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erik neuteboom View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: My lesser known and unknown new prog bands thread
    Posted: August 08 2007 at 15:06
 
      
 
MY LESSER AND UNKNOWN NEW PROGROCK BANDS CD/DVD DATABASE

 

                                      Hello fellow progheads.

 

Next week, on August 19th, the Symphonic Prog Appreciation thread exists one year, thanks to everybody for joining! But the success has also lead to my evaluation that I have to create a new thread in order to put the reviews about lesser and unknown new progrock bands in a kind of database. Because at this moment the reviews about these bands are too much divided over too many pages.

 

Note 1 : The focus is on symphonic prog bands but you will also find bands in the category Art-rock, Heavy Prog, Prog-folk, Eclectic Prog and Progressive Electronic.

Note 2 :  The lion?s share of the bands is between a few months and two years old but some bands are from the era between 2000-2005 because in my opinion these bands deserve a bit more attention.

Note 3 : The forthcoming days I will update this database and of course I hope to add many new bands in the near future!

 

    
 
    
 
     
 
  
 
     
 
 
 
 

                                         The bands from A/Z:

 

A

 

AARDVARK ? Tuntematon Sotilas (***)

- This is a musical project by Finnish musicians, recorded in several countries (Singapore, New Zealand and Finland) and dedicated to the 95.000 Finnish victims in World war II. With their courage they have contributed to the independency of Finland. The lyrics and music are based upon a Finnish novel entitled Unknown Soldier.

The music (some vocals and some instrumentals) sounds very pleasant, melodic and alternating and features strong duo-guitarwork and tasteful, varied keyboardplay (from church ? and Hammond organ and Fender piano to harpsichord and violin-Mellotron). Aardvark their own musical identity is emphasized by the typical Finnish vocals.

My highlights are the very alternating composition Ei Taivahassa .. (delivering a catchy piano riff along sensitive guitarplay and wonderful keyboards) and Ne Jyraa Meitin! (mid-tempo with heavy organ waves, propulsive guitar riffs and a blistering wah-wah drenched guitar solo). I was also delighted about the songs that contain a guest musician on accordion, another proove how tasteful and elaborate Aardvark sounds on this promising debut album!

 

AETHER ? Inner Voyages Between Our Shadows (***)

- I only know this Brasilian four piece band from their tribute to the amazing 3-CD The Odeyssey Project, I wrote abut them: ?Aether from Brasil is the warm and pleasant final act on this 3-CD. They sound traditional with strong echoes from the neo-progressive movement with music that ranges from swinging with fluent electric guitar to dreamy with soaring keybards and mid-tempo with exciting synthesizer flights. The end is beautiful with sensitive acoustic guitar.? Well, after listening to this second album by Aether I can almost repeat the abovementioned musical analysis! The focus is on the wonderful, very flowing and warm guitar work, strongly evoking Steve Rothery and Mike Holmes (especailly the guitar sound on Dans Le Parc Du Chateau Noir), the album is layered with often compelling soli. The keyboards are tastefully colouring the music (strings, church-organ sound and some fine soli on synthesizer). It?s a pity that the vocals are not in their native language because the music would have sound more emotional, now the vocals are a bit flat and you can hear the accent easily. And at some moments the atmosphere in the compositions is a bit similar, it?s no coincidence that, in my opinion, the most captivating and alternating track is the cover A Night On Bald Mountain (Mussorgsky) delivering great bombastic eruptions and many strong breaks and accellarations. Nonetheless, this is a beautiful neo-prog inspired album that will please the fans of early Marillion and IQ and bands like Clepsydra.

 

AINUR ? From Ancient Times (***1/2)

- This new Italian band host a wide range of musicians on instruments that range from violin, harp and flute to bariton, Moog synthesizer and clarinet. Their debut CD From Ancient Times is based upon the book The Silmarillion by Tolkien, that?s not uncommon in prog ....!

During my first listening session I got more and more impressed by the Ainur their album, what a pleasant and elaborate compositions featuring very flowing shifting moods and a lot of variation. The atmospheres in the 11 tracks alternates between dreamy with twanging acoustic guitars, flute, harp and piano to compelling and bombastic with propulsive electric guitar riffs and fluent synthesizer flights. The vocals have an important role in Ainur their sound with many male and female singers, even a bariton who sounds like an opera vocalist. Some songs contain great variety like The Fall Of Nargochrond (from sparkling piano to propulsive and bombastic with fat guitar riffs and delicate synthesizer runs along strong male vocals), The Fall Of Gondolin (many changing climates) and War Of Wrath (sparkling piano, fiery gutiar, a sensational synthesizer solo and howling guitar runs). This is a tasteful album that blends symphonic prog, folk and classical in a pleasant way.

 
AFTER CRYING ? Live (****)

- Halfway the Nineties I had my first musical encounter with the unique Hungarian formation After Crying when I got their album De Profundis as a promo CD while working for Dutch progrock paper Background Magazine. To me it still sounds as their most captivating progrock effort since their debut album Overground Music from 1990. A few years ago I witnessed a concert in The Netherlands (only 60 spectators, what a shame!), the lion?s share of the tracklist con be found back on this exciting live DVD, taken from a Periferic Music Festival in the Hungarian capital Budapest, late 2004.

After Crying their sound is not very accessible, you have to be up to the blend of classical, prog like Seventies King Crimson and ELP and the frequent explorations in avant-garde and experimental, often captivating but also often complex! The band succeeds to make impression from the very first second: excellent and versatile musicians and varied and captivating compositions, supported by a wonderful light show and a great sound. A few examples of their exciting and alternating music: fiery guitar, Emersonian keyboards and trumpet in Viaduct, a swirling and virtuosic piece feautring two musicians on one keyboard in Burlesque, a dynamic solo on cello in Stonehenge, a Latin-American atmosphere delivering keyboards, trumpet and strong soli on keyboards and guitar in the swinging Life Must Go On, a great duel between cello and guitar in Cello-Guitar Duet, followed by short compositions that contain soli on piano, drums and trumpet. At least half of the track list features the pleasant Hungarian voice of Zoltan Batky-Valentin (via the menu you can subtitle it into English), his vocals fits perfect to the sound of After Crying.

Again, this is not very easy music to experience (for me sometimes a bit too avant-garde and experimental) but in general I was carried away by this After Crying live performance!

 

ALQUIN ? Blue Planet  (***)

- Alquin was the first band I ever saw live, I must have been at about 13 or 14 years old. They played at a schoolparty near my hometown The Hague, later I realised how lucky I was to witness this unique progrock band from The Netherlands. The enthousiastic reactions to their reunion a few years ago have turned into a new studio album featuring no less than five members from the original line-up, including lead vocalist Michel Van Dijk. In some tracks his distinctive voice reminds me of a 'crooner', like in the bluesy "Murder in the park" (howling electric guitar and fiery saxophone) and the melancholical "Enough=enough" (tender piano and fragile slide-guitar). On some tracks I hear the magic from their first two albums "Marks" and "Mountain Queen": a powerful and swinging sound delivering wonderful Hammond waves, flowing electric guitar and fiery saxophone, topped by the strong and distinctive vocals from Michel Van Dijk. But at others moments Alquin has a more polished sound, a bit too smooth for me although Alquin plays good and inspired with strong work on guitar, saxophone and keyboards. They are still an unique band delivering an entertaining and often swinging blend of prog, blues, soul, jazz, funk and rock, on two tracks supported by the Stylers Horns. And it defenitely doesn't sound dated, just listen to the great final track "The beach" with a strong grand finale featuring howling guitar and fiery saxophone!

ALSO EDEN ? About Time (***)

- This is a UK band with roots in the Nineties but it lasted until 2006 before Also Eden released their debut CD entitled About Time, the title is almost a self-parody! The album contains five compositions, most songs have a running time between 8 and 12 minutes. Listening to Also Eden I am delighted about their pleasant sound and the flowing shifting moods and accellarations: from dreamy with piano and warm vocals or mid-tempo with howling guitar to compelling with sensitive guitar or bombastic eruptions with flashy synthesizer flights. The singer has a strong, quite distinctive voice with a melancholical undertone. As references I would like to mention IQ and Marillion but with a more modern sound. If you are up to neo-prog, this is a band to discover!

 

AMAGRAMA-Ciclotimia (***1/2)

- Amagrama is a young Argentine band, the four muscians know each other from their childhood. Their debut-album ?Ciclotimia? sounds great: lots of dynamic compositions featuring spectacular and sumptuous interplay between keyboards and guitar, supported by an adventurous rhythm-section and many flashing synthesizer solos and lots of sensitive guitarwork. The music has strong echoes from the breathtaking approach by GERARD and DREAM THEATER but not that ?over-the top-scale-acrobatics?. Amagrama includes just enough mellow songs and moments to relax containing warm Spanish vocals and piano, acoustic guitar or soaring keyboards. A nice bonus is the cover Recluso Artista from CRUSIS, Amagrama delivers a pleasant and inspired version. An impressive debut-CD!

 

AMAROK ? Sol De Medianoche (****)

- After their album Quentadhark뮠from 2004, here is the new CD by Spanish progressive folk formation Amarok (which means wolf in Eskimo language). The musical brainchild is Robert Santamaria who played in Venezuolan symphonic prog band Tapobran but later moved to Spain. He is the main composer, writer and he plays an impressive range of instruments, from keyboards, accordion and Turkish saz to Iranian santur, dulcimer, xylophone and glockenspiel, this is the second coming of Mike Oldfield on Tubular Bells!

On the new album entitled Sol De Medianoche he is assisted by five other band members and a serie of guest musicians on instruments like electric ? and Spanish guitar, violin, trumpet, Tibetan chant and cymbals. The sound of Amarok is firmly rooted in folk/ethnic music but it scouts the border with jazz, fusion and symphonic prog. The climates are often Eastern sounding, due to the great vocals by Marta Seguar (powerful and expressive), she carries you away to Arabia, Turkey and Iran! The huge array of (often ethnic) instruments gives the music an extra, very captivasting dimension like the assorted woodwind, brass and percussion instruments. Some examples: a sultry atmosphere with varied woodwind ? and flute isntruments, a piece with sparkling piano and jazzy guitar (by the known jazz guitar player Andres Oleagui) and a final part with organ and saxophone in Hermits, lots of dynamics (from swinging Hammond organ and soaring violin-Mellotron to dreamy piano and powerful trumpet) in Wendigo, swinging violin, electric guitar and fluent synthesizer runs in Eight Touts and a cascade of shifting moods in the intricate Xiongmao II (longing vocals with sensitive guitar, an accellaration with organ and brass and Spanish guitar with lush Mellotron and Hammond). I was also delighted about the very special rendition of Keith Emerson his composition Abaddon?s Bolero featuring assorted percussion, accordion, didgeridoo and a final part with organ and trumpet. I am curious what the master himself thinks about it!

If you like adventurous progressive folk that blends with jazz, fusion and symphonic prog, this CD is captivating and exciting musical adventure!

 

ANEKDOTEN ? A Time Of Day (****)

- My first musical encounter with Anekdoten their compelling and captivating music was when I started to write for Dutch progrock paper SI Magazine in the early Nineties. I was very lucky that in this era the Mellotron drenched Skandinavian prog had just started to florish with as good examples Anglagard, White Willow, Landberk and ... Anekdoten. I was blown away by their debut CD entitled Vemod (even more on the re- release that contains the wonderful bonus track Sad Rain). On that album they sounded very similar to King Crimson (Anekdoten began as a King Crimson cover band) but gradually their music turned into more original and quite distinctive prog with the CD From Within as my personal favorite. I was a bit disappointed about the successor Gravity so what to expect from the this new CD?

During my first listening session I got very excited, it sounds more as a succesor to From Within than Gravity featuring the distinctive melancholical vocals, the dynamic-rhythm-section and the huge tension between the mellow, compelling, propulsive and bombastic parts. Of course I am delighted about the unsurpassed sound of the omni-present Mellotron, what a moving waves! Other keyboards on this album are the Farfisa organ (especially in the captivating 30 Pieces in great interplay with the Mellotron along propulsive guitar riffs and a wonderful final part with delicate flute and lush Mellotron) and synthesizer in Stardust An Sand (mellow with twanging guitars) and Prince Of The Ocean (dreamy with soft organ waves and a beautiful closing section with Mellotron). The guitar work sounds very alternating: fiery in the poweful opener The Great Unknown, propulsive in 30 Pieces and A Sky About To Rain, sensitive in King Of Oblivion and In For A Ride and mellow acoustic twanging in Stardust And Sand. My highlight is the long composition (almost 7 minutes) In For A Ride: it starts very compelling and bombastic, then a powerful bass and a lush Mellotron sound join and halfway we can enjoy a sensitive guitar solo. The climate ranges from dreamy to bombastic featuring a bit ominous undertone, almost psychedelic and very captivating, this is Anekdoten at their best!

With this album Anekdoten has prooved again to be a current top progrock band, every song is a wonderful painting delivering exciting and colourful landscapes, as if Turner and Constable have translated their paintings into prog music, a big hand for the new Anekdoten, not to be missed!

 

ANIMA MUNDI- Septentrion (***)

- We can enjoy more and more wonderful prog from the Latin-American continent: after Jaen Kief from Colombia and Parthenon from Venezuela, here is Anima Mundi from .. Cuba, in general known because of the sigars and angry words by Fidel Castro about the USA! But bakc to the music, it sounds very melodic and tasteful, this new band makes a good impression on their debut-CD. After a wonderful Vangelis-like keyboard intro, the other 13 compositions deliver an omnipresent bag-pipe sound in pleasant interplay with strong guitarwork (propulsive riffs and sensitive and fiery soli), varied but functional keyboards (except some flashy synthesizer soli) and the high-pitched sound of the tin-whistle flute. De atmospheres alternate between dreamy (with melancholical overtones) and often mid-tempo with a tight beat and warm Spanish vocals. I am impressed by Anima Mundi their music, especially the neo-prog and folk-prog fans will be delighted about this promising band!

 

APOCALYPSE ? Live In Rio (***1/2)

- This is a Brasilian five piece band with a live CD that is recorded in the most famous Brasilian city Rio De Janeiro in 2005. It starts with very Floydian-like guitarwork but then it?s early Marillion as the main inspirator. Especially the English vocals are mighty close to the sound of Fish on albums like A Script For A Jester?s Tear and Misplaced Childhood. Just listen to the songs Cut and Tears, is this the Brasilian twin brother of the singing Scottish giant? Most of the 11 compositions contain a fluent mid-tempo featuring multiple exciting Minimoog synthesizer flights and lots of strong, often howling electric guitar runs. I am impressed by the crafty musicians and how tight, dynamic and enthousiastic Apocalypse plays but some tracks tend so sound a bit similar. My highlights are Refuge (beautiful flute work, sparkling keyboards, powerful Hammond sound and expressive vocals), Waterfall Of Golden Waters (fine Hammond and Minimoog excertitions), Tears (alternating with a wonderful intro by twanging guitars and choir-Mellotron and great work on Minimoog and guitar) and Coming From The Stars Medley (from moving and compelling to propulsive with howling guitar and again great work on Hammond and Minimoog along a cheerful band presentation). I am sure this pleasant and dynamic album will delight the neo-prog fans, especially the early Marillion freaks!

 
APOCALYPSE ? Live In Rio (***1/5)
- Not very long ago I wrote a review about Brasilian five piece band Apocalypse their live CD from the same concert (Rio, 2005) as on this DVD (that contains the same track list as the CD plus two bonustracks). Here?s my CD review in order to get an impression from that concert with additional comments about the DVD.
- The concert starts with Floydian inspired guitar work but then it?s early Marillion as the main source of inspiration, especially the English vocals are mighty close to Fish his distinctive vocals like in the songs Cut and Tears. Most tracks sound fluent and catchy featuring a strong rhythm-section, lots of flashy Minimoog flights and powerful guitarplay with many howling licks. I am impressed by the crafted musicians and the tasteful and dynamic compositions but some songs tend to sound a bit too similar. My highlights are Refugee (wonderful flute play, sparkling keyboards, powerful Hammond organ and expressive vocals), Waterfall Of Golden Waters (pleasant work on Hammond organ and Minimoog), Tears (alternating with beautiful intro featuring twanging guitars and choir-Mellotron and flashy synthesizers and fiery guitar) and Coming From The Stars Medley (from compelling to propulsive with howling guitar, again strong work on Hammond and Moog and a warm band presentation). So what about the DVD? Well, it?s nice (and sometimes a bit hilarious) to watch the singer (he also plays decent flute) who is so obviously inspired by Fish: his voice, his gestures, a black-and-white mask, his enthousiastic attitude and his warm interaction with the crowd, this man?s looks like the Brasilian twin-brother of the huge Scottish neo-prog hero! The lightshow and sound are OK and Apocalypse looks inspired and the band is playing with their soul. The extra?s on the DVD are backstage shots, an interview (via the menu you can use the programm for English subtitling), a photo gallery, a biography and finally a discography, a good service to the progheads.
- If you want to watch a pleasant DVD by a lesser known neo-prog band, this is one to discover!
 
APPLE PIE ? Crossroad (****)

- In the Prog Archives biography I read that this is a Russian four piece band, founded in 2000 in the city Kursk. Well, if this band had made their album in the Cold War era, I am sure the USSR government had sent them away to Siberia because of ?obviously CIA sponsored activities?, what an incredibly USA sounding prog this, somewhere between Spock's Beard and Dream Theater! But seriously, I am glad that I got the possibility to listen to this new Russian band because Little Tragedies, Infront, Lost World and Aviva proove that the Russian progrock scene is very prolific and delivers lots of outstanding prog, their albums are often to be found inside my CD player the recent weeks.

Apple Pie sounds very professional, modern, dynamic and varied on their debut CD entitled Crossroads. The title points at the fact that their music is a blend of several styles. Well the first track already showcases their eclectic and dynamic approach: first a spacey intro with a lush synthesizer sound, then twanging guitars and dreamy vocals, followed by compelling bombastic prog with propulsive guitar riffs and fiery guitar runs, culminating in a prog metal atmosphere featuring spectacular keyboards and finally howling guitar, supported by Hammond organ waves and powerful and adventurous drums, what an exciting prog! The other ten compositions also deliver alternating and dynamic prog: sensational synthesizer flights and blistering guitar, heavy Hammond waves and a sensation break with sumptuous keyboards and biting guitar in Crossroad, a swinging ?big band sound? (captivating blend of brass and fiery guitar), inspired vocals and a bluesy guitar solo in Temptation, a swirling climate with heavy guitar, a bluesy Hammond solo and raw wah- wah drenched guitar in Escape, acoustic rhythm guitar with gospel-like singing in Still Got My Faith In You, wonderful sparkling piano and acoustic guitar and great work on keyboards, guitar and saxophone in the alternating Nothing Comes Everything and tasteful interplay between keyboards and guitar and a final part with howling guitar in Final. Who dare to say that the current prog is boring or not adventurous, what a splendid and exciting new prog!

I disagree with the category Neo-Progressive, to me this sounds as a band that scouts the borders between symphonic prog and prog metal, I would suggest to name it New Heavy Progressive, like Riverside, Rush and Ayreon. Highly recommended and a big hand for Apple Pie!

 

ARIES - Aries (****)     

? Incredible, here's another new Italian gem! This six-piece band delivers a wonderful album that blends rock, folk and symphonic in a very compelling way: from warm and mellow with beautiful piano, acoustic guitar and flute to lush symphonic rock featuring some splendid synthesizer soli. The guitarwork is excellent, some sensitive soli reminds me of Neil Young his raw and moving style. All six compositions are topped by a great vocal performance from Simone Angioloni (see fellow collaborator Dirk his avatar  ), this is one of the best female voices since Annie Haslam. Highly recommended!

 
ASHADA ? Circulation (***1/2)

- Ashada is a Japanese female duo featuring Tae (vocals, amdoline and piano) and Midori (piano, accordion and vocals), supported by guest musicians on electric guitar, bass, drums, violin and percussion. Their sound is not really mainstream prog but I love the wonderful blend of folk, chamber music and symphonic rock, often very moving!

1. Kagi (5.08) : An instrumental track delivering a fluent rhythm with a beautiful harmony of sparkling piano, romantic accordion and warm violin play.

2. Snowflake (5.58) : Another instrumental, it starts with fragil epiano work, then a fluent rhythm with beautiful interplay between accordion and piano. The accordion play becomes more prominent, followed by a sensitive guitar solo, very flowing and often howling.

3. Departure (6.26) : This one sounds a chamber music featuring tender piano chords and dreamy, almost whispering vocals. The violin enters with a very intense sound, the following interplay with the piano is splendid.

4. Sacred Visions (3.29) : A slow rhythm with dreamy piano, vocals and violin, th efinal part is subtle with on the background a raw guitar delivering fiery licks.

5. A Girl?s Week (4.09) : Again a dreamy song, the mandoline delivers a pleasant contribution along warm vocals and piano. The harmony between all instruments is perfect and it sounds very moving, especially the beautiful piano work is very moving!

6. Neji (6.49) : This is the highlight, it starts with a slow and compelling rhythm featuring sensitive electric guitar and delicate piano. Then the sound becomes gradually more bombastic with a captivating contrast between the fragile mandoline and the propulsive drum beats. After a dreamy part with buzzing bass work and fragile piano work, we can enjoy sparkling piano and wonderful mandoline play. The second part contains a great build-up with flowing shifting moods, culminating in a very intense and compelling electric guitar solo, breathtaking symphonic prog!

7. Birth (4.22) : The final song has a mellow climate and in the end some classical guitar play, very subtle.

I am absolutely delighted about this wonderful, often emotional blend of folk, chamber music and symphonic prog but I have to admit that it is not mainstream prog. Nonetheless, I hope more progheads will try to discover this very unique and promising Japanese project!

 

ASTRALIS ? Bienvenida Al Interior (****)

- This is the debut CD by Chilean four piece band, I hope they will make many more, what a beautiful, often compelling neo-prog!

1. Bienvenida Al Interior : A melodic and alternating sound featuring pleasant and modern keyboards, propulsive guitar riffs, howling guitar, warm Spanish vocals and lost of shifting moods. A great start, gentlemen!

2. Nocturno Urbano : After a spacey intro the atmosphere changes into a kind of ?symphonic blues? with moving guitarwork (like Nick Barrett from Pendragon), this in combination with ?choir-Mellotron-like keyboards? carries me away to Progheaven.

3. Novento Y Nueve : This long track (12 minutes) contains lots of variety, strong plau on guitar and keyboards and inspired vocals, the musci often reminds me of early Marillion, this is neo-prog at its best!

4. Doble Arcoiris : After a spacey synthesizer intro and fragile guitar with soaring keyboards, a slow rhythm with piano and synthesizer solo follows but this songs is build upon the wonderful, often movin guitar play, goose bumps.

5. Bajo El Domo De Cristal : Another composition with lots of shifting moods, I am delighted about the beautiful, very moving guitar solo and a captivating breamk with an impressive church-organ sound.

6. Kinnara : This final track (10 minutes) contains in the first part a blend of dreamy parts with soaring keyboards and sumptuous pieces with sparkling piano and sensitive guitar. Then we can enjoy a Brian May inspired guitar interlude with echo and fiery runs, culminating in a final part featuring an up-tempo with flashy kebyoards and propulsive guitar.

This CD is highy recommended to all early Marillion and Pendragon freaks, what a wonderful and moving neo-prog album!

 

ARS NOVA - Biogenesis Project (***1/2)

? On this CD the Japanese progrock trio Ars Nova delivers a SF concept: it?s 2301 and the earth is overcrowded, without nature, the ozone-layer has disappeared and an artificial sun is shining, a kind of Greenpeace doom-scenario! The story is written by Numero Ueno, the #1 Japanese proghead and deals about a fanatical nature organisation, space ships, robots, several ideologies and the deep-rooted evil in mankind. On this CD Ars Nova is supported by an impressive range of progrock artists: members from PFM, Goblin and Il Balletto Di Bronzo, the rhytm-section from Gerard and, I proudly presents, the Dutch genius Arjen Lucassen (the brainchild behind Ayreon). The music is in the tradition of the Japanese bombastic keyboard approach: dazzling synthesizer flights, virtuosic keyboard (inter)play and heavy floods of Mellotron and Hammond organ. In between there?s frequently Arjen?s fiery, very distinctive guitarsound. A strong contribution is from violin player Lucio Fabbri (PFM), he sounds like Jean-Luc Ponty at his best but the vocals are also OK featuring female singer Mika and ex-Leviathan vocalist Alex Brunori. At some moments the vocals sound a bit too theatrical and the compositions a bit fragmentic, in my opinion this CD would have gained at least one more star if Arjen Lucassen would have lived in Japan because of his compositional and producing skills. BUT IN GENERAL THIS IS A GOOD AND ENTERTAINING PROGROCK CD!

 

ANGULART - Donde Renacen Las Horas (***1/2)

- Here is a CD from the very southern point of South-America: the debut album ?Donde renacen las horas? by Chilean progrock band Angulart. The debut album Donde Renacen Las Horas opens with average progmetal (thunderous rhythm-section and biting guitar) but after a few minutes it starts to become very interesting: many captivating changes of accelaration, surprising breaks and great solos on guitar and keyboards. The band contains good musicians but I?m blown away by the alternating and spectacular sound of senor Poblete on his synthesizers (dazzling runs), piano (swirling play), strings (orchestral), organ (heavy floods) and even accordeon. He gives every song a special flavor, topped by the strong and biting guitarwork. The 10 compositions alternates from heavy, up-tempo and jazzy to bluesy, bombastic and dreamy, Angulart keeps your attention for the full hour! If you are up to a compelling, varied musical trip and typical Latin-American vocals (an emotional undertone) this sensational debut-CD will please you.

 

ATEMPO ? Simple (***1/2)

- Three years after their debut CD entitled Abismos Del Tiempo (2003) here is the new album Simple from the Argentine five piece band Atempo in which female singer Mariela Gonzalez (ex-Nexus) has been replaced by Zeta, guitarplayer Sebastian Chiarini has left the band too.

1. Subreal 1 : This composition starts slow, followed by a heavy and bombastic atmosphere featuring opera-like vocals and mellow pieces with beautiful piano, warm vocals and great orchestrations. The final part is outstanding delivering a very sensitive electric guitar solo, beautiful piano and dramatic vocals.

2. Triste : First a dreamy climate with fragile piano work, in the end a great finale with howling electric guitar runs.

3. El Circo De Los Tuneles : A very alternating track with twanging guitars and soaring guitar, a slow rhythm with dreamy vocals, sumptuous keyboards with passionated vocals, a mellow part with senstitive electric guitar and in the end a fiery and bombastic atmosphere featuring heavy guitar riffs and sweeping drum beats.

4. Simple : Another varied song, from dreamy with piano and sensitive electric guitar and a strong beat with sparkling piano to bombastic with flashy synthesizer runs. The fluent shifting moods shows the huge progress Atempo has made in 3 years!

5. Experimento ? SU 2.0 : After fragile piano work the music becomes more and more fluent and swinging to a mid-tempo rhythm with sparkling piano and a dynamic rhythm-section. The focus is on fiery saxophone work and jazzy-like piano, the interplay is great.

In my opinion Atempo has prooved their huge potention with this captivating album.

 

AVIVA ? Rokus Tonalis (***)

- This is a new Russian musical project (the CD is from 2007!) with multi-instrumentalist Aviva (Grand piano, keyboards, bass, samples and programmed drums and percussion) as the brainchild. The mainly instrumental music contains lots of bombastic parts in the vein of ELP and Japanese band Gerard featuring a powerful Hammond sound, fluent piano runs and some flashy, quite spectacular synthesizer flights. In the song The Vakse At The End Of Times a guest guitar player has a very propulsive contribution by delivering raw and heavy riffs. But this is not just ELP/Gerard inspired symphonic prog, some tracks contain more experimental sounding music with soaring keyboards, strange sounds and weird voices. Aviva uses programmed drums and percussion on this CD, this doesn?t harm the music very much although I prefer natural drums and percussion. If you like keyboard driven prog with an experimental element in the music, this CD could be interesting, to me it sounded very special.

 

 



Edited by erik neuteboom - January 03 2008 at 22:39
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 15:06

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BAUER – En Otra Ciudad (***)

- Bauer their first album Astronauta Olvidado blew me away, what a wonderful and often very compelling musical experience (with hints from Radiohead, Porcupine Tree and early Pink Floyd), loaded with Mellotron and sensitive electric guitar along melancholical vocals. So high expectation towards this new album, does Bauer succeed to delight me again?<p> Well, to be honest, it is not at the same level because the music is a bit more subdued and the dynamics between the dreamy parts and bombastic pieces are less intense. But this doesn’t mean En Otra Ciudad is a disappointing album because the compositions are still very tasteful like the compelling first song Dock Surf  (propulsive with a psychedelic undertone like Hawkwind and Porcupine Tree with fiery guitar and spacey keyboards), El Hombre De Blanco (beautiful interplay between the omnipresent Fender Rhodes piano, howling guitar and fluent drums) and the mellow, very moving Avanza (majestic violin-Mellotron and melancholic vocals). Remarkable are the The Shadows (Hank B. Marvin)-like guitar runs in some tracks. The raw guitar parts are a captivating contrast with the dreamy vocals and soaring keyboards.<p>I have to say that this new album sounds less exciting than Bauer their first but it is still a pleasant new effort that deserves a listen, I recommend it to fans of Radiohead, Porcupine Tree and early Pink Floyd.

 

BEARDFISH — Sleeping In Traffic: Part One (***1/2)

- When I started to review this album, I had the idea that this was a new USA band with their debut release but thanks to Prog-jester (who did the other Beardfish review), I discovered this band is from Sweden and somewhere I read that they will perform on a Dutch progrock festival in June or July.

The sound of Beardfish on their third CD is quite alternating and I am impressed by the tasteful arrangements, strong vocals and instrumental variety: the short intro On The Verge Of Sanity contains accordeon, then the next track Sunrise delivers good interplay between guitar and organ, an interlude with warm piano play and in my opinion the vocals are an extra instrument! The other seven tracks range from dreamy, swinging and bombastic to fluent rhythms and even blues like in Harmony featuring delicate work on guitar, organ and vocals. Very progressive/symphonic are the compositions The Ungodly Slob (fiery guitar, lush organ and a sensational synthesizer solo), Year Of The Knife (swinging with the sound of the clavinet, a biting guitar solo and suddenly in the final part a short violin solo) and Same Old Song (wonderful keyboards, varied guitar play and a compelling final part).

I you are up to varied and adventurous prog, this new album by Beardfish will delight you!

 

BIGELF - Hex (****) 

— The saying is “third time lucky”, well BIGELF’s (USA) third album is a perfect example, what a thrilling experience! Their music is based upon the heavy sound of BLACK SABBATH featuring fat guitar-riffs, a leaden rhythm-section and OSBOURNE-like vocals. Other obvious influences are The BEATLES (especially John Lennon), PINK FLOYD (Gilmourian slide guitar) and KING CRIMSON (floods of violin-Mellotron). The music is dynamic and alternating, from ballads to heavy rock with a lot of progressive tendencies like the integration of keyboards (Mellotron, Hammond organ, piano and synthesizers), changing climates, varied tempos and spectacular breaks. The distinctive vocals are powerful and have often a cynical undertone. BIGELF’s evolution is stunning, I’m more pleased with their progressive approach than the predictable and boring prog (metal) from a lot of known current bands. If you are up to heavy and compelling progrock, BIGELF is yours!

 

BIJOU - El Profeta (****)

- I discovered this new Spanish band while surfing on a Spanish site. The very positive review seduced me to order it, what a discovery! Bijou is an instrumental five piece band that plays in the 24-carat symphonic rock tradition with a modern sound. The seven compositions (running time more than 1 hour) are absolutely marvellous: lush and varied keyboards (from sparkling piano to bombastic orchestrations), very moving duo- guitarwork (many sensitive and howling soli, harder-edged riffs or twanging guitars), a splendid and energetic rhythm-section and lots of shifting moods, accellarations and great soli on keyboards and guitar. A very strong point is that Bijou plays wonderful and captivating progrock with an own identity, what an incredible high level for a new band with a debut-CD! The highlight on this CD is the epic titletrack (3 parts, almost 25 minutes) in which they manage to create a very captivating Morish climate featuring keyboards that sounds like the flamenco guitar in the piece "Zambra mora", one of the most Arab inspired flamenco rhythms. I keep my five stars for the next album!? Highly recommended for all progrock aficionados!

 

 

(THE) BLACK NOODLE PROJECT — Play Again (***1/2)

- It’s the third release of this French five piece progrock band but I had never heard of The Black Noodle Project, not really a progrock name or I must have missed the name is derived from Tolkien’s The Lord Of The Rings...

 

The 11 compositions sound very melodic and harmonic with the emphasis on creating emotion and atmospheres. I was often carried away by the huge tension between the mellow parts and the more bombastic pieces: very tasteful embellished with a soaring organ sound that reminds me of Rick Wright his Farfisa (70-73 Pink Floyd) and sensitive electric guitar featuring a great build up and intense final part in Tomorrow Birds Will Sing, a slow rhythm with Fender Rhodes piano and emotional, a bit theatrical vocals in the melancholic The Great Northern Hotel, between soaring and fiery rock in Garden Of Delights, spacey organ and swinging piano and clavinet in the compelling, Floydian-inspired To Pink From Blue and the highlight Happy End: first melancholic piano and vocals, then sensitive violin work and finally an excellent ‘grand finale’ featuring breathtakng interplay between violin, piano and electric guitar, goose bumps!

If you like 70-73 Pink Floyd, early Porcupine Tree and the melancholic progressive pop from bands like The Cure, Coldplay and Radiohead, check out this wonderful and compelling new French band The Black Noodle Project!

 
BLACK BONZO — Lady Of The Light (****)
Incredible, this is a Swedish five piece band from 2004 but it could have been an UK band from the very interesting Early British Progressive Rock Movement in the early Seventies! From the very first moment Black Bonzo takes you on a trip to the wonderful sound of the late Sixties and early Seventies with strong hints from early Uriah Heep (Hammond, vocal harmonies) but also echoes from The Moody Blues (Mellotron) and Argent ('heavy progressive' with Hammond organ and harder-edged guitar). The ten compositions sound warm, harmonic and varied featuring pleasant vocals and lots of majestic Mellotron waves and powerful Hammond organ runs along some fiery electric guitar. My final rating alternates between 3 and 4 stars but because of the Mellotron and Hammond organ I award Black Bonzo with a fully deserved 4 stars, WHAT A WONDERFUL AND WARM, VINTAGE KEYBOARD DRIVEN PROGROCK!!
 
BLACK BONZO – Sound Of The Apocalypse (****)

- In 2004 this Swedish formation released its debut CD entitled Lady Of The Light, it contains very pleasant work on Hammond and Mellotron and the sound is deeply rooted in the late Sixties/early Seventies, I love it!

This new CD has an awesome lay-out, especially the fold-out cover (similar to Yessongs but unfortunately on CD size) featuring a mindblowing painting of the apocalypse with lots of nature violence, very dark and ominous but also fascinating. But how about the music?

Well, I have to admit that my first listening session was a bit disappointing but gradually it grew, just like good prog! Black Bonzo their sound on this CD alternates between melodic rock and Heavy Prog with echoes from Seventies Uriah Heep and Kansas but less obvious than on their debut CD, Black Bonzo has matured in writing and done their best to sound more original. In general Black Bonzo delivers fluent and bombastic songs but it’s remarkable how many tracks contain interesting shifting moods and surprising musical ideas: Giant Games has a break with choir-Mellotron and xylophone, Yesterdays Friends starts with classical guitar and flute and in Ageless we can enjoy a typically late Sixties/early Seventies bluesrock guitar interlude. The long final composition Sound Of The Apocalypse (more than 13 minutes) sounds very strong: first fragile piano and warm vocals, from mellow it becomes more and more lush, than omonous and bombastic with wonderful classical orechestrations and after a great build-up with lots of tension, the grand finale is very compelling, topped by a sensitive electric guitar solo.

To me this sounds as a beautiful, very melodic CD loaded with vintage keyboards (Hammond, Mellotron and Minimoog), good vocals and tasteful compositions, a big hand for Black Bonzo!

 
BOOTCUT – De Fluff (***1/2)
- As a huge Hammond freak I got more and more impressed during the Beardfish gig on the first Symforce Festival, that young guy Rikard Sjöblom (who also plays guitar and sings) knows how to play the Hammond organ (I was told by other Hammond freak ‘Herman The Mellotron Man’), what a wonderful sound and how enthousiastic he performs! When a friend told me that Rikard his other musical project Bootcut was planned to play later that day I was on the first row half an hour before the show! Well, that gig was great and halfway I decided to sneak quickly a Bootcut CD on the Beardfish merchandising stand.

Bootcut has released 3 albums and this one entitled De Fluff is the second (from 2004). The band is a duo featuring Rikard Sjöblom (Hammond B3 organ, Nord Electro2 and ARP Pro Solist synthesizer) and Petter Diamant (drums and percussion) with additional musicians on woodwind – and brass instruments, guitar and contrabass. In general the 12 melodic and accessible compositions sound fluent and swinging with strong echoes from jazz (Bootcut often played in jazz clubs) but also rock and blues. Their music often brings late Sixties and early Seventies bands to my mind like The Spencer Davis Group (after Eddie Hardin had replaced Stevie Windwood who had just founded Traffic), Hardin & York (also a Hammond/drums duo), Brian Auger and Trace. And of course late Sixties fellow Swedish band Hansson & Karlson but less complex, less soloing and more keyboard variation like the synthesizer in Quintus Quest, the clavinet in Funck The Living Dead and the Fender Rhodes electric piano in the bluesy Istället För Att Jag Kom Till Skogen Kom Skogen Till Mig. Although Rikard plays less self-indulgent, we can enjoy some swirling and propulsive work like in Fresh Free Fruit (funky sound), Funck the Living Dead, Hang Em High and especially in Crazy Cookie where he freaks out, goose bumps! The interplay between Rikard and Petter is strong and often dynamic. In some songs we can welcome guest musicians on guitar, flute, trombone and saxophone, it give the music a pleasant extra dimension. A funny track is the final song Mutta, a swinging blend of organ, guitar and Turntables (by D-Cuts), that sound of playing LP’s with the hand, quite original in prog!

