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Apsalar View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Apsalar Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2006 at 15:56
This little Australia band from my birth Town really deserve more credit they they get. Most Australians seem to just dismiss and overlook all the wonderful bands we having coming out of our underground scene, which really is a shame. Coming out in 2005 with the debt album "Make Me Love You", this could be none other than a post-rock album. Here are some works to do them some justice.

Pivot
Make Me Love You
2005
B




just three tracks in and Sydney quintet Pivot’s long awaited debut album has well and truly justified fans’ keen hopes.

The third track, “Incidental Backloth,” begins with a repetitive throb somewhere between the click-clack of a train and the tick-tick of a wrist**tch. Pivot have long been compared to Tortoise, and drummer Laurence Pike’s factory-floor groove justifies that. But the light smattering of hi-hats and a sad, warm guitar line inject emotion the Chicago-ites have rarely managed since Millions Now Living Will Never Die.

Neal Sutherland’s bass kicks in at three minutes: it’s a relief and feels like something of a resolution. Laurence’s drumming gets heavier too; his degenerating rhythms and his brother Richard’s programming send the track into a tailspin of psychotic intensity.

Describing electronic music as a soundtrack is so ’95, but the images evoked by Pivot’s music are impossible to ignore. I can almost see it on the movie screen: sick-in-the-head lead character who you’ve come to understand, even like, but he’s spiralling out of control, hitting out and desperate for understanding.

The finale of destroyed melancholy is as euphoric as it is unsettling. After that, anything would be anti-climactic, the track is so tightly packed with possibilities and twisting, turning with ideas that it’s tempting to dismiss the rest of the album.

Pivot formed six years ago, but its members have collaborated so widely that it sometimes feels like a bit of a super-group: recording as Triosk for Leaf, collaborating with Jan Jelinek for ~Scape and traveling through Europe in Burnt Friedman’s group Flanger. Indeed, it is difficult to see why it’s taken them so long to get around to a debut, the response to early EPs—really just lovingly packaged demo’s—was critical acclaim and high rotation on community and national radio.

Compared to Triosk’s excellent debut last year, Make Me Love You is a much more open-sounding affair. And although it grew out of a series of improv sessions it rarely feels loose or aimless; it holds together well, the flow rooted in songs and moods, rhythm and ideas. It lies somewhere between Private Presses-era DJ Shadow, Tortoise’s debut and the epic quality of Squarepusher (e.g. “Tundra 4”) and yet somewhere entirely different; an album with a similar breadth of intent is John Tejada’s I Am Not A Gun on City Centre Offices. The musical ebb and flow is clearest on the tidal wash of “La Mer,” a flowing guitar washed in a cloud of glitchy production, sound samples, and a spray of feather-light hi-hats, which flow seamlessly into next track, “Pivot Voltron.”

I was initially tempted to dismiss Make Me Love You as failing the promise of Incidental Backcloth. But with time, it was the mournful electro of “Kirsten Dunst” that played in my mind. Or the ecstatic rush of soft focus drum’n’bass on “Montecore”; four minutes in everything stops, just like the moment in a fireworks shower when the explosions of light and sound stop and you think, “Is that it?” All of sudden there’s another explosion and you’re right back in the middle of the show.
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Apsalar Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2006 at 18:17
A very informative page on Mexican Prog, hope some people will find this interesting:

http://progressive.homestead.com/MEXICOPROG.html
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote eugene Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2006 at 06:25
I put this already in Symphonic appreciation thread, but thought it's also worthy to recommend it here, as this band are not in the Archives yet, but well deserve to be added and I would highly recommend them.
 
 
new discovery new discovery new discovery
 
This is modern Swiss band Ex-Vagus. Their album "Ames Vagabondes" will be instant attraction to all lovers of Symphonic prog. Made in traditions of 70's theatrical symphonic prog it can remind best of Ange at times, full of various keyboards with some great guitar parts, but the most powerful feature of this album are vocals IMO. Their singer has got beautiful and unique voice. All songs are in French, and it's wonderful. Christian Decamps of Ange fame guests on this album. Could well be one of the best release this year. Highly recommended!!!
Album is released on Galileo records http://www.galileo-records.com/ , where you can find some samples.
Also french readers can visit the band website http://www.xave.com/users/exvagus/
 
EDIT: read Erik's review in Symphonic thread


Edited by eugene - November 25 2006 at 06:36
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote gods of marble Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2006 at 23:30
damnit i say crime in choir
 
 
yay for regressive progressive rock!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Marwin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 26 2006 at 08:13
The Red Masque http://www.theredmasque.com/

Very interesting art rock, avant gardish band with a great female vocalist
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote markosherrera Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 26 2006 at 18:35
i recommend oratory.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote avestin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 28 2006 at 18:40
Hello fellas,

Been meaning to post earlier, but for some reason I wasn't in the mood to...

