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AtomicCrimsonRush View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 09 2012 at 21:27
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Arcane

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Brisbane heavy prog band that have a prog metal flavour but more melodic. The music may remind some of Porcupine Tree or Angra, that is at times ambient tranquility and ethereal soundscapes that break out into heavy bursts of story distorted guitar riffs. The music sounds similar to Riverside in the vocals and ranges from very heavy guitar to keyboard beauty and very quiet passages to balance the outbreaks of crunching guitar or frenetic keyboard solos. The odd time signatures and song structures with special effects and weird variations in tempo are absolutely captivating. One of the best prog metal bands from Australia without a doubt. They play at Progfest often and are becoming well known world wide thanks to youtube and the official website.  

The current line up:

- Jim Grey / Vocals
- Michael Gagen / Guitars
- Matt Martin / Keyboards
- Brendon Blanchard / Bass
- Blake Coulson / Drums


The albums:

2007 - Ashes


2009 - Chronicles of the Waking Dream


A review:

Review by UMUR 
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4 stars "Chronicles Of The Waking Dream" is the 2nd full-length studio album by Australian progressive metal act Arcane. The album was released through Arcane Australia in September 2009.

The band released a promising debut album in 2007 called "Ashes", and the dark and melancholic progressive metal style featured on that album is continued and developed further on "Chronicles Of The Waking Dream". While the debut album featured the 24:15 minutes long title track, which was divided into five parts, "Chronicles Of The Waking Dream" takes that concept a little further as all tracks on the album seque into each other to form a regular concept album. Arcane play a layered and keyboard heavy type of progressive metal with both really heavy moments but also mellower emotional sections too. While the instrumental part of the music is impressive enough, itīs the vocals byJim Grey that really set Arcane apart from most other progressive metal acts. He has a very distinct sounding voice and a convincing emotional delivery.

The tracks are structurally challenging, dynamic and itīs hard to pinpoint just one influence. I think I hear influences from both "classic" progressive metal in the vein of Dream Theater, but also influences from the more alternative part of the progressive metal scene. Acts like Riverside and A Perfect Circleprobably arenīt strangers to these guys.

"Chronicles Of The Waking Dream" is not an easy listen and itīs taken me quite a few listens to grasp the full 59:15 minutes long album. Thereīs simply a lot to take in, but in a positive way. So if you enjoy your progressive metal challenging (not necessarily focused on technical playing though) and delivered with great emotional impact "Chronicles Of The Waking Dream" is definitely a recommended listen. A 4 - 4.5 star (85%) rating is deserved.



My Review:


4 starsArcane are an Australian prog metal band that will appeal to those who love Riverside or other bands who merge heavy riffs with clear singing and intricate compositions. They have an endearing sound that is creative and moves in unexpected directions with odd time shifts and innovative musicianship. Tracks such as the mini epic 'Asylum: Acolyte Zero' have stunning complex structures, with killer riffs, complex times sigs and inject blends of grinding guitars with delightful melodic keyboards. The lengthy instrumental break features Michael Gagen's polished guitar work along with Matt Martin's keyboard wizardry. Jim Grey does a fine job on vocals, and the rhythm machine of Brendon Blanchard's bass and Blake Coulson's drums are wonderful. The double kick drumming is machine like and the song tends to build into heavier sections with faster singing pentameter at 9 minutes. It breaks into a soft vox and gentle piano, then builds into a symphonic soundscape, and some atmospheric choral voices. This is one of the highlights and really impressed me. Another awesome song is 'Fading' beginning with soft vocals and light guitar touches. The piano is lovely and it builds gradually with lead guitar flourishes and some symphonic keys. When the music fades out there is an a capella section for a moment and then grinding metal riffs break through.

The songs blend into each other to create a seamless musical experience with a conceptual framework that has mystical overtones. It involves a protagonist who is losing his grip on reality, perhaps even becoming deranged, and he becomes obsessed with the date of May 26th to the point where it haunts him and has some enigmatic meaning, though we van never be certain of what it all means. At times it is an unsettling excursion into a mentally unbalanced mind, but musically it is always a sheer delight.

The opening songs feature uplifting piano mixed with darker metal riffs, and the idiosyncratic vocals of Grey. The intro is a disjointed voice explaining the importance of May 26, then the music floats over, very melancholy and soft. It builds to heavier tones and segues into the next track.

The instrumental break in 'The Seer' is reminiscent of Dream Theater, with guitar and keyboard trade offs. Overall this track showcases the style of the band that moves from beauty to darker textures. 'The Malice' has a dreamy feel, and the piano instrumental to follow is beautiful. The climax is with the epic 'Asylum: Acolyte Zero'and then it settles into the closing track, a gentle piece called 'Whisper'.

The style of the album is like Pain of Salvation or Riverside, with beautiful moments juxtaposed by outbreaks of heavy guitars. It is an excellent album and yet another example of Australian prog metal at its finest.