This is a very tasteful CD that will please the Hammond organ freaks.


C

 

CANVAS – Digital Pigeon (***1/2)

- This band is from the USA, in 2000 Canvas released their first album entitled The Rhythm And The Rhyme (a promo-CD), two years later followed by their second effort Avenues. Then there was silence until this year (2007) when Digital Pigeon came out, the brandnew Canvas album. So how about those five years between their second and third CD, did Canvas use their time?

Well, I was very pleasantly surprised about the huge variety and tasteful arrangements, this band can write compositions and make good music! Canvas hosts many musicians (you can read the names on the inside of the booklet on every track), the main members are drummer John Swope, bas player Matt Schweitzer, keyboardist/trumpet player Chris Cobel, multi-instrumentalist Tom Mattem en singer Greg Lounsberry. Tow of the fourteen tracks are insturmentals: the swinging Spider featurin gtrumpet and sensitive electric guitar and the exciting On Second Though with sparkling piano, swinging bass, fiery guitar and powerful trumpet. Remarkable are two songs that are written by known musicians: the late Jaco Pastorius write Teen Town (a blend of jazzrock and experimental with strong bass runs) and the Crichton brothers from Saga composed Catwalk (swirling flute and fiery and propulsive guitar work in teh vein of ... Saga). The other tracks are a pleasant blend of varied styles and atmospheres: dreamy with howling guitar in Ghost Town, swinging with piano, trumpet and fiery guitar in Armchair Voyager, acoustic guitar with warm vocals and a surprising synthesizer solo in A Reptile Dysfuntion, acoustic rhythm guitar and violin in the folky Lost In Transit and sensational keyboard play in the final song Move The Earth. And the melodic opener The Dark Side Of The Sun is very similar to early Camel because of the pleasant vocals, organ waves, moving guitar and warm climate. During my listening sessions I noticed the many strong points in Canvas their music: a high musical level of the musicians, four good singers, the sound of woodwind instruments deliver an extra dimension (like in Dutch band Alquin) en the work on guitar and keyboards is very varied and worked out very well. If you are up to varied prog, this is an album to check out!

 

CHAOS CODE – The Tragedy Of Leaps And Bounds (***1/2)

 - This is the second album by USA progrock band Chaos Code that features a guest musician on tenor saxophone and harmony vocals. Their sound is very melodic, pleasant, varied and often contains lots of dynamics. I also enjoyed the strong and tasteful work on (often harder-edged) guitar and keyboards. The short first track Unity has a bit ominous climate with Fripperian-like, quite fiery guitarplay. The following song Another Hand delivers lots of flowing shifting moods (from dreamy to heavy outbursts) with good work on saxophone, flute, acoustic guitar and propulsive electric guitar, very dynamic! Other interesting tracks are

A Reason To Kill (alternating with exciting guitar and sensational synthesizers), The Creature Self (captivating atmospheres, strong breaks and again great work on guitar and keyboards) and the long and compelling final song Distance (sparkling Fender piano with acoustic guitar and a wonderful, symphonic prog ‘grand finale’ with lush keyboards and a sensitive electric guitar solo. Chaos Code made three albums between 1999 and 2005, I am looking forward to listen to the other two because I am delighted about this strong effort with lots of original ideas!

 

COMBINATION HEAD – Combination Head (***1/2)

- This is a new UK progrock formation featuring a keyboardplayer, guitarist/bass player and three different drummers for the eight compositions. Their eponymous, instrumental debut CD delivers fluent and dynamic music with a lush keyboard sound (including a wide range of ‘vintage keyboards’) and great interplay by the musicians. The sound is melodic and very pleasant, I cannot trace weak songs and especially the work on the Hammond organ is outstanding like in Clover RD R.B.C. (captivating and alternating, from dreamy with piano to compelling with a bluesy Hammond sound and an accellaration with fiery guitar) and Devonshire Crescent (swirling solo and splendid drumming). Halfway this CD a mellow, very beautiful classical piano piece is a short mellow interlude but in general Combination Head delivers swinging tracks like the Jeff Beck (Wired-era) sounding The Bonk (flashy synthesizer – and biting electric guitar solo along powerful Hammond runs), the ELP-inspired Clover RD DEF (exciting Hammond – and Moog sound and howling guitar) and the hypnotizing, electronic oriented Fourteen (a slow rhythm with spacey synthesizers). The final song For What? Is a very strong ‘musical goodbey’: a fluent rhythm with fiery guitar and a swinging end featuring a spectacular synthesizer solo and again fiery guitar.

Highly recommended!

 

CONQUEROR — 74 Giorni (****)

- After their debut CD Istinto (2003) and the successor Storie Fuori Dal Tempo (2005), the Italian five piece band Conqueror has released its third studio album entitled 74 Giorni in 2007. Again the band has made notable progress, I am even impressed by the ten melodic, tasteful and varied compositions (some instrumental) delivering a wide range of instruments: a wonderful blend of soaring keyboards, powerful bass runs, a tight drum beat and sensitive electric guitar in Il Viaggio, lots of shifting moods with pleasant work on guitar and flute in Orca, a Sixties-like organ sound (The Animals/The Doors), wah-wah guitar, a flute solo and fluent synthesizer flights in teh alternating Non Maturi per l'Adilà, romantic piano play in the short Cormonrani, tasteful keyboards and varied guitar work (from heavy riffs to use of the tremolo arm) in L'ora del Parlare, Fender Rhodes piano and jazzy guitar in the short Miraggi and sensational Minimoog-like runs and a compelling part with raw guitar and soaring flute in the captivating Nebbia ad Occhi Chiusi. So lots of variety and soli on different instruments (from guitar and flute to saxophone and organ), this album grows every listening session and I am sure it will carry you away to Progheaven!

 

CREPUSCULE – L’Hymne A La Vie (****)

- This is a German band, rooted in 1984 and founded by the brothers Franco and Gerald Rouvinez, both born in the French part of Switzerland. The absolute highight in their long history is a joint performance with the legendary French progrock band Ange. In 1996 Crépuscule released their debuut CD entitled Les Lunes Se Lèvent that contains a blend of rock and French ‘chansons’, followed by the ‘unplugged’ CD Signe De Vie with old and new songs. And now we can enjoy the new album L’Hymne A La Vie, first part of a musical project, the next album will be released within 3 years.

Despite the hints to the music of Ange in this intro, only the powerful, expressive and sometimes theatrical vocals reminds me of early Ange, like in the songs Prologue RE and L’Armada. But in general the 19 melodic songs (in five parts between 3 and 21 minutes) are very tastefully arranged with the focus on the elements variety and creativity, what a wonderful and often compelling music this is: a slow rhythm with howling guitar runs (in the vein of Steve Rothery) and lush organ, followed by a tight rhythm with propulsive guitar riffs in Après Un Pas, harpsichord-like flights and slide-guitar in the dreamy L’Arbre Del Arrêt, a captivating contrast  between soaring keyboards with theatricals vocals and a compelling rhythm with howling guitar runs in Prologue RE, swinging neo-prog with ‘slap’ bas work and a delicate synthesizer solo in La Créature, expressive vocals, beautiful play on acoustic – and electric guitar and a majestic grand finale with a church organ sound and guitar in the moving Moeurs, an electronic oriented atmosphere with wonderful keyboard work in Prologue EL and varied sounds and a final part with a bombastich church organ sound in Mort De L’Irréel.

For me “never a dull moment’ on this almost 70 minutes long CD, what a captivating prog/Art-rock, highly recommended to those who are up to French vocals!

By the way, the packaging is in DVD format and contains a huge booklet with lyrics in French and German and I have read that Crépuscule is planning to tour with a wonderful lightshow, video clips and masks, check out this amazing German band!

 

D

 

D SOUND - Balkan (***)

- This is the second album from Hungarian four piece band D Sound. The opener "Karpat- medencei hangulat" features a wonderful, a bit spacey climate with keyboards (mainly strings) and percussion. The build-up is strong when a sensitive electric guitar enters and the atmosphere gradually becomes more bombastic. The second song "Doromb" contains the same ethnic elements as fellow Hungarians Solaris, very disctinctive. Most of the following nine compositions alternates between mellow and more bombastic, often Mike Oldfield comes to my mind. It sounds very pleasant and melodic, the sound is very clear and the interplay between the guitars and keyboards is very inventive. On "Challangar" a slow rhythm culminates into a final part with heavy guitar riffs and the sound of the dramatic countdown and crash from the Challenger capsule. The magnum opus on this CD is "73 mp - Challangar 2. " (at about 13 minutes), it contains acoustic rhythm guitar and then the Mike Oldfield-like atmosphere enters, very beautiful. The track "Gyemant Nap" delivers a slow rhythm with a bombastic climate including propulsive drum beats and sensitive electric guitar. The final song "Kozelebb a Naphoz" has soaring keyboards and spacey, slightly distorted guitar runs. This is a very tasteful, varied and modern sounding album featuring pleasant keyboards and lots of Mike Oldfield-inspired climates, WONDERFUL!

 

DAY SIX - Eternal Dignity (***1/2)   

- This is a Dutch symphonic metal band that is rooted in the early Nineties when schoolfriends Dolf en Robbie (at about 11 years old) founded their first band named King Of Darkness but it became really serious in ’97 when the two friends formed Peanuts. In 2002 they changed their name into Day Six in 2002, in that year the band includes Daan Liebregts on drums, Dolf van Heugten on synthesizers, Nick Verstappen on bass and Robbie van Stiphout on guitars and vocals. Days Six made two CD’s until now, their sound is a blend of hardrock (Metallica) with ‘heavy progressive’ (Rush and Ayreon) in a very refreshing way.

The album Eternal Dignity (2003) sound mature and dynamic with powerful vocals, strong and fiery guitarplay, inventive keyboardwork and a tight rhythm-section. The seven compositions deliver music that is described by the band as ‘symphonic metal’. This fits more than progressive metal because Day Six their sound is not loaded with endless biting guitar - of flashy keyboard ‘scale-acrobatics’: it contains lots of fresh ideas and captivating shifting moods. An interesting album from a promising Dutch progrock band.

 

DIAPASAO – Opus 1 (****)

- This is a Brasilian trio in which the band members play keyboards, bass and acoustic guitar and drums, with guest musicians on violin and cello. Their debut CD has strong classical overtones, mainly due to the frequent work on the Grand piano.

1. Diapasoa (8.05) : What an impressive start: after sparkling work on harpsichord, accompanied by a fluent rhythm-section, a long piece on the Grand piano follows, I am blown away by Rodrigo Lana his skills on the keyboards, what a virtuosic! Then we hear orchestral keyboards and some flashy synthesizer lfights along a surprising break with swinging jazzy piano play (with hints from Keith Emerson).

2. Som Do Brasil (1.54) : A short song featuring wonderful work on piano and acoustic guitar including a beautiful duet that sounds very warm.

3. Sonata (6.08) : Aftera n intro with orchestral keyboards, a piece with melancholical piano follows, then it’s swinging time with the distinctive Hammond organ sound, obviously inspired by Keith Emerson. The rhythm-section plays outstanding. The final part is an impressive solo piece on piano.

4. Do Ceu Ao Inferno (7.51) : This composition features guest musicians on violin and cello, they match perfectly with the classical piano. After a solo piece, the music gradually turns into a bombastic sound with virtuosic piano.

5. Fuga (2.01) : This is chamber music delivering classical guitar (with a Spanish undertone) and the distinctive harpsichord, I love these instruments!

6. Noite A La Caipirinha (8.05) : A very swinging rhythm with sparkling piano and then a bombastic climate with orchestral keyboards and an adventurous rhythm-section.

7. Rock Espanhol (3.12) : A swirling solo piece on paino, very alternating, awesome!

8. Jazz (5.29) : Indeed, jazz rules in this song, we can enjoy very swinging, jazzy inspired piano work.

9. Piccolo Finale (0.57) : This final compsoition features a swinging and dynamic atmosphere with a funny end, a good contrast with the virtuosic climate on the whole album.

If you like keyboard-driven prog like ELP, Trace, Triumvirat or Ars Nova, this great debut CD by Brasilian band Diapasao will delight you!

 

DIMESION X - So ... This Is Earth (***) 

— Here is a USA band that makes heavy progressive rock featuring very alternating and dynamic compositions, loaded with shifting moods (mellow with classical piano to metal with heavy metal-riffs), propulsive drumming (often in the metal-vein) and many spectacular soli on keyboards and guitar (fiery and biting). The vocals (not my favorite element on this CD) evoke the sound of the Eighties like Spandau Ballet, often with a bit wailing/dramatic undertone. This is a promising band, personally I’m more pleased with their less self- indulgent and more varied approach of progmetal than Dream Theater but I think that all those millions fans who are hailing and praising Dream Theater on Prog Archives should give this band a chance. Not every part of this CD can keep my attention but most compositions deliver lots of interesting and exciting moments. So Dimension X have to mature in their compositions but THIS IS A PROMISING DEBUT-CD!

 

DISTILLERIE DI MALTO- Manuale del Piccoli Discorsi (***1/2)

- Distillerie Di Malto is a Italian five-piece band that includes two guitar players and a keyboardist, on the last track completed by a flute player. This debut-CD is dedicated to René Magritte, one of my favorite surrealistic/magic realistic painters. On the first track “Allegro Con Brio” (5.56) the climate is ominous and ambient, then a fluent rhythm featuring organ and guitar follows, this sounds very obvious as the lovely Seventies Italian Progrock Scene! Enjoy the dynamic music with fiery electric guitar and wonderful keyboardplay. The next song is “Phoebus” (9.24), first a bit experimental including xylophone, repetetive bass and electric guitar with ints from early King Crimson. Then the moods shifts from up-tempo with mellow organ, fiery electric guitar and flute to dreamy with classical guitar and flute and atmospheric with flute, hi-hats and piano, very alternating. In “Melodia Di Fine Autunno” (8.42) it starts with a compelling climate that gradually grows to more bombastic, interfered by more mellow pieces until a long and sumptuous finale, featuring lush keyboards, harder-edged guitar and a dynamic rhythm- section. The next composition is the longest one entitled “Aria E Vento” (13.24), again a very alternating track: compelling with twanging guitars and great keyboards like sparkling piano, moving with a wonderful guitar solo in the vein of Hackett/Latimer, bombastic with organ and even anl interlude with classical guitar and flute. The music often evokes early Genesis, wonderful! The final song “5/5/1555” (11.32) starts with xylophone (like the second track) and electric guitar, followed by some sensational, mid-Emerson inspired synthesizer soli and lots of varied climates featuring strong Italian vocals, howling electric guitar and dreamy flute. The ‘grand finale’ delivers a moving atmosphere with a splendid build-up guitar solo, supported by lush keyboards, prog heaven! This CD has hints from Genesis (twanging guitars and organ), Camel (guitarwork) and King Crimson (the more complex and experimental parts) and contains five elaborate and tasteful coloured compositions, AN IMPRESSIVE DEBUT!

 

DORACOR - Evanescenze (***)  

— This CD sounds far from original, complex or adventurous but I love the 24-carat symphonic rock sound on this album! Most of the compositions contain a pleasant climate featuring warm Italian vocals and wonderful work on the keyboards, evoking early IQ and Pendragon, mid-Genesis and Banco (also because of some vocal parts). The colouring of the songs is great delivering fat synthesizer flights, sensitive piano, organ waves or howling electric guitar. The climates often sound bombastic but also mellow or swinging, layered with great work on the keyboards and guitar, very compelling!

 

DORACOR — Onirika (***)

- After listening to the wonderful Doracor albums Transizione (2001) and Evanescenze (2005) I was very curious to this new album from multi-instrumentalist Corrado Sardella and his band. Well, again Doracor managed to make a compelling album that is inspired by mid-Genesis (like the track Dimensione 4) but this time less obviously than in the past. The compositions sound melodic and alternating featuring lots of howling guitar runs and pleasant work on keyboards (from soft choir-Mellotron waves and mellow Fender Rhodes piano to fat synthesizers). I also enjoyed the wide range of instruments like saxophone, vibraphone and violin like in the titletrack. The vocal parts are sung by a male and female singer, especially the song Il Giardino Di Peitra contains a great performance by Gianna Chilla, blended with biting electric guitar, very exciting! If you are up to compelling symphonic prog, this album is a tasteful and pleasant discovery.

 

DR. NO — El Bufo De La Cort (***1/2)

- What a surprise: a Catalonian (region around famous Spanish city Barcelona) progrock band with a English name on a Dutch label! On the cover you will notice a jester (in Spanish this is the album title ‘bufo de la cort’), this reference is not a coincidence because from the very first moment on the music is drenched into the early Marillion sound. Especially the first track “Arlequi” sounds like a Catalonian progrock version of “Market Square Heroes” featuring an up-tempo rhythm and a enthousiastic approach. But Dr. No is more than just another early Marillion sounding group. First the wonderful lush keyboards sound, delivered by three members, featuring lots of keyboards including strings, a grand piano and the Mellotron. Second the very tasteful and refined compositions, from dreamy to compelling and even bluesy (the short Estacion Pirenaica has hints from early Wishbone Ash). Third the splendid, very compelling electric guitarwork (with echoes from Latimer and Rothery) featuring lots of sensitive, often howling soli, excellent! And four the beautiful vocals in the Catalonian language, a mix of Spanish. French and Portuguese. This is a wonderful symphonic rock album.

 

                              

DYONISOS – An Incidental Collection (***)

- The sound on this CD often comes mighty close to a David Gilmour album or it could have been ‘unknown post-Waters Pink Floyd sessions’, incredible! Especially the guitar and vocals are very similar to David Gilmour.

The 12 compositions sound pleasant and modern and the moods shift fluent from dreamy and spacey to mid-tempo and bombastic featuring lots of good guitar soli, from howling and fiery to some slide-guitar. I was often carried away by the splendid, very moving guitar work. The keyboards have a bit functional role delivering sensitive piano, organ waves and a few flashy synthesizer soli.

If you want to be flooded by Pink Floyd (post-Waers-era) inspired music or enjoy a Gilmour-tribute, this album is for you!

 

E

 

ECCENTRIC ORBIT-Attack Of The Martians (***1/2) 

- This is a four piece USA progrock formation. Some members have played in the progrock bands Pye Fyte (a ‘vintage’ keyboard heaven) and A Triggering Myth and on Gentle Giant covers albums. The line-up from Eccentric Orbit is Bill Noland on bass, Madeleine Noland on wind controlled synthesizer and keyboards, Mark Cella on drums and Derek Roeback on keyboards.

Despite the fact that some members played on Gentle Giant covers albums, Eccentric Orbit plays keyboard loaden progrock with strong echoes from ELP, the “Trilogy”-era. The five dynamic compositions feature a propulsive rhythm-section as a base for sumptuous keyboardplay with a leading role for the Hammond organ and Moog synthesizers, flight after flight, what a splendid tribute to ELP! In some songs we can trace the sound of the Fender Rhodes electric piano (imagine the legendary intro from “Riders on the storm” from The Doors), the Wurlitzer piano and the swinging clavinet. The strong title-track (3 parts) contains a bombastic duel between the Moog and Fender Rhodes. The even longer, very alternating track “Forbidden planet” (4 parts) starts with a spooky and hypnotizing climate, followed by lots of changes of atmosphere and tempo delivering many waves of a violin-Mellotron and runs on synthesizers, concluded by fragile pianoplay. Along ELP, this composition also evokes Ars Nova and other ELP-inspired Japanese bands like Social Tension and Deja Vu. The music on this instrumental CD is beyond original but sounds exciting.

 

 

ECHOLYN - The End Is Beautiful (***1/2) 

— This year I went to an Echolyn concert after watching their stunning DVD. Well, Echolyn blew me and the audience away, what a powerful sound and what a killer voice! On their new album “The end is beautiful” Echolyn has succeeded to capture the spirit ‘on stage’, what a dynamic and alternating sound and how elaborate the 8 compositions are.

1. Georgia pine (5.49) : A swinging rhythm and a powerful sound featuring raw vocals, evoking the early Kansas. The interplay is excellent, especially between the organ and rhythm- section. After a flashy synthesizer solo and a fiery electric guitar solo follows a break with emotional vocals and tender piano. Then heavy guitar-riffs, lush Hammond organ and again raw vocals. The music sound scaptivating and contains a lot of tension.

2. Heavy blue miles (6.48) : This composition is loaded with shifting moods and changes of accellaration, from slow with piano and fine vocals to fluent and bombastic with fiery electric guitar and floods of organ. Remarkable is the integration of brass (sax and trumpet), very distinctive are their organ-guitar interplay and the vocal hamronies (like Gentle Giant).

3. Lovesick morning (10.12) : A melancholical song (as you could expect from this title) with a slow rhythm, wailing vocals, several sound effects and trumpet play in the vein of Miles Davis. The build-up and final part are wonderful featuring a splendid solo on the lap-steel-guitar.

4. Make me sway (5:22) : Again lots of variation, from slow to mid-tempo and bombastic, all layered with lush Hammond organ, a fat guitar sound and powerful, inspired vocals. The pieces with sampled choir-Mellotron are awesome! The closing section contains a fine organ solo with propulsive drums and guitar riffs.

5. The end is beautiful (7:45) : The titletrack alternates between dreamy and fiery featuring great play on the slide-guitar and electric piano along nice vocal harmonies and strong interplay between organ and drums. The final part includes brass sounds and a fiery, very compelling guitar solo.

6. So ready (5:01) : This song starts with sounds-effects, then a lush and bombastic sound and a swinging rhtyhm featuring the distinctive Hohner D6 clavinet sound.

7. The arc of descent (Dancing in a motel just est of Lincoln) (5:46) : This track is mainly dreamy with melancholical vocals and tender piano, gradually the sound becomes more and more dramatic with dynamic interplay between drums and organ and howling electric guitar.

8. Misery, not memory (9:03) : The final composition is very alternating and loaded with heavy guitar-riffs, bombastic organ and powerful vocals. A strong part is with a swinging piano, often blended with the electric guitar. Remarkable are the ‘ambient samples’, the final part is again swinging featuring strong drums and inspired vocals, what an excellent and varied singer this man is!

During the years Echolyn has turned into an unique progrock band. With this album they have prooved that this USA band is on the level of other great bands like Spock’s Beard. Highly recommended!

 

EYE TO EYE – One In Every Crowd (***)

- This is a new French band who mentions in the booklet fellow Dutchman Arjen Lucassen as a very supportive and inspirational person, Eye To Eye has even covered the Ayreon track Back On Planet Earth.

Their sound is wonderful and alternating although I had to get used to the vocals. The strong guitarplay has echoes from David Gilmour and Stee Rothery because of the emotional overtones and flowing sound. The keyboard work changes from dreamy with sensitive piano to powerful organ waves and spectacular synthesizer flights. The two long compositions (both more than 15 minutes) are the highlights on this CD, first Love And Pain (very dynamic with howling guitar and tasteful and varied keyboards) and the alternating One Day (a strong contribution on violin and great guitar work delivering howling and biting runs).

Eye To Eye is a new and promising band with a good taste for atmosphere and dynamics, worth to discover for progheads who wants to explore the boundaries between symphonic – and heavy progressive.

 

EX-VAGUS – AMES VAGABONDES (***)

- This Swiss five-piece formation is rooted in 1995, their musical goal was to blend progressive rock and French vocals. The information about Ex-Vagus mentions : “the band joins together five authors and creators in a permanent creativity, having for ‘Leitmotiv’ the systematic association of the visual world with the auditive world, from where principal will to dramatize their music”. Ex-Vagus concretized this artistic line by creating two rock opera’s- “Par Dela Les Legendes” (2000) and “Seconde Lumière” (2004) – calling upon original lights creations, a particular scenography and external actors. Ex-Vagus produced a demo-CD and four CD’s and was the support-act for progrock bands Ange, Barclay James Harvest, Focus, The Watch and Ars Nova. The album Ames Vagabondes is their third studio effort and sounds in the vein of third rock-opera’s: often dramatic music featuring strong, typical French theatrical vocals, sumptuous keyboard layers and lots of wonderful, often sensitive electric guitar soli. The band has a very professional approach and in their eight compositions (tasteful and inventive arrangements) the emphasis is on creating a dramatic atmosphere in which the inspired vocals are very important. A pleasant album that will please the Ange fans (Christian Decamps joins the band on one song) and those who love dramatic prog.

 



Edited by erik neuteboom - October 14 2007 at 07:23
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F

 

FINISTERRE - La Meccanica Naturale (****) 

— Shame on me, I must have overlooked an Italian gem because I only knew this band by name! I just got this (eight!) Finisterre album from a friend and it blew me away, it sounds so captivating and alternating and the 10 compositions are very tasteful and elaborate. Some songs remind me of the famous Seventies Italians progrock legend PFM, Banco en Museo Rosenbach but Finisterre manages to surprise me again and again with musical twists and turns, great! Other tracks has very different climates, from classical piano and trombone (?) to jazzy piano with wah-wah guitar and Mellotron. The final three songs delivers great build-ups, compelling climates and splendid grand finales featuring fiery electric guitar, lush keyboards and inspired vocals. The music on this album is not always accessible but it has so many wonderful moments, A must for every Italian progrock aficionado!!

 

FLAMBOROUGH HEAD — Tales Of Imperfection (***1/2)

- The Dutch band Flamborough Head is not the most prolific one, Tales Of Imperfection is their fifth in 8 years. But listening to this latest effort I can conclude that it is their most mature album. I have seen the band a few times, even on their annual performance on the Dutch Progfarm Festival. By the way, I can recommend every proghead to visit this festival featuring many less known but interesting progrock bands!

The seven compositions on this new CD (running time at about 52 minutes) sound pleasant and melodic and are a very tasteful arranged blend of classic, folk, rock and symphonic with the emphasis on the traditional symphonic rock from the Seventies with echoes from early Camel and Renaissance. The keyboards from Edo Spanninga are lush and varied: sparkling piano and soft violin-Mellotron in Maureen, classical piano, a church-organ sound and in the end a Peter Bardens-like synthesizer solo in Higher Ground and wonderful interplay with the flute and electric guitar in most of the songs. But the most impressive contribution on this CD is delivered by guitar player Eddie Mulder, from sensitive and warm to fiery and harder-edged and subtle use of slide and volume pedal, what an outstanding guitar work! The female vocalist (also flute) Margriet Boomsma will never gain the 'Annie Haslam award' but her voice sound less sharp than in the past, a bit more warm. If you are up to wonderful and pleasant 24 carat symphonic rock, this one is yours!

 

FLOR DE LOTO — Madre Tierra (****)

- In 2005 the Peruvian progressive folk rock formation Flor De Loto released their eponymous debut album. I was pleased with the blend of Andean flutes and rock with fiery guitars and dynamic drums. But in my opinion the songs sounded a bit too similar in the end. Listening to this successor entitled Madre Tierra (2007) I notice a huge progress in the ten compositions. From the very first moment we can enjoy the very distinctive, quite melancholical Andean flutes. The atmospheres range from dreamy with mellow flute and acoustic guitar to rock with fiery electric guitar and a propulsive rhythm-section. My highlights are Danza Celta (captivating contrast between sparkling flute traverse and raw guitar), Andaluces (great Andalucian climate with excellent work on flute and acoustic – and electric guitars and lots of dynamics) and the alternating La Ley De La Vida (strong echoes from Jethro Tull with heavy guitar, swirling flute traverse and bitin guitar solo in the final part). I am delighted about this captivating Flor De Loto sound evoking Los Jaivas (without keyboards) and bands like Jethro Tull and Focus, unique prog that deserves wider attention!

 

FREE SYSTEM PROJEKT — Protoavis (***) 

- The Free System Projekt is an electronic trio featuring Marcel Engels, Frank van der Wel and Ruud Heij. They have delivered a beautiful album, containing three mega-long tracks. It opens with “In the ocean of Tethys” (22.39), this track is based upon the warm and unique sound of the string-ensemble, interwoven with flute-Mellotron solo runs and floods of choir-Mellotron. If you like Phaedra-era Tangerine Dream, this is an ‘electronic nirvana’ for you! Halfway pulsating sequencers join in, accompanied by lots of typical synthesizer sounds. In the second composition “Protoavis” (36.35) the trio succeeds to translate the dark and mysterious underwaterworld into a hypnotizing and a bit eerie sonic landscape, using a wide range of keyboards and electronic devices. It has obvious echoes from Jean- Michel Jarre. The last part contains a spectacular rolling sequencer sound and lots of synthesizer flights. The final number “Desolate landscape” (16.12) has a fat and low synthesizer sound, lots of violin-Mellotron, culminating in a splendid tribute to the retro- sound of early Tangerine Dream (74-77). This fine CD is a proove of the blossoming Dutch electronic music scene (annual festivals, some good labels and a wonderful magazine entiled E-dition).

 

FREE SYSTEM PROJEKT — Moyland (***1/2) 

- In my opinion FSP their music deserves more attention from the electronic music aficionados, what an outstanding trio from my home country The Netherlands, I am really proud on these guys!

This CD features the titletrack in five parts, ranging from 7 to almost 20 minutes. Part 1 starts with a spacey atmosphere featuring soaring violin – and flute Mellotron waves and soft synthesizer flights. Halfway pulsating sequencers enter and gradually the music swells to exciting electronic music with great synthesizers sounds. Part 2 delivers floods of compelling violin – and mighty choir-Mellotron along deep bass sounds. Part 3 has a percussive oriented climate with many pleasant synthesizer sounds. Part 4 is the highlight on this CD, it contains the strongest hints to the 74-78 Tangerine Dream era: very exciting featuring propulsive sequencing, awesome choir-Mellotron eruptions and synthesizer runs that are very similar to distorted guitar as on the live 2-LP Encore from TD. Part 5 starts spacey with soaring violin-Mellotron and soft, slow bass sounds. Then the music swells delivering great interplay between the three keyboard players with lots of fine synthesizer runs, Mellotron waves and ‘rolling’ sequencers, another strong track! The final composition is entitled Transition, first it has a spacey climate with soaring strings and pulsating sequencers, then a catchy rhythm with beautiful syntheiszer sounds. The interplay is very tasteful and carries you away to an ‘electronic music heaven’.

This is wonderful music for the electronic aficionados!!

 

G

 

GALAHAD (EN) — Live in Poland – Resonance (***)

- Many years ago Galahad was a promising neo-prog band but when they completely failed to make impression during a triple progrock concert in Amsterdam in the late Nineties, I decided to drop Galahad. So I was very surprised when I got this DVD, I didn't know that Galahad was still alive and I was even more surprised to notice that they are not only alive but also very progging!

After the intro based upon Prokofiev (like ELP) we hear an electronic inspired sound, propulsive guitar riffs and the singer enters the stage with a remarkable outfit: eye make-up, black painted nails, a long coat and a silken sjawl, he could have been the singer of a glamrock - or Eighties New Wave band! But his voice his strong and his stage antics are great with lots of expression, this man knows how to entertain a progrock audience. In the past Galahad their sound had obvious mid-Genesis echoes but the current Galahad sounds electronic featuring sumptuous kebyoards layers, frequent synthesizer sounds and fiery, often propulsive guitar work. During my first session I got more and more impressed by this Galahad on DVD: great interplay, wonderful visuals and lots of strong soli on guitar (varied but functional) and keyboards (from church- organ to swinging piano). At some moments the music reminds me of IQ because of the sumptuous keyboards and fiery guitar but in general Galahad sounds quite unique. The bonus features are a nice docu (15 minutes), an interview and studio recordings. Recommended to the more adventurous progheads! Rating: 3,5 stars.

 

GALAHAD (EN) — Empires Never Last (****)

- A few weeks ago I wrote a review about Galahad their new DVD entitled Live In Poland – Resonance. I was delighted about the exciting prog by this current line-up, the last time I heard Galahad was in the mid-Nineties during a triple prog concert in Holland with a very disappointing Galahad performance so I decided to focus on other bands. This new album is produced by guitarplayer Karl Groom who played in the neo-prog bands Casino and Shadowland (with Clive Nolan) and mainly with prog metal formation Threshold along guest work on records from Mercy Train, Strangers On A Train, Peter Gee (Pendragon) and Tracy Hitchings (Landmarq), most musicians had a contract with SI Music, allied to SI Magazine, the Dutch progrock magazine I worked for many years in the Nineties.

In general the 7 compositions sound bombastic featuring sumptuous keyboard layers, propulsive guitar riffs, howling and fiery guitar soli and expressive vocals (from warm and dreamy to ominous and dramatic). The captivating elements in Galahad their new sound are the great tension and lots of musical surprises: an intro with fragile piano runs, then a compelling and bombastic climate and a break with sensitive electric guitar play in Termination, an intro with exciting sequencing, splendid guitarwork, excellent vocals and a majestic church-organ sound in the alternating and emotional I Could Be God (quite cynical view on mankind and religion), a swinging bass, mellow Fender Rhodes piano and a bombastic final part with fiery guitar in the captivating titletrack and wonderful keyboards (from fragile to sparkling piano, bombastic synthesizers and soaring Mellotron) and a closing section featuring howling guitar runs in de alternating final song This Life Could Be My Last.

I am impressed by Galahad anno 2007, what a compelling musical experience, way more interesting and original than the pleasant but predictable neo-prog like the debut CD Nothing Is Written!

 

GALF – Spirals Of Time (***1/2)

At his moment we can enjoy lots of interesting Latin-American prog like Tarkus and Diapasao from Brasil, Astralis from Chili, Bauer and William Gray from Argentina and ... four piece band GALF from Brazil.

The first composition has a running time of 25 minutes but I couldn’t trace boring moments: strong play on guitar and keyboards: fiery guitar runs, sparkling piano, wonderful parts with classical guitar and Grand piano and flowing shifting moods, from dreamy with a beautiful strings-sound to a mid-tempo with great guitar and bombastich with sensational synthesizer flights. The other tracks are also very alternating and pleasant with flashy keyboards, sensitive guitar and a Mark Knopfler –like solo in Universe, first a bluesy climate with howlin guitar and then a great build-up and bombastic finale with lush keyboards and agai nhowling guitar in Earth. I was less pleased with the mediocre English vocals, I hope GALF will take another singer or decide to sing in their native language. Anyway, most of the music is instrumental on a high level so there is a lot to enjoy on this fine debut CD!

 

GALLERY – Jas Grippen (***)

- This is a new Norwegian five piece band, their debut CD entitled Jas Grippen is released this year (2007). The music reminde me of their progrock neighbours Anekdoten because of the melancholical vocals and the dynamics between the mellow parts and fluent rhythms. But Gallery sounds more raw and but not Mellotron drenched, in fact you can categorize it as melodic rock with progressive tendencies.

Gallery plays tight and powerful, especially in the songs with fluent rhythms and propulsive guitar work, accompanied by an adventurous rhythm-section. The guitarplay is tasteful (from relaxed twanging chords to fiery and howling soli) and the keyboards sound functional but varied and pleasant (from piano and organ to even some violin-Mellotron. This band has chosen for tastefully arranged compositions instead of complexity and many soli. If you like melodic rock with progressive ideas, this is a band to check out.

 

GAN EDEN IL GIARDINO DELLE DELIZIE – Lavori In Corso (***1/2)

- Another wonderful packaged CD from the Italian label Btf. featuring a cover that stimulates your fantasy and a booklet with lots of information. This new Italian band ‘with the long name’ is a project by Angelo Santo Lombardi (vocals, Hammond organ, Minimoog synthesizer, pipe organ and synthesizers) along with musicians on acoustic- and electric guitar, drums, bass and vocals. The music is obviously rooted in the 24-carat symphonic prog tradition of the Seventies, mainly because of the frequent use of vintage keyboards like the Hammond and the Minimoog. After a few listening sessions I noticed a huge difference of composing quality between the first and final track! The opener Dolce Brezza starts in a pleasant atmosphere but goes on and on without any tension or musical ideas, only the final part delivers a sensitive electric guitar solo and a fluent shifting mood with tasteful piano and organ but 10 minutes is way too long for this track. The final composition I Take All The Way showcases Gan Eden Il Giadino Delle Delizie at their best: lots of variety and dynamics and exciting work on guitar and keyboards: sparkling Grand piano, fat Minimoog flights, a sensitive electric guitar solo, a fluent rhythm-section and organ play that strongly reminds me of famous Le Orme (Collage-era). The other four songs sound pleasant and melodic with a tasteful colouring by the guitar and keyboards like warm Grand piano, fat Minimoog runs and a pipe organ interlude in the titletrack, slow and fat Minimoog flights, howling guitar and sparkling piano in La Canzione Della Bimba and mellow Hammond runs with fiery guitar in E Dopa Il Vento. The Italian vocals on this album sound warm and inspired in the typical Seventies Italian prog tradition like Metamorfosi and Le Orme.

Apart from the first composition I enjoyed this wonderful symphonic prog album and I hope this is not another Italian one-shot-band, recommended to fans of Seventies Italian Symphonic Prog!

