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Mandrakeroot View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 13 2007 at 07:40
Finnforest in RPI team? Isn't a bad idea. Considering our general level of productivity (like Team globally) wouldn't displease me!!!  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 14 2007 at 12:08
Another my RPI review. This is for one good compilation:

DELIRIUM (ITA)

Le Più Belle Canzoni Dei Delirium

(Boxset/Compilation, 2006)
Limmagine%20“http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/500/cover_270131832006.jpg”%20non%20può%20essere%20visualizzata%20poiché%20contiene%20degli%20errori.
Review by Mandrakeroot (Andrea Salvador)
Collaborator Italian Prog Specialist

— First review of this album —

3%20stars My review is produced using this release: Warner Music Italia Srl 5051011-1946-2-7

Rating: 6,5/10

Interresting compilation. But composed with 9 song from singles plus "Jesahel" from "Sanremo Festival 1972" and these aren't Prog songs. So is a strange compilation. Also because the first 9 songs are with Ivano Fossati. Certainly it is good music. However it is an Italian problem, what this compilation lifts. In fact in Italy if you are well-known for a musical genre come handed down to the posterity for the music of that musical genre. So Le Orme are famous for the Prog albums and the Proto Prog/ Beat period? Budget compilation and budget reissue. And I Delirium? Are famous for non Prog single... And Warner Music Italia produced a compilation of non Prog delirium's songs. But I repeat: In every case this is big music. Listen "Canto Di Osanna", "Favola O Storia Del Lago Di Kriss", "King's Road" (P.s.: Jazzy instrumental song), "è L'Ora", "Treno", "Buana The Rainbow" (P.s.: Jungle Boogie very nice) or Corri Bambino (P.s.: sung with White Voices chorus) because you will not stay disappointed.

Typical Italian compilation. But good. For fans of I Delirium... But not only.




Edited by Mandrakeroot - July 14 2007 at 12:09
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 15 2007 at 05:09
ANOTHER I DELIRIUM BUDGET COMPILATION!!!

Exploitation of a myth?  I do not know it.  Nevertheless I saw (but done not buy) another budget compilation dedicated to I DELIRIUM.  It know the title?  ...No?  "Jesahel".  This turns it is printed from the SMI from Milan.  The songs seem excellent.  Well...  It see to buy the for then to review it.  Also because the budget compilation of the SMI always quite are done. 

Edited by Mandrakeroot - July 15 2007 at 05:09
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 15 2007 at 06:03
My last RPI review:

RICCARDO ZAPPA

Santo & Zappa

(Studio Album, 1991)
Riccardo%20ZappaSanto%20&%20Zappa%20album%20cover
Review by Mandrakeroot (Andrea Salvador)
COLLABORATOR Italian Prog Specialist

3%20stars My review is produced using this release: DDD 412 035 (MC)

Rating: 6,5/10

Interesting album by Santo (of Santo & Johnny) and Riccardo Zappa. With the help of other musicians (one is Ares Tavolazzi, ex Area) that play varied types of percussions (ethnic and traditional) and natural varied types of sounds reproducers to form a Longue Music orchestra, Santo & Zappa inventing a cover album with a classic Andinean Folk song "El Condor Pasa", "Stand By Me" (Ben E. King), "Caruso" (Lucio Dalla), "Bridge Over Troublrd Water" (Simon & Garfunkel), Imagine (John Lennon), "Norwegian Wood" (The Beatles), "Madame Butterfly" (Giacomo Puccini), "On The Road Agan" (evergreen of Blues), "Sleepwalk" (classic of steel guitar, wrote by Farina brothers) and other songs. The final result is this: in general "Santo & Zappa" is a good World Music album, not distant to Third Ear Band or Aktuala. Every song is good... Strange... Powerful... But the world Music version of "Madame Butterfly" is... a really sole version and, honestly, brilliant!!!

I cannot describe this album. It goes listened to. Also because it is a sole experience. It believe me.




Edited by Mandrakeroot - July 15 2007 at 06:05
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 15 2007 at 13:08
Originally posted by Mandrakeroot Mandrakeroot wrote:

ANOTHER I DELIRIUM BUDGET COMPILATION!!!

Exploitation of a myth?  I do not know it.  Nevertheless I saw (but done not buy) another budget compilation dedicated to I DELIRIUM.  It know the title?  ...No?  "Jesahel".  This turns it is printed from the SMI from Milan.  The songs seem excellent.  Well...  It see to buy the for then to review it.  Also because the budget compilation of the SMI always quite are done. 


True.  All truth. that sadness!!! What it have to be a budget compilation has revealed to be the reprint of this album: 

DELIRIUM (ITA)

Jesahel

(Studio Album, 1999)
Limmagine%20“http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/500/cover_2330161012006.jpg”%20non%20può%20essere%20visualizzata%20poiché%20contiene%20degli%20errori.

That it contains new (but too POP melodic) versions of old songs. 

