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NotAProghead ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Errors & Omissions Team Joined: October 22 2005 Location: Russia Status: Offline Points: 7964 |
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I think www.btf.it is the best place if you are looking for RPI. Edited by NotAProghead - August 19 2007 at 08:01 |
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Who are you and who am I to say we know the reason why... (D. Gilmour)
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Mandrakeroot ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Italian Prog Specialist Joined: March 01 2006 Location: San Foca, Friûl Status: Offline Points: 5851 |
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I confirm!!! |
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1800iareyay ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() Joined: November 18 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2492 |
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Thanks very much for the suggestions. Now I shall have even less money, but it's so worth it.
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1800iareyay ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() Joined: November 18 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2492 |
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Just ordered Darwin!, Per U Amico, and Ys. Can't wait for my first RPI albums.
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micky ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 02 2005 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 46838 |
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have a multitude of clappies hahhah ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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Ricochet ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 27 2005 Location: Nauru Status: Offline Points: 46301 |
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I had myself a bit of RPI Day yesterday
PFM - Storia Di Un Minuto Battiato - Foetus & Clic All three with reviews. ![]() Just...saying... ![]() |
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Mandrakeroot ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Italian Prog Specialist Joined: March 01 2006 Location: San Foca, Friûl Status: Offline Points: 5851 |
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These are the three Ricochet's reviews:
FRANCO BATTIATOFetus(Studio Album, 1972)![]() Review by Ricochet ("Philip Desmond Halloway") [Special Collaborator Electronic Prog & Art Rock Specialist] Posted 1:18:01 AM EST, 8/18/2007 ![]() The 1971 Fetus (with a second, English-lyric, version Foetus), as a step-on and stepped-ahead curse of a "special" and illegible album concept, makes a pretty decent impulse by which to comment on the artist and on his strange temper rather than (or only afterwards) on the music, which is skinny and (much like under the title's creative word meaning) under premature emphasis. Battiato is in a proper moment of pressure, not because of his split personality and vision, happening under the switch of the decades and shaping for good the demise of the previous style, but because he actually comes out of that split and starts to focus on the new style. Such an impression arrives right even before you start absorbing Foetus as an "indiscipline" of experimental and minimal dissonances. The style, furthermore, is useful to show the deep lock, at least for now and at least by this, of the artist being fascinated and blindly orientated, without (thus) a craft which to dominate him, nor a lot of simplicity which to simply pour down heavily. The culpable sentiment isn't the strangeness within the movement, but the little crack of imagination that stops and bleeds pretentiousness, instead of unfolding pleasantries or just atypical precise moods. Upon hearing the fiber-sounds of the latter Pollution or Sulle Corde Di Aries, which are related to this one but merely spotlight the same F. Battiato, Fetus is most successfully and comfortably an improbable simplicity and an avantgarde splinter composition, yet it tends to succumb exactly in its keenest and sincere detail: a mystery of music before an invasion of senses, a perfect art before a jump-started dizziness. As a pretty stringent album (since uninspired it is perhaps not) Fetus crumbles the listener's ear into a very unrealistic passion of music, a tragic minimalism and a distorted preconception of a substance having some particularities, but also some toxins. Stylistically, there can't be named more than three pieces which have a symph harmony or an Italian discernible trace, instead there is a complexity of a tangled rock, an "avant-indie" experiment cause, a technical and electronic blemish craft, plus a free-loaded surreal pleasure of mixing, spicing and cutting on the white sleet of musicality and subtenant forms. None of the big genres are eloquently used, but that doesn't mean they also count a lot into the great scheme of things (except RPI which, again, doesn't show Battiato's belonging in it); just like that, nothing is a mess, but the caliber drives through a paranoid state of charmed art. The album could have used the "cinematic crunch" small and perforating style it has (mostly meaning electro-experimentalism) if it would have had more than 8 songs. Mean like it is, the album only sums edges and consistently dark nits of music and foreign sound. You'll hear some brave rock harmonies and up-beats - plus some vocals, the original ones speaking a loud and misfiring concept idea, whilst, in English, Battiato sounds lisping. But, mostly, Fetus is Battiato in front of mechanical and form-fragile characters of loud exhibition. Disappointing, but not really screwed, if you think of Battiato more independently. FRANCO BATTIATOClic(Studio Album, 1974)![]() Review by Ricochet ("Philip Desmond Halloway") [Special Collaborator Electronic Prog & Art Rock Specialist] Posted 1:38:34 AM EST, 8/18/2007 ![]() "Clic" is released in 1974 and it is truly of those art-popping creations Battiato ever managed to do - there are full analogies naming it a best ever album, there are voices that appreciate its corrosive attitude under quite exhaustive portraits, everything being or not of a heads-up, since "Clic" needs to affirm a great response from the person who listens to it. All the fractured comparisons can become unremarkable, even if most of the previous solid works has lead to this entire full interesting in crouching avant-garde - for