The Music:

Promo clip:





Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 30 2012 at 07:38
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 09 2012 at 21:45
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Ariel
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This prog related band was the product of Aus legendary bands Tamam Shud and Spectrum. Members of these bands got together to form a fairly popular band back in the 70s that churned out a swag of albums until a lengthy hiatus and then they surfaced in 2002 to release one more final album. Guitarist/singer Mike Rudd and bassist Bill Putt formed the group and recruited Spectrum members when they dissolved. Their debut "A Strange Fantastic Dream" that came out in 1973 reached #12 on Australian LP charts in 1974. The music is stoner psych with rock guitars and acid fuelled lyrics. They even embarked on a concept album of sorts, and seemed to be exploring the same sound as Nektar or Fuzzy Duck at times. The vocals were well executed and high register at times. The lead guitar solos are excellent, soaring and fast, and the Hammond organ permeates the sound.


The original line up:

Mike Rudd - Lead Vocals/Guitar
Bill Putt - Bass/Backing Vocals
Tim Gaze - Lead Guitar/Backing Vocals
John Mills - Keyboards
Nigel Macara -Drums


2002 line up:

- Mike Rudd / Lead Vocals, Guitars
- Bill Putt / Bass
- Glyn Mason / Guitar, Vocals
- Harvey James / Guitar
- John Lee / drums

The albums:

1974 - A Strange Fantastic Dream


1975 - Rock and Roll Scars


1976 - Goodnight Fiona


2002 - The Jellabad Mutant







The Music from the debut:








Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - September 09 2012 at 21:51
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 09 2012 at 22:04
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Arnioe

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Multi instrumentalist Aron Scharfegger has released a number of albums with soft rock and spacey textures. At times he incorporates other musicians onto the albums, and mostly self produces each release. Many tracks are instrumental and evoke images of beauty and tranquility. The vox at times may remind some of Peter Gabriel such as on "Something Something". Aron refers to his music as Renaissance Space Rock and this is an appropriate description.

The albums:

2007 - Forever Free


2008 - For I've Been There


2009 - Sick Son


2010 - So Heaven Is Gone


2011 - Ate My Words


2012 - One Before X



My review of "Ate My Words":

Review by AtomicCrimsonRush 
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3 stars Home grown Aussie multi-instrumentalist Aron Scharfegger's latest album clocks 71 minutes and is purely based on one musical theme. The album is titled "Ate My Words" and he presents the theme in 8 parts on this 2011 release. Aron plays many instruments ranging from guitars, piano, keyboards, synthesizers, percussion, bass guitar and saxophone. There are guest artists on the album that add to the musicscape including Greg Genna on guitar, Chris Fournier on synthesizers, guitar, and bass, as well as vocalist Mahne Dupre and the Kiew Youth Orchestra who play the orchestrated sounds of violins, cellos, basson, and horns. The production is excellent and there are some definite moments of brilliance and an overall consistent sound quality.

Arnioe's instrumental album begins with very spacey synth swirls, very patiently building in intensity from the minimalism of a solo synth to a wall of sound. At 3:40 the organ staccato chords slam in over the manic synthesizers and really lift the ambience to a solid punctuated beat.

Part 2 begins with strange synth effects and a sustained keyboard pad ascending in volume. The spacey phased electric guitar solo is terrific. Some vocalisations are included on this, though incoherent, and they work rather well with the progressive feel of the music.

Part 3 is very different with creepy violins ascending and descending over a strong percussion and synth squiggles. The atmospherics are broken with vocalisations and scats. The heavy guitars come in eventually and overpower the sound.

Part 4 is a plethora of majestic vocals, and a choir with a strong upbeat tempo to drive it. The mood is rather sombre in places and a delightful lead guitar break lifts the mood.

Part 5 is a happier melody and this contrasts sharply with the shadowy bleakness of Track 6. It begins with big booming drum pounding, backmasked creepy vocals and an ethereal violin sound creating a haunting chilling atmosphere. Part 6 is perhaps the darkest track on the album and it builds to a terrific Pink Floyd style guitar piece.

Part 7 is the best track with a killer riff driving it along and some absolutely sensational organ work and very heavy guitars. Lead breaks abound and shift from left to right speaker alternating in volume. The sound is heavier and more forceful bordering on metal. The Hammond sounds are high pitched and very strong.

Part 8 features awesome emotional saxophone playing and a very powerful back beat. The sax reflects the isolation and melancholia of the music. There are some very innovative melodies on display, pretty acoustics, and percussive excellence. The song locks into an elongated Dave Gilmour style lead guitar solo and some spacey effects. Overall the song is another highlight on the album.

Arnioe's latest album is an instrumental treat and has a myriad of emotional mood swings. The musicians are solid performers and there are some real surprises with light and dark textures on the canvas. 3 solid stars for sheer innovation in the compositions and delightful musicianship.


