Forum Home Forum Home > Other music related lounges > General Music Discussions
  New Posts New Posts RSS Feed - Non-Prog Album Reviews
  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Events   Register Register  Login Login

Non-Prog Album Reviews

 Post Reply Post Reply Page  <1 23456 13>
Author
Message Reverse Sort Order
Prog Sothoth View Drop Down
Collaborator
Collaborator
Avatar
Honorary Collaborator

Joined: May 03 2011
Location: MA
Status: Offline
Points: 1940
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Prog Sothoth Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 21 2014 at 22:02
For no real reason I've decided to review some of the weirdest pop albums in my collection.

Minayo Watanabe - 'Hopping' (1987)



Hopping nestles itself somewhere between Deathspell Omega and Yes (that is, in my music collection as opposed to in a musical sense, which would have made this one of the most significant albums of the 80's). Before I get into any progressive leanings regarding this release, since this is a prog site, I will start by saying that considering the law of averages, there must be at least a few people in this world that consider Hopping to be the most significant listening experience in their lives, most likely residing in Japan. The album was, after all, a hit recording and boasts two number one singles within its track-listing. Minayo was riding pretty high at this point in time, not only as a solo performer but as a member of the monstrous idol group Onyanko Club, in which its formula would in turn inspire high-count member groups such as Morning Musume and currently AKB48. As well as this album sold, after another full-length her sales and popularity would begin to drop and by the 90's her music career was pretty much done. Like some other former idols, she wound up eventually posing nude for photobooks & such, and considering that idols back then for the most part weren't exactly getting even remotely a fair share of the earnings their albums garnered, it's not really a surprise. Luckily, her saga ends on a happy note as she's now married and manages a furniture business, which most likely graces her with a much larger income.

Anyways, the album, at its core, is essentially textbook Jpop, in which the actual sing-song melodies themselves (occasionally in a Beatle-ish pre-Rubber Soul sense) regarding the vocals are more pertinent to the tunes than actual talent. Claiming that she's strong vocalist is like stating that Greg Lake could stand to gain a few pounds. The tone of the voice itself matters most, and she pulls off the 'cute' tone naturally. Endearing means more in idol culture than siren-esque. The songs contained within do offer some variety, and thankfully there's no slow white-bread ballads to spoil the fun with maudlin tales of lost love. 

As for the progressive nature of this release, I have to say that after enough listens, I've come to the conclusion that there really isn't any, which would certainly not contradict any standard beliefs in terms of this release. Granted, although a couple of these tracks posses a rhythm section that sounds like someone just pressed the "disco" or "bossa nova" button on the Yamaha keyboard, "Kimi wa Cupid" does possess some tasteful jazz drumming. Also of note is the odd chromatic scale used on a couple of occasions during "Pink no Chao", and "Heart de Motion" even provides a bit of rock, and is certainly no less ballsy than what Asia was pumping out by 1987. The best track, though, in my personal opinion is "Ijimenaide". The music has a sort of early 60s "fun at the beach" vibe, and yet it's riddled with strange spacey keyboards, and in cohesion with the reverbed drumming, the results induce visions of an enjoyable day at the beach on another planet.

The actual skill level of the keyboardist isn't bad, and there's a couple of solos here and there utilizing wonky synth sounds that remind me of tones I've heard on a few Glass Hammer recordings. The tunes themselves are peppy ("Furio no Tamago" even brings on the funk to some extent), and most importantly, the dated 80's production with its slight reverb over everything, brings about a strange aura that's almost haunting despite the cheeriness, an echo of another time, a lost yet cheerful little ghost. Obviously an album like this can only really be considered a relic as opposed to a landmark, like most pop albums from decades ago, and finding an original album such as this as opposed to a compilation would be a much more difficult endeavor. How this wound up in my lap, without knowing a thing about it years ago, would extend this already long review too much to ensure that I am actually sane, but as it is, it's weirdly pleasant to listen to on odd occasions. What's also interesting is that the melodic approaches of this style of music hasn't exactly evolved much in the ensuing decades. Spice up the production and spruce things up with some auto-tuning and these songs would sound fresh today in Japan's idol-world. Yet that would ruin the charm found in Hopping. I won't give this a rating because there's no point. It's not about really about the music, but a sense of an era gone by, one that I wasn't even remotely a part of.


I don't know what's more bizarre:
The two pink dancing dinos?
The dress?
The gigantic smoke spewing monster that shows up?
The fact that the song is being performed by a full orchestra and band?
 




