![]() |
ANAM CARAOliver WakemanProg Related |
From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website


The genesis of this album began before Wakeman joined Yes in 2009, but it was only in 2023 that he finally set to and finished writing it. To help him achieve the vision, he then invited in Hayley Griffiths (Riverdance, Karnataka) on vocals, Troy Donockley (Nightwish) on pipes and whistles, Oliver Day (Fragile) on acoustic guitars, lute and mandolin, Scott Higham (Pendragon) on drums along with David Mark Pearce (electric guitar), Robert McClung (violin), Steve Amadeo (bass guitar) and Mick Allport (saxophone, clarinet). The album was mixed by Karl Groom (Threshold) and recorded by John Mitchell (Arena, It Bites, Frost*, Lonely Robot), so it was very much him working with people he knew very well indeed.
The result is an album which has Oliver's name on the front cover, but his role in this is to provide the perfect support to Hayley in an album which is very Celtic in nature with nods to Iona as much as to his more symphonic approach. Some of the flourishing and rippling piano is very much like his father, as he demonstrates his more progressive approach than his brother (who has always been more rock based to my ears, and it is perhaps not surprising he is most well-known these days for being sideman to the likes of Black Sabbath, Uriah Heep, Deep Purple and many more). There is a depth to this album which combines with a lightness of touch which is pure Oliver, with plenty of piano against the synths, acoustic instruments against the rock, with Troy making a huge difference whenever he comes in, yet he is not overplayed.
Yet Oliver has made this album all about Hayley, providing material and accompaniment to perfectly suit her voice, and she has grabbed this opportunity and run with it showing both her classical and rock chops as she moves much more into the folk field. That this is beautiful is to surely understate just how magical this truly is, with the album feeling very much like an ensemble with everyone playing their part to lift Hayley up and ensure the vocals truly shine. It will take a while for me to truly gauge if this is Oliver's best work yet, as 'Baskervilles' will take some toppling, but at present I think this may indeed take first place as this is faultless with a stunning guitar break here, the perfect violin there, punchy drums at the right time, all held together with magical keyboards and piano. Months on from its release I note this is the first review on PA, which means a gem is being missed out by many. Available through Cherry Red, this is sublime.
OLIVER WAKEMAN Anam Cara ratings only
chronological order | showing rating only
-
dannyb
-
dyyigor1958 (Igor)
-
mhernand3 (Martin Hernandez Valdez)
-
bublick (Sergey)
-
KansasForEver2 (andré)
-
crimsogenes
-
gegece (gustavo garate de Nacional)
-
ProgroC (Valentyn)
-
Sergio Saldes (Sergio Saldes)
-
mdelval (Manuel del Val Latorre)
-
ElRocin (Jacinto)
-
Pastichoni (Marco Cayuso)
-
Fernandi (Fernandi Gunawan)
-
carltonh (Carlton Hobbs)
Post a review of OLIVER WAKEMAN Anam Cara
You must be a forum member to post a review, please register here if you are not.
MEMBERS LOGIN ZONE
As a registered member (register here if not), you can post rating/reviews (& edit later), comments reviews and submit new albums.
You are not logged, please complete authentication before continuing (use forum credentials).