The music:

Promo:

music with Tasmanian images


Official website:


http://www.arnioe.com/



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 09 2012 at 22:21
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Ayers Rock


Jazz Rock fusion from the 70s released some albums on Mushroom labels. The upbeat tempo and bright guitar playing are a feature, and the vocals are easy on the ears. The lead solos are excellent from Chris Brown and James Doyle. The lengthy instrumental breaks are the main drawcard, especially the twin guitar harmonies. The contribution of Col Loughnan on saxes, clarinet, flute, keyboards, percussion, and vocals is the other reason to check out these rockers. The second album is the proggiest no doubt, but all of their songs have an endearing quality well worth checking out.   


The original line up:

- Chris Brown / guitar, vocals 
- James Doyle / guitar, vocals 
- Mark Kennedy / drums 
- Col Loughnan / saxes, clarinet, flute, keyboards, percussion, vocals 
- Duncan McGuire / bass

The EP:


1974 - Big Red Rock


The albums:

1976 - Beyond


1980 - Hotspell 



My review of "Beyond":

Review by AtomicCrimsonRush 
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3 stars Ayers Rock came to my attention back in the 70s when I was listening to Skyhooks. The inner cover of "Ego is not a dirty word" had a number of album covers listed as a form of promotion for Mushroom labels, and the iconic image of Ayers Rock on the cover was always something that made me wonder what this band would sound like. Interestingly enough the EP "Big Red Rock" is actually a live album with very rocked up songs sounding nothing like the work on this debut album release. The music on "Beyond" is more jazz fusion, and instrumentals abound, though at times it verges back to the straight forward sound of "Big Red Rock".

The album begins with ethereal atmospherics on 'Moondah (Beyond)' that relies heavily on Col Loughlan's keyboard skills and woodwind. The aboriginal sounds are prevalent using clicking sticks and a didgeridoo droning effect. It breaks into beautiful guitar and keyboard melodies, with chimes and strong percussion. It is a delightful melody and very original sound, and allows for lengthy twin guitar solos using wah wah pedal and tremolo bar. The sax lends a nice jazz edge along with the rocking tempo.

'A Place To Go' features a moderate tempo and a sax melody, and the vocals at last come in. The smooth approach is welcome and sounds a bit bluesy in style. The string section is beautiful on this giving it a symphonic quality. The sound is akin to Santana with the cool guitar solos and breezy tempos. 'Catchanemu' is a showcase for percussionist Mark Kennedy, using a full on drum attack. The sax sounds are prominent and powerfully played by Col. The lead guitar playing is like Carlos Santana, soaring and emotional throughout.

'Song For Darwin' is dedicated to the victims and survivors of the devastating Cyclone Tracey that hit Darwin in 1975 and left thousands homeless just prior to Christmas. The disaster is one of the worst in Australian history and it is nice to hear a song dedicated to the catastrophic event, and this is better than the more popular at the time 'Santa Never Made It Into Darwin'. 'Angel In Disguise' is another instrumental that begins with chimes and sparse piano. It builds with gorgeous violin strings, harps and a full symphonic sound of transfixing beauty. Guitar swells and cymbal splashes add to the light textures. A steady bass sig locks in with a lovely lead guitar solo and spacey keyboard squelches. A very relaxing piece of music is the result, and definitely shows what the band were capable of. It builds to a nice fast tempo and some extreme wah wah guitar finesse.

'Little Kings' finishes the album with a rock song, sounding like Traffic, that is uncharacteristic of the music previous. It certainly wakes you up after the beauty preceding and is a decent way to close things off. I like the sax on this and it has an infectious chorus melody.

Overall this is a solid album from Ayers Rock, though is uneven and inconsistent in terms of the musical approach. Rather than sticking to one style it tends to veer into some odd songs that ruin the overall feel of the album. In any case it is worth seeking out as there is some fine music here and it is a prime example of 70s jazz fusion, and perhaps Ayers Rock's finest recording.



The music:














Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - September 09 2012 at 23:15
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 05:30
Must be time to get on with bands beginning with B.... will do soon.


BAK Experimental/Post Metal
BAKERY Heavy Prog
BECAUSE OF GHOSTS Post Rock/Math rock
IVAN BERTOLLA Progressive Metal
BRAINSTORM Psychedelic/Space Rock
BREAKING ORBIT Heavy Prog


Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 01 2012 at 06:11
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 06:32
Blackfeathers first album "At The Mountains Of Madness"  was probably one of the few Aussie Prog albums around in 1971. ....could have been the first!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 06:33
Bak

BaK is a duo of composers Beau, guitar/bass/bağlama, and Kit, drums/percussion and keyboards/piano. The band incorporate a variety of styles merging into one project, from symphonic orchestrations, Eastern music, Arabic flavours and distorted metal bites. It is a theatrical treatment that the band desire and the two members write, compose and arrange the original compositions. The recording is based in Sydney and a generous sized crew of talented session musicians impact the overall sound making it full and sweeping, with Symphony Orchestra, on strings, brass, woodwind, Opera Choir, local ethnic musicians playing East Indian styles, and professional singers among others. For all these reasons the band do not perform live, and have only one album at this stage. 