me, at least, there's a huge difference between the wonderful Sulle Corde Di Aries and "Clic"'s mainly unexpected weird charisma and flattering scales of collapsed logic and music. "Clic" stands out as pretty tough, with no influence or place in 1974's top speed but well-known prog act, but with a lot of nontrivial hard art which to dominate or be dominated, by either harder of clearer/cleaner contrasts. Quite different become the emotions of listening to it than those of understanding it, "Clic" being strong and unhallow, but remarkably narrow and heavy-pointed in its most independent looms. Though there is rock, harmony, aggressive experiment and luminous unintelligible visions (and such reactions), losing yourself in the webbed structure of "Clic" can be a basic avant-gardish strange feeling. Me myself, losing in some of the album's most transient elaborate sizzles, come to see Battiato as vicious, a superlative or a funk-master."Clic"'s inordinately taste is schizophrenic, but not over-exaggeratedly (I wonder if authentic as well?). But the side of music scratch and deep mystification leads to quantifiable qualities and sharp concepts being used. The vocals stay in an astral or acidic spirit, spinning along the roots of freak poetry or (mildly said) tricky lyrics. The rock output defies yet again most values, except for a real treat, this time, of avant-music flabbergasts. The electronic heart-loop and sound-shape of Battiato stay really close to primary and absorbing, but very far from accurate (instead of purely assumed) powerful nerves. Experimentalism is a thing of a basted imagination and desire, making Battiato come up with exemplary moves of powerful, surreal, deluding or blunt furious expressions. And that's the sum of "Clic"'s monstrosity and monumentality. I could not face a paragraph of tracklist details, those being really the last symbols and cadences of this creation's huge resolution - though you can tell which pieces are pure abstractions, which tender the dark deviated romance of rock, which are technical and chunk meditation, or which are sound-metaphors and resemble the experiment's neurasthenia. "Clic" is Battiato's avant-garde classic explosion. Or one of them huge ones. PREMIATA FORNERIA MARCONI (PFM)Storia Di Un Minuto(Studio Album, 1972)![]() Review by Ricochet ("Philip Desmond Halloway") [Special Collaborator Electronic Prog & Art Rock Specialist] Posted 2:37:42 AM EST, 8/18/2007 ![]() To my shame, a imagined a lot of softness and biased ardor in Italian Symph's regular inspiration, only for one of the best such expressions (and, incidentally, one close to being my first ever experience from the entire universal-lengthen catalog) to prove me wrong. The italienesque sapience comes indeed with linguine morphs of passionate, sweet-ceramic or soporifically suave, otherwise the accent would fall on gainful dappers or gigantic tones. But PFM finds a different approach, with no stop at it, combining the sweet candor (and a quite original candid warmth) with notch and fruitful hard arrangements and artistic challenges, much to complement dynamic and suspense, under empathies and lucid vocalities. In rest, the band (and most awarding Storia Di Un Minuto plays and sings under genuine and basic treats of excellent music and extra-viral emotion. The music vibrations of this album are deceitful at times, but always masterful. The dependency is pure progressive, but also aspires and supports originality. A work like Storia Di Un Minuto, not that heavy at all but surely more shaped than within a "minute"'s veritable splendor, is profoundly something of genius, but most especially of a major sensibility. It has most of the classic prog puzzling instrumentality, describing it with an indulgence of a careful expression. The art sounds simple, in terms of fantasy and numbness, colors and serenities. The band here consists of musical poets, who are also aggressive melomans. With a huge effort of mixing the traditional rock band weight with instruments of finesse and radical expressions (mandoloncello, ottavino, clavicembalo!!) and a contrapuntal vocal spirit (almost all the artists know to sign a bit from the tale), Storia Di Un Minuto is an album of very good inspiration, drying a lot to signal a suple supreme progressive act. My personal hero is Mauro Pagani, playing wonderful flute macro-arrangements and ample sonorities - somehow, I am also sure many will love the piquant guitar frenzy, interpreted by Franco Mussida, and di Cioccio's vocal ethereal lead. All the rock passions and lyrical impressions conserve PFM's out stand and show a soul conditioned musical act; there are full caprices of all the beloved dynamics and symphonic dialects, sensing and scoping the artistic embrace and the full demise of imperfections. The walkthrough that follows is the easiest impression yet, since the entire album burns under a clever light of ingenuity. But it is true that each piece enchants specifically. Introduzione is a "prelude-simfonietta", with a hard climax. Impressioni di setembre is agil and tasteful, a first melodic fantasy in the album, with a grand tumultuousness of a prog deep rock rhythm, by scenic keyboards grave choruses. E' Festa is absolutely sensational, as an embalming musical play, going from sensibility till plenitude. Flawless, really, if only the vocals wouldn't oscillate so darkly. Dove...Quando... is a bipartite compositions (disturbingly cut between the two sides, if you have the LP or the vinyl), which overwhelms, under a mini-fantasy of music and complete fragrances, the surreal, the corpulent and the "tempestuoso" of the music. La Carozza di Hans is unnaturally splendid and charming, mostly loving crazy and eclectic rock fireworks, under a mindful melody and beloved heartbeat. Grazie Devvero ends with another full effect, in a constrict ensemble of movements and a graceful freedom; the orchestral-touch beholds the simple guild of the final flair. Storia Di Un Minuto is wonderful, as a typical PFM magic-clasp, and as a simple and hallucinating classic album motive. I'd hate to say that this wouldn't be a five star grand creation, a strong and charming music and, most gently said, one of the most lucid Italian symphonic dreams, sharing a pretty immortal essence. |
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Ely78 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: July 20 2007 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 169 |
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I am happy of to present my special: The RPI (and related) live reviews special.