 

GOSTA BERLINGS SAGA – Tid Ar Ljud (***)

- What a beautiful name for a progrock band in which two members are mentioned as playing the unsurpassed Mellotron, unfortunately only in two songs and not really omnipresent. The focus is on the Fender Rhodes electric piano, caressing our ears whith its very distinctive sound in most of the tracks. A strong point in Gosta Berlings Saga their music is the interplay between the guitar and keyboards but I am also impressed by the subtle shifting moods and creative musical ideas. This makes listening to this Swedish progrock band to a special experience because it sounds quite orignal with jazzy undertones and a tasteful colouring by instruments like the flute, slide-guitar, violin, some spectacular synthesizer work and a few Mellotron waves.

If you like instrumental prog with an adventurous touch and the accent on melodies and harmony, this is a fine album to check out.

 
(THE) GOURISHANKAR — 2nd Hands (****)
- Here’s another interesting Russian formation after Little Tragedies, Infront, Aviva, Lost World and Apple Pie: The Gourishankar, what an exciting prog! The sound of this Russian four piece band (with additional guest musicians on violin, saxophone, flute and backing vocals) is a Pandora’s Box of musical surprises.
Take for example the first composition entitled Moon7: first a fluent rhythm with heavy organ, fast synthesizer runs, Allan Holdsworth inspired guitar work, powerful guitar riffs and propulsive drumming, in between a swinging piano and suddenly a violin solo or a Spanish guitar with percussion, “never a dull moment”! The other 7 tracks also deliver lots of variety, musical ideas and shifting moods: from swinging to bombastic featuring pleasant work on guitar and keyboards, propulsive guitar riffs, a sparkling piano solo and fiery guitar in Endless Drama, classical piano and violin the short song Taste A Cake, a modern and electronic sound in The Inexpressive Chagrin (including theatrical vocal parts and a saxophone solo), End (a bit similar to Eighties elektro pop) and their ‘magnum opus’ Marvelous Choice (almost 20 minutes): an electronic intro, then bombastic symphonic prog with fiery guitar, followed by lots of shifting moods, nice musical ideas and pleasant keyboard work, from classical piano to flashy synthesizer flights, very dynamic and exciting!
My conclusion about The Gourishankar their varied music: it often sounds exciting and captivating but often the music goes into all directions, like from Seventies Prog to Eighties Elektro Pop, you have to be up to that huge variety!
H

 

HAMADRYAD — Safe In Conformity (***1/2) 

- This kind of progrock is the reason why I still love to make reviews after 15 years, what an interesting and varied sound! Hamadryad is a band from Quebec, Safe In Conformity is the second effort after their acclaimed debut CD entitled Conservation Of Mass. The line-up has slightly changed because lead singer/guitarplayer Jocelyn Beaulieu has left and bass player Jean-Francois Désilets took over the vocals. After reading the reviews about the first album (which I haven’t heard), I get the idea that Hamadryad is almost another band on this new album, take a look at those reviews to compare! Jean-Francois his vocals evoke Peter Gabriel his vocals in a similar way The Watch does. This Italian band comes more to my mind on this album but in general Hamadryad their music indeed has strong Genesis undertones (between Foxtrot and Wind And Wuthering): twanging 12-string acoustic guitars, Moog Taurus bass pedals and organ work in the vein of Tony Banks. But don’t judge this new promising band as a Genesis clone because they have their sound but Hamadryad is way from a copycat!

-  The 11 compositions sound elaborate and varied: great build-ups and grand finales, fluent shifting moods and lots of exciting soli on guitar (some wah-wah) and synthesizer. The one moment the music is mellow with twanging guitars, the other moment it is bombastic, dynamic or it contains a fiery or even metallish guitar solo or spectacular work on keyboards, very compelling and exciting. Some examples: the short piece Sparks And Benign Magic features a wonderful Mellotron and Moog Taurus bass pedalls sound, One Voice evokes Red-King Crimson era delivering propulsive electric guitar riffs and dynamic interplay between drums and guitar and Self Made Man changes from mellow into bombastic with splendid play on guitar and keyboards. I am very curious to the development of this very promising Canadian band

 

HAMADRYAD — Live In France 2006 (***1/2)
- After two studio-albums the Canadian quartet Hamadryad has released a live-CD that was recorded on the Crescendo Festival in France. You can read the enthousiastic comments by the band members about the atmosphere and the enviroment in the booklet. In general Hamadryad sounds dynamic and often exciting featuring lots of bombastic and heavy parts with some mellow moments: a wonderful sampled Mellotron intro followed by a powerful bass, a fiery guitar solo and a spectacular pitchtbend driven synthesizer solo in the opener Sparks And Benign Magic / Self Made Man, raw and biting guitar and sensational keyboard work like a blend of prog metal and Red-era King Crimson in the songs Amora Demonis, Nameless and One Voice, wah-wah guitar, wonderful Mellotron sounds, howling guitar and again spectaculair pitchbend driven synthesizer flights in Polaroid Vendetta, an intro featuring soaring keyboards and gradually a more lush sound ending with a great grand finale with choir-Mellotron and sensitive electric guitar in Still They Laugh Pt. 1 / Pt. 2 and finally a catchy rhythm with blistering guitar and flashy synthesizer runs in ...Action! So a lot of excitement but unfortunately I have to conclude that the vocals are often mediocre and a bit too theatrical and at some moments even a bit of a blow to the music. In my opinion Hamadryad should continue as an instrumental band, that’s their quality and I enjoyed it a lot!

HOSTSONATEN - Springtides (***1/2)  

- I only knew this Italian band by name but they surprised me very positively with this compilation CD with songs recorded between 1992 and 2002. The musical brainchild is multi- instrumentalist Fabio Zuffanti, he mentions in the booklet: "These songs are taken by different kind of supports (tapes, CD, DAT, etc.) and the sound quality is not ever very good but I hope you can like them becasue in these songs you can find the roots of the Hostsonaten works in this 10 years, thanks to you all!".

Indeed, especially on the first track the recording quality is at the level of a bootleg but in general the sound is decent, absolute not disturbing (to me). The first three songs "Ace of sunlight", "Starfields" and "Seascape" sound mellow featuring fine guitar and some saxophone and Mellotron. The English vocals are mediocre, if you are Italian, please sing your wonderful native language! Then the next lush progrock tracks "Season of Eve" (a bit bombastic mid-tempo piece with irritating computer drums but it only was meant to explain the musicians how to play the parts), "Aries" (very alternating featuring church-organ and a fiery, R&R inspired guitar solo), "Rainbow" (an exciting composition with a sitar intro and then dynamic and sumptuous progrock with duo-keyboards), "Morning" (a splendid track with wonderful flute samples, sensitive electric guitar, sparkling piano, impressive Mellotron waves and many shifting moods, this is Hostsonaten at their best!) and "Living stone and 1st reprise" (first a swinging rhythm with a strong bass sound and then a compelling climate delivering howling electric guitar and majestic choir-Mellotron and beautiful piano, GREAT!). The final two, new songs "The night the moon fell down" and "Crossing the bar" contain acoustic guitar and vocals and will appear one day on an entire acoustic album Fabio hopes.

After listening to this compilation CD, I will for sure try to listen to more albums from Hostsonaten!

 

I

 

ICE-The Saga (***)  

- This new Dutch progrock formation Ice is an offshoot from Dutch band Maryson, the brainchild of writer/keyboardist Wim Stolk. He is not present on this CD, the keyboards are by Ardie Westdijk who once played with his brother in Dutch progrock band Differences in The Eighties.

So here we have some experienced prog musicians, this is obvious on The Saga because the 10 compositions sound very professional and pleasant (melodic, harmonic, tasteful and varied): from dreamy to bombastic up-tempo (with echoes from Pendragon) in the opener Starlight, a lush symphonic rock sound delivering howling electric guitar in The Trail, dreamy and compelling featuring a fiery saxophone solo in Not Only Love, from slow to up-tempo with pleasant keyboard work (including a sitar sound) and a wonderful guitar solo in The River and bombastic with Floydian guitar and flashy synthesizer runs in Setback. The final long track This Battle delivers a splendid final part: first acoustic rhythm guitar and vocals with strong hints from early Uriah Heep, then exciting symphonic rock with great soli on guitar, saxophone and keyboards. The vocals on this CD are excellent: Hein v/d Broek delivers emotion and variety and succeeds to give the songs an extra dimension with his singing.

Dutch band Ice has made a strong debut-CD, at some moments a bit polished but in general very tasteful and entertaining with the strong guitar play and tasteful colouring by the keyboards as the main assets.

 

INDACO – Tracce Mediterranee (***)

- This is an interesting musical project from Italy, rooted in 1991. The musical brainchild is Banco member Rodolfo Maltese (guitars). Indaco have made 6 studio albums, one live album and just released this live DVD (recorded early 2006 in Rome, Italy). As the title suggests, it’s an encounter of ethnic music from countries around the Mediteranean See: we can enjoy the Greek bouzouki, the Spanish flamenco, assorted Arabian percussion and instruments like the flute, bagpipe, violin, clarinet, trumpet (by Rodolfo Maltese!) and acoustic guitar. Along these folky elements, the music also contains prog elements by playing on drums, electric bass, keyboards and electric guitar and – sitar. All in all a colourful blend of instruments that sounds captivating, especially in compositions like Andalusiana (a bit sultry climate and an exciting mix of bagpipe, bouzouki, flute and percussion along fluent work on piano and flamenco guitar), Ascea (bagpipe, bouzouki and Minimoog-like flights), Teatro Do Mar (compelling with bluesy vocals, tango-like accordeon and again delicate flamenco guitar play), Mediterraneo (swinging rhythm with folky guitar and the sound of a sitar) and Norwegian Wood (expressive female voice and Morish undertones). Then the legendary Banco singer Francesco Di Giacomo (recently voted as the best singer is a Prog Archives poll), immediately he succeeds to evoke nostalgic feelings with his great, very distinctive voice with echoes from the Seventies Banco.

To me this sounds as a very interesting DVD but you have to be up to a folky sound!

 
INFRONT — Wordless (***1/2)
- This a Russian four piece band with additional guest muscians on keyboards, flute, trumpet and trombone. Last week I had the pleasure to meet the drummer and guest keyboard player when they were in Amsterdam too. I was pleased with the very passionate way the drummer ‘KS ‘ told about his appreciation for Bill Bruford.
- Well, listening to Infront their debut CD I am not surprised that he mentioned Bill Bruford because KS his drumming has obvious hints: powerful, inventive and frequent use of the hi-hats. Infront their sound is often dynamic and propulsive featuring a fluent rhythm-section and great duo-guitar work, from mellow twanging chords (888 and RUNNN) and sensitive runs (Chinese Butterfly) to fiery soli (like biting wah-wah pedal in 888) and heavy riffs (RUNNN). The way Infront slows down the music at some moments creates a lot of tension with the in general fiery and violent sound, I love their dynamics! The three guest musicians deliver a tasteful contribution like the trumpet/trombone in Autumn Velvet (a kind of mellow ‘salsa-King Crimson’) and sparkling flute in the alternating, quite dreamy epic composition Chinese Butterfly. This Russian band doesn't make very accessible prog, in my opinion their sound has echoes from other King Crimson inspired band like Shylock (second album Ile De Fièvre) from France, Chilean formation Eksimio and Swedish top band Anekdoten (without Mellotron) because of the fiery guitar, the propulsive rhythm-section and the violent climates. Infront their music is focussed on awesome interplay and creating dynamic atmospheres.
- If you are up to adventurous prog and you don't have a problem with the minimal contribution of keyboards, this is a band to discover!

 

INTERPOSE+ - Interpose+ (****)

- WOW, this is an amazing debut CD from a Japanese band that has so much to offer and an incredible high level of musicianship!

1. Aircon (11:03): The intro delivers a slow and compelling rhythm with howling electric guitar, then a powerful mid-tempo rhythm with jazzrock overtones and great interplay. Lots of dynamic shiftings moods, pleasant female vocals and great soli on electric guitar, synthesizer and violin (Akihisa Tsuboy from KBB). Their sound reminds me of fellow Japanese band Providence because of the female vocals and jazzrock inspiration.2. Dayflower (10:04): A slow rhythm with a dreamy atmoshpere featuring awesome violin-Mellotron flights. Gradually the music becomes more lush and dynamic featuring moving, often howling electric guitar runs and a spectacular synthesizer soli. The final part delivers a short piece on classical guitar.3. Zitensia (8:30): This compositions contains dynamic an powerful interplay (guitar, piano, rhythm-section) and many fiery and howling electric guitar soli (including wah-wah). The level is very high and evokes the excellent jazzrock from Mahavishnu Orchestra, splendid!4. Koibumi (10:55): A wonderful track with a great build-up, first dreamy with flute-like keyboards, warm female vocals and tender piano runs, then gradually more lush featuring a sensitive electric guitar solo. Again Providence is on my mind because of the powerful female vocals and dynamic interplay. The final part delivers some beautiful classical guitar and just another splendid, very sensitive electric guitar solo.5. Last Sign (7:16): The atmosphere is dreamy with slow and sensitive jazzy guitar runs, soaring keyboards and strong drums. The music becomes more dynamic with sensational synthesizer flights and fiery electric guitar runs, the rhythm-section sounds strong and propulsive. The second part delivers exciting dynamic music with a swirling Hammond organ solo and harder-edged electric guitar, the interplay is amazing!

THIS IS ONE OF THE BEST JAPANESE PROGROCK ALBUMS EVER MADE, I AM SURE IT WILL PLEASE BOTH THE SYMPHONIC ROCK FANS AS THE MORE JAZZROCK INSPIRED AFICIONADOS!!

 

J

 

JAEN KIEF–Las Hadas No Vuelan Mas/1.Vagas Nubes (***)

- Usually Colombia is associated with drug wars and extreme violence, you should almost forget that people still make music, even progressive rock! Jaen Kief is a formation from the infamous Colombian city Medellin, in 2003 they released this CD. The seven compositions (some are divided in several parts) sound very tasteful and varied, this is already emphasized in the different atmosphere between the first two tracks: Prologo contains twanging acoustic guitars and warm vocals while Obertura is loaded with a bombastic sound featuring howling electric guitar and propulsive drum beats. On the other songs the music alternates between folk, classical and symphonic rock, especially the electric guitar soli (with echoes from Hackett and Gilmour) are wonderful and very compelling. But the keyboards are also worth to be mentioned, from sparkling piano to soaring strings and a sumptuous church organ sound. A strong point in Jaen Kief their prog is the integration of a variety of instruments like flute traverse (evoking Jethro Tull), saxophone, acoustic guitar and assorted percussion, embellished with inspired Spanish male and female vocals (at some moments a bit theatrical). This makes listening to Jaen Kief to a pleasant musical journey. I hope to hear more from this delicate Colombian band, it is 3 years ago that this CD was released ... do they still exist?

 

K

 

KARFAGEN – The Space Between Us (***1/5)
- After their promising debut CD Continium from 2006, very soon we can enjoy a new album entitled The Space Between Us. On this CD Karfagen their sound is even more varied and adventurous, this is genuine progressive rock, miles away from the Classic Seventies Prog like Yes, Genesis, ELP, Jethro Tull, King Crimson or Pink Floyd. Karfagen delivers a modern, very eclectic progressive blend of folk, rock, classical, electronic and even some avant-garde. I give you some examples: sparkling keyboards, propulsive guitar, harmonica, strange sounds, a jzaay synthesizer solo and fiery guitar in the alternating The Great Circus, strong interplay between powerful guitar and vaired keyboards (including a jazzy synthesizer solo) in the experimental/avant-garde sounding The Other Side, first soaring kebyoards, then a tight mid-tempo with propuslive drums, fiery guitar and flashy keyboards in Labyrinth, an electronic atmosphere in the vein of Tomita and Larry Fast in Kingsisher And Dragonflies, a slow and bombastic climate with choir-Mellotron, Moog flights and slide –guitar in Let Go and compelling symphonic prog with howling guitar and fluent synthesizer runs in the titletrack. This music wil not be every proghead’s cup of tea but I am impressed by the adventurous and varied sound on this new Karfagen CD!
 

KBB – Live 2004 (****)

- After the awesome new Japanese progrock band Interpose, here is another great discovery from the ‘Land of the rising sun’, the new and very promising four piece band KBB. On this live CD you will find two tracks from their first album entitled Lost And Found (2000) and four tracks from their second one entitled Four Corner’s Sky (2003) along the new song Inner Flames. I knew KBB from the second CD and was very impressed about the high level and splendid violin work. Well, on this live CD I was even more impressed, what a dynamic sound, what an excellent musicians and what an exciting soli on violin and keyboards!<p> The seven compositions sound pleasant and flowing, the focus is on the amazing interplay and the frequent soli. And these soli are often mindblowing: the violin alternates from warm and sensitive to flashy and very distorted (a kind of Ritchie Blackmore on violin!) and the keyboards from spectacular pitchbend driven on the synthesizer to swirling on the Hammond organ and swinging on the piano. The support by the rhtyhm-section is very dynamic and propulsive. KBB their melodic sound is close to fusion (like Mahavishnu Orchestra) but also worth to explore for symphonic prog fans, especially the Eddie Jobson aficionados although the violinist plays more in the vein of monsieur Jean Luc Ponty. Highly recommended!

 

KBB – Proof Of Concept (***1/5)

- KBB is a Japanese formation, rooted in the late Nineties but this new album is only their third studio effort after their debut CD from 2002 and the CD Live 2004.

I am delighted about that live album, what a sensational work on violin and Hammond organ! On the new CD entitled Proof Of Concept again we can enjoy great and often exciting work on keyboards and violin by wizard Akihisa Tsuboy, especially his wah-wah drenched soli are spectacular, very similar to a distorted guitar sound. KBB their music shifts from dreamy and classical to compelling, propulsive and bombastic, loaded with spectacular violin soli, sensational synthesizer flights and great interplay between violin and Hammond organ. Remarkable tracks are Rice Planting Song (the atmosphere is close to the Roumanian folk due to the violin sound) and 40 Degrees featuring swirling Fender Rhodes electric piano and a powerful jazzy bass.

- KBB is not a band that delivers elaborate compositions but if you like exciting instrumental, jazzrock oriented music with violin – and kebyoard pyrotechnics, you will be delighted too!

 

KEN’S NOVEL-Domain of oblivion (***1/2)  

- Ken’s Novel is a 5-piece band from Belgium featuring Patrick Muermans (lead – and backing vocals, drums and keyboard programming), Eric Vanderbemden (electric – and acoustic guitars), Bruno Close (keyboards), Geoffrey Leontiev (drums, percussions, drums programming) and Sebastièn Mentior. In ’99 they released their first album “The guide”, this one was boosted by a positive review from the magazine Prog Resiste and a distribution deal from the known French progrock label Musea Records. Ken’s novel played on several progrock festivals and in 2002 two songs from the band could be found on the compilation “Spring rock festival 2000”. A year later Ken’s Novel released the CD “Unplugged?” and in 2002 the album “Domain of oblivion” was released on a demo. Two years later the band put it on CD, again distributed by Musea. On this CD the band use a wide range of guest musicians (keyboards, bass, backing vocals, lead guitar, violins, cello).

The music on the CD “Domain of oblivion” sounds melodic, dynamic and varied with good solos on guitar and keyboards and strong interplay between these instruments. The propulsive parts with organ evokes KANSAS but in general the main reference is STYX, especially because of the vocals and the more polished parts of their music (AOR/poprock). Despite the running time of almost 77 minutes, the music didn’t fail to generate excitement: lots of spectacular synthesizer flights, some sparkling piano (“Voices”), sensitive electric guitar with soaring keyboards, metallish guitarwork and bombastic organ (“Wisdom part 3”) and a ballad with wah-wah guitar in the end (“Distinctive signs”). The absolute highlight on this CD is the long titletrack (more than 16 minutes): fiery electric guitar and sumptuous keyboards, acoustic guitar and piano, a beautiful, bluesy guitarsolo and then ... it’s solo time featuring a jazzy piano, sensational synthesizer runs and a swirling organ, this band ‘progrocks’ during these instrumental fireworks. This is the best from Belgium I’ve heard since the legendary Machiavel!

 

KING EIDER — Somateria Spectabilis (***)  

- King Eider is a Dutch duo featuring Derk-Evert Waalkens (keyobards, drums and bakcing vocals) and Hans Gerritse (electric - and acoustic guitars, guitar- synthesizer, bass and backing vocals). Hans also plays in other Dutch progrock band Nice Beaver (what's in a name?!). King Eider has invited some guest musicians: Dik Pomp on drums and Rinie Huigen (ex-Cliffhanger, now Knight Area) and Eric Holdtman. The name of the band is derived from a beautifully coloured Arctic duck and the CD has been released on the known French progrock label Musea. This is an honour but King Eider fully deserves it, what a splendid symphonic rock album!

1. Hatching (1'56) : A dreamy operner that contains atmospheric sounding keyboard and electric guitar.

2. Somateria Spectabilis (10'37) : The long titletrack opens with a slow rhythm and sensitive guitar work, then the music developpes into a wonderful, very alternating and captivating composition: from dreamy with twanging guitars and soaring keyboards to bombastic eruptions featuring fiery electric guitar and lush keyboards. The colouring of the keyboards is very tasteful (from warm piano to moving Mellotron samples) and the guitarplay is breathtaking, so senstitive and compelling with obvious hints from Andy Latimer! The final part is great, "the gateway to progheaven" with splendid howling guitar runs.

3. King Of Ducks (5'08) : This track is in the vein of neo-progressive rock, more polished and less elaborate: a mid-tempo with a strong, tight beat, pleasant vocals and a flashy synthesizer solo, accompanied by a beautiful strings sound.

4. In Detain (10'46) : Another beautiful and alternating composition in which symphonic rock and neo- prog changes frequently. The keyboard work is very tasteful featuring the sound of the Hammond organ and Fender Rhodes electric piano and spectacular synthesizer flights. Halfway some fiery, wah-wah drenched guitar soli, sensitive electric guitar with awesome choir-Mellotron samples, GOOSE BUMPS! The final part delivers bombastic symphonic rock at its best with heavy guitar, propulsive drums and sensational synthesizer runs.

5. Hatch, Walk, Fly (2'20) : A mellow piece with twanging acoustic guitar and soaring keyboards, followed by wonderful classical guitar in the vein of Steve Hackett.

6. The News (7'02) : First acoustic rhythm- guitar, then a more and more lush sound with organ, duo vocals, slide guitar and organ, great!

7. Arctic Skies (4'36) : After a mellow keyboard-intro we can enjoy warm en melodic guitar runs with hints from Andy Latimer. The sounds becomes more and more dynamic featuring majestic violin-mellotron waves and fragile guitar.

8. Atlantis '69 (11'34) : This long track showcases King Eider at their pinnacle, incredible how mature they sound on this debut CD! It starts with classical guitar, then a slow rhythm with bombastic organ and synthesizer work. Lots of shifting moods and strong musical ideas follow, the lush instrumentation is also worth listening: choir-Mellotron, steel guitar, cello and harp. In the final part again goose bumps because of the very compelling guitar work and floods of organ and choir- Mellotron! The subtle last moments are from fragile Grand piano runs and acoustic guitar.

9. Exxon Valdez (2'24) : This is a song to dream away featuring soaring keyboards and howling, often volume pedal driven guitar play, halfway the music erupts with howling guitar.

This is an impressive debut cd from an unknown dutch progrock project that deserves worldwide recognition, to be checked out, fellow progheads!!

 

KNIGHT AREA-THE SUN ALSO RISES  (***)

- Last year I witnessed a gig from Knight Area near Amsterdam, I was stunned by their compelling progrock and their professional attitude. No wonder that they got a contract from the famous USA progrock label The Laser’s Edge and I was told by their bass player Gijs Koopman (I  know him as a fan from his former band Cliffhanger) that Knight Area already sold more than 8000 copies from their debut-CD “The Sun Also Rises”, an incredible performance by this very promising new Dutch progrock band! If you listen to their music, you soon will be delighted by the wonderful sound in the vein of mid-Genesis, Marillion, IQ and Pendragon. The 10 melodic, alternating and tasteful progrock compositions feature lots of majestic Mellotron waves and flashing synthesizer runs (the back cover from the booklet shows a picture from the sensational Minimoog) and sensitive electric guitar soli along beautiful instrumentation with flute, accordion and acoustic guitar. In my opinion this CD (50 minutes) is a splendid 24-carat symphonic rock album that deserves a worldwide recognition. By the way, Knight Area has performed on the annual Nearfest progrock festival in the USA on July 10th (along with Le Orme and Kenso), 2005.

 

KOTOBEL – Omphalos (****)

- This is the new CD by the interesting Spanish formation Kotobel, it is their fourth studio effort since the debut album Structures from 1999.

1. Ra (11.30) : The first part is dreamy feturing flute and classical piano, then a very dynamic atmosphere with a propulsive rhythm, here Kotobel showcases their huge potential: fluent interplay between organ and guitar, sparkling flute work, soaring Mellotron, howling electric guitar and a fiery duel between flute and guitar. The most remarkable element in Kotobel their music on this CD is the opera-like female voice that sounds powerful with a wide range. It will not be everybody’s cup of tea but to me the vocals sound as an extra dimension to the captivating Kotobel prog!

2. Excellent Meat (8.51) : The dynamic, often violent music with lots of heavy parts evokes early King Crimson, especially the fiery electric guitar and powerful drum beats, halfway interrupted by a mellow part with flute and acoustic guitar.

3-8. Pentacle’s Suite (30.11) : In this half hour ‘magnum opus’ we can enjoy Kotobel at their best delivering great shifting moods, strong breaks, excellent interplay and exciting soli on several instruments. My highlights are a howling electric guitar solo in Mercury Pentacle, a wonderful classical intermezzo in Venus Pentacle (including piano and cello) and lots of changing climates in the alternating Mars Pentacle (swirling flute, powerful bass runs, a fat synthesizer sound and virtuosic interplay)

9. MetroMnemo (4.15) : A fluent rhythm with Fripperish guitar work and again many varied and captivating musical ideas.

10. Joropo (4.53) : A dynamic composition, from dreamy with flute and piano to a fluent rhythm with splendid interplay between flute and piano and a strong, flashy synthesizer solo.

11. Omphalos (6.57) : The final song is the titletrack, it starts mellow but gradually turns into more dynamic and bombastic, the vocals sound outstanding between the lush sound of the keyboards, flute and guitar, a great end!

This CD is a very captivating musical adventure, Kotobel prooves that 40 years after the birth of the progressive rock, bands are still able to make progressive rock in the true meaning of the word!

 

KVAZAR – A Giant’s Lullaby (***1/2)

It lasted four years before Norwegian band Kvazar released a new album after thei reponymous debut CD from 2001. Only two members survived these years: keyboardplayer/singer Andre Jensen Deaya and drummer Kim A. Lieberknecht. Kvazar has turned into a five piece band with additional guest musicians, including female singer Trude Bergli.

1. Flight Of Shamash (9:13) : The intro contains the impressive sound of a Gregorian choir, then Kvazar manages to create a great tension beween the dreamy (fragile guitar, soaring keyboards and acoustic guitar), fluent and bombastic parts (eruptions with fiery guitar and organ), very compelling and dynamic with echoes from Anekdoten (a bit sultry and a propulsive rhythm-section).

2. Choir Of Life (5:36) : The music alternates between cheerful folky (flute, mandoline and soft way-wah guitar) and bombastic with lush violin waves and spectacular synthesizer flights.

3. Untitled (1:30) : A very beautiful track delivering warm Spanish guitar and soaring

4. Dreams Of Butterflies (8:30) : Here is my highlight on this CD, it contains lots of shifting moods and many surprising musical ideas: jazzy with violin-mellotron drops, bombastic eruptions with majestic choir-Mellotron and sensitive guitar runs, an accellaration with a fluent synthesizer solo in a jazzy climate and dreamy with warm vocals and thin saxophone, unique!

5. Untitled (1:49) : A strang track with lots of weird sounds.

6. Spirit Of Time (8:42) : This long composition reminds me of Pink Floyd because of teh spacey keyboards, the slow rhythm and the sensitive guitar work. Halfway a great break with sensational keyboards and dramatic female vocals. The Mellotron waves evoke early King Crimson.

7. Desert Blues (6:13) : A splendid translation by the band from the title into the music: a sultry atmosphere that make you feel alienated, we also hear strange sounds and a fiery saxophone.

8. Sometimes (5:09) : Here we can enjoy the distinctive Rhodes eletric piano sound in a jazzy climate with subdued guitar play and dreamy saxophone work.

9. A Giant's Lullaby (9:42) : This titletrack delivers many shifting moods, from a slow rhythm with mellow saxophone and dreamy with choir-Mellotron to a mid-tempo with swinging piano, everything is possible with Kvazar in this captivating composition!

10. Dark Horizons (8:03) : The final song is dreamy with twanging guitar, gradually the music becomes more bombastic but to me it fails to keep my attention, a bit disappointing end.

The words ‘progression’ and ‘progressive’ should be put onto the banner of this interesting Norwegian band, they have made a strong, very varied album, ranging from classic symphonic rock to jazz, if you are up to this variation the new Kvazar will delight you!

 



Edited by erik neuteboom - October 14 2007 at 07:26
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L

 

LADY LAKE — SuperCleanDreamMachine (***1/2)

- A few months ago I witnessed a gig from Lady Lake during a Dutch Triple Concert with Knight Area and Plackband. I knew this band from their album "Pictures" from the Seventies but I was really stunned about new music! The members told me that I had to wait a few months until Musea had released their new album, more than 25 years after their debut LP. This night, after my late shift, I decided to listen to it and then to write this review. Well, I have very good news for you because Lady Lake has delivered a wonderful, very melodic album that will appeal to many progheads. The focus is on the guitar, Fred Rosenkamp has a very melodic and varied style (jazzy, rock, symphonic) with obvious hints from Andy Latimer. The music from Lady Lake often reminds me of Camel (and at some moments Focus), especially the changing climates from mellow to compelling and bombastic featuring sensitive and howling guitar, this man knows how to carry us away to progrock heaven! His interplay with the keyboards from Leender Korstanje (beautiful Hammond organ, piano and some fine Mellotron) is warm, delicate and sometimes very moving and drummer Jan Dubbe does a good job. I use to call this 24- carat symphonic rock, Holland is back on the track!!

 

LIKE WENDY — Endgame (****) 

- To my surprise this was the first review from Dutch musical project Like Wendy their latest (6th) album entitled "Endgame" on Prog Archives. The seven compositions sound a bit more accesible than the previous CD's, due to the melodic structure and vocal hints from The Beatles and Barclay James Harvest.

1. Mock Me! (10:54) : An alternating and very pleasant progrock sound, from melow with twanging acoustic guitar and piano to bombastic with fiery, often howling electric guitar and wonderful Mellotron. Their sound reminds me of mid- Genesis.

2. Radioactive Girl (6:40) : First tender piano and melancholical vocals, soon accompanied by sensitive electric guitar and majestic choir-mellotron. Then a synthesizer solo and a mellow featuring twanging acoustic guitar and Mellotron. The final part contains a sumptuous grand finale, splendid!

3. Subs (5:29) : Another altenating piece, from dreamy to bombastic with beautiful work on the guitar and Mellotron and emotional vocals.

4. Seventeen (8:15) : This track alternates from mellow and a slow rhythm to bombastic delivering fiery electric guitar and again a wonderful Mellotron sound (violin and choir).

5. Money For Monkey's (6:17) : A very compelling song featuring beautiful keyboards (synthesizers, church organ sound and Mellotron) and sensitive electric guitar with use of the volume-pedal (like Steve Hackett).

6. Moria (8:33) : Another Mellotron drenched piece!

7. Endgame (9:38) : The final composition is very alternating, the second part contains lots of bombastic eruptions featuring majestic choir-Mellotron and great interplay between guitar and keyboards. The final minutes delivers a surprise: mouth organ!

If you like Mid-Genesis, IQ, Pendragon and Barclay James Harvest, this one is yours!

 

LITTLE ATLAS – Hollow (****)

- Little Atlas is an USA progrock band that was founded in the Nineties, in 1998 they released their debut CD entitled Neverwordly. This new album by four piece band Little Atlas (with an additional female singer) is their fourth, released in 2007. One can conclude that Little Atlas took their time to produce an album and indeed, it has paid off, what a varied and exciting progrock album with strong vocals.

The ten compositions are song-oriented but due to the frequent shifting moods, breaks and strong soli on several instruments, Little Atlas succeeds to keep my attention during this new album. A pleasant extra dimension is the use of the vintage keyboards, from choir-Mellotron and Hammond organ to Minimoog synthesizer and Fender Rhodes electric piano. Despite these typically Seventies keyboards, Little Atlas doesn’t sound dated. In contrary,  they sound fresh and modern, here are a few examples. The long track Silence contains lots of variety, from an intro with soaring keyboards, a slow rhythm with saxophone and a break with choir-Mellotron to compelling with propulsive drums and rhythm-guitar, a mid-tempo with fluent piano runs and a dreamy final part with sensitive electric guitar, emotional vocals and beautul flute. In Paranoiac the atmosphere is often compelling with powerful Hammond waves, sensational Minimoog flights, biting guitar and strong interplay between keyboards and guitar. My highlight is the track Symbiosis featuring lots of shifting moods and dynamics, exciting work on guitar and keyboards and a strong build-up to a compelling, verybombastic grand finale. The final song Special contains a warm sound with piano, acoustic guitar and violin, then a solo on acoustic guitar and in the end we can enjoy a synthesizer solo that delivers a sound that is mighty close to Lucky Man by Keith Emerson.

This is a very good new album by Little Atlas, the band has made a stuning progression, perhaps Hollow will be the breakthrough for these crafted and creative musicians. Highly recommended!

 

LITTLE TRAGEDIES - Return (****)  

— WOW, here's an amazing progrock CD that carries me away to progheaven! It's the latest CD from the Russian progrock band Little Tragedies. During the first listening session I noticed a very mid-Emersonian inspired keyboard sound, especially the Yamaha GX-1 super- synthesizer (known from the video-clip "Fanfare for the common man" from ELP) but also a typical ethnic flavor, mainly the wonderful Russian vocals.

The first composition "Dream 1" features classical orchestrations (evoking The Enid) and soaring keyboards, followed by the distinctive Eastern-European atmosphere with Russian vocals and some folky sounds. Then splendid keyboardwork, heavy guitar-riffs and in the end a flashy synthesizer solo. The song "After death" is very alternating: excellent guitarplay (sensitive, heavy riffs and fiery runs), spectacular keyboards (organ and synthesizer) and a propulsive rhythm- section. In "Credo" we can enjoy swirling interplay between guitar and keyboards and in "Neuromantic" the contrast between the howling guitar and majestic harpsichord is very captivating, along with the Russian vocals! Among all those cascades of sumptuous progrock there are a few mellow tracks like "Canzona" (sensitive electric guitar and beautiful piano work) and "Return" (subdued with warm Russian vocals). My highlight on this CD is the composition "On the themes of Grieg": lots of sumptuous and fluent prog featuring marvellous keyboard work, inspired vocals and a final part featuring great duels between guitar and keyboards, in the vein of Trace, mid-ELP and the Japanese keyboard driven prog, superb! If you are up to Russian vocals and you like elp and the Japanese keyboard prog, this CD is highly recommended!!

 

LITTLE TRAGEDIES — New Faust (****) 

- One of my favorite albums of the last years is Return by the Russion formation Little Tragedies. So I was very excited to hear that they had just released a 2-CD, after a first listening session I can only conclude that Little Tragedies is a new progrock sensation! The focus is on the bombastic keyboard play, this man is obviously inspired by Keith Emerson featuring flashy synthesizer runs and swirling Hammond organ but he also delivers some delicate harpsichord play in more mellow parts. The interplay with the powerful, harder- edged guitar work is very exciting, it often sounds like a blend of ELP and Ayreon because of the heavy, propulsive guitar riffs and fiery, flowing guitar soli. The Russion vocals give an extra dimension to the music, it often reminds me of Hungarian progrock band Omega. Despite the two CD’s and the long running time of some tracks (even at about 30 minutes), Little Tragedies never bores, I am sure that many progheads who love ELP, the keyboard driven Japanese prog like Gerard and Ayreon will be delighted about this outstanding, very exciting Russian formation! HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!

 

LITTLE TRAGEDIES — The Sixth Sense (***1/2) 

- I was still in a sheer euphoric mood about their previous effort entitled New Faust when I received this new album by Russian symphonic progrock sensation Little Tragedies. After a first listening session, I concuded that the obvious ELP and Gerard hints are less and there is also more variation and originality. In fact Little Tragedies has developped into a progrock band that can compete with the current top bands like The Flower Kings, The Tangent and IQ, their only problem is that the vocals are Russian, not really accessible.

The first song The Sixth Sense is loaded with bombastic keyboards (especially Hammond organ and fat synthesizer flights) and heavy guitar riffs, it sounds like “ELP meets Ayreon” but the warm and distinctive Russian vocals give an extra dimension. The next track Bird is a kind of musical Pandora’s Box: first a Floydian atmosphere with dreamy saxophone and fragile slide-guitar, then an accellaration featuring sparkling piano, propulsive guitar riffs and great interplay. This is followed by sensitive electric guitar work and an organ solo, then suddenly a spectucalar break with sensational synthesizer sounds and heavy metal-guitar riffs, impressive!The other ten songs sound melodic, very tasteful, elaborate and especially varied, from dreamy with sensitive piano/warm vocals and compelling with Latimer-inspired guitar to fluent with fiery guitar/saxophone and sumptuous with lush keyboards. The interplay between the harpsichord and howling guitar in some songs sounds very delicate. My highlight on this CD is the track You And I: first sparkling piano, sensitive guitar and warm vocals, then a wonderful classical piano piece and finally a great build-up with bombastic Hammond organ and flashy synthesizers, accompanied by a dynamic rhytm-section, breathtaking!