The line up:

- Beau / guitar, bass, bağlama
- Kit / drums, percussion, keyboards, piano


The Album:

BaK Painter album cover

Listen to this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RkHRSl5QoKA





More info at : www.bakmusic.com


Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 01 2012 at 06:34
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 06:37
Originally posted by tyranny tyranny wrote:

Blackfeathers first album "At The Mountains Of Madness"  was probably one of the few Aussie Prog albums around in 1971. ....could have been the first!!


Ah yes this one has really made an impact online over the years and i wish it was included on PA but alas rejected by the teams.

To hear for one's self it is worth considering. Here's the whole thing!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 06:41
Originally posted by tyranny tyranny wrote:

Blackfeathers first album "At The Mountains Of Madness"  was probably one of the few Aussie Prog albums around in 1971. ....could have been the first!!

It's more psych rock to me, not devoid of prog though. Spectrum - Milesago, released in the same year, is excellent!  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 06:45
Originally posted by irrelevant irrelevant wrote:

Originally posted by tyranny tyranny wrote:

Blackfeathers first album "At The Mountains Of Madness"  was probably one of the few Aussie Prog albums around in 1971. ....could have been the first!!

It's more psych rock to me, not devoid of prog though. Spectrum - Milesago, released in the same year, is excellent!  


Okay fair enough - I just made a thread requesting that the band be included here:




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 07:03
Originally posted by AtomicCrimsonRush AtomicCrimsonRush wrote:

Originally posted by irrelevant irrelevant wrote:

Originally posted by tyranny tyranny wrote:

Blackfeathers first album "At The Mountains Of Madness"  was probably one of the few Aussie Prog albums around in 1971. ....could have been the first!!

It's more psych rock to me, not devoid of prog though. Spectrum - Milesago, released in the same year, is excellent!  


Okay fair enough - I just made a thread requesting that the band be included here:





They're at least prog-related I reckon, we'll see how it goes.   
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 07:05
Bakery

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Perth band Bakery began in 1970 in the underground scene releasing a highly regarded debut album "Rock Mass for Love" with the single "No Dying In The Dark". The members of the band at the time were John Worrall, "wild-haired guitarist" Peter Walker (ex-Jelly Roll Bakers), Mal Logan (ex-The Rebels), Eddie McDonald and Hank Davis. A second single appeared, a Deep Purple cover of "Bloodsucker" but they were best remembered for "No Dying in the Dark". The influences of the band were Sabbath, Zeppelin and Purple no doubt, and they seemed to fit into the heavy sound of the early 70s, even charting well in Australia, reaching number 9 with the first single. A second album came out in 1972 "Momento" before they faded into obscurity.


The original lineup:
John Worrall / vocals, flute
Tom Davidson / vocals,
Mark Verschuer / vocals
Eddie McDonald / bass
Rex Bullen / keyboards
Hank Davis / drums

The Albums:

1971
Bakery Rock Mass for Love album cover

1972


Listen to this:






Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 01 2012 at 07:11
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 07:23
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Because of Ghosts

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Post Math Rock band consisting of Jacob Pearce on drums, samples, glockenspiel, and Reuben Stanton on guitar, accordion, piano. They released three EPs as a duo between 2002 and 2003, "No More Reason, No More Doubt" and "Because of Ghosts EP", and later Domenic Stanton joined the band on bass, glockenspiel, wineglasses. Their album "Make Amends With Your Adversary Before Dawn" resulted in an international release with Japan label Wonderground music. In 2004 on this label they released an EP "Your House is Built on a Frozen Lake". With this they toured and gained significant airplay. 

The lineup:

- Reuben Stanton / guitar, accordion, piano
- Domenic Stanton / bass, glockenspiel
- Jacob Pearce / drums, sampling, vocals, glockenspie

The Albums:

BECAUSE OF GHOSTS Albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

2.00 | 1 ratings
Make Amends With Your Adversary Before Dawn
2004
3.67 | 3 ratings
The Tomorrow We Were Promised Yesterday
2006
4.50 | 2 ratings
This Culture of Background Noise
2008






Listen to this:







Discover more here:




Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 01 2012 at 07:24
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 07:33
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Ivan Bertolla

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Melbourne multi instrumentalist, focussing on guitar, Bertolla has produced a highly recommended sole instrumental album "Beyond The Skies Eternity" in 2002. It combines elements of metal, Gothic choirs, orchestral nuances and theatrical cinematic dramatic music. He has also produced music found online for various projects.


