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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
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Points: 8052
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Topic: I Talk To The Wind: Prog Blog and Reviews Posted: January 13 2008 at 19:36 |
I Talk To The Wind - Orb's Prog Blog and Review Anthology
Since I'm not at all satisfied with my
earlier attempts at rating ("Well, I suppose Love Beach isn't that bad. Not really... but... besides...well... a little shambolic, but... Maybe a 4?") and reviewing
(i.e. rambling) albums, I thought I'd inflict any
new attempts on everyone here and try for a more considered and
intelligible result. Perhaps this'll develop into more of a proper musical blog thing than a long list of reviews, but I think starting simple's the best way to go. I'll try to give anything at least ten listens, usually more, before rating it, since some of my favourites (especially King Crimson's Cirkus and Gentle Giant's The Moon Is Down have emerged from apathy only after a fair few spins). I'll generally explain my background to the band. Feedback and criticism is more than welcome, as is discussion, [s]mockery, and death threats[/s] and correction. My personal musical background is, at the moment, limited to approximately "grade one" level piano and keyboards, so don't expect lots of technical discussion about time signatures and the like. I've decided to start what is hopefully a new
era for my reviews with a band I've listened to a lot, and known for
quite a while (in fact, ELP are responsible for introducing me to
Prog. Pictures at an Exhibition (version on Works Live) brought me
into the fold), the great Emerson, Lake and Palmer. After I've exhausted my ELP collection, I'll move onto something else. I have, in some form or another, everything by ELP in the studio up to (but not including) Black Moon, as well as Works Live and the Fanfare For The Common Man anthology. Reviewed so far: [spoiler] Larks' Tongues In Aspic - King Crimson ( ) In The Court Of The Crimson King - King CrimsonH To He, Who Am The Only One - Van Der Graaf Generator Les Porches - Maneige ( ) Chameleon In The Shadow Of The Night - Peter Hammill ( ) Emerson, Lake & Palmer - Emerson, Lake & Palmer Nursery Cryme - Genesis Selling England By The Pound - Genesis Lizard - King Crimson Islands - King Crimson Caress Of Steel - Rush
Spectral Mornings - Steve Hackett Close To The Edge - Yes Tales From Topographic Oceans - Yes Ys - Il Balletto Di Bronzo A Passion Play - Jethro Tull Tarkus - Emerson, Lake & Palmer( ) Brain Salad Surgery - Emerson, Lake & Palmer Asia - Asia Trespass - Genesis( ) Foxtrot - Genesis The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway - Genesis A Trick Of The Tail - Genesis Wind & Wuthering - GenesisMirage - Camel Daughter Of Time - Colosseum 2112 - Rush In The Wake Of Poseidon - King Crimson Red - King Crimson Stand Up - Jethro Tull Permanent Waves - Rush A Farewell To Kings - Rush Fragile - Yes Per Un Amico - Premiata Forneria Marconi Starless And Bible Black - King Crimson Crime Of The Century - Supertramp Black Moon - ELPWorks Vol. 1 - Emerson, Lake & Palmer Works Vol. 2 - Emerson, Lake & PalmerWar Child - Jethro Tull Very 'Eavy Very 'Umble - Uriah Heep The Yes Album - Yes Arena - Asia From Genesis To Revelation - Genesis Sinister - John Wetton Songs From The Wood - Jethro Tull The Problem Of Pain pt. 1 - Torman Maxt Red and underlined = not quite sure of. [/spoiler]
Review 1, 1970, Emerson, Lake and
Palmer This self-titled debut is, in my opinion, the
progressive supergroup's best. Of the six tracks, only one (Emerson's
'The Three Fates') suffers from any doubtful taste, and even that has
a beautiful section. This is an even more astounding accomplishment
given the sheer versatility of the music produced: a great folk
ballad with a moog solo that never ceases to amuse me, the essential
acoustic masterpiece, the heavier Hammond-based Barbarian
and Knife Edge, the drumming-dominated Tank, and the various noodlings
that comprise The Three Fates. Even though ELP have produced several
excellent prog albums, this is the one I'd call essential.
Barbarian introduces the trio
perfectly, with a growling electric guitar, a superb heavy Hammond
organ, and tasteful drumming. The music's constantly shifting, yet
retains all its rawness. And suddenly, there's an acoustic section
with quirky, yet delightful, piano and drumming. And somehow Emerson
escalates that back to the main tune's heaviness flawlessly. And it
just gets better and better towards the end. Proof that a progressive
masterpiece does not need to be long.
Next we have my all-time ELP
favourite, Take A Pebble. It's just three musicians on acoustic
instruments working together flawlessly, with gorgeous, flowing
classical-inspired piano supported by Lake's delicate bass and
acoustic guitar parts, tasteful percussion, inspired use of watery
sound-effects, strong vocals (most reminiscent of Epitaph) with
beautiful surreal lyrics. The band shifts moods between optimism,
anticipation, grandeur and surprisingly heavy, dark moods seamlessly.
Emotion oozes from the piano and the vocals. There are no weak
moments in all the twelve and a half minutes of beautiful music.
Third in the album we have another
heavier piece, Knife Edge. This took me a little longer to acquire
than the previous two songs, but the excellent bass lines,
mantra-like, almost-spoken vocals, slightly darker drumming with
brief drum solos, and superb build-up and entertaining keyboard riffs
and parts ultimately make for a great song. I particularly like the
weird churchlike instrumental section in the middle. The lyrics are
solid, and work very well with the music. It ends with a slowing-down
effect and sort of clicks to a stop. As progressive as Barbarian, and
though it doesn't quite reach the heights of the opener, it's still a
masterpiece.
The Three Fates is a little more
mixed. The organ-opener Clotho hasn't really made an impression on
me, but it's well worth listening to through to move onto the
beautiful piano solo, Lachesis. Delicate, beautiful, tasteful,
mobile, and fairly symptomatic of Emerson's piano on the album as a
whole. Atropo is another entirely different kettle of fish, with a
combination of the instrumentation used earlier in The Three Fates
and a little percussion, if I'm not mistaken. The build-up to a final
explosion sound effect is quite good, and has a bizarre dramatic
atmosphere that goes down quite well. Overall, this track's not quite
as good as the rest of the album, but still interesting, at times
masterful, and well worth listening to.
