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Hedersleben - The Fall Of Chronopolis CD (album) cover

THE FALL OF CHRONOPOLIS

Hedersleben

 

Krautrock

3.93 | 14 ratings

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Mellotron Storm
Prog Reviewer
4 stars When it comes to modern day Krautrock it doesn't get much better than HEDERSLEBEN. They were formed in the town of Herdersleben, Germany and are led by British guitarist Nicky Garratt. This is album number three and it's based on a Barrington J. Bayley novel. On the back of the cd it says "Time is mutable... The Fall Of Chronopolis is dedicated to the infinite mind of Barrington J. Bayley."

I really like this band and apparently I'm not the only one as Joel from BRAINTICKET had HEDERSLEBEN as his backing band on that final BRAINTICKET record from 2015. Nik Turner also had this band as his backing band on his 2017 release "Life In Space". Now Nik and this band have had connections since 2013 with Turner guesting on flute on their debut. And some of these band members guesting on some Turner solo records before "Life In Space". The core trio of this band on the first three albums have been Garratt on guitar, Kephera Moon on keyboards and Jason Willer on drums. Their most recent release called "Orbit" is where Moon and Willer left the band and that was the first album they released that disappointed me.

I love their "sound" with that spacey and trippy vibe standing out, tons of atmosphere, with female vocals that whisper, are wordless and sing, but the vocals sort of blend in with the music. It was the new female singer on "Orbit" where I felt her vocals became too much of the focus, and I wasn't that into them anyways. The new singer here is good and she adds violin which is a new flavour for this band, not found on their first two records. While you can call this a concept record, it sure doesn't come across as one which I appreciate. As the focus is on the instrumental work despite it being a concept album which is refreshing.

We get eleven tracks under 42 minutes and there are four tracks under 2 minutes but they work in this uniform sounding recording. I love that intense rhythm section on "Gulf Of Lost Souls" that reminds me of early GONG surprisingly enough. Also "Ghost Amanda" really stands out for me. The keys and guitar, the melancholy, the urgent rhythm section. So good! And how about the way the album opens sounding like the start of a movie and adventure. Fasten your seat belts as that opener is the longest at under 8 1/2 minutes. And what a ride! Love the violin on some of those short pieces like "Umbul" and "The Archivist". I'm also a big fan of the spacey wind and start of "Somewhen Veaa(Dreamstate)" and the melancholic keys. Check out the echo on "The Third Time Fleet" the second longest piece at under 7 minutes. Space whispers too.

You can't go wrong with the first three albums by this band, but also check out some of those Nik Turner albums these guys guest on. A solid 4 stars for this slab of space rock.

Mellotron Storm | 4/5 |

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