The Lineup:

- Ivan Bertolla / all electric guitars, guitar synthesizer, classical guitar, synth solos, bass programming, drum programming ("Eclipse", "Orient Express", "Cathedral", "Lost In Infinity", "Shoemaker-Levy") 
- Tony Murray / piano 
- Robert Parolin / drums, drum programming

The Album:

Ivan Bertolla Beyond The Skies Eternity album cover


Listen to his music here:







Discover more here:

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 07:45
Brainstorm

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Brainstorm are from Melbourne and they began their successful career playing covers until branching out into a style reminiscent of Hawkwind meets Blue Oyster Cult. The lineup changed regularly until finally remaining with the current members Steve Bechervaise on Keyboards, Craig Carter on Guitars, vocals, Vittorio Di Iorio on Percussion, Paul Foley on Vocals, guitars and Jeff Powerlett on Bass, vocals. There have been 5 albums released to date, and some have conceptual themes running through such as 1998's "Tales of the future" that deals with a dystopian future, and is regarded as one of their best albums in the prog community. 

The current lineup:

- Steve Bechervaise / Keyboards
- Craig Carter / Guitars, vocals
- Vittorio Di Iorio / Percussion
- Paul Foley / Vocals, guitars
- Jeff Powerlett / Bass, vocals


The Albums:

0.00 | 0 ratings
Brainstorm
1993
3.00 | 1 ratings
Brainstorm Two - Earth Zero 
1995
4.50 | 2 ratings
Tales Of The Future 
1998
4.00 | 1 ratings
Desert World
2005
0.00 | 0 ratings
Planetfall
2012


A review by Mellotron Storm:

 Desert World by BRAINSTORM album cover

4 stars This is a concept album that takes us to the future near the end of the twenty-sixth century. The Earth lays in ruins,a barren desert as it has been destroyed by war and pollution leaving twenty billion people dead. This is about the survivors who now live on Mars and have struggled to survive. I know it all sounds so bleak but you just have to look on the back of the album cover to see the band in a flying car(Valiant) or on the back inside cover where we see them buried up to their necks in the desert(they are laughing) to know that these guys are not taking this too serious. There is no doubt though that the band has enviromental concerns as witnessed on their "Brainstorm Two-Eart Zero" album,where they had even more fun to go along with the serious message. Well it's been ten years since that album and i feel they have improved in many ways. I like the fact that this record has a concept and that the music doesn't vary much. This is Psychedelic/Spacerock from start to finish. The earlier album had a lot of Rock tunes and not much Spacerock.

"The Light" has a lot of contrasts throughout. It opens with a melancholic mood and a slower pace.The guitar breaks out a couple of times before the synths come in,some aggressive guitar as the drums pound away. A lot of spacey synths are being fired off before we get back to the mellow soundscape from the beginning that again features some guitar breakouts. "Occupation" is not a favourite as it features short outbursts of drums that are followed by the guitar responding, then synths responding, and so on. Too predictible and boring. "Unfathomed Darkness' is an instrumental of acoustic guitar being strummed (at first) accompanied by drums.This is a good tune. "Mutants" is very spacey with psychedelic guitars. Nice. The tempo picks up 4 minutes in as flute is added to the mix. Lots of spacey synths arrive later. I love this stuff !

"Shadow Of The Past" has some really fat bass lines and sweeping synths as the tempo changes quickly and often. "Paradise Lost" features flute and acoustic guitar to create a beautiful melody. Before 4 minutes the vocals come in as well as vocal melodies which are a nice touch. "Martian Chronicle" is a guitar driven tune to start with before the slows down and waves of synths come in. Some vocal melodies,flute and aggressive guitar to follow. "Goblins" is the other instrumental. I like the rhythm they create in this song. "Desert World" is the final track. It has some good vocals as the song seems to drift along. I like the instrumental interlude of flute and synths that starts to build as drums arrive. The ending is long and spacey that just goes on and on.

The acoustic guitar and flute is a welcome addition to the sound of the record. The lead guitar is not the focus here,it's more the synths and drums or percussion. I like this record a lot although i think you need to be a fan of Psychedelic/space rock music to really appreciate it. 4 stars.


Listen to them here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r1q-AnoiFu4





Discover heaps more here:







Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 01 2012 at 08:02
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2012 at 07:56
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Breaking Orbit

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A heavy prog band from Sydney who has gained some acceptance recently after years of playing live gigs around Australia. They released two single/EPs, "My Direction" and "Callsign" in 2010 building a devoted local fanbase. The recent album "The Time Traveller" has made them even more successful and they are begining to spark worldwide recognition online with this highly regarded conceptual master work. The music is akin to Dream Theater, complex and intricate with lengthy instrumental sections and it follows a storyline of a time travellers and his adventures as he attempts to relay an important message from the future to our present involving ground breaking news that will transform our world, and he is going to extract our seed to take back to the future


The Album:



My Review:


4 stars A journey into cosmic timespace travel with metal crunches and ambient beauty.