Tank is another oddity. Bass and
drumming paves the way for another flippant keyboard (Moog, I think)
part, sustained by the bass and brief bursts of solo drumming leading
up to a longer (though not excessive), extremely good drum solo with
a real sense of direction that many solos lack. It builds up
extremely well and leads into the return of the bass and the moog.
Yet another great, charming prog piece.
Lucky Man rounds off the album soundly.
It's in a much less progressive vein than the rest of the album, but
that doesn't really matter to me. The basic melody and the bass part
is good, Palmer's drumming complements it nicely, you get to hear
more of Lake's voice. And finally, there's a hilarious moog part.
Emerson was apparently not taking the solo entirely seriously when he
played it, but it's still brilliant. Although it's really more folk
than prog, I still love this song.
In conclusion, I'm giving this album
one of the easiest five star ratings that I'm ever likely to give. I
love it. This is ELP at their finest, with electronic and acoustic
instrumentation both used to their full effect. Accessible, yet a
grower. As much loved as In The Court Of The Crimson King or Selling
England By The Pound. Well worth buying, and also a good introduction
to the band.
Rating: Masterpiece. Five Stars.
Favourite Track: Take A Pebble.
Edited by TGM: Orb - January 11 2009 at 14:18
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everyone
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 09 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 159
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Posted: January 13 2008 at 22:49 |
You might try the Nice's album "The Thoughts of Emerlistdavjack." This album was released before the formation of Emerson, Lake and Palmer. I can see through this album the beginnings of the direction that Kieth Emerson wanted to do as a musician. The first ELP album is fantastic as is Brain Salad Surgery and Trilogy. When you get all your ELP albums give an underrated album by Roger Powell called "Cosmic Fire" a try. Have fun
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Kotro
Prog Reviewer
Joined: August 16 2004
Location: Portugal
Status: Offline
Points: 2815
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Posted: January 14 2008 at 05:59 |
Good job, Rob. Hope to see plenty of reviews from you.
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Bigger on the inside.
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: January 17 2008 at 18:29 |
@ Kotro, many thanks @Everyone, I'll definitely check out those albums soonish. Heh, I prefer ELP to BSS, myself. Trilogy I'm not quite sure about at the moment, and I'm definitely going to need a few more listens to form a decent opinion about it. Tarkus is on the way. Just had a couple of computer problems (needed to deinstall and reinstall Open Office onto another drive to make way for music). General comments: Pt. 1 Just got 15 or so Prog CDs, of which Look At Yourself (Uriah Heep), though not the most proggy of the lot, is possibly the current favourite. The Power To Believe was also a great surprise. Lost subject. Found Van Der Graaf Generator. Definitely a good trade. I'm also, starting next week, getting piano lessons, largely because I want to end up with a better technical understanding of the stuff I listen to. I already play a little self-taught electronic organ thingy on the limited Yamaha thing we have at home, and I'm going to keep on with that too. Pt. 2 More comprehensibly, I'm going for a bi-weekly usually Wednesday-Saturday review schedule. Next up (probably tomorrow) is ELP's Tarkus, Trilogy may be back-tracked to after Works. 1 or 2, since I have just about every track on it, but not all in the original release format, and I haven't listened to it in the correct order enough to get an overall impression. Love Beach will probably be omitted, since I don't have the inclination to listen to it 17 or 18 more times, and I've only got it on record, so I'd need to kidnap the record player thing from whoever has it at the moment. On the Saturday reviews, I'll probably name a personal album of the week, because I have an unnerving listing fetish.
Edited by TGM: Orb - January 17 2008 at 18:33
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: January 18 2008 at 16:38 |
Review 2, 1971, Tarkus � Emerson,
Lake And Palmer
Tarkus, though it doesn't (for me, at
least) have the same consistent quality and emotional impact as their
debut, is the album that really fixed the future of ELP, and the
title suite is definitely vital listening for any progger. Although I
can see where much of the criticism for the rest of the album comes
from, I think it's not as bad as some make it out to be. Even the
much-maligned �filler� Are You Ready Eddy and Jeremy
Bender have charm, energy and sarcasm, which works for me, and
only the fairly cold 'Infinite Space' and the organ intro to The Only
Way fall down a little. Lake's sometimes guilty of producing dubious
lyrics, and in particular the words to the atheistic The Only Way are
too confrontational and feeble for me.
The second side begins with the
whimsical Jeremy Bender. The light elements might grate a little with
the dark, brooding title track just before it, but if you see the
second side as a completely separate entity, it opens it nicely.
Lake's lyrics are amusing enough, the piano is good. Palmer is
obviously able to merge his drums impeccably with just about
anything, and this track is no exception. Lake's voice is good, and
the clapping doesn't spoil it at all.
Next we have a winner, the
unfortunately named Bitches Crystal. It enjoys a twisted sense of
humour, with the nursery rhyme introduction and reprise hilariously
contrasted with the main drums, bass and heavier piano theme. Lake's
voice, though not as sublime as usual, and occasionally
overstretched, and bits of moog and overblown lyrics thrown in for
good measure. It ends well, and is a great track in its own way, and
perhaps the real proof for me that ELP did have a sense of humour.
The fourth track on the album is of
a different sort. There's a classical organ intro, apparently Bach,
but, as with most classical organ I'm not particularly fond of it.
You then have a less showy organ part subordinated neatly to Lake's
superb voice and slightly tacky atheistic lyrics (I don't care, if he
can write Just Take A Pebble, he can do more than brief couplets and
triplets :p). They're probably too strong/tacky for some people, I've
learned to tolerate them. However, that's where it picks up. Palmer
and Lake come in, and Emerson switches to piano, to create a
beautiful, memorable trio. If it wasn't for the opening and lyrics,
this would be ELP at their best. Still a great track.
The conclusion, infinite time and space
is mostly a trio, with the briefest of drum solos, and a quick piano
solo too, but, without Lake's voice, sort of cold. It also feels a
little too deliberate at times, but Emerson's piano overlaying over
an already stand-alone part nearish the end is quite neat. Compared
to Emerson's usual prominence, it feels like Frippertronics. The
song's got some character. Still good material.
Hammond organ, moog and drums drive the
next song to a decent synth-and-drum based conclusion that sort of
reminds me of some of Toccata. The lyrics are mostly nonsense, but
sound good, and Lake's voice is again strong. Unlike in Bitches
Crystal, the song is serious enough that Lake over-extending his
voice to what basically is screaming doesn't help. The hammond riff
is solid and overblown. The drumming here's particularly noteworthy,
and the heavier keyboards provide a nice break from the
acoustic-dominated second side. If you're a big BSS fan, this is
probably the second-side track for you.