My conclusion: Little Tragedies has made a great album, very varied and loaded with good musical ideas and excellent soli on several instruments. Just check their MP3 files or try to get their CD’s, highly recommended!

 

LIZARD – Spam (***)   

- Poland is becoming a small ‘progwalhalla’, after Collage, Quidam, Riverside and Satellite here is the interesting four piece band (including keyboard, violin and guitar synthesizer) Lizard! Their first album is from 1997, this is their fourth CD entitled Spam and divided into six pieces, Spam #1-Spam #6.

Despite the King Crimson group name Lizard, the music is not too obvious derived from King Crimson. Some tracks contain King Crimson elements (both the early as the new band) but in general the focus is on the excellent violinplay that reminds me of David Cross and JL Ponty. You can enjoy lots of great soli! The music sounds pleasant and melodic featuring tension between the heavy guitar riffs and the flowing violin work and the songs alternates between dreamy and propulsive and bombastic with inspired Polish vocals. The keyboards sound a bit subdued but if you listen good these are blended very subtle into the music. The final track (at about 12 minutes) delivers halfway the most obvious King Crimson hints featuring propulsive drum beats and repetetive guitar work along fine piano and violin play, wonderful and exciting!

This is a fine progrock album that will delight the King Crimson fans and those who like the violin (and the title will please the Monty Python fans!).

 

LOST WORLD — Awakening of the Elements (****)

- Lost World is a Russian trio with a guest keyboardist who plays in one song. After their debut CD Trajectories from 2003, here is their new album entitled Awakening Of The Elements (2006).

The 12 compositions contain a great flow, lots of dynamics, excellent interplay and great soli on guitar and violin. Because of the fiery guitar and violin work and the propulsive rhythm-section, the music often reminds me of 1972-1975 era King Crimson. The songs sound elaborate and host many captivating elements, surprising breaks and shifting moods. Strong examples are the dynamic titletrack (great tension between the fiery guitar and orchestral keyboards and halfway a splendid break with propulsive guitar riffs and flashy violin), Infinity Street (delicate progressive folk with wonderful acoustic guitar overdubs), Over The Islands (swinging rhythm with exciting guitar runs and funky 'slap'-bass work), States Of Mind Part I (captivating interplay between guitar and violin, again funky ‘slap-bass’ play and subtle synthesizer sounds) and finally my favorite track, the alternating Collision Of The Elements featuring fiery violin – and guitar runs. Because of the lush and powerful Hammond waves, to me it sounds like ‘King Crimson meets ELP’! The cheerful flute work on this CD gives the music a fresh extra dimension between all the heavy dynamic atmospheres.

I am very curious how this promising bands develops because Awakening Of The Elements is an excellent addition to your collection!

 

M

 

MAGIC PIE — Circus Of Life (****)
- I can remember two often returning words from the many reviews about the acclaimed debut CD Motion Of Desire by Norwegian band Magic Pie: “varied” and “dynamic”. And you can organize a progrock quiz with the subject “how many bands influenced Magic Pie on Motion Of Desire”?! But seriously folks, listening to their new album I notice that Magic Pie has moved more towards an own direction. The CD opens with the long titletrack that contains five parts and has a running time around the 45 minutes. The climates range from dreamy with acoustic guitar, violin and warm vocals (part 1 and 5) to compelling with soaring keyboards (organ and Fender piano) and fragile wah-wah guitar (part 3) to bombastic with propulsive drums and guitar, a long fat sounding Minimoog-like synthesizer solo and great interplay between guitar and keyboards (part 2 and 4). Especially the closing section in Part 4 (entitled Trick Of The Mind) I am delighted about because of the swirling Hammond organ and biting wah-wah guitar. Then follows the second composition Pointless Masquerade (alternating and dynamic with splendid keyboard work, a fiery guitar and a beautiful interlude with Spanish guitar) and the final track Watching The Waters (lots of wah-wah guitar and a surprising final part with bluesy mouth organ and guitar). On this CD there is an important role for the 3 lead vocalists but Magic Pie their trademark is the blend of heavy progressive/prog metal and symphonic prog and the tension between the mellow and bombastic parts, very entertaining and often exciting!
 

MALAAVIA - Danze d'Incenso (***)

— In general this musical project from the Italian duo signori Lusi and signori Scarpato is a wonderful and very alternating progrock album: great duo-vocals, tastefully blended with flute, organ, violin and piano in "Abraham, where is the land?", an Arabian undertone with synthesizer flights and saxophone in "Sahara - Marrakesh", classical orchestrations and a splendid grand finale featuring violin and some church organ in "Ombre", sparkling classical piano play in "Softmoon" and "Bach's prelude", fiery and heavy guitar work in "Hominem quaero" and wonderful classical/Spanish guitar and mandoline in "Locus amoenus". So there is a lot to enjoy, especially the titletrack (great keyboards, a sensitive Spanish guitar solo, beautiful piano and in the end a synthesizer solo) and "Mezzalunafertile" (compelling classical undertone, tastefuly blended with sitar, accordeon, Spanish guitar and flute). Unfortunately the composers got the idea to add disco beats to some tracks ("Kyrie Eleison" and "Vie interne")! Just when you are carried away to progheaven, that weird musical idea send you back to a harsh reality. But if you use the programm function, this CD will deliver lots of wonderful progrock moments.

 

MALIBRAN - Strani Colori (***1/2)   

— In the early Nineties I bought the debut-LP “Wood of tales”, a pleasant blend of folk and prog with echoes from Jethro Tull. Their next album was more symphonic with strong hints from early Marillion featuring sensitive guitar soli and lush keyboards. The Italian vocals gave the music a special flavor. After this album my attention faded away for this band but a few years ago I got an interesting Malibran promo CD entitled “Strani colori” (running time 75 minutes). You can divide this compilation into three parts. First 4 songs from their latest period, you can conclude that Malibran has turned into a band with an own identity, their music is very melodic, warm and alternating but also more polished. Then a few covers like “Bourreé” (Bach/Ian Anderson) from 2000 and “Rhayader goes to town” (Latimer/Bardens) from 1997. The renditions sound good but I always wonder who’s waiting for these covers. The cover “Cause we’ve ended as lovers” (Jeff Beck) from 1997 contains fiery and powerful guitarwork but it’s a mission impossible to copy the sound of the underrated ex-Yardbird’s guitarist. The final part includes 6 compelling songs from 1989-1994: beautiful soli en duets on guitar, a dynamic rhythm-section, wonderful flute – and saxophone play and tasteful keyboards. The music on these songs has again echoes from Jethro Tull and Marillion. This band has delivered a pleasant progrock CD, not very original but if you like early Marillion and you are up to Italian vocals this is a CD to check out.

 

MANGALA VALLIS-Lycanthrope (***1/2)  

- A few months ago I spoke a member from Dutch progrock formation Plackband. They had performed with Mangala Vallis on an Italian progrock festival and were very impressed by their performance and new material. Well, listening to this new album from Mangala Vallis (with a contribution from VDGG saxophonist David Jackson on 3 songs) I was stunned by the hugh progress this promising Italian band have made. Their debut CD was a pleasant one (loaded with Mellotron) but this one sounds far more mature andd captivating.

The unsurpassed Mellotron is very omnipresent, almost every song contains waves of the violin -, flute – and choir-Mellotron, what a joy! The eight compositions (between 2 and 12 minutes) sound melodic, tasteful and alternating: from dreamy en compelling to up-tempo and sumptuous featuring great soli on guitar (often Gilmourian inspired) and keyboards. The vocals (from Bernardo Lanzetti who played in PFM and Acqua Fragile in the mid-Seventies) are both very distinctive as a bit theatrical with echoes from early Peter Gabriel and Fish. The highlight on this CD is the long track The Boy That Howls At The Moon. It starts with the howling of wolves, then twanging guitars, dreamy vocals and flute-Mellotron. The rhythm turns into slow delivering floods of organ and delicate acoustic rhythm guitar, culminating in a senstitive electric guitar solo, supported by violin-Mellotron. Next a splendid piece of music with lots of bombastic progrock, very compelling and moving: heavy choir-Mellotron, a Hammond organ solo and finally an up-tempo rhythm with flashy synthesizer runs, GOOSE BUMPS! The final part contains a wonderful build-up guitar solo with fiery runs and fluent drums. This album is highly recommended to all fans of Genesis, IQ, Pendragon and Pink Floyd!!

 
MANGROVE — Facing The Sunset (***1/2) 

- The debut CD Touchwood by the Dutch symphonic rock formation Mangrove was a nice effort but in general the opnion was that their live sound was way more powerful and captivating. Listening to their new album entitled Facing The Sunset it's obvious that Mangrove has worked to improve their compositions and studio sound. I also could witness this while listening to them as support-act for USA sensation Echolyn.

The new album contains four compositions (between 10 and 21 minutes) evoking the good old days from mid-Genesis, early Hackett solo and early IQ. Especially the wonderful Mellotron samples (produced by a special sophisticated computer programm) and the beautiful, very sensitive electric guitar work are strong points in Mangrove their pleasant symphonic rock sound. I notice that Mangrove has put many fine musical ideas into their songs like a great build-up with huge tension between electric guitar and fiery eruptions in the titletrack, a compelling violin-Mellotron solo with acoustic rhythm-guitar in I Fear The Day, a tight beat with biting electric guitar and a bombastic grand finale in There Must Be Another Way and howling guitar runs with choir-Mellotron in the long final song Hidden Dreams. At some moments the music sounds a bit fragmentic and the musicians are obviously no virtuosi. Nonethless, Mangrove has done a good job on Facing The Sunset, I am sure this CD will please fans of 24-carat symphonic rock!

 

MALDOROR — L'Arbre-Cimetière (****)

- Last Wednesday night was a moving battle between my two passions: music and soccer. In the morning I received a parcel with many progrock CD’s. Due to a very busy daily schedule I had to postpone my wish to a first listening session until the early evening. My first choice was the debut CD “L’Arbre-Cimetière” from the very promising French progrock band MALDOROR, mainly because of two very positive descriptions from fellow reviewers on the Prog Archives site. I had to do it quickly, soon the European Champions League Soccer Finale between my favorite team Liverpool and the shrew Italian AC Milan squad should start. I was very impressed by MALDOROR’s wonderful and moving 24-carat symphonic rock sound but the finale had just begun. After 45 very disappointing minutes Liverpool was 3-0 down and I decided to switch off the televison and re-start my ‘MALDOROR-CD-session’. I was halfway and got every song more excited but then a friend send an e-mail that Liverpool had fought back to 3-3! This stunning information urged me to put on the television. I witnessed a very tense soccer game with eventually Liverpool as the Champions League winners after extra time and a captivating serie of penalties. For me it was “Tears in my eyes” from URIAH HEEP and the stadium speaker start “We Are The Champions” from QUEEN and “You Never Walk Alone” from Gary And The Pacemakers, the Liverpool anthem that can be heard on the PINK LOYD album “Meddle”. After the game I rushed to my CD-player and listened to the rest of the album. My conclusion: MALDOROR is one of the most promising progrock bands I’ve heard in the last five years: the 12 compositions sound wonderful, alternating, elaborated and compelling and features lots of shifting moods, impressive keyboards (Mellotron, organ piano, and synthesizers) and great harder-edged guitarwork. I hear elements from ANGLAGARD, KING CRIMSON, GENESIS, MARILLION and KANSAS but MALDOROR doesn’t sound as a deravitive, they manage to blend their tribute to the Seventies progrock sound with the typical French theatrical approach and lots of original musical ideas. Prog Archives allows a lot of space for the symphonic rock dinosaurs (to me this is OK!) but I would like to say: THIS CD IS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!!!!

 

MARYGOLD — The Guns Of Marygold (***1/2)  

This fine Italian band is rooted in 1994, most members are from the Marillion (Fish-era) cover band Wildfire. Marygold started to play covers from Marillion and Genesis but gradually composed more own material, this resulted in the debut CD entitled The Guns Of Marygold. The vocals are in English and the running time is like that from the ‘good old LP’s’, at about forty minutes, nostalgia time!

1. Hara-kiri Show (7.25) : The intro contains a spacey sound from keyboards and a Roland guitar synthesizer, it evokes Hackett his ominous sounding song Land Of A Thousand Autumns. Then a compelling rhythm with lots of breaks and shifting moods, it sounds very dynamic featuring dramatic vocals, fiery guitar and fluent synthesizer flights.

2. Crows On The Tree (6.32) : A mellow track with melancholic vocals and fragile guitar work, followed by beautiful guitar play with the evolume pedal and sensitive piano. The final part delivers a mid-tempo with howling electric guitar, very moving!

3. Marygold (7.21) : First twanging guitars in the vein of early Gensis in a dreamy climate with warm vocals and a slow synthesizer solo. Halfway a break, then a mid-tempo and we can enjoy delicate work on organ, inspired vocals and slightly distored guitar.

4. Sunflowers (5.21) : This composition contains lots of variation and flowing changing climates, from dreamy with sparkling piano to a fluent rhythm with flashy synthesizer work, fiery guitar and passionated vocals.

5. Tania Stands... (2.56) : A short song with wonderful interplay between the acoustic guitar (twanging and frequent flageolets), halfway there is some delicate flute, simply beautiful!

6. The Wizard (9.46) : After strong drum beats and fiery guitar the atmosphere turns into dreamy with a slow rhtyhm delivering soaring keyboards, sensitive electric guitar with volume pedal play and warm vocals. Gradually the tempo become faster and the sound more lush and bombastic, culminating in exciting interplay between guitar and keyboards along passionated vocals, this is Marygold at their best! Suddenly the music stops and a bell rings (my Bordercollie Lola looked confused at me or she had to bark ..!), then the music returns with a mellow climate featuring wonderful symphonic prog with lush keyboards and howling electric guitar, I am on cloud #9!

Marygold sounds very warm and beautiful and is recommended to fans of pleasant and melodic prog like Genesis, Marillion, Pendragon, Camel and IQ but a bit more subdued, I would say that Marygold is (to quote Fish) “..for the romantics in the audience..”.

 

MASCHERA DI CERA (LA) — LuxAde (****)   

- In 2002 I got the eponymous debut album from this promising Italian five piece band as a promo on a CD-R. I was delighted about the Seventies inspired sound (Banco, Museo Rosenbach, Metamorfosi), loaded with vintage keyboards like the Moog synthesizer, Hammond organ and Mellotron. Unfortunately the compositions turned out to be a bit too fragmentic, this band had to mature. After two studio - and one live CD here is the new album by La Maschera Di Cera and to start with my conclusion: THIS IS A MASTERPIECE! From the very first moment La Maschera Di Cera takes you away with dynamic, alternating and often very compelling compositions, drenched into the wonderful Seventies Italian progrock tradition: passionate Italian vocals, fluent and pleasant shifting moods, great build-ups and wonderful 'grand finales', often featuring choir - and violin-Mellotron eruptions and sensational synthesizer flights, GOOSE BUMPS! The musical variation is great and ranges from 12-string acoustic guitar and traverse flute to saxophone and a huge array of vintage keyboards (Mellotron, Hammond - and Crumar organ, harpsichord, Fender Rhodes piano and several synthesizers). Another impressive new italian progrock CD, highly recommended!

 

MAURO E I PRONOMI - (Ec) Citazioni Neoclassische (***)

— This debut-CD sounds as a tribute to the glorious days of the Seventies Italian progrock bands like BANCO, BIGLIETTO PER L’INFERNO, METAMORFOSI, LE ORME AND IL BALLETTO DI BRONZO. The first composition “Il racconte degli dei” (at about 25 minutes) is divided into seven parts. Part I is build around a compelling climate featuring powerful vocals (a bit melancholical undertone), beautiful piano play, propulsive guitar riffs and a wonderful string sound. I love the tension and dynamics and the final, very sensitive guitar solo. Part II has a fluent rhythm featuring fiery electric guitar work ans slow synthesizer runs and again very inspired vocals. Part III sounds atmospheric but halfway we can enjoy a good build-up and strong guitar solo. Part IV has a bit ominous climate (like KING CRIMSON on “Red”) that flows into Part V that delivers a heavy guitar solo with biting runs. Part VI sounds bombastic with a howling guitar, choir-Mellotron, very compelling! The final Part VII contains powerful Hammond organ. Although some parts have a similar climate or are too longwinding, in general this composition sounds warm and pleasant. The second track “Lei e Venezia” (12.02) has strong classical overtones featuring piano, violin and orchestral keyboards. Gradually the climate becomes more bombastic with strong Italian vocals and sensitive electric guitar and halfway the atmosphere erupts with propulsive guitar riffs, synthesizer flights and a great build-up guitar solo with lush strings and powerful vocals. The third song “Voglio cambiare” (5.49) is a kind of ‘prog ‘n’ roll: a heavy up-tempo rhythm, a dynamic rhythm-section, strong organ waves and good vocals. The next track “Oceano” (almost 10 minutes) sounds like ‘bluesy symphonic rock’: a slow rhythm, soaring strings, a lush organ – and fat guitar sound and melancholical vocals. Then we can enjoy a powerful saxophone solo (in the vein of PINK FLOYD), a sensitive guitar and a surprising break with tin-whistle, organ, howling guitar and flute. The final song "L'assenza" is very alternating but showcases also that this band has to mature in compsosing and writing because at some moments it tend to sound too longwinded. But the second part is great, concluded with a wonderful and moving guitar solo. Although Maury E I Pronomi has to work on the compositions, this is a very warm and pleasant tribute to the legendary Italian progrock bands from the Seventies.

 

MAZE OF TIME –Tales From The Maze (***)

- This is a Swedish five piece band, their debut CD is relased by the Dutch label AMR Productions. Haze Of Time their sound is very melodic, accessible, tasteful and alternating, between symphonic prog (mid-Genesis) and neo-prog (like IQ) with the emphasis on the latter category. The band hosts dual guitar play (lots of howling soli) and dual keyboards (flashy synthesizer flights), the English vocals are decent. The climates in the eight compositions range from dreamy with twanging guitars to mid-tempo with fiery guitar and bombastic with a heavy keyboard sound. My absolute highlight is Daydreamer: first propulsive guitar riffs and drums, then an exciting part with ominous violin-Mellotron waves, goose bumps! During the rest of this track we can enjoy sensational keyboard work and strong guitar play, from howling and fiery to a raw sound.

I enjoyed this is wonderful, a bit polished but very tasteful arranged album and I am sure it will not only please the neo-prog fans but also the symphomaniacs.

 

MINSTREL — Faust (***1/2)   

- Here's a great album from 2000 by the Italian band Minstrel. It turned out to be their swansong, just another promising one-shot band from Italy!

1. Preludio (Una Selva Una Storia) (1:20) : This one contains spoken words in the Italian language.

2. Atto I, Scena I: Bellatrix (5:28) : The start is with twanging acoustic guitar, typical dramatic Italian vocals and wonderful keyboards. In the end a splendid 'finishing touch' featuring a fiery and very compelling electric guitar solo.

3. Atto I, Scena II: Mefistofele (8:55) : This track delivers an exciting tension between the acoustic piano and propulsive electric guitar. Also very moving is the acoustic guitar/piano interplay and a moving guitar solo, supported by a beautiful string sound. The final part is bombastic, in the great Italian progrock tradition!

4. Atto I, Scena III: Il Castello (6:52) : An up-tempo rhythm with fiery electric guitar, then a mellow part with piano, moving electric guitar and soaring keyboards. The vocals are great and the 'grand finale' carry you away to a progwalhalla!

5. Atto II, Scena I: Faust (9:49) : The intro features bombastic keyboards, then a mid- tempo with echoes from mid-Genesis, remarkable is the wah-wah drenched guitar solo.

6. Atto II, Scena II: La Neve (7:52) : First twanging gitars, dreamy vocals and mellow kebyoards, then a compelling bombastic atmosphere delivering a wonderful electric guitar solo.

7. Finale (Ogni Viaggio) (4:17) : This one only features piano and spoken words.

Another overlooked Italian gem!

 

MOONGARDEN — The Gates of Omega (***)   

- Last year I witnessed a gig by this amazing Italian progrock band. I was impressed by the performance of the singer, the wonderful keyboard sound and the varied compositions. This 2-CD is not their latest (that's RoundMidnight from 2003), it's already five years old. I took a look at the reviews on Prog Archives (another progrock activity of mine), the rating alternates from 1 to 5 stars, “say no more!”....

I have to mention that The Gates Of Omega is not an easy album to listen to, the climates alternate frequently from romantic, a bit melancholic progressive pop (like Nineties U2 and Peter Gabriel) to pure symphonic rock like mid-Genesis (lush keyboards, Moog Taurus bass pedals, twanging guitars and sensitive, flowing guitar soli) and even electronic music in the vein of 74-80 Tangerine Dream (hypnotizing atmospheres with floods of Mellotron and spacey synthesizer sounds), an incredible varied sound! But Moongarden also delivers fine musical ideas like choir-Mellotron waves blended with Spanish guitar runs, a beautidul piece on acoustic piano and a song featuring a sultry, exotic climate with a djembe percussie sound, soaring keyboards and the distinctive Stick bass. But my highights were the compelling, often long soli on the electric guitar and the omnipresent (sampled in my opinion) Mellotron waves, mostly choir but also flute and violin sound.

To me this 2-CD sounds as progrock to discover, I honestly don't understand why reviewers rate 1 star: music is subjective but Moongarden has delivered a wonderful piece of music with emotion, skills and variety. It must be a blow for these musicians to read those low rated, in my opinion too subjective reviews. I won't conclude that this is an excellent addition to any progrock collection but at least this is good music, worth to check out!

 

MOONGARDEN - Roundmidnight (***1/2)   

- On April 15th 2005 the promising Italian band Moongarden performed very well on a triple-concert near my hometown The Hague (the Dutch residence city), along with Riverside from Poland and Knight Area from Holland. I’m familiar to the last two bands but I didn’t know anything from Moongarden so I borrowed their last CD entitled “Roundmidnight” from a fellow proghead (Mr. Kiwi). Listening to Moongarden ‘s music is a special experience, a kind of ‘Pandora’s box of musical surprises’. It’s hard to put this band in a category, perhaps the muscians themselves will hate every attempt from progrock reviewers to do so! My first reaction on this album was “Is this progrock?” but my final reaction is “Great to notice that, after more than 35 years, new bands still succeed to sound progressive!”. The music alternates from progressive pop, including warm piano and acoustic rhythm-guitar and melancholic vocals (with obvious hints from Radiohead and Coldplay), to melodic progressive rock featuring sumptuous keyboards (lots of fine Mellotron samples) and some wonderful sensitive electric guitar soli. I’m stunned by the beautiful, varied and elaborated compositions, loaded with emotion. In the end the vocalist sings “I’m so damned alone...”, I think this phrase epitomizes the feeling of many young people who live in our ultra-modern and technically based society where verbal communication is on the level of the pre-historical times!

 

MOTIS – L’Homme-Loup (***)

- This is the unique French progrock band Motis their seventh album. The 11 compositions sound like a blend of folk/medieval music and early Ange with strong, typically theatrical French vocals (like Ange, Mona Lisa and Versailles). Motis uses a wide range of instruments, both acoustic (guitar, violin, flute) as vintage keyboards. This results in very interesting combinations like violin-Mellotronwaves and acoustic rhythm-guitar in P'tit Louis, trumpet and Hammond organ in Les Normands and runs on the acoustic guitar, accompanied by violin-Mellotron and the sound of the psychedelic organ like early Ange as in the captivating titletrack.

This is not really mainstream music but if you have an adventurous mind and you like folk, this is prog to discover!

 

MUSICAL WITCHCRAFT III – Psalms & Soundtrack (***)

- This is the third album by the Hungarian musical project Musical Witchcraft, led by Solaris fluteplayer Kollar Attila. He is accompanied by a wide range of musicians on acoustic instrument and one player on the electric guitar he joins the company in 3 tracks (he delivers a wonderful solo in the final track). The music sounds mainly as a warm and pleasant blend of folk and classical with a lot of room for the flute (also flute traverse evoking Ian Anderson) and violin along conga’s, some harmonica and acoustic guitar (one solo contains beautiful tremolo guitar work). If you are up to a sound that is based upon classical and folk, this is an album to discover.

 
MYSTERY — Beneath the Veil of Winter’s Face (***)

- The history of this Canadian progrock band starts in 1986, meanwhile Mystery has released five studio albums, this is their latest effort.

I am delighted about the very good singer, this man is a strong point in the modern, a bit polished music. The compositions sound tasteful and varied: from dreamy with bombastic eruptions in the titletrack, a slow rhythm with warm vocals and sensitive electric guitar runs in Snowhite, outstanding interplay (great drums), some bombastic eruptions and fiery guitar in Travel To The Night, a tight and propulsive beat with wonderful work on guitar and keyboards in The Scarlet Eye, from dreamy with twanging guitars to more compelling with fiery guitar licks in The Sailor’s And The Mermaid and Awakening and a powerful mid-tempo with R&R guitar in The Preacher’s Fall.

This is a very pleasant and melodic album, recommended to the fans of modern sounding progrock.

 

N

 

NARROW PASS – A Room Of Fairy Queen’s (***)  

- The man behind this Italian project is multi-instrumentalist Mauro Montobbio, he is supported by musicans like singer Alessandro Corvaglia from La Maschera Di Cera en Edmondo Romano van Eris Pluvia.

1 - Earth - Je Cherche La Vie (5'19) : A wonderful spacey intro by the keyboards and Roland guitar synthesizer. Then a fluent rhythm featuring Spanish guitar runs and quick synthesizer flights with strong echoes from Tony Banks his ARP Pro Solist sound. A great start!

2 - A Room Of Fairy Queen's (5'32) : This track has a beautiful Medieval atmosphere with pleasant female vocals (like Annie Haslam), flute and classical guitar.

3 - Lord Of The Headline (7'37) : Now Narrow Pass turns to a propulsive mid-tempo with raw male vocals, flashy synthesizer runs and harder-edged guitar work. We can enjoy fiery electric guitar soli and Minimoog-like synthesizer flights. The music sounds dynamic and tasteful.

4 - The Lake (6'50) : This is an instrumental piece that starts with flute and acoustic rhythm guitar, then the surprising sound of a bagpipe, very unique! After a strong and compelling guitar solo, the climate turns into mellow with acoustic guitar and soaring keyboards.

5 - Coming Off My Shadow (1'45) : A short instrumental with a catchy rhythm and a spectacular duel between guitar and keyboards, in the vein of Hackett his work in In That Quiet Earth.

6 - Desert (7'46) : Another instrumental, very alternating with Hackett-like guitar and lots of strong soli on guitar and keyboards, great!

7 - Wake Up (10'15) : Her is the longest composition, it sounds very dynamic, from dreamy with twanging guitars to bombastic with fiery electric guitar. It often evokes early IQ their pleasant neo-prog. Remarkable is the omnipresent work on saxophone along the Hackett-like guitar and lush bass pedal sound.

8 - Into The Light (6'04) : After a dreamy intro the music slowly turns into compelling symphonic prog, culminating in a ‘grand finale’ delvering bass pedals, lush keyboards and howling electric guitar, this progheaven!

This is a very pleasant and melodic CD that will delight the fans of 70-77 Genesis, Hackett solo and neo-prog like IQ and Pendragon.

 

NEGUA – A Way Out (***)

- Negua is a new Spanish five piece band with members from former Spanish prog bands Dracma and Unoma. During my first musical encounter with Negua I was pleased with their sound but to me it sounded a bit polished. However, as usual for good prog, a further investigation delighted me: what a varied, adventurous and especially dynamic prog this is! The first song Bagdad (about political failure and suffering civilians) contains a lot of tension, often with bombastic interplay between guitar and organ and inspired vocals. The ominous middle part delivers furious guitar and propulsive, militairy beats, it sounds like the musical translation of raining bombs and screaming people and reminds me of Forgotten Sons by Marillion (another complaint about political failure and suffering people). The next three songs showcase Negua their adventurous mind and variety: A Reason To Believe is melodic rock with strong guitarwork (sometimes evoking Eighties U2), Late Night contains a tight beat with delicate orchestrations and fiery guitar and Bright Light is alternating with halfway soaring keyboards and a moving guitar soli with howling runs. The final two tracks are quite long: first the very dynamic Lullaby (from dreamy to bombastic eruptions) with great guitarplay (from sensitive runs to propulsive riffs and swirling interplay with the organ) and a ‘grand finale’ with emotionals vocals, slow synthesizer flights and adventurous drumming and finally the three-piece composition View From The Castle (more than 20 minutes) that features Negua at their best, from biting guitar and sumptuous parts to tender piano, flashy synthesizer and twanging guitar with soaring keyboards. The vocals contain a slight accent but the emotional overtones match perfectly with the dynamic music. The entire running time of one hour I have enjoyed Negua their fresh and modern blend of melodic rock (evoking modern Rush), neo-prog (IQ and Marillion) and symphonic prog (Genesis), this is a very promising band that has a lot to offer for progheads!

 

NEMO – PRESAGES (***1/2)

- This French band was rooted in ’99 when Pascal Bertrand (drums and percussion), Pierre Louveton (guitar and vocals) and Guillaume Fontaine (keyboards) decided to make progressive rock music. In 2000 bass player Hervé Esquis joined Nemo but he was soon  replaced by Benoit Gaignon. Early 2002 the band started to perform, their first concert was attended by at about 100 spectators. In July 2002 Nemo released their first album entitled “Les nouveax mondes”, a few months later Nemo hosted again a new bassplayer named JB Itier. In this line-up Nemo released their second album entitled “Présages”, they promoted this CD on the Crescendo Festival in the same year, along with Anglagard, Cast and Focus. What a thrill it must have been to watch these progrock bands!.

The second album “Présages is a stunning CD, in my opinion as innovative as Rush and their guitarists has the same varied and inventive play as Alex Lifeson! The five dynamic and alternating compostions contain lots of great breaks and many changes of rhythm and atmosphere. Most of the music is based upon an adventurous, jazzy sounding rhythm-section, a harder-edged guitar and varied keyboards. The interplay between guitar and keyboards is amazing: bombastic with howling guitar and orchestral keyboards, swinging with acoustic guitar and jazzy piano (Chick Corea meets John McLaughlin) or symphonic with heavy guitar-riffs and flashing, very spectacular synthesizer solos. The French vocals sound convincing, this man has a wide range but his role is a bit limited, many parts of this CD are instrumental with lots of biting electric guitarsolos and sparkling pianoplay. Recommended to jazzrock oriented progrock fans!

 
NEMO-Prelude A La Ruine (****)

- Are you fed up with just another Genesis, Dream Theater or Marillion clone? Do you think progrock is dead or fails to generate any excitement? Well, the new and third album “Prélude A La Ruine” from French progrock band Nemo prooves that there are still progrock bands that succeed to sound innovative. Enjoy Nemo’s unique progressive blend of symphonic, metal, jazz and classic, loaded with good ideas, strong breaks, dynamic climates, strong  interplay, a propulsive rhythm-section, sparkling piano and many spectacular solo’s on guitar (often harder-edged) and keyboards (flashing synthesizer and bombastic organ). The more mellow moments contain piano, violin, twanging electric guitar and warm acoustic guitar but in general you will carried away by swirling, often breathtaking progrock. In my opinion with their new CD  Nemo has turned into a progrock band equally level to Spock’s Beard or The Flower Kings! If you are up to music like Mahavishnu Orchestra, Liquid Tension Experiment or Rush, the new album from Nemo will be certainly please you.

 

NEMO – Si Partie II : L’Homme Idéal (****)

- In 2003 I received French progrock formation Nemo their second album entitled Présages as a promo while workin gfor the Dutch progrock paper Background Magazine. It was ‘love at first hearing’, I was blown away by their dynamic and often exciting prog! Meanwhile they produced a live CD (Immersion Publique – Live 2005) and this is already their fifth studio effort. have to admit that I was a bit shocked while listening to their new album for the first time: to me it sounded as if the music was going into too many directions and that I needed a ‘third ear’. But often good prog needs a few turns and indeed, during my third listening session I got into their album. I even conclude that this new album is another captivating step into the development of the typical ‘Nemo progrock sound’.

You can experience this on the 10 compositions, every song is a musical adventure but you have to be up to huge variety (scouting the borders between jazz, symphonic, metal and classical), lots of complex structures and a slightly theatrical undertone in the French vocals. From the first track Nemo succeeds to make impression delivering awesome work on guitar (fiery runs, propulsive riffs) and keyboards (from fluent piano play and spectacular synthesizer flights to wonderful violin-Mellotron waves). The interplay between all musicians is amazing and the rhythm-section sounds very dynamic and adventurous. In fact all tracks flows into each other but the climates are different: a captivating blend of funky bass, jazzy Fender Rhodes piano and heavy guitar with a howling solo in L'homme Idéal (1), a compelling contrast between the orchestral keyboards and the wah-wah drenched guitar work in Reflets, spectacular guitar and keyboards and suddenly a Fender Rhodes piano intermezzo like Riders On The Storm (The Doors) in Décadanse, a wonderful blend of psychedelic organ (Farfisa sound) and fiery guitar in the propulsive Une Question De Temps, a flashy synthesizer solo and swinging piano in the fluent L'homme Idéal (2) and stunning interplay in the strongly build-up Les Visages Du Monde.

If you are up to adventurous prog in the true meaning of the word ‘progressive’, this new Nemo album will delight you!

 

NEVERNESS – Horizonte De Susesos (****)

- This is a Spanish four piece band that was founded in the late Nineties, this debut CD was released in 2002.

Neverness their sound is powerful and dynamic melodic rock delivering fiery and propulsive guitar work by the two guitarplayers (including the singer). But the frequent, very flowing shifting moods and the varied vitnage keyboard sound give Neverness their music on this CD a strong progressive touch. A few examples: a hypnotizing rhythm with Fender Rhodes piano and fiery guitar in Hasta El Final, strong Spanish vocals (expressive and slightly theatrical), wonderful Mellotron and a biting wah-wah guitar solo in Finjo Y Miento, a break with blistereing wah-wah guitar and fluent drums in the titletrack and warm, a bit melancholical vocals in the psychedelic inspired (mainly because of the organ sound) in Todo Acabará.

But the two highlights are the ‘epic’ compositions (both almost 20 minutes) that start and close this album. First 10 años Y Un Dia : the first part shifts between fiery wah-wah and mellow Hammond organ waves (like Procol Harum), then an accellaration with a synthesizer solo and tight drums, culminating in a dreamy part with twanging guitars and warm vocals. The song continues with a powerful rhythm including a compelling, very strongly build-up guitar solo with howling runs, supported by lush Hammond organ. Gradually the atmosphere becomes more propulsive featuring swirling Hammond organ, powerful guitar riffs and a fiery guitar solo with piano. Then lots of changing climates with great work on guitar and keyboards and in the end sparkling piano, emotional vocals and captivating interplay between guitar, organ and rums, what a splendid composition! The final track is Malahierva : a mid-tempo with fluent synthesizer runs between parts with twanging guitars, then a long, quite experimental interlude (that sounds different from the rest of the CD) featuring varied work on the piano and electric guitar, accompanied by acoustic rhythm guitar. Neverness returns to their dynamic and powerful sound with a mid-tempo that delivers a strong duel between synthesizer and wah-wah guitar. The atmosphere changes into heavy with a biting wah-wah guitar solo but suddenly a dreamy part with Grand piano, slowly changing into a grand finale with swinging piano and a fiery guitar solo, meanwhile I have turned into a Neverness aficionado!

 

NEVERNESS - Cuentos De Otros Mundos Posibles (****)

- This Spanish formation was founded in the late Nineties and in 2002 they released their debut album entitled Horizonte De Sucesos. The it took five years until Neverness produced a successor but if you listen to it, you can conclude that the time was worth waiting, the band has made a huge progress, what a wonderful and often exciting CD!

- The sound of Neverness has no obvious references, every track (between 5 and 13 minutes) on the album contains lots of flowing shifting moods with many interesting musical ideas and a dynamic rhythm-section. A very captivating element is the contrast between the rock-oriented guitar work and the varied ‘vitnage keyboard’ sound, from Mellotron and Moog synthesizer to Fender Rhodes piano, Farfisa organ and Solina string-ensemble. I was carried away during the strongly build-up and often very compelling guitar soli like in Muro De Cristal - Maldita Esperanza (from sensitive to fiery) and Sin Horizonte (long and bluesy with great support on strings and organ). Other great moments are the pyschedelic sounding intro during Desde El Silencio (the guitar and organ sound evoke Pink Floyd At Pompeii), the variety and wonderful vintage keyboards (Mellotron, organ and piano) in Mi Mundo Al Reves and the many goodmusical ideas in the captivating final song Mundo De Locos (4 parts).

I am impressed by this second effort by this new Spanish band, what a good musicians and what a wonderful and often compelling compositions, a big hand for Neverness!

