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Ergo Sum - Mixolidio CD (album) cover

MIXOLIDIO

Ergo Sum

 

Prog Folk

3.62 | 20 ratings

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Cesar Inca
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars Ergo Sum's second album shows a definitive improvement from their great debut album. The musician's skills, versatility and rocking energy are effectively displayed in their solid interplays. The repertoire is divided in two sections: a studio one and a live one - it is in this second section that the aforementioned virtues are accomplished to the highest level. The strength is there, rocking in your face, yet there is also an easily noticeable sensibility to create polished and well-articulated musical ideas. While it is clear that the lead guitar is usually the most featured instrument in the mix, the roles of the flute and the tuned percussives serve to add some peculiar colors to the overall 73- 75 era KC influenced prog sound that the guys of Ergo Sum recreate according to their own musical intuition. Other musical sources come from jazz fusion and hard rock, all of them fluidly combined with the main Crimsonian stuff upon a solid rhythm basis: the bassist and whoever plays the drum kit at a particular time (Menares and Muga continuously exchange drumming and percussive duties) are capable of providing a very strong column for the rockiest passages and a more fluid cadence for the softer, jazzier moments. In some aspects, Ergo Sum reminds me of the Argentinean quartet Tánger (another current South American instrumental act worth checking out). Let's take a look at the album's repertoire: tracks 1, 2 & 4 are effective rockers, while the beautiful acoustic guitar-centered nocturne 'Amistad' brings an air of ethereal introspectiveness, and 'Tonada a la Soledad' displays an eerie melancholy combined with a touch of exquisite psychedelic rock. Tracks 6-12 conform the live set, which includes some tracks from the band's debut album. 'Power II' & 'Power III' set an energetic ambience in a catchy manner, until 'Clasicoide' brings a most intricate compositional structure (this is my fave track of the entire album). 'Power IV' brings back the upfront rock stuff with a R'n'B twist; later on, 'Rompecabeza' will set things tighter and stronger, in a quasi-metallic manner. Between the two, tracks 10 & 11 explore jazzier trends. Well, what else can I say: this is one of the best prog recordings to come out from Chile for the last 10 years. and we're talking about a very proficient country in the current prog scene (Tryo, Mar de Robles, Akinetón Retard, AngulArt, Sarax, Entrance. all of them, excellent bands): Ergo Sum's "Mixolidio" is a must for every lover of good contemporary prog rock.
Cesar Inca | 4/5 |

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