This it is called:
Exploitation of a myth!!!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 15 2007 at 17:21
Originally posted by Mandrakeroot Mandrakeroot wrote:

Finnforest in RPI team? Isn't a bad idea. Considering our general level of productivity (like Team globally) wouldn't displease me!!!  
Anyone giving Il tempo della gioia from QVL 5 stars is a good choice for the Italian team imo Wink.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 15 2007 at 17:48
Originally posted by Dirk Dirk wrote:

Originally posted by Mandrakeroot Mandrakeroot wrote:

Finnforest in RPI team? Isn't a bad idea. Considering our general level of productivity (like Team globally) wouldn't displease me!!!  
Anyone giving Il tempo della gioia from QVL 5 stars is a good choice for the Italian team imo Wink.


hahhahh... depends of what he gave QVL's debut.. which was the better album LOLWink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 15 2007 at 18:24
LOL, we've been here before Mickey, but notice in his earlier review that Finnforest  also likes the second album better (the real thing he calls it  Thumbs%20Up) . So there you are, though i admit that there are lots of people that prefer their debut. including some Erik that seems to hang out here a lot.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2007 at 05:47
I don't have the second QVL's album. But for me depends all from the knowledge of obscure artists/ bands. And already the QVL are enough obscure outside from the Italy (because in Italy, instead?) 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2007 at 06:39
News from Maracash records:
 

MASS MEDIA "Criptoidea"


Second album from Mass Media, historical band from the '70s
that reunited in 2005, in order to record this splendid new
album, a live in studio with a very impressive "groove"!
This band displays perfectly the classic '70s style compositions, always rich in new ideas but with definite individualities showing, too; for sure the album belongs to Prog (Acqua Fragile, PFM, Yes, ELP...)
even more than their previous one "Dark Opacity" but in the DNA of this band you may also find excellent
jazz-rock bits (Arti & Mestieri, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Brand X... )!
The CD culminates in the splendid "Suite del ringraziamento (Thanksgiving suite)" dedicated
to their all time influences... Bach, Beethoven,
Mozart, Bernstein, Copland, Emerson, Wakeman and more.
Planned and composed for live concerts, the suite was recorded as a live in studio, like the other tracks, to keep the "groove" and the energetic feeling intact.


Piero Dondi - Keyboards
Armando Pozzo - Guitars - Vocals
Tiberio Boido - Guitars - Vocals
Alberto Rinaldi - Bass
Luca Tuffanelli - Drums

CLICK & PLAY !!! Mass Media Live in Studio 2007

 
___________________
 
 
On about Quella Vecchia Locanda. I prefer their second effort Il Tempo della Gioia than their debut!Thumbs%20Up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2007 at 08:19
Probably one of the best reviews on RPI of this year!Clap
 
 
ROVESCIO%20DELLA%20MEDAGLIA%20%28RDM%29,%20IL%20Contaminazione%20progressive%20rock%20album%20and%20reviews Italian Symphonic Prog
(Studio Album, 1973)
Avg: 4.26/5
from 38 ratings
ROVESCIO DELLA MEDAGLIA (RDM), IL — Contaminazione
Review by Kotro (João Cotrim)

5%20stars PROGRESSIVE SUMMER RAMBLINGS 2

Abisso, abside, accantonare, affogato, allenatore, Alpi, amaretto, arrivedérci, asinino, aspettare, auguri, avanti, babbo, bacio, bambino, befana, Beretta, birra, bolognese, buonasera, calcio, caldo, calzone, cappucino, cercare, chiesa, cinquecento, cipolla, condottiero, conoscere, consigliere, conzucione, croce, culo, cuore, destra, doge, domani, dopo, ebreo, ecco, espresso, fascio, fica, formaggio, fragola, freddo, ghibelino, giallo, giorno, gli, grazie, guardare, guelfo, ieri, insegnante, insieme, latte, loggia, maccherone, madonna, malato, mascarpone, mensa, mezzo, moglie, nave, negozio, nessuno, niente, nocciolato, nodo, nudo, occhio, ogni, olivo, parmigiano, paura, pazzo, permesso, piccolo, pipistrello, pizza, pomodoro, quartiere, quindici, raccogliere, raccolta, ragazza, rapporto, regno, risotto, rovescio, scopo, scusare, sfumato, siccome, specchio, spunto, squadra, stampa, strappo,sviluppo, tagliatelle, tarantella, tasca, testa, tifosi, tonno, treno, tridentino, uscita, vecchio, volere, zio, zucchero, zuppa.

The above list is, rudely put, my entire Italian vocabulary, not counting, obviously, the long array of words similar or alike in my native tongue. A few of those were picked up on trip to Italy last year. Of course, my goal there was not to learn the language, but to attend a Gilmour concert and do a little sightseeing. The Gilmour concert was great, the sightseeing even better, but I feel I could have done more and maybe dive into the cradle of a fantastic musical genre, Italian Symphonic Prog. I knew PFM and La Maschera di Cera were around performing, but one of the downsizes of travelling accompanied is that you can’t always go where you what. Still, back to the list, it is not, as you can probably conclude, a very flattering one. And it is probably one of the reasons why I can’t appreciate Italian Symphonic Prog (from now on referred to by the Italian initials to Rock Progressivo Italiano – RPI) in full.

I was “introduced” to RPI, surprisingly, by a dear lady friend (prog-chicks – gotta love them!). The band in question was Banco del Mutuo Soccorso. When I asked her where she had got those tracks, she replied “Prog Archives. Don’t you know it?” I had never heard of it. I can’t say that I would continue not knowing it if not for her, but I agree she speeded up the process of me joining this wonderful resource. She and RPI, that is. For my first moments on this website were spent downloading (when you still could) the massive array of RPI samples available in this prog El-Dorado. From ba-rock bliss to heavy folk-rock, from eerie to exciting, at every track I got, my curiosity and devotion to this amazing genre grew. Progressively.