But now I am and here is the latest:

A while back I was reminded by Yukorin in the Zeuhl 5 thread about this French band from the late 70's called Pataphonie. I say reminded, since I have heard them several years ago (something like 10-11 years ago) and I remembered liking their sound, but I have since forgotten all about them...

So my memory of them was salvaged by Yuko and he got me going after their second album Le Matin Blanc and I finally managed to get it online. It is as good as I remember it.

This is all good an well you say, but what is it like?
Well, think chamber rock with RIOesque touches and avantgarde oddities, improvisational at times and free-form compositions. An instrumental group made up of 3 guys playing the basics - guitars, bass and drums.

I have scanned the biography appearing in the booklet of the cd and here it is:

"
Pataphonie : "No purpose, no ambition; except, ultimate luxury, to be unclassified ... "
     Before      1970, the future PATAPHONIE
members used to play covers songs in rock bands in the north of Paris Andre VIAUD, Gilles ROUSSEAU and Pierre DEMOURON long time friends (who made before some MOVING GELATINES PLATES first part gigs) gathered in PATAPHONIE around about 1973 ...
The group, without name and career schedule, improvise a scholarly mixture of jazz and rock music. The musicians quickly went in a more free-rock style in quintet (with Bernard AUDUREAU on piano and Alain SEVE on sax). The crux, an appear in the famous Jose ARTHUR Pop-Club on France Inter. The project, based on a pooled passion for the contemporary compositors such as Bela BARTOK, Eric SATIE or Maurice RAVEL; also a vocation to reconcile claimed influences of WEATHER REPORt, HUGH HOPPER and HENRY COW The last comparison surely not harmless, or pretentious, a Rock en Stock chronicler wrote in the August 1976 issue, that the drums play of Chris CUTLER, the Rock in Opposition frontman, was near from Robert WYATT (SOFT MACHINE, MATCHING MOLE ... ) and ... Gilles ROUSSEAU from PATAPHONIE ...
The band name was chosen at random in a dictionary. The first attempt was not the good. The name "mussel" ( ... ) was not as elegant as "Patagonie" ... It's a southern Argentina region renamed for its sheeps breeding. The noun became the join of "Pata" for the pataphysic (to be unclassified) and "Phonie" for the sound and the atmosphere. The band PATAPHONIE was created on a instrumental trio with guitar, bass and drums, where own member composed music (only one author name was awarded to satisfy the SAC EM ... ).

In 1975, few chronicles, following the example of Jean-Marc BAlllEUX of Rock & Folk said that PATAPHONiE "could be the great European discoveJy of the year" To confirm that good promise, the Pole records label edited a LP called "Pataphonle" with extracts of the 1972-1976 period. That improvisations collector, not really a first constructed piece, wasn't suggestive at all of the instability of the group at that time ...
Better than a speech, that declaration of the combo in 1977 make us keep their philosophy:, "To be free in music, you must work for yourself. Freedom isn't the notes recitation, but the feeling that you put into. You must work on the sound as a clay model. We think that we play an innovator music with his defaults. We can be wrong commercially, but musically, we're right. Music is not synonymous of success at all".
After a succession of remuterating gigs, the band finances could support a studio recording. In July 1978, the musicians put in concrete form the awesome gigs. "Le Matin Blanc" was recorded in only four days (!) at Prunay Ie Temple studios ... That master piece presented an exclusively instrumental music, structured and sharp. An omnipresent tension wrapped allover the album the inspired play of the musicians, extremely competent in their own domain. Harmony, melody and rhythm meaning lived together with happiness, and the feverish sequences, inspired of free-jazz styie could going on.
Due to the lack of interest from the labels to their music, the PATAPHONIE members decided to issue their first effort on a phantom label, FEERIMUSIC. The lP, essentially sold by mail-order business (distributed by Meta Records and Ceresco) was bought by around 1000"people, thanks to die hard fa~ .. .T he album was, on the whole, welcomed well by the press. And strangely, that was the province chroniclers who were righter in the assessments on the emitted atmosphere by the worrying and imaginative music of the trio ...
"Mandoline Station" was a composition written in April 1978; never played live, it had to appear on the "Matin Blanc" LP. However, the difficulty of transporting a piano harmony table made of that track an unpublished one, till now! The extracts of a gig from Strasbourg, six months before the combo spiit are also include. "Automne Souvenir" emits a communicative atmosphere; more over "Memoire Baroque" surely the most structured song of the combo, was the main title of the second true opus ...
The powerful success of the Parisian group continued one year after the LP issue. It was concluded in pinnacle at the Rennes festival, on the 23nd october 1980, a performance which emphasized the split. The musicians jugged themselves "too old to rock'n'roll" ... But aiso "to young to die" , cause a second album was on work! "Memoires Baroques" compietely composed, will never be issue, victim of a time change and of the indifference of the medias towards of new musics and other styles a bit complex. Eventually, a story heard a lot when you're speaking of then French and Europeans innovators or bands; by the side of references not confessed such as MAGMA, SOFT MACHINE or KING CRIMSON ...

