1000 Prog Albums Over 46 Years: 1966-2011 |
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progbethyname
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 30 2012 Location: HiFi Headmania Status: Offline Points: 7849 |
Posted: September 23 2012 at 23:21 | |
Well you know that you'll always have the support of your fellow proggers from this forum, especially myself. I'd also like to note that your almost done!! 😜 take care. And tonights cd line up for me is IQ's THE SEVENTH HOUSE, OSI: BLOOD, and the ever powerful GENESIS: SELLING ENGLAND BY THE POUND, which you selected of course( how could you not.) happy progging to you, brother and you keep writing them ....I'll keep reading them. |
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Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: September 24 2012 at 08:25 | |
2006 872
A review by Mellotron Storm: Very interesting release from France with these
experts of contrasting the mellow and heavy passages, and besides they also use
mellotron. Enough said? Not quite.The vocals are in French and add a nice
flavour to their sound as he can be quite theatrical at times. I've really
grown to love this record and I'm going to seek out their back catalogue now. "Douce Mort" features so many tempo and
mood shifts, but at almost 17 minutes in length you'd hope it would, right? It
opens with different sounds coming and going including piano, drums, mellotron
and guitar with no real melody until after 2 minutes; it's a good one, with a
nice heavy sound. It settles right down after 3 minutes and whispered vocals
arrive later that build in strength as mellotron waves wash in. This is all so
good. The tempo picks right up as a full sound comes in and vocals follow. We
get some heaviness for 2 minutes. A calm returns with lots of piano, then more
heaviness, and it sounds amazing! It's very catchy 14 minutes in as vocals, guitar,
synths and bass lead the way to the end of the song. The bass is quite heavy. "Ici, Maintenant" opens with piano as
reserved vocals come in. Heavy drums and guitar 1 1/2 minutes in as passionate
vocals arrive. Great passage! A calm after 3 minutes is broken 4 minutes in as
it gets heavy with organ added this time. Ripping guitar follows and vocals
after 5 minutes are back. The final minute of the song is mellow with strummed
guitar and vocal melodies. "Miroirs" opens with riffs as the organ
screams. It settles when vocals come in. Lots of synths 3 minutes in and a
heavy sound 4 1/2 minutes in. The vocals are almost spoken at this point
although they become strong to end the song. "Si" is so fragile for
the first 2 1/2 minutes as vocals tremble and keys and bass lightly play. Drums
start to change and after 4 minutes it gets heavier. Guitar solo 5 minutes in
with some strong vocals a minute later with organ runs. "Apprentis Sorciers" is the 20 minute
closer that opens with some fine bass as piano, guitar and drums create a jazzy
flavoured sound. Synths open the way for a terrific guitar solo. This leads to
a full sound 4 1/2 minutes in as organ arrives, and it sounds great. It calms
down quickly before building to a powerful sound. A catchy section follows that
is again sort of jazzy before a guitar solo 9 minutes in. The song pretty much
becomes silent before vocals and then piano come back. Some bluesy guitar after
12 minutes and it builds again in power until 14 1/2 minutes in we're there.
Nice. It settles right down again to a beautiful section with piano, guitar, light
drums and then vocals 16 1/2 minutes in. It's slowly building until an
incredible sound 18 minutes in including vocal melodies. The final minute is
brighter with some great drumming, piano and guitar. This was such a pleasure to listen to at the end of
this long winter we've had. Prog helps when spring seems so far away. Lots of
snow still just like on the album cover.
873
A review by Conor Fynes: Widely considered to be the holy grail of Romanian
black metal, Negura Bunget's 'Om' has a reputation that precedes it. Although
widely unknown to those outside of black metal circles, the band's brand of
'spiritual metal' leaves an impression, and I would go on record saying that
this is the best album the band ever made. Although somewhat more challenging
to appreciate than much of the atmospheric black metal out there, Negura
Bunget's 'Om' does reveal its grandeur over time, and while still not amounting
to the genre's crowning achievements, 'Om' delivers on all counts. The band is sure to face some debate as to what
particular style of music they play here is, but it can be held to reason that
Negura Bunget do not ever stray far from the sound of black metal. As one might
tend to expect then, the heavier aspect of this music is dominated by higher register
growls, atmospheric guitar riffs, and the abrasive drum techniques that define
the genre. Negura does this style with some great skill, always sounding
professional and letting the dynamic ebb and flow naturally. What makes 'Om' an
excellent album though is the fact that there is a wealth of changes in the
sound here; there is more than black metal at work here. A listener would be
hard-pressed to find a segment of heavy riffing and metallic darkness that
lasts more than a few minutes without the more mellow and introspective side of
the band coming into play. It is in fact the mellow, ambient side of Negura
Bunget that I prefer, as they seem to paint a vaster sound with it. Long sections of ambience and mellow interlude tend
to drag on for a while, but they do sound incredibly beautiful. Every now and
then, some pleasant folk instrumentation will pop up, giving a more authentic
feel, but much of the 'pretty' side of Negura Bunget is left up to a keyboard,
which is commonly heard as well during the heavy moments of the album. The band
plays their compositions very well, and are clever to make added nuances over
the abrasive guitar textures. Whether it’s the quiet sound of a bell
harmonizing with the melody or changing keyboard chord, Negura Bunget has left
plenty of easter eggs to hunt for on this dark, spiritual journey. Negura Bunget have found an excellent album here
with 'Om', although it does feel a little longer than it should have been.
Nonetheless, a wholeheartedly recommended album for the more atmospheric and
introspective side of black metal. 874
A review by UMUR: Expect
the Unexpected is the title of a song from the sole Control Denied (Death main-man Chuck Shuldiner´s side project)
album The Fragile Art Of
Existence (1998) and that title fits Unexpect´s second full-length studio album In a Flesh Aquarium like a
glove. This second album by Unexpect is female led avant garde extreme metal with lots of
twist and turns, tempo and time signature changes and an integrated use of
violin in the music as well as quite a few electronic elements too. While the
female vocals are the most dominant vocal style on the album there are also
quite a variety of growling and aggressive male vocals on the album; a nice
schizophrenic mix that works wonders. The songs are very complex in structure
and just when you think you got a hold of where a song is going, it
unexpectedly changes. The music is very extreme, dissonant and at times almost
eerie and unpleasant. A feeling of uncontrollable chaos (the same feeling I get
when I listen to 666
International (1999) and Supervillain Outcast (2007) by Dødheimsgard orDHG if
you will). In this case this should be understood as something positive.
There´s a kind of freak show/ carnival atmosphere to the music that I find very
charming and the classical chamber music elements also gives the music much of
it´s identity. There are plenty of heavy and fast guitar riffing and intense
drumming on the album too, so even though this is a very progressive and rather
avant garde metal album it´s first and foremost an extreme metal album (there
are elements from both black, death and thrash metal in the music). The album is sort of divided into two parts. The
first four songs are intense and challenging progressive/ avant garde extreme
metal songs but the fifth song Silence_011010701 is
an electronic/ symphonic track that serves as a variation and a breather before
the second part of the album begins with the sixth track Megalomaniac Trees, and then
into the three part suite The
Shiver. The album ends with the 11:10 minute long Psychic Jugglers. There´s not a weak moment
on the album. It´s overall a very strong album. The musicianship is excellent. Unexpect is a seven piece band
and the interplay between them is outstanding. The vocals are a real highlight
among many. Leïlindel is
a powerful female vocalist who masters both the angelic and the semi- operatic
style to perfection. The male vocals are also really enjoyable. Very aggressive
and intense. The production is really good, but I found that the
album didn´t sound too good on my car stereo where the drums kind of drowned.
It sounds much better on my home stereo equipment though. In a Flesh Aquarium is a very
challenging listen and some people will probably never find the charm in an
album like this. Don´t expect the music to be accessible. It´s taken me many
listens to fully appreciate this music. I must admit that I started out being
rather skeptical about the whole thing but In a Flesh Aquarium has really grown on me to the point
where I´ve begun to view it as one of the most important progressive extreme
metal albums in recent years. I had the intention of giving the album a 4 star
rating but as I listened to In a
Flesh Aquarium a couple of extra times in a row before writing this
review it really dawned on me how unique this album is and I think I´m gonna
have to give out a deserved 5 star rating here. This is mandatory listening for
fans of progressive extreme metal if you ask me. A really essential and highly
recommendable album. A review by Conor Fynes: Among all of my musical travels, I have not quite
come across either a band quite like uneXpect (sic) or an album quite like
their sophomore 'In A Flesh Aquarium'. They have a weird, nightmarish sound
that has since become my quickest association whenever I hear the term
'avant-garde metal' being passed about. One part technical, one part dramatic,
and ten to twenty parts weird, uneXpect creates a record with 'In A Flesh
Aquarium' that is incredibly fun, yet also one of the most challenging records
I have ever heard. A lasting contradiction in virtually every way, the fact
alone that uneXpect leaves this reviewer at a loss for words should be
testament enough to its quality. A sheer masterpiece in originality and
exploration of chaos, 'In A Flesh Aquarium' is an unforgettable experience, for
better or worse. When attempting to describe the music here, labels
truly elude. Is it thrash metal? Death metal, symphonic metal, even industrial
metal in parts? Even the somewhat pedestrian term 'clown metal' seeks to
explain the strange, yet utterly distinctive style that uneXpect plays, but I
think the best way to discuss the music of this enigmatic ensemble would be to
simply call their music 'avant-garde metal', in every sense of the word. There
is not a track or minute that goes by that won't raise the eyebrow of even an
adventurous listener on his first time through. Jazzy, pummeling bass licks and
gypsy-tinged violins make up the highlight of this band's sound, but for the
most part, the music is driven by an eclectic range of metal guitar styles,
going from the rapid pacing of thrash chugging, to atonal jazz leads to higher
register riffs and even some black metal sounds. The vocals are even more
diverse, with both male and female clean singing through and harmonizing, and a
host of different 'unclean' growlers rasping their way through some incredibly
surreal and nonsensical lyrics. The tone of the album is very dark throughout, but
it is done in a playful way. In this sense, 'In A Flesh Aquarium' is much like
a cult classic comedy; suited only for very specific tastes, but the tastes it
does adhere to will be certain to blow some minds. Each track here maintains
the same playfully malefic vibe to it, but different things are employed in
each. 'Feasting Fools' is a highly thrash oriented tune, whereas the most
memorable and unsettling piece 'Desert Urbania' is a piece of dark metal with
roots placed in dramatic theater and gypsy music. Lastly, the epic 'Psychic
Jugglers' could easily be seen as an orchestral piece set to some twisted
theatrical work for stage, making little narrative sense through the poetic yet
somewhat overindulgent lyrics, but piecing dramatic effect together through the
musical intensity. One issue that robs 'In A Flesh Aquarium' of its seeming
inhuman perfection though is the general lack of inconsistency throughout some
of the tracks here. Especially during the three part suite 'The Shiver', the
music feels as if it loses some of the same majesty it first had with the first
three pieces that opened up this album. Despite not being entirely mind blowing
and brilliant throughout though, the sheer brilliance and unbelievable quality
of the album's majority make it an undeniable masterpiece in my eye. Make no mistake, 'In A Flesh Aquarium' is not an
album for everyone, and many will find themselves turned off by the wickedly
bombastic and strange direction of this crazy band. Dare to explore somewhat
far into this mad realm however, and one might find some beautiful insanity
waiting for them. 875
A review by Conor Fynes: Even half a decade after this has been released,
there has still been some buzz over this virtuoso guitarist's work amongst
friends and acquaintances. Being a guitarist myself, I can always appreciate
the talent and skill, not to mention the time and effort, that it takes to
become a truly great guitarist, but with all too many instrumental rock
guitarists, I find myself frankly bored by much of their one-sided,
overindulgent music. Enter Guthrie Govan, an English fusion guitarist who, much
like Tosin Abasi of Animals As Leaders, seems to be revitalizing the scene of
instrumental rock guitar. A rare masterpiece of this sort of music, Guthrie
Govan's incredible skill at playing and tasteful tact of songwriting makes his
debut, 'Erotic Cakes' essential listening for its style. As the label of 'instrumental rock guitar' would
imply, the center of this music is Govan's axe work, which shows him dabbling
in a number of styles, including hard rock, blues, but most notably, hard-edged
jazz. Throughout all of these, Guthrie Govan manages to harness his tone and
give a clear, fitting sound to all of these different avenues, all the while
drawing in seductive melodies and themes into his lead playing. Guthrie could
be the phenomenal guitarist that he is, and still end up making a boring album
if it weren't for his clever use of melodies and atmosphere in the songwriting.