It seems only fair that my first RPI review refer to my first RPI album: Roverscio della Medaglia’s CONTAMINAZIONE di alcune idee di certi prelude e fughe de «Il Clavicembalo ben temperato» di J. S. Bach (don’t you just love long titles?). Sure, I had previous contact with the RPI samples here on PA, including the one for RDM, Cella 503, yet Contaminazione… was the first full experience of appreciation I had, which is to say, the first RPI album I purchased. It was an impulse of the moment. I received a mailing list from a music distributor that featured one copy of this album. As soon as I saw it, in 5 minutes I had it bought. Two days later, there he came knocking to my door. Needless to say, the first listen wasn’t all I expected it to be. First off, there was the album length – 36 minutes. When you pay some dosh for an album, you might expect it to be filled. Then, as if the album length wasn’t enough, there were the tracks – one had 4 minutes and 10 seconds, the rest not even 4. Of course, after a few listens, I realized this wasn’t important. As far as I could and can tell, the album compromises only one piece of music, as all the songs segue into the next to form a 36 minute opus (the only exception is between tracks 6 and 7 where, I can only imagine, the division for vinyl was made, an assumption confirmed by other reviewers).

What wondrous music and musicianship! The keyboards are omnipresent, but they don’t embark as much on the psych ups-and- downs we are used to in many progressive rock acts as much as they serve an eerie ambient sound. Electric guitars are less present throughout the album, but they do come out sometimes, and what a joy it is when they do! The vocals, both individual and in chorus, are spot on. The orchestra gives it a classical ambience that the band fits into so well and therefore there is plenty of classical instrumentation to go around, driven by the obvious harpsichord and strings, delightfully present throughout the opus. The first half of the album, compromising the first 6 tracks, has an exiting start, but then gets progressively more mellow and emotional. From the second half on, opened by Johan it gets slightly heavier, faster and wackier. Every song before Alzo Un Muro Eletrico sounds like a display of fireworks at Louis XIV’s Versailles. When that track does arrive, it does so in a funky blast, after the small 1-minute intro provided by the flute-dominatedContaminazione 1760. Distorted guitars dominate the landscape here, by far the heaviest track of the album and a real highlight. The heaviness is slightly interrupted at the middle by what Ian Anderson could describe as a “sleazy piece of hotel elevator jazz”. This amazing track gives way to the climatic yet phantasmagorical, keyboard dominated Sweet Suite (such a sweet name!), that repeats the intro from Alzo Un Muro Eletrico before segueing into the fast-paced, baroque-psyched ending that is La Grande Fuga. Harpsichord, strings, electric keyboards, all compete in this track to see who’s stronger and who’s faster, and while they do so, the only winner in the competitions is us, the listeners. You can just picture in your mind the fireworks in the end.

This is not an album to hear and discard after one listen. It has to be repeated, listened to carefully, it has to mature in the ear. When it does, you can’t keep from seeing it as it is. A masterpiece.

Posted Monday, July 16, 2007, 07:58 EST
Review Permanent link | Submit a review for this album



Edited by Andrea Cortese - July 16 2007 at 08:20
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2007 at 12:04
Originally posted by Andrea Cortese Andrea Cortese wrote:

News from Maracash records:
 

MASS MEDIA "Criptoidea"


Second album from Mass Media, historical band from the '70s
that reunited in 2005, in order to record this splendid new
album, a live in studio with a very impressive "groove"!
This band displays perfectly the classic '70s style compositions, always rich in new ideas but with definite individualities showing, too; for sure the album belongs to Prog (Acqua Fragile, PFM, Yes, ELP...)
even more than their previous one "Dark Opacity" but in the DNA of this band you may also find excellent
jazz-rock bits (Arti & Mestieri, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Brand X... )!
The CD culminates in the splendid "Suite del ringraziamento (Thanksgiving suite)" dedicated
to their all time influences... Bach, Beethoven,
Mozart, Bernstein, Copland, Emerson, Wakeman and more.
Planned and composed for live concerts, the suite was recorded as a live in studio, like the other tracks, to keep the "groove" and the energetic feeling intact.


Piero Dondi - Keyboards
Armando Pozzo - Guitars - Vocals
Tiberio Boido - Guitars - Vocals
Alberto Rinaldi - Bass
Luca Tuffanelli - Drums

CLICK & PLAY !!! Mass Media Live in Studio 2007

 
___________________
 
 
On about Quella Vecchia Locanda. I prefer their second effort Il Tempo della Gioia than their debut!Thumbs%20Up


I think thaty MASS MEDIA is another RPI band for PA!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2007 at 12:05
Originally posted by Andrea Cortese Andrea Cortese wrote:

News from Maracash records:
 

MASS MEDIA "Criptoidea"


Second album from Mass Media, historical band from the '70s
that reunited in 2005, in order to record this splendid new
album, a live in studio with a very impressive "groove"!
This band displays perfectly the classic '70s style compositions, always rich in new ideas but with definite individualities showing, too; for sure the album belongs to Prog (Acqua Fragile, PFM, Yes, ELP...)
even more than their previous one "Dark Opacity" but in the DNA of this band you may also find excellent
jazz-rock bits (Arti & Mestieri, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Brand X... )!
The CD culminates in the splendid "Suite del ringraziamento (Thanksgiving suite)" dedicated
to their all time influences... Bach, Beethoven,
Mozart, Bernstein, Copland, Emerson, Wakeman and more.
Planned and composed for live concerts, the suite was recorded as a live in studio, like the other tracks, to keep the "groove" and the energetic feeling intact.