Thanks to Andre Viaud, Gilles Rousseau, Pierre Demouron & Luc Marianni.

Translation by Jean-Louis Demouron.
"

The cover art work:



Our ZAR (Zeuhl/Avant/RIO) Team is in the process of approving them for addition to PA.



More recommendations to come...


Assaf





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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Yukorin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 28 2006 at 19:37
 
The LP sleeve of the seminal 'Le Matin Blanc' 

 

 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote avestin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 29 2006 at 11:58
^^^
Guess who will be added to PA soon.... Big smile


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote avestin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 29 2006 at 23:28
As with many previous recommendations I've made, I fear some have passed unnoticed. This one in particular, and I want to emphasize it another time (in part because of the South American thread by The T calling for info on SA prog musicians). This should not be missed by symphonic and folk prog fans. A gem.

Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:


I want to recommend the Brazilian folk and art rock artist http://www.progarchives.com/Progressive_rock_discography_BAND.asp?band_id=2366%5b
ARAÚJO, MARCO ANTÔNIO

MARCO ANTONIO ARAUJO was born in Belo Horizonte on 1949. On 1968 he played in a band called VOX POPULI, that later would become SOM IMAGINARIO. In 1970, and now living in England, he used to be a fan of bands such as: PINK FLOYD, LED ZEPPELIN and GENESIS, who would have great influence on his musical production. Within the next few years, MARCO ANTONIO ARAUJO studied guitar and cello in Rio de Janeiro. In 1977, once again in Belo Horizonte, he joined the symphonic orchestra and soon (1980) his first album, "Influências" was released. With only six instrumental tracks, he had already achieved an amazing sense of balance and created a personal style.MARCO ANTONIO ARAUJO is a classic when it comes to brazilian prog, and also a highly recomended artist for anyone who likes both symphonic rock and prog folk

What is good in this case is that you can't go wrong with any of his releases as they are all of equal quality.

http://paginas.terra.com.br/arte/maa/

    
    
    
    
    

Edited by avestin - November 29 2006 at 23:33
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote ShW1 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 01 2006 at 01:38
I'd like to recommand on SHESHET album - (name is sheshet also)
 
(sheshet is "friday" from robinson cruso story)
 
This band comes from Israel, and released one album, in 1977. It contains top Israelian musicians like - Shem tov levi - the leader, fluetist, composer... also Yehudit Ravits - Vocalist, Adi Renert - keyboards, Iky levi - drums, and others (all are great musicians.)
 
This band does not apear on PA, but it is pure progressive rock, with many Jazz rock influences, bulgarian-odd-time-signatures, (Shem tov paraents born in Bulgaria), Israeli-eastern, all original and unique style.
 
There are many (female) vocals in hebrew, so it wont apeal to everyoneEmbarrassed
 
It apeal for those who are looking for whats called eastern music, who dont mind to hebrew in their prog music...
 
It could be found in Israeli stores. and i'm sure it could be done via internet (right now i've got no address).
 