While there are plenty of less structured 'solo' sections where he effortlessly
impresses with his beautifully flowing improvisations, each song gives the
definite feeling that it is going somewhere, and that the listener isn't merely
sitting by idly while Guthrie gives his virtuoso musician's equivalent of a
child calling out and saying "hey, look what I can do!" 'Erotic
Cakes' shows a satisfying balance of necessary showboating and quality
composition. On a less positive note, these songs don't necessarily compliment
each other on an albumwide scale, but each song is consistent, despite the fact
that he is drawing from a number of different styles. Making 'Erotic Cakes' an even better listen is that
this is not merely a 'guitar' album; believe it or not, there are actually
other musicians at work here as well, and talented ones at that. Bassist Seth
Govan (Guthrie's brother, I will assume) makes some great slap bass fills here
that fill out the sound beautifully, ensuring that there is always something
else out there for a listener to focus on, if they want a change from the
guitars. The drummer here is best suited for jazz, but manages to fluctuate
based on whatever style Guthrie is leading the band into. A really excellent
performance here from each member of the band. I would really love to see Guthrie Govan churn out
a second album, because without a doubt, 'Erotic Cakes' is one of the best, if
not the best, instrumental rock guitar album I have ever heard. I went into it
not knowing what to expect, and came out of it dazzled. A masterpiece album
from a style I do not normally enjoy much, 'Erotic Cakes' has me turned on. 876
A review by Gatot: I noticed this band underwent dramatic change in
their music style when they released 'Artificial Paradise' in 2002. It's
totally different from their 'Encounters' album (2000) which I liked very much
and represents my first introduction to the band. I fell in love with the
opening track 'No Way Out' which showcases one of the best neo-prog songs with
killer riffs and powerful melody. I consider that the concept album 'Posthumous
Silence' would satisfy fans of Pink Floyd, Marillion and Radiohead. It opens
with a great vibe in a moody and atmospheric 'Eternity Ends' (2:54) which
reminds me of the opening of Pink Floyd's 'Pulse' through 'Shine on You Crazy
Diamond'. But instead of using bluesy guitar, this song uses atmospheric female
choirs. It's really great and it sets the overall tone of the concert. The
piano intro of 'Bequest of Tears' (3:05) and vocal work of Marco Gl'hmann
reminds me of the opening concert of Peter Gabriel with his 'Here Comes The
Flood' using his piano. It's a great opening, really! The basslines resembles
the entrance of 'In Chains' (8:55) where the music flows in upbeat mode with
nice and soft guitar riffs. This is an excellent track! The album represents a great
flow of music with excellent combination of keyboard and guitar work
accompanying great vocal lines. Tracks like 'Pane of Truth' (9:14) are really worth
enjoying especially with their emotive style, great accentuation in vocals and
tight basslines. The interlude sections of the music are also excellent. You
can enjoy wonderful keyboard and guitar work in 'Questions' (6:58) for example.
I find this album is enjoyable from start to finish with the closing track
'Posthumous Silence' (5:38). A review by Mellotron Storm: This is Sylvan's first concept album and it's about
a man who gets to know his daughter through reading her diary. The problem is
his daughter is gone, for she has commited suicide. Obviously this is an
emotional record lyrically as well as musically. Actually I have always found Sylvan's music emotional
mainly because of Marco's amazing vocals, but also because of the soaring
guitar and powerful melodies. "Eternity End" is a short 2 minute intro
track. It opens with synths, the sounds of birds singing and a choir before we
hear an explosion (she died). Sampled words and a choir end it. "Bequest
Of Tears" features fragile vocals and piano. Cello comes in and the sound
of a submarine (symbolic of being drowned in tears). The following melody
re-creates the absolute pain he is feeling. "In Chains" is heavy with riffs and great
vocals, especially during the chorus. We get a mellower passage with keys 4
minutes in followed by a nice long soaring guitar melody, then the heaviness
comes back. "Bitter Symphony" has a nice little guitar line with
almost mono-toned vocals. "Pane Of Truth" is a great sounding song
with cello and some beautiful guitar 5 1/2 minutes in. It gets emotional after
7 minutes, then cello and piano follow. "No Earthly Reason" is
intense with piano and vocals. "Forgotten Virtue" is a heavy tune.
Vocals build to a dramatic and theatrical climax three different times. "The Colors Changed" is a beautiful song
with gentle vocals, piano and cello. The song gets emotional before 2 minutes
when the vocals and sound grow louder. The guitar is heavenly 5 1/2 minutes in.
"A Sad Symphony" is ok, while "Questions" is much better.
The vocals are fantastic and the tone of the guitar is perfect 5 minutes in. We
get some riffs as the guitar solos over top. The vocals are the highlight on
"Answer To Life". "Message From The Past" has cello, piano
and melancholic vocals. "The Last Embrace" is bombastic with
screaming vocals. I like it. "A Kind Of Eden" opens with water
flowing and birds singing as gentle piano and vocals come in, then the sound
does get louder. "Posthumous Silence" has gentle vocals, piano, strings
and soaring guitar 2 minutes in. The last words in the song and album say
"We failed to notice, to show her we tried.To keep her from falling, to
save this sole child..." This record and Sylvan’s previous two releases are
all so well done. It would be hard for me to say which is the better of the
three as they are all excellent. Most would choose this one and I can
appreciate why. I can only suggest you get all three, and I don't think you
will be disappointed. 877 Somewhere Along the Highway
A review by Bonnek: Finally! They got it nailed! This album is highly regarded amongst
post-rock/post-metal lovers and has generally received raving press reviews.
And for the first time in Col's career I will join the enthused clapping. While
Col is still highly indebted to Isis and Neurosis, SATH is certainly not dwarfed by the music of their heroes,
but can stand proudly next to it. My change in appreciation doesn't come from a
change in Col's approach, but it's simply due to the flash of inspiration that
has caught them here. Every second sounds tight, tense and focused. The riffs
are spiralling round your head like charmed snakes and the quiet parts
overwhelm you with atmosphere. The pieces aren't melodic in any traditional
sense but there's more attention to harmony then on earlier albums. The quiet
song And With Her Came The Birds is
a good example. Even the vocalist is in fine shape. His one-trick
hard-core vocals rarely used to charm me, but as it goes with these type of
vocals, if they are driven forward by an inspired and crushingly powerful wall
of sound, they do the work. There are some subdued soft vocals as well, not
outstanding but effective where applied. The album is varied enough and not too long, though
with 65 minutes I tend to either skip Thirtyfour or to stop after the album highlight Dim. An excellent album and sure
amongst the best in its scene. A review by Conor Fynes: Before purchasing 'Somewhere Along The Highway,' I
had no idea who Cult Of Luna were, besides the fact that they were a post-metal
band and that this particular album came in high regard. To that effect, when I
saw it lying in a used record store, I didn't think twice before picking it up.
To my delight, what I was blessed with was one of the most atmospheric and
emotionally charged albums I have ever heard. While most people think of Isis or Kayo Dot when it
comes to post-metal, Cult Of Luna really have some solid chops, and give a fine
definition of the genre with this album. A concept piece revolving around male
loneliness and sole travel, these feelings are transmitted perfectly, as the
album is a vessel for emotion. While a lot of the songs are extended in their
length, there's a great deal of repetition used and edgy build-ups traditional
of post-music. While the guitars are heavily distorted and extreme screams are
used a lot here, there is a feeling that the music itself is not heavy, but
instead a very distorted form of mellow. The guitar sludge is used in no short
supply, but all the way throughout it feels like everything is under control.
It is this sense of control that makes it all the more dramatic when things do
get out of control during the most intense segments. While it's hard to hear the lyrics through the
growls and yelling, what little I can decipher fits the music perfectly and
really compliments the overlying theme of the album. Things really take an even
mellower turn with softer sections such as 'And With Her Came The Birds.'
During this particular song, while it's not my favourite musically, it best
encapsulates the feeling of driving along a rain swept highway and night better
than any other song I've listened to, I believe. Speaking of musical highlights, they include the
opening track 'Marching To The Heartbeats,' the first fleshed out composition
(and my favourite of the album) 'Finland,' a very powerful track that doesn't
forget to have it's tender and sweet moments and 'Dim,' another mostly
instrumental track in the typical post-metal vein. Overall, this album fits
together perfectly, and each track compliments each other. Dare I call this one
of my favourite metal albums of all time, but that wouldn't be very far from
the truth at all. A really inspirational work in the realm of metal, and the
perfect introduction to this Scandanavian band. 878 Stati Di Immaginazione
A review by Warthur: PFM's Stati di Immaginazione is an all-instrumental
album from a lean three-man PFM lineup with guest keyboardists. Musically
speaking, it doesn't so much remind me of their 1970s heyday so much as it
makes me think of Steve Hackett's late 70s/early 80s solo work, or perhaps The
Lens' sole album "A Word In Your Eye". Although there are some fast-paced
bursts of energy, overall the mood of the album is calm and reflective, the
performers playing for the joy of playing rather than to make any particular
point. There's an almost neo-prog vibe to it, which isn't
so bad to my mind. It's nice to know PFM have kept an eye on the prog scene
rather than stayed mired in their past, but it may put off purists who were
hoping for something resembling their first three albums. It's great, but not
essential; perfect if you're in the right mood, but there a number of equally
good or better albums that cater to that exact mood too. A review by Mellotron Storm: This album is absolutely stunning! I was very
surprised at the darker and more aggressive passages (which suit my tastes
perfectly) that are on this album but PFM
have still kept that beautiful symphonic music that they're famous for. A nice
blend, and the sound quality couldn't be better. "La Terra Dell'Acqua" opens with some
excellent atmosphere before the drums and synths start to dominate. Bass
follows, then mellotron and violin; such a gorgeous sound here. The tempo picks
up 3 minutes in and check out the bass, drums and guitar! It then settles with
piano before 5 minutes before the guitar and drums start to lead the way again
as the sound gets much fuller. Nice. A top three track. "il Mondo In Testa" opens with piano as
violin joins in. The sound kicks in around a minute. It settles again as the
tempo continues to shift, then violin is back followed by vibes. "La
Conquista" is another one of the top three for me. It opens with guitar
before heavy drums and bass arrive, then violin and vibes. A beautiful calm 2
1/2 minutes in, building just like my emotions.The guitar then starts to solo.
"Il Sogno Di Leonardo" opens with gentle guitar as flute then synths
join in, so uplifting. Piano then what sounds like orchestra sounds after 3 1/2
minutes. A bass solo comes in then themes are repeated. "Cyber Alpha" is the other top three
song. This features dark guitar melodies as synths then drums join in. The
guitar starts to solo; just pure emotion here. The tempo picks up late as the
bass joins in. "Agua Azul" again opens with dark sounding guitar and
perhaps mellotron. Violin and drums after 1 1/2 minutes. The tempo picks up
before 3 minutes and it's brighter as well. "Nederland 1903" features
acoustic guitar, violin and piano early. A fuller sound follows with floating
organ in the background. "Visioni Di Archimede" is the almost 9
minute closer. The guitar to open reminds me of Gilmour. It's building as drums
come in. A calm before 3 minutes then it starts to build again with bass, violin
and drums. It settles before 5 1/2 minutes, with nice bass, and it kicks back
in one more time. The band has to be so proud of this recording. 879 Act I: The Lake South, The River North
A review by UMUR: I know this is considered an EP but don´t be fooled
by that tack as Act I: The Lake South, The River North by The Dear Hunter is
38:36 minutes long which in my eyes qualify as album length. Act I: The Lake
South, The River North is the debut release from The Dear Hunter and it´s a
very good release that is worth checking out indeed. The Dear Hunter is really
a one man band that consists of Casey Crescenzo. Casey sings and plays all
instruments except the drums who are played by Nick Crescenzo. Judy and Phil
Crescenzo also guests here with backing vocals and organ respectively. Tom
Neeson plays trumpet and there are is also Dan Nigro who sings some additional
vocals. The music is modern symphonic prog rock, but there
are also other influences present. The music evolves around Casey Crescenzo´s
melody lines and the mood is generally pretty dark. The music is very dynamic
and has both quiet beautiful moments and more powerful moments too. Casey
Crescenzo is a very diverse and skilled singer and he masters lots of different
moods and styles. I generally like his vocals very much but sometimes they get
a bit too emo for my ears and I can´t help being reminded of bands like My
Chemical Romance and Panic at the Disco which are not the best bands to be
compared to. Don´t get scared by this remark though as the vocals are generally
very beautiful. There are some great rhythms here to accompany the music and I
am intrigued time and again by something that happens in the songs. The
structure is not radio friendly pop structures. The musicianship on the album is a real treat and I
believe Casey will be one of the new stars in modern prog without a doubt. The
production is very good and it has a special emphasis on the vocals that I
really enjoy. It´s not often that I pick up something I had never heard of
before and get this impressed. I will rate this 4 stars because I really think
it´s excellent prog rock. This is highly recommendable to people who would like
to hear some new prog rock that doesn´t sound like it´s made in the seventies. 880
A review by Mellotron Storm: I'm always amazed at how poweful a trio can be.
I've said that about Rush for years, but there are many bands now that fit this
description. Russian Circles are from Chicago and at times recall another
Chicago band named Pelican. I was actually quite surprised to find out how
heavy parts of this record really are. The drumming was another pleasant
surprise. This guy can lay down some crazy intricate patterns when he wants to,
or just flat out pound away. "Carpe" is the first song and the
heaviness arrives 1 1/2 minutes in and it comes and goes. A catchy melody
follows with some excellent drumming before I am wowed by the guitar work in between the
riffs. The song settles to a calm 6 minutes in before a galloping rhythm
signals a return to the original soundscape. "Micah" opens with a
guitar/drum melody that starts slowly and gradually accellerates. There is a
great melody with crazy drumming 2 1/2 minutes in. The sound is full 3 minutes
in before a calm a minute later settles in. The tempo continues to change like
shifting sands. "Death Rides A Horse" is my favourite
track on the record. This one hits the ground running with steller Iron Maiden-like
guitar melodies. Nice. The amazing guitar continues as the song then becomes
very fast paced after 3 minutes. The drum work is tremendous before 5 minutes. "Enter", the title track, opens with a
cool drum pattern and it's hard not to tap your foot to this one. Heaviness
arrives after 3 minutes as we are hit hard! The spotlight is on the drummer
again 4 minutes in and screaming guitar follows. "You Already Did"
starts off a little slow until 2 1/2 minutes in as drums and guitar fight to be
heard over each other. This sounds incredible! The song becomes quiet until it
starts up again, giving us 3 minutes of an absolutely amazing sound. "New
Macabre" is an uptempo tune with some prominent bass work, not heavy
though. Some scorching guitar 2 1/2 minutes in, and now it's heavy! There are no weak songs, and there is some
complexity and variety. I am a huge fan of the way they combine different
styles on this album. Is this Post-Rock or Post-Metal or Prog-Metal? Yes it's
all of these, and it's all done so incredibly well. 881
A review by UMUR: Frost sounds like a black metal band name to me but
this is as far from the truth as possible. Milliontown is Frost´s debut album
but don´t let that fool you as this band is full of experienced musicians. Jem
Godfrey who sings and plays the omnipresent keyboards on the album is also the
main composer of the music. He has produced and written pop music for many
years but has with this project decided to return to his prog roots. The other
musicians are members of various neo prog bands like Arena and IQ. Personally,
I don´t think this sounds much like neither Arena nor IQ. Frost has a much more
modern approach and sound and thank God for that. The influences ranges from
Dream Theater (Images & Words and Awake), to some neo prog influences and
commercial pop music. I must say I was really surprised when I listened
to Milliontown for the first time because I was expecting some rather mediocre
neo prog, but this sounds much more powerful and fresh. The music is very melodic and there is a good mood
in the songs. Not since I heard Dream Theater´s Images & Words have I heard
an album with this kind of sound. Milliontown is not a heavy metal album
though, but there are traces. The melodic and complex instrumental opener Hyperventilate
is a really excellent song with lots of Dream Theater tendencies. I also hear
some Steve Vai Firegarden influences in this song. Jem Godfrey´s piano playing
is otherworldly in this song. I promise you this is fantastic and very melodic. No Me No You is the first test of Jem Godfrey´s
frontman qualities and he passes with splendour. He has a really strong voice
and even though the chorus of the song could have been in a pop song, it suits
the music so well. This is one of those rare bands that sounds like pop, but is
much more complicated than that. It never gets cheesy though and that´s good. Snowman is a song with another style than the two
previous ones. Very keyboard dominated and mellow, this reminds me a bit like
Chroma Key with a pop rock singer. Again the melody is very strong and the
keyboards play some really melodic themes. The Other Me is the weakest song here. This is
really eighties like in the melody department, but of course it is
professionally done and that saves this otherwise weak song. Black Light Machine is the most neo prog song here.
