The Italian Prog Appreciation den |
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Alberto Muñoz
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2006 Location: Mexico Status: Offline Points: 3577 |
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Hello friends How Are you?
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Alberto Muñoz
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2006 Location: Mexico Status: Offline Points: 3577 |
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it's time to write more reviews!
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Todd
Special Collaborator RPI / Heavy Prog Team Joined: December 19 2007 Location: California Status: Offline Points: 3472 |
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Pierre, that is a very cool story! Thanks for sharing that with us.
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Todd
Special Collaborator RPI / Heavy Prog Team Joined: December 19 2007 Location: California Status: Offline Points: 3472 |
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Alberto! Hace demasiado, no? Gusto verte de nuevo. Look forward to reading your new reviews!
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Alberto Muñoz
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2006 Location: Mexico Status: Offline Points: 3577 |
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Si casi 5 años de no escribir, espero ponerme al dia de nuevo. nonetheless i didn't stop hearing music! |
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AEProgman
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 11 2012 Location: Toadstool Status: Offline Points: 1789 |
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Very nice indeed, sounds like a wonderful trip. Just got Alphataurus, self titled album added to the collection. A little heavier than my previous ventures into RPI, but very good. I backslid into the modern symphonic prog for a week or so and got Neal Morse-Momentum and Glass Hammer - Perilous, like them both, but I just could not wait to get back to the treasures I would find next here in RPI which now includes Alphataurus...
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hellogoodbye
Forum Senior Member VIP member Joined: August 29 2011 Location: Troy Status: Offline Points: 7251 |
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This BTF reissue is really a pleasant surprise. Love the mix of religious organ with acid guitar. A little big music ! |
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Finnforest
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 03 2007 Location: The Heartland Status: Online Points: 17203 |
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That is a great story Pierre, so happy you found an RPI veteran.....I believe if I lived in Italy i would just travel the country and do a photo/interview book on these older gentlemen who were in the more obscure bands....not the PFMs and Orme's, but the guys like that. I would love to do that while they are still around. But, I don't have the time or money to spend a couple years running around Italy.
Alberto, great to see you back around here!! There's lots of guys around lately. I invited Mats to join the forums and visit us, but I've heard nothing. |
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...that moment you realize you like "Mob Rules" better than "Heaven and Hell"
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hellogoodbye
Forum Senior Member VIP member Joined: August 29 2011 Location: Troy Status: Offline Points: 7251 |
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Thanks Jim. It was so nice to talk with that gentleman. Maurizio spoke to me about the pression of the music industry. They wanted a big eighties sound with loud instruments. He has to fight to impose its own vision, close to classical music. The disc has had no success at the time, but it is still more alive today.
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hellogoodbye
Forum Senior Member VIP member Joined: August 29 2011 Location: Troy Status: Offline Points: 7251 |
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CAINO E ABELE : St (1973).
Another Mats great discovery with a deep religious feeling. Personally, I love it. |
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hellogoodbye
Forum Senior Member VIP member Joined: August 29 2011 Location: Troy Status: Offline Points: 7251 |
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Sensation's Fix is an important band of the seventies RPI, even if you can't really call this progressive. Their first albums have only been reissued in CD inside the Progessive Italia boxes. This compilation includes 28 tracks of their best work.remixed by the leader of the band Franco Falsini.
SENSATION'S FIX - MUSIC IS PAINTING IN THE AIR: 1974-1977 - NEW CD BOXSET |
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Finnforest
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 03 2007 Location: The Heartland Status: Online Points: 17203 |
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Mats reports he will keep his site running for another year, but at that time faces the same dilemma about the cost of running it, and may close it then. He appreciates the messages of support.
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...that moment you realize you like "Mob Rules" better than "Heaven and Hell"
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hellogoodbye
Forum Senior Member VIP member Joined: August 29 2011 Location: Troy Status: Offline Points: 7251 |
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Great news Jim. Anything can happen in one year.
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Finnforest
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 03 2007 Location: The Heartland Status: Online Points: 17203 |
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Nice review by Brufordfreak
Blemmebeya Akt Eclectic Prog Review by BrufordFreak
An album of amazingly diverse sound and styles, from true symphonic RPI structures to
world, new age, jazz, folk, psychedelia and many other forms.