Breaking Orbit's "The Time Traveller" is a concept album with a healthy blend of symphonic and heavy prog. The album cover art is exemplary featuring the science fiction theme of venturing beyond into new realms of time as we see the iconic figure of a sage holding a mystical object as the cosmos evaporates around him. This is the same figure that adorned the previous singles "My Direction" and "Callsign". Incidentally both the title tracks of these have been revamped for inclusion on this new album along with an extended version of 'Orion'.

The first encounter with Breaking Orbit on "The Time Traveller" is 'Echoes' that sets the scene with an intro of preternatural white noise distortion and spacey swirls, as we are whisked out of our time zone into a netherverse removed from reality. The distorted guitars signify that the sound will be laced with metal but the synths keep us firmly planted in a progressive territory. The music is organic and flowing until the vocals join in. Matt Quayle's singing is clean and untainted by forced aggression. The lyrics form part of the mystery encapsulated in the hypnotic music; "will we ever make it through, only time will tell". An integral part of the sound are the loud blasts of guitar, played by both Quayle and Dylan Mitrovitch, that overwhelm the symphonic nuances. The beat is formulated by unusual time signature changes and slowed down chord crashes that speed up rhythmically; enough to keep any metronome battling to keep up.

This track blends seamlessly into 'Conscious Self' with ambient pads that are suddenly torn apart by murderous lead guitar speed picking. Quayle's vocals are more falsetto and high register relating a continuing and developing story line. The lyrics focus on freedom from bondage, escaping into a new world outside of consciousness; "the rain falling through the clouds", so "fill my heart" and "walk me through the rain". There are some scratchier vocals to balance the cleaner singing. The guitar riffs are powerfully executed over the drum crashes of Mark Tyson, and this track is a highlight on this album with a great depth of emotion and precision musicianship.

'My Direction' has a percussion intro and some innovative guitar picking as the lyrics are heard "is anyone going in my direction, done all I can to stop the madness, take my hand and follow." The prog time sig is excellent on this track; fast paced and creative with strong melodies. The rhythm is driven by powerful guitars and a slab of Ayden Mitrovitch's bass and Tyson's drum rhythmic drama. This is a wonderful heavy prog track that has become a definitive highlight for this reviewer.

'Machiguenga' begins with a pulsing heartbeat that builds into an atmospheric ambience and a bamboo flute played by Amaru Farrel. This flute or Quena is a reminiscent sound of pan pipes. The spacey soundscape is augmented by vocal intonations, and it sounds very primitive or tribalistic, especially with the clanging percussion. This tribal flavour is intentional as the Machiguenga are a hunter-gatherer tribe of short warriors from the Amazon Basin on Peru. I recognised instantly the elegant 'pan pipes' melody of "A Picnic at Hanging Rock", one of my favourite films. The distorted guitar staccato blasts provide the heaviness while the jungle rhythms continue. There are more bamboo flutes adding a mysterious quality with ethereal haunting beauty to this instrumental. Later, inventive drum soloing trade off with the woodwind with sporadic flourishes; a very nice musical transition piece between the songs.

'Time Traveller' has rhythmic metal riffs with an odd meter. The vocals are rough at first and follow the weird time signature. Then more vocals follow that fluctuate between clean and growling vocals. The beat also fluctuates with quaking riff tremors and loud splashes of percussion. A spoken narrative adds some atmosphere and then the band launch into an instrumental break with innovative lead guitar helped by wah-wah effects. The concept is based on the time traveller coming from the future to our present with an important message that will transform our world, and he is going to extract our seed to take back to the future; the main vision of lyricist visionary Matt Quayle.

'Transcension (part 1)' is a short musical interlude of acoustic vibrations and haunting flute, that resonates beautifully after all the heaviness previous. It is followed by 'Callsign' with a Pink Floyd like guitar echoing phrase and then vocals, centring on the desperation of searching for a sign. The lyrics are esoteric laced with metaphors such as "moonlight slowly begins to fade", and "I have traded the high life for one last chance" and the protagonist finds himself lost in time. The riff and style remind me of Tool, and the vocals get heavier in the next section before a blazing lead guitar breaks out. It is a great song that rocks along vibrantly. The term 'transcension' may be linked to the hypothesis that once intelligence saturates its local environment, it is constrained to leave local spacetime, hence the time traveller theme.

'Harmonic Voice' is an instrumental dominated by a spiritual bamboo flute and ominous droning menace. The flute and atmosphere are again reminiscent of Peter Weir's "Picnic at Hanging Rock" where the girls walk to their doom up the rock and disappear into the void; perhaps an intentional homage to the film that has become an Australian icon. At this point in the album I was convinced it was no coincidence as the film explores the possibility of time travel in an ambiguous surreal sense.