In this moment is composed from 17 reviews. But it is a clear work in progress.
I hope it comes read and annotated from a lot of forum member.
P.s.: I decided to create a separate thread because I believe have more sight.
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When the love becomes poetry, distant from the eyes
(Quando l'Amore Diventa poesia/ Lontano Dagli occhi [Aphrodite's Child) |
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Ricochet ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 27 2005 Location: Nauru Status: Offline Points: 46301 |
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what happened to vol.15, Elizabeth?
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Ely78 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: July 20 2007 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 169 |
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Well... the volume 15 is a mine old vow without review. Today I created the review and I introduced it. The album is "In Concerto" by Le Orme.
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When the love becomes poetry, distant from the eyes
(Quando l'Amore Diventa poesia/ Lontano Dagli occhi [Aphrodite's Child) |
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Mandrakeroot ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Italian Prog Specialist Joined: March 01 2006 Location: San Foca, Friûl Status: Offline Points: 5851 |
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I return to produce a RPI album review. This fact coincides with a large test. In fact enough to read the review to understand!
FRANCO BATTIATOGilgamesh(Studio Album, 1992)P.s.. Battiato's "Classic Music discographies" ![]() Review by Mandrakeroot (Andrea Salvador) Collaborator Italian Prog Specialist — First review of this album —
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Ricochet ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 27 2005 Location: Nauru Status: Offline Points: 46301 |
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hmm,1992, interesting...
I think I'll explore a bit of what's left from the avant-garde, I skipped Pollution, that may worth a lot, plus more mid-70s works (I'm interested in that album micky said it's purely for "Stockhausen fans" ![]() |
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micky ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 02 2005 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 46838 |
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lots of great stuff to explore Rico.... it isn't easy listening... but it is interesting as all hell. btw. great reviews... ![]() |
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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Mandrakeroot ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Italian Prog Specialist Joined: March 01 2006 Location: San Foca, Friûl Status: Offline Points: 5851 |
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For me... The Avantgarde albums of Battiato are a great tour de force listening. But the compilation "Gli Anni Settanta" is THE great in tour de force listening!!! |
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jimmy_row ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: July 11 2007 Location: Hibernation Status: Offline Points: 2601 |
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Hello friends
Today I've gone on an RPI-spree:
ordered from Greg Walker:
Le Orme - Elementi
Ubi Maior - Nostos
Celeste - s/t
Osage Tribe - Arrowhead
Corte dei Miracoli - s/t
book: "The Return of Italian Pop"
I'll give my thoughts as soon as I get to listen.
Meanwhile, here's one of my current favorites that has been getting some mileage lately:
![]() Didn't expect an awful lot from this one but it's every bit as good as Uomo di Pezza and almost to the level of the mighty Felona e Sorona. The opening track is the most clinical and complex I've heard from Le Orme, they really show their chops on this outting...Aliante has a time sig that makes me dizzy, a drifting synth line flying up and down over an uneasy clavinet/bass rythmn. Overall, it's a very electronic record...a lot of synths, effects, and experimentation. Aldo's vocal approach is as touching as ever, choosing to remain high on the register but never attempting to climb the heights achieved by the more bombastic pieces.
The two tracks that really grab me here are the second, "Frutto Acerbo", and the closer, "Maggio". Maggio is one of the rare longer pieces performed by Le Orme, and it's a good one, very much in the mould of Sospesi Nell Incredibile - atmospheric at the start with treated keyboards and synths for several minutes before switching into a melodic verse accompanied by upbeat, Camel-esque synth lines and bombastic percussion embellishments...then an experimental middle section before returning to the main theme for the final minute or two. From what I can gather, this song is about the conflict at the time in Italy, between church, state, government, extreme ideology, and fighting people therein...offering a voice of reason and hope; that it is all resolvable conflict, opposite corners should see the other's view and try to understand. Of course I know zero Italian and am relying on outside sources so I could be completely wrong.
