The Gift (Music UK) - Why the Sea is Salt |
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Cetacean282
Forum Newbie Joined: October 21 2016 Location: Exeter, Exeter Status: Offline Points: 9 |
Topic: The Gift (Music UK) - Why the Sea is Salt Posted: October 27 2016 at 06:36 |
This is The Gift in their third incarnation on their third album. Why the Sea is Salt
is both exhilarating and challenging as the band, and audience to a
degree, step out of their respective comfort zones. The writing team has
expanded, the band play as a far tighter unit and, from the evidence of
live performances, they appear happy. In version one, singer Mike
Morton and guitarist Leroy James wrote together. After a couple of
hiatuses, Leroy has returned to join Stef Dickers (bass), David Lloyd
(guitars) and latest recruits Neil Hayman (drums & percussion) from
Konchordat and Gabrielle Baldocci (keyboards). For a band that sometimes
describe themselves as Symphonic Melodic Rock there is a lot of power
in their stage performance. The opening motif could have served as a repeating refrain throughout, but, like the Spanish Inquisition, no one expects…there are hand claps which will make some wince, however they work for me. The church organ adds to the historical feel of a track that seems to reflect on our environment and the human impact, and then again about the passage through life and the changes that come upon us. Complicated? Yes, probably. The Gift’s Supper’s Ready? Yes and no. There is some Led Zeppelin, a pinch of Jon Lord from Deep Purple’s Book of Taliesyn, ELP, Neil Hayman providing Phil Collins-like fills – so many reference points. I cannot make a direct comparison, it has its own strengths, melodrama and pathos. I sit back and enjoy listening to the Hackett-isms and Pink Floyd undertones. This is my fifth listen; abandon hope, I am going down with the ship of fools. Fools? Well, it is daring to produce something this long and involving in the attention deficit 21st Century. Is it self-indulgent? No. Is it clever? Ultimately your choice, but I say yes. Does it require toilet breaks? I shall cross my legs so as not to miss anything. Played back through four Tannoy Revolution 1’s and a hefty KEF centre at volume, it works for me. It is a sort of Genesis/Yes/Queen mash up with a touch of the Fab Four plus a smidgen of When the Sour Turns to Sweet. But I have rambled enough and there are five more tracks! So from Genesis to revelation, At Sea is unusual and daring, from the first keys of Gabriele’s piano, mimicking the sea and its moods, you know this is a different album from The Gift. With hints of Debussy, Ravel, Grieg and others, it shows Signor Baldocci’s classical training and influences from the likes of Firth of Fifth, the fade out of Life On Mars and perhaps Rick Wakeman’s Elgin Mansions. I close my eyes and reflect on the various beaches where I have sat just listening to the sea and I am transported back to my youth towards the end of this instrumental passage. Leroy, David, Stef and Neil join in; it is sublime. The last man at the table joins after about six minutes, Mr Morton’s soulful voice, almost a lament, brings the words. Like All These Things they have labelled the parts, I acknowledge their names, evocative of the music each part portrays, but my thoughts differ. There is no right or wrong. For me it’s Robinson Crusoe of long school holidays; classical, contemporary and emotional. You can see the sea shimmering, and as the first guitars appear, the wind takes sail and the voyage begins. Picking up, we are racing, ships in full sheet, waiting for battle. It’s elemental, my dear Morton. The bass line from the man in the cap, Stef Dickers, is tight and controlled; the keyboard passage preceding Yes, the Wakeman years. Homage not copy, and then he sings. Lyrical and artistic, reminding me of Le Radeau de la Méduse (The Raft of Medusa) by Jean-Louis André Théodore Géricault, or the tale of Odysseus, avoiding the Sirens call. Myths placed from childhood. How many lines are referenced? Perhaps the music has fuelled my imagination, which has then leapt to further conclusions – Nursery Cryme, Procol Harum – if it is not my mind then it is very clever. I would say also that Trespass and Queen II are referenced, but not stolen – no plagiarism from these scurvy dogs. Sweeper of Dreams is Misplaced Childhood in its drive, the Marillion of Fish, and though darkness is threaded through the vocal it has a different sort of menace from that of Mr Dick, and more of the roll of the sensation Alex Harvey. It