I've recently heard some beautiful samples by KOTEBEL  im waiting eagerly to listen to their album. this KOTEBEL band sound very similar to SHESHET ! amazing. they didnt hear Sheshet, thats for sure...
 
admins, Shell you check out SHESHET to put in PA?
 
http://www.songs.co.il/artist.asp?id_singer=86
 
(sorry for the horrible english, SHESHET music is much betterLOL)
 
 
 
 


Edited by ShW1 - December 02 2006 at 11:23
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rainbow111 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 01 2006 at 12:19
Azure d'Or
 
I just got the album, thus completing my collection...most Renaissance/prog fans see this as the beginning of the end for their sound... Well, this may be the case sometimes, but the album is actually really good (highlights, for me, are Winter Tree, Secret Mission, and Friends)...The album is actually quite good, dispite it's loss of the 12 minute classics we all know and love... It's not Camera Camera, so give it a chance, it's a good album.
It's got to be slow
Taking love the only way
It's got to just flow
Making love and taking time to let it grow
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote lucas Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 01 2006 at 17:31
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

As with many previous recommendations I've made, I fear some have passed unnoticed. This one in particular, and I want to emphasize it another time (in part because of the South American thread by The T calling for info on SA prog musicians). This should not be missed by symphonic and folk prog fans. A gem.

Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:


I want to recommend the Brazilian folk and art rock artist http://www.progarchives.com/Progressive_rock_discography_BAND.asp?band_id=2366%5b
ARAÚJO, MARCO ANTÔNIO

MARCO ANTONIO ARAUJO was born in Belo Horizonte on 1949. On 1968 he played in a band called VOX POPULI, that later would become SOM IMAGINARIO. In 1970, and now living in England, he used to be a fan of bands such as: PINK FLOYD, LED ZEPPELIN and GENESIS, who would have great influence on his musical production. Within the next few years, MARCO ANTONIO ARAUJO studied guitar and cello in Rio de Janeiro. In 1977, once again in Belo Horizonte, he joined the symphonic orchestra and soon (1980) his first album, "Influências" was released. With only six instrumental tracks, he had already achieved an amazing sense of balance and created a personal style.MARCO ANTONIO ARAUJO is a classic when it comes to brazilian prog, and also a highly recomended artist for anyone who likes both symphonic rock and prog folk

What is good in this case is that you can't go wrong with any of his releases as they are all of equal quality.

http://paginas.terra.com.br/arte/maa/

    
    
    
    
    
 
I wrote a review for what I consider his most mature album, 'entre um silencio e outro'
 
 
MARCO ANTÔNIO ARAÚJO — Entre Um Silencio E Outro
Review by lucas (lucas biela)
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Errors And Omissions Editor

4 stars Marco Antonio Araujo is a brazilian guitarist who used to play instrumental music, blending rock with folk. On this album, he changed his usual formula by playing a more intimate music, close to classical chamber music. In fact, he is backed by 2 cellists, and one flautist, a completely different line-up than the previous one which formed the band Mantra. This album is dedicated to the memory of Araujo's teacher of composition, Esther Scliar, explaining the change of direction on this album and his will to showcase his composition skills. The music is truly beautiful, one could even wonder if it hadn't been composed by a most renowned classical composer, the level of complexity being so relevant in this record. The album consists of two tracks (three more on the reissued edition, in the same vein) crafted to form a suite. The overall feel to the music is very european, the cello giving a touch of romanticism and the flute a touch of classicism, only the guitar has the typical latine tone, reminding the solo works of Egberto Gismonti, to whom he was nevertheless compared. Fortunately, the album is not focusing on Araujo's guitar work, rather the quartet works as an ensemble, each of the musician contributing equally to this record. The music presented here should appeal more to the usual classical music listener, than the prog fan. However, when comparing this record to Araujo's other ones, I much prefer the classical texture of this music than the prog-rock Araujo played with Mantra. It just seems to be a more mature work. Unfortunately, the great Araujo died prematurely in 1986. This album will remain for me the best testimony of his art. NB : as this record belongs IMHO to the realm of classical music and is not a progressive rock piece of music, I didn't gave it the 5 stars it would deserve if progarchives were a site devoted to classical music !

Posted Sunday, September 10, 2006, 14:11 EST

"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Andrea Cortese Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2006 at 17:09
Aria Palea - Zoicekardìa (italian prog folk - 1996)
 
Aria Palea
 
Zoicekardìa is basically a prog folk a la early Jethro Tull, Stand Up, mainly. The third track is similar to  A New Day Yesterday. Another important peculiarity is the theatrical mood of the singer, especially in the opener track which is a sort of opera buffa, or burlesque ouverture. All in all an excellent album, highly recommended 'cause shows another side of the italian scene.
 
 
Spirosfera - Umanamnesi (italian art rock 1996):
 
 
Saturday I've found another obscure modern italian band "Spirosfera". They only released the album "Umanamnesi" (1996). A mix between Rush and Area...something very difficult to imagine, and due to the weird singing.
 
