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Finnforest View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 13 2009 at 09:20
Yeah Todd!!!!    Great job man.  Good point about repeated listenings too, I catch these little things with the acoustic guitars that I missed. 

Posted Saturday, June 13, 2009,
 Una Vita Una Balena Bianca e Altre Cose by TESTA, STEFANO album cover Studio Album, 1977
5.00 | 2 ratings

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Una Vita Una Balena Bianca e Altre Cose
Stefano Testa Rock Progressivo Italiano

Review by Todd

5 stars Sometimes the cover says more than we think!

For me, the cover is perfect. A simple engraving, essentially monochrome, so unassuming at first glance. But then the simple lines draw you in, until you see that the thickly muscled monster (Polyphemus?) is holding a pig over its head. Then you open the cover and see a ship in the distance, apparently the target of the impending pig toss. The moment is beautifully captured, suspended in time, inviting the viewer to look beyond the simple form and experience the depths lying behind it.

So it is with the beautiful, pastoral, folk-infused music of Stefano Testa. This album richly rewards those who repeatedly and patiently listen. There are depths to be discovered, complexities not immediately noted. Testa's pleasant Italian voice is complemented by layers of acoustic guitar, bass, drums, flute, and even occasionally accordion or strings. The 16 minute "Una Vita" is for me the best of the album, but there's no weakness here; just song after song with beautiful melodies and sonic textures brilliantly crafted.

Enjoy this RPI masterpiece of the late 1970's while you can. What a treasure!


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 13 2009 at 12:33
Note to self....have to hear this band!

Posted Saturday, June 13, 2009, 12:19 EST | Review Permalink | Submit a review for this album
 Abbiamo Tutti un Blues da Piangere by PERIGEO album cover Studio Album, 1973
3.96 | 15 ratings

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Abbiamo Tutti un Blues da Piangere
Perigeo Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by listen

5 stars This is some excellent space jazz psych prog from Italy that manages at times to be rather mind-blowing. I would make comparisons to Sensations' Fix, Santana (Caravanserai), Weather Report, Brainticket (mainly Celestial Ocean, also Psychonaut), Mahavishnu Orchestra, Popol Vuh, as well as to some Canterbury (Supersister, Soft Machine), Italian Jazz Prog (Picchio Dal Pozzo/Duello Madre/Dedalus), Funk, and Avant Garde (Henry Cow,...). Great album! I was hooked immediately!

My favorite song might be the entrancing opener "Non c'č Tempo da Perdere", but a lot of great stuff on this album. I like the first side a little more as the second drags a little at some points with more soft slow jazzy essays, though there is still a lot to like. A generally very inspired and very proficient jazzy atmosphere fusing influences from many styles, with a nice dose of psych.

I will update and elaborate this review and possibly the rating as I listen more to the album.

4.5 stars


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 13 2009 at 12:38
We have this album in our collection... Time to give it a listenThumbs Up!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 13 2009 at 13:00
I really enjoy Genealogia and La Valle del Templi--I'll have to give that one a listen!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 13 2009 at 16:11
Perigeo... A grerat Jazz band in Rock field!
 
As Baricentro, Arti + (E) Mestieri and Venegoni & Co.!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 13 2009 at 20:58
Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:

Ryan, do you know that Ubi Maior's new album has been released? According to the review I read on MovimentiProg, it is a masterpiece - inspired by Neil Gaiman's work too.
That's what I hear on the streetBig smile  I have it on my list for a Greg Walker order if I manage to drum up enough dough before his sale ends.  But I'm afraid this will hurt "Ryan's Ireland Fund" which is, by the way, still accepting donationsBig smileLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 13 2009 at 21:01
Jimbo, dude, I know you don't just hand out those 5 star reviews like M&M's; I'll definitely grab up the Testa album in the $9 bin if I can...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 13 2009 at 21:59
Originally posted by jimmy_row jimmy_row wrote:

Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:

Ryan, do you know that Ubi Maior's new album has been released? According to the review I read on MovimentiProg, it is a masterpiece - inspired by Neil Gaiman's work too.
That's what I hear on the streetBig smile  I have it on my list for a Greg Walker order if I manage to drum up enough dough before his sale ends.  But I'm afraid this will hurt "Ryan's Ireland Fund" which is, by the way, still accepting donationsBig smileLOL



Maybe we need to start a "cash-strapped student RPI fund" ???LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 17:43
Nah, we just keep mentioning the comparative value of internet downloads (legal, like from Band sites or commercial, i.e. label or music sites) versus CDs shipped halfway across the world.
Especially when you consider that album artwork, lyrics, and all sorts of additional goodies may be downloaded as part of the purchase.
"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 18:41
I've actually considered going that route with my future RPI buys, DB...but when you open a btf mini-LP sleeve somehow you just don't care that it cost $22.  I really do wish I could find some better deals on ebay though...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 19:39
Sorry DB, but its not for me.  I want the CD quality sound.....and I don't have a printer than can deliver the marvelous quality of the BTF minis, which is my preferred form of RPI. 