is a bit of both. Sweeper… is gutsy, close to that raw energy The Gift have live, David and Leroy battling for space, Neil and Stef holding the rhythm, Gabriele’s keys flourishing; this track will really work well live. The balance between noise and toys is right. Tuesday’s Child opens chorally, as if you are ever to meet such a bunch of unlikely choirboys – more Joseph Wambaugh than St Paul’s Cathedral! Gabriele’s piano and the guitar solo leave goosebumps, and when the singing begins, the intonation similar to Walk into the Water from Land of Shadows; well if you can’t steal from yourself…. It is as close as you will get to a sing-a-long on Why the Sea is Salt; this for me again is early Genesis, Trespass, Nursery Cryme, Foxtrot. There is one key change that takes them into dire straits. The sea metaphors still appear like a ghost ships from the mist. No one is really producing material like this, nostalgic but still original, and if anyone dare say ‘Genesis-lite’, well sod them. And then there were two; The Tallest Tree is topped by Anthony Phillips and tailed by Steve Hackett – now there a trick. Not the first time they have appeared on the same track, Anthony plays on two tracks from Steve’s Out of the Tunnel’s Mouth. Combined with the Irish Whistle of Tiger Moth Tales’ Peter Jones, it starts a little bit like More Fool Me from Selling England by the Pound, the vocal angelic, choirboy (cough) rising, ethereal; it is simple, or at least appears so, almost folk-like, but then ‘only love remains’. The keys when they join at about two minutes in just add to the whole. With the inclusion of Anthony and Steve, if you cannot have that band, The Gift have at least delivered the dream in part. Final track, a reprise of At Sea subtitled Ondine’s Song, strikes me as a lament. There is sadness and emotion in the vocal, sea metaphors, ancient and modern, combine as we take a little trip back. Neil is superb. There’s an afterglow, a warm and fuzzy end to a beautiful album, finishing with another great guitar solo – or is it solos – and I descend into peaceful, silent slumber, if that is wise. [According to French and German mythology, the nymph Ondine/Undine discovered that her husband had committed adultery. Because he had promised his every waking breath to her, she cursed him that so long as he was awake he could breathe, but if he ever fell asleep he would stop breathing and die. Nice girl…] The artwork of Mark Buckingham is stunning, a painting worth hanging on my mythical walls. It adds to the delight, and is befitting of the album. Purchase wise, it fits in my ‘Must Haves’ for 2016 and I have bought
it. I would recommend it to you, particularly if you love melody. I
think it is a massive step up for The Gift; you can feel the love in the
music, the craftsmanship. The recording of Mike Morton’s voice is
probably the best I’ve ever heard it. David and Leroy bring the best
from each other, Neil and Stef quietly gluing it together, and finally
Gabriele Baldocci bringing not so much resonance as renaissance. It is a
triumph, I hope that it pleases them as much as I. In the end, gentle
reader, your choice, but the quality cannot be denied. TRACKLISTING Total time – 57:45 MUSICIANS ADDITIONAL INFO LINKS |
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PH
Forum Newbie Joined: March 24 2013 Status: Offline Points: 33 |
Posted: October 29 2016 at 06:13 |
Any fan of high-quality progressive rock (old or new), owes to invest in The Gift. Excellent band... Unreservedly recommended!
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Colorz58
Forum Newbie Joined: October 29 2016 Location: London UK Status: Offline Points: 1 |
Posted: October 29 2016 at 09:15 |
I enjoyed your review. I am still soaking up the album. (Waiting for the hard copy - Listening to the MP3 download) My first impressions are that The Gift have just shifted up a gear. This is a seriously great concept album from these guys at early listenings. I will return. More soon.
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Leo V.T.
Forum Newbie Joined: October 29 2016 Location: Totnes / Narnia Status: Offline Points: 1 |
Posted: October 29 2016 at 12:24 |
Nice review of a GREAT album - these boys are something else. Real step up in class... and their last album was bloody good already! Great to have Anthony Phillips and Steve Hackett of Genesis on one track, alongside the wonderful Peter Jones of Tiger Moth Tales.
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Leo V.T.
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