Piero Dondi - Keyboards
Armando Pozzo - Guitars - Vocals
Tiberio Boido - Guitars - Vocals
Alberto Rinaldi - Bass
Luca Tuffanelli - Drums

CLICK & PLAY !!! Mass Media Live in Studio 2007

 
___________________
 
 
On about Quella Vecchia Locanda. I prefer their second effort Il Tempo della Gioia than their debut!Thumbs%20Up


I think thaty MASS MEDIA is another RPI band for PA!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2007 at 20:28
Originally posted by Andrea Cortese Andrea Cortese wrote:

Probably one of the best reviews on RPI of this year!Clap
 
 
ROVESCIO%20DELLA%20MEDAGLIA%20%28RDM%29,%20IL%20Contaminazione%20progressive%20rock%20album%20and%20reviews Italian Symphonic Prog
(Studio Album, 1973)
Avg: 4.26/5
from 38 ratings
ROVESCIO DELLA MEDAGLIA (RDM), IL — Contaminazione
Review by Kotro (João Cotrim)

5%20stars PROGRESSIVE SUMMER RAMBLINGS 2

Abisso, abside, accantonare, affogato, allenatore, Alpi, amaretto, arrivedérci, asinino, aspettare, auguri, avanti, babbo, bacio, bambino, befana, Beretta, birra, bolognese, buonasera, calcio, caldo, calzone, cappucino, cercare, chiesa, cinquecento, cipolla, condottiero, conoscere, consigliere, conzucione, croce, culo, cuore, destra, doge, domani, dopo, ebreo, ecco, espresso, fascio, fica, formaggio, fragola, freddo, ghibelino, giallo, giorno, gli, grazie, guardare, guelfo, ieri, insegnante, insieme, latte, loggia, maccherone, madonna, malato, mascarpone, mensa, mezzo, moglie, nave, negozio, nessuno, niente, nocciolato, nodo, nudo, occhio, ogni, olivo, parmigiano, paura, pazzo, permesso, piccolo, pipistrello, pizza, pomodoro, quartiere, quindici, raccogliere, raccolta, ragazza, rapporto, regno, risotto, rovescio, scopo, scusare, sfumato, siccome, specchio, spunto, squadra, stampa, strappo,sviluppo, tagliatelle, tarantella, tasca, testa, tifosi, tonno, treno, tridentino, uscita, vecchio, volere, zio, zucchero, zuppa.

The above list is, rudely put, my entire Italian vocabulary, not counting, obviously, the long array of words similar or alike in my native tongue. A few of those were picked up on trip to Italy last year. Of course, my goal there was not to learn the language, but to attend a Gilmour concert and do a little sightseeing. The Gilmour concert was great, the sightseeing even better, but I feel I could have done more and maybe dive into the cradle of a fantastic musical genre, Italian Symphonic Prog. I knew PFM and La Maschera di Cera were around performing, but one of the downsizes of travelling accompanied is that you can’t always go where you what. Still, back to the list, it is not, as you can probably conclude, a very flattering one. And it is probably one of the reasons why I can’t appreciate Italian Symphonic Prog (from now on referred to by the Italian initials to Rock Progressivo Italiano – RPI) in full.

I was “introduced” to RPI, surprisingly, by a dear lady friend (prog-chicks – gotta love them!). The band in question was Banco del Mutuo Soccorso. When I asked her where she had got those tracks, she replied “Prog Archives. Don’t you know it?” I had never heard of it. I can’t say that I would continue not knowing it if not for her, but I agree she speeded up the process of me joining this wonderful resource. She and RPI, that is. For my first moments on this website were spent downloading (when you still could) the massive array of RPI samples available in this prog El-Dorado. From ba-rock bliss to heavy folk-rock, from eerie to exciting, at every track I got, my curiosity and devotion to this amazing genre grew. Progressively.

It seems only fair that my first RPI review refer to my first RPI album: Roverscio della Medaglia’s CONTAMINAZIONE di alcune idee di certi prelude e fughe de «Il Clavicembalo ben temperato» di J. S. Bach (don’t you just love long titles?). Sure, I had previous contact with the RPI samples here on PA, including the one for RDM, Cella 503, yet Contaminazione… was the first full experience of appreciation I had, which is to say, the first RPI album I purchased. It was an impulse of the moment. I received a mailing list from a music distributor that featured one copy of this album. As soon as I saw it, in 5 minutes I had it bought. Two days later, there he came knocking to my door. Needless to say, the first listen wasn’t all I expected it to be. First off, there was the album length – 36 minutes. When you pay some dosh for an album, you might expect it to be filled. Then, as if the album length wasn’t enough, there were the tracks – one had 4 minutes and 10 seconds, the rest not even 4. Of course, after a few listens, I realized this wasn’t important. As far as I could and can tell, the album compromises only one piece of music, as all the songs segue into the next to form a 36 minute opus (the only exception is between tracks 6 and 7 where, I can only imagine, the division for vinyl was made, an assumption confirmed by other reviewers).