 
NEW TROLLS – Concerto Grosso, The Seven Seasons (****)
I was pleasantly surprised with the news that this legendary Italian formation has released a new album because I still love their 2-LP Searching For A Land (1973), what a great musicians, what a variety and how many musical highlights!
Like the other legendary Seventies Italian reunion bands Le Orme, Banco and PFM, New Trolls showcases their huge qualities and creativiy on this new CD (15 songs, running time at about 75 minutes), what a stunning album!
The songs The Knowledge – Overture (flute like Jethro Tull), Future Joy (with clarinet) and Barocco'n'Roll - allegro Brioso (fat guitarwork) sound like the typical late Sixties/early Seventies blend of classical and symphonic prog featuring a captivating tension between violins and fiery electric guitar with a bombastic and propulsive climate. On the other hand New Trolls also deliver mellow songs like Dance With The Rain – Ballatta (warme sound of twanging guitar, soft flute and violins), Intro And Canone (beautiful classical guitar), Testament Of Time – Andante (melancholical violins along clarinet and warm vocals with piano), The Season Of Hope -Piano Preludio – (sparkling piano solo) and Ethix - Canzona (wonderful ballad with piano, violins and vocals). Very strong are the varied tracks To Love The Land – Adagio (more and more lush and compelling with a captivating contrast between violins and guitar and two sensitive guitar solos), the Queen-like The Ray Of White Light – Rondo (first Grand piano, then a strong build with a rock-opera-like atmosphere with great guitar work) and the captivating Simply Angels – Suite (bombastic and compelling with a lush instrumentation, from biting guitar and vibraphone to a violin orchestra). The final song
So Che Ci Sei (Italian version of Dance With The Rain) is unfortunately the only one in the wonderful and so expressive Italian  language, it sounds warm and dreamy with twanging acoustic guitar, flute, violin and clarinet, simply wonderful!
To me this new album by RPI legend New Trolls sounds impressive, perhaps a bit less rock and more classical but just like their acclaimed 2-LP Searching For A Land very varied and captivating. For me New Trolls are the only trolls we appreciate on Prog Archives!!
 

NEXUS – Perpetuum Karma (*****)

 - I had very high expectations towards this new Nexus album, due their mindblowing previous studio album entitled Metanoia and their excellent contribution to the 3-CD The Odyssey The Greatest Tale, also featuring bands like Glass Hammer, Tempano, CAP, Simon Says and Minimum Vital. Yesterday evening my wife phoned me on my work that I had finally received their new album, this is the best news I have heard from her since many years!

1. Mirar Hacia El Centro (17:28) : After a dreamy intro with soaring synthesizers, birds sounds and acoustic guitar, suddenly Nexus treats us on a heavy sound featuring sumptuous Hammonnd organ and biting wah-wah guitar, a very exciting opening! Then lots of shifting moods, we can enjoy great Hammond work (Keith Emerson ‘rules’!) along a delicate piece with Fender piano and melancholical vocals and aninterlude with fragile guitar and mellow organ.

2. Perpetuum Karma (14:56) : The titletrack is a huge tribute to Keith Emerson with sensational work on Hammond and Moog. Halfway the guitarplayer delivers fiery and howling runs and I also enjoyed the combination of melancholical vocals and the strings sound, very pleasant.

3. Del Abismo Al Sol (9:50) : This is a dreamy song that contains a tasteful keyboard colouring (warm strings, fat Moog flights, Fender piano runs and swinging Hammond), warm vocals and ‘freak-out’ guitarwork. At some moment the music reminds me of the song Ice by Camel, also very compelling with moving guitarplay!

4. Travesía (9:12) : This alternating and captivating instrumental composition features lots of interesting music, from a swinging rhtyhm with Hammond and a dreamy part with spacey synthesizers to lush Hammond and Moog with propulsive guitar work. The interplay is strong and the build-up great to a beautiful climax featuring a sensitive guitar solo with exciting use of the wah-wah pedal, impressive!

5. Cruces Y Sombras (14:00) : Again a long, alternating an captivating song, from the short intro with an Inca flute sound and a propulsive rhythm with powerful Hammond runs to compelling bombastic prog that carries me to Progheaven, what a wonderful lush keyboards and sensitive guitar.

6. En Ese Viento (6:44) : While most of this album has ELP hints, this track has echoes from mid-Genesis featuring twanging guitars and frequent use of the volume pedal on his guitar. It starts dreamy, than more and more lush featuring a bombastic climac, first with propulsive guitar riffs and biting wah-wah and eventually with wonderful keyboards, again I am in Progheaven!

To me this new Nexus album sounds as splendid Classic Seventies Symphonic Prog inspired music with obvious hints from ELP and Genesis, HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!

 

NEXUS — Buenos Aires Free Experience Volumen 2 (***1/5)

- Warning: this is not a successor to the album Perpetuum Karma but a release in the serie Free Experience by the Brasilian Progrock label Record Runner (fellow Argentine band Amagrama started in this serie). The record company Record Runner mentions about this special serie: “The "Buenos Aires Free Experience" project is an associated production of Brazilian Record Runner company and Argentine UTOPIA Music Factory with the intention of showing the hidden side of musicians and their playing of instruments from the spirit. These “jam sessions” consist in meetings where every musician generates a musical frequency of energy able to harmonize with the others. In the Seventies, the legendary and endless ‘jam sessions’ were the most sublime passages of musical expression. Four decades later, my aim is to record in this collection of improvisational moments a sound ‘collage’ including rock, hardrock, blues, psychedelia, symphonic-rock, jazz, avant-garde, etc. The basic idea is to use music as a vehicle for the soul to express itself. Every piece of music is created and improvised live at the studio, without overdubs nor rehearsing, and later they are edited and mixed with a very creative criterion.” So take your seat and enjoy a captivating musical adventure by excellent, very inspired musicians!

1. Plaga (17.51) : Nexus starts very dynamic delivering fiery guitarplay and powerful Hammond work, supported by a beautiful strings-sound and propulsive drumming. Then the rhythm slows down, after a biting wah-wah drenched guitar solo the atmosphere is quite bluesy with a slow synthesizer solo (fat Minimoog sound). Gradually the rhythm-section plays heavier and we can enjoy splendid interplay, culminating in a breathtaking climax, Nexus ‘rocks’! But it’s not over, in a swinging rhythm Lalo delivers a swirling Hammond organ solo and flashy Minimoog flights, followed by a heavy guitar solo and sumptuous keyboards, the final part features piano and howling guitar runs, what a start!

2. El reves del espejo (5.34) : A powerful mid-tempo with fiery guitar and bombastic keyboard work, then a propulsive rhythm-section supporting a heavy and raw guitar solo and sensational keyboard flights, culminating in exciting interplay and amazing drumming.

3. Servicio de lounge (14.39) : Nexus got the blues with slow Hammond waves and a bluesyguitar solo. Gradually the atmosphere becomes heavier and more dynamic featuring very tastful and varied keyboard work, from the Fender Rhodes electric piano and Hammond organ to the Minimoog synthesizer sound. The interplay is awesome, ending in a compelling Keith Emerson inspired Hammond organ solo.

4. No pizza (14.25) : A swinging rhythm with lots of piano runs, a swirling Hammond organ solo and fat Minimoog flights, supported by very powerful and propulsive drum beats, how dynamic this sounds!

5. Dame un "La" (0.55) : A very short piece featuring Spanish voices and the tuning of instruments.

6. Danza mental (18.12) : This long and alternating final composition starts with a wailing violin by Vox Dei guitar player Ricardo Soulé, the melancholic climate fits perfect to the Spanish vocals by Nexus guest singer Lito Marcello (also on their latest album Perpetuum Karma). Nexus delivers a pleasant harmony of mellow organ, intense violin, fat Minimoog runs and bluesy guitar. A short accellaration contains heavy and raw guitarwork in the vein of Jimi Hendrix and Ritchie Blackmore, these are Carlos Lucena his obvious roots! Then we can enjoy raw, distorted and howling guitar runs, a dynamic rhythm-section, flashy Minimoog flights and a sensitive violinsolo. The heavy final parts sounds as a tribute to Deep Purple during the Made In Japan era, a big hand for the powerful and exciting Hammodn organ!

Don't expect symphonic prog in the vein of the music on their album Perpetuum Karma, just enjoy the captivating, adventurous and dynamic blend of styles, mission accomplished!

Muchas gracias, Alberto!

 

 

NICE BEAVER-Oregon (***)  

- What’s on a man’s mind, dr. Freud? A Nice Beaver from Holland! This  band just released their second album and what a stunning progress they’ve made. The first track “Nights In Armour” (at about 12 minutes) is a wonderful and alternating piece featuring lots of shifting moods (bombastic, bluesy and even some Andalusian undertones), pleasant keyboards (organ, violin-Mellotron), nice vocals and strong guitarwork (sensitive soli). The next seven compositions deliver varied and tasteful progrock: from “Morphine” (a compelling blend of ethnic, prog and metal), “Any Other Day” (a polished progrock ballad with a moving guitarsolo) and the titletrack (sensational bombastic break halfway with sparkling piano and heavy guitar-riffs) to the exciting instrumental “The Beaver Stater” (intro feautures soaring  keyboards and beautiful Latimer-inspired solo and in the end a wah-wah drenched guitarplay)  and the classical influenced final song “Lawn Mower’s Day Off”. Keep on proggin’ Nice Beaver, I’m already looking forward to your next album!

 

NOTABENE — Sei Lacrime d'Ambra (***1/2)

- After their wonderful and acclaimed eponymous debut album, here is the new album by Italian symphonic prog band Notabene. It contains six compositions, three have a running time between 10 and 20 minutes. But this no problem because Notabene succeeds to keep my attention during the entire album: lots of fine shifting moods, wonderful, often howling guitar soli, some flashy synthesizer soli (like on La Revolution Bourgeoise Parte II) and warm Italian vocals with that typical Mediterenean dramatic undertone. I was also pleased by the delicate musical surprises like a jazzy piano part in Le Mistificazioni Dell'Ombra, mandolin and accordion in the titletrack and a break with percussion in Il Treno Di Obuda. Notabene their most pleasant element is the interplay between the guitar and keyboards, this remind me of another fine Italian band named Nuova Era like in the song La Revolution Bourgeoise (parte I). In my opinion Notabene has matured after their promising first album, I am sure that many progheads and symphomaniacs will be delighted about this new album!

 

O

 
OAKSENHAM – Conquest Of The Pacific (***1/2)

- This is the debut album by the Armenian six piece band Oaksenham - Thisis the debut album by the Armenian six piece band Oaksenham (including players on keyboards, violin and flute) that consists of experienced musicians who played in pivotal Armenian formations and founded Oaksenham in 2001. The additional guest musicians use a wide range of instruments, from harp and bassoon to oboe, French horn and clarinet. While reading about all those instruments and the tracklist that contains two Gentle Giant cover and a piece with music based upon Ian Anderson (Jehtro Tull), I got a strong idea about the music by Oaksenham. And indeed, Oaksenham their instrumental ‘conservatory prog’ is a tasteful and melodic blend of Classic Prog (like Gentle Giant, Yes and Jethro Tull) and classicl -, chamber – and folk music. It reminds me of bands like Gryphon and the After Crying: the one moment a powerful bass, Hammond and fiery guitar are blended with French horn, clarinet or trombine, the other moment you hear flute and harpsichord or a harp intro, followed by a slow rhythm with Hammond organ runs, sensitive electric guitar and flute. I am delighted about the composition Water Spark in which a captivating contrast between heavy guitar riffs and a folky flute, accompanied by organ runs, twangin gguitar, flute and powerful bass, what a lush instrumentation!

Not every proghead will be pleased with this kind of music but if you love music like Gentle Giant, Gryphon and After Crying, this is a band to check out.

 

OBSCURA – Le Citta Invisibili (***1/5)

- This is a new Italian sextet, their music sounds as a pleasant and alternating blend of several styles in which the contrast between the sparkling Grand piano and heavy guitar riffs like Black Sabbath are very remarkable! It give an extra dimension like in the varied compositions Limbo Cosmico Part I (from mellow flute to heavy guitar and a wonderful, very sensitive guitar solo, supported by huge Mellotron waves, Progheaven!), La Citta Del Sole (sparkling piano and heavy guitar riffs, an accellaration with organ and guitar and finally Fender Rhodes and again heavy riffs), Limbo Cosmico Part II (beautiful interplay between piano and flute, a moving guitar solo with lush organ  and a great final part with good vocals, flute and choir-Mellotron)) and the excellent final composition Guernica (alternating with Fender Rhodes piano/flute and neo-prog with fluent synthesizer flights, organ and propulsive drums and a compelling part with wah-wah guitar, first supported by organ and then by majestic choir-Mellotron, goose bumps!). This CD delivers two short pieces: Bersebea featuring Grand piano arpeggio’s and mellow flute and Ipazia with a flute/acoustic guitar duet, wonderful.

Although they still have to mature a bit in composing, to me this debut album by new Italian band Obscura sounds as a very pleasant blend of symphonic (tasteful vintage keyboards), classical and hardrock

 
ODYSSICE- Impressions (****)  

- This Dutch progrock band is rooted in the late Eighties but it lasted until ‘96 before Odyssice  made a Camel inspired mini-CD (four songs) entitled  “Moondrive”. In 2000 Odyssice released the CD entitled Impressions, a strong, 24-carat symphonic rock album with obvious echoes from Camel but also some ethnic elements. It is in the vein of the mini-CD Moondrive but with more mature and alternating compositions. Jeroen delivers a lush keyboardsound (piano, Mellotron – and Moog samples) in some songs but the focus is on Bastiaan Peeter with his sensitive guitarplay and the use of a guitar-synthesizer (spectacular – and surprising sounds). The progress of this band is emphasized by the integration of ethnic elements from Scotland, China and India, very beautiful and a proove that Odyssice is on the way to develop their own sound. I’m sure this album will please a lot of symphomaniacs!

 

(GAVIN) O’LOGHLEN – The Poet And The Priest (***1/2)

- This Australian is a very versatile and creative mind: actor, author, composer, musician and responsible for many album releases, theater productions, plays for movies, he has a grade in ‘drama’ and lots of experience in music, theater music, drama and as a session-musician he joined on many records. Quite an impressive curriculum vitae that started to shape when Gavin began learning bagpipe at the age of eleven. He took part in Highland competitions in several groups and then he focussed on learning guitar, keyboards and flute. Influenced by the progrock by early Genesis, King Crimson, The Moody Blues, Pink Floyd and Peter Gabriel started to integrate the keyboard sound in his theater productions that became more and more bombastic and complex. If you visit his website, you will discover how prolific Gavin is!

On the CD The Poet And The Priest the concept story is about two young friends and the development of their friendship and life. The music sounds like melodic symphonic prog featuring lush vintage keyboards, sensitive electric guitar work and pleasant vocals that reminds me of fellow Australian Les Dougan (from legendary Australian neo-progrock band Aragon) and Fish because of the tonation. Although the sound is often laidback, this is not an album to get asleep because of some varied and dynamic tracks like the alternating Lovers (heavy church-organ sound, a delicate strings-sound and fluent synthesizer runs), The Open Road (great build-up with howling guitar and sumptuous keyboards), The Pit (wonderful keyboard sound delivering The Mighty Tron, church-organ and spectacular synthesizer flights), the Marillion-like The Open Road Revisited (mid-tempo with inspired vocals and moving guitar), the very symphonic Bird Of Life (beautiful work on the Mellotron and a lush Hammond organ sound) and the strong final song The Dance (very compelling with fine vocals and keyboards).

Don’t expect groundbreaking or complex prog, just enjoy this honest tribute to symphonic prog featuring tasteful arranged tracks and wonderful vintage keyboards!

 

(Gavin) O’LOGHLEN & Cotters Bequest– Land Of The Vast Horizon (***1/2)
- This musical project from Down Under is led by actor, author, composer, director and multi-instrumentalist David O’Loghlen. He has a degree in drama and many years experience in music, music theatre and drama productions. At the age of 11 he started to play bagpipes and soon joined Highland competitions and even extended his musical skills by learning to play guitar, keyboards and flute. He returned to his musical roots with the creation of Cotter’s Bequest, a progressive Celtic ensemble that uses Highland, Uilleann, Northumbrian and Scottish small bagpipes amid layers of keyboards, guitars and vocals. The band, that contains six members playing no less than 23 instruments, has released three albums and is working on their fourth.
On this third album entitled Land Of The Vast Horizon we can enjoy 13 very pleasant and melodic progressive folk compositions that are loaded with the sound of a wide range of bagpipes, the high pitched tin-whistles, excellent female vocals (a bit similar to Sally Oldfield) and a tasteful variety: dreamy with sensitive piano and violin and mellow Hammond organ waves in The Peramangk - Time there was..., a delicate blend of bagpipes and accordion with in the end a subtle electric guitar solo in Port Augusta 1869 - The Teamsters, beautiful interplay between the sound of harpsichord, soaring keyboards, bagpipes, violin and wonderful female vocals in Gulnare 1872 - Death Of The Last Born, several languages (German, Latin and English) and omnipresent tin-whistles in Sevenhill 1873 - Johann Pallhüber SJ and the sound of the native Australian instruments the didgeridoo in Nantabra Hut 1895 - The Scottish Shepherds and Udenyaka (Death Rock), blended with bagpipes, accordion, acoustic rhythm guitar and tin-whistles, simply wonderful!
If you are up to the very distinctive sound of the bagpipe in a beautiful blend of folk and progressive rock (with hints from Mostly Autumn, Mike Oldfield and Peter Gabriel), this is a CD to discover. Also recommended: Gavin O’Loghlen with his solo album entitled The Poet And The Priest (www.locrian.com.au) featuring very warm and melodic symphonic prog with lots of vintage keyboards!
 

OMNI – Solo Fue Un Sueno (***1/5)

- Omni is a Spanish six piece band, rooted in the late Eighties. This is their third album, released in 2007 and again it contains pure instrumentally music.

The sound of Omni on Solo Fue Un Sueno has obvious echoes from Seventies Camel and also reminds me frequently of Dutch Camel-inspired bands Lady Lake and especially Odyssice (it could have been their new album!): very melodic, flowing and often sensitive guitar work (compelling in Noche En Malandar, fiery in Telescopio de Papel en biting wah-wah in Espíritu Libre), omnipresent interplay between guitar and keyboards, some pitchbend driven Minimoog sounding soli (like in Telescopio de Papel and the dreamy final song Salto al Abismo) and finally the use of saxophone (sultry in El Tren De Rota). Like Seventies Camel the sound by Omni is like a ‘warm bath’ as on the Camel albums Mirage and Moonmadness, my favorite Camel-era. Along the strong guitarwork, the keyboard player colours the compositions very tasteful with varied vintage keyboards like the Fender Rhodes electric piano, the violin-Mellotron (wonderful intro on Noche En Malandar), Minimoog synthesizer, Solina string-ensemble and the Hammond organ (swirling solo in the alternating highlight Espíritu Libre).

This is not very original symphonic prog but it sounds wonderful with very good work on guitar and keyboards and tasteful arranged compositions.


OSADA VIDA — Three Seats Behind A Triangle (***1/2)

- This is a Polish four piece band that is rooted in the late Nineties, it is their third studio album and what a mindblowing effort, these guys are trying to compete with the exciting and dynamic sound of their fellow countrymen of Riverside!

In general the 11 compositions contain frequent heavy and propulsive guitar riffs, a powerful and dynamic rhythm-section, lots of fiery, biting and blistering guitar soli, spectacular synthesizer flights, some swirling Hammond organ runs and many sensational breaks or thrilling shifting moods. Although the guitarplay and rhythm-section often sounds as prog metal, Osada Vida their music is more than prog metal, to me it sounds as ‘heavy progressive’ scouting the borders between symphonic rock and prog metal. The music ranges from mellow to compelling and often heavy, propulsive and dynamic featuring great musical ideas and a subtle variety: a heavy and bombastic first part that shifts into dreamy with acoustic rhythm-guitar and soaring keyboards in Devotion (Part I) - After Hours, a sparkling Grand piano with acoustic guitar, followed by heavy guitar riffs in a prog metal atmosphere and then a break with a tango-like rhythm and a Spanish guitar solo in Devotion (Part II) - Flying Time, jazzy piano and guitar in Boiling Point and the distinctive Fender Rhodes electric piano sound in the alternating Btterly Disappointed.

This is one of the most exciting and dynamic heavy prog albums I have heard in years, I compare my excitement with the sound of late Seventies Rush and early Ayreon era although Osada Vida is (still) not on their superior level. My conclusion: Riverside has serious competion in their country!

 

OUTER LIMITS – Stromatolite (****)

- Last week a friend told me that Japanese progrock legend had made a new album, I couldn’t believe my ears and I was really delighted, what a pleasant progrock surprise. I am a huge fan of their last studio album The Scene Of Pale Blue (1987), the title track contains one of the most compelling Mellotron drenched parts in progrock history, check it out fellow progheads!

- So nearly twenty years later the new album Stromatolite has been released in the almost original line-up, only a new singer. From the very first moment on this CD I am very impressed and enjoyed their distinctive ‘Holy Trinity’ of sumptuous keyboards, fiery guitar and sparkling violin in an often compelling blend of classical and symphonic prog with hints from King Crimson and UK. Especially the six instrumental compositions sound very alternating and dynamic and carry me away to Prog Heaven like the opener Cosmic Velocity delivering a surprising break with fiery and blistering Fripperian guitar work and flashy synthesizer flights, Algo_Rhythm C with beautiful violin play, bombastic Hammond organ blended with propulsive guitar riffs and a wonderful grand finale with Outer Limits in full splendor, the exciting highlight Spiral Motion featuring a pipe organ that duels with guitar, violin and Stick, wonderful Mellotron waves and several majestic bombastic eruptions with pipe organ and finally the alternating songs Pangea with orchestral keyboards, fiery guitar, sensational synthesizer runs, some wailing violin and a compelling final part, quite classical oriented. This CD also contains two solo works: in Caprice we can listen to a powerful and vivid violin solo and Organ Small Works No. 4 features a strong build up and lots of variation with the pipe organ. Four pieces contain vocals, I prefer the captivating track Constellation with excellent work on violin, keyboards and guitar, the vocal harmonies remind me of Yes. I am only not very pleased with the final song Lunatic Game, despite the great vintage keyboard sound, because to me it sounds a bit too polished, like USA progrock band Glass Hammer. My conclusion: a great comeback album, as if Outer Limits had recently made The Scene Of Pale Blue!

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!

 

OVERHEAD-Metaepitome (***)

- Three years after their debut CD entitled Zumanthum (from 2002) this Finnish band came up with their successor. I already have read many positive reviews and stories about Overhead so I was very curious to this new CD. Let’s analyse it song by song.

1.  Metaepitome (19:40): This long titletrack starts with acoustic gutiar and melancholic vocals, then a mellow eruption featuring Floydian slide guitar and plesant keyboards like organ and the Fender Rhodes electric piano sound. The dreamy climate is wonderfully coloured by majestic violin-Mellotron waves, followed by compelling bombastic prog delivering powerful organ. Then we can enjoy a varied and tasteful ‘progrock stew’: an exciting break with propulsive guitar chords (between Pink Foyd and early Twelfth Night), a fiery guitar solo with howling licks, a sensational synthesizer solo, a piece with metal riffs and sparkling piano, classical piano and dreamy vocals, soaring Mellotron with fragile piano play, concluded with the sound of the intro: twanging acoustic guitar and warm vocals. What a way to start an album, such an alternating and tasteful progrock!

2.  Warning: Ending (7:56): This track sounds totally different from the first! First slow, then more and more compelling featuring swirling flute play. Suddenly the climate shifts to cheerful delivering modern progrock inspired music. In between some pieces with classical piano and dreamy vocals. A very varied and surprising one!

3.  Point of View 5:17: This composition is build upon very compelling, beautifully build-up guitar soli (from sensitive with volume-pedal to howling and fiery), supported by Hammond organ, wonderful!

4.  Butterfly's Cry (7:03): A swinging rhythm featuring flute, powerful bass guitar and fluent organ waves. Again it sounds modern, far away from the mainstream progrock but still progressive. In the end a spectacular synthesizer solo, a nice musical idea.

5.  Arrival of the Red Bumblebee 2:16: A short, instrumental piece delivering sensitive piano and soft Mellotron waves, very mellow in comparison with the other tracks.

6. Down 16:22: The final song is a plesant mix of many musical styles, again far away from the maintream progrock but for sure it sounds progressive! The keyboards are electronically inspired, the guitar howls, the rhythm-section is propulsive and the vocals contain a melancholical undertone. Very tasteful but so different from the first track, almost another band!

 

To me Overhead sounds like a fresh and inspired progrock band but also as a muscial chameleon, you have to be up to their varied sound. I like the music a lot but I needed a few turns!



Edited by erik neuteboom - October 14 2007 at 07:49
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PERIFERIA DEL MONDO – Periferia Del Mondo (***)

- The Italian band Periferia Del Mondo has released their third album and decided to give it the name of the group so it’s called Periferia Del Mondo but not their debut album. The 10 compositions sound alternating and contain a wide range of instruments. The woodwind instruments (clarinet and saxophone in my opinion) have an important role on this album, they colour the music in a very pleasant way. And you can enjoy lots of interesting musical ideas like a moving clarinet solo and sensitive electric guitar in the swinging titletrack, fiery guitar and an organ solo in the mid-tempo song Ocean, a spectacular synthesizer solo and many soli (including a clarinet inspired by Ravel’s Bolero) in the Mid-Eastern sounding Suite Mediterranea and wonderful acoustic gutar with violin-Mellotron in Charoscuro. And in the song Alghe suddenly there is pure rock and roll guitar with organ and powerful vocals, it’s all possible on this new, quite compelling CD by Periferia Del Mondo!

 

PFM – Stati Di Immaginazione CD + bonus DVD (CD ***** DVD ***)

- This legendary Italian progrock band delivered many outstanding studio-albums in The Seventies but I prefer their live sound, just a grade more powerful and captivating like on the album USA (aka Cook) from 1975 and work from the new PFM like the DVD Live In Japan 2002 and the CD/DVD Piazza Del Campo, what an outstanding musicians and what a dynamic and cpativating prog! I was very curious to this new CD (with bonus DVD) featuring eights instrumental songs from the ‘veterans’ Franz Di Cioccio on drums and Franco Mussida on guitars who founded a trio with bass player Patrick Djivas, accompanied by guest musicians Lucio Fabbri (violin and keyboards) and Gianluca Tagliavini (Hammond organ and Moog synthesizer).

First the CD:

1.La Terra Dell’Acqua (8.13) : It starts with spacey keyboards, fragile guitarplay and a warm bass sound, then gradually the music turns into more lush delivering a compelling violin solo. After an accellaration with a swinging bass, we can enjoy a splendid guitar solo in captivating interplay with piano and propulsive drum work, eventually quite bombastic. Then a mellow part with tender Grand piano and in the end a dynamic concludion featuring a fiery and bluesy guitar solo with howling licks, accompanied by a powerful rhythm-section, great!

2. Il Mondo In Testa (3.55) : After a classical, warm sounding intro on piano and violin, a swinging rhythm follows with a pleasant blend of guitar, piano and violin, halfway a vibraphone joins. The music reminds me of Gentle Giant and Frank Zappa, both because of the strong interplay and inventive changing of climates.

3. La Conquista (6.26) : Another swinging rhythm and exciting interplay between rhythm guitar, bass and vibraphone. The the moods shift from dreamy with soaring keyboards and fragile guitar to bluesy with wah-wah guitar and the vintage keyboard aficionados can freak out with a wonderful and long solo on the Moog synthesizer, evoking ‘the good old Celebration days’

4. Il Sogno Di Leonardo (6.43) : First warm acoustic guitar an dflute, then a beautiful build-up with wonderful interplay by piano and acoustic guitar, very romantic. I also enjoyed the sensitive violin sound and a slow synthesizer solo.

5. Cyber Alpha (4.27) : This piece is build upon an excellent build-up guitar solo with howling and biting runs and spectacular use of the way-wah pedal.

6. Agua Azul (3.53) : The intro delivers subtle interplay between bass and strings, what an unique sound! Then lots of shifting moods and exciting work on the Moog and violin.

7. Nederland 1903 (3.20) : Thanks PFM for this tribute to my home country The Netherlands (Nederland), the picture in the booklet showcases a fishermen family in traditional clothes in the early Nineties. The atmosphere is mainly dreamy with beautiful work on the piano and guitar along mellow Hammond play.

8. Visioni Di Archimede (8.57) : This is PFM at their best, what a dynamic and varied sound and great colouring by fiery electric guitar, exciting rhythm guitar, powerful Hammond and spectacular Moog play.

The the DVD, the track list is similar to the CD but unfortunately it features only images from landscapes, cartoons or black and white scenes from the African native people, no studio – or live footage from the band. Nonetheless, the images are wonderful!

In my opinion PFM has made a masterpiece and, it may sounds as ‘blasphemy to the Italian progrock history’, I would like to conclude that this is PFM their best studio effort ever, what a dynamic, caried and captivating album!

 

PHIDEAUX – Doomsday Afternoon (****)

- Last year I listened to Phideaux their previous effort entitled The Great Leap, I was quite disappointed and even decided not to review it, in general I cannot motivate myself to write about music I don’t like. But this album is another story: because of the many positive, often sheer euphoric reviews here on Prog Archives I asked a good friend to borrow me Doomsday Afternoon and from the first listening session I was pleased with their ‘new’ sound.

- The CD Doomsday Afternoon is a concept album with the subtitle An Eco Terro Tale, in a great way supported by mindblowing paintings that look like a blend of Hieronymus Bosch (madness and fear), Vincent Van Gogh (expressive colours) and Gerald Scarfe (venomous look on mankind). The music sounds as a pleasant blend of Art-rock, progressive pop and symphonic rock, on one hand melodic and accessible but on the other hand also very alternating featuring lots of good musical ideas and interesting shifting moods, from dreamy and atmospheric to compelling, a tight mid-tempo or bombastic. I am delighted about the omnipresent ‘vintage’ keyboard sound like in The Doctrine Of Eternal Ice (Part One with fat Minimoog flights and warm ARP string-ensemble and Part Two with Minimoog, ARP string-ensemble, Fender Rhodes electric piano and the distinctive swinging clavinet sound) and Candybran featuring a acoustic rhythm guitar with Hammond organ. We can also enjoy an orchestra with woodwind instruments (French horn, clarinet and trumpet) and violins and the the both male as female vocals are strong and varied, including Matthew Parmenter who performed in 2005 on the USA Nearfest festival along Le Orme and IQ. My highlight on this nw album is the final composition (at about 15 minutes): first soaring Hammond organ waves, then a tight mid-tempo with tasteful keyboard colouring and strong vocals. During the sparkling violin soli I am in Seventies Kansas Heaven! After a fiery guitar solo the final part contains a melancholical atmosphere (that matches perfectly with the subtitle and concpet of Doomsday Afternoon) delivering dreamy paino work and wailing violin play, is this a musical prologue that warnes we are on the brink of polluting ourselves to a slow death?

- I am surprised by this varied and tasteful new Phideaux album, I can understand the positive words in other reviews but this is not mainstream progrock or Classic Prog, this is ..... the new Phideaux!

 

PIG FARM ON THE MOON — Orbital (***)

- This progrock band from Venezuela delivers very pleasant and alternating music on five compositions between 8 and 20 minutes, the running time from this CD is almost 70 minutes. We can enjoy lots of changing climates, accellarations, breaks and good soli on guitar (from sensitive to fiery) and keyboards (often bombastic). The instrumentation is varied (from Spanish guitar to classical orchestrations) so the style is, from folk and classical to psychedelic and metal. I notice traces from Pink Floyd, Genesis, King Crimson and Marillion but this band features such a varied progrock sound that this is not disturbing.

 

PLACKBAND – After The Battle (***1/2) 

- Halfway the Seventies the Dutch progrock formation Plackband was founded with this line-up: Kees Bik (vocals, Mellotron), Ronald Brautigam (guitar and vocals), Michel van Wassem (keyboards and vocals), Albert de Keijzer (bass and Moog-pedals) and Tom van der Meulen (drums and percussion). Plackband were ‘local heroes’ but gradually they became more and more known and Plackband even appeared on the national Dutch radio. Unfortunately musical disputes lead to the demise in ’82. Until then they never got the opportunity to record an album, only a single entitled “Seventy warriors/Some  party” (from ’78, nowadays a collector’s item). In 2000 Plackband reunited and released in the original line-up the live-CD “The lost tapes”, including all their best songs. Two years later Plackband  released the album “After the battle” and a single entitled “Remember forever”, including the new titletrack and the two songs from the single “Seventy warriors”. The sound of Plackband is a tribute to mid-GENESIS, very warm, melodic and with strong vocal harmonies, lush keyboards and powerful guitarwork. In 2004 singer Kees Bik was replaced by Karel Messemaker, he knew Ronald and Michel from the Dutch formation NOVEMBER, the successor of Plackband. Full circle!

The album “After the battle” (2004) is a strong progrock album, at an almost un-Dutch professional level! After many rehearsals Plackband re-recorded their best material and some new songs, including a few instrumentals. The CD showcases the skills of Ronald (beautiful twanging guitars and volume pedal along exciting fiery solos) and Michel (from sumptuous choir-Mellotron till nice synth flights and swinging clavinet), supported by the impressive Moog Taurus bass pedals and a solid rhythm-section. “After the battle” is a real treat for the mid-GENESIS fans. In fact, this album should have been released in the late Seventies but ‘better now than never’!

 
POÇOS & NUVENS — Ano Veloz Outono Adentro (***)

- This is the debut album by Brasilian five piece band Pocos & Nuvens. Their sound is a captivating blend of folk and symphonic rock: the one moment you are dreaming away on a violin, acoustic guitar or bandolim (Latin-American accordeon), the other moment you will be stunned by exciting accellarations featuring fluent drums, fiery electric guitar, Jehtro Tull inspired flute work or flashy synthesizer runs. Other interesting elements are instruments like the Krumhorn (UK band Gryphon used it often) and the trombone. The 13 compositions sound tasteful and elaborate so if you are up to a Latin- American discovery, this one is recommended!

 

POÇOS & NUVENS — Província Universo (***1/2)

- I'm pleased with the very alternating sound and wide range of instruments on this second album: a fluent rhythm with fiery electric guitar, violin and soaring keyboards in "Copla", twanging acoustic guitar, flute and a break with great interplay between keyboards, flute and electric guitar and in the final part slow synthesizer solo in "Víndima e Ventania", lots of breaks, shifting moods and splendid soli on guitar and keyboards in "Vega", a wonderful intro with twanging guitar, followed by a romantic climate and howling electric guitar in "Canção" and metal guitar and bombastic keyboards, many changing climates with splendid work on flute and violin in "Poços e Nuvens". The best composition is the very alternating and exciting "Incenso e chuva" featuring an intro with tablas and Fripperian guitar ("Discipline"-era), followed by a psychedelic atmosphere and lots of good musical ideas, very dynamic and captivating!

 

PRESTO BALLET - Peace Among The Ruins (***1/2) 

— This is a five piece USA band including two keyboard players, one of them is Kurdt Vanderhoof (Metal Church). Their debut-CD starts very bombastic featuring a propulsive rhythm-section and lush organ. The interludes with violin-Mellotron, sparkling piano an flashy synthesizer flights add a very symphonic dimension to the heavy progressive sound. Most of the other seven compositions alternates between mellow with acoustic guitar and violin-Mellotron to heavy and bombastic with fiery electric guitar, swirling organ, majestic Mellotron and quick synthesizer runs. The blend of hardrock and vintage keyboards evokes Angel and Kansas and the vocal harmonies and synthesizer runs reminds me of Styx. Not every track on this album is at the same level ("Seasons" and "Sunshine" sound as polished rock songs) but in general the compositions deliver lots of excitement with powerful vocals, many changing climates, strong breaks and good soli on guitar and keyboards. Highlight is the composition "Sunshine" that starts with twanging acoustic guitar and violin-Mellotron, then acoustic rhythm-guitar and synthesizer flights, followed by a Pandora's Box of strong musical ideas, from a fat bass sound with Mellotron to sparkling piano runs and bombastc organ. I hope that on their next album all compositions wil be on the level of this one! A promising heavy progressive debut CD!

 

PULSAR – Memory Ashes (***)

- Yes, this is the legendary French progrock band that made wonderful albums in the Seventies and Eighties, I still love Halloween (1977), what a mindblowing Mellotron sound!

Pulsar performed on the annual Mexican progrock festival Baja Prog in 2002, perhaps this has lead to a new album. The line-up features four members of the original line-up and the guest musician Louis Paralis joined Pulsar on their latest album entitled Gorlitz  in 1988.

So what about the new Pulsar sound? Well, that is a different story, it sounds more modern and quite atmospheric, let’s say ambient! Especially the first composition Memory Ashes (four parts) sounds as ambient delivering dreamy music with warm French vocals, some sound collages, sensitive electric guitar work (obviously inspired by Gilmour and Latimer) and a pleasant colouring by tin-whistle, clarinet and acoustic guitar. Only part III sound smore heavy with powerful electric guitar play. Then the song Monks, you can divide it into 3 sections: first Gregorian choir, blended with several instruments, then a compelling rhythm with Floydian slide guitar runs and finally a mellow part with flute, piano and cello. Don’t expect a Pulsar that sounds like their Seventies and Eighties albums, beautiful but for me a bit too laidback.

 

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RA – Wake (***1/2)

- This is the instrumental debut CD by the UK four piece band Ra (with an additional violin player). The music sounds pleasant and melodic featuring lots of fluent and swinging rhythms, embellished with a lush vintage keyboard sound (Hammond, Moog, Mellotron, Fender Rhodes piano) and strong solos on several instruments. The compositions are not very elaborate or original but very tasteful like in Head On (exciting choir-Mellotron and sensitive guitar like early Hackett solo), Wheels Keep Turning ( a dynamic sound with sumptuous church organ and propulsive guitar work, choir-Mellotron with sensitive electric guitar, a violin solo and in the final part flashy synthesizer flights), Last Farewell (alternating with splendid work on violin-Mellotron, Fender Rhodes, violin and especially guitar with howling runs), the titletrack (atmosphere similar to early Focus with lush Hammond organ and moving guitar), The Knee Of An Idol (vintage kebyoards heaven and sensitive guitar play) and the final composition At Last featuring a slow rhythm with powerful Hammond waves and early Hackett-like guitar)

I am sure this album will please the melodic symphonic prog fans from bands like Seventies Camel and Focus and early Hackett solo.

