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Mile Marker Zero - Coming of Age CD (album) cover

COMING OF AGE

Mile Marker Zero

Progressive Metal


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4 stars This is the third full-length album from this modern melodic Progressive rock band from New Haven, CT, following their acclaimed concept album The Fifth Row (2018). Great stuff! Love the mix of various Prog elements (from moody and atmospheric to heavier prog metal influences) while also maintaining strong and solid rock melodies and vocals throughout. They have their own unique sound, but as musical references, I would say if you like modern prog bands along the lines of Pattern-Seeking Animals and The Pineapple Thief, you should also really like Mile Marker Zero as well. In their heavier moments they also have some elements of Rush. Great find. Best Tracks: Coming of Age, Best is Yet to Come, End of August, Bizarre, Towns to Grow Up In. Rating: 4
Report this review (#3112784)
Posted Tuesday, November 5, 2024 | Review Permalink
4 stars MILE MARKER ZERO has delivered a handful of reinterpretations of classic Christmas songs by prog legends such as Opeth, GENESIS and RUSH. Otherwise MILE MARKER ZERO loves YES, Steven WILSON, RIVERSIDE, TRANSATLANTIC and FROST* and it shows.

1. A Time in Place solemn piano-vocal intro, a bit of wind to feel the shivers 2. Best Is Yet to Come à la Steven Wilson, RUSH and YES start off with something to prick the ear; a cathartic chorus with a wild guitar solo to layer the sound. John launches a melodic shred in the vein of Lifeson or Howe, take your pick; Jaco hits his bass on Squire, the latent break, simple, effective, mysterious, perfect with this warm finale between FROST* and Neal MORSE heavy, slap 3. Towns to Grow Up In for the nostalgic hymn to our homes that form us, a typical US sound, the voice, the sharp guitar, the reminiscent sounds surely; the bass again there recalling RUSH from the 80s, John's very good solo announcing the prog drift that is worth its musical weight, a modern yessian spleen sound without the original 10 minutes of introduction 4. Bizarre that made me stop mountain biking, a well-calibrated trip-hop like WILSON, synth from SIMPLE MINDS, the rhythm on a Peter GABRIEL, alternating between the clear piano and the dark danceable beat with its beautiful final rise and the circumspect air of thinking that it was indeed another group, bluffing.

5. Coming of Age drives the point home with these Gabrielelesque marimbas and the swinging tune, making your old skeleton sway; these soothing metronomic notes with its schoolyard break, proven world music, its grandiloquent piano and this Gilmourian acoustic solo, Howien delivers the emotional moment with the final explosion à la DIRE STRAITS, look for the title, grandiose 6. Heavy Days heavier, hard rock with an acoustic guitar verse at the start and a screamed chorus whose voice must be tamed; a heavier Neal... MORSE ersatz, a little overplayed here which shows the metallic side well 7. Far from Here and its symphonic prog intro which shows the ease of the group to move from one drawer to another; a TANGERINE DREAM sound in the background like the marimba in one of the previous titles; otherwise RUSH, energetic ENCHANT, a fast solo, the heady voice, too high and a finale on this primary beat 8. End of August in a typical AOR finale, a bit of everything in fact for the folk ballad which is worth it for its central digression on the piano, this Mark is good at building a prog universe with so little; the acoustic then electric guitar for the explosive finale bringing back to the first title of 'The Best is Yet to Come', yes the prog is there.

Report this review (#3141660)
Posted Tuesday, January 7, 2025 | Review Permalink

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