What wondrous music and musicianship! The keyboards are omnipresent, but they don’t embark as much on the psych ups-and- downs we are used to in many progressive rock acts as much as they serve an eerie ambient sound. Electric guitars are less present throughout the album, but they do come out sometimes, and what a joy it is when they do! The vocals, both individual and in chorus, are spot on. The orchestra gives it a classical ambience that the band fits into so well and therefore there is plenty of classical instrumentation to go around, driven by the obvious harpsichord and strings, delightfully present throughout the opus. The first half of the album, compromising the first 6 tracks, has an exiting start, but then gets progressively more mellow and emotional. From the second half on, opened by Johan it gets slightly heavier, faster and wackier. Every song before Alzo Un Muro Eletrico sounds like a display of fireworks at Louis XIV’s Versailles. When that track does arrive, it does so in a funky blast, after the small 1-minute intro provided by the flute-dominatedContaminazione 1760. Distorted guitars dominate the landscape here, by far the heaviest track of the album and a real highlight. The heaviness is slightly interrupted at the middle by what Ian Anderson could describe as a “sleazy piece of hotel elevator jazz”. This amazing track gives way to the climatic yet phantasmagorical, keyboard dominated Sweet Suite (such a sweet name!), that repeats the intro from Alzo Un Muro Eletrico before segueing into the fast-paced, baroque-psyched ending that is La Grande Fuga. Harpsichord, strings, electric keyboards, all compete in this track to see who’s stronger and who’s faster, and while they do so, the only winner in the competitions is us, the listeners. You can just picture in your mind the fireworks in the end.

This is not an album to hear and discard after one listen. It has to be repeated, listened to carefully, it has to mature in the ear. When it does, you can’t keep from seeing it as it is. A masterpiece.

Posted Monday, July 16, 2007, 07:58 EST
Review Permanent link | Submit a review for this album



wow... great review... and I agree, one of the best I've seen.  Smokes any of mine.

that was my first RPI album.

(Angry his vocabulary is larger than mine damnit,  all I've learned is the vulgar stuff from Raff hahhaha)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 17 2007 at 02:58
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

Originally posted by Andrea Cortese Andrea Cortese wrote:

Probably one of the best reviews on RPI of this year!Clap
 
 
ROVESCIO%20DELLA%20MEDAGLIA%20%28RDM%29,%20IL%20Contaminazione%20progressive%20rock%20album%20and%20reviews Italian Symphonic Prog
(Studio Album, 1973)
Avg: 4.26/5
from 38 ratings
ROVESCIO DELLA MEDAGLIA (RDM), IL — Contaminazione
Review by Kotro (João Cotrim)

5%20stars PROGRESSIVE SUMMER RAMBLINGS 2

Abisso, abside, accantonare, affogato, allenatore, Alpi, amaretto, arrivedérci, asinino, aspettare, auguri, avanti, babbo, bacio, bambino, befana, Beretta, birra, bolognese, buonasera, calcio, caldo, calzone, cappucino, cercare, chiesa, cinquecento, cipolla, condottiero, conoscere, consigliere, conzucione, croce, culo, cuore, destra, doge, domani, dopo, ebreo, ecco, espresso, fascio, fica, formaggio, fragola, freddo, ghibelino, giallo, giorno, gli, grazie, guardare, guelfo, ieri, insegnante, insieme, latte, loggia, maccherone, madonna, malato, mascarpone, mensa, mezzo, moglie, nave, negozio, nessuno, niente, nocciolato, nodo, nudo, occhio, ogni, olivo, parmigiano, paura, pazzo, permesso, piccolo, pipistrello, pizza, pomodoro, quartiere, quindici, raccogliere, raccolta, ragazza, rapporto, regno, risotto, rovescio, scopo, scusare, sfumato, siccome, specchio, spunto, squadra, stampa, strappo,sviluppo, tagliatelle, tarantella, tasca, testa, tifosi, tonno, treno, tridentino, uscita, vecchio, volere, zio, zucchero, zuppa.

The above list is, rudely put, my entire Italian vocabulary, not counting, obviously, the long array of words similar or alike in my native tongue. A few of those were picked up on trip to Italy last year. Of course, my goal there was not to learn the language, but to attend a Gilmour concert and do a little sightseeing. The Gilmour concert was great, the sightseeing even better, but I feel I could have done more and maybe dive into the cradle of a fantastic musical genre, Italian Symphonic Prog. I knew PFM and La Maschera di Cera were around performing, but one of the downsizes of travelling accompanied is that you can’t always go where you what. Still, back to the list, it is not, as you can probably conclude, a very flattering one. And it is probably one of the reasons why I can’t appreciate Italian Symphonic Prog (from now on referred to by the Italian initials to Rock Progressivo Italiano – RPI) in full.

I was “introduced” to RPI, surprisingly, by a dear lady friend (prog-chicks – gotta love them!). The band in question was Banco del Mutuo Soccorso. When I asked her where she had got those tracks, she replied “Prog Archives. Don’t you know it?” I had never heard of it. I can’t say that I would continue not knowing it if not for her, but I agree she speeded up the process of me joining this wonderful resource. She and RPI, that is. For my first moments on this website were spent downloading (when you still could) the massive array of RPI samples available in this prog El-Dorado. From ba-rock bliss to heavy folk-rock, from eerie to exciting, at every track I got, my curiosity and devotion to this amazing genre grew. Progressively.

It seems only fair that my first RPI review refer to my first RPI album: Roverscio della Medaglia’s CONTAMINAZIONE di alcune idee di certi prelude e fughe de «Il Clavicembalo ben temperato» di J. S. Bach (don’t you just love long titles?). Sure, I had previous contact with the RPI samples here on PA, including the one for RDM, Cella 503, yet Contaminazione… was the first full experience of appreciation I had, which is to say, the first RPI album I purchased. It was an impulse of the moment. I received a mailing list from a music distributor that featured one copy of this album. As soon as I saw it, in 5 minutes I had it bought. Two days later, there he came knocking to my door. Needless to say, the first listen wasn’t all I expected it to be. First off, there was the album length – 36 minutes. When you pay some dosh for an album, you might expect it to be filled. Then, as if the album length wasn’t enough, there were the tracks – one had 4 minutes and 10 seconds, the rest not even 4. Of course, after a few listens, I realized this wasn’t important. As far as I could and can tell, the album compromises only one piece of music, as all the songs segue into the next to form a 36 minute opus (the only exception is between tracks 6 and 7 where, I can only imagine, the division for vinyl was made, an assumption confirmed by other reviewers).

