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Anakdota - Overloading CD (album) cover

OVERLOADING

Anakdota

Eclectic Prog


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BrufordFreak
COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars An album of refreshing, theatric, acoustic piano-driven, GENTLE GIANT-like songs delivered in a Broadway musical- like style with a male lead vocalist who sounds and styles like XTC's Andy Partridge (or THE GABRIEL CONSTRUCT's Gabriel Lucas Riccio) and a female lead that sounds like Amy Darby (THIEVES' KITCHEN) and Amanda Plummer (AXON-NEURON)! Exceptional songwriting here is met by musicians who are every bit up to the task. The song constructions are deceptively complex while the sound engineering and production are among the best you will ever hear. Unfortunately, I thing this one sailed under everyone's radar because it was released so late in 2016 (mid-November by AlrOck Productions).

1. "One More Day" (7:03) The first half is like an Andy Partridge song gone Broadway! The second half is so gorgeous and life-affirming. It's full of amazingly engaging pop-jazz melodies and sound and construction that sound as if they've been lovingly borrowed from those of the great songwriters of the 1940s like Gershwin and Porter. (9.5/10)

2. "Different Views" (5:42) with its great drumming/percussion work. (8.5/10)

3. "Late" (4:20) reminds me of a HUMBLE GRUMBLE song. (8/10)

4. "Mourning" (5:28) is definitely the prettiest, most emotional song on the album. It's mostly a piano song with lead singing from the eminently capable female lead, Ayala Fossfield. Highlight: Ayala's duet of wordless vocalise with the piano. This is the song that most bears the comparisons I've read to Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin's work together. (8.5/10)

5. "Overloading" (7:08) is quite the piano dominant, though Ray Livnat's voice, Guy Bernfeld's bass, and Yogev Gabay's drums get their turns to shine as well. (8.5/10)

6. "Staying Up Late" (8:24) opens with Yogev's bass but it's really the vehicle for the beautiful, thoughtful vocal stylings of Ayala Fossfield. This is a great song--my favorite on the album--that sounds a lot like a THIEVES' KITCHEN (Amy Darby) or AXON-NEURON (Amanda Plummer) song done in a GENTLE GIANT way. The jazzy electric piano-led excursion mid-song (3:55 to 6:35) is especially sweet--even when it gets "dirty" with distortion--but it is the return and finish of Ayala's part that is most welcomed. (9.5/10)

7. "Girl Next Door" (5:01) has a Vince Guraldi-like piano with DEREK SHULMAN-like singing (8.5/10)

8. "End Of The Show" (5:58) the album's finale is an end-of-Disney-movie sound-alike (8.5/10)

A bit of an acquired taste--kind of like GENTLE GIANT and HUMBLE GRUMBLE were for me, and yet the STEPHEN SCHWARTZ-like theatricity of it is quite interesting and, if you give it a chance, engaging.

January 2017 re-assessment: The remarkably clean production, complex, proggy composition style, virtuosic performances, and thoroughly enjoyable melodies kept drawing me back to this one despite the flurry of other activities (and albums) over the course of 2017. This is so close to being a masterpiece of progressive rock music-- definitely one that should be heard by anyone who professes themselves a prog lover.

A 4.5 star album; B+; an excellent addition to any prog rocker's music collection.

Report this review (#1868482)
Posted Sunday, January 21, 2018 | Review Permalink
Windhawk
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars Israeli band ANAKDOTA was formed in 2013, consisting of members that all have a musical education they bring into the band and the music created and explored. "Overloading" is their debut album, and was released by Italian label Altrock Productions through their imprint Fading Records in 2016.

Anakdota is a band that merits a check if you want to check out something a bit different. With a foundation in jazz as I experience this album, but with distinct nods in the direction of both classical music and pop music. Music easy on the ears and the mind, yet also featuring some challenging details here and there. Those with a certain affection for piano based jazz should find plenty to enjoy on this album, especially if they are also able to appreciate a band exploring that style seguing over to both pop music and classical music, in sum creating material that arguably is a better fit inside the progressive rock umbrella than anywhere else.

Report this review (#1918321)
Posted Sunday, April 29, 2018 | Review Permalink
4 stars I must say, this easily deserves 4 stars. Strongly rooted in jazz but perhaps more deserving of the Prog designation than almost anyone i can think of in that regard (jazz roots). Stunning piano work and tasteful and well considered arrangements. This is a must listen. Plenty of Gentle Giant influence in the jagged phrasing. Vocals are very nice and strong. Clearly a great deal of thought has gone into this work, far more than 90%+ of Prog music these days. Perhaps what keeps it from being an all time classic is the familiar hurdle most artists succumb to and that is having that special union of vision and voice creatively. It will dazzle you and please you but you may not remember the music as much as the dazzle. Still, it turns me on! Great album.
Report this review (#2118910)
Posted Wednesday, January 16, 2019 | Review Permalink

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