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CAUSE & CONSEQUENCES

Anasazi

Progressive Metal


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Anasazi Cause & Consequences album cover
3.79 | 30 ratings | 3 reviews | 17% 5 stars

Excellent addition to any
prog rock music collection

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Studio Album, released in 2023

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Trapped (7:13)
2. 324 (5:37)
3. Death Was (Her) Name (5:53)
4. Exit Life (8:30)
5. Disheartening (9:39)
6. Into the Void (6:05)
7. Space Beetween (6:41)
8. The Mourning (13:19)

Total Time 62:57

- Bonus tracks on Digital release:
9. Manic Circle (8:49)
10. Bleeding Through (5:50)
11. Shine (4:46)
12. Autumn of Tears (4:10)

Line-up / Musicians

- Mathieu Madani / vocals, guitars, keyboards
- Brunos Saget / guitars
- Anthony Barruel / drums

Releases information

Format: CD, Digital
January 27, 2023

Thanks to mbzr48 for the addition
and to projeKct for the last updates
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ANASAZI Cause & Consequences ratings distribution


3.79
(30 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(17%)
17%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(40%)
40%
Good, but non-essential (23%)
23%
Collectors/fans only (20%)
20%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

ANASAZI Cause & Consequences reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by Negoba
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars Progressive Heavy ROCK - Tasty, Adventurous, and Well Recorded

Some albums, even prog albums, don't have to re-invent the wheel to succeed. I had never heard Anasazi in the past, but as I worked my way through my first listen of Cause and Consequences, I kept nodding my head thinking "Good choice." Like many prog metal bands, Anasazi switches up the feel often, but it never feels forced. They also don't milk a particular idea too far (which many other bands do). The influences are certainly here - Tool, Opeth, Porcupine Tree, and traditional heavy rock, but the number of different rhythms, tonalities, melodic elements always kept me interested. There is very little shred (although it is well done in the few places the guitarist lets loose). Thankfully, the band neither leans on Dream Theater or Meshuggah. There's plenty of groove, great riffing, and vocals that have some attitude and snarl without ever going into extreme realms.

There is a LOT of death themes in the lyrics, which did not appeal to me as much as the music itself. What did appeal to me was the production. I could hear everything clearly. During vocal sections, the vocals were the loudest element. When there was a guitar solo, it was clear. Riffs, including the spaces between notes, sit on top when it's time. While one would assume that all professionally mixed and mastered albums would be this way, modern overuse of compression and overdubs often makes (especially metal albums) a soup of sound where the only clear element is the kick and snare.

The final epic is indeed the star of the album, taking the listener on a journey that has many stops along the way but always knows where it is headed. The opening riff encapsulates all the things the band does well - a syncopated riff a la Opeth, then a layered vocal over a Tool groove, and then a not-quite-chorus that if anything makes me think of King's X. What I love is that even if one instrument is making an obvious nod to a classic band, other members of the band are pulling from somewhere else. The result is interesting, rocking, and a great listen from the opening to the close.

So why not 5 star? Although they have produced a wonderful album, recombining known elements in their own unique way, the elements themselves are familiar. My emotional response is more like a little nod and "Nice!" but not "Holy Moly what is THAT?" And I think there needs to be some of those moments to classify an album as masterpiece.

Latest members reviews

4 stars Anasazi ('former enemies' in the Navajo language) group formed in 2003 by Mathieu Madani on the evening of the viewing of an episode of the X-Files of the same title; very quickly they burn their production with a sound oriented on prog metal with Dream Theater sauce with concept titles. A nervo ... (read more)

Report this review (#2895623) | Posted by alainPP | Thursday, March 2, 2023 | Review Permanlink

4 stars So Much Blood So Much Darkness French progressive metal trio anasazi (always lower case, I was told) here releases their sixth full length album (also 4 EP's, and a special instrumental release), titled "cause & consequence". It's a fine example of complex and dark progressive metal from ... (read more)

Report this review (#2879271) | Posted by Steve Conrad | Sunday, January 29, 2023 | Review Permanlink

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