What wondrous music and musicianship! The keyboards are omnipresent, but they don’t embark as much on the psych ups-and- downs we are used to in many progressive rock acts as much as they serve an eerie ambient sound. Electric guitars are less present throughout the album, but they do come out sometimes, and what a joy it is when they do! The vocals, both individual and in chorus, are spot on. The orchestra gives it a classical ambience that the band fits into so well and therefore there is plenty of classical instrumentation to go around, driven by the obvious harpsichord and strings, delightfully present throughout the opus. The first half of the album, compromising the first 6 tracks, has an exiting start, but then gets progressively more mellow and emotional. From the second half on, opened by Johan it gets slightly heavier, faster and wackier. Every song before Alzo Un Muro Eletrico sounds like a display of fireworks at Louis XIV’s Versailles. When that track does arrive, it does so in a funky blast, after the small 1-minute intro provided by the flute-dominatedContaminazione 1760. Distorted guitars dominate the landscape here, by far the heaviest track of the album and a real highlight. The heaviness is slightly interrupted at the middle by what Ian Anderson could describe as a “sleazy piece of hotel elevator jazz”. This amazing track gives way to the climatic yet phantasmagorical, keyboard dominated Sweet Suite (such a sweet name!), that repeats the intro from Alzo Un Muro Eletrico before segueing into the fast-paced, baroque-psyched ending that is La Grande Fuga. Harpsichord, strings, electric keyboards, all compete in this track to see who’s stronger and who’s faster, and while they do so, the only winner in the competitions is us, the listeners. You can just picture in your mind the fireworks in the end.

This is not an album to hear and discard after one listen. It has to be repeated, listened to carefully, it has to mature in the ear. When it does, you can’t keep from seeing it as it is. A masterpiece.

Posted Monday, July 16, 2007, 07:58 EST
Review Permanent link | Submit a review for this album



wow... great review... and I agree, one of the best I've seen.  Smokes any of mine.

that was my first RPI album.

(Angry his vocabulary is larger than mine damnit,  all I've learned is the vulgar stuff from Raff hahhaha)


No problem, micky.  I believe that 90% of the Italians using an associative vocabulary because certain words are of use such communes that it is known to use them even if it isn't known the meaning. I remember a good school discussion in this sense. The true strangeness is the use of Because and since. In Italian language the use of this two words is similar but not identical. So the 90% of the Italians use because instead of since. But I noted that the Slovak and the Croatians (but also the inhabitants of trieste) use since if the sentence is affirmative (therefore if should affirm a concept).  I use that it is the just one.


Edited by Mandrakeroot - July 17 2007 at 03:00
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 17 2007 at 08:06
Italy has so many artists to offer. Thanks Philippe for opening the door onto the electronic-prog scene which I never investigated.Clap
 
 
BIANCHI,%20MAURIZIO%20Mectpyo%20Bakterium%20progressive%20rock%20album%20and%20reviews Progressive Electronic
(Studio Album, 1982)
Avg: 5.00/5
from 1 ratings
BIANCHI, MAURIZIO — Mectpyo Bakterium
Review by philippe (Philippe Blache)
Special Collaborator Content Development & Krautrock Team

— First review of this album —

5%20stars An other awesome, bizarre, ultra-oppressive, "traumatic" electronic work from MB’s first era. As in his first experimental electronic tempests "Mectpyo Bakterium" features a large variety of collages & noises (from concrete sounds, artificial, chirurgical effects) but much more organised and punctuated by lugubrious droney sequences. In a sense this album is closed to the glacial, haunting and chaotic & fascinating electronic atrocities of “Neuro Habitat”. The demonic ambiences are maybe more easy to listen but still beautifully intense and visceral. "Fetish Pinksha” is remarkable sinister, threatening electronic voyage, exploring the secret sides of our poor soul. "Stériles règles" contains bloody gorgeous sounds that infiltrate the brain for cathartic moments in real "isolation". It starts with a discreet, repetitive hypno pulse, industrial noises to progressively open the path to a powerfully tortured organic melody. "Placenta”"alternates strange noisy, cerebral sounds, cycles and motifs with serene, monotonous, cloudy synth notes. The ambience is minimal, absolutely sonic, it progressively grows in you. As usual, MB’s work is totally unique in the world of micro-tonal, Indus and experimental electronic music. I’ve never heard something more stimulating for my brain than MB’s elevating & fantastical "chaosmic" hymns!