 

RANDOM DEEDS  - Basis Of Comparison (***1/2)

- This unknown Hungarian four piece band has surprised me pleasantly with the both melodic and accessible as elaborate compositions. The vocals often reminds me of Frank Borneman from legendary German prog band Eloy. The music alternates between dreamy, compelling and bombastic with the focus on a lush Hammond organ sound and Gilmourian guitar work. Some good examples are the first song Respect For The Exceptions (intro with mellow organ and twanging guitar, then a moving climate featuring a wonderful guitar solo), the strong build-up Compass (compelling with majestic Hammond waves and a sensitive guitar solo and halfway a break with propulsive guitar riffs and a bombastic finale), the dreamy Before Dinner (a pleasant atmosphere with beautiful acoustic guitar) and the final track Out Of The Great Valley (howling guitar and lush organ).

After a few listening sessions this album delighted me more and more, I think the Pink Floyd fans and those who love German prog like Jane and Eloy should give this new and unknown but promising Hungarian band a chance.

 

RANDONE - Hybla Act 1 (****)       

— I have heard their fine debut album but this album #4 is a better and more original effort. I'm delighted about the variety in the compositions, the use of a lot of different Italian singers (especially the opera-like vocalist sounds great, a matter of taste), the wonderful vintage keyboard sound (Mellotron, Moog), the splendid and alternating guitar play (acoustic, Spanish, metal, wah-wah, some sensitive soli and howling soli) and beautiful work on the violin. The 25 tracks are varied and dynamic, only at some moments a bit too fragmentic or too many ideas after each other. But in general this CD is an impressive progressive piece, the subtitle "A barock opera" fits perfect to the music. It will not everybody's cup of tea but (it's not really mainstream) but this prog taste like adventure and progress! WONDERFUL!

 

RETROVERTIGO-IDEJALA! … ESTA TRISTE (***)

- This is a Venezuelan band on a French label, you can say that music binds! The music on this CD (from 2003) is in general rather dark and guitar-oriented featuring lots of slow rhythms, atmospheric climates and fragile guitarwork. The influences ranges from Landberk, King Crimson (“Discipline-era) to Coldplay, Nirvana and U2. Highlights are “La Esperanzadora” (soaring keyboards and beautiful electric guitarsound), “Mi Dulce Y Enferma Vivana Vivana” (great interplay between fiery electric guitar and propulsive drums) and the tiltetrack (warm vocals and intense electric guitarplay). Between all the bombastic progrock this is a brave and honest attempt to sound more emotional.

 

 

(THE) REASONING – Awakening (***1/2)

- This is a UK sic piece band that host two guitarists, a keyboard player en three members (including a female singer) who are doing the vocals. So no wonder there is a lot of attention for the vocale lines in the eight composition with lots of duets and vocal harmonies.

The songs are pleasant and melodic with a modern, a bit polished sound. The colouring by the keyboards and guitars is very tasteful like the propulsive rhythm and sensitive guitar solo in the titletrack, a spectacular synthesizer solo with propulsive guitar riffs and a wonderful final part in the alternating Aching Hunger, a beautiful closing section delivering a fiery guitar solo, lush keyboards and powerful drums in the great build-up Sacred Shape and a fiery, in the R&R tradition drenched guitar solo in the also strongly build-up piece Shadows Of The Mind. But the absolute highlight (in my opinion) is the final composition Within Cold Glass featuring Marillion guitarist Steve Rothery (a sticker on the front cover of this CD mentions him): first a dreamy climate with intense and melancholic sounding violin work and warm piano, then a mandoline and female vocals enter, the sound become more compelling. Halfway Steve plays a very moving guitar solo with howling runs that fits perfect to this emotional song

I am impressed by this new band and their strong and tasteful modern progressive rock on this debuut album, especially the neo-prog fans will be delighted!

 

RED SAND - Gentry (****)  

- This is the second effort from the Canadian band Red Sand, rooted in Quebec, the cradle of Prog Archives. The music is in the vein of their debut CD but the compositions sound more matured and their new singer has a more original and expressive voice. It's party time for the Seventies symphonic rock aficionados: pleasant and melodic 'side- long' compositions, obviously early Marillion inspired and loaded with wonderful, very sensitive guitar soli and lush Mellotron work. The slow and bombastic rhythms and eruptions deliver lots of howling electric guitar, often accompanied by majestic choir- Mellotron, GOOSE BUMPS! If you love bands like early Marillion, IQ, Pendragon and Clepsydra, you will embrace this wonderful new album from Red Sand!

 

RED SAND – Human Trafficking (***1/2)

- The previous effort entitled Gentry of this Canadian band still sounds very pleasant to me because of the wonderful early Marillion inspired atmospheres and the lush Mellotron sound. But the guitarplayer has left and that is one of the first facts I notice listening to Human Trafficking: although the guitar player did a decent job on keyboards, I miss the omnipresent Mellotron waves from Gentry, this was an extra dimension for me. The new album contains two long and two short tracks, the total running time is around 45 minutes, not very long for a CD because usually it’s between 70 and 80 minutes. The two long compositions are simply structured but sound very tasteful, from dreamy to compelling and bombastic with frequent sensitive guitar soli, loaded with howling runs (obviously inpspired by Steve Rothery but also with hints from Gilmour and Latimer, they all prefer ‘emotion’ above ‘scale-acrobatics’). Remarkable in the song Regrets is the more prominent role of the keyboards, especially the violin-Mellotron along fluent synthesizer flights. Just like the other long track, this song contains a very compelling final part with very emotional guitar work, goose bumps! The first short track sounds like Ice by Camel because of the warm combination of tender paino play and sensitive electric guitar but the Steve Rothery fans will also be delighted about this wonderful piece, what an emotion. The final song is Loving Child, it starts with acoustic rhythm-guitar and pleasant, a bit melancholic vocals, then a delicate colouring by a wonderful strings-sound, it ends with a fragile guitar solo, accompanied by soaring keyboards, quite laidback. Although I have missed the keyboard player, I conclude that this is a very beautiful CD, recommended to all neo-prog fans, especially the early Marillion freaks!

 

RICOCHER - Cathedral Of Emotions (***)  

- This Dutch progrock band was rooted in the schoolband Frontline. In ’93 most members of that band founded the cover band Truss. Their decision to write own compositions in the neo-progressive rock tradition led to the demo-tape “A scream for help”. When the guitarist left, newcomer Bart van Helmond completed the current line-up with Erwin Boerenkamps (vocals), John van Heugten (keyboards), Maikel van der Meer (drums) and Niels Nijssen (bass). These musicians delivered the acclaimed mini-CD “Quest for the heartland” (2000), Martin Offord from IQ named it one of the best progrock CD’s in the last years! Ricocher shared bills with Saga and Arena and in 2001 the band was awarded as Best New Band by The Classic Rock Society. The next year Ricocher released their second album entitled “Cathedral of emotions”, a fine progrock album with strong hints from the neo-prog masters (mainly Pendragon but also Marillion).

On their album Cathedral Of Emotions it’s obvious that Ricocher has made progress: the melodic compositions sound more mature and symphonic, thanks to the keyboardplay from John van Heugten (often in the vein of Clive Nolan). The guitar has a rocky edge (some beautiful sensitive solos with echoes from Nick Barrett and Steve Rothery) and the vocals sound convincing. This band has the potential of other Dutch progrock bands like Flamborough Head, Plackband and Odyssice, I hope they will continue to develop this promising way and sound less like a Pendragon or Marillion wannabee. In 2004 Ricocher released the album Chains, I haven't heard it yet.

 

RITUAL - The Hemulic Voluntary Band (***1/5)

- In the mid-Nineties this Swedish band was very popular in Holland and I have seen Ritual a few times, they turned into a kind of ‘cult-band’ in those days because of their fresh blend of Classic Prog and folk and their enthousiastic approach on stage. And I remember that was on my friends had taken his 12 years old son to a Ritual concert, he was delighted with a signed t-shirt by the band a at that moment the youngest Ritual fan!

So I was very curious to this new effort, I haven’t heard a Ritual album for many years. But during my first listening session it was like “meeting an old friend’, very warm and familiar. To me Ritual still sounds as a blend of Classic Prog (Gentle Giant and Yes) and folk in which singer Patrik Lundström plays an important role with his distinctive voice. A captivating element on this CD is the swinging sound of the clavinet (Kerry Minnear from Gentle Giant is one of the few keyboard players who used it frequently), often in strong interplay with the guitar.

I am pleasantly surprised by this new Ritual album, let’s say they are still ‘alive and Eclectic Progging’!

 

RIVERSIDE - Second Life Syndrome (****) 

— At about half a year ago I did an interview with this Polish progrock sensation and one of my burning questions was "What are your main influences?". Well, I expected some bands but their simple but striking answer was "our emotions"....an almost perfect description of this new album! I read the previous reviews and have to say that to me it sounds as an insult to call this new Riverside album a progmetal album because Riverside has so much more to offer. OK, the great vocals contain grunchy elements and the guitar riffs and runs have some metal overtones. But in general Riverside makes dynamic and alternating progressive rock with one key element: EMOTION, from the mellow and melancholical climates (wonderful vocals) to the compelling Gilmourian-drenched progrock atmospheres and exciting bombastic and harder-edged parts with those grunchy vocals and heavy guitarplay. The colouring of the compositions with the keyboards is amazing, so tasteful and varied, from tender piano and soaring strings to sumptuous organ floods and some spectacular synthesizer sounds.

This band is a sensation, what a stunning album!

 
RIVERSIDE – Rapid Eye Movement Limited Edition 2-CD (****)
The debut album entitled Out Of Myself by the very popular new Polish progrock band Riverside sounded to me already captivating and exciting but the successor Second Life Syndrome turned me into a Riverside freak, how compelling and loaded with tension and great dynamics! So I was very curious to their new effort and decided to buy this Limited Edition 2-CD, it contains on CD-1 the 9 new albums songs and on CD-2 5 new songs, including 3 EP tracks (02 Panic Room as a remix).
CD-1: At least half of the new material is in the vein of Second Life Syndrome, especially in the exciting opener Beyond The Eyelids (progmetal guitar and drums, interesting keyboard variety like lush Hammond organ and sensitive electric guitar runs in the end), the dynamic Parasomnia (emotional vocals and captivating work on guitar and keyboards) and the long, very alternating and compelling final song Ultimate Trip (varied keyboards, wonderful guitars and a sumptuous final part with swirling Hammond organ). But I also hear songs in which the emphasis is more on creating atmospheres and less on exciting guitars, keyboards and breaks like the hypnotizing Schizophrenic Prayer (fragile work on guitar and piano, intense vocals and a guest percussionist, very moving), Through The Other Side (twanging guitar and almost whispering vocals) and the dreamy Embryonic (beautiful vocals and acoustic guitar with a sensitive guitar solo in the end). And some songs showcase a more accesible and less dark side of Riverside like the dynamic Rainbow Box (fiery guitar eruptions, cynical vocals, bombastic Hammond organ with raw guitar and sweeping drums) and Cybernetic Pillow (tight beat with propulsive guitar riffs, soaring keyboards, melancholical vocals and a final part with bombastic keyboards and fiery guitar).
Riverside has slightly changed its musical direction but their sound remains very distinctive and captivating although I prefer their previous effort as more exciting and more compelling.
CD-2: I only review the first en final track, for the other three: see my EP review. The opener Behind The Eyelids starts with soaring keyboards, then a slow rhythm with subtle work on guitar and electric piano, the sound becomes more lush with powerful Hammond organ and the final part delivers pleasant syntehsizer flights. The instrumental Rapid Eye Movement ( at about 13 minutes) is a great final composition: after a keyboard driven intro follows a strong build-up with a pulsating sequencer sound , fiery electric guitar runs, halfway culminating in a hypnotizing beat with an almost psychedelic atmosphere featuring SF sounds, sensitive guitar and piano runs, what an exciting musical experience in which Riverside is scouting new musical boundaries.
If you don't own the EP 02 Panic Room, it's worth to buy this Limited Edition 2-CD. In case you own that EP only two new songs remain on CD-2 but for me these are excellent and a reason to buy this 2-CD set!

 

ROOLAART, ANTON — Dreamer (****)

- This musician has an interesting geographical background: Anton was born in the Iranian capital Teheran, his father is Dutch, his mother is Belgian, he grew up in the Dutch city Laren and at an early age the family went to the USA.

Listening to this debut CD I notice that the eight compositions sound like a journey through a beautiful and varied musical landscape with lots of surprising and exciting ideas. The music sounds modern but in some songs I trace elements from the Seventies symphonic prog like the titletrack (Floydian atmosphere and slide guitar, wonderfuly blended with violin-Mellotron waves) and Mid Summer’s Day (Yes during the Fragile-Close To The Edge era featuring great Howe- like guitar and frequent runs on the organ along great interplay between guitar and organ). A strong point on this album is the tasteful colouring of the melodic and accessible music, it contains many flowing shifting moods, good soli and strong breaks like a swinging Hammond organ solo in the final part of Near Or Far, a biting wah-wah guitar solo and sensitive acoustic – and Spanish guitar (with castagnettes) in the symphonic On To The Afterglow and a strong build-up with pleasant sounds on piano, organ, vibraphone and cello along a blistering wah-wah guitar solo in the fairy tale-like The Spider. My only negative remark goes to the vocals, at some moments these tend to sound a bit too theatrical but it’s not disturbing.

Anton Doolaart has delivered a very adventurous symphonic prog album that sounds both melodic and accessible as tastefully and elaborate, well done fellow Dutchman!



Edited by erik neuteboom - October 14 2007 at 07:45
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SALEM HILL – Mystery Loves Company – Live (***1/5)

- Many progheads on Prog Archives were positive about USA progrock band Salem Hill their latest studio effort entitled Mimi’s Magical Moment (wonderful alliteration) from 2005 featuring lots of guest musicians including Neal Morse.<p>

This DVD is recorded in 2005, just before the release of that album en Salem Hill played two songs that would appear on Mimi’s Magical Moment namely The Joy Jem and The Future Me. The difference between that acclaimed album and this DVD is that Salem Hill plays in the original four piece formation (including two band members on guitar and keyboards and all members on vocals) with the emphasis a bit more on melodic rock than symphonic prog. This resulted in frequent duo-guitar work like in the fluent starter January (sensitive guitar solo), Children Of The Dust (propulsive guitar riffs and dynamic duo-guitar play), Peculiar/So Human (very swinging guitar rock with powerful bass and a pleasant synthesizer solo) and the final track Invisible (fluent with a fiery guitar solo). We can enjoy more variety and more prog elements in the compositions Between The Two (organ intro, flashy synthesizer flights and an atmosphere that ranges from dreamy to mid-tempo with a strong break delivering a heavy guitar solo), The Joy Jem (from mellow to bombastic like the early Kansas sound featuring great keyboard work) and The Judgement (alternating with lots of interesting musical ideas, howling guitar runs and tasteful keyboards, from sparkling piano to slow organ waves). The set also contains an acoustic part with the band members on acoustic guitars, acoustic bass and piano, it sounds beatiful and very warm. The ‘bonus features’ are an interview and the Salem Hill Acoustic Set surprisingly featuring not four but three band members, one on the toilet? Anyway, the Grand piano play is wonderful.<p>

Altough this DVD delivers less progressive moments than their latest studio-album, you can enjoy the very melodic, accessible and pleasant blend of rock and symphonic prog with hints from Rush (dynamic interplay between guitar, bass and drums), Kansas (keyboards) and Glass Hammer (vocal harmonies and accessible sound).

 

SALMON - When The Dust Settles (***) 

- This Dutch band was rooted in a progrock coverband (Camel, Marillion, IQ) with Jan Jaap Langereis (vocals, keyboards and flute) and Sven de Haan (bass, bass pedals) as the prime movers. They wanted to make their own prog and in ’97 both musicians founded Salmon, the band was completed with guitar-player Gerrit Hoogebeen and drummer Henk Sonnenberg, soon replaced by Robert Schuster. In 2001 Salmon released their debut-album entitled “ Decade reference”, a 24-carat symphonic rock album with hints ranging from Kayak and Camel to Rush and Kansas and classical composers like Vivaldi, Bach and Mozart. In mid 2004 they released their second effort entitled “When the dust settles..”, their progress on this album is stunning.

The new album When The Dust Settles.. (2004) is a beautiful, very warm and melodic CD. It contains strong echoes from Genesis (Hackett-era) and some vocal harmonies in the vein of Gentle Giant. The keyboard sound is lush with lots of organ along nice synthesizer runs, majestic Mellotron samples and Grand piano. The guitarplay is strong and sensitive with some great solos. Salmon embellishes their 24-carat symphonic music with the sound of  the violin, flute and acoustic guitar. Yet another promissing Dutch progrock band!

 

SATELLITE – Evening Dreams (****)

While listening and watching to this DVD, to me it seems that this DVD experience succeeds to keep me more involved in the music than their last CD entitled Evening Games. The reason is that I feel much more emotion and to me the music sounds more powerful and compelling on this DVD than on the CD.

During the start of this concert (recorded live in Poland, 2005) the atmosphere is great with enthousiastic crowd participation (clapping and cheering). Then we can enjoy the wonderful lightshow and the modern, very tasteful and often emotional sounding neo-prog by the Polish four piece band Satellite: inspired vocals, howling electric guitar, pleasant keyboard layers and runs and lots of dynamics. The next track is Evening Games, a perfect example how Satellite manages to keep my attention, despite the long running time of this composition (more than 15 minutes): a wonderful intro with soaring violin-Mellotron samples, followed by warm vocals, sensitive electric guitar and some exciting bombastic eruptions. In the other seven songs Satellite also delivers wonderful, very melodic neo-prog with flowing shifting moods and beautiful work on guitar and keyboards, emotional vocals (early Fish inspired) and compelling work on keyboards and guitar (lots of very beautiful soli with hints from Latimer and Rothery).

The bonus video contains the video clip Love Is Around You, the docu Satellite Offstage and extras like a biography, discography and  bonus audio tracks (On The Run, Now, Rush and Why). The total running time of this DVD is more than 200 minutes, THIS IS A MUST FOR ANY NEO-PROG FAN!

 

SEVEN REIZH — Samsara (****)

- Seven Reich is a French musical project featuring the duo Claude Mignon (keyboards, guitars, compositions) and Gérard Le Dortz (graphics, story, voice and samples) along many guest musicians. This CD is the successor of the album Strinkadenn Ys that was released in 2001, a while ago. Somewhere on Internet I read that Seven Reich intends to make a trilogy, well, I am looking forward to that because Samsara is a very captivating and often compelling blend of ethnic music and progressive rock (with hints from Pink Floyd and Camel) with the emphasis on ethnic. In the huge booklet (20x20 cm) you can read about the story, the lyrics and the wide range of instruments, these are blended in a wonderful way into the 14 compositions. The climates are in general dreamy with a sultry undertone and we can enjoy great female and male vocals in French (Breton), English and Arabian (the North-African Berber language). The songs flow into each other and are all small jewels, so beautiful and warm, from the short opener Encore (melancholical violincello with twanging guitar and a mellow trumpet sound), Soñj (compelling contrast between fragile piano, flute and soaring vocals and bombastic keyboards and propulsive guitar chords) and the breathtaking Ay Adu (Arabian vocals, Scottish bagpipes, a wonderful solo on classical guitar, followed by powerful electric guitar) to Qim Iydi... (a lush sound with piano, violincello, accordeon and moving interplay between piano and howling electric guitar) and A-roak (a slow rhythm featuring organ and a bombastic part with again howling guitar). It was a real treat to listen to all those ethnic instruments, from the Scottish bagpipe and the Celtic harp and tin-whistle to the Arabian udu along the bodhran, duduk, flute traverse and tambour, to name a few!

If you are up to a captivating musical adventure on the borders of folk and prog, I am sureyou will be pleased with this wonderful album, HIGHLY RECOMMENDED TO PROG FOLK FANS!!

 

 

SHADES OF DAWN — From Dusk Till Dawn (***)

- This is a German band that made recordings halfway the Nineties but it lasted until 2006 to release an album. The CD From Dusk To Dawn contains 11 compositions, four are re- recorded a few years ago. Shades Of Dawn their sound is mainly in the realm of the neo- prog like early Marillion and IQ but without being a copycat. I am pleased with the tasteful and varied arrangements with a modern sound, from dreamy and spacey to fluent and bombastic. A strong point is the interplay between the guitar and keyboards but I am also delighted about the wonderful, often howling guitar runs and the pleasant keyboards work (from harpsichord and organ to string-ensemble and choir-Mellotron sounds). Due to the slight German accent and the melodic and harmonic sound, Shades Of Dawn their music reminds me at some moments of Austrian band Eela Craig but less symphonic and with a more modern sound. To me this CD is a pleasant effort that will appeal to the neo-prog fans.

This album is dedicated to prime mover Wolfgang Schmidt who died of a heart- attack in January 2000.

 

SHADOW CIRCUS — Welcome to the Freakroom (***1/2)

- This new USA five piece band has made an interesting debut CD but I have to admit that it required a few listening sessions to get into their music. Shadow Circus sounds way from mainstream symphonic prog and the singer has a very distinctive voice, not always my cup of tea because of the theatrical undertone at some moments. But his voice is powerful and gives the sound of Shadow Music an extra dimension.

1. Shadow Circus (7:25) : The bands starts dynamic and powerful with propulsive guitar riffs and a wonderful colouring with vintage keyboard sounds (choir-Mellotron, Minimoog, Hammond organ and Grand piano). The music is melodic, it is a genuine circus atmosphere and the vocals are strong, halfway we can enjoy a biting electric guitar solo, a good and promising start!

2. Storm Rider (7:49) : A catchy mid-tempo with a captivating tension between the fiery electric guitar play and the swinging piano (it contains a Latin-American undertone). In the second part a fiery guitar solo is accompanied by lush Hammond organ and then fluent synthesizer flights, very exciting!

3. Inconvenient Compromise (5:58) : Lots of shifting moods (from mellow with sensitive electric guitar to bombastic with Hammond organ), excellent drum work and varied keyboards (including a swinging piano solo).

4. Radio People (5:43) : This is the maverick on the album delivering a catchy beat and lots of interesting musical ideas like the flute-Mellotron and a sitar-like sound and choir-Mellotron blended with a biting wah-wah guitar solo. It sounds like ‘pop meets neo- prog’ but this song has been worked out very well.

5. In the Wake of a Dancing Flame (6:34) : The long intro contains wonderful Hammond organ play, it reminds me of early Seventies bands like Rare Bird and Julian’s Treatment. Despite good work on guitar and keyboards and strong vocals, this track lacks a bit direction.

6. Journey of Everyman (11:46) : This alternating and dynamic final composition is the absolute highlight on this album, what a ‘Pandora’s Box of musical surprises’, from a blend of wonderful classical orchestrations and Grand piano to bombastic keyboards, a powerful rhythm-section and fiery electric guitar runs, from a slow rhythm with a sensitive electric guitar solo to choir-Mellotron waves with tender piano and from acoustic rhythm guitar with vocals to an almost psychedelic part with a long, biting wah-wah guitar solo, accompanied by majestic choir-Mellotron and an adventurous rhythm-section, this is Shadow Circus at its best!

The music of this new and promising band is hard to pigeon-hole (I could only notice some short but obvious early Yes echoes in the final track) but it’s worth to discover their unique sound, I am glad that Atkingani and E-Dub recommended Shadow Circus to me, thanks! I am looking forward to their next release, until so far a solid 3,5 stars for their debut CD but I expect to give 4 stars to the successor!

 

SENOGUL-Transitos (***1/2)

- Senogul is a band from the Northern part of Spain that is rooted in 2002. They have released a demo with covers from bands like ELP, Yes, Liquid Tension Experiment, Genesis and Frank Zappa. This CD contains five own compositions, the running time is only 37 minutes. But the musical level is high for a new band, I enjoyed listening to this new band very much, what a crafty musicians and what an abundance of musical ideas!

1. Dr. Gull / Racionalidad: Wonderful interplay between sparking piano and flowing, very sensitive electric guitar (with echoes from Steve Hackett) and a catchy break featuring a swinging piano and jazzy electric guitar. The interplay between the musicians is amazing!

2. Tango Mango: The band manages to capture the typical Latin-American atmosphere of the Argentine tango (I even hear the sound of the bandenon), very exciting and compelling. This long composition (at about 10 minutes) delivers many strong and surprising breaks and shifting moods and excellent work on guitar and keyboards.

3. Microcosmos Blues: It starts with an early, a bit dark and propulsive King Crimson climate, then mellow featuring twanging electric guitars and soaring keyboards. This is followed by a slow build-up, a sensitive electric guitar solo and finally quite experimental/avant-garde-like musical explorations, again very surprising and adventurous.

4. Travesía De Las Gaviotas: This is a short piece with a fine electric guitar solo.

5. La Mulata Eléctrica: Fasten your seatbelts, this long track (almost ten minutes) will take you away to an exotic progheaven! The exciting catchy and propulsive rhythm and sultry climate reminds me of Rock Andalus legend Guidalquivir and jazzrock giant Al DiMeola (like on Race With The Devil On Spanish Highway), what a splendid music! Halfway lots of fine musical ideas: a short but powerful bass solo, ‘palmas’ (handclapping), a beautiful electric guitar solo and some very swinging and virtuosic piano work, again the interplay between the musicians is outstanding.

This year Senogul will release a new CD, I’m looking forward to it, I keep my 4 or perhaps 5 star rating ready! This band is great progrock news from Spain!!

 

SHAKARY – Shakary 2006 (***1/2)  

- The promising Swiss formation Shakary just released a ‘limited double-CD editiondigipack’ featuring a selection of tracks from their two studio albums Alya (2-CD from 2000) and The Last Summer (2002), re-recorded, re-mixed and re-mastered. Clepsydra singer Aluisio Maggine is replaced by Noel McCalla (Manfred Mann’s Earth Band) and on one track Arjen Lucassen (Ayreon) and Steve Rothery (Marillion) deliver their distinctive guitar work.<p>

CD1 entitled Alya 2006 contains nine songs, these sound as wonderful symphonic prog with hints from legendary neo-prog band early Marillion: melodic, harmonic and tasteful, from dreamy to compelling bombastic. The sound of the keyboards is very lush and I was carried away many times by very moving, often howling guitar soli. To me the vocals by Noel McCalla are a pleasant contribution to Shakary their music, the vocals remind me of the dramatic undertone of Damien Wilson. A strong point is the swirling violin work in some tracks, the Eddie Jobson fans will be delighted! A nice surprise is the track Sentence, halfway we hear a fiery and howling guitar solo by Arjen Lucassen and during the wonderful final part Steve Rothery delivers a sensitive guitar solo, it sounds like ‘early Marillion time’! Another good track is Open Skies featuring dynamic prog with exciting keyboard work (including a violin-Mellotron sound), a howling guitar solo and pleasant play on trumpet and violin, what a beautiful and lush sound.<p>CD2 entitled The Last Summer 2006 contains seven compositions, again Shakary makes wonderful symphonic prog with echoes from early Marillion, like “symphonic prog meets neo-prog”. It sounds very dynamic, from subdued and mellow to propulsive and bombastic with a lush instrumentation: beautiful interplay between harpsichord, vocals and violin in Dreaming In L.A., a spectacular synthesizer solo in Love Warchild Of 64, a swinging piano and compelling bombastic prog with howling guitar in The Play Of My Life, twanging acoustic guitar and warm vocals in Two Days Left and a child-choir and the sound of bagpipes in the strongly build-up final song Sparkles In The Dark. On CD2 Noel McCalla does a good job too, I love his voice.<p>In my opinion Shakary has released a wonderful, very melodic and tasteful 2-CD with plesant keyboards and often sensitive, very moving guitar soli. I think that Shakary 2006 will not only appeal to the Genesis and early Marillion fans but also to progheads and symphomaniacs who love the borders between melodic symphonic prog and neo-prog, RECOMMENDED!

 

SIMON SAYS - Paradise Square (****)             

- This CD from the Swedish band SIMON SAYS is another gem from the amazing Mellotron- loaden Skandinavian progrock scene. In my opinion “Paradise Square” is one of the best releases from 2002! Most of the 7 songs are long, alternating and elaborate pieces with lots of surprising ideas: classical guitar and piano, a jazzy intermezzo, sensitive Spanish guitar or sitar and tablas. The 24-carat symphonic sound is very inspired by mid-GENESIS but has also echoes from ANGLAGARD (sumptuous Mellotron waves), SPOCK’S BEARD (shifting moods and fiery electric guitar), MARILLION (keyboards) and MANFRED MANN’S EARTH BAND (Minimoog flights with pitchbend).

 

SLEEPWALKER SUN - Sleepwalker Sun (***1/2)

- This is a Brasilian musical project featuring violin player Marcus Viana from Sagrado. I had heard many positive stories about this CD and was very curious to hear it finally! Well, from the very first moment I was struck by their sound, this is a very good progrock and deserves more attention! It contains seven alternating and dynamic compositions (between 4 and 15 minutes): from dreamy or compelling to bombastic and propulsive with often a great tension between the majestic violin and heavy electric guitar. The music delivers many shifting moods and accelarations, most of the time fluent and bombastic and loaded with great guitar work (fiery and biting soli and heavy riffs) and a huge portion of sumptuous keyboards. The female singer Giana Araujo does a good job but I prefer her singing in the more mellow parts. My highlights are the exciting opener Blindfold (great contrast between the classical violin - and electric guitar sound), Russian Roulette (wonderful Mellotron waves), the mellow Jalen’s Eyes (beautiful classical violin and piano) and the dynamic, a bit Rush-inspired Nocturnal (great bombastic sound and strong soli on guitar and keyboards).

 

SOLARIS FUSION – Mystica (***1/2)

- This Hungarian five piece band is a musical project by the Solaris rhythm-section. Their debut CD entitled Mystica contains two tracks.

 

  1. Mystica (4.11) : After a dreamy the moods shift from compelling to a bit sultry featuring bombastic keyboard orchestrations, sparkling flute, a powerful rhythm-section and propulsive guitar riffs.

 

  1. Secret At Mahagma (5.19) :  This song starts mellow with twanging guitar, flute and soaring keyboards, followed by a slow rhythm that gradually changes into more dynamic with lush keyboards. Then a slight accellaration with a tight beat and propulsive guitar riffs, culminating into a bombastic final part delivering fiery and howling electric guitar runs. Remarkable is the omnipresent flute work.

No doubt, this is a very short album but also a very promising one, an adventurous sound that tastes to more!

 

SONIQ CIRCUS – Soniq Circus (**1/2)

- This Swedish band started under the name TP3 but in 2006 the band changed it into Soniq Circus. In September 2007 they released their eponymous debut CD that contains both early as new work (total running time at about 45 minutes).

Their sound on this CD is mainly in the realm of the neo-prog  with pleasant atmospheres but the music fails to keep my attention all the time. I enjoyed Bright Future (tasteful work on guitar and keyboards like the clavinet) and the dynamic songs Revolution (from dreamy and compelling to bombastic) and An Idiot (strong break with fiery guitar and lush organ and a synthesizer solo with propulsive guitar riffs). A nice and pleasant debut CD but in  my opinion Soniq Circus has to make more captivating music to compete with the many good new bands that als release debut albums.

 

SONIC PULSAR - Out Of Place (***1/2) 

— I am not really into progressive metal but when I got this CD as a promo I was stunned by this Portuguese trio: most of their music is dynamic and energetic progmetal (fortunately not those endless scale-acrobatics) with lots of exciting ideas and variety and splendid metallish guitarwork (many biting and howling soli and propulsive heavy riffs), this man is a sensation! Sonic Pulsar also creates moments to relax featuring acoustic rhythm guitar, great keyboards (wonderful piano, classical orchestrations and a soaring string-sound) and some panflute. In my opinion Sonic Pulsar has made a progmetal album on an international level, highly recommended!

 
SONUS UMBRA – Digging For Zeros (***) 

- Sonus Umbra is a Mexican six piece band (with additional guest musicians) that has released their third album late 2005. The running time is at about one hour and this CD contains 20 melodic, tasteful and very varied compositions: an electronic atmosphere with wonderful interplay by acoustic – and electric guitar along pleasant sounding keyboards in Zero, lots of shifting moods (from dreamy with twanging guitars to mid-tempo with a fat guitar riff or sultry with swinging piano) in Invisible World, first propulsive, then mellow and in the end fiery guitar with howling licks in Infestation, prog metal with raw vocals and biting guitar in Aleph and dreamy with piano arpeggio’s and ... English horn in Infinity. My highlight is The Great Fall Inwards: first dreamy, then a mid-tempo with fiery guitar and flashy synthesizer flights and a final part featuring a bombastic climate with propulsive drums. If you are up to varied and melodic prog, this album is fine one to checkout.

 

 SYLVAN - Posthumous Silence (***) 

- I didn’t know this band though this new CD is their fifth, “shame on me”! So unfortunately I cannot compare Posthumous Silence to the previous releases by Sylvan.

Well, after a first listening session I was impressed. Sylvan manages to create a rather own sound, scouting the borders between progressive pop and neo- progressive rock. The vocals by Marco Gluhmann are a good point in Sylvian their music, his voice has a wide range and lots of emotion. At some moments a bit theatrical but this doesn’t disturb me at all. The new album contains fifteen compositions, the running time is at about 70 minutes. The atmosphere in the songs is very varied: between dreamy and bombastic with sensational synthesizer runs, expressive vocals and fiery electric guitar in In Chains, a wonderful ‘on-cloud-number-nine’ guitar solo in Pane Of Truth, a great build-up from acoustic piano to a bombastic finale with sensitive electric guitar and lush keyboards in The Colors Changed, many shifting moods with sparkling piano and a spectacular build-up synthesizer solo in Questions, an ominous climate with agressive vocals and heavy guitar riffs in The Last Embrace and a splendid, very compelling atmosphere with howling electric guitar runs in the captivating titletrack.

 

SOLAR PROJECT — Chromagnitude (***)

- This is a German band , their debut CD The Final Solution was released in 1989 so you can conclude that Solar Project is making prog for almost twenty years!

This new CD (their sixth studio album) contains 7 compostions that sound simply structured but very tasteful coloured by guitar and especially keyboards, the Hammond organ work often evokes Manfred Wieczorke his work in early Eloy. The guitarplay has obvious hints of David Gilmour, especially in the opener Gray (also delicate saxophone solo and omnipresent organ sound) and Black (alternating with very compelling organ work). My highlight is the long track Green (more than 15 minutes) featuring lots of shifting moods and very pleasant work on guitar (from heavy riffs and sensitive play to a captivating psychedelic solo and a fine duet with the organ) and kebyoards (from soaring synthesizers and compelling Hammond sounds to frequent eruptions on the choir-Mellotron. Halfway the climate turns into psychedelic like Pink Floyd At Pompeii. The final part delivers fat guitar riffs and fiery guitar runs. The vocals are often duo, a combination of male and female, it sound pleasant but the lyrics are very simple. At some moments the music reminds me of the first Epidaurus album, also from Germany but rooted in the Seventies.

This is not music with refinement, tension, inventive ideas or awesome skills but if you like early Eloy or more psychedelic pInk Floyd, this is a CD to discover.

 

 

SPIN – Contraponto (****)

- After GALF, Tarkus and Diapasao, here’s another Brasilian progrock formation, the four piece band Spin. The four melodic compositions (between 7 and 11 minutes) sound very tasteful, elaborate and alternating and you will find some interesting musical ideas.

1. Sensacoes Diversas (7.04) : We can enjoy very pleasant symphonic prog featuring sensitive electric guitar, wonderful modern keyboards and passionate Brasilian vocals. The climates range from dreamy with acoustic guitar to mid-tempo with organ and propulsive guitar and bombastic with a lush keyboard sound.

2. Buscando Algo De Novo (10.18) : This song contains a mid-tempo with fluent interplay between guitar and keyboards, again those passionate vocals, a beautiful part with acoustic guitar overdubs, orechestral keyboards and an up-tempo rhythm with Mark Kelly inspired synthesizer flights and quite raw and heavy guitar play.

3. Conflitantes Paranoias

Parte 1 Sec XX (10.54) :  Some musical surprises with jazzy piano and wah-wah guitar, then wonderufl parts featuring classical guitar and Grand piano and in the end a fluent rhythm with flashy synthesizer runs.

Parte 2 Sec XXI (4.48) : The first part contains acoustic  rhythm guitar and dreamy

vocals, then it becomes more compelling with great keyboards and howling guitar and

the final part delivers breathtaking choir-Mellotron samples and strong vocals, very

moving!

4. Ventos Do Passado (7.43) : This final track sounds a bit folky with warm acoustic guitar and passionate vocals, halfway blended with slow synthesizer flights, very tasteful.

I am sure that this wonderful symphonic prog album will please many progheads, highly recommended!

 

SUN CAGED – Sun Caged   
- An impressive Dutch progrock band that teamed up in ’99 with these musicians: Marcel Coenen (guitar), Rob van der Loo (bas and stick), Joost van den Broek (keyboards) and Sascha Burchardt (vocals), she arrives after the first EP. The name Sun Caged is derived from a song by Simply Red. The new Sun Caged from 2003 features Marcel Coenen (guitar), André Vuurboom (vocals), Joost van den Broek (keyboards), Rob van der Loo (bas and stick) and Dennis Leeflang (drums), known from WITHIN TEMPTATION, a famous Dutch gothic band. By the way, the young Joost van den Broek stunned many progheads as a guest musician during the ARJEN ‘AYREON’ LUCASSEN tour last year.