Maybe someday if I have a kickarse printer and the download burn sounds as good as a disc. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 19:42
Originally posted by jimmy_row jimmy_row wrote:

I've actually considered going that route with my future RPI buys, DB...but when you open a btf mini-LP sleeve somehow you just don't care that it cost $22.  I really do wish I could find some better deals on ebay though...
 
 
CD cost... A great problem!
 
Because they have to cost so much?
 
€ 20 for a new released CD... Are you mad? Where they want us to go get the money to promote the albums?
 
Personally I will never understand that in politics there in this exasperation of Cds prices!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 19:58
It does suck Mandi....the big price tags for RPI.  The thing is, I am perfectly happy to pay more if I knew the extra was going to the artists, but I have a feeling it does not. 

In any case, I'm very happy to support the Italian bands and the good labels....and will continue so long as I'm drawing a paycheckBig smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 20:11
Has any of you heard the Colossus Project's 4-disc opus based on Dante's Inferno? There are lots of Italian bands and musicians involved.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 20:15
I have not Raff.  Heard it talked about by many, but never got to it myself.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 22:10
Originally posted by Finnforest Finnforest wrote:

It does suck Mandi....the big price tags for RPI.  The thing is, I am perfectly happy to pay more if I knew the extra was going to the artists, but I have a feeling it does not. 

In any case, I'm very happy to support the Italian bands and the good labels....and will continue so long as I'm drawing a paycheckBig smile
Seriously, you should be getting all kinds of free stuff by now...the one man PR machineLOL  I'm trying to get my hands on this Ubi Maior album, do you ever talk to them?  I would SO write a review of it if I could hear the thing, I'm sure it's great.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 22:12
Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:

Has any of you heard the Colossus Project's 4-disc opus based on Dante's Inferno? There are lots of Italian bands and musicians involved.
It sounds like a great idea in theory,  I heard one of the project's albums (Spaghetti Epic) and wan't impressed, but maybe the others are better?  Is it in the archives?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 22:31
Good review David!ClapClapClap

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 Picchio Dal Pozzo  by PICCHIO DAL POZZO album cover Studio Album, 1976
4.18 | 44 ratings

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Picchio Dal Pozzo
Picchio Dal Pozzo Canterbury Scene

Review by Atavachron
Special Collaborator Art Rock Specialist

3 stars A band divergent from their homeland scene in 1976, Picchio dal Pozzo seemed more at home with the roomy sounds of American jazz and the space it provided to develop spontaneously, and less with the formalities of the cherubic Italian prog canon. Consequently this debut claims its own territory, separate even from the Canterburian identity they're given, a record more in common with Zappa's exploratory surgery or Pink Floyd's sound-striding than any grand operas.

Guitarist Paolo Griguolo's overdubbed nylon arpeggios are soon joined by the synths of Aldo de Scozi for 'Merta' [a cut also featured on Cherry Red's indispensable compilation Prog is Not a Four-Letter Word], graduating into 'Cocomelastico', its clashing horns, dreamy Fender piano and the sounds of an Italian family starting the day. Downright space age is 10-minute 'Seppia' with more sickly brass as it moves into a mean groove led by Andrea Beccari's heavy bottom and the sting of Griguolo's fuzztone, all backed with a playful xylophone [by guest Ciro Perrino], a young man's cantori and the band's Yes-like chorale. The carnivals of 'Napier' disintegrate into an astral trip with touches of Herbie Hancock, several flutes, and distinct English pastorals in 'La Floricoltura di Tschincinnata' ending with an Italian argument of epic proportions. Erik Satie's softness is imbued for 'La Bolla', finishing with the jazz vocalizations of 'Off'.

An unexpected and welcome fork in the Italian prog road, and an album less likely to scare away newcomers to what Italy was offering in the mid-1970s. Recommended.