Back to Top
Prog 74 View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: March 16 2014
Location: USA
Status: Offline
Points: 171
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Prog 74 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 26 2014 at 13:50

File:Wham! Make It Big album art.JPG

I remember it well.  Christmas Day 1985.  Iron Maiden had recently released the album 'Live After Death' and this was what I wanted most of all for Christmas.  After seeing a couple of what easily appeared to be record albums wrapped under the tree I was certain I would be belting out "Aces High" Christmas night.  Imagine my utter astonishment when I unwrapped this album instead.  Wham!?!?  What the bloody hell??  This was my mom's favorite album and she played it constantly in the car.  Why did she give a copy to me?  I don't like Wham.  Never have.  She laughed with glee as I held up the record completely bewildered.  "I caught you singing Careless Whisper the other day and knew you had to have it!" she said.  Ermm  "Uh, well..." was all I could stammer out.  "I saw the record you wanted and it looked like devil music to me.  There is no way I would ever let you have that" she continued.  Stern Smile  "Besides that George Michael is just so handsome!" she added.  Dead  "But, mom!  I don't like Wham!  This is your music not mine" I said.  "You'll change your mind.  You always seem so happy when I play it in the car" she said.  Shocked  I could only stare at her in shock.  Clearly I must've been thinking about other things in order to be happy while I was riding in the car.  Wham would not have made me happy.  Okay, the songs are catchy, but still.  This is Wham!  This is not supposed to be something I should ever like.  Never, never, never.  Then how come I caught myself singing "Everything She Wants" in the shower the other day.  Almost 30 years later?  Damn you George Michael and damn you "the other guy".  Whoever you are.  My childhood and now my adulthood is haunted by your irresistible pop music!
Back to Top
poeghost View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member


Joined: December 13 2013
Location: U.S.A.
Status: Offline
Points: 175
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote poeghost Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 13:36
Love An Adventure by Pseudo Echo - 1987

This 1980s new wave synth pop group were from Melbourne, Australia. They consisted of Brian Canham - Lead and backing vocals, guitars; Pierre Gigliotti - Bass guitar, bass synth, backing vocals; James Leigh - Keyboards, bass synth, backing vocals; and Vince Leigh - Drums and backing vocals. This is an excellent album. All the songs are wonderful. Brian Canham had a deep to midrange smooth voice and the group had a surprisingly heavy rockin’ guitar sound at times, yet had a smooth interesting synth sound. The album I’m reviewing is the U.S. version which includes the cover of “Funkytown”, it was added to later releases and replaced the song “Don’t Go”. I remember seeing the video for “Funkytown” back in the 80s. I thought it was a lot of fun and it rocked! The original version was a disco/dance hit for Lipps Inc. in 1980. That was a fun song too. Pseudo Echo’s music is available to listen to on Spotify. Though the album track listings are different there.

LP Record RCA 5730-1-RX
Cassette RCA 5730-4-RX

Track list - Side A:
A Beat For You
Living In A Dream
Try
Listening
I Will Be You

Track list - Side B:
Love An Adventure
Destination Unknown
Funkytown
Lonely Without You
Lies Are Nothing

Prog appeal: Light.

Rating: 5 stars!

Edited by poeghost - March 09 2014 at 13:38
Back to Top
poeghost View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member


Joined: December 13 2013
Location: U.S.A.
Status: Offline
Points: 175
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote poeghost Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2014 at 15:02
Symphonic Soul by Henry Mancini and his Concert Orchestra - 1975

Henry Mancini was an American conductor, composer and arranger, most well known for his film and TV scores from the 1960s to the 1990s. Some of his best known tunes are: “Moon River”, “Days of Wine and Roses”, “Peter Gunn” and “The Pink Panther Theme”. My personal all-time favorite by him is “Baby Elephant Walk”.

Prog appeal: Light to strong appeal. I think that prog listeners would enjoy this album. In particular if you are into symphonic prog or jazz.

The music is typical Mancini instrumental orchestra music with some added funky electric bass, electric piano and organ solos along with flute, piccolo trumpet, trumpet, harmonica and African finger piano solos. All the tracks are wonderful on this excellent album. Some parts are powerful sounding while others are soft, dreamy and mysterious.

Rating: 5 Stars!

Click here for the album image, track list and music clips on Amazon.
Back to Top
Prog Sothoth View Drop Down
Collaborator
Collaborator
Avatar
Honorary Collaborator

Joined: May 03 2011
Location: MA
Status: Offline
Points: 1940
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Prog Sothoth Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 10 2014 at 11:46
Jaurim - 'Goodbye, Grief'
 
 

Jaurim has been pretty much one of my favorite straight-up rock acts for the last decade, and their latest release, 'Goodbye, Grief' they continue to pump out high quality music, in fact it's their 9th full length release without a real dud in their discography. Many of their past albums had a theme to it in some way: 'Ruby Sapphire Diamond''s bouncy joyfulness, the dark and brooding "Ashes To Ashes' or the quirky coolness of 'Wonderland'. 'Goodbye, Grief', a late 2013 release, sort of touches on certain emotions, but balances things out for a more universal viewpoint. There's some heavy rock, some ballads, some catchy stuff, some light and some moody tunes. And it's all great! One of their better releases, and it actually jumped up to being one of my favorite releases of the year.

 

Starting in the indie scene in the mid 90s, Jaurim has persisted through all trends by not falling prey to any of them, and are now almost like rock royalty in Korea. Their music touches a lot of styles without actually committing full-on to any one in particular, which makes their releases so interesting...I'm never sure where they're gonna go next, but I'm always sure that whatever they wind up doing, it seems to always come out as pretty killer stuff. The talent level is fantastic, with seriously skilled veteran players handling their music with taste and class, while keeping things reasonably raw without glossy pop sheen. Sometimes they're actually kind of Stonesy but with female vocals. Singer Kim Yoon-Ah has quite a rep as an outstanding vocalist, and she continues showing us why with this album. The emotional delivery transcends my lack of Korean linguistics...the language barrier being an easy issue to overcome with pipes this good. She also does a righteous job on the keyboards as well.

