Though
Porcupine Tree's permanent lineup was in place by the time
Sky Moves Sideways was complete, it was actually a combination of old and new, with a number of tracks once again done by
Wilson on his own. Regardless of the provenance of one song or another, though, it was another fine release under the
Porcupine Tree name, continuing the excellence of
Up the Downstair while achieving a new liquid sense of drama and overall flow.
Barbieri's keyboard skills alone made for a wonderful addition to the ranks, easily capturing the slow sense of unfolding atmosphere and elegance combined from earlier
Porcupine Tree work while adding his own touches here and there, a touch of playfulness and improvisation. The
Edwin/
Maitland rhythm section sound like they were born to work together, able to both set slow, spacy moods and quick gallops and
dance-skewed approaches both.
Wilson, meanwhile, is still himself, calling to mind strange lyric images of rural collapse and romantic connection in his ever stronger, commanding but never straining vocals. As for guitar, there's subtle delicacy and headbanging overload and plenty of space in between for more. Overall, there's not much in the way of immediate sonic difference from
Up the Downstair, more a sense of exploring and establishing styles, almost as if the bandmembers were getting used to working with each other. The tripped-out title track bookends the album (perhaps in a not so subtle nod to a similar sequence on
Pink Floyd's
Wish You Were Here with
"Shine on You Crazy Diamond"). The real winners, though, are the
jazz-touched
acoustic/electric dreamscape of
"Stars Die," with a great lead melody and overdubbed chorus from
Wilson, and the immediately following
"Moonloop," an instrumental calm then
rocking jam that's credited to all four members. ~ Ned Raggett