After their new CD “Sun Caged” the band is hailed as the Dutch answer to DREAM THEATER but in my opinion this does wrong to the band. In fact I’m more pleased with Sun Caged because their eponymous CD is not layared with dazzling solos and virtuosic interplay and their singer has not that exaggerating undertone like JAMES LABRIE. The nine compositions often contain spectacular shifting moods with elaborate and tasteful keyboardplay, heavy and propulsive guitarwork, powerful vocals and a dynamic rhythm-section. The music features exciting soloing but the emphasis remains on the songs, this makes Sun Caged sound like a band. This refreshing progmetal deserves international recognition!

By the way: the Japanese CD version has a bonustrack entitled “Four guilders”.

SZKITIA – Ketezer Eves Enek (***)

- This is a new Hungarian band that delivers a pleasant and melodic blend of prog and folk. I general the focus is on the vocals (male and female, several duo’s and many voal harmonies) and the songs sound simple but pleasant featuring some keyboards (organ, piano, soaring keyboards), strong electric guitar play (from propulsive riffs and sensitive runs to fiery wah-wah) and especially a lush folk sound by (thanks to Hungarian proghead Norbert):

-furulyák=flutes, rather a folky flute than the likes used in a symphonic orchestra or by Thijs Van Leer for instance.

- töröksíp is probably equal with tárogató, a very old woodwind instrument with a rather powerful sound

- torokének is a weird kind of singing similar with shaman chantings.

- doromb is Jew's harp, a small instrument

Because of the Hungarian language and the rocky element, the recent Omega comes to my mind but in general it sounds as an original and pleasant blend of prog and folk.

 

SUPAY — Confusión (****)

- When I was a young boy, my father taught me that it was important to meet other cultures. So we often went to musea about native Indians and he used to play LP’s with music from Greece, Russia, Roumania, Spain and often Latin-America, especially the Andean flute sound like Los Paraguayos, Los Incas and Los Calchakis. When I got in touch with progrock I was very pleased with Los Jaivas, the wonderful blend of ethnic and symphonic prog. Last week I was advised to buy Peruvian band Supay, I am very grateful (thanks Hans) because their blend of Andean folk and Western prog/rock is amazing! Supay is a new band that consists of six members, four are playing the ‘quena’ (an often used Andean flute) and two of those also play the ‘zampona’, a double panpipe from the Incas. Most of you will know these instruments from the Andean street musicians playing in Europe.

The CD is from 2004 but re-released in 2006 by the French label Musea and the Chilean label Mylodon Records. It contains seven pleasant and melodic compositions that sound like a progressive blend of Andean folk and rock music. In general the songs deliver fluent rhythms with an adventurous rhythm-section with the focus on the flutes and electric guitar. This results in a great tension between the cheerful ‘quena’ sound, the melancholic ‘zampona’ sound and the fiery and harder-edged guitarwork, in my opinion inspired by Hendrix and Blackmore. The guitarplayer makes impression with his frequent soli, often biting and howling and the duels with the flutes are great like on the first track when he uses wah-wah while the flute sounds like a nightingale! The keyboard player sounds a bit subdued: in Avanzado he delivers a bit jazzy organ solo, in La Nueva he plays a fine duet with a flute and in most of the other songs he accompanies on organ in a very tasteful way. That is also the strong point of Supay: the band sounds like a band despite the frequent soli and instrumental adventures.

If you like a musical encounter between two different worlds, this is an excellent CD!

 



Edited by erik neuteboom - October 14 2007 at 07:44
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TARKUS (BR) — Ao Vivo Em Niterói (****)

- This is a Brasilian six piece band rooted in 2000, they have released two studio albums: A Gaze Between The Past And The Future (2002) and Mundus Novus (2006). In December 2006 Tarkus also released the live CD entitled Ao Vivo Em Niteron, I read that this concert is also released on DVD and you can even watch a video track on YouTube!

- From the first moment I listened to Tarkus I was carried away by their wonderful symphonic prog compositions featuring a lush keyboard sound (two members are keyboardist), strong and warm female Brasilian vocals (at some moments similar to Bacamarte), a dynamic and fluent rhythm-section and a crafted guitar player (from acoustic rhythm guitar to propulsive riffs and sensitive soli). The most remarkable element is the sound of the Minimoog, the music contains lots of spectacular soli with strong hints from Seventies Rick Wakeman. The climates on the ten compositions shift very flowing from dreamy to often bombastic and some songs deliver solo pieces on classical piano (very sparkling) and classic guitar (with flageolets that remind me of Steve Hackett). My highlights on this very compelling CD are O Portal (pleasant changing climates and a great build-up that culminates into an exciting ‘grand finale’’ with Minimoog flights in the vein of the final part of Starship Trooper by Yes), Vida Nova (warm intro with classical guitar and piano, then lots of shifting moods and again exciting Minimoog runs and sensitive electric guitar) and A Danca Escolhida (wonderful twanging guitar, than first a dreamy atmosphere and then a strong build-up to a bombastic final part with powerful organ waves and propulsive guitar riffs). The final track Ensaio Dos Ventos delviers a pleasant atmosphere with a rock element (swinging piano, R&R guitar and powerful vocals) but it ends with a symphonic prog finale that delivers sparkling piano and sensational Minimoog flights, goose bumps!

I am glad that Tarkus is on Prog Archives but this bands deserves more attention, what an excellent live CD!

 

THE THIRD ENDING – The third ending (***1/2)

- This is a four piece band from Australia aka Down Under. The band was founded in 2002 by a group of friends who started to make music along with the drinking of some beer (accordingto their biography)! It lasted until 2006 (perhaps because of the poor quality of Australian beer?) until they finally succeeded to make their debut album, it was released by USA label ProgRock Records.

The Third Ending sounds modern and alternating, often from dreamy with acoustic rhythm guitar, piano and warm vocals to compelling with lush keyboards (frequent violin-Mellotron sound) to prog-metal-like atmospheres featuring propulsive drums and varied, powerful guitar work (from slide-guitar to heavy riffs and sensitive soli). Listening to The Third Ending often Dream Theater comes to my mind but also Rush due to the dynamic, clear and modern sound.

My highlights are Can You Hear Me? (alternating with wonderful acoustic guitar solo and a howling guitar solo, supported by violin-Mellotron waves), Falling (also very alternating with great tension between heavy guitar riffs and ominous sounding choir-Mellotron, this is Progheaven!) and Coming Around (a sensitive guitar solo with pleasant organ waves and an exciting break delivering propulsive guitar riffs and sumptuous keyboards).

To me this debut-CD sounds very promising, I hope this wil not be just another one-shot-band!

 

THIRTEEN OF EVERYTHING - Welcome Humans (***1/2)

— This is a USA band on a French label, reviewed by a Dutchman, progrock has no borders! The music reminds me of Rush and Kansas (concerning the ideas, not the sound) because of the dynamic and alternating climates and the good skills of the musicians. The instrumentation is varied: piano, organ, synthesizers, acoustic - and electric guitars, bass, Chapman stick, bass pedals and drums and percussion. The seven compositions deliver lots of progrock pleasure: beautiful electric guitar with volume pedal use and fiery runs, bombastic organ and boogie woogie piano or flashy synthesizer flights, powerful vocals and dynamic interplay and many shifting moods. The 'magnum opus' is the long track "Late for dinner" (almost 27 minutes): although sometimes my attention slips away, most of this composition strong because of the good soli on keyboards and guitar, the great build ups and the moving grand finale. On this CD Thirteen Of Everything evokes Pink Floyd (guitar and organ) and Genesis (twanging guitars and Banks-organ) but in general this bands tries to sound original. This is a promising debut-cd!

 

TRESPASS – Morning Lights (***) 

- I was impressed by the debut CD In The Haze Of Time (2002), especially the swirling keyboard work from the young and promising Gil Stein. It took four years to make a successor, it’s entitled Morning Lights. The cover (Sleeping Giant) is very funny, showing a giant that is sleeping on a bridge with his head on a fire brigade car. But back to the music.

1. Songs Of Winds (3.38) : The atmosphere is this first song is Medieval (and JS Bach inspired) with a delicate flute sound and sparkling keyboards.

2. Morning Lights (21.33) : The long titletrack is loaded with great keyboard play and sounds very dynamic, the fans of bands like Trace and The Nice will be delighted. I am not really pleased with the mediocre vocals but there’s plenty good instrumental music to enjoy.

3. Ripples (12.16) : (This is not a Genesis cover) The intro delivers the distinctive sound of the harpsichord, then it’s Hammond organ time, what a mighty sound and also the synthesizer flights sound awesome! Again the mediocre vocals don’t add an extra dimension to the music but the exciting keyboards and dynamic rhythm-section are caressing my ears.

4. Vivaldish (5.39) : This tribute to Vivaldi could have come from a Trace album, what a virtuosic keyboards (great Hammond sound) along some fine flute sounds.

5. Forest Birds’Fantasy (4.59) : The final song has strong classical overtones featuring a fluent rhythm, swirling keyboards and again some flute sounds.

I have to admit that I had expected a little bit more from this new album: more variety, some real highlights and better vocals. But in general Trespass makes pleasant and melodic, very entertaining keyboard-driven prog. If this trio matures in writing, they can become the new Trace!

 

TINYFISH – Tinyfish (***1/2)

- According to the biographical information on their excellent website, this UK band is rooted in the late Seventies when school friends Simon Godfrey and Jim Sanders met each other ... at the age of five! Reading their very interesting and often funny story, you will understand why Tinyfish delivers such a varied and unique sound because they have an incredible musical background (under different names), ranging from a heavy metal love to a symphonic prog fascination, they were a cover band for a while and even support-act for the almost entire neo-prog scene (from Jadis and IQ to Galahad and The Geoff Mann Band). This year their eponymous debut-CD was released, what a pleasant musical experience!

During the first track Motorville I got the idea that Tinyfish was just another fine band scouting the borders between symphonic prog (atmospheres and vocal harmonies like Spock’s Beard) and neo-prog (guitarwork in the vein of Pendragon) but soon I discovered that Tinyfish sounds quite unique and very alternating, a kind of ‘musical chameleon’: blues in Fly Like A Bird (dreamy with warm vocals and a very compelling guitar solo), swinging rock in God Eat God (fiery guitarplay), classical in Sundried (a string-section with viola, violin and cello) and ambient in the final piece Tinyfish (spacey guitar sound). My highlights are the two varied tracks Nine Months On Fire (captivating contrast between violin-Mellotron and wah-wah guitar and lots of strong musical ideas) and Too High For Low Company (great tension between sultry and heavy climates), these compositions proove the compositorial qualities of this very promising new band!

 

(LA) TORRE DELL ALCHIMISTA - USA...You Know?  (***)

— As a European I have no reason to complain about the bands that visit our continent, from Anekdoten and Riverside to Ange and Moongarden. But I'm a bit jealous on the USA progheads that got the opportunity to visit the annual progrock festivals Progfest and Nearfest featuring every year a captivating line-up! Take, for example, this concert from the Italian progrock formation La Torre Dell'Alchimista on Nearfest 2002, what a wonderful tribute to the keyboard inspired symphonic rock from the Seventies (especially ELP). As a vintage keyboard freak this album is for me a 'progwalhalla': Hammond, Moogs, Fender Rhodes piano, great! The compositions sound fine, the vocals are OK, this is simply a must for every Seventies progrock aficionado!

 
(LA) TORRE DELL ALCHIMISTA — Neo (****)

- Since their eponymous debuut album from 2001, this Italian band has turned from a five piece formation into a quartet, on this new CD accompanied by guest musicians on flute traverse, violin, saxophone and guitar. The last years La Torre Dell’ Alchimista has performed on several festival like Nearfest 2002 in the USA and The Gouviea Art Rock Festival 2005 in Portugal, I notice this has boosted their experience and compositorial skills if you compare Neo with their debut CD.

The new album contains seven compositions (running time around 50 minutes), most sound fluent, melodic and accessible, especially the parts with vocals. I had to get used to the vocals in the first song but gradually I started to appreciate the singer and in the end I was pleased with his contributions. La Torre Dell’Alchimista their sound is drenched with a ‘vintage’ keyboards like mainly the Hammond organ (with obvious hints from Keith Emerson and Rick van der Linden during Trace) but also synthesizers (like the Minimoog), the Fender Rhodes electric piano, the Mellotron (often the violin-section) and the Grand piano. The interplay between the instruments is wonderful and colours this album very tastefully like the ‘Liturgic organ’ and violin in Medusa, a sensitive piano and violin in Risveglio Procreazione E Dubbio pt. I and flute traverse with Fender Rhodes piano and fluent synthesizer flights with intense violin in de final song Risveglio Procreazione E Dubbio pt. II. Two tracks deliver solo pieces on Grand piano: sparkling and compelling in Idra and dreamy, quite romantic in L’Amore Diverso. But I am most impressed by the lush keyboard sound featuring bombastic Hammond organ, majestic Mellotron waves and lots of fat sounding synthesizers, almost every track contain exciting keyboard work, this reminds me of fellow Seventies Italian prog legend Rustichelli & Bordini (bombastic use of Hammond and Moog) and Trace (fast Hammond runs and a wide range of vintage keyboards).

La Torre Dell’Alchimista has made a lot of progress on their new album and especially the vintage keyboard aficionados will be delighted!

 
TRAUMPFAD – Traumpfad (***)

-  This is the eponymous debut CD by the German five piece band Traumpfad, released in 2003. Their music sounds as melodic rock with progressive tendencies. An extra dimension are the very distinctive, often emotional vocals in German. It took me a few listenings sessions to get used to his vocals but in the end I appreciated his voice and it matches good with the music. In geenral the songs are fluent rock featuring powerful guitarwork (lots of fiery soli and propulsive riffs) and tasteful keyboards, I enjoyed the swirling Hammond organ soli and the jazzy piano soli. An interesting element is the contrast between the sparkling piano and the R&R inspired guitarplay. A very pleasant album with an unique sound.

 
TRAUMPFAD – Die Kreise Schliessen Sich (***1/2)

The German quintet Traumpfad was founded in the late Nineties and exists in their recent line-up since 2003. In 2004 they released their eponymous debut-CD and two years later we can enjoy this second effort. Because of the German vocals the music reminds me of early Novalis and the album Wer Will? by Anabis. Their music is rooted in the melodic rock tradition but the frequent shifting moods, surprising breaks and use of keyboards turnes this band into an interesting band for progheads.

The nine compositions sound elaborate and tasteful featuring lots of variety, strong soli on guitar and keyboards, a dynamic rhythm-section and good vocals. The one moment you hear a fluent rhythm with fat synthesizer flights, propulsive guitar riffs and fiery guitar play, the other moment you are carried away by classical piano, sensitive guitar or a dreamy climate with fragile piano and romantic vocals. My favorite tracks on this CD are Der Kreislauf Beginnt (propulsive with heavy guitar and bombastic keyboards and a final part with captivating interplay between keyboards and guitar), Der Nächste Winter Kommt Bestimmt (alternating featuring a wonderful grand finale with organ, dynamic drums and fiery guitar), Totes Meer (a beautiful, very sensitive guitar solo loaded with howling runs), the exciting and strongly build-up titletrack (spectacular keyboards, a wonderful, dreamy break with a lush strings-sound and violin-Mellotron and again a howling guitar solo) and the final track Ein Neuer Tag: first a dreamy part, then more and more compelling, culminating in a 24-carat symphonic prog closing section featuring moving work on keyboards and guitar, Progheaven!

I am delighted about this pleasant and dynamic debut-CD and it sounds original, also because of the German vocals, recommended!

 

TRION — Tortoise (***)  

- The idea for this muscial project came from FLAMBOROUGH HEAD’s keyboard player Edo Spanninga and was by accident when he tested some recording equipment in order to record Seventies styled music as a fun-project. Eventually Edo was so excited about the results that he recruited other FLAMBOROUGH HEAD member Eddie Mulder (guitars and bass) and ODYSSICE drummer Menno Boomsma to make an album. The name TRION is a contraction of the words ‘trio’ and ‘(Mello)tron’, simply because the band is a trio and because Edo only used Mellotron samples (flute, oboe, strings, organ, cello, vibe and choir) for his keyboard sound on this album. The music on TRION’s debut-CD “Tortoise” is simply structured but it sounds very warm and melodic. It ranges from classical and folk to symphonic rock and has hints from early IQ, mid-GENESIS and YES and bands from the Early British Progressive Rock Movement like GRACIOUS and SPRING.

The music contains lots of fine guitarwork and moving Mellotron sounds (from a flute like “Strawberry field forever” to a choir like “Afterglow”). Eddie Mulder does a good job with his varied guitarplay (from mellow twanging acoustic guitars to howling electric guitar solos) and Menno Boomsma delivers a solid but subtle background. Some will complain that this album sounds a bit tame or too laidback but others will describe it as warm and compelling music. In my opinion we have to be grateful that TRION got the chance to make wonderful this music, far beyond the emotionless, predictable and multinational sponsored commercial crap from the charts. TRION maniac’s alert, this is a Mellotron fan’s wet dream!

 
TRION – Pilgrim (****)
In 2003 the Dutch trio Trion (an abbreviation of the words trio and Mellotron) released their debut CD entitled Tortoise, a wonderful symphonic prog album layered with beautiful Mellotron samples. It was received very well by the press and progrock fans and soon Colossus (Finnish Progressvie Rock Society) invited Trion to contribute to the 2-CD The Spaghetti Epic (featuring progrock bands from all over the world). Trion was OK and delivered the epic Frank. This composition can be found on this new CD (in a re-arranged version) while originally Trion was only founded to make one album!
Listening to Pilgrim I notice a huge progress in comparison with their first effort, way more dynamic and alternating, also due to the more varied vintage keyboard sound. That variety is very present in the first song Pilgrim: a violin-Mellotron intro, a piece with Fender Rhodes piano and a sensitive guitar solo, a compelling rhythm with Hammond organ runs and propulsive guiar riffs, a mid-tempo with fluent synthesizer flights and a final part with first fragile Grand piano/Mellotron and then organ, Mellotron and slide guitar, wonderful! In the other tracks the atmospheres range from dreamy to compelling with echoes from Seventies Camel, Genesis and Focus. Especially the interplay between organ and Mellotron with the electric guitar is beautiful and moving, like in Silence of the Universe, Giant Man, The Deep Ocean and Out There Somewhere. In between we hear interludes with warm play on classical - and acoustic guitar like in How We Used To Go (solo piece) and Reveal The Mystery (wonderful interplay between organ and Mellotron). Also worth to listen to are the tracks The Book (majestic church organ sound along slide guitar and Mellotron) and the mellow A Dream (warm sound of the Grand piano and fragile acoustic guitar). But the absolute highlight is the final composition Frank: it begins with twanging 12-string guitar (like early Genesis) and violin-Mellotron, then lots of shifting moods (with moving guitar, beautiful Mellotron), a captivating duel between fiery guitar and fluent synthesizer runs and a compelling grand finale delivering a long and moving guitar solo, supported by mellow organ and strong drums, this is Progheaven!
What a wonderful album, I am glad Trion decided not to remain an one-shot-band!

 

U

 

UBI MAIOR-Nostos (****)

- To me this new Italian five-piece band sounded as the most convincing one on the BIGLIETTO PER L’INFERNO-tribute DVD (also featuring members from LE ORME, BANCO and AREA). So I was very pleased to discover this debut-CD from Ubi Maior, it will be one of my Top 3 albums in 2005!

Vendetta (9.21): After an intro with twanging guitars and sensitive piano, a fluent rhythm follows delivering a Procol Harum-like Hammond organ sound and an adventurous rhythm-section. Then the music turns into the best progrock of new Italian bands I have heard since many years: heavy guitar-riffs, majestic choir-Mellotron, powerful and moving Italian vocals, howling electric guitars, SPLENDID!

Terra Madre (6.38): This track sounds as the Italian version of ELP their single success Lucky Man: the same dreamy, a bit melancholical climate, acoustic guitar and those sensational Moog flights.

Livia (3.12): Another dreamy piece with halfway a bombastic eruption. The piano play is wonderful.

Messia (9.36): A very strong composition with tasteful arrangements and subtle musical ideas. Lots of compelling parts featuring sumptuous Hammond organ, inspired vocals and fiery electric guitar. The flashy synthesizer runs bring early Marillion to my mind. This is a very dynamic song, especiallly in the final part delivering heavy guitar-riffs.

Oltre Il Vetro (3.45) : A mellow song featuring warm vocals, sensitive acoustic guitar (including a short solo) and soaring violin-Mellotron

Nostos (23.06) : The titletrack is the 'magnum opus' on this CD, it starts with twanging guitars, soaring keyboards and warm vocals, followed by a fragile Hammond solo, very tasteful. Then lots of flowing shifting moods, from dreamy to bombastic. Halfway a great build-up with a huge tension featuring propulsive guitar-riffs, powerful, a bit theatrical vocals, howling electric guitar runs, impressive choir-Mellotron and a grand finale delivering swirling organ and fat guitar licks, GREAT!

La Tua Casa Comoda (5.22) : The final song is a compelling and captivating one with pleasant work on the keyboards: sparkling piano, fine Mellotron and mellow organ. The final part contains a biting, wah-wah drenched electric guitar solo and floods of Hammond organ.

This CD deserves worldwide recognition, what a warm, inspired and strong progrock sound!!

 

UNOMA — Croma (***1/2)

- During my weekly surfing on the Spanish progressive rock sites, I discovered this wonderful album by UNOMA. The prime mover and musical brain is guitarplayer Fidel Vazquez. He has a beautiful, very warm sound and his compositions are varied featuring lots of good musical ideas. Let’s take the album song by song.

1. Croma (5:42) - This is a tasteful arrangement with a pleasant mellow atmosphere featuring twanging electric guitar, piano, a synthesizer solo and beautiful, very sensitive electric guitarwork in the vein of Andy LATIMER from CAMEL.

2. Black Hole (8:50) - The first and final part contain a slow rhythm delivering sensitive, howling electric guitar soli and an organ solo. Halfway there is a break with sensational synthesizer flights and a fiery, MIKE OLDFIELD inspired guitar solo.

3. The Bird (4:32) - Great electric guitar overdubs featuring twanging guitar and slightly distorted soli.

4. Magic Tour (6:10) - It opens with a slow rhythm delivering soaring strings and spacey synthesizer sounds. Then a lot of shifting moods and very spectacular guitarwork (jazzy, heavy riffs and howling soli) and sensational synthesizer runs.

5. In The Name Of God (14:52) - This epic composition contains English vocals (a kind of soulful version of Peter GABRIEL) and has many fluent changing of climates, from warm an slow till bombastic featuring pitchbend-driven synthesizer flights, fine piano – and organplay and sensitive electric guitar soli (with echoes from Andy LATIMER ). The final part has a fiery, very moving electric guitar solo.

This showcases the great skills from Fidel Vazquez, a very talented guitarplayer and composer. If you like CAMEL, MIKE OLDFIELD and the music of early GANDALF this CD deserves a change.

 

V

 

VERTICAL ALIGNMENT – Sign Posts (***1/2)

- This new USA progrock formation features members from other USA progrock bands Salem Hill and Glass Hammer. The music on this debut CD sounds very pleasant and melodic, scouting the borders between synphonic prog and neo-prog with the focus on the vocals and the lyrics (about the Titanic, God, the Roumanian dictator Ceausescu and 9/11). But the integration of vintage keyboards (frequent sound of the Mellotron and Minimoog) and th eoften fiery guitarwork colours Vertical Asingment their prog very tasteful. The climates range from dreamy with acoustic rhythm guitar and piano to compelling and bombastic with lush keyboards and howling guitar runs (like in the long tracks Freedom Calls with duo-keyboards, Rented House and Kingdom Of Summer with a beautiful final part delivering choir-Mellotron and a sensitive guitar solo). The album Sign Posts doesn’t contain complex or surprising prog but it sounds very pleasant and tastefully arranged, during the long running time of almost 80 minutes I kept my attention for Vertical Alignment their music on this promising debut CD.

 

VIIMA – Ajatuksia Maailman Laidalta (***1/2) 

- This debut album by the Finnish progrock band Viima has touched me from the very first moment, what a wonderful sound featuring lots of fine musical ideas and surprising twists and turns. The six compositions (all between 6 and 10 minutes) contain a blend of folk, rock and symphonic rock, in my opinion with the emphasis on the latter category. You will hear many flowing shifting moods, from dreamy to rock or bombastic parts: Leijonan Syksy delivers halfway a beautiful keyboard interlude as a bridge to a long and moving guitar solo with echoes from Steve Rothery, the titletrack contains great variation, from sparkling piano to wah-wah guitar, a harpsichord-piano duet and a church organ part, Ilmalaiva Italia starts dreamy but then there is a steamy rock and roll guitar interlude and a sensational synthesizer solo and in Luutomat the dreamy climate with twanging guitars and flkute turns into a mid-tempo with fiery saxophone work (in the vein of mid-Pink Floyd) and majestic violin-Mellotron. The final, long track Johdsatus delivers again lots of variation, wonderful keyboards and a long, compelling guitar solo. To me Viima their sound evokes early Renaissance (great female vocals but in Finnish) and mid-Genesis (lush 24-carat symphonic rock parts) but Viima doesn’t sound as a clone, they present a beautiful blend of folk and symphonic rock that contains many surprising musical ideas. This is a strong debut!

 

VISIBLE WIND – La Dæmentia Romantica - Live in Mexicali Baja Prog 2002 (***1/2)

 - Almost 20 years ago I bought Visible Wind their debut LP Catharsis. It’s still my only album from this Canadian formation because they never succeeded to impress me with their following efforts. Until this live CD, what a wonderful prog and how exciting to experience an omnipresent Hammond B3 organ (nicknamed ‘The Beast’) along lots of majestic Mellotron waves and powerful, often fiery electric guitar work. And I love the John Wetton-like vocals (both in English as in French), a very pleasant extra dimension to the music. Most of the songs feature bombastic overtones but some contain foly elements with beautiful acousitc guitar and flute. My highlights are Néandertal (lush Hammond, wonderful interplay between intricate vocals and organ and a splendid final part with Mellotron), Dans Le Vide (impressive church-organ sound, sensitive guitar runs, emotional vocals and another wonderufl grand finale with Mellotron) and Emergence (very compelling, layers of Hammond and Mellotron and a captivating accellaration with a fiery guitar solo). Almost twenty years after their debut album, Visible Wind has released their best effort with this album, especially the ‘vintage keyboard aficionados’ will be delighted!

 

VLAD V

- Here’s a Brasilian quartet that was founded in ’86, the name is derived from a hero in the Roman history. The band is Jean Carlo (vocals, flute, guitar, violin, banjo and harmonica), Beto Luciani (guitar and violin), Claudio Reif (bass), Jairson Dorigatti (keyboards and accordeon) and Flavio Theilacher (keyboards and percussion). It lasted until the early Nineties to make a serie of records: “Vlad V” (’94), Espada E O Dragao (’96), O Quinto Sol (’99) and Volume IV (2003). The most obvious influences are JETHRO TULL and FOCUS (swirling fluteplay) but in general their sound is quite unique with passionate Portuguese vocals.

The third album O Quinto Sol is a pleasant blend of several styles (folk, blues, rock, prog) with the use of many instruments (violin, flute, acoustic – and electric guitars, bandolin, mouth-organ). The compositions are melodic and alternating, from dreamy with folky instruments till up-tempo with heavy guitarwork.

The fourth album Volume IV is in the vein of the third but has more hints from JETHRO TULL (even some covers). Most of the compositions sound pleasant with many shifting moods (even an Eastern climate) but some heavier tracks lack fresh ideas, a bit too much from the same. Nonetheless this is a promising progrock band.

 

W

 

WATCH, THE — Primitive (***)

- I remember very vividly that I hea-rd the very Peter Gabriel-like voice of Simone Rosetti for the first time: I wrote reviews for the Dutch progrock magazine iO Pages, every prog CD similar to early Genesis or Mellotron-drenched came to my way and so I received Twilight by Simone Rosetti his first band The Night Watch. And indeed, within a few seconds the music carried me away to early Genesis. Ten years later and three years after their second effort entitled Vacuum, the new album by The Watch (Simone Rosetti his new band with a totally new line-up) evoke the same atmosphere: a sound mighty close to early Genesis (Nursery Cryme-Foxtrot-era) blended with the neo-prog by early IQ but less dynamic and less elaborate. The seven pleasant and melodic compositions deliver frequent Mellotron eruptions (often the violin sound along some choir-Mellotron), passionate Peter Gabriel-like vocals and some sensitive electric guitar work. In general the atmosphere is quite dreamy and mellow, at some moments there are bombastic eruptions and accellarations. To me the music on this new The Watch album sounds as ‘pastoral prog’: wonderful and tastefully coloured but a bit too subdued, in some songs I couldn’t keep my attention. I prefer other obviously early Genesis inspired bands like Neuschwanstein and Sensitiva Immagine. Nonethless, I am sure that the many The Watch fans (I am not really one of them) will be pleased with this new effort, in my opinion their most mature effort after all those years. My rating: 3,5 stars.

 

WHITE CHAPEL – Le Masque D’Arlequin (***)

- The sound from this French five piece on their debut CD entitled Le Masque D’Arlequin reminds me of the ‘Vikings’ of Europe: fluent rhythms featuring propulsive guitar riffs, a heavy rhythm-section and symptuous keyboard layers with lots of room for biting guitar runs and flashy synthesizer flights. But White Chapel has a less polished and more adventurous approach than Europe. The vocals are in French, I am not surprised that in the booklet he mentions Christian Dechamps, singer of the legendary French progrock band Ange. Between the mainly fluent, heavy and bombastic inspired tracks, we can also trace some mellow songs like the dreamy Elixer and the compelling Sarajevo (from the former Yugoslavia), you can feel the emotion about the sad history in the howling runs!

Although White Chapel sounds quite heavy, I won’t describe it as a progmetal band, to me it sounds more as a blend of ‘Gothic’, prog and hardrock/heavy metal, very tasteful and exciting.

 
WICKED MINDS – Live At Herzberg Festival 2006 (***1/2)
- New Italian band Wicked Minds is a ‘musical time-machine’ that brings you back to the heavy progressive sound of the exciting Seventies era: a Hammond organ (lots of swirling soli) and fiery and biting (often wah-wah) guitar drenched sound and David Byron like vocals in simple but very catchy and compelling songs that will appeal to fans of mainly Uriah Heep but also Deep Purple, Atomic Rooster and even Jimi Hendrix (the track Through My Love is an obvious tribute to the late Jimi feauring a long and distorted guitar solo). This album was recorded in Germany and it’s great to hear how proud the Germans are to be able to present Wicked Minds to their fans. I don’t need to say more, I only miss some refinement from their studio album Witchflower (wider range of keyboards and acoustic guitar) but on the other hand, this band on stage let you freak out so dig this CD if you are up to abovementioned bands!

 

WILLIAM GRAY - Living Fossils (*****)

 - This is an Argentine musical project featuring 10 musicians and focussing on three subjects: an album, an audio-visual show and a multi-media website (still under construction).

The story on this concept album is about a person called Virgilio who is walking on the streets of Buenos Aires and lives between sane and insanity.

During my first listening session I got more and more excited, this is a very alternating and captivating blend of different styles, from compelling and bombastic with some progmetal climates (evoking Ayreon), powerful Hammond runs and fiery guitar to mellow pieces with classical piano and violin, impressive church-organ intro's or folky oriented songs with acoustic guitar and warm English vocals, what a splendid musical adventure!

I give you some of the many highlights on this CD. First Darkest Side: it starts compelling and bombastic with heavy guitar riffs, orchestral keyboards, violin and fiery guitar, then a mid-tempo with fluent Hammond runs, wonderful violin-Mellotron and powerful guitar followed by a short mellow part with melancholical violin play and in the end a slow rhythm with sensitive guitar and violin. Then the track Fading Points: lots of shifting moods and great ideas with bombastic interplay between Hammond and heavy guitar, blended with sparkling classical piano and heavy guitar runs, very exciting and dynamic! Another great composition is Urban Battle II: after a church-organ intro the atmosphere is compelling with fat guitar riffs and powerful Hammond waves along fiery guitar runs. The parts with dreamy piano, violin and the distinctive bandoneon turn the music into a very captivating experience. Finally the song Urban Battle III: the climate is bombastic with progmetal hints featuring great keyboard work (church-organ, Hammond, Mellotron) and thundering drums. The final track from this breathtaking album is in Argentine style delivering a tango atmosphere with piano and bandoneon, how beautiful with a very moving, melancholical undertone!

I am sure that many progheads will be delighted about this excellent debut CD!

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!

 

WILLOWGLASS — Willowglass (****)

- WOW, lots of Mellotron and sensitive electric guitar soli! I can make an extensive review but I keep it short (and I refer to the other two fine reviews): if you like mid-Genesis and early IQ or bands like Camel and BJH, I highly recomended this CD to you, what an amazing and often moving progrock experience this is and what a stunning appearance from the 'Mighty Tron'! And it's mainly made by multi-instrumentalist Andrew Marshall, with help from Dave Brightman on drums. Don't expect original or complex prog, just let yourself carry away by this very pleasant and melodic prog!

THIS IS A SPLENDID DEBUT CD!!

 
WOBBLER — Hinterland (***)
- Early this year a befriended proghead told me the exciting news that the keyboardplayer from Norwegian band White Willow had just founded his own band and it was expected to be Mellotron-drenched! Wow, I thought, let's wait and hear! This weekend we had our annual progrock meeting with the Background Magazine reviewers and finally I got the opportunity to listen to the Wobbler album. The first composition "Hinterland" (almost half an hour) is a tribute to the Seventies symphonic rock dinosaur sound with lots of musical parts that are obvious derived from YES, GENESIS, GENTLE GIANT and Keith Emerson. And I trace also strong echoes from ANEKDOTEN and ANGLAGARD. The whole album is layered with vintage keyboards as the Mellotron, Moog synthesizer and Hammond organ, this always sounds very pleasant to me. But I also notice that the vocals are mediocre and at some moments the compositions lack direction or tend to sound too longwinding. I won't nail Wobbler as just a derivative, I won't hail them as an excellent addition, for me this is a good album, no more or less, just enjoy the wonderful vintage sound.
X

 

XINEMA – Basic Communication (***)

- This is a Swedish trio, they know each other from the Eighties as the progrock formation Madrigal that played prog inspired by Genesis, Rush, Yes and Kansas. Then the members went their own way, at some moments they met again and in the late Nineties thsi led to a new effort to make music with each other. In 2002 they released under the name Xinema (they had to chnage their name because of another Madrigal) an album with lots of early work but in 2006 Xinema finally released new work.<p>Their sound is a pleasant blend of neo-progressive rock and melodic rock featuring lots of great guitar work, almost every song is coloured by him, from sensitive and compelling to raw and fiery with often howling runs. The vocals sound inspired, the rhythm-section plays tight and the keyboards have a bit functional role but in some tracks we can enjoy flashy synthesizer soli, classical orchestrations and even the impressive sound of the church organ. The climates in the 14 tracks ranges from mnellow to mid-tempo with sursprising musical ideas like spacey keyboard work (the short Awakening), subdued with Grand piano (Live The Way I Knew It) and lush keyboards and a fiery guitar solo in the final song Dust In Your Eyes. A very pleasant album that will appeal to especially the neo-prog fans.

 

Y

 

YESTERDAYS – Holdfenykert (***)

- This is a Hungarian band with mainly Rumanian musicians, the current line-up features 10 band members including 3 women. Yesterdays is rooted in early 2000 and has already made a demo tape (entitled Come Dream With Me from 2002), a serie of CD’s and even a DVD.

During the first part of this CD their sound is pleasant and folky inspired featuring lots of acoustic guitar and flute along a wonderful female voice with echoes from Annie Haslam. I am delighted about an acoustic guitar duet (twanging and solo) and the omnipresent violin-Mellotron waves. The second part of Holdenfenykert delivers a way more symphonic rock sound featuring fluent Moog runs and again beautiful Mellotron work. But we can also enjoy pure folk and I was very pleased with a duet from acoustic guitar and harpsichord, that distinctive vintage keyboard. My highlight is the long and alternating song entitled Seven: it starts with a fluent rhythm, Moog flights and Mellotron waves and mellow parts with warm female vocals, then a compelling piece with sensitive guitar and lush Mellotron. The final part begins with a flute solo and howling guitar runs and finally a sumptuous eruption with a swirling Hammond solo, great!

To me this sounds as a wonderful blend of folk and symphonic rock, very tasteful, this band will please both the prog-folk – as the symphonic prog fans.

 

Z

 

ZAGUAN — Testigo Del Tiempo (***1/2)

- After new, splendid bands like Bijou and Senogul here is Zaguan. They are rooted in 1997 and started as a Triana cover band. If you listen to the vocals this is not a surprise, incredible how similar the singer sounds to the late Jesus De La Rosa who died tragically in a car accident early The Eighties! If I compare Zaguan their own compositions to Triana I analyse that Zaguan sound less symphonic (short compositions and a small range of keyboards) and more folky because of the more omnipresent flamenco guitar. That's also why I have Zaguan categorized as prog folk. The 11 songs on this CD are a very melodic and tasteful progressive blend of rock, folk and symphonic featuring strong and expressive vocals (but not that typical wailing of the flamenco singers), some fiery and howling electric guitar and fluent Hammond organ soli and lots of exciting flamenco guitar runs. I fyou like Rock Andalus, especially Triana, this great Spanish prog folk band is worth to check out, what a moving experience!