 

If one is just looking for a good recent rock & roll album and has no hang-ups with foreign dialects, Jaurim gets a huge recommendation from me. Class act, and 'Goodbye, Cruel' deserves a 9/10.

 
Great hard rocker with mad Hammond key-banging. Not sure why Kim is playing a guitar instead of the keys in the video (although she can play guitar)...visual aesthetics maybe?
 
Epic rock ballad that few bands even try to attempt these days. LOVE this song & the video works well with it
Back to Top
dr wu23 View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: August 22 2010
Location: Indiana
Status: Offline
Points: 20623
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote dr wu23 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 21 2013 at 13:44
The idea is to post a small review not a novel.
Wink
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin
Back to Top
BrufordFreak View Drop Down
Collaborator
Collaborator
Avatar
Honorary Collaborator

Joined: January 25 2008
Location: Wisconsin
Status: Offline
Points: 8185
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote BrufordFreak Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 21 2013 at 10:22
Band Name and description
EMPTY DAYS an AltrOck publication from the creative talents of Francesco Zago (YUGEN, NOT A GOOD SIGN, et al.), PAOLO "SKE" BOTTA (YUGEN, SKE, NOT A GOOD SIGN, et al.) and vocalist ELAINE DI FALCO (CAVEMAN SHOESTORE/HUGHSCORE, THINKING PLAGUE, Yugen's Iridule) along with an ensemble of Italian chamber musicians.

Album information
Self titled, Empty Days, released in November or December of 2013 on AltrOck Records.

The Review:

EMPTY DAYS Empty Days (7 songs + 7 instrumentals)

Another stunning gem from YUGEN/AltrOck/NOT A GOOD SIGN geniuses FRANCESCO ZAGO and PAOLO “SKE” BOTTA this one presenting a collection of gorgeous near-neo chamber music songs focusing on the extraordinary vocal talents of ELAINE DI FALCO (CAVEMAN SHOESTORE/HUGHSCORE, THINKING PLAGUE, Yugen’s Iridule) using musical stylings varying from straight medieval to dark ambient to the avant garde stylings of Iridule and then to straight ahead prog rock of Not a Good Sign as well as a kind of slowed down, vocal-oriented of SKE’s 2011 masterpiece, 1000 autonni.

Five star songs:  1. “Two Views on Flight” (4:17) with its incredible weave of multiple layers of vocals (10/10); 3. the Satie-with-vocals “Words Lurking” (3:12) (9/10); 4. the hauntingly atmospheric “Kurai” (5:50) (9/10); 5. the Kurt Weil-like presentation of John Dowland’s “Flow My Tears” (4:17) with operatic vocalist Rachel O’Brien (9/10); 7. the gorgeously sensitive and melodic, GENESIS-like rendering of the Seamus Heaney poem, “Running Water” (5:04) (10/10); 8. the ALAN STIVELL-like instrumental, “The Ghosts of Dawn” (4:14) (9/10);  9. Elaine De Falco’s utterly haunting rendering of John Dowland’s “In Darkness Let Me Dwell” (4:55) (9/10); 11. the acoustic, female vocal-led remake of NOT A GOOD SIGN’s awesome “Come Back Home” (3:56) (9/10); 12. the awesome interpretation of the sounds of an apocalypse “Waiting for The Crash” (2:08) (10/10); the hauntingly beautiful and richly emotional ambient masterpiece, “This Night Wounds Time” (12:04) (10/10).

Four star songs:  the eerie scaled down avant-Nektar-like instrumental 2. “Ankoku” (4:55) (8/10); 10. “A Knife Under The Pillow” (1:22) (8/10); 13. the musical rendering of Viktor Nabokov’s, “A Dark Vanessa” (3:03) (8/10).

An awesome year-end surprise from my favorite music label (AltrOck), one of my favorite modern composers (Francesco Zago), and one of my favorite teams of musical collaborators (Zago and Botta-with the not insignificant contributions of the remarkable Elaine Di Falco).

An immediate hit to my ears, mind and soul, I shall have to wait to see how high Empty Days ends up on my Year End Top Albums list. Probably pretty high.

Rating:
Five stars. One of the ten best releases of 2013.

Prog Appeal:
Once again, the lack of rock formatting may cause this album to be denied acceptance into the PA fold, but I believe that all AltrOck releases are among the most adventurous, creative, and innovative musics being created today, thus, I believe this album is so progressive that it should be included on the archives because it is highly "progressive" though not necessarily rock'n'roll.
Drew Fisher
https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/
Back to Top
BrufordFreak View Drop Down
Collaborator
Collaborator
Avatar
Honorary Collaborator

Joined: January 25 2008
Location: Wisconsin
Status: Offline
Points: 8185
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote BrufordFreak Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 21 2013 at 10:02
Awesome thread idea! Sorry I hadn't seen it before! Love seeing reviews/recommendations for Prefab, Gaga, etc.!