It´s kind of a mini epic with it´s 10 minute running time, but it isn´t the
kind of song that builds. There are lots of solos and instrumental parts in
this one; nothing fancy though. Milliontown is the real epic of the album. 26+
minutes is a long time for one song, but I am entertained throughout the whole
playing time. The vocal lines and the singing style in this song sometimes
reminds me of Neal Morse from Spock´s Beard. This is a great ending to a great
album, and with the many different parts in this song, Frost proves that they
are more than just another neo prog band. The musicians are outstanding on this album and
with the wonderful production this is emphazised even more. This has to be one
of the most polished productions I have ever heard on a prog rock album, and
even though this sometimes offends me, I enjoy it greatly here. These songs
were born to be produced like this. This is one of the best modern prog rock albums I
have heard in years and a sure 4-5 star album. It´s very rarely I hear
something that I feel deserves 5 stars, but this is very special, even though
it has it´s flaws and I can therefore only give it 4 stars. I can´t wait to
hear more though. This is highly recommendable, you just have to try this one
out if you´re into melodic symphonic prog rock. 882 Synchestra (The Devin Townsend Band)
A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Branching out into new
territory a great sign for things to come. “Synchestra” is Devin Townsend's 7th studio album
and it is no surprise that once again Heavy Devy is branching out into some unreserved
new territory as he does on all his albums. This is no “Ziltoid”, which is a
couple of albums away, and it certainly aint no “Terria”. In fact it is a rock
opera with a vampiric theme underpinning it. My overall reaction was that “Synchestra”
has the catchy tunes of “Terria” though nowhere near as technical, and has
hints of the dark humour of “Ziltoid” in places. There are some outstanding
songs on this that really stay in the cranium well after the CD has ended, ‘Vampira’,
and there are throwaway tracks, ‘Babysong’, that are as forgettable as some of
the material on “Accelerated Evolution”. However, the really great moments are
mind-blowingly brilliant which tends to make up for some of the solemn
melancholy moments that are like smoke in the air and disappear. The whole album seems to flow lucidly from track to
track and indeed the album as a whole is masterfully produced and realised, at
least on a conceptual level. Musically, it is as flawless as Devvy gets and
that has become an unexpected factor on his albums. The Hammond sounds great
and the lead guitar breaks are killer, and there are some incredible wall of
sound moments where the crescendo rises and Devvy really goes into full flight
on vocals, belting out massive growls and literally shouting his voice raw.
These moments are juxtaposed by subtle gentle vocals and a minimalist acoustic
arrangement such as the opening track. Devin tries to get spiritual with nature
on ‘Gaia’, but this is a mismatch for me, not cohesively linking to the overall
concept. The highlight for me begins at the polka, which is
as quirky as anything I have heard, almost sounding like the polkas on Weird Al
Yankovic's albums. The satirical nature of ‘Vampolka’ is enhanced by the speed
of the melody that simply rips past in minutes, and this prepares us for the
real deal, which is the showstopper of the album, the brilliant ‘Vampira’. I
had heard this on a live clip of a Vampire Rock show starring some great rock
stars, and of course it is a melodic standout and perhaps one of Devin's best
compositions. The guitars on this are crunching and the heavy power riffing is
accompanied by caustic gravel vocals that are dark and menacing throughout,
reminding me of the style Devin does with “Ziltoid”, ala ‘Planet Smasher’. The
moments where Devin sings in his clear vocal to heavy metal riffs are also
wonderful, and this is where he tends to shine. The standout track ‘Notes From
Africa’ is well structured and memorable to close the album before a weird
ghost track. I have to mention ‘Triumph’ too with a lead break from the
mindbending Steve Vai as a track you should hear for certain. Devin has a great
band to back him up as usual, the other lead guitarist is so good I had to
research him to see what else he had done. Well I was delighted to discover
Brian Waddell was also on the “Devlab” album, as part of the Devin Townsend
band of course, and he appears on “Accelerated Evolution” and the more recent “Addicted”
album, playing bass and doing gang vocals if you don't mind. Devin decided to go solo with “Hummer” after “Synchestra”,
a pity really as the band sounds so good here. The best thing about this split
is that Devin was really able to branch out into some incredible experimental
territory and he produced “Ziltoid The Omniscient”, the masterpiece of dark
metal humour. “Synchestra” is sandwiched between two of Devin's worst albums so
it really looks like a standout in his repertoire, although having heard most
of his albums it is fair to say that it isn't up to the masterpeice standard of
some of his other works. In any case “Synchestra” is a great album and worth
listening to whether you are into metal or not. It is entertaining and one of
Devin's great achievements as the unsurpassed 'Mad Scientist of Metal'. 883
A review by Bonnek: 10.000 Days is
only the 4th Tool album in 15 years. It makes them even less prolific then
Anekdoten who managed to churn out at least one more album over a similar
period of time. But Tool make up for it by releasing a really long album again,
and for the first time in their career they have me on board; and how! Tool hasn't changed all that much compared to the
previous album, but somehow they finally achieved to capture their live energy
on a studio recording. The opening Vicarious sounds
like someone set the band on fire. It's dark, urgent and poignant, even Maynard
fully convinces me now. He has just a tad more melody in his rhythmic recitative.
The band also perfected their compositional skills. While very similar to Lateralus, it's strikingly more
varied. The songs ebb and flow nicely through various motions. Maybe it's just due to an extra sparkle of
inspiration and bite, but Tool sound ablaze on this album. ‘Jambi’ continues
to deliver on the genius that I had heard in Tool 15 years earlier during one
of their early live concerts. They sweep me off my feet here, a few outbursts
aside, and Wings for Marie is
the first quiet moment on the album. Tool manages the dynamics between soft and
loud very adequately now. 10.000
Days gradually builds up out of brooding guitar chords. The Pot continues with a catchy
funk vibe; not unlike Rage Against The Machine this one. Lipan Conjuring is a pagan chant that
I'm sure I've heard somewhere before. We're 40 minutes in by now and when Lost Keys begins, it's like the
intro of a second album is starting, and I actually tend to play both halves in
separate sittings. The first half if I want rock, the second if I want to dream
away with the music; Rosetta Stoned is
one of those Tool tracks where I can just sit and listen to the drums and the
bass; great playing abound. Intension is
more brooding and post-rock oriented. Right In Two has a powerful emotional drive; again Maynard
puzzles me, did he take singing lessons or a course in writing memorable vocal
melodies? What an improvement over the preceding albums. Everything ends with
the nihilistic white noise of Virginti
Tres. It's the type of track added at the end to make sure you don't
shuffle the intended running order. Seems like Tool continues to sound better with
every album. If they continue at this pace (an album every 5 years) they will
eventually release the most astounding rock album ever; probably by the time
they retire. Until that happens, this sure is a 4.5 star album for me.
A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: A psycho-drama of
technical riffing and atmospheric gloom. Tool blaze a trail of glory on "10, 000
Days" with raucous metal riffing precision and powerful song structures.
The riffs are like machines in factories churning out iconic metal prog, check
out the machine gun attacks on 'Jambi' for example. It begins with a blast of riffing elegance on
'Vicarious' with the Tool signature sound, razor edge riffs and emotive raspy
vocals that echo more anger than the average screamer. The attitude of the band
has always been to attack at the jugular vein of society and reveal the uglier
side of humanity. The lead breaks are as well executed as the distorted riffs,
such as the wah-wah vocoder effects of Adam Jones' lead guitar on 'Jambi'. Tool
have a relentless rhythmic pace that is familiar to all Toolaholics, from
previous albums "Aenima" and "Lateralus." The angular
guitar phrases and odd time signatures are a key feature and the dark lyrics
sung with so much passion by Maynard James Keenan. On 'Wings for Marie (Pt 1)' the droning ambience of
layered guitars and extended vocal intonations are ethereal and atmospheric.
Justin Chancellor's bass drones menacingly and then the percussion explosion of
Danny Carey augments the chilling soundscape. '10,000 Days (Wings Pt 2)' is where the complex
musicianship really comes into effect and all in 11 glorious minutes. This is a
masterful track beginning with stormy distant thunder and a guitar picking
phrase. The clean low key vocals speak of a river, the tales of a saviour,
trials and tribulations, "a congregation gather round spewing sympathy,
spare me", and "blinded by choices" you are "safely on your
way". It builds with looming menace as the thunder gets closer and some
violining guitar swirls, sounding like Pink Floyd's 'Empty Spaces'. Eventually
loud thunder crashes lead to a fast hypnotic motif and some more forced vocals.
It kind of sits on the one note musically but is very effective with its
brooding atmosphere. It breaks into a loud instrumental break powered by phased
guitar and a vibrant bassline. The lead break has sustained feedback and some
wonderful string bends with soaring elegance. It gets heavier at the end until
the whispered portentous vocals "never lived a life, never took a
life", capping off a masterful track. 'The Pot' is next, beginning with a capella vocals
"who are you to wave your finger you must have been out of your
head". The tribal percussion and strange guitar effect is soon joined by a
chugging riff, as heavy as distortion can get. The melody on this is more
accessible than previous track and has the repeated phrase "you must have
been high". I like the pulsing riff that locks in at the end as a snarling
guitar blasts over; it is an enduring track. Keenan's guitar is interminably
locked into a D minor pentatonic scale but it is recognizable as trademark
Tool, and the sound really haunts well after the album is over. 'Lipan Conjuring' is one of the short Tool tracks
with tribal vocal intonations and a mystical percussion feel with some guitar.
It is a transition into 'Lost Keys (Blame Hofmann)', a track that really made
me sit up and take notice when I first heard this album years ago. It is dominated
with sustained lead notes feeling very dark and downbeat. A nurse's voice
converses with a doctor about a situation of concern. They have a patient who
is experiencing some kind of catatonic state. We hear his breathing and then
the band launch into 'Rosetta Stoned'. This is an 11 minute prog metal blaster, with
chunky riffs and speed rapping. A very weird vocal is soon heard, overlayed
growls and phased vocals enhance the ominous atmosphere. It builds eventually
to the zinging guitar effects done by slashing a pick over the strings, and an
excellent time sig change moves the track into a new direction. The
polyrhythmic riffs are mesmirising and inspiring, and the bassline solo on this
is incredible. One of the best tracks on the album without a doubt. The last three tracks are linked well making the
album culminate in some intricate riffs and time sigs. 'Intension' follows on
with a weird intro of shifting glass and leaves with a stoned atmosphere of
loneliness, and the air is intense with whispered rage. The bass emanates
nicely and there are harmonised vocals, so effectively layered over. It is one
of the quietest moments on the album, but threatens to break out any moment.
When the rhythms stop a lone guitar echoes in the night, before a bass joins
and then percussion. It builds to more power until the melodic vocals return.
The guitar is beautiful on this song, understated and melodic. 'Right In Two' has a similar rhythm, slow and
patient with soft vocals. I like Tool when they are in their melancholic mood
but at times I long for a blast of distortion to keep things interesting. This
one has some psychedelic textures but is overall replete with chilling lyrics
such as the "2001: A Space Odyssey" inspired verse; "Monkey
killing monkey killing monkey over pieces of the ground, Silly monkeys give
them thumbs, they make a club, and beat their brother down, How they survive so
misguided is a mystery, Repugnant is a Creature who would squander the ability,
To lift an eye to heaven, conscious of his fleeting time here." It builds
to a heavier section, with the repeated "cut and divide it right in
two." Tool finish albums with disturbing material, such
as the Area 51 rant on "Lateralus", and here is no exception with the
esoteric 'Viginti Tres', Latin for 23. After a cosmic pulse sounding like a
planetary signal, a deep voice is heard uttering a mystical phrase, and then it
emanates into oblivion. As scary as Tool like to get and one that has been
interpreted over the years as leaving the body into some state of
transcendental realm. The uttered phrase "asisco" apparently means to
"take-in" or "accept", spoken in the angelic language known
as Enochian. It makes more sense understanding that the album was dedicated to
Maynard James Keenan's mother, who died prior to its recording, and the voice
may be taken as a means of God inducting his mother into Heaven. The pulse then
may be the life machine she was plugged into prior to passing over.