Are you Ready Eddy is a quirky rock and
roll song with absolutely hectic piano, loads of energy, excellent
drums and entertaining, sarcastic lyrics. It may not be the most
complex, soul-searching prog song ever, but its fun (and partly
inappropriate) to sing along to. The vocal effects only enhance this.
This and Jeremy Bender sort of acts as bookends for the second side,
and they give a relief from the pomposity of Tarkus much more
effectively than some of their other light songs.
In conclusion, I like the second side.
It's got a lot of great material, and nothing really intolerable.
It's not as superb as ELP, or as progressive and overblown as Brain
Salad Surgery, but it shows a lot of development in the band, and
their musical direction, while never being really pretentious and
humourless enough to lose the listener.
Oh, and the first side's quite good.
Rating: Tarkus is a masterpiece, the
rest is good. Four Stars.
Favourite Track: Tarkus (surprise!),
more specifically Battlefield
--- More seriously. And probably going to be part of the review I put up.
The Tarkus suite is really essential
listening for any progger. It feels very deep, switches mood
frequently, has Lake's best lyrics, nicely used vocal effects, great
bursts of lead guitar on battlefield, changing Hammond sounds
everywhere, moogs occasionally added in for good measure, and the
unique drumming that fits this bizarre mix. Eruption begins with
Lake's voice multi-tracked and slowly rising in number to meet the
cymbal crescendo, Hammond organ to fit the track's name, moog that
evokes the lava depicted in the album booklet. The bass is there, but
only really as an atmospheric and rhythm section addition, and that
works great for the song. This moves on the quieter hammond and bass
section beneath Lake's beautiful vocals on Stones of Years.
Everything is here, all working together, and nothing too dominant.
The bass becomes a little more pronounced and provides the real
rhythm while Emerson and Palmer overpoweringly provide the main tune.
There's another similar vocal section. Iconoclast is solid and
instrumental, while the following Mass is a bit acquired, but good
once you get into it, and the trite Moog and low vocals defuse some
of Tarkus' pretentious aspects. The instrumental section in the
middle is great and Lake's guitar 'solo' is good.
Manticore is a fairly intense
instrumental with masses of quirks, and music that suggest a battle
more skilfully than The Gates Of Delirium (*beats off Yes fans with
hammond organ*) ever did. Battlefield is the best section of a
superb suite. Surprisingly emotional and dominant drumming,
soul-wrenching lead guitar, beautiful singing with deep, war-related
lyrics, and haunting organ-work that manages to somehow lead *as
well*. Aquatarkus is a good return to the main theme, sprinkled with
bits of moogage, and a great conclusion. This suite is essential prog
listening. --- Week 1 - Albums reviewed: ELP - ELP (5 Stars), Tarkus - ELP (4 Stars) Best album of the week: Look At Yourself - Uriah Heep Best song of the week: Birth - Focus Worst song of the week: Dreamer - Supertramp Next week's reviews: Brain Salad Surgery - ELP, Works Vol. 1 - ELP
Edited by TGM: Orb - January 18 2008 at 16:53
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micky
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 02 2005
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Posted: January 18 2008 at 18:27 |
great reviews.... and you nailed the debut album... maybe the best debut in prog.. period....
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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TGM: Orb
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Joined: October 21 2007
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Points: 8052
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Posted: January 23 2008 at 16:18 |
Review 3, Brain Salad Surgery, Emerson,
Lake & Palmer, 1973
Some fans like to think of this album
as ELP's magnum opus. It certainly shows technical skill, power, a
complete disregard for musical conventions and grandiose pieces that
don't wear too thin after a few listens. It also has the added bonus
of relatively diverse musical choices (from the heavy electronic
classical(?!) interpretation of Toccata to the soft tones of
Still..You Turn Me On to the progressive beast that is Karn Evil 9).
The biggest let-down on this album is that it doesn't really feel
like an album, but rather like a collection of several very good
songs. There also isn't really any single track that I'd consider
absolutely vital to someone who isn't an ELP fan already (well, maybe
Toccata). There's no weakness, and everything's great, but this album
doesn't really have a Tarkus or a Musical Box or a
Gypsy or a Schizoid Man to leave you gasping for more
and riveted to your chair. Perhaps my favourite part of this album is
Palmer's drumming throughout, especially on Toccata. It always annoys
me to see Phil Collins, although he's good, getting way more votes
than Palmer on all those best drummer ever polls.
The version of Jerusalem was a fairly
ambitious choice. However, the arrangements are great, Emerson's
organ backing Lake's triumphant 'Bring me my bow of burning gold...'.
It's great entertainment, an original take, and a good opener.
Still... You Turn Me On is pretty
obviously a Lake composition. Short, melodic and with gorgeous
haunting verses interspersed with slightly awkward choruses that take
a few listens to acquire. If you like Lucky Man, you should like
this, if not, I can't see it being too annoying to listen through.
Benny the Bouncer is another short
track, based on a weird club-style piano, light drums and Lake's
half-drunken vocals. It's quite amusing, but nothing really superb.
Toccata is a driving reinterpretation
of a classical composition. The drumming; chimes, electric drums and
all is absolutely amazing, the Moog is hectic, screeching and
energetic, and, most importantly of all, the atmosphere and direction
is always there.
Karn Evil 9 may not be every progger's
piece of cake, but is definitely something most ELP fans should
enjoy. The concept is the enslavement of humans by computers, which
at times has superb lyrical results, and at others lines like 'no man
yields who flies on my ship'. The first impression pt. 1 is opened
with a good vocal part, together with Emerson's Hammond organ, and
has a moody energy, great keyboards and foreshadowing perhaps
weakened by an occasional moment of tacky lyrics and vocals.
The First Impression part 2 is a big
improvement on that, full of energy and bursting with lightness, and
the bass is supporting suitably silly keyboard parts that take the
serious edge off the song. Lake's vocals are as good as anything he's
done, and the lyrics aren't bad, per se, and the instrumental section
is as polyphonic as you could expect from a three-piece band. I love
the thing that sounds like a great guitar solo, but could be a
keyboard solo. I particularly like the brief moments when Palmer's
left alone. He can both hold up the rhythm section throughout the
song flawlessly and also develop on that any time he wants.