Band Name and description
FIVE STOREY ENSEMBLE is a progressive neo-classical band from Belarus coming out of the AltrOck label that rose out of the ashes of RATIONAL DIET in 2012-13. Compositions are mostly by former RD members and Five-Storey core members bassoon/saxophonist Vitaly Appow  and pianist/vocalist Olga Podgaiskaja and generally feature accordion, violin, double bass and/or cello, acoustic or electric guitars, some percussion, and classically styled male and female vocals. 

Album information
Their first release from March of 2013 is entitled, Not That City. Several videos of music of live and studio performances from Not That City can be found on YouTube. 

The Review:



FIVE-STOREY ENSEMBLE Not That City


Out of the ashes of RATIONAL DIET rises this phoenix of incredible power and beauty--in my humble opinion, an album ten times better than the very well crafted albums of its predecessor. Yes, Five-Storey Ensemble is the spawn of RATIONAL DIET. RATIONAL DIET founding member and reed player, Vitaly Appow, and keyboard/vocalist Olga Podgaiskaja, of the final two RATIONAL DIET albums, At Work and On Phenomenon and Existences, are principle composers here, while violinist, Cyrill Christya, and bass guitarist, Dmitry Maslovsky participate on several songs.

     While I thoroughly enjoyed the Avant/RIO/Modern Chamber musings of RD, I was quick to zoom in on Not That City once it was posted on progstreaming.com. Bam! Was I broadsided! This album blew me away from the opener through to the last song. It’s music is reminiscent of RATIONAL DIET but, like ARANIS, it is much more melodic and its vocals play a much more important role in defining their sound. The vocals here are used more operatically—and really only used in the forefront of four different songs. Whenever the male tenor and female soprano voices perform I find myself reminded of Goreki’s Third Symphony. Even though vocalists Sergey Dolgushev and composer and keyboard player, Olga Podgaiskaja, respectively, employ operatic approaches stylistically, their vocals are often used almost more as additional instruments—which has the tremendous effect of deepening the conveyance of emotions within each song—and each has such a distinct and different contribution to the songs with their voices—often at the same time--that it has the effect of bringing two very different, almost divergent threads into the emotional weave.   


1. “The Harbinger” (5:51) opens the album with some long, sustained note playing from accordion player, Alexander But’ko. He is then gradually joined by violinist, Anastasia Popova, and oboist, Natalja Malashova, all weaving their magical notes together, slowly, deliciously. At the 2:20 mark pianist, Olga Podgaiskaja, bassoonist Vitaly Appow, and double bass player, Vyacheslav Plesko join in, taking the music into more staccato, rapido mode for several measures before fading back to let the original weave evolve. This cycle of piano- and bass-infused tempo upgrade recurs twice more, before the third occasion, in the third minute, a prolonged, sustained dark theme more suited to PRESENT or UNIVERS ZERO is presented and built upon. This continues until 4:15 when an additional thread of color is provided by male vocalist, Sergey Dolgushev. We then see the song devolve into a final weave coming from Sergey’s plaintive voice and Alexander’s emotional accordion.

     Awesome song—though it does get drawn out a bit in places. I’ve heard this song in three different formats now, album version and two different live performances with two very different instrumental lineups (one more expanded, like the album version). Each has its strengths and charms. (9/10)  


2. “Bondman’s Wings” (2:24) is a short, beautiful and powerful 'folk' instrumental using accordion, bassoon, oboe, and stringed instruments (with some military-like percussion) to tell its tale. Charming!(9/10)


3. “The Incommunication” (5:22) alternating female and male vocals as if in conversation—sounds so romantic yet spiritual, almost religious. Sparse instrumentation of long sustained chords accompany the vocal until the two minute mark when a kind of Renaissance courtly music dances us into another dimension. Incredible constructions of seemingly independent instrumental voices all woven into a spacious yet multi-layered tapestry of exquisite beauty! The voices return for the final two minutes, this time woven within the multi-layered tapestry (a bit too much going on here for these ears). (9/10)


4. “To Ringfly” (3:11) begins as a rondo between accordion, bassoon and percussion and plays out very much in that format with the occasional instrument added here or there. (8/10)


5. “A Disappearing Road" (4:42) To pulsing bassoon, and drum are soon woven in with accordion and other woodwinds. The first third is very Baroque/Renaissance processional feeling, but then structure shifts at about the two minute mark, taking on a more squared, constant feel, and then again at the 3:20 mark in which cacophonous strings play wildly over a woodwind section that holds long, long notes in strange discordant harmonies. Interesting and unusual. (9/10)


6.     “The Unpainted” (7:57) is a haunting, even disturbing song beginning with simple piano arpeggio, double bass, and intermittent injections of string or woodwind instruments. Just after the one minute mark, the discordant tones of a female vocalist enters in low registers, then slowly climbs, octave by octave, until a minute later she is singing her dirge in her highest soprano register. Piano, strings, and woodwinds work themselves into until at 3:35 drums join in to accentuate the drama. A few seconds later and all has calmed down to 'solo' piano attended very sparsely by injections of winds, strings, percussives and, in the sixth minute, an electric guitar(!)--all painting a picture of the most ominous and despondent tones. The most UNIVERS ZERO-sounding song yet! (8/10)