Interestingly enough if one syncs this track up to 'Wings For Marie (part 1)'
it makes even more sense, as many have discovered. This form of syncing two
tracks also has significant meaning along with the stereographic album artwork
with the use of the special stereogram binoculars. The track has developed a
cult following for all these reasons. Tool again have produced an intriguing album with
masterclass musicianship, driven by angular guitar riffs and powerful vocals.
It has some of the most innovative album design art ever, complete with those
unique glasses making everything jump out in real 3D. The psycho-drama concept
is heavy and hard to grasp as always but it is the music that really makes Tool
such an endearing act. "10, 000 Days" is as good as
"Lateralus", forever my favourite of theirs, and this is well worth a
visit now and then; a wonderful example of the band as inventive metal
geniuses.
884
A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Climbing Blood Mountain
to Crack The Skye. Mastodon's "Blood Mountain" is the album
preceding the masterful "Crack the Skye" that put them on the
progressive metal map. The earlier work seems to be heavier and less prog but
"Blood Mountain" is a progressive album culminating in a psych prog
conclusion. The album begins with 'The Wolf Is Loose' that
utilises trademark power metal riffs that change time signature. The vocals
consist of caustic growls and screams. This is one of their heaviest tracks and
starts the album on a high note. There are assaults of brutal riffs, duel
guitar breaks, and complex effective drumming. A short blast that is technical,
fast and progressive. 'Crystal Skull' begins with tympanic African
drumbeats from Dailor then an excellent Slayeresque riff chugs along.
"Into the black hole, searching for crystal... making the veins
bleed," the vocals growl. The incessant riffing are intricate with many
time changes. Blazing guitar solos from Hinds and Kelliher and emphatic vocals
create a seriously brutal tone and killer speed. 'Sleeping Giant' has even more
depth and complexity beginning with a doomy slow guitar motif. There is some
harmonic work and a great lead break. It changes pace when the vocals kick in.
The track is a definite highlight, very catchy tune and at 4:20 there is a
brilliant riff to latch onto and a scorching guitar break. The drums are
frenetic at times, a low vocal is used in places and it ends with a jagged
guitar and it rings from left to right speaker. 'Capillarian Crest' features more inspired dynamic
guitar power riffs to introduce it and then it shifts to a speed metal pace,
then changes pace later to launch into a lead break. It slows again when the
vocals resume and feels like a different song. The intricate technical playing
is astounding. Guitar squeals break the pace and then it shifts again into a
cool chugging riff with screeching vocals and pulsating bass. A weird effect ends the track and transitions it to
'Circle of Cysquatch', which is a crashing energetic rocker; more of the fast
technical thrash. There is a robotic voice on this and a really brutal power
riff, bass heavy and dark composition. 'Bladecatcher' features guitar picking and builds
to a chaotic mid section with nonsensical vocalisations, like a metal chipmunk.
A crunching onslaught of Hinds and Kelliher's duel guitar riffing chugs along
and then a strange effect like a vinyl album played back n’ forth leading back
to the main riff. 'Colony of Birchmen' is a metal track strung along
by riffs and time changes but there is more harmony in the vocals. At 3:20 the
time sig is very strange with a well executed lead break. A weird effect
transitions this to 'Hunters of the Sky' and this has great vocals and heavy
pounding guitars. The verses are repeated over very speedy riffs. It slows at
3:05 into a nice melodic riff that fades into the next track. 'Hand of Stone' is a moderate speed riff heavy
track with high register vocals that are virtually screamed. I am reminded of
Testament on this track. There are many twin guitar lead breaks and at 3:10 it
gets very heavy and fast and then ends without warning. 'This Mortal Soil' begins with phased guitar and
acoustic picking. There is a slower mellow pace with melodic vocals. The pace
changes swiftly and suddenly. Mastodon are masters of time sig changes, so
tight and innovative moving from 7/8 to 6/4 and 8/6 effortlessly. At 3:30 the
pace is very fast with Black Sabbath riffing. The dark, ferocious riffs
absolutely blaze at 4:10. The drummer somehow keeps pace and drives the track
back to the main riff at 4:36. The next bizarre effect segues into 'Siberian
Divide', which is a more aggressive attack with shifts in pace and then a
proggy guitar riff locks in at 4:15; ferociously original metal. 'Pendulous
Skin' is a weird experimental psych prog track with some inspirational passages
of instrumental virtuosity. It begins with acoustic picking over an estranged
spacey effect. A sublime guitar follows and very weird vocals. Spacey,
psychedelic atmosphere makes this track a real stand out and there is even a
Hammond sound that shimmers and grinds like the 70s prog days of ELP or Banco
Del Mutuo Soccorso. The surrealism stops at 5:13 and there is dead silence and
we await a ghost track. But there is none forth coming except at the end of
about 22 minutes a voice speaks about downloading, "Keep it real".
How weird is that? In conclusion, this is a definite prog metal album
to get hold of. Innovative, experimental, technical, original, strange,
heavenly riffs and power metal technical virtuosity. 4 shining stars. Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - September 24 2012 at 08:37 |
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: September 24 2012 at 08:38 | |
2007 coming soon...
Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - September 24 2012 at 08:39 |
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: October 19 2012 at 00:08 | |
2007 885 A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: A sprawling masterpiece of intense dreamscapes and
symphonic ambience. The much heralded Phideaux eventually came to my
ears, after reading a stack of reviews that hails the albums as masterpieces.
First impression was a reaction of amazement as I was lulled into a dreamy
state, with some of the most beautiful music I have heard. It was when I
arrived at ‘Crumble part 1’ that I was convinced that this would be one of the
best prog albums of recent years. Some of the lyrics were very strange and did
not resonate with me at all, especially the bits that spout on about
"satan has come again bringing some of his friends, he has won, his boys
are having fun, satan's angels swarms to catch the tide," (though in
context it fits the concept of environmentalism and doomsday and government
brainwashng and experimentation). It is a very Pink Floyd like album in many
respects and that is good enough for me. I was reminded of Porcupine Tree and
Anathema among others, with very pleasant listening, darker overtones and
multiple instrumentation to virtuoso standard. The icing on the cake is the
female vocals. On subsequent listens the music tended to take on a different
atmosphere; it can be uplifting or even melancholy depending on how you
approach the album with a specific frame of mind. I felt myself drawn into the
music, it has a hypnotic effect that lures in the listener and drowns them in
the atmospheric soundscapes. The whole thing about the 'deathstar' was a
strange odditty for a “Star Wars” fan to listen to, but it was nonetheless
enjoyable, nothing to do with “Star Wars” apart from the odd title. The whole album deserves to be heard a few times
before making up one's mind because it is jarringly infectious; the tunes began
to haunt me and I was humming them as I walked about days after. The celtic
influences are astounding with some pretty female vocals and sweeping
synthesizer washes. The rhythms interchange between fast tempo and slow, with a
myriad of tension and release passages, including swathes of mellotron,
Hammond, flute, violin, piano, acoustics, and clavichord such as on ‘The
Doctrine of Eternal Ice part 2’. The multilayered vocals of female and male
intertwine to create some ambient textures that soar into the stratosphere,
majestic and epic, even bombastic but delightfully progressive. Each track seems to blend into the next creating a
conceptual whole that is in depth and very powerful. The ominous tones of ‘Thank
You For The Evil’ are stark and prevalent with a sense of impending doom. It
crawls along but has some inspired acoustic flourishes, synth swirls and garish
symphonic nuances. The synth sounds Pink Floydish, as do the lyrics, "back
down in the safety net, by the television set, remember that you had a choice,
opened up your mouth and had a voice, it's been gutting them, it's been gutting
them, it's been gutting them." The instrumental break is appropriately
downbeat. I really liked this lengthy compelling track and it has a mesmirising
impact on the listener. ‘Formaldehyde’ is a masterpiece of prog on its own;
permeated by female vocals and some harmonised male vocals with a driving flute
and meandering synth rhythm section. It twists and turns in many directions
with an odd time signature and very sporadic drumming; simply a wonderful track
by any standards. ‘Microdeath Softstar’ ends the album on a glorious
epic note. The bright organ truncates along until a chiming synth takes over.
It builds to an epic orchestration, with the same uplifting melody. I liked the
harmonised vocals here, and the soaring lead guitar break is joined by sweeping
violins, Celtic in flavour and indisputably progressive. The female vocals are
brightly coloured soprano variations. The multiple violins really get a chance
to shine here as a dominant driving voice. The guitars are a bit heavier and
the musicians take off into full flight in the mid section. There is a
delightful time sig change towards the end, a verse "do not speak"
and then swathes of guitar and synth trade offs as a violin fills in the gaps.
The spacey guitar is sensational at this point. The lyrics are memorable,
"I'd like to say it's over and we will be okay, and that you'll feel the
same." The finale is psychedelic more than any other moment on the album,
"once upon a time there was a line that we have drawn we wouldn't
cross" and even better, "Fear leaves a trace of something stained, a
wasteland of memory of how we failed, but all we need is time, all we need is
time, but time's too damned unkind." At the end of the album, I realised what the fuss
is all about and why this is hailed as one of the best prog albums of 2007. It
simply is a stunning masterpiece, a magnum opus of melodic, powerful,
structures, a myriad of emotional textures dark and light, layered with strong
vocals and intensely complex orchestration, a work of love and passion where
the artists known as Phideaux have poured their spirits into every moment,
every instrumental, every vocal. Believe the hype. 886 A review by SouthSideoftheSky: Neal Morse is a recent encounter for me and I do
not know any of his work with Spock's Beard or Transatlantic, but I have heard
his three most popular solo works: this one, “?” and “Testimony”. Of these
three albums, I like this one the most, and compared to the other two, “Sola
Scriptura” is darker, more aggressive and intense; it rocks harder, at times
flirting with Prog Metal sounds, and there are far more instrumental workouts.
In that sense at least, I find this more 'progressive'. There are still the
sweet Beatles-esque melodies, but they are more finely woven into a much bigger
tapestry and the long compositions are more complex in structure. What's perhaps best of all is the fact that this
album comes across as much less 'preachy'. Like on “Testimony” and “?”, the
subject matter is still religion, but “Sola Scriptura” is more about religion
than in religion (a useful distinction I learned while
studying religion at the university for two and a half years); it is more of a
historical portrait than a personal 'testimony'. This time the religious
praising comes out of the mouths of Martin Luther and the Catholic Church
respectively and not, like on “Testimony”, from Morse's own. This helps a lot
to make the album's message more acceptable for me as a confirmed atheist and
secular humanist. I feel much more sympathy for Martin Luther's very real
struggles against the authoritarian Catholic Church in the 1500's than for the
'spiritual struggle' of a Rock musician in LA in the new millennium. With the presence of piano, synthesisers, electric
and acoustic guitars and violin; the sound here often evokes Kansas, and Morse
seems to have picked up more than a few tricks from Kansas' main songwriter
Kerry Livgren who also happens to be one of my own all time favourite
songwriters. Morse is walking in the footsteps of Livgren in more than one way
as Livgren is also a born again Christian. They know each other too we may
assume as Livgren played guitar on Morse's “Testimony” album. However, this is
no Kansas clone or any clone at all for that matter, Morse has found his own
style here within the framework of Symphonic Prog. This may not be
groundbreaking music, but it is also not derivative in any objectionable way in
my opinion. Overall, I find this album highly enjoyable with
strong compositions, great instrumentation and interesting tempo and mood
changes. Highly recommended!
A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: “Sola Scriptura” is one of the finest efforts from
Morse; full of progressive elements that would satiate the palate of any
proghead (like myself). It begins with the blistering 29 minute epic ‘The
Door’ which is broken into many parts like a multi movement suite in classical
music. This is an incredible sophistocated piece of prog that thunders at times
with awesome guitar riffs and at other times there is a solitude of acoustic
and mellotron beauty. Portnoy on drums is at his best as usual, but it is
Morse's vocal performance that gives this a majestic quality outside the realm
of the type of material he was doing with Transatlantic, or, for that matter,
Spock's Beard. His heart and soul is poured out on this CD in 76 minutes of
musical virtuosity par excellence. ‘The Conclusion’ is a mini epic running for about
17 minutes. It is a worthy addition to the Morse catalogue with complicated
tempo changes and metrical patterns that range from Adante to Presto time
signatures; 4/4 standard to complex couplets or triplets in 9/8 and beyond. ‘Heaven in my Heart’ is a beautiful ballad in true
Morse style with emotional depth about his pure faith in God. Listen to that
heavenly guitar for a great example of accomplished musicianship. It ends with the wonderful 16 minute ‘The
Conclusion’. What else? The concept of theological church history is strong but
never overbearing towards the music as a whole. I appreciate how Morse has not
sold out his prog roots even though his music has changed direction from the Spock’s
Beard years. In fact the material on this album is some of the heaviest Morse
has performed, including crunching guitar riffs and a very dark tone overall. This
is definitely an excellent addition to any prog music collection.
887 Ziltoid the Omniscient A review by Conor Fynes: The mad scientist of metal is at it again with this
humorous and satirical delving into what can only be described as a form of
comedic Space Operatic prog. Devin Townsend weaves a tale in “Ziltoid The
Omniscient” of a self-conceited alien being that seeks coffee to fulfill his
time-travelling desires. In taking over earth (with his virtuosic guitar
skills) a rebellion is formed, led by Ziltoid's nemesis, Captain Spectacular.