Posted Tuesday, July 17, 2007, 07:34 EST
Review Permanent link | Submit a review for this album

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 17 2007 at 08:08
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

Originally posted by Andrea Cortese Andrea Cortese wrote:

Probably one of the best reviews on RPI of this year!Clap
 
 
ROVESCIO%20DELLA%20MEDAGLIA%20%28RDM%29,%20IL%20Contaminazione%20progressive%20rock%20album%20and%20reviews Italian Symphonic Prog
(Studio Album, 1973)
Avg: 4.26/5
from 38 ratings
ROVESCIO DELLA MEDAGLIA (RDM), IL — Contaminazione
Review by Kotro (João Cotrim)

5%20stars PROGRESSIVE SUMMER RAMBLINGS 2

Abisso, abside, accantonare, affogato, allenatore, Alpi, amaretto, arrivedérci, asinino, aspettare, auguri, avanti, babbo, bacio, bambino, befana, Beretta, birra, bolognese, buonasera, calcio, caldo, calzone, cappucino, cercare, chiesa, cinquecento, cipolla, condottiero, conoscere, consigliere, conzucione, croce, culo, cuore, destra, doge, domani, dopo, ebreo, ecco, espresso, fascio, fica, formaggio, fragola, freddo, ghibelino, giallo, giorno, gli, grazie, guardare, guelfo, ieri, insegnante, insieme, latte, loggia, maccherone, madonna, malato, mascarpone, mensa, mezzo, moglie, nave, negozio, nessuno, niente, nocciolato, nodo, nudo, occhio, ogni, olivo, parmigiano, paura, pazzo, permesso, piccolo, pipistrello, pizza, pomodoro, quartiere, quindici, raccogliere, raccolta, ragazza, rapporto, regno, risotto, rovescio, scopo, scusare, sfumato, siccome, specchio, spunto, squadra, stampa, strappo,sviluppo, tagliatelle, tarantella, tasca, testa, tifosi, tonno, treno, tridentino, uscita, vecchio, volere, zio, zucchero, zuppa.

The above list is, rudely put, my entire Italian vocabulary, not counting, obviously, the long array of words similar or alike in my native tongue. A few of those were picked up on trip to Italy last year. Of course, my goal there was not to learn the language, but to attend a Gilmour concert and do a little sightseeing. The Gilmour concert was great, the sightseeing even better, but I feel I could have done more and maybe dive into the cradle of a fantastic musical genre, Italian Symphonic Prog. I knew PFM and La Maschera di Cera were around performing, but one of the downsizes of travelling accompanied is that you can’t always go where you what. Still, back to the list, it is not, as you can probably conclude, a very flattering one. And it is probably one of the reasons why I can’t appreciate Italian Symphonic Prog (from now on referred to by the Italian initials to Rock Progressivo Italiano – RPI) in full.

I was “introduced” to RPI, surprisingly, by a dear lady friend (prog-chicks – gotta love them!). The band in question was Banco del Mutuo Soccorso. When I asked her where she had got those tracks, she replied “Prog Archives. Don’t you know it?” I had never heard of it. I can’t say that I would continue not knowing it if not for her, but I agree she speeded up the process of me joining this wonderful resource. She and RPI, that is. For my first moments on this website were spent downloading (when you still could) the massive array of RPI samples available in this prog El-Dorado. From ba-rock bliss to heavy folk-rock, from eerie to exciting, at every track I got, my curiosity and devotion to this amazing genre grew. Progressively.

It seems only fair that my first RPI review refer to my first RPI album: Roverscio della Medaglia’s CONTAMINAZIONE di alcune idee di certi prelude e fughe de «Il Clavicembalo ben temperato» di J. S. Bach (don’t you just love long titles?). Sure, I had previous contact with the RPI samples here on PA, including the one for RDM, Cella 503, yet Contaminazione… was the first full experience of appreciation I had, which is to say, the first RPI album I purchased. It was an impulse of the moment. I received a mailing list from a music distributor that featured one copy of this album. As soon as I saw it, in 5 minutes I had it bought. Two days later, there he came knocking to my door. Needless to say, the first listen wasn’t all I expected it to be. First off, there was the album length – 36 minutes. When you pay some dosh for an album, you might expect it to be filled. Then, as if the album length wasn’t enough, there were the tracks – one had 4 minutes and 10 seconds, the rest not even 4. Of course, after a few listens, I realized this wasn’t important. As far as I could and can tell, the album compromises only one piece of music, as all the songs segue into the next to form a 36 minute opus (the only exception is between tracks 6 and 7 where, I can only imagine, the division for vinyl was made, an assumption confirmed by other reviewers).

What wondrous music and musicianship! The keyboards are omnipresent, but they don’t embark as much on the psych ups-and- downs we are used to in many progressive rock acts as much as they serve an eerie ambient sound. Electric guitars are less present throughout the album, but they do come out sometimes, and what a joy it is when they do! The vocals, both individual and in chorus, are spot on. The orchestra gives it a classical ambience that the band fits into so well and therefore there is plenty of classical instrumentation to go around, driven by the obvious harpsichord and strings, delightfully present throughout the opus. The first half of the album, compromising the first 6 tracks, has an exiting start, but then gets progressively more mellow and emotional. From the second half on, opened by Johan it gets slightly heavier, faster and wackier. Every song before Alzo Un Muro Eletrico sounds like a display of fireworks at Louis XIV’s Versailles. When that track does arrive, it does so in a funky blast, after the small 1-minute intro provided by the flute-dominatedContaminazione 1760. Distorted guitars dominate the landscape here, by far the heaviest track of the album and a real highlight. The heaviness is slightly interrupted at the middle by what Ian Anderson could describe as a “sleazy piece of hotel elevator jazz”. This amazing track gives way to the climatic yet phantasmagorical, keyboard dominated Sweet Suite (such a sweet name!), that repeats the intro from Alzo Un Muro Eletrico before segueing into the fast-paced, baroque-psyched ending that is La Grande Fuga. Harpsichord, strings, electric keyboards, all compete in this track to see who’s stronger and who’s faster, and while they do so, the only winner in the competitions is us, the listeners. You can just picture in your mind the fireworks in the end.