My criticism for the second impression
is that it is really nothing except good music. I can't see any real
relation to the concept, or musical ties between the pieces. The
music is all very cooperative, and usually seems to have all members
of the band playing. The random yipping after the opener only
improves it, and Palmer's drumming is eclectic and sounds like steel
drums. The second part of it has some echoes of Toccata and excellent
drawn out atmosphere with bass and piano together with the occasional
hollow tap on a percussion instrument. The shift to a slightly
heavier and more pompous piano part doesn't come off too well. It
goes back to some variations (I think) on the opener section, and
there are some brilliant moments. Unfortunately it still overall
feels to me like a bunch of random ideas thrown together into a bit
of a mess. It changes abruptly and obviously to an overblown third
impression. The third impression starts well with bits of
pseudo-classical organ interspersed with light moog, a good sung part
continuing the concept. The 'computer's lyrical parts were obviously
the good ones, and its . The instrumental section is again the real
triumph here, though the keyboard parts sometimes seem a little
brainlessly or ostentatiously added. Additionally it doesn't really,
for me, evoke the idea of a battle. As hard as I try, I can only
think spacey or confused when listening to this. When the vocals kick
in again, it's to good effect, and the computer's final duet with
Lake is pensive and impressive, and shows why I don't dislike the
concept overall. Although I've come to accept the ending, as is the
case with King Crimson's In The Wake Of Poseidon, its feeling is
ruined by the inclusion of bonus tracks.
Of the bonus tracks, there's not
much to say, they'll get a fuller mention on the Works II review.
Brain Salad Surgery itself has an almost spitting drum-part, silly
keyboards, basically random lyrics, and a generally laid back feel.
There's a good 'lead' guitar part in the background and the quiet bit
in the middle, which is always a nice change from pure
keyboard-domination. Not brilliant, but good.
When The Apple Blossoms Bloom is
basically a nice jazz fusion piece, with eclectic keyboards, good
percussion and a quiet bass part. It's great. The excerpts just
irritate me. I can only listen to the opening of BSS itself once in a
sitting before it annoys me, and I get equally annoyed if I have to
dash to the stereo just to turn it off at the exact moment WTABB
ends.
Overall, a very strong four stars that
only misses the fifth because of a lack of overall direction and
personal nitpicking in Karn Evil 9, as well as too much keyboard
dominance on that song for me. I'm one of the unconverted heathen who
likes polyphony and thinks that In The Cage is vastly overrated, and
proud of it. Despite the high rating, I wouldn't start an ELP
collection with this. It's not massively accessible, and if you just generally don't like ELP, I can't see this having anything really which you'd like.
Rating: Almost. Almost. Four
stars. Favourite Track: Toccata ----- Just about on schedule. @Micky, many thanks for the kind words. @Everyone, looks like Works 1's up next.
Edited by TGM: Orb - January 23 2008 at 16:21
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: February 03 2008 at 12:52 |
Review 4, Works Vol. 1 (double-CD), Emerson, Lake & Palmer, 1977
A much harder album to analyse than
their previous studio albums, because the band is no longer a
three-piece band, but a three-piece band with an orchestra and with
Sinfield and Lake collaborating on the lyrics to Lake's side and
Pirate. This combination is at times winning (Emerson's Toccata Con
Fuoco, Lake's Closer To Believing and Palmer's Tank), and at times
quite annoying (Pirates, Nobody Loves You Like I do). The album
consists of three solo sides, of which I prefer Palmer's, and a group
side, on two CDs. I do enjoy most of it, and there are a couple of
excellent tracks, but it's a far cry from ELP's earlier material, and
it's probably too varied for one person to like all of it.
Keith Emerson's classical piano
concerto is basically too fluid for me to describe fully. It has an
essentially anarchic and dramatic opening that doesn't particularly
impress me, after this moves to a crescendo, the music slows down
into a lush classical piece, with violins leading onto a slightly
darker horn and bells section, and then constant shifts in mood and
instrumentation. Whenever the piano comes in, it's usually to good
effect, and, though I'm not a big fan of violins and some other
elements of the orchestra, everything seems to work together quite
well. I enjoy the flute parts especially. The first movement does
continue and end much better than it starts.
The short second movement has a great
piano part, and the orchestra seems to be supporting it well. The
third movement opens very dramatically with aggressive piano and
classical drumming as well as a continual build-up despite the fluent
musical changes at any moment. The sheer beauty of the lone piano
after the fire dies down for the first time is amazing. There is not
a weak moment to the third movement, and even the orchestral sections
are good. Furthermore, the music really does evoke the fire ('con
fuoco') that is the focus of the movement. Despite an uninspiring
start, Emerson's contribution to Works 1 is overall pretty good.
Lend Your Love To Me Tonight is an
acoustic ballad that moves to a better orchestra and drum backed
acoustic-ballad. Sinfield's lyrics are quite decent, until 'confuse
me, abuse me, misuse me'. It's overall a decent effort despite
occasional tackyness and generic moments.
C'est La Vie is amazing: tragic, strong
lyrics, real atmosphere, and the ability to almost reduce me to tears
every listen. It's basically driven by an acoustic guitar with
beautiful orchestral additions. The only (and very annoying) weakness
here is the accordion solo, which takes a bit of getting used to. I
prefer the Works Live version, though.
Hallowed Be Thy Name is a complete
contrast, though also good. It's a fairly energetic number with
biting, entertaining Sinfield lyrics. The drums and piano are great,
and the horn and violin additions are also very strong. Lake's voice
is, as usual, amazing. I think the fade could happily have been
replaced with a proper conclusion, though.
Nobody Loves You Like I Do has a great
start, with acoustics, electrics, piano and drums leading it.
Unfortunately, it then has a pathetic chorus with an irritating
harmonica sound. The vocals and lyrics are cheesy. The brief moments
of excellent instrumental work are instantly replaced with irritating
chorus and frivolous violins and that bloody harmonica. I dislike it,
but it still shows promise.
Closer to Believing is much better, a
tragic, sweeping ballad with beautiful lines like 'From the opium of
custom to the ledges of extremes'. Not repetitive, not weak, and with
both strong music and enough substantial lyrics to allow Lake to sing
throughout without wrecking the song. It ends the first CD
beautifully, and the orchestra is perhaps used with more finesse here
than it is in any of Lake's other pieces.