I've saved Frutto Acerbo for last because at the moment this one really has a hold of me...one of the most beautiful melodies I've ever heard smack dab in the middle of two pompous instrumental workouts. Le Orme show that soft ballad's can fit perfectly if in the proper context, and I must confess a vulnerability to these sort of songs by Italian bands...the mediterranean folk touches are just irresistable and the way Aldo seemlessly glides through the verses with such care and delicacey puts me in a special place removed from the world...yeah flowers and green grass and all that corny stuff (hehe). So what? my favorite song is the silky love song, you gotta problem with that tough guy? Guess I'll just have to go crank up Porta Chiusa to compensate....
Well before I slip into my denial-riden hammond organ feast, I'd like to say that there's a point in Frutto Acerbo (and you English-only speakers will probably know what I'm talking about) were I'm just following along and out come a few words that I actually understand...now this would be good enough to make me smile a bit, but the words matched perfectly to what I feel at that time depending on where I let my imagination go("quanto amore, quanto amore"), at this point I feel an incredible connection with the music, music from a completely different time and place, with one word that inspires such emotions as to defy any reasoning, transcending the barriers of language, time, and space. Maybe one day the world will understand the power of this one word...then we can all sit together and sing along to Time and a Word (okay maybe that's not such a good thing)...nevertheless, until that day comes we can still hold on to the understanding that we have as individuals and the enduring dreams and beauty evoked by the music we love. Peace.
Well, that's my sloppy 25-minute review after 5-8 spins. Needs some editing, listens, and time but you get the picture...I don't care what language the music is in, I "get" it; this RPI stuff is the best I've come across in a while...really has me exited about making new purchases (of course my bank accound and better sense of reasoning not so much).
Long Live RPI
(now that would be a real handy time to know a lick of Italian...I can't even muster "long" or "live"
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Mandrakeroot ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Italian Prog Specialist Joined: March 01 2006 Location: San Foca, Friûl Status: Offline Points: 5851 |
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Well jimmy_row: "Contrappunti" are good album. But I prefer "Collage", "Uomo Di Pezza", "Felona E Sorona", "In Concerto", "Storia O Leggenda", "Antologia 1970- 1980", "'Gioco Di Bimba' E Altri Successi", "Il Fiume" and "L'Infinito". This because, in my opinion, "Contrappunti" is too cold. But, in general, "Contrappunti" remain a great album.
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jimmy_row ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: July 11 2007 Location: Hibernation Status: Offline Points: 2601 |
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![]() I still haven't heard Collage, Il Fiume, Florian, or any of the "poppier" one's but I'm making my way down through their catalogue.....really looking forward to Collage and Florian and then some live recordings.
Excellent band...part of the "big 3" for a reason
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Mandrakeroot ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Italian Prog Specialist Joined: March 01 2006 Location: San Foca, Friûl Status: Offline Points: 5851 |
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![]() ![]() ![]() Not to believe that the trilogy of 90's ("Il Fiume", "Elementi", "L'Infinito") are POP. Le Orme abbandoned the virtuosism and the complicate song only because Le Orme don't have to more it show nothing. With the age (and this farewell for all of the artists, in every field of the art) prevails the concreteness, the message, the emotions and leave themselves the virtuosisms. In the painting a good example is represented from Emilio Widow (Venetian like Le Orme...). Edited by Mandrakeroot - August 23 2007 at 04:23 |
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jimmy_row ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: July 11 2007 Location: Hibernation Status: Offline Points: 2601 |
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By "poppy" albums I meant the mid-70's period (ie Smogmagica and Storia o Leggenda)...I've heard bits of them and they don't seem all that bad. Nevertheless, I'll wait until I have most of their catalogue before I go for the pop stuff. What are your thoughts about Il Fiume? I've read good and bad reviews about it so it must have something controversial.
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memowakeman ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: May 19 2005 Location: Mexico City Status: Offline Points: 13033 |
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Great reviews by Ricochet!!
But now its time to present a couple of reviews i wrote yesterday, and one more by Finnforest!!
DIK DIK, I — Suite Per Una Donna Assolutamente Relativa
Review by memowakeman (Guillermo Hdez. Urdapilleta) Special Collaborator Discogs Editor & Italian Prog Specialist
Posted Wednesday, August 22, 2007, 15:43 EST SORRENTI, ALAN — Aria
Review by memowakeman (Guillermo Hdez. Urdapilleta) Special Collaborator Discogs Editor & Italian Prog Specialist
Posted Wednesday, August 22, 2007, 17:33 EST CITTÀ FRONTALE — El Tor
Review by Finnforest (James) Prog Reviewer
Posted Wednesday, August 22, 2007, 21:10 EST |
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Follow me on twitter @memowakeman |
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