| Track by Track Review | 
 
	
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	| Disc 1 | 
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	| The Invisible Man There's a sinister            edge throughout this 13-minute opener, even though it runs through several            movements. This is fitting since the subject of the song appears to            have become invisible against his will. The 7/4 section that kicks in            at around the 6:30 mark is especially harrowing.
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	| Marbles I The            first of four short interludes in this album, this is a laid-back affair            with a slight cocktail-jazz feel to it.
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	| Genie This            is a mid-tempo number, heavy on the guitar and with some nicely understated            vocals on the bridge.
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	| Fantastic Place Hogarth is at his            most soulful on this tune that builds ever-so-gradually.
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	| The Only Unforgivable Thing We don't know            what it is, but Hogarth runs through an imaginative litany of what it            does. Mark Kelly's organ adds a hymn-like tone, and Ian Mosley's percussion            keeps the song from plodding.
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	| Marbles II This piece sounds rather Lennon-esque with the melody and the Phil Spector-like            production.
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	| Ocean Cloud The            band pays homage to Don Allum and the Ocean Rowing Club, a group who            have a penchant for rowing solo back and forth across the Atlantic.            At 18 minutes this song is perhaps the focal point of the CD. It keeps            moving with an ebb and flow of tempos and feelings. Like "Out of            This World" from the Afraid of Sunlight album, this piece also            uses actual audio clips of the subject at hand to good effect.
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	| Disc 2 | 
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	| Marbles III Leading            off the second CD, this short piece is highlighted by Mark Kelly's simple            melodic lines and Hogarth's slightly disturbing lyrics.
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	| The Damage It            almost sounds like Marillion is borrowing from the Jeff Lynne songbook            on this one. The lyrics come mostly from "Genie."
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	| Don't Hurt Yourself This is a relaxed            rocker, and the lyrics basically encourage you to forget the past and            live each day afresh. An interesting side note - Pete Trawavas and Steve            Rothery switch roles on bass and guitar, Pete driving the song with            his acoustic guitar strumming.
 
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	| You're Gone The            first single pulled from the album, this song is much like a latter-day            Genesis composition but without the sap quotient that plagued them in            later years. This is another example of Marillion's ability to write            and record a song in a more "traditional" vein.
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	| Angelina A smoky, late-night            jazz feel kicks off this paean to an over-night disk jockey. The song            doesn't pick up much steam after that, though, lending to an intimate,            relaxed mood.
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	| Drilling Holes With its trippy lyrical imagery, bird sounds that open and close the            track, and snippets of harpsichord and mellotron, the band seems to            give a friendly nod to late 60s psychedelia. (Mentioning king retro-psych            kings XTC doesn't hurt either.)
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	| Marbles IV Musically            this is pretty much a reprise of Marbles I with a slight change in the            chord progression.
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	| Neverland After            a rather soulful first few verses, the band get into an extended slow            funk jam on this 12-minute closer with Steve Hogarth repeating vocal            lines, and Steve Rothery adding simple yet powerful guitar fills. The            band ends short of the 11-minute mark to the delicate sound of wind            chimes to close out this incredible, sprawling album.
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