7.     Yesterday Dormant” (5:40) is a classical sounding discourse between male and female vocalists. Very powerful. I love music like this (no matter that it's being sung in a language I neither know or understand.) Kind of reminds me of a more classical sophisticated version of Jon Anderson's "Chagalll Duet", a conversational duet he did with Sandrine Piau from 1994's Change We Must. Beautiful music! Very powerful in the way that Sergey’s tenor is so strong, staccato, and positive while Olga’s soprano is so delicate, melodic and pleading. (9/10)

 

8. “The Protector” (3:22) uses oboe and piano over rapid hand drumming--all of which makes me feel very at home, as if I were at a Renaissance Faire. The slowed down piano chord hits with cello and percussion section that begins around the 2:20 mark is quite devastatingly sad, a mood that is then quickly dispelled with a return to the opening section. But the song then concludes with a half-a-minute of some very ambiguous chords and feel. (8/10)


9. “Fear-Dream” (3:47) piano, strings and bassoon dominate this one, though accordion, oboe and a little percussion are also involved. It's very powerful and emotional. Electric guitar even joins in for some soloing a couple of times--especially during the last minute. This one reminds me of the music of one of my favorite modern groups, KOTEBEL. (9/10)


10. “Amid the Smoke and Different Question” (6:31) starts out sounding like a Broadway/operetta, even Moulin Rouge-ish. A male vocalist sings over the simple support of long, sustained accordian chords, and later is accompanied by an almost-separate woodwind dance, then another separate, discordant thread comes from strings, and then yet another seemingly unrelated theme arises from the deeper woodwinds. It's as if several small troubadour groups are parading through a town center, criss-crossing at the center, each playing its own little diddy as it passes by where the tenor continues, unphased, singing his plaintive dirge. Brilliant and gutsy! (9/10)


11. “Not That City” (6:57) begins as a rondo between oboe, chor anglais, and bowed double bass and then accordion. Then harpsichord takes over! The other instruments join in in a frolicking folksie tune with the accordion and chor anglais kind of dominating the twin melody lines. The at 2:15 all stops and piano enters to take over lead melody and rhythm making while all other instruments slow down in long languorous sustained notes in gorgeous harmonies. At 3:32 it happens again, everything stops and adjusts to a section in which strings lead the basic rhythm while all else pulse and dance around them (even the double bass and viola). Another shift allows the song to play out its final minute in a very dreamy, mysterious but beautiful way. Incredible song! My favorite on the album. Were I a music theorist I might appreciate and enjoy this even more—it seems so bold and daring.  (10/10)


Without a doubt Not That City is one of my favorite album of the albums I've heard from 2013. It's music excites and mesmerizes me, its constructs surprise and delight--they raise my hopes for the possibilities of music and for the possibilities of humanity.



Rating:

5 Stars, unquestioned; six if it were allowed (occasionally). I've not been this excited about a new album since MAUDLIN OF THE WELL's Part The Second blew me away back in '09. Stunningly creative and fresh.


Prog Appeal:
I understand that the music from Not That City is lacking in the "rock" elements that are considered essential to PA's foundation, but I believe this album is so progressive that it should be included on the archives.

Drew Fisher
https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/
Back to Top
dr wu23 View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: August 22 2010
Location: Indiana
Status: Offline
Points: 20623
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote dr wu23 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2013 at 23:26
The Temperance Movement
 
Good solid blues based hard rock....similar to the Black Crowes or Humble pie and even a bit of the Faces thrown in here and there. They don't sound completely retro and have a bit of a modern feel to many of the songs. All in all a decent debut for those who like classic sounding rock with a blues and southern based edge.
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin
Back to Top
Luna View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: July 28 2010
Location: Funky Town
Status: Offline
Points: 12794
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Luna Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2013 at 22:03
Originally posted by infocat infocat wrote:

^ I listened to it one time a few weeks ago and I just don't see it...  oh well
Took me a little bit to appreciate it too. I might suggest reading along with the lyrics to get a better feel of the music, but the music is intended for a pretty young audience so there's that as well.
Back to Top
infocat View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar
VIP Member

Joined: June 10 2011
Location: Colorado, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 4671
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote infocat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2013 at 20:45
^ I listened to it one time a few weeks ago and I just don't see it...  oh well
--
Frank Swarbrick
Belief is not Truth.
Back to Top
Luna View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: July 28 2010
Location: Funky Town
Status: Offline
Points: 12794
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Luna Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2013 at 17:13



[I'm doing this on the spot, so I'm bound to miss something important]

Ever since I was shown the solo project of Will Toledo by forum member The Truth, he has blown me away. This is an album that really feels like a person and has an identity. Can I describe it well? Not really. However, I am very good friends with it if that makes any sense.

The album is conceptual, involving themes of friendship (the big one), but also loneliness and life in general as a 19-year-old. Beginning with "My Boy (Twin Fantasy)", it's established that "We don't see each other much" and "It'll take some time/But somewhere down the line/We won't be alone". Twin Fantasy shines in its dynamics (seen most clearly in "Beach Life-in-Death") and self-expressive lyricism (seen everywhere, but "Bodys" especially).

Despite having multiple 10+ minute songs on the album, the album is very catchy and makes me want to listen again and again. In fact, I thought this album was nothing special after the first listen or so, but the catchiness led me to listen over and over again, cementing it as my favorite album (at least so far). 