While the plot is obviously not meant to be taken seriously, the music (at
points) can be extremely beautiful and powerful. The music is best described as a heavier version of
the typical Devin Townsend band work, mixed with a dose of Devin's extreme
metal band, Strapping Young Lad. There is some very heavy material on this
record. 'Ziltoidia Attaxx!!!' is bone-shattering, to say the least, and Devin's
screams have never sounded better in any of his work than on “Ziltoid”. The ironic thing about this album is despite its considerably
high rating, it was recorded in Devin Townsend's living room! There's a real
sign of talent when someone doesn't even have to leave the confines of their
house to write something so entertaining. However, it is this fact in which the
album suffers the most. For the most part, the production quality is fine;
while it doesn't match up to the Devin Townsend Band material in terms of sound
quality, all things considered, it's very good. The thing that bothers me about
this album though is the fact that all of the percussion is played by a drum
machine, and not a living, breathing human being. While purely musically,
things are fine and the compositions are great, the album would have just that
much more power if it used real musicians. Drum machines should be left as a
jam tool, not a band member. One song that really seems to stand out is the
laid-back 'Hyperdrive.' Despite it consisting of a pretty simple guitar riff,
and garbled vocals, it creates such an amazing atmosphere and feeling of
loneliness, as if the listener really is travelling through the coldness of
space. While releases like “Terria” and “Ocean Machine”
have more of an immortal quality about them, “Ziltoid The Omniscient” is
actually one of my most initially enjoyed albums, and demonstrates that you
don't have to write serious music, to be serious about music. A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: And now an album review from the mighty Ziltoid. Greetings humans, I am Ziltoid...the omniscient. I
have come from far across the omniverse to present this album review of my
latest recording. While I am writing this you shall fetch me your universe's
ultimate cup of coffee... Black! You have five Earth minutes. The first part of this conceptual masterpiece makes
one very important observation. That I, Ziltoid am so omniscient that if there
were to be two omnisciences's I would be both! Then the music kicks in at break
neck speed on 'By Your Command'. A song that is guaranteed to blow your head
off.... twice! Prepare yourselves for the subjugation! This track features
brilliant time sig changes, progtastic lyrics and ambient levels of
scintillating soundwave effects and did I mention the breakneck drum patterns?
It is during this mindwarping song that my commander comes before me and I ask
him, Have the humans delivered their ultimate cup of coffee? I sip it and my
reaction is one of disgust! Fetid! How dare they present this to me! Foul! They
hide their finest bean! Prepare the attack! The metalicious riffs ominously
pound as if some machine were stalking, searching for prey. And the musical
mayhem continues. But my commander tells me some bad news. The humans
are preparing themselves for the attack! But I do not flinch and reply.
Excellent! Have you prepared the Planet Smasher? And the Planet Smasher is
prepared to crush the puny planet. The human with the funny American War voice
states: Now listen here men! We represent the planet Earth! I want no heroes!
They are coming over the horizon as we speak! We gotta be ready to take them
down! Hold your position men! Do not fire until I tell you to fire! Have you
got that? The troops yell as one, Yessir! Captain Spektacular is ready to
attack. 'Ziltoidia Attaxx' thrashes from the speakers and
absolutely drives headlong with monster guitar riffing and huge wall of sound
symphonic blasts. It has to be heard to appreciate its full metal onslaught.
You’ll love it, puny Earthlings! 'Solar Winds' slows things down indeed and is a
beautiful prog classic. Then 'Hyperdrive' and 'N9' bring things up to speed
with massive time signature changes and killer riffs to die for! But, I, Ziltoid, feel like a good bit of
entertainment; time to destroy the planets. Which one shall it be? This one?
No.too feeble. This one.yes, perhaps. Yes. This one shall do nicely. Commander.
Divert all the power from the main engines to the front guns and take ninety
percent of the surplus power and divert it toward the sonar awakening device.
We must summon the 6th dimensional planet smasher, I feel like a bit of fun. Summon
him! The Planet Smasher awakes and screeches, “Who dares
awaken the planet smasher!” My reply is as strong as it needs to be, “It is I,
the 4th dimensional Ziltoid the Omniscient!” 'Planet Smasher' rips out
unmercifully. It is an absolute thrash metal frenzy of relentless drumming, a
barrage of choppy metal riffs and megablasts of bass and beyond. A metal feast
of a beast. This is followed by other classics such as 'Color
Your World' and 'The Greys.' These two amazing songs are beautifully produced,
well-sung psychedelic and memorable songs. In fact all the songs are
memorable... indeed! But the bonus disc is a real let down - Dreadful
music... phooey and double phooey! When you first hear my album you may find yourself
resisting its quirky humour and Monty Pythonesque absurdity... but it will grow
on you... mark my words, humans.... it will grow on you like a fungus from
Ziltoidia! And when it does, as your head hits the pillow you will not be able
to get these metal riffs and mellow melodies out of your heads. It will haunt you
day and night. You will be subjugated indefinitely. Don't believe me? Foolish humans. I will have my
revenge.... You will be subjugated. But suddenly, I feel so…vulnerable. You
have not seen the last of me! You have not seen the last of Ziltoid! 888 Fear Of A Blank Planet A review by Finnforest: "How can I be sure I'm here." “Fear Of A Blank Planet” (FOABP) is a compelling
and ambitious piece of modern rock music that aims high and really achieves it’s
goals. The subject matter is dark and relevant and also cyclical, isn't it? We
get the stories of disaffected youth in every generation and I'm reminded here
of "Subdivisions." While I think Mr. Wilson lacks the poetic pen of
Mr. Peart ("Any escape might help to smooth the unattractive truth, But
the suburbs have no charms to soothe the restless dreams of youth") he
still does a reasonably good job of explaining the emptiness that this
generation of kids is dealing with. The title track starts things out quite well I
think with the ominous guitar riff and catchy crunch. "How can I be sure
I'm here?" is a key line of the track and gets those of us one generation
on from these kids to think to ourselves: what exactly can we say, what can we
do to respond to that need, to that blank despair they have? We know in
ourselves that Blank Planet is a mess and yet we couldn't stop ourselves from
allowing another generation to fall prey to the same crap. We segue nicely into
"My Ashes" which features some gorgeous melody although to be quite
honest, Wilson owes Thom Yorke a royalty check for this track. Is this an
outtake from "OK Computer" or what? Maybe so, but it is still a
pleasing track. At near 18 minutes, "Anesthetize"
qualifies for epic length status, featuring blissful noise guitar and lots of
room which is very good. Alex's solo is fitting and quite nice although with 18
minutes to spare they could have easily given him a bit more space to
elaborate. We later get into some near metal moments that nicely balances the rather
pop sounding chorus in this track. What makes the track is the section from 12
minutes on where things are calmed down before a last perfect guitar lick goes
to flatline; nice ending to a truly great track. "I never wanna be old and I don't want
dependents"; What a line to open "Sentimental" with and one that
too many of us can relate to. This is an absolutely gorgeous song that again
strikes me as pretty Radiohead but much more palatable to me. Where Radiohead
will usually bore me before making me care, Porcupine Tree seems to be able to
make this work deliciously well. "Way Out Of Here" is really, really good;
lots of variance in texture and pace, a beautiful chorus, Wilson's best solo,
and some very inventive drumming in the metalish sections. Listen closely to
this track as it might be the best on the album. "Sleep Together" unfortunately ends the
album on a slightly weaker note. The "big" drums joining in at one
minute are the first mistake; they should not be there or they should have been
far more soft and ambient. The chorus seems pretty contrived to me and the song
plods in places. I think "Way Out" would have been a better closer
personally. The material here focuses mainly on youth but I'm
sure, given Wilson's age, that he is seeing more than "kid and x-box"
when he speaks of the Blank Planet. We are entering a century with problems
that seem insurmountable, from the cultural to the environmental, war, disease,
poverty, justice, personal responsibility, religious fanaticism, on and on.
These things, and many more, are what we all have to deal with, let alone the
challenge of having a fulfilling and happy personal life. I'm sure that Wilson
feels the kids have the potential to confront these problems, but are we giving
them the support they need, and are we listening to their concerns about
themselves, or is it easier to give them another gadget to distract them? Can
we put aside our demands from our jobs to spend that extra time with them? Have
we really gotten to the point where a prescription for anti-depressants is an
essential part of growing up? All of the tenets of our prized economic system
that hold things together have the downside potential to the human condition
and perhaps Wilson will delve further into the broader picture on future
albums. Are we better off continuing down this road of success as defined by
profit growth potential or will there have to be a scaling back of expectation
of material success at some point? While such a shift would hurt us short term
economically, would not it shift back the emphasis of life to personal
relationships, time to slow down, to perhaps embrace art over yet another
"goal", and to leave the electronic Blank landscape for one with a
heart, pulse, flesh, earth, water, soul. Smaller community based existences for
which family and connections to each other are enough, for which we are not fed
this message that to succeed means "you must want it ALL, and then push
for MORE." I don't mean to go off the deep end here with personal musings,
but these are the thoughts that FOABP brings to my head and maybe some of you
have the same thoughts. Just one more: I remember being a kid and longing
for summer vacation. I remember endless days with no structure, roaming the
fields behind our neighborhood with friends and exploring. Playing. Being free.
Hanging out in the basements of friends or riding bikes down to the park. I
remember dreading the beginning of the next school year. Perhaps those of you
who grew up in the 60s and 70s know of the world I speak. Last week I heard a
13-year old exclaim how she is dreading the END of the school year and it's
going to be SO boring in summer. How things change. But is that for the better?
Is growing up now so about learning conformity and structure that kids today
cannot deal with down time? Have they forgotten how to be kids? Does every
moment of a child's life have to be filled with structured activity? League
sports? Summer school programs? And is the only alternative to that of the
Blank Planet? I don't know but my gut tells me that kids today have been
cheated out of a certain type of childhood that I can't imagine missing. What I
do know is that I'm glad I'm not a kid in today's world. And we need to explain
to these kids why summer is NOT boring. Again sorry for the long story but I
feel it relates to the music in question. The subject matter of FOABP hopefully
will help lead to these discussions in the place that matters most: living
rooms. An undeniable modern rock classic. A review by Conor Fynes: Although it will arguably never reach the same
level of success and achievement as it did in the 1970's, progressive rock is
not dead. In fact, some of the decade's best music was crafted by
progressively-inclined acts. Porcupine Tree is the defacto leader of modern
prog rock these days, with a string of masterpieces under their belts that more
than justifies the attention they have received. Throughout the late '80s and
'90s, musical mastermind Steven Wilson developed Porcupine Tree from what was
originally a tongue-in-cheek psychedelic experiment into something more
serious. Though a bit older than some of the other bands on this list,
Porcupine Tree never really hit their stride until the 00's, opening the new
millennium with such now-classic albums as 'Lightbulb Sun' and 'In Absentia'.
Virtually perfecting their atmospheric blend of art rock by 2005's 'Deadwing',
Porcupine Tree then set their sights on something different. Emphasizing their
existing feelings of melancholy and exchanging their psychedelic tinge in
favour of metal, 'Fear Of A Blank Planet' saw a much darker side of the band's
music than ever before. The album is a six piece concept revolving around
the tribulations of modern life, through the eyes of a teenager. Porcupine Tree
expose and reflect upon the sort of ambivalence and apathy that plagues the
middle-class lifestyle today, with Wilson's brooding lyrics touching upon
everything from prescription drugs, hypocrisy and media to the emotional
results of this environment; isolation, helplessness, and thoughts of suicide.
Make no mistake; Wilson tackles these topics with a poetic soundness that keeps
'Fear Of A Blank Planet' from ever becoming a weepy mess. Most of the loose
narrative here is told through the eyes of your everyday pill-popping,
disillusioned youth, and Wilson manages to adopt this persona in his lyrics
without getting preachy or didactic, much like a prog rock J.D Salinger. As one
might guess, the music isn't too far off the lyrics in terms of its moodiness.
There is plenty of dynamic here, ranging from soft electronic ambiance to
moments of extreme metal aggression, possibly a reflection of our protagonist's
bipolar disorder? All of the chaos within the mind of this teenage everyman is
channeled through Wilson's brilliant-as-ever production. 'Fear Of A Blank Planet' rests in a perfect balance
between a sense of cohesive flow and distinction between songs. The title track
gives us a dense blast of dark art rock and introduces the subject matter. 'My
Ashes' and the spacey piano-driven 'Sentimental' are a more relaxed slice of
Porcupine Tree, toning down the energy and heaviness without losing any of the
feel. 'Anesthetize' is the album's seventeen-minute cornerstone, an absolute
monster of a track that summarizes everything the album is about, featuring
both the album's most mellow, and most aggressive moments all within one
composition. 'Way Out Of Here' is possibly the most immediately
appealing track, with the melancholy now amped up to 11. Finally, 'Sleep
Together' ends the journey on an ambiguous note, with exotic string sections
blazing and dark electronics filling up the sound. The album ends with Wilson
singing about relieving the pressure, and burning his possessions. Has he found
enlightenment or is broken through his apathy, or killed himself? These things
are left up to the mind of the listener, and makes 'Fear Of A Blank Planet' the
greatest statement from one of today's most impressive rock groups. A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: "I dream of escape, but a song comes onto my
i-Pod..." This concept album has certainly made an impact in
the prog community, hailed as one of Porcupine Tree's finest and for good
reason. There is so much on offer on this excellent project. The actual concept
of the album was heavily influenced by Bret Easton Ellis' novel "Lunar
Park", a story told from the perspective of a father, and the difference
here is the album tells the story from the perspective of the 11 year old son,
Robby. The lyrics are often taken directly from the novel, focussing on the
themes of two typical neurobehavioural developmental disorders that affect
modern teenagers, namely bipolar disorder and attention deficit disorder. As I
work with some kids with these disorders the album definitely touched a few
chords with me. A member of my family has suffered in one of these mental
illnesses and I know how hard it is to cope with this even from a third party
perspective. The lyrics also deal with the youthful aspirations of attempting
to escape by turning to drugs, or X box games, I-pods and technology that cause
social alienation. The mass media gets a real serve on this album as the cause
or part of the cause of this disassociation, and I think the album has some
potent remarks on the harm that is being done with the mass appeal of
technology based infomedia. The album begins with the killer title track that
pounds along at a brisk pace and has some absolutely wonderful melodies. The
song is unforgettable and is the best on the album. I always liked how the
lyrics mention X Box as a symbol of techno addiction. 'My Ashes' sounds like 'No Quarter' by Led Zeppelin
at some point, perhaps noticeably the keyboard sound encapsulates the
psychedelic atmosphere. It is a song filed with pathos and pain but with dark
beauty. The lyrics are quite downbeat as is most of the content of the album.