I've always found The Enemy God... a
little difficult to stomach. A strong reinterpretation of a classical
piece, certainly, but it's really a one-mood song, and the fact that
it's not in and of itself on a cohesive album/side makes that mood
less easy to achieve. The drumming underlying the piece is very
strong, and the orchestra is well used. The drama is really here, and
it has atmosphere. A great track when you're in the right mood, but
you do need to be in the right mood to appreciate it.
LA Nights begins with bass, drums and
synths cooperating moving into a great jazzy sax part, a superb
guitar solo and the occasional bit of piano with good drum and bass
backing. The full-out continuation is superb, even if the opening
doesn't strike me as much above-average.
New Orleans is another jazzy piece with
really unusual hollow drumming complimenting more conventional
percussion and occasional jazz guitar and brass. The drumming
essentially acts as the backbone of the music, and various other
things are basically added on over it.
The rendition of Two Part Invention
in D Minor is beautiful. Some people don't like the idea of
reinterpreting a classical piece without going into electronic
overdrive, I love it, and the percussion focus is an excellent change
to conventional classical instrumentation.
Food For Your Soul is one of my
favourite pieces from the album, with brief drum solos interspersing
various instruments, and seems at the same time quite anarchic and
yet directed. The drum solos do grate a little, but they're short,
and the power and ideas of the music more than make up for it.
The orchestra-including revision of
Tank basically has all the (many) strengths of the original, except
that the drum solo is a lot briefer than that on ELP and the ending
section seems a little more developed, though Emerson's still adding
the keyboards to the end section. A great re-working.
The classical drum and keyboard opening
of Fanfare For The Common Man is promising, and the unexpected leap
into a freer bass-and-drum-with-keyboard-soloing section does follow
up on this, and the piece basically continues in this mould, and the
jam section is good. On the plus side, there is a feel that the band
collectively had fun making it, on the minus side, some of the
keyboard noises aren't clean enough for my liking, especially over a
longer track. Not my favourite, but a good collective piece.
Pirates has a lot of fans, probably
more than detractors, but it's doesn't really dazzle me. There are
certainly some great moments, and Lake's voice, as always, is
perfect. Unfortunately, the lyrics seem to alternate between
entertaining and creative and bland and stereotypical. The music is
similarly a mixed bag, from seemingly random, light orchestra-based
moments to a few superb highlights. The ending also leaves a little
to be desired, for me, at least. In the end, this is listenable, and
sometimes enjoyable, and I usually end up singing along, but it just
doesn't have the consistency of Tarkus or Take A Pebble that turns an
epic with some great moments into a masterpiece.
Concerning the bonus material, the live
version of Tank is essentially decent, but the sound quality isn't
great, on the other hand, I do like some of the changes on the drum
solo (the Works Live version is better, though), even if it still retains some of the basic problems of a drum
solo, and the direct shift into The Enemy God... is a nice touch. The
version of Nutrocker is a little different from the studio version on
Pictures, but it still, appropriately, rocks, and what sounds like a
bit of decent improvisation is always fun.
Overall, the effort is commendable, and
there are some stunning moments. Palmer seems to have an idea of
exactly where he wanted to go with each track on his side, whereas
Emerson and Lake occasionally don't quite know what they want to do
with their material. The group side is palatable, but really I think
that it doesn't bear much of a relation to their earlier efforts, and
it's not up to par with them, either.
Rating: Overall, good, with some very
strong and some very weak moments. Three Stars. Favourite Track: Disc 1: Closer To
Believing, Disc 2: Food For Your Soul ------- Well, this is a little late for a couple of reasons, one being that it's a double CD, another that I don't know it as well as their earlier albums, and a third that I've been otherwise busy. Although I didn't give enough time to the group side, probably, I don't think I'd end up adding more real substance or opinion to it. if I expanded it. Week 2 -1/2 Albums reviewed: BSS - ELP (4 Stars), Works Vol. 1 - ELP (3 Stars) Best album of the week: Birds of Fire - The Mahavishnu Orchestra Best song of the week: Arrow - Van Der Graaf Generator Worst song of the week: Dreamer - Supertramp Next week's reviews: Works Vol. 2 - ELP, Asia - Asia
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micky
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Posted: February 04 2008 at 16:25 |
Great reviews again Rob... and for what it's worth... your review of BSS is a carbon copy of what mine would have been if I devoted more time to reviewing and less to general forum spamming and mayhem. I would knock Toccata up to essential ELP... or absolutely vital as you phrased it. In my humble opinion probably the best single piece of symphonic prog out there... if it was good enough for Ginastera...what meer mortal could argue with that hahhaha. and the negative points of KE 9... ...dead on ... as big a fan of the group as I am.... the piece does not hold together well... I LOVE the 2nd impression from a musical standpoint....... but makes NO sense within the context of the larger piece. Never got much into Works Vol. 1.. .only when I want to satisfy my carnal lust for all things Carl Palmer. His side was the only one I really enjoyed.. or want to really listen to when I reach for the album.
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Slartibartfast
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Posted: February 04 2008 at 17:05 |
Tocatta, even though not an ELP original was what hooked me on ELP. I may not be particularly eloquent here, but what the heck.
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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micky
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Posted: February 04 2008 at 23:38 |
Slartibartfast wrote:
Tocatta, even though not an ELP original was what hooked me on ELP. I may not be particularly eloquent here, but what the heck.
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you want eloquent... I'll give you eloquent... this is ELP we are talking about... eloquence? pfffff... go see the dancing singing flower and the insomnia curing backing band hahahhaha.
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
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Posted: February 05 2008 at 13:20 |
*general growl in the direction of Genesis-haters*
Otherwise, the comments make this all worthwhile, and it's always good to see other people who actually agree with me on some of my more outrageous ELP views. To be honest, Works 1 has never gotten that much playtime for me, either, and when it does, it's usually just one CD at a time. I don't have the energy and/or emotional contortionism to listen through all four sides in a row. I quite frequently listen to some of the individual tracks when working, though, and there was an embarrassing time (my early prog days, in late 2006...) when Pirates was a very frequent listen.
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micky
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Posted: February 05 2008 at 13:31 |
Pirates NEVER caught to me for some reason
sorry about the Genesis shots.. sometimes I am a bad boy and can't resist.