One thing that I can see as a turn-off for some would be the recording quality and overall lo-fi-ness of it all. I acknowledge this, but I see it as a part of the art. Keeping with the "album is a person" theme, no person is without flaws, and so this album is perfect in its initial imperfection (I have no critiques on the music itself, however).

Highlights: "There's no devil on one shoulder and angel on the other/They're just two normal people" from "Bodys"

"Part III" of "Beach Life-in Death", completely bursting after the quiet "Part II".

All in all, it's an emotional rollercoaster, made for emotional rollercoasters like myself.

(I missed a ton and might revise this later, but this is the gist of it)

5/5 
Back to Top
deafmoon View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: March 24 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 462
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote deafmoon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2013 at 20:09
Folk singer John Stewart's 1974 album The Phoenix Concerts is a classic. Stewart was a folk artist starting in the Kingston Trio and evolved to become one of America's greatest story-telling songwriters. Stewart wrote about the country, love and life in general. He wrote with a passion for depth of feeling and a fantastic descriptive easiness about living. He passed in 2008. Som eof John Stewart's better known songs were; Chilly Winds, California Bloodlines, Cheyenne, July You're A Woman, Gold, Pirates of Stone County Road, You Can't Look Back and many, many more. If you can sit still and give a folk singer on acoustic guitar a listen, you will not be dissappointed. 
Deafmoon
Back to Top
DamoXt7942 View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar

Joined: October 15 2008
Location: Okayama, Japan
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 28 2013 at 10:57
Lysol (1992) - MELVINS

Quote One of stoner masterpieces really, not of progressive rock though. Their heavy, explosive sound launcher kicks our b*** violently, and chorus mysteria salvages our ears from the hell.

Grunge power is always impressive and innovative indeed. Over 30 minute stoner rock quake full of inorganic power is the basis of this EP, and their madness harmonized with deep riffs and warped, scattered killer voices is obviously the life elixir of alternative rock scene. Sound structure is not complex nor complicated, but extremely mind altering and excessive, depressive. Exerted remarkable influence upon the younger stoner killas, and they've done their original play, as you can feel via this stuff. Actually tremendous mind power should be needed when we listen to this heaviness, even for 30 minutes or so. The latter part is not only stonerly heavy but also horribly calm with extreme sound depth created by their rhythm section (bravo).

In conclusion, such an explosive gravity cannot get experienced without listening to this 30 minute anti-comfort / anti-pleasure. Grab this black muddy sound river.
Cool
Back to Top
rappingangel View Drop Down
Forum Newbie
Forum Newbie


Joined: May 28 2013
Status: Offline
Points: 1
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rappingangel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 28 2013 at 06:05
Artist:   Pretty lights

Album:   A Color Map of the Sun.

Rating:    4.5 stars

Prog Appeal:  To the followers of hip-hop & soul

Review: While it is difficult to judge a album by just one track; if the Pretty lights track record is anything to go by this album will have the same mix of soul, hip hop and electronica that has become the signature of the Pretty lights. They have recently released the track “Around the Block” and it is pretty awesome. Big smile



Back to Top
VOTOMS View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: April 18 2013
Location: KOBAIA
Status: Offline
Points: 1420
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote VOTOMS Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2013 at 10:11
It would be better if the reviews was organized by title and link at the main page
Back to Top
rogerthat View Drop Down
Prog Reviewer
Prog Reviewer


Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rogerthat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 19 2013 at 06:47
Artist:   Everything Everything (UK, 2007 to....)

Album:   The Arc (2013)

Rating:    4.5 stars

Prog Appeal:   
(3) Strong appeal to Gentle Giant fans

Review:


This young band are only two albums old (including the one under review) and are already getting a fair amount of attention from the media.  Perhaps, the fact that they are now promoted by Sony RCA has something to do with that.  But it may also have something to do with their originality.  Sure, there is no music without inspiration from some 'source material', but Everything Everything have their own unmistakable sound. 

I can trace lots of Britpop and contemporary music influences in their style (well, duh, like for a lot of new, upcoming bands).   On the other hand, their love for vocal harmonies and a tendency to develop music very rapidly with lots of notes flowing almost uncontrollably, points more to, yes, Gentle Giant.   When a member of this forum first brought this band to my notice, I think most of the people who enjoyed it (including self) were Gentle Giant fans!  Perhaps, apart from an appetite for almost math-y, goofy complex music, a tolerance for not so appetising vocals is also a trait of GG fans. 

The vocals are certainly something you have to watch out for.   Either you might be able to live with lead singer Jonathan Higgs's weird and more often than not annoying delivery, or it will turn you off the band so heavily that you may not feel like giving it another chance (of course, the third option is that you do like his voice).   He relies almost exclusively on the falsetto and without much by way of finesse or nuance in his approach.  Now as much as I love listening to a great singer, I make any allowance for the vocals when the music clicks for me (yes, I would indeed tolerate Bruno Mars if his songwriting was anywhere near this creative).   I can live with Derek Shulman and I can live with Higgs too (though, admittedly, I find that harder than putting up with the former). 

