![5 stars 5 stars](https://www.progarchives.com/static-images/5stars.gif)
Area's stunning ferociously original approach to music left me in awe.
"Arbeit Macht Frei" is my first taste of this delicious Italian prog band hailing from the
eclectic golden era of the 70s; it simply was a delightful experience. The music is
astonishingly different and wonderfully complex. One to savour for progheads who like prog
to be sheer adventure.
It begins slowly and then builds to the incredible 'Luglio, agosto, settembre (nero)' (July,
August , Black September) "Forget your weapons and live in peace" a female voice
pleads, "My love, With peace, with peace I have placed Loving flowers at your feet, With
peace, with peace I stopped the seas of blood for you, Forget anger, Forget pain..."
Then a strange male voice echoes the sentiment. The Arabian music flies out of the
speakers and pins you to the wall with unrelenting power. The lyrics are in Italian but
translated as: "Playing with the world, leaving it in pieces, Children that the sun has
reduced to old age. It's not my fault if your reality forces me to fight your conspiracy of
silence. Maybe one day we will know what it means to drown in blood with humanity."
Amazing lyrical power is accompanied by foreign sounding duel woodwind flourishes. The
time sig picks up considerable pace and there is a great duel sax trade off instrumental
with polyrhythms, sporadic tom tom drums and screeching vocals by Demetrio Stratos. His
vocal gymnastics are well executed and become another instrument. It is chilling, ethereal
but very emotional, almost screaming out in anger. The eccentric music is not for the
squeamish, coming across as angry and volatile but it soon settles into a strange ambient
peaceful section threatening to explode at any moment. The droning saxes are portentous
and looming. Translated the final words are: "When you see the world without problems
seek the essence of all things. It's not my fault if your reality forces me to make war with
humanity". It ends with the main motif. In a word ? alarmingly brilliant!
The title track 'Arbeit Macht Frei' follows and typifies the approach of the band to
unconventional music. Innovative virtuoso musicianship with always interchanging time
signatures and mood swings. The insane sax work is reminiscent of the type of work
Jackson did with VDGG or even King Crimson in the early years. There are some wild
flourishes of polytonalities, and the drums simply take off. When the band is in full flight
such as midway through the title track, it is the most compelling music you will hear. The
bassline is awesome and really holds the track together and then it stops suddenly. The
style of Stratos is similar to the vocal style of Grobschnitt or PFM for that matter. High
falsetto in places but easy to listen to and utterly full of conviction.
Track 3, 'Consapavolezza', begins with some ominous sax and bass, with a clean guitar
sound. The vocals are distinct complete with rolling R's. There is a beautiful instrumental
break with scorching sax and ambient keyboards. These guys were not kidding!
Intersecting passages of dark and light and always a quirky humourous streak breaking
through. The drums are sporadic and jazz fusion influenced. This is RPI at its best.
'Le
Labbra Del Tempo' is a 6 minute improvisational jazz fest. It stops and
starts at will and the drums struggle to keep up but somehow do. The
urgent sax is accompanied by Stratos estranged vocals. It locks into an
infectious groove, that takes detours and echoes the vocal rhythms.
Metrical shapes take over and there is a keyboard instrumental and the
drums spiral out of control. he guitar work is frenetic but suitable.
The high strangeness of echoing keys are a feature and then it is again
brought to some semblance of orde rwith an ambient section of melancholy
beauty. Very heavy synth is a welcome change, Stratos sings in his own
inimitable style. Once again the fast paced music takes over, a sax and
guitar pysch-out. Amazing prog.
'240 Chilometri Da Smirne' begins with high saxophone solo and an offbeat rhythmic
metrical pattern of bass and drums. It is a strange blend of time sig metronome bending
prog and jazz fusion. There is a strong bass solo that continues under screaming dueling
staccato sax blasts and shimmering keyboards. A very full wall of sound is created and it
goes haywire for a few moments then is pulled back together by the key musical motif. This
is broken by a freakout section with organ squelches until it fades with a moaning sax. A
sensual , gorgeous instrumental.
'L'Abbattimento Dello Zeppelin' is the weirdest track; a spoken wailing section with
estranged sax and bizarre effects is unsettling, unnerving, macabre at times, but a solid
way to end such a ground breaking album. The drums echo the vocals and explode into a
cacophony of freakout noise, like the end of KC's '21st Century Schizoid Man'. An insane
section with break out instrumental violence follows and then this oddity abruptly ends
without warning.
What I love about this album is its unabashed unconventionality, and unashamed brutality
towards music. Emotionally stirring and unforgettable, this is one of the best things to
come out of Italy, along with Banco del Mutuo Soccorso and Premiata Forneri Marconi. It is
adventurous and intricate fusion to the Nth degree; music that will repel some and compel
others. I was totally compelled by the sheer force, the unmistakeable vigour and energy of
Area.
God bless the excellent reviewers who led me to this album. It is a definitive masterpiece!