There is a melancholy feel throughout, and it really punches a hole into the
consciousness as one listens to the album. It seems to get darker and more
intense in mood from track to track. 'My Ashes' is a homage to the last chapter
of the novel where the ashes of Bret's father are scattered effectively burying
the memories of his life. 'Anesthetize' is the multi movement suite masterpiece
that drew me to the album in the first place; a 17 minute epic with incredible
guitar interplay and powerful synth lines. The melody is brilliant and the
lengthy instrumental section is prog bliss; a track to be heard over and over. 'Sentimental'
is a very gentle sad song with sweet melody lines, similar to the chords used
in 'Trains'. 'Way out of here' is another of the masterpiece
songs that deal with some very tough issues. The lyrics are full of mystery and
intrigue; "Out at the train tracks, I dream of escape, But a song comes
onto my i-Pod, And I realize it's getting late, I can't take the staring, And
the sympathy And I don't like the questions: "How do you feel? How's it
going in school? Do you wanna talk about it...” These sentiments seem to
capture the teenage angst experienced in adolescence when one does not feel
understood and loses track of communication with others. Steven Wilson
explained partially some of the content of the album in "Revolver"
music magazine when he stated, that the protagonist of the tale was a
"terminally bored kid, anywhere between 10 and 15 years old, who spends
all his daylight hours in his bedroom with the curtains closed, playing on his
PlayStation, listening to his i- Pod, texting his friends on his cell phone,
looking at hardcore pornography on the Internet, downloading music, films,
news, violence." This is why the lyrical content mentions these
technological mediums, though it does not attack them as much as one may
expect, at least not as much as Wilson who has infamously smashed i-Pods and
MP3s on many occasions. 'Sleep Together' is a popular live track and
although I look upon it as one of the weaker tracks here it still works as a
good way to close the album, putting the protagonist to rest as he searches for
love in an interminably cold faceless world. My final thoughts are that this is an album that
gets better over the years like a fine wine. On first listen I was impressed
with about 3 tracks but the rest kind of washed over. On returning to the album
after a long break, I began to appreciate the material as a whole concept which
is hauntingly melancholy and bleak, and yet imbued with an uplifting ray of
hope entrenched within. It certainly is one of the best albums of 2007, even
winning Collaborator's album of the year on progarchives.com, and it is a
thought provoking master work from a brilliant band. 889 The Machinations of Dimentia A review by UMUR: Blotted Science is the new project from guitarist
Ron Jarzombek (Watchtower, Spastic Ink) and Bassist Alex Webster (Cannibal
Corpse). Charlie Zeleny (Behold...the Arctapus) plays drums. This is tech metal
of the highest standard, but it differs a little from the usual tech metal
madness. First of all there are no vocals on the album, and secondly allthough
this is very technical music, it´s still listenable. I think much credit for
this should go to Alex Webster who probably have pulled the project in a more
"simple" direction. Actually the album is pretty heavy, so don´t
expect this to sound like fairy haired prog metal. It´s more in the vein of
heavier Spastic Ink. I enjoy this album very much, but it is not a masterpiece
for two reasons. First of all, I think vocals would have done the trick to some
of these songs. They would have been complete. Don´t misunderstand me though,
they work perfectly fine without the vocals, it´s just me who likes vocals. The
other thing I will complain about is the length of the album. With demanding
music like this I think it´s a bit much with 16 songs even though some of them
are short. I know this is an eternal discussion, but I generally don´t think
albums should last more than 45 minutes with a few exceptions. This is a 4 star album though. It´s one of the best
I have heard in this genre. Ron never seems to disappoint. A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: The metal shredding on "The Machinations of
Dimentia" is akin to having your head lobotomised with a surgical drill.
The intensity of the sound is mind numbing, and you will love every minute of
it if you are a technical metal addict. Every track is technically precise and
full of surprising twists and turns. The bass is jack hammer pounding at times
as distorted riffs grind powerfully through the brain. It is little wonder the
music is this brutal coming from the hands of extreme bands such as Cannibal
Corpse, Watchtower, Spastic Ink, Obscura and Hate Eternal. Tracks such as 'Synaptic Plasticity', 'EEG
Tracings', 'Activation Synthesis Theory' and 'The Insomniac' absolutely
annihilate with power shredding and some of the most incredible lead guitar
work on the planet. Every track has astonishing dextrous guitars, drum blast
beats and hammer smashed basslines. The furious attack of stop start riffs may
be too extreme for some but what really draws me to this Meshuggah like band is
the fact that they are devoid of any vocals. There are none so there is no
interference with the mind blowing metal. Too often great bands are ruined in
my opinion by screamo or gravel gargling vocals and when these are removed the
band is simply brilliant. There are moments that allow the music to breathe
such as the dreamy guitar picking on 'Adenosine Breakdown' and even jazz
nuances abound on this track, before it revs into high gear and spirals wildly
out of control. The screeches of guitar distortion are joined by delirious off
beat signatures and polymeters. The axe man is a master of rhythmic precision
and very complex patterns, none other than guitarist extraordinaire Ron
Jarzombek, and he is joined by Alex Webster on bass and Charlie Zeleny on drums.
Together they are a glorious force of killer metal. 'Amnesia' begins with incredible bass that is as
good as I have heard, and then manic frenetic lead screams over a breakneck
speed riff. This is intense wall to wall shredding and blast beats. Everything is
going at warp speed and it makes the heart race quicker as the grinding pounds.
'Laser Lobotomy'features Slayer-esque lead work and riffing throughout, as fast
as you would need, and yet maintains some Steve Vai type lead breaks and
absolutely flawless technical rhythms. This is one album to get hold of for shred heads
and is definitely some of the most technical metal I have ever heard. Skull
crushing metal from beginning to end with relentless brutality, but there is a
market for this and without vocals it is all the better. Not for the faint
hearted but an important album for the development of extreme metal. A review by Conor Fynes: To put it simply, this is the most accomplished
technical metal release ever created. While the genre of technical progressive metal has
a bad name in the eyes of some for it's typically overindulgent and mindless
showboating and lack of substantial depth, there will always be bands, or
albums, that really excel and break through the barriers of convention to
deliver something that really blows the doors away. While the metal world is
full of greatly talented, skilled and even genius musicians, I will admit that
there have been only a handful of albums that have impressed me so much on a
musical level in instrumental metal, and arguably none that have blown me away
as much on a technical level as Blotted Science does however. While this is not
going to be the order of the day for everyone, 'The Machinations Of Dementia'
is easily one of the greatest instrumental albums ever made. Essentially the brainchild of virtuoso guitarist
Ron Jarzombek (of Watchtower/Spastic Ink fame), Blotted Science was created out
of the urge to make a progressive metal supergroup of some of the most talented
and skilled musicians in the scene. What might come as a bit of a shock to the
progressive side of the prog metal scene, is that the bassist chosen to be part
of this project is Alex Webster, of Cannibal Corpse. While Cannibal Corpse
isn't exactly known for their penchant of thought-provoking themes and music,
they are indeed talented musicians and Alex Webster's frantic bass work steals
the show here. With a presence much greater here than on most other albums, the
technical bass display adds a dimension to the music that really compliments
Jarzombek's left-of-center guitar playing. Add in some near-obsessive
mathematical drumming from Charlie Zeleny (of Behold... The Arctopus) and
Blotted Science comes together to produce something that is nearly unparelleled
in terms of it's complexity and chaos. Although the music is entirely instrumental, the
concept of mental illness and psychology flows throughout the album, as is
conveyed through the song titles. As with all great concept pieces, the music
reflects the nature of the subject matter; frenetic work, crushing heaviness
and mathematically impossible polyrhythms give 'Machinations' a very unsettling
and disturbing feel to it. While there are a few tracks that stand out on their
own as individual songs ('Laser Lobotomy,' 'Night Terror') the album generally
flows together as a long piece. While such complexity and technicality can be
overwhelming over the course of fifty-odd minutes, the high level of
compositional quality and experimentation lies throughout. Possibly best described as an 'instrumental
technical death metal' album, Blotted Science gets very heavy amongst the
technicality. 'The Machinations Of Dementia' is an insanely complex and
immersive listen. Any fans of progressive metal should find something to love here,
but make no mistake; you'll be exhausted by the end of it.
890 A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: A Mellotron-soaked maelstrom of ambience. Anekdoten's 2007 album "A Time of Day" is
a strong melancholic atmospheric work with very slow paced easy listening
material, mixed with bursts of dynamic creativity. Each track tends to blend
into one piece so it is difficult to define any highlights for me. Having said
that, '30 Pieces' is my favourite track as the time sigs and vocal style are
memorable among all the instrumental sections that the album capitalises on.
This track also has a killer riff in the instrumental break and some wonderful
flute. There are moments of sheer tranquil bliss in the same vein as King
Crimson, Transatlantic or Porcupine Tree. There are passages of deep mellotron
mixed with spacey guitar embellishments, and the cymbals crash in like waves on
a beach. The music transports you to an imaginary location; I can picture a
forest with sun bursting through the clouds with the golden rays blessing the
treetops. The soundscape is a beautiful transfixing serene texture with shades
of light and dark. The vocals are quiet and reflective such as on the
acoustically driven 'A Sky About To Rain'; "How did it ever come to this,
I can't pretend that nothing changed any longer... Ignore the space between the
lines, don't act so surprised when you knew it all along each and every lie
bursts a hole into my soul." Powerful stuff. There is not a lot of heavy rock on this which may
alienate some of the fans of earlier heavier Anekdoten. The fantastic up tempo
'In For a Ride' is as heavy as they get and even this is layered with pleasant
sounding keboard motifs. The vocal style on this is similar to Gentle Giant as
are the rhythm breaks. However, as in the case with Opeth's
"Damnation" that did not have a shred of metal on it, this is a nice
departure for the Swedish band. It takes them in a new direction with waves of
gentle keyboards, focusing on duel mellotron layers, and a few detours with
some heavy drum beats and solid guitar breaks. The riff on the instrumental
passage of 'A Sky About to Rain' is notable as a memorable killer riff, but for
the most part the mellotron orchestration dominates. Overall Anekdoten have a real winner here and it
may pleasantly surprise you as it did me. It will grow on you with its
infectious melodies and solid virtuoso instrumentation. I have to award this
musicianship and consistent high level of innovation 4 stars at least.
A review by Bonnek: If you want to know how much I marvel at
Anekdoten's music, I will simply refer you to my “Gravity” review. “A Time of
Day” continues in the same vein as “Gravity”, with some extra proggy things
thrown in for good measure, such as vintage prog instruments like moogs and
flutes and some unexpected interludes and alterations in some of the songs. Even so it took me months to appreciate it, I could
tell a similar story to that of other reviewers. I liked it at first but it
didn't really gel until I gave it another spin in the spring of 2009. I've
played it an uncountable number of times since and it still continues to blossom
more intensely. That is how slow and simultaneously addictive this music works
on you. So be warned and go out and buy this now. Just like a good wine this
needs a few years to season. I initially gave this 4 stars because I like the
bleak beauty of “Gravity” even
more, but since this sits definitely in the top 5% echelon of my discography, 5
stars it must be. There's few contemporary bands that crawl under my skin like
this. A review by Sean Trane: Few groups take as much time between albums while
still managing to release them at regular intervals. Only Tool seems to be able
to be more parsimonious. While Anekdoten's last two studio albums had not
raised that much enthusiasm from fans, the first being vacuous and thin, the
second foraying in the wrong direction, this was in my opinion Anekdoten's
fifth breath of fresh air. With an artwork (in a digipack) hinting at Vemod's
paganism and mystery, the return of Anna-Sofi's cello, a wider array of
keyboards and even some occasional flute (by guest Bergsten), indeed giving the
whole album an impetus that was absent since the late 90's. I must say that for
me, this was their last chance before I gave up if another poor album was
released. After an enthralling lead-off track ‘Great Unknown’
(the usual Anekdoten realm track plus a great flute), comes one of the most
unusual but extremely successful tracks ‘30 Pieces’. It starts out like an 80's
pop track (Nordin's drumming will keep this characteristic for much of the
7-min+ track) and slowly evolves to become a wild four minutes instrumental
interplay passage, where the superb flute takes the lion's share of the
spotlight; Very refreshing and a great start to this album! ‘King Of Oblivion’ (with its shared verses between
Jan and Niklas) and ‘A Sky About To Rain’ (with a slower and ambient ending
that's overstaying slightly its welcome) fail to maintain the superb level of
the first two, but both would've been highlights on the previous “Gravity”. The
short instrumental ‘Every Step I Take’ (with a post rock feeling, especially
the guitar part), ‘Stardust And Sand’ (a very acoustic ballad that reminds me
of ‘War Is Over’ from the previous album, but better), the gloomy and furious ‘In
For A Ride’ (with its great inter-verse lunacy bits) and ‘Prince Of The Ocean’
(slow, lengthy and haunting) end the album on the same level as it started. While not quite of the level of their now-mythic
debut or its violent follow-up, this album is indeed a return to form,
forgetting the emptiness of “From Within” and easily outdoing “Gravity”. Having
maybe found a start to their new direction without losing their souls,
Anekdoten is one of the better bands from that second 90's prog wave
891 A Gentleman's Hurricane A review by Gatot: Mind's Eye was initially a progressive band where
the main characteristic of the music was melodic and heavy. Some have termed
them as marrying heavy metal and progressive rock, taking influences from bands
like Rush, Yes, Queensrÿche, E.L.O, Winger, Toto and Genesis. The embryo of the
band started in 1992 when Johan Niemann (bass) and Daniel Flores (drums &
keyboards) met Fredrik Grünberger (guitar). They first called themselves Afterglow,
recorded and made a self-produced, self-financed promotion CD named “Afterglow”.
