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MIRAGE

Jazz Rock/Fusion • France


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Mirage biography
French band MIRAGE were born in1996 of the fusion of keyboardist Philippe Duplessy, drummer Joël Mondon, bassist Cyrille Forner and his brother guitarist Stephan Forner; Stefan's wife Agnès, who would join them on flute and vocals during concerts, soon became a permanent member of the band. For most of twenty years, all had been CAMEL devotees (as you may have guessed from the band's name) and by 2001 they had gigged, jammed and accumulated enough material to release a first album titled "A Secret Place". This gave them some exposure and fostered a renewed enthusiasm for a second album titled "Tales from the Green Sofa", released in 2004. Besides CAMEL, bassist Cyrille Forner says the band members are also influenced by The ALAN PARSONS PROJECT, KING CRIMSON, PINK FLOYD, The FLOWER KINGS and PORCUPINE TREE as well as by not-so-prog acts such as LED ZEPPELIN and DEEP PURPLE.

Both of their albums, "A Secret Place" and "Tales From the Green Sofa", feature that rich, warm, mellow, melodic guitar and flute play reminiscent of early CAMEL; add some female vocals plus a little touch of jazz fusion and you'll get the picture. Throughout both CDs, you'll be hearing hints of "Moonmadmesss", "The Snowgoose" and "Nude" as well as of "Harbour of Tears" and even "A Nod and a Wink". Overall, both feel a bit like some timeless CAMEL albums. Nothing revolutionary but fairly well done and faithful to the CAMEL spirit, with nice arrangements and a very decent production.

Recommended to vintage CAMEL fans.

: : : Lise (HIBOU), CANADA : : :

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MIRAGE discography


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MIRAGE top albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

2.92 | 24 ratings
A Secret Place
2001
3.92 | 36 ratings
Tales from the Green Sofa
2004
3.46 | 21 ratings
Borderline
2008
2.52 | 15 ratings
The Tyler Durden Project
2021

MIRAGE Live Albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

MIRAGE Videos (DVD, Blu-ray, VHS etc)

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MIRAGE Reviews


Showing last 10 reviews only
 The Tyler Durden Project by MIRAGE album cover Studio Album, 2021
2.52 | 15 ratings

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The Tyler Durden Project
Mirage Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by kenethlevine
Special Collaborator Prog-Folk Team

1 stars Here is yet another "comeback" by a long assumed dead prog rock group. The sometimes symphonic sometimes fusion sometimes heavy French band's first release in 12 years gives the impression that they forgot to unleash several productions during the intervening years. This is because, while it bears similarities to "Borderline", to say it picks up where that album left off would be to imply that they suddenly suffered an unprovoked heart attack and conveniently omit the likelihood that it was provoked by years of failing health. I'm not saying that they had to remain a CAMEL clone band - in fact their pinnacle album "Tales from the Green Sofa" sounds like a CAMEL collection that enhances that band's legacy while barely retrenching at all. While I had issues with the direction on "Borderline", "The Tyler Durdan Project" doubles down on the clumsiest tendencies of the past, a hard rock and bluesy interpretation of the fictional protagonist of "The Fight Club" movie, book and comics. One would expect more aggressive programming but not the plod rock parody on display here, punctuated by technically skilled and utterly vapid lead guitar solos only accentuated by Stephan Forner's lackadaisical vocals, a strength of the group when their music actually soared contrastingly. Such a shame.
 The Tyler Durden Project by MIRAGE album cover Studio Album, 2021
2.52 | 15 ratings

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The Tyler Durden Project
Mirage Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by motutunga

4 stars This is not a master piece as Mirage never pretend to be Steven Wilson our Dream Theater..I guess they are just poor musicians trying to bring something new as amateur guys. Actualy they bring rich hamony and subtil rythm paterns....they made a real concept album..Only one track ( the last one) as a well know chords structure, all the rest is a kind of experimentation , and that is the deal for this kind of music....you can find a lot of other prog music , better produced , with better musicians but unfortunatly , most of those show a critical lack of imagination..In the release Mirage try to produce something unusual, and they succeeded sometimes, like "how can you know" or some hard blues rythm in " fair warning" ( lsiten to the intro). To me the real wrong aspect is the poor production, i am sure that if they get more competency in recording mixing and mastering the result would have been a great new piece..as you can see they album is an auto production, that mean they did it is their home studio with can't be a real professional one
 The Tyler Durden Project by MIRAGE album cover Studio Album, 2021
2.52 | 15 ratings