Coming to the album under review, it is an extension of their style and approach evidenced in the debut (Man Alive) and at the same time, reflects a lot of growth and development.   It continues roughly in the same vein as the debut as it revolves around an aforesaid GG-like fondness for vocal harmonies and rapidly developing music (without quite the same amount of complexity as GG).   However, there appears to be a greater partiality for accessible vocal or instrumental hooks now.  Mind, I did find Man Alive very infectious but on The Arc, they just 'streamline' their approach a bit without losing their uniqueness.  

They are also occasionally a bit more eager to pause and relax and let the beauty of a melody or a chord progression unravel rather than careen at a 1000 miles per hour.   Notice the almost Beatles-like string section in the chorus of Duet.   Beautiful bell-like harmonies accompany the opening verses of Choice Mountain, reminding me strongly of 70s prog just for a moment.   On the other hand, they have seriously upped the ante in terms of the funk aspects of their style.  It was only evident on maybe Schoolin' from the previous album, but Armourland is almost Michael Jackson-like, at least until the chorus (which has a distinct Everything Everything touch...already!).  

Speaking of which, Everything Everything don't achieve an original sound merely through a mish mash of all kinds of combinations of genres (which might be the initial impression they give).   Their melodies and harmonies have distinct patterns that give them away, just like any number of great rock artists from the good old days and going up to Radiohead.  Leaving aside minor reservations about the way they tend to blitz their way through songs, they are one of the most promising new rock bands at least outside of prog.  

They support their stellar writing with vibrant and energetic execution.   They have one of the strongest rhythm sections I have heard from many, many recent bands AND they also throw melodic basslines at you.  There are some catchy guitar licks co existing with contemporary electronic sounds as well as piano (though no actual piano seems to have been used).  Vocals aside, there is not a single track off The Arc that I don't like at least a bit.  Highlights would be Cough Cough, Kemosabe, Duet, Feet for Hands, Armourland and...many more, actually. 

I am sorry to have to dock half a star, then, but I do on account of the vocals and also because no emphatic statement expressing the band's emotions or point of view comes through clearly in the way last years' masterpiece Idler Wheel communicated.   But if the rate at which they are scaling peaks (pun intended) is anything to go by, their creativity alone might make me disregard that aspect in future...again, just like Gentle Giant. 

 


Edited by rogerthat - April 20 2013 at 03:07
Back to Top
rogerthat View Drop Down
Prog Reviewer
Prog Reviewer


Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rogerthat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 19 2013 at 06:08
Not a fan, by which I simply mean I haven't yet explored their music.  But I have heard about them and am glad to know they are still going strong.  
Back to Top
R-A-N-M-A View Drop Down
Forum Groupie
Forum Groupie
Avatar

Joined: July 12 2007
Location: Calgary, AB
Status: Offline
Points: 84
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote R-A-N-M-A Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 18 2013 at 23:00

I'm honestly shocked that no one else is jumping on this, but it only just came out and not everyone is a diehard, so I’ll gladly do the honours.

For those who don't know them, the Flaming Lips are one of the oddest bands to have any kind of mainstream following. They began in the 1980s and for the first part of their careers; they were an unorthodox and somewhat self-loathing alternative rock band. What little I've heard from their early discography hasn't really been to my tastes so I haven't killed much of my time on it. Their first glimmer of success did come in this period however. The song "She don't use Jelly" off of their 6th album, released in 1993, Transmissions from the Satellite Heart, was a left field hit. While I am partial to this single and the album as a whole, the best track is hidden away on the B side however. It's a fairly short number clocking in at a little of 4 minutes called Moth in the Incubator. It is a clear break from traditional rock/pop song structure. It mounts from a quavering grungy introduction through a rocky and claustrophobic middle section before bursting into a triumphal finale; truly, an excellent track and a sign of even better things to come.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XA9z5Jq2f_w


Fast forward to 1997 and the Lips are on the verge of breakup. Car crashes, relationships, drugs and most curiously a spider bite almost put the band permanently on ice. This year the Lips release the extremely experimental album called Zaireeka. A 4 album set whose disks are meant to be played simultaneously or in 2s or 3s. It isn't much of a hit, but it is a crossing of the Rubicon (or should I say Rubycon?) away from their traditional alt-rock domain. By the time 1999 rolls around, the band has overcome its travails and releases its newest and some would, validly, argue finest artistic statement, The Soft Bulletin. The Soft Bulletin is delicate and dark and at once prismatic. Lots of people have favourite songs from this album, like the "Spiderbite Song" which serializes their recently overcome travails or the colourful electro-pop of "Race for the Prize" or the breezy summer ode "Buggin'", all great, but those aren't the ones for me. No, my favourite is the two part combination of What is the Light and the Observer.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LsTbgxh7oTM


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ad2YdIQeVZM


The first, and better, of the two is the embodiment of the overflowing joyfulness of which characterizes this period of the Lips. It eventually flows into the latter, which is the darker, driving and morose counterpart, equally essential moods for the complex and expressive new Lips. The Soft Bulletin's two follow ups largely in the same vein, Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots and At War with the Mystics are both quite successful. Yoshimi, the more important of the two is a semi-concept album about a futuristic girl who battles humanoid robots and features their biggest hit, the humanist ballad "Do You Realize??".  AWwtM isn’t to be dismissed offhand either. It has arguably their best rock of the period and strongest instrumental Pompeii AM Gotterdammerung. Their concerts during this period also become a thing of legend. Confetti cannons, swarms of massive bouncy balls, giant laser hands and a human hamster-ball elate crowds the world over. But all the fatalist tinged fuchsia was about to give way to something darker and considerably more powerful.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zYOKFjpm9s

