CD Version: This is the single CD version of the 2018 Stereo remaster by Steven Wilson.
Double Vinyl Version: This is the double vinyl LP version of the 2018 Stereo remaster by Steven Wilson.
4 CD / 1 BR Deluxe Edition (2018): CD/Bluray version of a brand new (2018) Stereo & 5.1 Remaster of Marillion's 1994 album Brave.
Disc one features a brand new stereo remix of the album by Steven Wilson.
Disc two features the original 1994 mix of the album by Dave Meegan. Discs three and four contain Marillion’s April 29, 1994 concert at La Cigale in Paris. Newly remixed by Michael Hunter, the music includes a performance of
Brave in its entirety, which first appeared in 1996 on the band’s double live album, Made Again.
The blu-ray contains 96/24 audio of Steven Wilson’s remix of the album in stereo and 5.1. Also included are the promo videos for the album’s singles, plus a new documentary about the album that includes concert footage and interviews with the band. OUT OF PRINT.
4 LP Deluxe Vinyl Edition (2018): This is the vinyl version of the 2018 Stereo Remaster. Disc One and Two of the set features a remix of the album by Steven Wilson . Discs Three, Four and Five contain Marillion’s April 29, 1994 concert at La Cigale in Paris. Remixed by Michael Hunter, the music includes a performance of Brave in its entirety, which first appeared in 1996 on the band’s double live album, Made Again. Those recordings have been expanded with nine unreleased tracks, including live renditions of “No One Can,” “Easter,” “Waiting To Happen” and “Hooks In You.”
Brave : June 1998
Brave started out like any of our albums, with jam sessions, a handful of finished lyrics from John Helmer, and disparate streams of thought from yours truly. John had sent us a lyric called 'Runaway' and I was trying to articulate a statement about man's innate ability to get used to ANYTHING, and the consequences of that, which gradually became 'Living With The Big Lie'. The third song to take shape was 'The Great Escape' which I was singing against some of Mark's piano chords. Steve Rothery didn't like it so I went away and used the same chords to write 'The Hollow Man' instead. It was round about this stage that the song ideas took me back to a memory of an intriguing radio broadcast from the Bristol Police some years ago on GWR radio. The police had picked up a young woman wandering on the Severn Bridge who refused or was unable to speak to them. In desperation the appeal was broadcast to the general public in an attempt to discover her identity. I heard this on the radio and thought it was a great first page to a mystery story. I was also concerned for her and wrote a few words of support which, of course she would never see or hear. I suppose it's as near as I come to saying a prayer. I believe that good thoughts eventually lead to good things. 'Runaway' took me back to her - wondering what became of her - and I thought we might dream up a story which would become a piece of music like a fictional documentary of her life and the circumstances which led her to the bridge. We now had a concept album on our hands at a time when the whole genre was and probably still is terribly unfashionable. Suits us just fine!
Now the band had a spectrum of imagery to get its teeth into and the songs progressed quite quickly throughout the winter of 92/93. Someone in A&R at EMI introduced us to the great Dave Meegan in January of '93 and we set about pulling his visions and ideas into the project. In February we moved into Miles Copeland's Chateau Marouatte in the Dordogne region of France - a 15th century castle perched on top of a high hill silhouetted against the moon at night like a vampire movie. We went there with a truck full of technology and turned the place into a recording studio. I lived in a round castle tower separated from the building, standing alone across the garden. On my first night there I climbed the stone spiral stairs to my room and looked out of the window across the sweeping woodland in the valley below. It was quite a feeling! I sat down on the big bed and wrote a few words. They were 'Brave'. I spent the next few days locked away with a keyboard full of drone sounds and eventually the chord progression emerged. Occasionally, one of the boys would look in to see what I was up to as the drones moaned and hummed for hours on end. "He's still in there!" they would murmur to each other.
The band was set up in the largest room in the Chateau whilst their amplifiers were in distant rooms connected by multicores which hung between the arrow-slits of the castle towers like washing lines. Dave had microphones everywhere: on the long spiral stone stairways and distant landings - he even had a couple of mics in the fireplace to pick up the crackle of the fire. The theory was that if we fed all the mics onto tape then we'd pick up any passing ghosts as well. You can't hear them but I can feel them here and there. 'Brave' is all about the spiritual aspect of life dominated by the non-spiritual, so we filled the songs with as many sounds and pictures as we could dream up - I sent our sound engineer out at dawn one morning to record silence for the beginning of the album! He found an underground cave full of water and we made a raft for the microphones so that we could make sounds on the shore and record the echoes on the water deep in the cave. This was where we recorded the big splash at the end of 'Paper Lies' which represents a certain newspaper millionaire falling off a yacht. When we later returned to England, Dave was dispatched to Lambeth North station to record tube trains whilst, up in Liverpool, Mark and I threw loose change at the pavement, actresses were hired in for the mother/daughter argument, the river Mersey was recorded lapping against the shore, and I discovered Tony Halligan busking Uillean pipes in a shop doorway (but not for long) and Cathy, the Japanese receptionist at Parr Street Studios, whispered for us.
I think of 'Brave' like a Christmas cake - full of hidden ingredients which only reveal themselves gradually. I can still listen to it and discover moments I don't remember being there before. It is best listening to in one sitting, in private and, as I said on the sleeve, loud with the lights off. This remastered version of the CD should improve your chances of hearing the ghosts.