In 1997 they finally got a deal with a record company and recorded their first
CD “Into the Unknown” for the American label. The album was well received in
both American and German press. This "A Gentleman's Hurricane is my first
introduction to the band. Based on this album I can say that the music of
Mind's Eye is similar to Royal Hunt, but with more energy in most of its
compositions. Put it in a more suitable category, the music of Mind's Eye
(especially this album) is a heavy progressive AOR with song-orientated
compositions characterized by a catchy melody. If you like Royal Hunt, you might
love this one... The opening track "Praying for
Confession" is a grandiose composition where the musical arrangement is
quite complex and challenging with a great string section plus nice textures. I
was so impressed with this opening track and I expected what follows would be
something similar. As a matter of fact, I did not expect the grandiose opening
to happen in the next tracks. I really enjoy the second track "Seven
Days" which characterizes the melodic and heavy style of the music. Yes,
you might find similar riffs as Dream Theater, but it's obvious that the music
of Mind's Eye is nothing similar to Dream Theater. If anything, it's probably a
very small portion of the music that fits with Dream Theater’s style. "Assassination" sounds like Asia
performed in a heavy mood. The next track "Chaos Unleashed" confirms
the similarity of Mind's Eye with Royal Hunt, especially during the intro part. "Hell's Invitation" is a provocative
title and it has excellent composition with a riff-based rhythm section. The
next song "Feed My Revolver" moves in a similar vein with its
predecessor followed by "Ashes to Ashes (In Land Lullaby)" which has
a good combination between mellow and heavy parts. The guitar solo is stunning.
Almost all songs share similar styles that sometimes make me a bit bored with
the rhythm section. I know that as far as individual tracks are concerned, you
cannot deny that the individual song stands out firmly as excellent tracks. But
when it's combined into one cohesive whole, I find there are limited
diversities from one passage to another or one song to another. I know that the
composition of each track is excellent and you might find that "Pandora's
Musical Box" is an excellent example of their tight composition. The
problem is there are minimum tides between high and low parts. Overall, I would recommend this album for those who
like AOR in heavier composition. The individual song is strong in melody and
tight composition. It's an enjoyable album even though I feel "bored"
after three-quarters of the album due to not enough diversity as an album.
Those who like Royal Hunt, Styx, Coheed and Cambria and Kansas would love this
album, I believe. 3.75 stars overall rating. 892 Viides Luku - Hävitetty A review by Mellotron Storm: Whether you are a fan of the music or not, it is
difficult to argue that Moonsorrow are not masters of epic metal. Through a
notably consistent and accomplished career, the band has crafted immense pieces
of music that, more often than not, transcend the barriers of metal and go to
lengths that few folk metal bands ever do. 'V: Hävitetty' is the fifth
full-length album of Moonsorrow, and I could argue that it is their best.
Throughout the course of an hour, Moonsorrow makes it clear that they are in an
entirely different league than any of their Finnish compatriots, and one of the
best at what they do. With only two tracks here to make up the hour of music
that 'V: Hävitetty' offers, the catchy drinking tunes usually associated with
folk metal are non-existent here, instead giving way to two compositions of
metal that are epic in the truest sense of the word. 'V: Hävitetty' is a masterpiece
of metal, to put it simply, and although long-winded at times, I would love to
see a detractor of the genre still arguing their common points that it is
merely a style of 'noise' or 'screaming' after hearing this. 'V: Hävitetty' takes the form of two epic-length
tracks, 'Jäästä syntynyt/Varjojen virta' and 'Tuleen ajettu maa'. Contrary to
the majority of the bands that reach some level of international acclaim and
fame, Moonsorrow choose to remain singing in their mother tongue of Finnish,
and while it would often be difficult to make out what the singer was saying
through all of the dense instrumentation and raspy cries that make up most of
the vocal work here, it is still a testament to the band's unwillingness to
compromise. Anyone who has heard something from Moonsorrow before will have
some idea of what to expect right from the start; grand orchestrations from
both metal and folk instruments, complex arrangements, drawn out compositions
and a triumphant tone to everything they do. Here though, there is certainly a
little more of a black metal feel when compared to music they had released in
the past, although there are no profound stylistic changes to really mention. Instead of changing up what they have grown up
doing as a band, Moonsorrow instead chooses to refine and intensify their
existing sound. Simplicity is rare, and even possibly non-existent in the
vocabulary of 'V: Hävitetty'; quite commonly, multiple instruments of many
different timbres will be playing at once, giving the semblance of a folk metal
orchestra. As one might expect, all of the details within the music are
impossible to all pick up from the first listen onwards, and it is this sense
of exploration and engrossing nature of the album that makes it so good.
Although the album is never too quick to develop or change its pace throughout
each song's monstrous length, it is difficult to leave 'V: Hävitetty' on merely
in the background, due to the fact that there is too much going on to go
unnoticed. The production of the album can sound a little weak at times, but
this is almost certainly due to the fact that Moonsorrow jammed so much sound
into the mix that the competition between instruments makes things a little
cloudy. For an album that is so instantly enjoyable and
emotive, 'V: Hävitetty' is surprisingly challenging. A masterpiece of the
genre, and contrary to what some might argue, this is the way
folk metal was meant to be done.
893 A review by Bonnek: Unlike the albums that preceded it, Frames sounded
slightly disappointing at first. I heard flashes of good songwriting, but
somehow Oceansize seemed to have lost some of the appeal, diversity and
emotionality of the predecessors. As it turned out, this is their first album
that has grown on me instead of gradually losing my interest, and that is
always a good indication that there are proggy things abound. While I would not
really add my voice to the legion of fans who call this their best album to
date, it's certainly not less than the preceding ones, only different. Commemorative T-Shirt starts as an
homage to Oldfield's Tubular Bells. It grows into a captivating
epic rock song with beautiful vocals, brilliant drumming and 3 thick layers of
guitars. It's one of the first Oceansize songs that doesn't remind me
immediately of some other band. Oh yes, they have grown up. Unfamiliar continues the
thick guitar tapestries and varies them with catchy and intricate riffing.
Again it's remarkable how much they have matured. The verses still have a
regular indie vocal line, but the music below it explores more sophisticated
areas and time signatures. Quite ironically, even though it's the shortest
track here it's a tad too long. Trail of Fire is another
big composition. I sure hear some Porcupine Tree influences here, more so than
on their previous albums. If Oceansize didn't want to be tagged prog before,
then they sure fully embrace it here. Savant is a welcome
rest-point, it's a slowly progressing post-rock study with plenty of spacey
guitars and vocal effects, which might be another indication of the Porcupine Tree
influence. Only Twin gradually picks up a higher speed again.
It's not the easiest track to get into, a lot of gloomy atmosphere is built up
during the first half, but the melodic development in the second half could
have been better. An Old Friend is one of the
most chilling moments here: brooding minor chords, ghostly whispers and a
slowly pounding drum beat. Almost hesitantly, beautiful guitar picking is added
on this funeral march. Halfway in, heavier guitars lift up the mood. Not for
long, the ending progressively decomposes the sonic texture again, till only
the bass note remains. A bit of creepy feedback builds up and launches
into the heavy Sleeping Dogs, featuring complex time signature
riffing that is similar to how Porcupine Tree incorporated math rock influences
on In Absentia. It has potential but the wilder section with the
distorted screams should better have been handled by a guest vocalist with a
real death throat. Now it lacks that stroke of real aggression to make it work. The Frame ends my
version of the album. (Even though the package says 'bonus Live DVD', they
didn't deem it necessary to add the superior bonus Voorhees!). The
Frame hasn't yet convinced me of its qualities, the vocal lines aren't
really remarkable. As far as I'm concerned, Voorhees should
have been the preferred pick to end the album. It's an 11 minute epic with rich
textures, dramatic crescendo's and passionate playing. This band never sounded much like space-rock to me,
more like post-rock or experimental/post metal. This trivial notion is still
relevant when it comes to rating the album. It's a 3.5 stars that I would have
to round down when comparing it to Floyd masterpieces. However, when compared
to similar bands like Tool, Maudlin of the Well and Anathema, 4 stars are
deserved. Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 19 2012 at 07:13 |
||
AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: October 19 2012 at 00:15 | |
2007 continued...
894 A review by Conor Fynes: Often, the term 'ambient music' has admittedly had
a bit of a pejorative meaning in my mind. More often than not, I've associated
the ambient approach and label to be music that fails to capture the listener's
attention; the sort of thing that is best left in an elevator or hospital
waiting room. Of course, there is no way to critique an entire genre or musical
direction with 'good' or 'bad'; there's always going to be gold buried within
any mountain. Of course, leave it to the eclectic Norwegian experimental outfit
Ulver to create a piece of music that is mellow and soft, but leaves me hanging
for almost each blissful moment. This is about as far a cry as one could get
from Ulver's origins as a black metal act, and while the band gives a
completely different presentation here, I find myself loving the band more than
ever with this inventive sound they have fashioned with their 2007 masterpiece
'Shadows Of The Sun'. Make no mistake with this one, the album is
incredibly laid-back, and often quiet to the point of straining one's ears to
hear each detail. But, while the music here may not be chock-full of energetic
riffs and variety, Ulver's 'Shadows Of The Sun' succeeds simply by how well the
sound is arranged, and how surprisingly good the songwriting is considering the
ambient label the album has. Expect nothing but a quiet, mellow trip with
'Shadows', but it is also one of the most atmospheric records I have ever come
across. Much of the album is driven by peaceful, intricate electronics. These
are done very well, and while there is not much sparing the piano and the
occasional string section in terms of 'typical' instrumentation one might
expect to find in most music, the sounds are done perfectly, and often feel
arranged much like a classical composer would envision them. A notable aspect of the music here is the use of
the electronic instrument, the theramin. A fairly obscure instrument with a
uniquely distinctive voice to it, it gives a very eerie sound to its parts;
particularly the opener 'Eos'. Even before listening to 'Shadows Of The Sun' in
its entirety, 'Eos' always stood out to me as being one of those songs I could
always put on regardless of mood, and have it sweep me away by its sheer
beauty. Dark, deep and brooding vocals from Krystoffer Rygg (listed here as
Garm, or Trickster G.) add some extra resonance to the vast soundscapes, taking
a lyrical approach that can often be left open to one's personal
interpretation. The album is certainly not meant for every
occasion, and not every listener will have the patience to dig into every niche
and detail of the music before getting bored. That being said, I have found
myself really struck by the post-apocalyptic, brooding, and melancholic
ambiance the music gives; it is a personal journey, and a dark vision of the
future all in one. It is Ulver's 'Shadows Of The Sun', and it's been one of the
most beautiful things I have ever heard.
895 A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Symphonic Power metal with Celtic flavours... With Tarja being moved on in a whirlwind of Gothic
dust, Anette Olzon joined Nightwish and injected a new passion and enthusiasm
to the band. This amazing album begins with a 13 minute symphonic metal epic,
with Anette sounding crystal clear and emotional among all the orchestral
strings and grinding distorted guitars. 'The Poet and the Pendulum' certainly opens this
release in a blaze of glory, with massive crescendos and some absolutely
sumptuous strings. There is a passage of high octave vocals like an angelic
choir layered over dreamy cello and synth strings, and the odd harp glissando.
This is ultra dramatic music with some hyper orchestrations and downright
chilling soundscapes. The violins are frenetic at one point and are joined by
galloping metal riffs and a tirade of percussion and bass. Marco adds some
growling vocals but they are not too intrusive. It ends with gorgeous vocals,
dreamy piano and symphony. Overall, this is one of the greatest Nightwish songs
in their extensive catalogue. 'Bye Bye Beautiful' is a fan favourite, featuring a
heavy driving beat and an emphasis on the aggressive vocals of Marco. I prefer
the female vocals and a more melodic approach with Nightwish. One of the most
popular songs of recent years is 'Amaranth' which is rather heavy in rhythm and
very melodic, with Anette adding just the right amount of grandeur to the wall
of symphonic sounds. The choppy riff of Emppu's guitar on this track is
excellent and it has an innovative structure ranging from bone crushing riffing
to gentle piano by Tuomos. 'Cadence of Her Last Breath' has a pulsating
rhythmic riff and more stabs of orchestra. Anette's voice is multi tracked and
harmonised well with the gritty distortion and omnipresent strings. There is a
thrash feel in 'Master Passion Greed', perhaps one of the fastest and heaviest,
with Marco dominating on verses and then a mixture of symphonic and Anette
joining him in the chorus. Jukka's drumming is supersonic in places and really
drives along powerfully. 'Eva' begins with soft piano, strings and woodwind,
and Anette really serenades with sweet tones. This is Nightwish in their
melancholy mood, and they are able to provide some emotional moody scapes of
immeasurable beauty. 'Sahara' is another melodic rocker that is a grower. The
chugging riffs return with 'Whoever Brings the Night' sounding dark and more
prone to a metal sound. The chorus builds with some intriguing choral vocal
intonations and strings. There is a Celtic flavour present in 'The Islander'
with flute, acoustics and stormy effects. Marco uses clean vocals and sounds a
bit like Guy Manning. The theme that is concentric on a sea voyage further
augments the Celtic sound. The albatross even makes an appearance, along with
watery ghosts, bringing to mind the legend of the Rime of the Ancient Mariner.