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The Tyler Durden Project
Mirage Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by Beautiful Scarlet

3 stars This album is the first release by Mirage in over a decade. It is with a renewed line up featuring only Stephen Forner of the original Mirage. Fear not, this is still Mirage. Lounge fitting vocals are plentiful as are guitar solos and lengthy tracks. However, there is a strong metal sound throughout this album, distorted guitar and aggressive drumming. It isn't the heaviest of metal but still a sound I would consider metal. His is a welcome change as it brings new life to Mirage. Unfortunately, the music on The Tyler Durden Project is just not very impressive. Inspired by the novel Fight Club, this album at times comes off as a musical, replete with cheesy melodies and dialogue like lyrics. Additionally the music still meanders and keyboards play basically no role.

In short this album has a gimmick (a concept album of sorts) and new sound yet fails to improve upon any of Mirages shortcomings. (The songs go on and on, noodling, bland melodies and poor instrumentation)

 Tales from the Green Sofa by MIRAGE album cover Studio Album, 2004
3.92 | 36 ratings

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Tales from the Green Sofa
Mirage Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by Beautiful Scarlet

3 stars Largely forgettable yet never bad. This band is like 50% Camel 50% Jazz fusion. The end result is a sound I would classify as Canterbury Scene. The vocals are mixed low but audible and are serviceable. The music is very loungy, at its worst sounding like elevator music/ambient. The better parts have some engaging work, particularly when the keys play something as opposed to the guitar.

The first track is my least favourite, to long and boring with lame melodies.

The second track is mostly the same, picking up towards the end for a great vocal/key combo, nice.

The third track opens in a similar vein as the second tracks ending and manages to mostly keep the energy level up. The vocals are a lot better on this one compared to the first track.

Gone margarita opens with more guitar lines that are quickly joined by deep vocals that remind me of Leonard Cohen and ice cool keyboard chords. Then another guitar solo begins, this time it is accompanied by other instruments and it doesn't go on for to long without some changing sections being added and continuing in a faster paced mood reminding me of Ain Soph at their best. This part of the song is engaging and great, very well done.

Tales from the green sofa opens up with chipper guitar, an acceptable change from the melancholy of the prior tracks. Without wearing its welcome the song gives way to some great keyboard work. Vocals then are introduced by guitar. The vocals here have some backup vocals and are louder. The vocals are somewhat happy yet not saccharine sweet, they are rather good. Excellent organ(?) work then occurs for some time with some good music happening. More keyboard oriented then most of the tracks it really works well, the band gels on this song. Different vocals come in over acoustic chords at around 7:30, the slurred (might just be the accent) delivery works well. Taking the song to a strong finish in the last two minutes is a shifting landscape of music that flows seamlessly. I find a lot of this last stretch to be unnecessary, they should have ended the song at around 10:00.

The final song is the first song part two. It opens with the vocals typical of this album with some fret less bass and keyboard, not bad. The vocals here are to AOR for my taste, still they are acceptable. Then a chill guitar solo enters the equation. Vocals return after about a minute and the song ends with literally nothing for a minute.

This is a good album, although it has enough flaws to be 3/5. All of the songs, save Gone Margarita could use a trim, they are just to long and some of the guitar solos sound to sparse, not enough accompaniment, feels like listening to air passing.

 Tales from the Green Sofa by MIRAGE album cover Studio Album, 2004
3.92 | 36 ratings

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Tales from the Green Sofa
Mirage Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by seventhsojourn
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator

4 stars This band's name leaves no doubt as to who their foremost influence is, so the question for me is whether Mirage can come up with anything to rival the illustrious English band; is ''Tales From The Green Sofa'' good enough to challenge the pre-eminence of Camel's finest work? It's certainly a worthwhile effort but there's not a whole lot to distinguish these guys from Camel. Lyrics are in English, so there shouldn't be any problem for those with issues about non-English lyrics, and vocals are pleasant if lacking a little in feeling. Emotive guitar slices like a hot knife through buttery slabs of Hammond organ, and the occasional flute contributions further strengthen the Camel comparisons.