Looking forward to your next reviews. Especially the Asia one.... no review for the imfamous Love Beach hahaha
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
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Posted: February 11 2008 at 20:29 |
Review 5, Works Vol. 2, ELP, 1977
The much-maligned Works Vol. 2, while
not progressive, is still, for me, good fun and an enjoyable album.
The jazz pieces are all uplifting and cheerful, the fusion-y pieces
are generally interesting, Lake's ballad really doesn't match up to
the standards of those on Works 1, but So Far To Fall has its good
moments. The opener and the closer, Tiger In A Spotlight and Show Me
The Way To Go Home, are strong. Certainly the album has a couple of
moments that most fanatical proggers won't like, but there are a
couple of peaks to make up for that.
Tiger In A Spotlight starts with a
light drum part and fast bass, as well as Lake singing essentially
random, but decent lyrics. Unfortunately, the opening and the first
keyboard solo feel a little too light and lack-lustre for me, though
they really do develop into a much better piece, with great
screeching synths, an excellent rhythm section, and uplifting vocals.
When The Apple Blossoms Bloom is opened
by the drumming, and continues with basically different keyboard
parts and riffs laid over changing percussion and a quiet bass part.
The instrumental 'chorus' of this piece is very strong, and all three
musicians shine on their respective instruments through to the
conclusion.
Bullfrog is a fairly eclectic fusiony
piece, with bizarre and conventional percussion placed side by side,
and keyboards and saxes occasionally thrown in for good measure. The
change to a more exotic atmosphere and more layered music at around
the two minute mark is good, and I love the short bass solo here
before it moves back through an anarchic section to a much better
variation on the opening section. I think the unfortunate issue here
is that the sum of the parts is worth more than the end result, which
is too hectic and uncoordinated for my liking.
Brain Salad Surgery is a short and
concentrated burst of silly keyboards, spitting drums and bass, with
nonsensical lyrics. The opening riff is great. Good if you're in an
appropriately sarcastic mood, and definitely musically directed.
If Emerson's Barrelhouse Shake-Down
can't cheer you up, what will? This is mostly made up of infectiously
cheerful piano and brass parts. Not massively adventurous and
diverse, but still fun, and my addiction to piano-and-drums is
suitably satisfied.
Watching Over You has two essential
problems: firstly, lyrics that don't interest me and a singing style
that does nothing to relieve this and secondly, a ballad acoustic
guitar part, of which the good variations' quality is obscured by the
weakness of the main theme. The occasional presence of keyboards is
simply not enough to lift the song up. Oddly enough, I find the
(thing that sounds like) kazoo solo most amusing. Not Greg Lake's
finest moment.
So Far To Fall doesn't really grip me,
generally, though at times its energy is contagious. The lyrics are a
little shaky, the vocals are at times irritating. The music is pretty
up-tempo, but difficult to describe. Palmer's drumming is (as always)
excellent, and the keyboard and sax parts are good, once the band get
past the fairly dubious opening.
The orchestra-and-piano version of
Joplin's Maple Leaf Rag is winning, but short. If I'm not mistaken
(and I could be), Emerson's playing very adeptly on a harpsichord.
The drumming and band parts are equally excellent.
I Believe In Father Christmas is
another ballad, though much better than Watching Over You, mainly
because of the lyrics (which are excellent, and targeted at the
negative effects of commercial Christmas) and the Prokofiev theme.
There is a delicious irony in this song's appearance around Christmas
every year. The keyboards, when added, are to good effect, and I like
the main acoustic tune.
Close But Not Touching is another jazz
piece, this time Palmer-penned, and with an excellent drum
performance, as you might expect. It's basically a big band piece,
and pretty hectic, throughout, with a couple of tunes repeating and
mostly unconnected soloing. The lack of direction sometimes takes
away from the enjoyment (for me), but it's still a decent track.
Honkey Tonk Train Blues is a (n
excellent) jazz cover. The piano and percussion keep it going
throughout and yet run off on their own spontaneously, while the
brass additions over the top keep blaring out. Again cheerful. Again
good.
Show Me The Way To Go Home is an
exceptional rendition of the traditional song, with club piano,
relaxed vocals and orchestral additions leading into a brief
instrumental trio, followed by a couple of brass parts leading
seemlessly into the faster not-quite-ending section with more soulful
vocals, catchy harmonies and a quiet and almost lamentful end. This
doesn't fall short of what I expect from earlier ELP, and is probably
the best song on the album.
Onto the bonus material: the three live
renditions aren't really that great, with average production, a
performance of Tiger In A Spotlight (though I prefer the studio
version) is always good. Watching Over You is a track I don't like,
so a second version (even if it is an improvement, since it feels
slightly more emotionally charged) isn't an overwhelming plus for me.
Lastly, Show Me The Way To Go Home - an excellent performance, with
good improvisation on the opening clouded over by poor sound quality.
I miss the vocal harmonies, but it's still a good version of an
excellent song, and distinctly different from the studio version.
Overall, this is still an album full of
enjoyable material, and while it doesn't hit the experimental and
powerful peaks that Tarkus or ELP did, I'll still give it the
occasional listen when I'm not in the mood for something heavier or
just want to relax with a bit of background jazz. An optimistic three
stars, though I can understand why it's sometimes rated lower here.
Rating: Three Stars. Good
fun. Favourite Track: Show Me The Way To Go Home
---------------- Week 3...ish. Albums reviewed: Works Vol. 2 (ELP) - 3 Stars Best album of the week: 2112 - Rush Best song of the week: 2112 (especially Soliloquy) - Rush Reviews coming up: Asia - Asia, Wind And Wuthering - Genesis I'm not very satisfied with the Works II review, but I'm looking forwards to the controversy of Asia, which should be up tomorrow.
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Mike Giles
Forum Newbie
Joined: February 08 2008
Location: Canada, Québec
Status: Offline
Points: 30
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Posted: February 11 2008 at 23:20 |
A Tarkus is a tattoo? I mean the animal (tatoo)??
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Nothing he's got, he really needs. Twenty first century schizoid man.
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
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Points: 8052
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Posted: February 12 2008 at 09:57 |
Eh?
I thought it was just an armadillo/tank hybrid.