It segues into 'Cassandra Syndrome' with a crashing rhythm and vocal embellishments. The lyrics are as enigmatic as other tracks, focussing on the metaphorical syndrome that has a psychological meaning used when valid warnings are dismissed or disbelieved. This syndrome has been tackled by other prog bands such as Star One's 'Cassandra Complex' and The Mars Volta's 'Cassandra Gemini'. The lyrics are concentric on disappearing into a time vortex, that echo the themes of time distortion and the protagonist attempting to tell of what he had experienced in the future that falls on deaf ears; "the future's never meant to be told by someone beautiful, destroyed by someone powerful", and goes on to say that out there is "a creature not from round here". The main melody actually sounds similar to Kylie Minogue's 'Confide In Me', at least the main phrase, and she is also an Australian icon. The lyrics are wonderful such as the mysterious ideas engulfed in "All my fears subside" matched by "all my dreams collide"; an ideology of the film "Picnic at Hanging Rock", that questions what happened to the girls who disappeared off the face of the planet, "what we see and what we seem are but a dream, a dream within a dream." This track is definitely the overall highlight of the album.

'Ice Warmth" begins with the freezing wind howls creating an icy atmosphere over a warm pad. The guitar hovers over until it breaks into heavier distortion. The music slowly modulates, ebbing along the tide of a measured rhythm in this short instrumental.

'Orion' begins immediately with Quayle's crystal clear vocals; "I am the hunter, you are the lion", and then as it is threatening to break out, he suddenly screams out "I am Orion", leading to an angular riff with distorted grunt. Orion is a hunter in Greek mythology, in consistency with the hunter theme of the Machiguenga previously. The main melody is repeated adding new lyrics each time and it builds to a more electronic synth rhythm, programmed by Mitrovitch. The drums are off kilter, slower than they should be and it is effective to balance the odd meters of the riffs. A time sig change crunches in soon with alien-like feedback effects. Again the polyrhythmic riffs remind me of Tool and the way the vocals compete with the meter and emanate from dark shrieks to warm clear vocals. This one grew on me and is now another favourite on the album.

'Silence Seekers' has a quiet hypnotic synth reverberation over clean guitar phrases at the beginning. The lyrics are replete with thoughts of escape and remorse, "softly spoken words are broken, no one knows", and "Silence seekers won't you come and take all your lies away". The music is punctuated by strong explosions of distorted metal riffs, like a surge of violence in the tranquillity. At this point the phrase reminded me of "Asylum seekers", who would feel the same thoughts of escaping the turmoil they felt in their home country. Of course it may be a reference as The Australian Immigration Department has been widely criticised for failing to adequately protect refugees and subsequently abusing their human rights by incarceration in Detention Centres.

After listening to this album, one feels as though they have embarked on a journey. The musicianship is masterful and though not as complex as perhaps Dream Theater or Tool, it nevertheless sounds similar in certain passages. The concept is quite ambiguous but I heard definitive homages to Australian culture such as Peter Weir. This was a pleasant surprise to me personally adding an esoteric feel to the album. It moves from darkness to light, from emotionally stirring power chords to achingly beautiful bamboo flute. Overall "The Time Travellers" is an album well worth seeking and has a lot to offer from these relative newcomers to the Australian prog scene.


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Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 01 2012 at 07:58
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 05 2012 at 21:09
Just a reminder of whats out there 

For sure the Australian prog scene is different to the Europe, UK or Us scene as the music stems from a different style and era. The 70s scene was progressive in Australia for a number of bands. The great compilation "Golden Miles" features most of these prog bands, it is here
 
 
 
 
 
and
 
check out
 
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    And an awesome Aussie prog compilation

    Various Artists (Concept albums &amp; Themed compilations) Golden Miles: Australian Progressive Rock 1969-1974 album cover


    Disc 1:
    1. No Dying In The Dark [BAKERY] (3:11)
    2. Travelling South [CARSON] (3:10)
    3. Lotus 1 [LOTUS] (3:45)
    4. Golden Miles [HEALING FORCE] (3:19)
    5. Inner Spring [BULLDOG] (2:47]
    6. Melodies Of St. Kilda/Southern Cross [MASTERS' APPRENTICES] (7:54)
    7. Girl Of 17 [GALADRIEL] (4:39)
    8. Lady Sunshine [TAMAM SHUD] (4:35)
    9. You Realise You Realise [TULLY] (2:56)
    10. I Am The Sea [WILD CHERRIES] (3:27)
    11. Fanciful Flights Of Mind [JEFF ST. JOHN'S COPPERWINE] (3:23)
    12. Getting Through [MELISSA] (4:08)
    13. Here It Comes Again [PIRANA] (2:44)
    14. Wichita Lineman [KING HARVEST] (4:10)
    15. Freedom Train [FRIENDS] (3:55)
    16. Seasons Of Change [FRATERNITY] (3:34)
    17. Satan's Woman [FRESHWATER] (2:59)
    18. Ain't No Loving Left [FANNY ADAMS] (6:45)