Thankfully I didn't go on my first impressions with this album, because ''Tales From The Green Sofa'' really grows on you if you allow for second and further thoughts. So long as you're not looking for originality you'll be fine here, although I do have one or two minor quibbles. Firstly, there are precious few moments to even remotely challenge the listener. However, the members of Mirage demonstrate a notable capacity for melody, so fans of symphonic prog should enjoy the album. Only seldom do they draw on more distant influences though.

''Secret Place (Part One)'', for example, comes to life after its murmuring intro with some spacey Floyd grooves, while ''Gone Margarita'' is arguably the album's jazziest track with chilled-out flute and congas. The title track waxes and wanes with a neat syncopated rhythm underpinning synthesizer and organ flurries, then wah wah guitar and short stabs of harsh organ. And that brings me to my second slight criticism, i.e. the album's lack of variety. The first three tracks basically follow a parallel course of guitar and Hammond duet, some funk-fuelled electric piano, and maybe a bit of acoustic guitar and flute. Jazz moments are definitely at a premium, but overall this is a quality piece of work.

 Borderline by MIRAGE album cover Studio Album, 2008
3.46 | 21 ratings

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Borderline
Mirage Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by Tarcisio Moura
Prog Reviewer

3 stars One thing you can´t really accuse french band Mirage of is sameness. Their so far 3 albums are quite different from each other, their sound always evolving somehow. And. alas, that does not exactly mean for the better. While Songs From The Green Sofa is a tremendous improvement over their debut, this new offer from this very interesting group somehow failed to excite me as much. It is like they want to have their own sound, whatever it takes. But I really enjoyed more their early Camel-like approach of the first two discs.

Don´t get me wrong, Borderline does have very good moments. The group is not totally removed from their past, but the new songs are leaning much more towards average jazz rock/fusion than to the symphonic/neo/jazzy mixture they were so good at. The music is a lot less melodic and takes much more time to really sink in. After repeated lsitenings I can say I liked most of what I heard, and yet it does not have real memorable tunes, if you know what I mean. I don´t have the same willingness to push the repeat button like I had when I hear A Strange Place and Songs From The Green Sofa. I can´t point my finger at what is wrong (Production? Songwriting? Arrangements?), but the guitars are heavier. the new material is less interesting, the vocals are duller and the general feeling is that the band is going to be one of those "all skills and no heart" type of jazz rock records I really don´t like.

Of all the tracks here I guess the Pink Floyd-ish Nothing Stops Me is a highlight.

Conclusion: A good, if not outstanding, CD. A bit of a letdown considering their previous works. Still. a 3 star affair. Barely.

 Tales from the Green Sofa by MIRAGE album cover Studio Album, 2004
3.92 | 36 ratings

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Tales from the Green Sofa
Mirage Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by Tarcisio Moura
Prog Reviewer

4 stars Well, what a giant leap forward when compared to their already good debut A Secret Place. But unlike their first effrord this one is much more cohesive and personal: the early Camel sound is now a big influence, not a copy anymore. The strong Marillion references on a couple of tracks before is all but gone. The result is a very melodic, powerful and diverse CD, where you can still hear a lot of Camel references, but with a music of their own and very good songwriting.

The somewhat odd female singing is also history (Agnès Forner is now cited as a guest and on flute only). And even the male singing is much better now. However, the instrumental parts is where the gold is really in: gorgeous guitar solos, terrific bass playing, dreamy keboards (much on the Peter Bardens vein) and very versatile drumming. To top it all, we still have excellent flute on some songs. Those guys really know how to write great, memorable songs and performe them with very tasteful and varied arrangements. The playing here is top notch and there is absolute no low moments on the whole CD. All tracks are excellent and it is a joy to listen to it from start to finish.

Production is good, with all instruments very well balance in the mix.

Conclusion: a reall winner! A very nice surprise from France. If you like early Camel (around the time of their 4 first albums) with a slightly more jazzy approach, you just can´t miss Tales From The Green Sofa. An hour of pure prog heaven for all those who love great melodic symphonic prog. Rating: 4.5 stars at least. Highly recommended!

 A Secret Place by MIRAGE album cover Studio Album, 2001
2.92 | 24 ratings

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A Secret Place
Mirage Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by Tarcisio Moura
Prog Reviewer

3 stars Let me start this review stating that I just LOVE this record! Personally, I´d give it a four star rating or more. However, I should also point out that there are some issues here that prevented me to do so. First of all, this french quintet is not original at all. From their name (taking from Camel´s Mirage album) and with a song called For Andy, they made no secret to no one of who their idols are. No problem with that, but songwriting-wise, they go beyond just being influenced by Camel to actually copy part of their songs: Untold Story, just to cite one, is almost a total rip off of Lunar Sea. And yet, I must say they do it very well.