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKbJpngxzc0


In the later years of band, they've become notorious for the length of time between albums. It was 3 years from Soft Bulletin to Yoshimi, 4 more to AWwtM and 3 again to 2009's Embryonic. Embryonic bears some resemblance to its most recent forbearers in that it is densely layered and sparklingly produced, but in many ways it is a throwback to their older, darker more angst ridden work. The title itself is taken from a line in Moth in the Incubator. The crunchiness is back in a big way and lead singer Wayne Coyne's trademark falsetto is faded well into the background. I and others would argue that Embryonic actually marks a new phase for the band. The raw, manic depression of Embryonic is probably best heard on The Ego's Last Stand, but my favourite is actually one of the bonus tracks, the chilling and beautiful Anything you say now I believe you.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dyp_UBJut6g


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x5PphNl1BTQ


After Embryonic they embarked on some humanist movie making adventures and paid tributes to prog giants with their covers of Dark Side of the Moon and In the Court of the Crimson King. Word started to spread that a new studio album was in the works in 2011. During the intervening period a lot of people were wondering if the new mood for Embryonic would last or if it was passing. Last year the band named the album and confirmed that it would be very dark. The only question left was how dark is that? Well, this month we've finally found out.

THE TERROR
The Flaming Lips (2013)

5/5

... is upon us! In short, the only thing traditionally Flaming Lips about this album is the incredible degree of artistry. There is nothing popularly oriented on this album, and scarcely anything vaguely rocking about it. This a pitch black mechanical drone from start to finish. It takes much more from the textural and melancholic schools like Tangerine Dream, Kraftwerk and Pink Floyd than it does from Beatles or Stones.

The album is comprised of 9 mostly long-ish tracks (by pop standards at any rate) many of which are simply continuations of one another. It is abrasive and cold all the way through and songs sport heart warming titles like You Are Alone, Turning Violent and yes, The Terror. My personal favourite is You Lust which clocks in at an auspicious 13:03. It is frighteningly cold and mechanistic with piston drumming and a central repeating synth lines. It gives me chills, in a good way. Other standouts are the Kraut-rocking the title track which features some poignant drumming, and the aptly named missing Tangerine Dream track You Are Alone, but it’s all so good.

Many of the Lip's albums boarder on the edge of concept albums (especially Embryonic), but this is the final leap. The band hasn’t explicitly called it as such, but the tight playing, narrow stylistic window, continuous nature and obvious theme (it's in the name) belie what its true naturem is. In fact, it's hard to describe each song on their own, but cause they're simply part of the whole. Helpfully, the whole album is currently streaming for free. So check it out.

http://stereogum.com/1314262/stream-the-flaming-lips-the-terror/album-stream/


Many long time fans of the band will probably be turned off by this departure, but I think potential and non-committal fans here at PA should really take notice. If you look into it, The Flaming Lips have come up for inclusion a couple of times and been rebuffed on the grounds of their insufficient progressiveness. Well, all the Observers, Gemini Syringes, Pompeii AM Goterdamerungs and Moths have come home to roost in a big way. This is a progressive rock album and a very good one at that. It is not an album for the meek. It is an unabashed artistic statement by a band overflowing with talent and direction. It is for anyone like me who wanted albums like Zeit, the Hell half of Heaven and Hell and the Hummer to really strike them to the core, this is it. This is the Terror you've been waiting for.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/e8/The_Terror_cover.jpg



Edited by R-A-N-M-A - April 18 2013 at 23:17
Back to Top
tamijo View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: January 06 2009
Location: Denmark
Status: Offline
Points: 4287
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote tamijo Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 17 2013 at 04:01


Eat em and smile

Band Name and description: This is the first studio album, by  David Lee Roth supergroup with Steve VaiBilly Sheehan, Gregg Bissonette. they made one more supreeme album Skyscraper (1988) before the band split.

Album information
: 1986

The Review : What we got is a technical very talented Power Heavy. with a bit of Roth flamboyant and a lot of wonderfull Vai, a lot of humour, and a lot of sun. Works more than perfect in the car, on the highway, summer days.
Works well with a six pack too. Its stripped og the dark Dungeons and Dragons Metal elements, but it gets my head banging on most tracks.

Rating - In its own terms, Power Heavy Rock with a twist, its a 5/5,

Prog Appeal 
From a prog. point og view Skyscraper may fit better, but in my book this is the true masterpiece.

NB: a sidenote :On the CD version of Skycraper, they put in 2 tracks as 1-2
  1. "California Girls" (Brian Wilson/Mike Love) – 2:51
  2. "Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody" (Casucci/Caesar/Williams/Graham) – 4:41
A horriable idear, because they do not fit with the intension of the album, if you start the CD from track 3, you get the  original better version.
Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
Back to Top
 Post Reply Post Reply Page  <1 23456 13>

Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down



This page was generated in 0.379 seconds.
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.