 

ZEN CARNIVAL – Bardo (***)
- This USA progrock band is rooted in 1994 and first named EOS, then renamed into SOL in 1997 and finally ZEN CARNIVAL a year later. The name is a blend of two opposite worlds: Zen points at the meditation of the Boedistic world and Carnival at making fun with dance and music and a few things more during the annual Latin American carnival. The prime mover and musical brainchild is multi-instrumentalist Bill Denison (guitars, keyboards, vocals and flute). The music of Zen Carnival sounds strong and varied with lots of exciting soli on guitar and keyboards. It’s hard to put Zen Carnival in a category: first Grand piano with dreamy vocals, then compelling and bombastic and finally pure symphonic prog with sensitive electric guitar and sumptuous keyboards in Blindness, melancholical vocals, intense piano play, a swinging break and fat synthesizer sounds in Pins And Needles and swinging fusion with great work on guitar and keyboards in Zeitgeist. If you are in the mood to discover adventurous prog, Bardo by Zen Carnival is an interesting album to check out!
 
ZENIT — Surrender (***1/2)   

- This is a Swiss five piece band with additional musicians on flute, saxophone, cello and even a child-choir. The bass player was in Clepsydra

1. Promenade (Part I - Om) (1:28) : A short opener that sounds very atmospheric.

2. Yin And Yang (10:47) : Lots of varietation in this long composition, from dreamy with piano and warm vocals and a piece that sounds like a sound-collage (including ticking Swiss clocks) to swinging with expressive vocals, a slow rhythm with a buzzing bass and a sumptuous final part with biting wah-wah guitar and floods of Hammond organ. It all sounds very elaboborate and flowing and there is lot of tension and dynamics.

3. The City (4:25) : Again lots of varietation, from catchy piano work to a fluent rhythm with fiery guitar and the cynical sounding vocals, really an extra dimension on this CD!

4. Devil’ Siesta (3:59) : First a wailing cello sound, then a dreamy atmosphere with Peter Gabriel-like vocals and tasteful keyboards.

5. The Cathedral (4:18) : This song rocks: a catchy rhythm, a lush Hammond sound, fat synthesizer flights and a fine break and bombastic grand finale.

6. New1c (12:43) : It starts with a slow rhythm that contains dreamy saxophone, then an accelllaration with organ and fiery wah-wah guitar, followed by an intricate piece with violin-Mellotron and propulsive guitar riffs, very captivating! The final part delivers a dreamy climate with flute, saxophne and twanging guitars.

7. Promenade (Part II – On Stage) (4:30) : An instrumental song with a tight beat, base dupon tasteful interplay between guitar and keyboards.

8. I Ching (6:31) : First a Chinese inspired atmosphere with swinging bass and modern sounding keyboards, then an ominous climate with theatrical vocals, followed by bombastic guitar and keyboards, great interplay! Finally we can enjoy a lush bombastic grand finale with sparkling keyboards,propulsive guitar riffs and inspired vocals.

9. Promenade (Part III - Underground) (1:14) : A short instrumental with the sound of streaming water and fragile work on the slide- guitar.

10. Surrender (14:08) : The final composition is the longest and layered with strong musical ideas and varietion. I am delighted about the middle part that sounds like a tribute to the middle-part of Supper’s Ready by Genesis: a dynamic organ solo, in an exciting way blended with sensational synthesizer flights, sensitive guitar and warm vocals, very compelling!

Zenit their sound is between ‘classical symphonic progressive rock’ like Genesis and Art-rock with bands that blend rock with surprising musical ideas and several styles. Highly recommended!



Edited by erik neuteboom - October 14 2007 at 07:47
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CONVENTION PROG RESISTE 2005 – dvd (***1/5)

 - This is a Belgian initiative, if you take a look at their website (http://www.progresiste.com/convention/ ) you will notice that this DVD is part of an annual serie from 2003, soon 2006 will be released. Here we have the 2005 edition featuring seven bands, each plays one song and between the songs you can enjoy scenes in the dressing rooms, some very funny ones!

MADELGAIRE : This is a Belgian formation that makes very pleasant ‘Classic Seventies Symphonic Prog’. The intro contains a folky atmosphere with acoustic guitars (even the drummer) and a mandoline player, wearing a t-shirt with the magic word Melotron printed on it ... Then the music turns into melodic symphonic prog, from dreamy to bombastic with a lush Mellotron sound, fluent synthesizer runs, fiery guitar and French vocals, a good starter.

EX-VAGUS : Here we have a Swiss band that made two rock operas, this is obvious on their contribution: an often bombastic  blend of rock and symphonic with dramatic French vocals (strong hints from Ange), heavy keyboard layers and a compelling guitar solo. An interesting band, I have heard their album Ames Vagabondes, very tasteful and professional.

QUIDAM : No introduction necessary for this popular Polish band, I have seen them this summer during a progrock festival in Paris, this formation is at their best on stage: their singer is the ‘Bono of the progrock’, a very enthousiastic and dynamic personality! The music is a melodic and alternating blend of progressive pop, neo-prog and some symphonic. Halfway the music flows into the cover Hush by Deep Purple and we can enjoy strong work on flutes and guitar.

FOCUS : Our Dutch pride still features Thijs Van Leer, what a professional and humorous musician! On this track he starts with a long solo on his flute traverse, followed by some funny singing and eventually Focus treats us on a very good rendition of their ‘classic’ composition Hocus Pocus, especially the guitar work is impressive!

KNIGHT AREA : Last year this Dutch band performed on the annual Nearfest festival in the USA, there they made friends and I think here in Belgium too. They start with a bit polished up-tempo neo-prog but soon their sound shifts into wonderful, very compelling symphonic prog with majestic Mellotron, powerful bass pedals and in the final part a great build-up guitar solo by the humorous Rinie Huigen (like bass player Gijs Koopman once a Cliffhanger member), he treats us on lots of howling runs, the applause is huge!

LA MASCHERA DI CERA : Next the acclaimed Italian symphonic prog band La Maschera Di Cera, I hope to see them once! Their long composition is drenched in the Seventies Italian prog with dreamy flute and bombastic Mellotron, what an inspired and enthousiastic band, they carry us away to Progheaven!

RIVERSIDE : Finally the Polish progrock sensation Riverside, their song starts with sensitive piano and electric guitar, gradually turn into a slow rhythm with a moving atmosphere delivering howling electric guitar and emotional overtones, the typical Riverside sound!

- This is an excellent progrock DVD with many highlights and an exciting line-up, highly recommended!

 

(THE) 7 SAMURAI – The Ultimate Epic (***)

Here is another project by Colossus and Musea, this time a CD featuring three bands, each with an ‘epic’ composition between 20 and 30 minutes.

CAP – Alla Corte Degli Eroi (27.03)

First the Italian band CAP, they deliver symphonic prog in the 24-carat tradition, wonderful ! After a dreamy intro with violin, flute and twanging acoustic guitar, the music turns into a lush and compelling prog sound with strong hints from the Classic Seventies Italian Prog featuring warm Italian vocals, lots of Grand piano, Hammond organ and Mellotron and fiery electric guitar. The powerful guitar and flute traverse work evoke Jethro Tull, a very popular band in Italy in the Seventies!

TEMPANO – The Farmers (26.19)

 

This band is from Venezuela, they also treat us on beautiful symphonic prog, very tastefully coloured by fat Moog flights and delicate work on the Hohner D6 clavinet, Farfisa organ and Rhodes electric piano. The music changes frequently and very fluently from dreamy with violin or a slow rhythm with soaring keyboards to propulsive with fiery guitar or bombastic with lush keyboards. At some moments there are vocals but it’s mainly instrumental prog.

TAPOBRAN – The Bandits (22.33)

Lots of progheads are eagerly waiting on their debut CD but first here they are with a very alternating contribution to this CD.

First an impressive intro with majestic violin-Mellotron and sweeping drum beats, followed by a swinging rhythm with flashy soli on Hammond organ and Moog synthesizer, this is ‘keyboard Heaven’, with obvious echoes from Keith Emerson! Then a mid-tempo with warm Italian vocals evoking Nuova Era (another wonderful ELP inspired Italian band). Suddenly the atmosphere turns into folky with flute, mandoline and violin, it reminds me of the Andean folk. Tapobran keeps on surprising us with lots of fine musical ideas: sweeping drums with powerful violin-Mellotron, a piece with clarinet and piano and finally a bombastic climate with propulsive Hammond waves and captivating interplay between saxophone and choir-Mellotron, supported by dynamic drumming, unique prog!

- This CD is highly recommended to all symphomaniacs on this earth .. and beyond!

 

PROGRESSIVE ROCK COVERS – Various Artists (***1/2)

The French progrock label Musea has compiled this CD from previously

earlier released Musea albums except the final song.

Track list:

1 - Toccata (7'39)

2 - Time (4'59)

3 - Immigrant Song (2'53)

4 - Birds Medley (7'52)

5 - Travelling Lady (5'33)

6 - Darkness - 11/11 (7'08)

7 - Child In Time (9'46)

8 - House With No Door (4'07)

9 - Kashmir (14'39)

10 - Dynamite (2'56)

11 - Strange Days (3'06)

12 - Exiles (4'51)

Performing bands:

1. GERARD (Japan)

2. PANGAEA (USA)

3. BLUE SHIFT (USA)

4. ARS NOVA (Japan)

5. LONDON UNDERGROUND (Italy)

6. TWENTY-FOUR HOURS (Italy)

7. QUIDAM (Poland)

8. HALLOWEEN (France)

9. NOW (Belgium)

10. DIFICIL EQUILIBRIO (Spain)

11. VISIBLE WIND (Canada)

12. Thierry CRUSEM & L'AUTRE SYSTEME (France)

In general th elevel of this CD is good, especially Gerard with Toccata from ELP and Ars Nova with Birds Medley from Tracé featuring splendid keyboard-driven prog with an awesome rhythm-section. Blue Shift with Immigrant Song from Led Zeppelin (very dynamic with captivating integration of organ) and Visible Wind with Strange Days from The Doors (very pleasant atmosphere, strong vocals and fiery wah-wah guitar). I don’t know the two VDGG songs by London Underground and Halloween but I enjoyed it. The rendition of the classic Child In Time from Deep Purple turned out to be the biggest disappointment on this CD, what a poor female vocals, only the strong work on flute and sensitive guitar saved Quidam! Very remarkable is Exiles from King Crimson by Thierry Crusem & L'Autre Systeme, it sounds very compelling with strong vocals, a dynamic rhythm-section, this band has succeeded to sound original while playing a cover.

In my opinion Musea has released a very interesting CD compilation although most songs can be found on earlier Musea CD releases.

 

VARIOUS ARTISTS (LABEL SAMPLERS) — Nearfest 2005 Rising To The Surface (***1/5)

- In 2005 the annual USA progfest festival Nearfest delivered a stunning serie of progrock bands during the two days, now you can enjoy it on DVD with a running time of three hours!

 

WOBBLER: This DVD starts with the acclaimed Swedish band Wobbler, their sound is similar to Anglagard but more varied. The play their demo-song Imperial Winter White Dwarf, a very alternating composition: from dreamy with flute and swinging with clavinet to bombastic with heavy choir-Mellotron eruptions and experimental with xylophone and wah-wah guitar. It’s great to witness the keyboard player who is surrounded by vintage keyboards, like Rick Wakeman in The Seventies! The vocals sound a bit mediocre but in general Wobbler delivers 20 minutes of wonderful Mellotron drenched and Seventies inspired prog.

FROGG CAFE: The stage is crowded with musicians on a wide range of instruments, from violin and guitar to keyboards and lot of woodwind and brass. The music (three tracks, half an hour) is a blend of several styles, from jazzrock to experimental, and it sounds swinging and melodic, a fien musical experience it it’s your cup of tea.

PRESENT: This is a belgian avant-garde formation with a cult status (according to the cover information), it’s not my music but I ahve to admot that they sound dynamic and adventurous during the 25 minutes on the song Promenade Au Fond D’Un Canal.

IQ: Neo prog legend IQ has released the 2-DVD On Stage that contains the Nearfest 2005 concert. On the Nearfest 2005 DVD you can find two tracks from that concert: Born Brilliant (intense vocals, sensitive electric guitar and lush violin-Mellotron) and the epic The Seventh House (alternating with lots of changing climates), it prooves that IQ is one of th eleading prog bands at this moment, what a great sound and inspired musicians!

KNIGHT AREA: In the mid-Nineties I witnessed a concert by Dutch progrock band Cliffhanger featuring bass player Gijs Koopman and guitarplayer Rinie Huigen, nowadays members of Knight Area: it was in the middle of nowhere and the attendance was 10 progheads.. great to see that more than 10 years later these two musicians are playing for many hundreds of progheads on this acclaimed USA progrock festival! And both musicians are also the driving forces on stage, Gijs with his enthousiastic walks and Rinie with his emotional performance, especially during the final song Mortal Drew (closing section) when he freaks out with a very moving solo, loaded with howling rungs. The other two tracks Conspiracy (the singer looks like Steve Perry from Journey) and The Run Also Rises alternate between a bit polished neo-prog and mainly symphonic prog with a lush keyboard sound (lots of bombastic Mellotron eruptions), the crowd hailes Knight Area with an enthousiastic applause, I amvery glad about that for my fellow Dutchmen!

THE MUFFINS: This band offers an adventurous and alternating musical experience but it’s not my cup of tea, too complex and experimental but if you like this music, you will be delighted, it sounds strong and elaborate.

MATTHEW PARMENTER: This man is the maverick of the festival with his white painted face and black eye mascara but he convinces me, what a beautiful, a bit dark music, I love the acoustic rhythm guitar, his fragile lyrics and emotional singing, the crowd loves it too.

KENSO: What a virtuosic, dynamic and exciting jazzrock, loaded with excellent runs on the synthesizer and great interplay in the opener Shining In The Sky. Funny to see the guitarplayer in his white doctors coat. Then we see lots of percussive keyboard sounds in Tjandi Bentar with mindblowing psychedelic screen projections, I amcarried away by those typical Sixties elements! Finally the track Echi Dal Foro Romano featuring sparkling piano, Kenso has delivered an outstanding performance!

LE ORME: The final gig on this DVD is by Italian progrock legend Le Orme who recently toured in Italy, Mandrakeroot and Andrea Cortese has told their enthousiastic stories! This 20 minutes version of the ‘ultimate’ Le Orme composition Felona E Sorona caused mixed feelings. On one hand I am impressed by the new Le Orme line-up with two excellent keyboard players (one on Hammond organ) and ‘veteran’ Aldo Tagliapietra on his spectacular looking twin-neck guitar but on the other hand I am not pleased with the drum solo after 8 minutes and the fact that the compelling grand finale has been deleted. Perhaps Le Orme will release it on a possible DVD of their recent tour ...?

Anyway, enjoy this great DVD that contains varied and inspired prog, highly recommended!

 

THE SPAGHETTI EPIC 2 (***)

Bands: Randone, La Voce Del Vento en Tilion (all bands 1 ‘epic’)

Again an impressive lay-out by the Finnish Colossus project: a huge booklet featuring lots of information, pictures and even cartoons about the famous movie The Good, The Bad And The Ugly, the subject on this album.

RANDONE  (Italy) – The Good (25.04)

This acclaimed new Italian five piece band delivers an alternating, very melodic composition in the 24-carat symphonic prog tradition with wonderful vintage keyboards (especially the omnipresent choir-Mellotron), strong interplay between keyboards and guitar, pleasant Italian vocals, powerful work on saxophone and lots of changing climates and breaks. It doesn’t sound original but very tasteful and I am sure many symphomaniacs will enjoy this music.

LA VOCE DE L VENTO (UK) – The Bad (24.23)

Despite the Italian bandname, this is a duo from the UK. Their music alternates between polished sounding prog/progressive pop and exciting ELP-like bombastic keyboard-driven symphonic prog. I am delighted about the parts with flashy Moog sounds, swirling Hammond runs and propulsive organ with wah-wah guitar, goose bumps!

TILION (Italy) – The Ugly (26.57)

This new Italian band turns out to be the new Il Balletto Di Bronzo because of the expressive vocals, fiery parts, raw guitar sound, avant-garde/experimental undertones and lots of surprising breaks and shifting moods: from swinging with jazzy Fender Rhodes piano to fat Moog flights with dramatic vocals or bombastic keyboards featuring Moog and Hammond, followed by experimental work on piano and theatrical vocals. To me the music by Tilion sounds as very intricate and compelling but not everybody’s cup of tea.......just like the sound of Il Balletto Di Bronzo on their legendary album Ys!

 

VARIOUS ARTISTS (LABEL SAMPLERS) — One World Tapestry - Progressive Rock (***1/5)

- Originally this CD is an idea by the Australian DJ Andrew Holbron because of the devastating Asian tsunami a few years ago but after the Interantional Red Cross has done a lot for the tsunami victims, Andrew changed his focus to the Sudanese refugees. If you buy this CD you help these people who live in terrible circumstances we cannot imagine because it is so far away from our houses with airco or central heating, our loaded refrigerators, our new iPods or wide screen TV’s or our holidays to Aruba, Greece, China or South-Africa.

This album has become a wonderful and varied musical journey, from folk to classical to symphonic rock: a pleasant mix of flute, acoustic guitar, mandoline and pan flute in Karakoram Waltz by the Swedish band In The Labyrinth, Al DiMeola-like acoustic guitar runs blended with violin and percussion in Hawa El Sahra by the Australian Steve Warner, strong prog folk with exciting violin work in InstruMental Breakdown by the USA musician Steve Unruh (once he played Neal Morse and Kevin Gilbert!), beautiful work on violin and Grand piano in Madrugada (excerpt) by Wiermann & Vogel, known from the Brasilian formation Quaterna Requiem, Nordic folk in Tolv Man by Styrbjorn Bergelt & Roland Hakansson from Sweden, a compelling blend of folk with mandoline and symphonic with bombastic church-organ in La Tour Haute by Vital Duo (known of the French progrock band Minimum Vital), classical flute by Attila Kollar with bombastich female choir and fiery electric guitar by the late Istvan Czigli (both know from Hungarian sensation Solaris) in Alchemy, didgeridoo in Gregorian by Robert Erdesz (also from Solaris) and pure symphonic rock with howling guitar and lush keyboards in Geracao Perdida by the overlooked Brasiliaanse prog folk band Pocos & Nuvens.

This is a CD to discover, what a pleasant and varied blend of folk, classical and symphonic!

 

PROGRESSIVAMENTE 1973 – 2003   

- This CD is a compilation featuring 11 Italian progrock bands with music made between 1973 and 2003. It’s an initiative by some Italian progheads in order to let us enjoy from the captivating and varied Italian scene. Most of the compositions are composed in the last ten years but this CD also contains material from the Seventies like the final track by Semiramis that came from the vaults of one member!

1. GIANNI LEONI : Frammenti Di Ys (4:48) : Here’s the keyboard player from the legendary, highly acclaimed band Il Balletto Di Bronzo with fragments from their excellent album Ys, re-recorded in 1996. He delivers dazzling keyboard work in the vein of the bombastic and virtuosic Keith Emerson. Halfway a mellow piece with soaring keyboards and warm vocals and finally some complex prog, their trademark!

2. METAMORFOSI : Porta Dell'Inferno/Caronte/Spacciatore di droga - live 1996 (3:33) : Another acclaimed band from the Seventies, they start with a majestic church- organ sound, then very distinctive vocals (expressive, opera-like) and the music turns into swinging with sparkling organ runs and a powerful rhythm-section, great!

3. SINFONIA: La Follia Che Diventa' Realta' - 2003 (6:44) : First dreamy with soft synthesizer flights, twanging and pleasant vocals. Then it’s Pandora’s Box featuring fluent flute traverse and a spectacular synthesizer solo. The music becomes more and more complex and bombastic including soli on violin, saxophone and piano. A real gem in the wonderful Italian progrock tradition!

4. OSANNA: Non Sei Vissuto Mai - new version from 2001 (4:53) : This song contains a mid-tempo delivering fiery electric guitar runs and powerful vocals, halfway a short dreamy part with saxophone. Quite swinging for the usual progrock standards!

5. EZRA WINSTON: The Painter And The King - alternative version from 1990 (7:53) : This known band from the Eighties delivers a fine blend of folk, classical and symphonic rock, very alternating with many delicate musical ideas and a lush instrumentation, ranging from piccolo flute and trumpet to saxophone and wonderful keyboards.

6. HYDRO: Worry from 2001 (5:08) : This song is a bit of a maverick, it sounds atmospheric and has electronic undertones with lots of weird sounds.

7. ALBERO MOTORE: Capodanno '74 from 1974 (6:55) : We can enjoy the distinctive Rhodes electric piano sound and then strong interplay with the (often fiery) guitar and some flute. To me the music has elements from Frank Zappa and King Crimson

8. METAMORFOSI: Mururoa from 1996 (6:35) : Another track on this CD by legendary Metamorfosi. This one is very alternating, from dreamy and swinging to bombastic, embellished with great vocals, these sound dramatic, great Italian prog!

9. VITTORIO DE SCALZI – La Storia Dei New Trolls: La Prima Goccia Bagna lI Viso - Part I & II - new version from 2002 (9:04) : From the beginning you can enjoy the powerful, very typical Hammond organ sound in a bluesy climate featuring a bit screamy vocals, a piece with classical piano, vocal harmonies and finally a strong build- up guitar solo.

10. VIRTUAL DREAM: Frengo from 1996 (7:31) : This composition delivers jazzrock inspired prog with strong interplay and biting, wah-wah drenched guitar and a bass solo with propulsive rhythm-guitar.

11. LEONERO: Il Castello - English version from 1975 (4:56) : A catchy rhythm with a varied keyboard sound (a kind of fuzzed clavinet, piano and organ) and strong duo vocals, very compelling.

12. SEMIRAMIS: Luna Park - demo version from 1973 (4:43) : This final track by one of my favorite Italian progrock bands is one of the highlights of this CD, it features wonderful keyboard work (my beloved string-ensemble), a dynamic atmosphere, a piece with mandoline and finally a sensitive electric guitar solo. A great final song that contains the typical Seventies prog sound.

A big hand for Progressivamente!!

 

KRAUTROCK MEETING       

- In the late Seventies my favorite record shop Moonlight Records in The Hague (the owner was drummer Bob De Jong from Dutch prog band Pythagoras) started to sell Krautrock/German progrock. I was mesmerized by line-ups that featured lots of Hammond organ work, a wide range of keyboards and varied instrumentation (flute, acoustic guitar, violin). After a first listening session I bought albums from Jane, Grobschnitt, Eloy and Novalis, I was so delighted about their music that within a few weeks I had almost bought the entire Krautrock/German progrock section, from the aforementioned bands to Ramses, Triumvirat, Birth Control and Hoelderlin. At about 25 years later I have bought my first DVD featuring Krautrock/German prog bands and I am very pleased with it.

The 2-DVD Krautrock Meeting contains a concert with 6 bands (each played at about 30 minutes), recorded late 2004 in Bonn, Germany. So don’t expect footage from the Seventies or Eighties or all bands in the original line-up. On this 2-DVD you will witness Krautrock veterans with often rugged faces and grey or thin hair but how inspired and professional they played that evening, THUMBS UP!

DVD-1 starts with Epitaph, they play bluesrock with echoes from Cream, Eric Clapton and Wishbone Ash (duo guitarwork). Guitarplayer Heinz Glass does a good job on his silverplated Fender Telecaster.

Then legend Guru Guru, they offer varied songs: bluesy in Living In The Woods, swinging in Izmiz (with strange small blow instruments, sounds funny), sultry in Kleines Pyama (powerful saxophone play), heavy and bombastic in Moshi Moshi (heavy guitar riffs and fiery saxophone with hints from King Crimson) and hypnotizing in the final song Der Elektrolurch, the singer wears an exotic, very coloured mask and climbs and the back of the guitarplayer while he plays a solo, these guys had fun!

Next is Karthago, they play bluesrock that is loaded with the powerful sound of the Hammond organ. The band plays pleasant and dynamic, nothing special but very entertaining.

Finally Jane, my favorite band on this 2-DVD. The line-up features drummer/singer Peter Panka (he looks like Jack Bruce from Cream) and the early keyboard player Werner Nadolny (later replaced by Manfred Wieczorcke who came from Eloy). Jane turns out to be the absolute highlight on this 2-DVD, what a wonderful melodic sound, based upon compelling interplay by the keyboards (strings, organ, synthesizers and Mellotron samples) and guitar (powerful and sensitive), to me it sounds as ‘symphonic bluesrock’. They play the songs Daytime, Windows/Spain Medley and Out In The Rain. For me this gig from Jane is almost worth buying this 2-DVD, especially the final track Out In The Rain delivering beautiful sampled choir-Mellotron, very moving guitarwork and great vocals, SPLENDID!

DVD-2 opens with another legend, Amon Duul II. I know this band from their ‘free-form’ psychedelic albums but during this gig the music is mainly rock- based (along the reggae song Speed Inside My Shoes) with good duo-guitarwork. The female singer Renate Knaup-Krötenschwanz has lost some power and often tended to sound unbalanced/out of tune although her presentation is very warm and enthousiastic.

Finally another personal highight: the known band Birth Control. They played three songs: Just Before The Sun Will Rise (dynamic progressive bluesrock featuring good soli and interplay by swirling organ and fiery electric guitar), Back From Hell (floods of organ, wah-wah drenched guitar and duo vocals, including special guest Peter Föller) and the epic ‘crowd pleaser’ Gamma Ray (on a propulsive rhythm it is 'solo time' with a percussive break, a bass solo accompanied by distorted clavinet, a spendid build-up guitar solo and a duel between the singer and the guitar, evoking Gillan/Blackmore and Page/Plant). To me Birth Control sounds as a great end of an impressive Krautrock Meeting, not really progressive in the vein of ELP, Yes or Genesis but as Krautrock sounds, unique!

 

ODYSSEY - THE GREATEST TALE    

- I would like to start with my conclusion: NOT TO BE MISSED IN ANY SERIOUS PROGROCK COLLECTION!!!

This lavish international progrock project includes 3 CD featuring nine more or less known progrock bands (each one 'epic' composition) and their musicians and instruments and a 56-page booklet that contains drawings, lyrics and stories about this project and the Greek saga the Odeysey (about Odysseus and his travels on which he met Cyclopes and Sirens).

CD1 (73:29) 1. Opener is Canadian band Nathan Mahl, led by multi-instrumentalist Guy LeBlanc (keyboards, bass and guitar). He colours the alternating music very pleasantly with his vintage keyboards (Hohner clavinet, Rhodes electric piano, Moog and Hammond), the fiery electric guitar is a strong counterpart. During the more than 20 minutes Nathan manages to keep my attention due to great soli, a wonderful vintage sound and lots of strong musical ideas. 2. Argentine band Nexus is my favorite band on this project and they don't disappoint me, the music delivers splendid early Keith Emerson inspired keyboards (fat Moogs and powerful Hammond), some heavy and propulsive guitar riffs, warm Spanish vocals, a piece with classical guitar and many great breaks, accellarations, build-ups and 'grand finales', A MASTERPIECE! 3. USA band Glass Hammer is perhaps the most known progrock band on this 3-CD, they sound here very familiar to their fans: dynamic and alternating with a melodic and accessible progrock sound featuring wonderful vintage keyboards and fiery electric guitar.

CD2 (79:23) 4. XII Alfonso from France sounds very original: an opening with classical orchestrations, choir samples and percussive sounds, then many musical ideas like jazzy with a Hammond solo, dreamy with twanging guitar and soaring keyboards and bombastic with sparkling piano, fiery guitar and flashy syntehsizers. 5. Simon Says from Sweden is another favorite of mine (I love their album Paradise Square from 2002). You have to be up to the a bit theatrical and very distinctive vocals but the duo-keyboard players deliver an outstanding and varied sound. The guitar soli are fiery (he uses an E-bow) this composition is build upon many strong soli. 6. C.A.P. is an experienced Italian band with powerful Italian vocals, lots of organ and piano and some fat, very spectacular sounding Moog soli. This song sounds fluent and often bombastic, C.A.P. is just another good, new Italian band.

CD3 (68:07) 7. Tempano from Brasil is the most original but also less accessible sounding band on this 3-CD. The track starts with church organ and opera-like vocals, then adventurous and a bit wayward progrock featuring sensitive electric guitar work, wonderful choir-Mellotron and great synthesizers. 8. Minimum Vital from France makes alternating and melodic prog with that special blend of church organ and Mike Oldfield- like electric guitar (flowing and fiery). The bombastic final part with howling guitar is very moving. 9. Aether from Brasil is the warm and pleasant final act on this 3-CD. they sound traditional with strong echoes from the neo-progressive movement with music that ranges from swinging with fluent electric guitar to dreamy with soaring keybards and mid-tempo with exciting synthesizer flights. The end is beautiful with sensitive acoustic guitar.

I would like to end with my intro: NOT TO BE MISSED IN ANY SERIOUS PROGROCK COLLECTION!!!

 

               HIJOS DEL AGOBIO Y DEL DOLOR (2-CD)

- After the great compilations Rock Andalus (CD) and Duende Electrico After After the great compilations Rock Andalus (CD) and Duende Electrico (2-CD), here is a new and excellent doorway to the captivating and often exciting Spanish progressive rock: a box set entitled Hijos Del Agobio Y Del Dolor (subtitle: Pioneros Y Origines Del Rock Andaluz) featuring a 2-CD and a docu DVD.

On CD 1 and 2 you will find many legendary socalled Rock Andaluz bands like Triana, Medina Azahara, Qualdalquivir, Mezquita, Azahar, Alameda, Iman and Cai. These bands, spearheaded by Triana, blended several styles like symphonic rock, hardrock, jazzrock and rock with flamenco, the ethnic music from Andalusia (Southern Spain): the one moment you will be carried away by a virtuosic flamenco guitar intro, palmas (handclapping) or wailing, expressive vocals, the other moment you will be stunned by howling electric guitar, Hammond and Mellotron waves or quick synthesizer flights, a very exciting experience! Also featured are interesting groups that are more mixing flamenco with blues and rock like Miguel Rios (intricate Morish atmosphere) and All & Nothing (flamenco with swinging piano and fiery guitar) or bands with strong flamenco overtones like Camaron De La Isla (pleasant flamenco guitar work but also a flashy synthesizer solo) and Vega (accessible and catchy flamenco-pop). The band The Storm is more in the vein of Rare Bird and Procol Harum delivering a Hammond organ drenched sound. CD-2 is more focussed on special sounding bands like Tabletom (swinging mix of flute, saxophone and piano) and Gualberto (wonderful blend of flamenco, raw electric guitar and vintage keyboards like the string-ensemble), the bluesy Cuarto Menguante and the Sixties band Tarantos (1969) delivering a pleasant mix of pop, rock and flamenco. My highlight is the track Nuevo Dia by Lole Y Manuel featuring moving female vocals, wailing cello, some Mellotron and great flamenco guitar work, an exciting, very compelling song!

The DVD is a docu about the development of the Spanish progressive rock between the late Sixties and early Seventies, focussed on the known band Smash. Their guitarplayer Gualberto tells his story along many other legendary or known early Spanish progressive rock musicians. The docu also contains stories about the Underground scene, the drugs, the gypsies and the blend of flamenco and fusion. Unfortunately there is little live footage from bands, only some shots from Gong and Smash but no Cai, Triana or Azahar. Nonetheless, this docu (in Spanish, not subtitled) is a warm and pleasant view on an unique progrock scene.

If you want to discover the exciting spanish progrock scene, this box set is a must!!

 

THE BEST OF KRAUTROCK VOL 1    

- What an incredible exciting experience this dvd is!! Since the second half of the Seventies I am a Krautrock fan, in that period I started to collect albums from Novalis, Jane, Grobschnitt, Eloy, Hoelderlin and Ramses. I remember that I witnessed concerts by some of these bands on the German television (our neighbours) like Grobschnitt and Jane. And now this DVD contains live footage from that era (1970-1978), WHAT A THRILL!!

The featured bands on this DVD are Amon Düül II, Can, Frumpy, Lucifer’s Friend, Epitaph, Birth Control, Passport, Guru Guru, Popol Vuh, Kraftwerk, Embryo, Novalis, Lothar Meid, Eloy and Jane. These bands deliver a lot of variety, from psychedelic (Amon Duul II), experimental (Popol Vuh) and jazzy (Passport) to symphonic rock (Novalis and Eloy), bluesrock (Frumpy) and hardrock (Lucifer's Friend). I was very delighted about the tracks by Frumpy (great Hammond organ sound), Amon Duul II (captivating psychedelic rock with raw guitar, a powerful violin solo and lots of weird synthesizer sounds), Eloy (wonderful and lush sound with Hammond, Minimoog and fiery electric guitar along the warm and distinctive vocals by Frank Bornemann), Jane (simple but very compelling symphonic bluesrock with great interplay between fiery guitar and powerful Hammond waves) and the absolute highlight Novalis delivering their epic Sonnenwende (17 minutes): wonderful keyboards by Lutz Rahn (beautiful flute-Mellotron intro, then tasteful work on Hammond, Minimoog, string-ensemble and clavinet), inspired vocals and sensitive, very flowing electric guitar, GREAT! The 42 minutes docu is very interesting but also a bit sad because it confronts you with the difficult situation in which the many promising Krautrock groups had to survive, only a few managed because most of the bands got no support from record companies and government! The docu contains very exciting live footage from bands like Udo Lindenberg & Panikorchester, Amon Duul II in 1968, Pell Mell, Kraan, Hoelderlin, Atlantis (with Inga Rumpf), Conny Plank Studio with Grobschnitt, Can and really great live scenes from mid- Seventies Tangerine Dream, including Edgar Froese on the Mighty M400 Tron!!

NOT TO BE MISSED!!

                                

CANOSSA – The Rock Opera (****)

This is an Italian prog project bij Mangala Vallis member Gigi Cavalli Cocchi, he is both the brainchild as the producer. The story (I did my best to translate the Italian because the English version was out of function) is about the small village Canossa in the Italian provence Reggio Emilia. An imiginary visitor of the Canossa Castle tells in the warm and passionate Italian language the more than 1000 year old history in 7 short interludes with spoken words, the other 7 parts are tracks by also 7 different Italian progrock bands. After the first interlude with a Vangelis-like keyboard intro and the first spoken words, the known band Mangala Vallis starts with an alternating, classic Seventies prog rooted, from dreamy with twanging guitar to mid-tempo with fiery guitar and bombastic with lush Hamond and flashy synthesizer flights. The the other six bands are mostly unknown but all sound pleasant and varied: melodic and moving with female vocals and a strong final part including howling electric guitar runs by Trama Sonora, heavy symphonic, romantic inspired prog with warm vocals, lots of variety and in the end a sensational keyboard solo by Sequencer, a long piece with a tight beat, sumptuous keyboards and omnipresent, fiery electric guitar by Arcanoise, a heavy and dynamic sound with strong hints from early King Crimson delivering Fripperian guitar and a propulsive rhythm-section by Type, plesant and alternating (dreamy, compelling, mid-tempo, bombastic) with passionate vocals and a spectacular synthesizer solo by Oltremare and finally Master Experience: a dynamic atmosphere featuring fiery guitar, a psychedelic organ sound and intense vocals. The final part delivers soli on organ and guitar.<p>I am sure this very pleasant and varied sounding project will please many prog fans, especially those who love the classic Seventies symphonic prog featuring lots of vintage keyboards like Hammond, Moog and Mellotron. Recommended!

 

 

 



Edited by erik neuteboom - August 11 2007 at 15:58
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 15:18
 
                                                I hope you like it Thumbs%20Up
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 15:44
Very good article Erik, it's going to take ages to read and absord all the information. Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 15:50
Very impressive Erik, I'm going to need at least another year of prog listening to get starting on my own deep progressive list of recordings and bands having been listened. Thumbs%20UpClap

Edited by Ricochet - August 08 2007 at 15:51
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 15:50
Wow Eric, amazing work as usual. You're the bestThumbs%20Up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 16:37

Thanks for your enthousiastic and kind words, a real boost for me Thumbs%20Up This thread is meant to let you discover the exciting world of lesser and unknown but exciting bands like Lost World, Nemo, William Gray, Senogul and Interpose+, the many positive reactions on my reviews in the Symphonic Prog Appreciation thread aboiut these bands were my motivation to set up this thread, let me know if you have discovered new progrock beauties and feel free to ask for recommendations or advise.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 16:40
nice work Erik Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 16:48
Yeehaaa!!! Kid in a candy store time for me.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 16:48
Excellent work, ErikClap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 17:00
I see a soulmate in Erik everytime when he rises an issue of unknown/lesser known contemporary bands. Immense work, buddy, I've already copied these reviews on my PC to read them precisely later. I've already known and reviewed at least 1/5 of aforementioned bands (thanks for mentioning me in reviews, btw ) and will definetely check the ones I'm interested in. Keep the things going, you're great!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 17:02
ClapClapClap, it scares me  bit that it's probably only 0.001% of all the albums you've ever heard. Which selection criteria did you use compiling this beast? I notice for instance that La Maschera di Cera, Aries , Randone,Mangala Vallis to name a few are not here while i know you know these bands. Also what does a rating of ***1/5 mean? i noticed these ratings before but forgot to ask. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 17:14
Thanks again for all those clappies Clap Dirk, I still have to add lots of bands (like the new Italians you mentioned) but it's so time-consuming Dead About ***1/5, that'sone of my infamous typing errors, of course it should have been ***1/2, I am afraid that I was into a kind of purple haze after all those efforts to make this database Wacko

Edited by erik neuteboom - August 08 2007 at 17:15
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2007 at 19:50
Erik, I don't know how you find the time for all this, I am sure it is a labor of love.  Great work.  Be sure and add your The Odyssey review on here at some point.  I really want to get this but having trouble parting with the $30 right now.  Should I just pull the trigger?


Edited by johnobvious - August 08 2007 at 19:51
Biggles was in rehab last Saturday
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