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 22:55
hey thanks Jim, always nice to hear


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 14 2009 at 22:58
It seems I'll never get into Sorrentis Smile, but anyway one more well-written review:


 Saint Just  by SAINT JUST album cover
Studio Album, 1972
3.60 | 15 ratings 

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Saint Just 
Saint Just Prog Folk

Review by ClemofNazareth 
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Researcher

3 stars Saint Just came to me highly recommended but with a warning that they wouldn’t likely ‘click’ at first, but over time would grow in appeal considerably. That turned out to be an accurate description.

This was an Italian trio from Naples who set out with the intent of creating a unique, modern sound that at the same time respected tradition and was dreamy and colorful and free from any restrictions of convention. I know this because the CD’s liner notes say so. I think they succeeded for the most part. There are a few points on the album where I get the impression the three of them are trying a bit to hard to be unique and clever and kind of fall flat, but these are few and you can’t make an omelet without breaking a few eggs anyway.

Like I said the band is a trio, they’re Italian and they are playing modern folk rock. That should tell you enough about there sound. But it doesn’t really. In addition to the gorgeous classical piano you’d expect there are also occasional blasts of psych electric guitar on “Il Fiume Inondo” and “Una Bambina”; bongos and castanets with dense rhythms (“Una Bambina”); carnival-like organ with gentle plucked acoustic guitar accompaniment (“Trister Poeta di Corte”); and even a sort of spoken/chanted-word piece with a thudding backbeat that could easily be sampled by some up-and-coming hip-hop musician even today (“Saint Just”).

But the two most prominent and overwhelming characteristics of this music come in the form of the singer listed simply as “Jane” in the liner notes (“Jenny Sorrenti”), and saxophonist Robert Fix. Sorrenti has one of those voices that you’ll love or hate, but either way will take some time to get used to. It’s hard to say what register or octave she’s singing in most of the time, but she comes off sort of like Bernadette Peters doing Kate Bush covers. After some time I’ve sort of come to appreciate her voice although she is undoubtedly on the outer fringe of prog singers, along with Geddy Lee, Colin Meloy, Kate Bush and probably even Peter Hammill.

The songs are a mixed-bag despite all being clearly in the prog folk arena. The opening and lengthy “Il Fiume Inondo” persists a lovely piano line that is alternately accented by the saxophone, Sorrenti’s soaring vocals, tasty guitar licks and Fix’s reverberating and undulating saxophone passages. What starts out as a classically-tinged acoustic instrumental ends up being a sort of operatic psych trance thing, and the delicate piano passage eventually gives way to some harsh, discordant and jazzy ivory-tickling before the whole thing is over. I’ll give these guys credit that they managed to put out something pretty unique, and not at all what you’d expect by looking at the cover or liner notes.

“Il Risveglio” almost plays out in reverse of “Il Fiume Inondo”, opening pretty quickly and energetically with Sorrenti’s vocals and guest Gianni Guarracino’s jamming electric guitar licks before working its way into a mild jazz bridge and finally to a pastoral piano and saxophone passage that is tastefully framed by classical and some electric guitar. “Dolci Momenti” on the other hand is quite brief, and mostly emphasizes Sorrenti’s vocals along with organ bells and pipes.

I like “Una Bambina” the most on this record, with its shape-shifting sections that, like the opening track, move from classical piano and operatic vocals to tight fuzzed psych guitar and strummed acoustic that themselves give way to a highly syncopated rhythm with castanets, Sorrenti overdubbing herself in two widely separated octaves with what sounds more like an intense Latin love song, and Fix’s really wacky sax.

There are only six songs on the album and the last two are much more restrained that the earlier ones, although “Trister Poeta di Corte” does include a brief cacophonic passage of sax and guitar. Otherwise it ends up as mostly a very long and plodding drum/piano dirge that eventually just plays itself out.

The closing track bears the same name as the band, but is one of the shortest tracks on the album. It was clearly meant as a closing piece and is highlighted by some very tasteful classical guitar and the carnival-like atmosphere established by guest keyboardist Mario D'Amora.

I doubt record this will remain high on my playlist for very long, but I’m glad I was introduced to these guys and look forward to hearing their second and final album if I can ever find it; that one was released on CD many years ago but I doubt it is still available. Anyway, well- recommended to prog folk fans, possibly to fans of Italian prog, and to those who think Clare Grogan was the best part of Altered Images. Three stars.

peace



Edited by NotAProghead - June 14 2009 at 23:07
Who are you and who am I to say we know the reason why... (D. Gilmour)
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