This is not an album to hear and discard after one listen. It has to be repeated, listened to carefully, it has to mature in the ear. When it does, you can’t keep from seeing it as it is. A masterpiece.

Posted Monday, July 16, 2007, 07:58 EST
Review Permanent link | Submit a review for this album



wow... great review... and I agree, one of the best I've seen.  Smokes any of mine.

that was my first RPI album.

(Angry his vocabulary is larger than mine damnit,  all I've learned is the vulgar stuff from Raff hahhaha)
 
...how much vulgar, Micky? WinkLOL
 
(ok, it's not really necessary to spell the words...Embarrassed)
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 17 2007 at 08:14
Originally posted by Andrea Cortese Andrea Cortese wrote:

Italy has so many artists to offer. Thanks Philippe for opening the door onto the electronic-prog scene which I never investigated.Clap
 
 
BIANCHI,%20MAURIZIO%20Mectpyo%20Bakterium%20progressive%20rock%20album%20and%20reviews Progressive Electronic
(Studio Album, 1982)
Avg: 5.00/5
from 1 ratings
BIANCHI, MAURIZIO — Mectpyo Bakterium
Review by philippe (Philippe Blache)
Special Collaborator Content Development & Krautrock Team

— First review of this album —

5%20stars An other awesome, bizarre, ultra-oppressive, "traumatic" electronic work from MB’s first era. As in his first experimental electronic tempests "Mectpyo Bakterium" features a large variety of collages & noises (from concrete sounds, artificial, chirurgical effects) but much more organised and punctuated by lugubrious droney sequences. In a sense this album is closed to the glacial, haunting and chaotic & fascinating electronic atrocities of “Neuro Habitat”. The demonic ambiences are maybe more easy to listen but still beautifully intense and visceral. "Fetish Pinksha” is remarkable sinister, threatening electronic voyage, exploring the secret sides of our poor soul. "Stériles règles" contains bloody gorgeous sounds that infiltrate the brain for cathartic moments in real "isolation". It starts with a discreet, repetitive hypno pulse, industrial noises to progressively open the path to a powerfully tortured organic melody. "Placenta”"alternates strange noisy, cerebral sounds, cycles and motifs with serene, monotonous, cloudy synth notes. The ambience is minimal, absolutely sonic, it progressively grows in you. As usual, MB’s work is totally unique in the world of micro-tonal, Indus and experimental electronic music. I’ve never heard something more stimulating for my brain than MB’s elevating & fantastical "chaosmic" hymns!

Posted Tuesday, July 17, 2007, 07:34 EST
Review Permanent link | Submit a review for this album



Good work, philippe. Nevertheless I should admit that Sangiuliano to part... the remainder of the Italian Electronic Prog scene is practically impossible to follow because it isn't found nothing in the shelves of the shops!!! 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 17 2007 at 10:07
AREA%20Crac%20!%20progressive%20rock%20album%20and%20reviews Jazz Rock/Fusion
(Studio Album, 1975)
Avg: 4.56/5
from 25 ratings
AREA — Crac !
Review by StyLaZyn (Rich)

5%20stars Wow! I am not normally a fan of Italian Prog but this music really bit into me hard. And I am also a prude if the lyrics are not in my native English, I get turned off fast. However, I must thank a friend on another forum who has a weekly Prog Web Show (with corresponding chat). Goobs! You pulled a rabbit out of the hat here. This music is magic!

Now, I noticed the band is listed under Jazz Fusion but I am hearing more Prog than anything in overall writing. Sure the chops harken of jazz, and for that reason, the musicianship stands out. Upbeat, melodic, catchy. This music is fun to listen too. Mostly instrumental with keyboard leads, each song is not a casual jam session but forged ear candy.

The sample provide is just that. A small morsel of the talents of this band. I highly recommend Crac! It's like crack.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This isn't a bad review... But the work is good!!!




Edited by Mandrakeroot - July 17 2007 at 10:07
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 17 2007 at 10:26
My last Italian Prog review:

METAMORFOSI

Inferno

(Studio Album, 1973)
Limmagine%20“http://italianprog.interfree.it/metamorfosi2.jpg”%20non%20può%20essere%20visualizzata%20poiché%20contiene%20degli%20errori.
Review by Mandrakeroot (Andrea Salvador)
Collaborator Italian Prog Specialist

4%20stars My review is produced using this release: VM 2000/ BTF VM CD 002

Rating: 8,5/10

Modern version of Dante's "Inferno" with new version of infernal sins, this "Inferno" contain the best Jimmy Spitaleri performance. For me is a great album, with the just climax. The songs have a good pathos and the keyboasrds are invadents like Jimmy's voice or the drums. For the music of Metamorfosi this is the winning elements. Because rather that the virtuosisms or the technique, the Metamorfosi aim to the feeling, to the emotions. Unlucky the excellent voice of Jimmy Spitaleri, a bass voice, helps not to allow the emotions of to be fundamental. So it is the upsets that it prevails. But this thing is really totally positive. Remember: the music is a typical Italian Prog melodic version. The voice is one of the best all time Italian voice!!!

So "Inferno" is one of the best 70's Italian Prog album. But for me isn't a totally masterpiece since the Metamorfosi go on the secure direction. But the voice of Jimmy Spitaleri farewell the price of the album, however high.


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