    Total Time: 72:01

    Disc 2:
    1. Make You're your Stash [DADDY COOL] (6:04)
    2. Superbody [Spectrum] (9:12)
    3. The Day Superman Got Busted [COMPANY CAINE] (6:20)
    4. Free [KAHVAS JUTE] (5:12)
    5. Long Legged Lovely [BLACKFEATHER] (7:30)
    6. Shake Off [TYMEPLACE] (8:12)
    7. Make It Begin [SONS OF THE VEGETAL MOTHER] (5:00)
    8. Human Being [COLOURED BALLS] (6:00)
    9. 'til My Death [BUFFALO] (5:34)
    10. 12lb Toothbrush [MADDER LAKE] (6:00)
    11. Extra Terrestrial Boogie [MACKENZIE THEORY] (5:47)
    12. Darkness [DRAGON] (4:43)

    Total Time: 75:46
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 05 2012 at 21:25
    A quick mention of 
    Blackfeather


    A prog Aussie band that did not release many albums!

    They transformed their sound to awful AOR boogie with their infamous Boppin' The Blues but before all that they had a stunning prog concept album released April 1971. The single Seasons of Change is the killer track appearing on Aus rock compilations and they are renowned more for this than anything that followed. 

    Prog? Well the album in 1971 certainly had elements of it but they really moved away from this style on subsequent albums so a controversial band and as a result not included on Prog sites.
    Still deserves a mention before we move on....

    Members
    Alexander Kash - Drums and Footsteps 
    Neale Johns - Vocals 
    Robert Fortescue - Bass Guitar 
    John Robinson - Electric Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Effects 

    Non Prog Album
    1972 
    Boppin' the Blues  
    Click to see larger image 
    "Pineapple" (Johns) 
    "Gee Willikers (Johns)" 
    "Own Way Of Living (Johns)" 
    "Red Head Rag (Johns)" 
    "D. Boogie (Mama Roll) (Johns)" 
    "Get It On (Johns)" 
    "Boppin' The Blues (Perkins/Griffith)" 
    "Lay Down Lady (Johns)" 


    1974 
    Blackfeather Live at Sunbury  
    "Boppin' the Blues" (Perkins-Griffin) 
    "Get It On" (Johns) 
    "I Just Love to Rock 'n' Roll" (Johns)
    "I'm Gonna Love You" (Johns)
    "Let's Twist Again" (Mann-Appell)
    "Slippin' & Slidin' " (Penniman-Collins-Smith)
    "Still Alive & Well" (Derringer)



    Prog Album
    1971

    "At The Mountain of Madness"  
    Click for large image 

    "At The Mountains Of Madness" (Robinson) 
    "On This Day That I Die" (Robinson) 
    "Seasons Of Change Part 1"" (Robinson/Johns) 
    "Mangos Theme Part 2" (Robinson) 
    "Long Legged Lovely" (Robinson/Johns) 
    "The Rat" (Suite) 
    "- Main Title (The Rat)" 
    "- The Trap" 
    "- Spainish Blues" 
    "- Blazwaorden (Land Of Dreams)" 
    "- Finale (The Rat)" (Robinson/Johns) 

    Listen to it here:



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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 05 2012 at 22:00
    Now onto C

    CHRIS BROOKS Progressive Metal
    CALIGULA'S HORSE Progressive Metal
    CHAOS DIVINE Tech/Extreme Prog Metal
    THE CHURCH Prog Related
    CIRCLES Tech/Extreme Prog Metal
    COSMIC NOMADS Heavy Prog
    BEN CRAVEN Crossover Prog
    CYBOTRON Progressive Electronic

    First:

    Chris Brooks

    Chris Brooks picture


    Multi-instrumentalist from Sydney, Metal guitar primarily, and has released two solid metal albums. Sounds like the melodic work of Steve Vai or Joe Satriani. Has a style also like the shredding of John Petrucci. Has played with various artists including Australian pop icon John Farnham, and I think I saw him live in concert at a Farnham concert years ago.

    The Albums: 
    2002
    Chris Brooks The Master Plan album cover

    1. Kryptica (4:51)
    2. Inner Light (4:05)
    3. Crack in the Hourglass (5:41)
    4. Blue Sky Odyssey (5:00)
    5. Funksion (1:40)
    6. Theme for the Next World (0:44)
    7. Axiom (2:27)
    8. The Master Plan (6:08)
    9. Only Time (3:44)
    10. Tales from a Distant Sky (7:49)

    2011

    Chris Brooks The Axis Of All Things album cover

    1.The-Axis-Of-All-Things.
    2.-Transfiguration
    3.-Wisdom-Road
    4.Hammers-Heart.
    5.Feeding-The-Myth.

    The Music:




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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 06 2012 at 01:25
    Caligula's Horse

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    Aussie Prog rock or prog metal at times band, hailing from wherever

    I will finisih this later
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