Edited by TGM: Orb - February 12 2008 at 09:58
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
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Posted: February 14 2008 at 12:58 |
Review 6, Asia, Asia, 1982 (PR) ()
I bought this album at the same time as
my first Yes albums (CTTE and The Yes Album), knowing only that it
had Palmer on the drums, and without that many expectations. Both
those buys proved excellent, though the differences couldn't be more
extreme: on the one hand, you have the layered sounds, cosmic themes
and build-up of Yes, and on the other, the short, catchy tunes, clean
and fluid music and amazing plain rock of Asia. I think a lot of
prog-men expected a Yes II with a couple of Crimson elements to
emerge from the supergroup, but I think this end result should
satisfy anyone (excluding those more given to the classical or jazz
elements of prog) who approaches it with an open mind.
From the first chords of Heat Of The
Moment, right through to the fade, the group's musicianship and
dynamic (something not, it would seem, to extend through to their
next album) is obvious. Palmer's drumming is superb, the short
instrumental parts are fantastic, the vocal harmonies are great, the
lyrics may not (a theme to the album) be the best you've ever heard,
but they suit the music, and the end result has grown on me with each
listen.
Only Time Will Tell is a beast of a
different nature: much darker, beginning with a keyboard riff and
continuing with a couple of different moods expressed by excellent
music. Wetton's vocals support this, and the drum crescendos are
extremely powerful. As strong as the opener, though it takes more
getting used to.
The bass-and-drum introduction of Sole
Survivor signals the start of yet another great rock song, this time
going to complete nonsense lyrics, but with energy and style and
enough small variations to keep me interested.
One Step Closer has a decent opening,
but the continuation (especially the chorus) is a little too
pop-based for me, and the lyrics (appalling. Really appalling) don't
alleviate that. The tune and components (lyrics/vocals excepted)
aren't that bad, but the end result does nothing for me.
Time Again is perhaps the fastest of
the album's songs, very energetic, and with stronger lyrics ('Fate
looks certain, but then nothing's guaranteed/You want for nothing,
but is nothing what you need?') than the rest of the album. Howe's
guitar solo here is perfect, and the drumming is Carl Palmer
at his finest, and the bass is very strong, and the keyboards fit in
very nicely.
Wildest Dreams is the closest thing to
prog rock on this album. It's a protest song with mind-blowing
verses, but instrumental sections and choruses that don't (for me)
reach the level of those on the rest of the album (not quite sure
why, but occasionally it seems over-indulgent or overblown in a way
that the rest of the album doesn't). Still an excellent song
Without You is as highly rated by me as
any of the huge progressive epics that are so loudly trumpeted around
PA. The lyrics are strong, the moody keyboard opening and vocals are
haunting and echoey, and the composition can take a complete turn
when you least expect it. The entire song is absolutely perfect: a
great combination of emotion and technical skill.
Cutting It Fine has its moments,
one of Howe's catchiest melodies, a superb opening and an emotive
instrumental close (mainly piano), although the lyrics aren't
anything exceptional. The energy is infectious, and Downes' tasteful
additions to the guitar-bass-drums dominated song proper give it
enough material to be replayable.
Here Comes The Feeling is the
optimistic end to the album, uplifting and genuine verses, and the
chorus is less annoying than One Step Closer, with stronger melodies
and particularly strong keyboard and bass parts. A great closer, with
a very abrupt end.
Asia's debut, in my opinion, is superb
- an amazing rock album with a couple of irritating pop moments.
Unfortunately, it seems to suffer ridiculous over-reactions (1
star?!) based on what the band could have been, and a refusal to
actually engage with the music individually. Highly recommended, but
it seems that the experience of this album differs from person to
person.
Rating: Four Stars (Five, but I'm
not awarding masterpiece ratings to PR or proto-prog albums)
Favourite Track: Without You
--- Week 3ish. A little later than predicted, but I wanted to collect my thoughts on why I liked the individual tracks, rather than just the album as a whole. Just ordered 10 or so new albums from Amazon, which should be here sometime tomorrow.
Discussion: Anyone want to defend a 1-star (lowest of the low) rating for Asia? I don't mind people rating things differently to me, but 1-star seems really quite extreme and reactionary for this album, and, glancing at the reviews, I haven't seen one that justifies such a low rating and actually considers the music, rather than just throwing around words like disappointing and AOR. It's quite interesting that later Asia albums seem to have *higher ratings*, although I get the impression that most Asia fans actually think that Asia is the best thing they've released.
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micky
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Posted: February 14 2008 at 13:55 |
now that is a yummy review ... and you have to forgive the numbnuts who rate albums with terms like disappointing and AOR and not actually reviewing the album.
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
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Posted: February 16 2008 at 18:45 |
I may have said that Wind And Wuthering
was next on the agenda. I've since changed my mind and decided to go
through Genesis chronologically up to W&W, including a complete
workover of an embarrassing Foxtrot review, which I may or may not
have posted. So, from the beginning:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Review 7, From Genesis To Revelation,
Genesis, 1968
A rather weak album, in my opinion: a
load of pop songs, none of which are very compulsive, and the few
flashes of excellence are soon obscured by massed string/horn parts
and appalling choruses. However, it's occasionally good for
background music, and, apart from The Conqueror, I wouldn't consider
any of the tracks irritating. The concept in itself is feebly done
(producer Jonathan King's fault, since he suggested it) and the
lyrics vary from terrible to passable. I prefer a couple of the
stringless mixes to those included on the album, and the original
'She Is Beautiful' floors the reworked version 'The Serpent'.
Where The Sour Turns To Sweet has a
fairly nice melody and vocals, but the lyrics are a little poor, and
for no real reason, the end result doesn't make a real impression.
The string and horn overdubs here are generally tolerable.
In The Beginning begins with a
promising chaotic sound into a bass part into a song dragged down by
the poor sound quality and slightly pretentious lyrics. I like the
components, but the recording isn't very clear, and you can't really
hear anything except Gabriel properly: Rutherford and Philips are
good musicians (at least, they are later), but it seems that here, as
on the rest of the album, they can't be heard properly.
Fireside Song goes on too long with too
little variation, and the lyrics are pretty ineffectual. Gabriel's
unsteady voice and the whiny strings do nothing to alleviate this.
However, the starting piano theme is passable, and the acoustic parts
are sometimes good. The end result is dull and cheesy, sadly.
The Serpent starts off quite well with
a sort of hollow drumming thing and excellent acoustics and a decent
bluesy rocking guitar part, then it moves to a rework of what was
originally 'She Is Beautiful', not bad, with a decent bass part and
bits of organ if you listen hard enough, as well as good electrics,
and enjoyable drumming, but the vocal harmonies (aaaa) (aaaa) (aaaa)
everywhere really make it difficult to listen to the music, and the
lyrics are feeble, compared to the original piece.