I fear the album's cover is as banal as the lyrics. This is the only weak point, though.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote avestin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 06 2006 at 22:13
Hello friends, long time no see...

Well, I have in fact a huge amount of albums to recommend and some of them I would like to recommend before others, as I feel they are more "important" to know them and of them.

However, as I am very tired and actually exhausted and it's only the middle of the week, I decided to go with a "lighter" recommendation.


So what are we having tonight? Well - Everything!
What do I mean by that?

The band and more precisely the album I wish to introduce is just that: Everything.

Everything as in eclectic. The band is Estradasphere. The album - Palace of Mirrors which was released this year 2006.

This band is composed of six members form Santa Cruz, CA.

Let me quote you from the booklet what the eclectic part means:
"One moment Estradasphere may manifest a Romanian gypsy tune through the psyche of an angsty suburban teenager, then be walking a musical path much traveled simply to uncover some semblance of a better time. Connecting to music by playing real instruments (violin, upright bass, guitar, accordion, organ, Japanese Shamisen, drums) and a shifting variety of instrumentations (chamber ensemble, jazz combo, gypsy metal band, 60's film rock etc)."

Now, the type of combo they do might not be the most original, and I hear similarities to Mr. Bungle (Disco Volante) and Secret Chiefs 3, but it is a good album and fnu to listen to and the musicianship is good as well. It is also instrumental as opposed to previous efforts which were with a vocalist.

Reviews on the web:

Farragoblog - http://farragoblog.livejournal.com/7388.html

Crucial Blast webstore - http://www.crucialblast.net/webstore/titles_e.html scroll down

The Metal Observer - http://www.metal-observer.com/articles.php?lid=1&sid=1&id=11007

TheGreatNothing.com - http://www.thegreatnothing.com/reviews/view.php?review_no=1010

Sea Of Tranquility - http://www.seaoftranquility.org/reviews.php?op=showcontent&id=4132

PA artist page - http://www.progarchives.com/Progressive_rock_discography_BAND.asp?band_id=2041


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Everlasting Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2006 at 16:11
Estradasphere is indeed good, as is every avant-gardist band

In the Woods... is my favorite these weeks, this band is soooo awesome. And the people who stop at Omnio are making a great mistake. Strange in Stereo is simply..... no word. And the first and the last ones also have wonderful moments.
Don't forget the bands that came to life from the middle of ITW ashes either.

then of course Arcturus, Ulver, Winds, Devil Doll, Solefald, Virgin Black, Age of Silence, Unexpect, Peccatum, Subterranean Masquerade, Ved Buens Ende, Secret Chiefs 3, Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, Ensoph, Spiral Architect etc etc
just the most splendid domain in music Star
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote avestin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2006 at 19:30
Originally posted by Everlasting Everlasting wrote:

Estradasphere is indeed good, as is every avant-gardist band

In the Woods... is my favorite these weeks, this band is soooo awesome.
And the people who stop at Omnio are making a great mistake. Strange in
Stereo is simply..... no word. And the first and the last ones also
have wonderful moments.
Don't forget the bands that came to life from the middle of ITW ashes either.

then of course Arcturus, Ulver, Winds, Devil Doll, Solefald, Virgin
Black, Age of Silence, Unexpect, Peccatum, Subterranean Masquerade, Ved
Buens Ende, Secret Chiefs 3, Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, Ensoph, Spiral
Architect etc etc
just the most splendid domain in music


    
I agree on In The Woods (one of my favourite bands) and on all other bands you've mentioned (besides Ensoph which I don't know, but the name means infinity in Hebrew).



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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Andrea Cortese Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2006 at 02:11
Hi Assaf, today I would like to recommend the two prog albums by I Pooh, the most famous italian pop band from the late sixties to nowadays.
 
In the mid-seventies almost everyone played prog rock. In particular the period 1973-1975 is the Pooh's romantic symphonic prog period. They always played very good music.

Parsifal This is one to check (1973).

 
Maybe also "Un Po' del Nostro Tempo Migliore" (1975):
 
 
Please I recommend you to visit http://www.aruga.com/pooh/
 
and to listen to the midi samples of these two albums in the discopgraphy section.Clap
 


Edited by Andrea Cortese - December 09 2006 at 06:02
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Atavachron Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2006 at 02:16
   ^
Lovely covers
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Andrea Cortese Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2006 at 02:22
^^^
 
Yep, and the music is of a high quality, I think. It's not a case the band is included also in www.italianprog.com
 
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