1. "Prima Della Fine" (1:13) starts the album off with a recording of a GEORGE CARLIN rant on politics. Amazing! What a way to start an album! YES! A group with some guts! (10/10) 2. "L'assalto" (9:56) gets the music off to a very, very powerful start--great melodies coming from all instruments, weaving in and out of each other's paths in a beautiful and never overwhelming the listener with "too many notes." At 2:30 male vocals enter, causing the tapestry to be less attention getters--for a while. The vocalist timbre and style is remarkably similar to that of Quebec's THE BOX lead singer, JEAN-MARC PISAPIA. This song has so many twists and turns it's like a maze, yet it never loses the listener, each turn is easy and acceptable. (9/10) 3. "TG Egeo" (5:10) is a great song very much in the RPI tradition, sounding a lot like BANCO DEL MUTUO SUCCORSO from the 1970s. Cool Frippertronics at the end. (9/10) 4. "Favonio" (4:55) begins with acoustic guitar and male vocals--first one then harmonized others. Sensitive, kind of like a great JOHN DENVER song. Piano, double bass, and brushed drums join in for the next section before an awesome guitar riff pulls in mellotron, electric bass, and full drum kit. Yes' or Genesis' best 'surprise' moments never topped this one! And then it just gets better with another shift at 3:30 whereupon an electric guitar--with bass mirroring and harmonizing it--plays an amazing solo to the end. (10/10) 5. "Stati D'animo Uniti" (5:50) starts with some ominous, deep bass sounds with flits and splffs of percussion and other distorted instruments and samples creating a heavy, oppressive feel into which an equally dismal feeling vocal enters. The music and 'noises' plod ominously along, until at 2:35 a brief flourish of tango-like Latin music rushes through the room before, then, just as quickly disappearing to allow the vocalist to carry forward his depressing message (in Italian). The upbeat Latin section returns, establishes some lasting footing, then kind of backs off for a very ALLAN HOLDSWORTH-like guitar solo to play. The song ends with the Latin flourish, leaving the listener quite confused but entertained. Those Italians! They're so dramatic! (8/10) 6. "Di Vento" (10:17) again starts off with a feel and sound extremely similar to several of the kind-of-monotone songs on THE BOX's 2009 album D'Après le horla de Maupassant. This similarity continues throughout the song. Musically there are builds and lulls that are quite reminiscent of the wind. A nice song that seems to want to really build and break out, and threatens to do so several times in a "Cinema Show"-like way, but doesn't really do this until the end of the eighth minute. Still, a satisfying climax, dénoument and finale. (9/10) 7. "Mani Aperte" (4:55) starts off with clapping like PAT METHENY's "First Circle" before evolving into an enigmatic, chameleonic song, melding together some amazingly disparate sounds, instruments, and themes in a rather STEVE TIBBETTS kind of way. Even the guitar solo sounds like its straight out of Yr or another of Tibbets' 80s/90s releases. Then--surprise, surprise--at 3:20 an electric guitar slow strum that just brings everybody into pure prog melodic bliss--and which plays out, with male vocals/lyrics at the very end. (9/10) 8. "Zeitgeist" (3:44) is an instrumental that begins with another ominous, yet beautiful and engaging groove with still more odd and unusual sounds coming from stringed and keyed instruments. (9/10) 9. "La Fine" (5:27) begins with a muffled/treated male vocal backed by bass, far-back keyboard chords and very subtle cymbol play. By mid second minute the intensity and volume of still-slow drum work and vocal are increasing. A nice acoustic nylon string guitar solo in the middle carries the mood forward until a glockenspiel and some television sound samples take over for a bit, over which the voice returns in his treated whisper, before the volumes elevate again for the fifth minute. The final thirty seconds is kind of time echoing away. (8/10) An album of amazingly diverse sound and styles, from true symphonic RPI structures to world, new age, jazz, folk, psychedelia and many other forms. The only negative comment I might have about this album revolve around the lead vocalist's monotonic singing style: it often seems to weigh down the song, even preventing it from developing more dynamic diversity. Still, this is in my opinion nothing less than a masterpiece of progressive rock music. 5 stars. (As of 9/24/12 Blemmebeya sits at #167 on my list of All-time Favorite Albums.) |
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...that moment you realize you like "Mob Rules" better than "Heaven and Hell"
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Finnforest
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 03 2007 Location: The Heartland Status: Online Points: 17203 |
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New artist added, bravo Chris!
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...that moment you realize you like "Mob Rules" better than "Heaven and Hell"
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hellogoodbye
Forum Senior Member VIP member Joined: August 29 2011 Location: Troy Status: Offline Points: 7251 |
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Just download and listen to the Akt's Blemmebeya album. Just great
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Todd
Special Collaborator RPI / Heavy Prog Team Joined: December 19 2007 Location: California Status: Offline Points: 3472 |
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Mats should have a Donate button. Maybe he could generate a few dollars that way.
I just got a shipment of new Italian stuff: Alphataurus, Osanna, Mangala Vallis, Syndone, and Court. I've only made my way through the new Alphataurus, but WOW! Do I love this one! I guess it helps that most of the album was composed in the 70s, but even the production isn't as digital sounding as I was expecting--that's a good thing in my book! Love love love it. Court is a bit of a letdown after the first pass through, but I'll report back. And on the others.
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hellogoodbye
Forum Senior Member VIP member Joined: August 29 2011 Location: Troy Status: Offline Points: 7251 |
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I agree about Mats, Todd. I think that Jim told him. Now he has to decide.
About Alphataurus, my opinion is the same a week later. I listened to it several times a day during my trip in Italy and despite undeniable melodic qualities, these new old songs have not completely convinced me.
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TheH
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 18 2009 Status: Offline Points: 1152 |
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I'm glad to see that I'm not the only one who likes the new Alphataurus
For all who are not sure jet, listen to it treaming here: there are a lot of other Italian artisit: (HeatWave Drum might be to, but I'm not sure)
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Todd
Special Collaborator RPI / Heavy Prog Team Joined: December 19 2007 Location: California Status: Offline Points: 3472 |
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I like this album as much as any of their proper studio albums.
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