Another strong influence is Fish era-Marillion (as the opener Nothing On TV Tonight shows quite clearly). But most of the time Mirage soudns like a slightly jazzy version of early Camel. Flutist and singer Agnés Forner has an unsual voice that takes some time to get used to, but also helps them to be a little more than just a copy of Andrew Latimer´s famous band. And their musicanship is excellent too, with brilliant guitar solos, excellent keys, great bass (a highlight on all the songs) and very good drumming. There are no fillers and songs like Time machine are fine samples of their skill and passion. The last track , Alien Attack - Supernova, is on the more experimental side and is a clue of the sound they would eventually develop outside the Camel scope.

Conclusion: for an early Camel freak like me, A Secret Place is pure prog heaven. Originality aside, Mirage is a very good band (Camel was not an exactly easy band to emulate, if you know what I mean...). And it is obvious that this group had all they need to go much further on their own (which they would do from their second release onwards). So this album is recomended for the ones that have a similar taste.

Final rating: 3,5 stars.

 A Secret Place by MIRAGE album cover Studio Album, 2001
2.92 | 24 ratings

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A Secret Place
Mirage Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by apps79
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator

3 stars 3.5 stars to be exact...

A very good band from France,but with a very UK-styled prog rock sound, MIRAGE were found in 1997 by Phillipe Duplessy on keyboards, Joel Mondon on drums,Cyrille Forner on basses and his brother Stephan on guitars, while Stephan's wife Agnes contributed on vocals/flutes at the live performances and soon she became a stable member of the band.During all those concerts MIRAGE worked on their own material and out of 16 tracks,they chose half of them to be included on their debut.This came out in 2001 on Musea Records under the title ''A secret place''.

With such a band name and tracks with a title like ''For Andy'',I expect to listen to nothing less than CAMEL-influenced progessive rock with ANDY LATIMER-like emotional guitars...and,sure, that is exactly what is going here.Excellent melodic stuff, which lacks a bit in diversity, but it is based on strong musicianship, melodic arrangements and emotional instrumental parts,exactly like CAMEL.Guitars and flutes play first roles here and create soundscapes met both in early- and later era-CAMEL: from Canterbury Jazz-Prog to flute-driven symph-like orchestrations and highly emotional instrumental music, characterized by nice guitar solos.The keyboards here are placed mostly in the background,so the music becomes deeper and more atmospheric and,as for the bass work,this goes mostly from slow bass lines onto a jazzier approach.Imagine all this well-crafted musicianship supported by the crystalline voice of Agnes Forner,who sings only in English.This is first quality dreamy and atmospheric progressive rock in the vein of CAMEL or even ALAN PARSON'S PROJECT, DOGMA and CHANCE.Strongly recommended!

 A Secret Place by MIRAGE album cover Studio Album, 2001
2.92 | 24 ratings

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A Secret Place
Mirage Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by kenethlevine
Special Collaborator Prog-Folk Team

2 stars Mirage's debut amounts to little more than a CAMEL tribute album. At this point they are not so much playing "In the spirit of" CAMEL as to the letter of CAMEL. They are content to intermingle blatant riff-offs from classics like "Lunar Sea", "A Song within a Song", "Harbour of Tears" and "Echoes" to the extent that the actual tracks contain very little development of their own. They create a soulless CAMEL soundscape that conjures precious little of the original emotion while failing to establish any credibility in their own right. These guys can play, but virtuosity in itself is not the name of the game.

"For Andy" delves into fusion in a way that Mr Latimer only did sporadically, and hints at the direction taken on subsequent releases, but it's still pretty tentative. The female vocals do not suit the style and mar tracks like "Nothing on TV tonight" and "The UFO trip". The finale "Alien Attack-Supernova" shows more than experimentation and a willingness to spread out. It even has CRIMSON ish heavy guitars. But ultimately it lacks both the continuity of a compelling suite and the import of an epic. This may have something to do with being essentially silent for the latter half of its 20+ minutes.

In all, at this point the band sits in a place best kept secret. That changes dramatically a few years later.

Thanks to ProgLucky for the artist addition.

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