Marillion's 6th Studio Album, Holidays In Eden is a single album & was released on 24th June 1991. This album was remastered in 1998. A deluxe edition of the album will be released in 2022.
Current & Notable Release Versions:
2CD Remastered Version: Includes the original album plus bonus disc. Standard Jewel case with CD booklet featuring Lyrics & original album art. OUT OF PRINT.
Vinyl Version: Cut from the original vinyl production masters. Reproduced in 180g heavy weight vinyl with a gatefold sleeve featuring the original artwork. OUT OF PRINT.
US Version: The US edition featured two new tracks, "A Collection" and "How Can It Hurt", which were the B-sides of the original "No One Can" and "Cover My Eyes (Pain and Heaven)" singles, respectively. In addition, the track order was rearranged and the title for "No One Can" was lengthened by adding "… Take You Away from Me". Slightly different cover art was also used, featuring the original cover overlaid with the new logo and the album title in the middle left of the cover in a straight line, rather than the original.
Download Version: Audio download not available from Racket Records.
Holidays in Eden : December 1997
Immediately following the “Seasons End” tour we descended upon “Stanbridge Farm” residential rehearsal studio and decadent gentleman's retreat, once again just outside Brighton. I arrived on a sunny summer day in 1990 to discover a rambling Tudor house with outdoor swimming pool, a cottage annexe, and a converted barn full of sound equipment. Having turned up first I bagged the master bedroom and lay upon the bed contemplating it's recent occupants - Phil Collins (no less), Siouxie Sioux, Morrissey, and Duran Duran's Warren Cuccurillo. Word has it, Warren likes to decorate his room with silver foil and as I lay on the bed, I could see evidence of his efforts - sellotape and tinfoil remnants in the topmost corners of the room. (I heard a few more stories about the Durannies... they sound like quite a bunch of characters...)
Having come more or less straight here from the tour we hadn't had much time to dream up any new ideas - we were starting from scratch - and in many ways this was the point in our creative relationship where we first started attempting to define what Marillion might represent in the future. There was a degree of nervousness on all sides during the writing process. Everything seemed to take forever and my natural impatience to move things along and turn musical moments into song structures caused mutual frustration amongst the boys, who were used to living with ideas for a period of time before moving on. I thought “Seasons End” was written in a few short weeks but I was forgetting that the band had been jamming for eight months before we met! I was going to have to slow down... I became ill and went home for a couple of weeks while they got on with it.
The songs gradually came together during the late-summer and autumn.. and then the winter. Originally the band were to return to producer Chris Kimsey to record “Holidays In Eden”. Chris was in the middle of recording “Steel Wheels” for The Rolling Stones and came over a couple of times on his days off to listen to us playing. Somehow they got wind of it and he started receiving threatening letters from the Stones' lawyers in New York banning him from any other projects until he'd finished their record. That's what he told us, anyway... We were going to need another producer. Chris Neil - pop producer extraordinaire - called up one day to say we were his son's favourite band and that he would love to work with us and that he promised not to lighten up the sound and turn us into Mike and the Mechanics. We bit the bullet and enlisted him, moving to Nomis Studios in London to routine the songs and then on, once again, to Hook End Manor in Oxfordshire, to record the album. Consequently, “Holidays In Eden” was to become Marillion's “pop”est album ever, and was greeted with delight by many, and dismay by some of the hardcore fans.
That was just fine by me - I like anything that stirs up a bit of controversy... and if Splintering Heart and The Party are pop songs, I'll eat my pink telecaster.