Am I Very Wrong has one of the
highlights of the album: the excellent pensive
acoustics-trombone-and-vocals of the verses, with great piano parts
between them, unfortunately, it then goes on to have a silly,
moderately mindless chorus that ruins everything. Could've been a
pretty good song, but wasn't.
In The Wilderness actually isn't too
bad, though the childish dun-dun-dun-dun thing leading to a passable
chorus annoys me if I'm listening properly. The verses have a hint of
Gabriel's future ability and range as a singer, but it doesn't quite
work here, for whatever reason. The strings don't hurt me. The piano
solo end is a decent touch.
The Conqueror opens with a guitar
repeat of the In The Wilderness themes, and then a fairly mindless
and unclear acoustics and piano tune with fairly weak harmonies and
appalling lyrics. On the plus side, the electric guitar in the
background and then soloing over the top of the theme is good,
however, the piece overall is very weak.
In Hiding has the same problems as the
much of the rest of the album: repeated and uninteresting music, and
a weak chorus. Gabriel's voice here is pretty good, but that's about
the only thing I like about the song.
I like One Day, silly horns and
strings, yes, repeated chorus, yes, fairly weak lyrics, yes, but it
seems to work here. The bass-and-piano are good, the xylophone or
vibraphone or whatever it is additions to the start are nice, and it
all works together quite neatly.
Window starts promisingly with a bit of
acoustic guitar and piano, bass in the background, a quiet and
haunting vocal with (what sounds like) trombone in the mix, slowly
building to... a bland and generic chorus with irritating strings and
fairly idiotic lyrics. The verses are generally quite good, though
they could have lost the violin, but the end result is an unmemorable
song.
In Limbo again starts with a decent
theme, and this time it's the vocals that bring it down, and the
choruses are also annoying. The ending limbo section suffers from
poor mixing, in my opinion, I love the electrics and hectic
background music, but it's not very audible behind the weak brass and
vocals in the foreground.
The Silent Sun is a little
uninteresting: an essentially generic ballad crossed with a generic
pop song. The harmonies are badly done, the vocals aren't that great,
and the violin is completely redundant here. Just unmemorable.
The concluding A Place To Call My Own
is probably the best thing on the album. Banks and Gabriel give their
first real indication of their future vocal and piano talents, and
the instrumental end is quite good, with the strings/brass being used
in a more constructive way. I don't love the final 'lalalala' thing
that much, but it's a decent effort.
The bonus tracks I have on my 2 CD
compilation thingy make it much easier to piece together the
problems: recycling of material to fit producer Jonathan King's
concept results in weaker lyrics, and the strings and horns seem to
be added a lot when not needed. I prefer Patricia without the vocals
to the piece it became (In Hiding), Try A Little Sadness is a weak
pop song, with basically the same random strumming and good piano
with a couple of tolerable musical moments in there that can actually
be heard. She Is Beautiful is
essentially a better version of The Serpent with piano taking the
lead, better lyrics ('cool as ice, but brittle as glass') and the
(aaaa) being less dominant. Although I think the final mix has better
basic material, this one sounds better. Image Blown Out is a fairly
silly, whimsical composition, tolerable once if you're in a good
mood.
The
Silent Sun's single version isn't really that much different, but the
slightly more audible bass is good. Retains the problems of the
original, but slightly less dull. That's Me is an enjoyable pop song,
although the vocals in the chorus grate a little. The guitar solo
(and guitar in general) is fun, and the lyrics are tolerable. It
sounds as if the band had fun playing/writing it, something not
always evident here, and Philips (guitarist), whose playing made
Trespass for me, doesn't seem to be on such a leash here. A Winter's
Tale has a quiet organ in the background, which gels amusingly with
the pop chorus. I enjoy listening to it, but partly for the wrong
reasons. A better song than the album proper. The One-Eyed Hound is a
bit weaker, with an annoying refrain ('This man committed a sin, this
man, he never can win') absolutely wrecking the song, which would
otherwise be passable. The rough mixes generally strike me as being
equivalent to or better than the album pieces in quality/sound
quality.
Only recommended if you want to see the
first stages of Genesis' development and the opportunity to rant
about poor producing in reviews. I feel the album could've done with
more music time instead of chorus repeat time, and the strings rarely
work well here. This seems to me like a mix of poor production, poor
mixing and a musical immaturity or a lack of direction in the band.
Nonetheless, there are occasional glimmers of promise, and Genesis
would go on to produce no less than seven
very strong studio prog albums in a row after this.
Rating:
2 Stars. Flashes of promise, but mostly weak.
Favourite
Track: That's Me, or, in the album itself, A Place To Call My Own ------ Ah well, it seems that my Asia challenge has been left unanswered. Embarking on a Genesis series now, since the ELP one seemed to focus my mind better than random reviews. Plus, I'm hoping it'll generate more banter and comments. FGTR could well have been a one star album, but I thought that'd be too harsh for it.
@Micky, I'll have to forgive them eventually, but I'm hoping I may have brought some attention to a problem with lots of generally looked-down-on albums and given some people the urge to explain before slamming that lowest of low ratings on anything at all. It's one of my major pet peeves with some PA reviews, the other being people saying '4.6 stars really', '3.2 stars', '1.112234294 stars'.
Edit: Apparently, 6+1 = 7, not 8. Review title has been accordingly Lucassed.
Edited by TGM: Orb - February 17 2008 at 12:59
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micky
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 02 2005
Location: .
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Posted: February 16 2008 at 18:54 |
of course your Asia challenge went unchallenged.... it's easier to lope off some half ass review safe in knowledge that is is a common perception.. than to actually explain it. Like the time old TFTO 'fluff' question. Those same people who give Tales hell for not being more concise would have been the first to say Yes was merely sticking to formula and done another CTTE type album. It was a natural progression for them. Curious to know what you think of that album if you do a series of Yes reviews. I am not particularly much of a Genesis fan. . but I'll admit... FGtR is one of the albums I find most interesting. I really get a pleasure out of FGtR than I simply don't get out of more 'acclaimed' albums like Foxtrot. Looking forward to reviewing it some day. Nice review.. would have given it 3 stars myself
Edited by micky - February 16 2008 at 18:55
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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