It builds to a twin violin solo and is very different to other Nightwish tracks
and stands out as a result. 'Last of the Wilds' is an instrumental that follows
seamlessly with more thunder and Celtic flute and violin, though the metal
riffing guitar returns to up the tempo and atmosphere. I really like this side
of Nightwish with the compelling music mixing folk prog with heavy guitars; it
works so well. Emppu's lead break is a welcome embellishment along with some
fragrant flute and tinkling keyboards. '7 Days to the Wolves' is next and I expected some
heavier material after all the Celtic flavours, and was not left waiting long.
The drums pound heavily and then a metal riff crunches in with some violin
serrations, sounding like Rammstein. Anette is back on harmonised vocals and
Marco joins her later as the sound gets heavier. A lead break is heard briefly
and then after a chorus the song breaks into a new time sig with some dramatic
violins and faster drums. This is a terrific passage of music, and is augmented
with more vocals but the song has changed, until it moves back to the measured
rhythm; a great song reminding me of the style of Ayreon in places. The last track is 'Meadows of Heaven' opening with
melancholy strings and Celtic flute again, which really sounds dreamy and
peaceful. Anette is sensuous on crystalline vocals, and this builds to a
grandiose orchestration creating a wall of sound with the band at their most
bombastic and emotionally charged. Overall, this is a quality release from Nightwish,
showcasing the new talents of Anette Olzon and focussing on symphonic
orchestrations throughout. Some of the tracks are masterpieces such as the
opener, and others seem to glide by unnoticed such as the poppier 'For The
Heart I Once Had'. The Gothic element is omnipresent and it is consistent in
terms of quality musicianship, providing enough balance between metal and
symphonics. I was very impressed with "Dark Passion Play"; an
enjoyable listen with some tracks worthy of the bands' growing reputation as
leaders in Symphonic metal. 896 Sleeping In Traffic: Part One A review by Gatot: Right after Christmas last year I met Hardiansyah
Rizal who was on year end holiday in Jakarta. He has been working in Singapore
since three years ago. My prog meeting with Rizal has always been very unique.
Before he moved to Singapore, we occasionally gathered together for a prog
meeting right after office hours at his office. We typically spent about two to
four hours meeting until midnight. We talked a lot about prog music, while playing
some CDs that we had just received. Sometimes we talked about CDs that I
received directly from the bands due to my involvement with online sites. One year we held the meeting at local café down
town and I was introduced to a band called Beardfish that I had never heard of,
and I was blown away by their music. It was really a joy listening to this
album, categorized under "electic prog" and receiving many influences
from Gentle Giant, King Crimson and Zappa. I just need to add that there is a
bit of influence from Jethro Tull as well. Let's have a musical journey with "Sleeping in
Traffic: Part One". A wonderful opening! It starts in ambient nuances through an accordion
sound "On The Verge Of Sanity" (0:47) and it moves seamlessly with a
blast of upbeat music as the intro part of "Sunrise" (7:54) in an
elegant way. Honestly, I am impressed by the kind of music this intro part
delivers to my ears and it strikes through my mind wonderfully. The music is
quite symphonic in nature and it later has beautiful breaks right before the
first verse and the vocal line enters the music. I can sense the element of Van
der Graff Generator in the music. The melody is so catchy and also the piano
solo that accompanies the singing is also catchy. What makes the song so
powerful is the inclusion of screaming performed by the band's drummer Magnus
Östgren. This is truly a masterpiece track and it serves as a wonderful
opening! And here they go …a beautiful break! The next track "Afternoon Conversation"
(3:42) is basically a drumless song with magnificent guitar playing which
reminds me of Steve Howe of Yes. The song serves as a beautiful break that
flows naturally with an unusual melody but the more you listen to it, you will
see it's really catchy. It then moves back to an upbeat tempo music with
rocking style "And Never Know" (5:59). At first it sounds like early
King Crimson and later when guitar starts to roll, there is a similarity with
Jethro Tull, especially "Too Old To Rock n Roll, Too Young To Die"
song on the way the guitar is played. The singing style is truly energetic and
sometimes involves high register notes with screaming style. Honestly, this is
a great track! The "Roulette" (12:07) opening reminds me
of another Swedish band A.C.T. or Supertramp to be a bit precise. However, when
the keyboard enters, it wipes out every single similarity I can withdraw from
this piece because it's quite original in style. The singing style is quite
unique, especially when it is combined with unique keyboard/ organ work. It's
really good. This song moves wonderfully with multi-styles combining many
elements of music. "Dark Poet (3:24)" provides The Beatles
style of music with nice piano work that accompanies vocals.
"Harmony" (7:20) brings together the element of Gentle Giant, King
Crimson and a flavor of Procol Harum, but Gentle Giant is more obvious. The
stream of this song might sound weird to some people but it works really well
with me. I love how the vocal sings high and low register notes nicely.
"The Ungodly Slob" (6:42) is truly an excellent progressive rock band
with its dynamic structure combining complex arrangements and inventive
keyboard work. ..and the excellent concluding tracks. The three concluding tracks are all excellent.
"Year Of The Knife" (7:28) sounds like combining the music of Gentle
Giant, with great guitar work! There is classic rock music like Beck, Bogert, and
Appice. The song style is quite unique, especially the combination of guitar
work and the music beats, accompanied with excellent singing style. "Without You" (2:39) is an excellent
ballad with great acoustic guitar work accompanying mellow singing. "Same
Old Song (Sunset)" (7:51) is another excellent style with good mellotron
sound. Conclusion Overall, this is an excellent album that suits
those of you who expect dynamic structure and some sort of complexity combined
with nice melody. For those of you who are new to prog music, this album might
take you quite sometime to get familiar with what the band is trying to do. But
for those who have known King Crimson, Gentle Giant and Zappa, I don't think
you have difficulty in digesting and, in fact, enjoying this excellent album.
Bravo Sweden! The Land of Progressive Music. 897 A review by Warthur: Some bands, like Marillion or King Crimson, burst
onto the scene with a high-quality debut album which shows them having already
ironed out the wrinkles on their sound and at the top of their game. Other
bands, like Yes or Van der Graaf Generator, might let a lesser album or two
slip out before it all comes together and they finally put out an album which
represents a creative breakthrough for them (such as “The Yes Album” or “The
Least We Can Do Is Wave To Each Other”). Some bands are mere also-rans who put
out a few OK-ish albums but either break up before putting out something truly
brilliant or prove in the long term to just not have it in them to produce
something really earth-shaking. But I don't think I'm aware of any bands who've had
quite the career trajectory that Galahad have had. For well over a decade,
Galahad put out music which at its best was alright but not exactly essential
neo-prog, and at its worst was a tediously derivative waste of time. Then, all
of a sudden, it all comes together for them around fifteen years after their
debut album! Perhaps they just needed the right inspiration. “Empires Never
Last” is clearly motivated by the band members' disquiet about the direction of
the War on Terror (the GWB quote cropping up here and there should convince
even the most sceptical on that point) but either way, they've put out a
fascinating neo piece which combines melodic rock with some harder-edged
passages. Frontman Stuart Nicholson might not be the most characterful
vocalist, but what he lacks in personality or distinctiveness he makes up for
in anger and other heartfelt emotions. It's not perfect, ‘This Life Could Be My Last’
outstays its welcome a little bit, but it's a far better album than I ever
expected to get from Galahad, so bravo to them. A review by Finnforest: Musically "Empires" is a pretty darn good
listen with a dynamic sound that is categorized as neo-prog although that
categorization makes the band's vocalist Stuart Nicholson bristle a bit. He
describes their sound as much heavier with industrial and electronic influences
and more progressive in that they really try to change with each album. The
playing is very solid, most notably the guitar work and the ever present
keyboards. The vocals are also very inspired and just about perfect on the ears
in every situation. The album is very ambitious for a group that's been around
for so many years. The content deals with power in various forms and heavy social
and political topics. Much of it burns with anger and disgust through
Nicholson's scathing delivery. Here are Stuart's comments about the thematic
content of this album: "ENL works on several levels, it's up to the
listener to interpret the lyrics how they want. Yes, there is a certain link to
politics and Governments within the song, but it is also about individuals who
build empires in the work place or even at home. Therefore, I guess it is
socio-political lyric. Basically the song is saying nothing ever lasts in this
World and we'd be fools if we thought otherwise. I like to keep abreast of
what's going on in the World at large and have my own opinions just like any
other individual and, yes, these opinions do occasionally spill over in to the
song writing. But we are not a political band as such, no." [Stuart
Nicholson, interviewed by Giannis Tsakonas for Metal Perspective magazine,
Sept. 2006]. "Defiance" begins with beautiful female
choral vocals setting a mood of anticipation before Stuart growls out his
DE-FI-ANCE opening, then the mood builds with good drumming and keys. In
"Termination" Stuart trades off very effectively with the female
vocals as the band sound really picks up with heavy guitar. "I could be
God" is the longest track at 14 minutes. The vocals are dramatic and
Fish-like and there's a heavy Fugazi era feel though the drumming is more crisp
and metallic. A quiet part around 5 minutes leads into excerpts of a Dr. Martin
Luther King speech followed by electric riffing and later a solo. It's a good
song the first few times but doesn't quite sustain the length after many plays.
"Sidewinder" is also longer than it needs
to be and features the predictable excerpts of George Bush’ greatest hits for
your amusement, but has another great solo at the end. "Memories from an
African Twin" is one of the album's nicest moments with the anger dropped
briefly for some nice acoustic and electric guitar melody and uplifting
wordless vocals. Then comes the powerful title track "Empires
Never Last" which is a cool song and another of the album's highlights.
The clever verses speak of Little Miss Glory, a dirty, lying, soulless,
back-stabbing pariah who is destined to "crumble and fall." My first
interpretation was that she represented America as Bush is referenced in the
track ‘Sidewinder’ but this is not the case. Rather, LMG is the portrait of an
individual, a seriously messed-up one. While I have never seen Galahad perform
live I can guarantee this title track is going to bring the crowd to their feet
singing along, it's just a great song to highlight an album; these guys should
be very proud of. The closer "This Life Could Be My Last" is an
emotional and pleasant middle of the road rocker with a well-crafted chorus. I don't think "Empires" is quite the masterpiece
that others do but it is very enjoyable and I would recommend it easily to
neo-fans of bands like Arena and Marillion and to prog-metal fans as well. The
booklet features complete lyrics and provocative photos. 3.5 stars. 898 Sound of the Apocalypse A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Black Bonzo have produced one of the most exciting
prog concept albums of recent years. This is an astounding prog album from a relatively
obscure Swedish band that may be the Swedish answer to Yes. Certainly the first
thing one will notice when hearing this album is the striking similarity of
their style to the classic 70s eclectic prog of such artists as Uriah Heep,
Kansas, Emerson Lake & Palmer (ELP), Gentle Giant, Caravan, Yes, Pink
Floyd, King Crimson, Camel and Rush, to name a few. They are heavily influenced
but are not mere imitations, rather adding their own inimitable style to the
progressive genre. Every track is masterfully executed with technical precision
and artistic flare, all wrapped up in a concept album. The album artwork is
sublime presented in a 3-gatefold widevision apocalyptic scenario. The imagery
is sumptuous and compliments the conceptual material admirably. The high-powered concept of an apocalyptic event
from the pages of Revelation begins with 'Thorns Upon A Crown' that is driven
by the hard pounding of an Emerson-like Hammond and Greg Lake-ish vocals. It
ends with a backwards glass effect, perhaps we are sliding into the mirror of
the future. Track 2 is 'Giant Games' and sounds a little like
Gentle Giant ironically enough. It is an excellent progressive rocker with a
huge shuffle and shifting time signature changes throughout. The relentless
Hammond and angular guitar riffing are exceptional. It even fades out in the
tradition of 70s songs. The lyrics are about the 911 conspiracy, if such a
thing exists. The next track, ‘Yesterday's Friends’, is a 7
minute killer that speaks of loneliness, emptiness, alienation, lost friends
and feelings of remorse. Somehow through the midst of this despair Black
Bonzo's musical prowess injects a ray of hope, in a similar way Peter Hammill
does in Van der Graaf Generator. The words are potent: "Why can't we be
friends like we were yesterday? Sun was shining and you held my hand, Trapped
in shackles, thrown to the jackals, I am struggling just to breathe." The
vocals are similar in style to Pink Floyd's Dave Gilmour and there is a jagged
Robert Fripp-style guitar riff that crashes throughout. It's absolutely
stunning and at 3 mins in, the track transforms into an off-kilter syncopated
rhythm with Keith Emerson style staccatos on the Hammond. Yes, it's that good. Could it get better? Absolutely. Track 4, 'The
Well' is my favourite track because it sounds uncannily like a 70s throwback to
the heavier side of Caravan with Pye Hastings type vocals. I love the lyrics:
"The hammer is falling down so hard, it won't catch your very eye,"
powerful and emotive. The track is driven by a relentless heavy guitar and
keyboard riff with swirling synth answers. The excellent melody is beautiful
and it twists and turns in surprising directions. I admire the way the band has
captured that eclectic 70s prog spirit, unashamedly, and they have hit it right
on the head; not only paying homage to the classic prog sound but somehow
reinventing it with their own original finesse. Track 5 is a short intermission that reminds one
immediately of Jethro Tull with flute and irregular vocals. ‘Ageless Door'
follows and sends us back to the Hammond and aggressive guitar stabs. The
off-beat drum patterns are similar to Bill Bruford's style, and they punctuate
the track throughout as the more abrasive vocals are heard; "An echo in
the corridor of time, a memory collapsed, a fainted will, a transcendent crime,
spare me all hypocrisy and blame." The track rocks hard but never quite
keeps rhythm, missing beats and jumping rhythm patterns. There are lots of
double guitar licks, an interlude with strange effects over a lead solo from
Karlsson, and Hammond stabs, sounding at times like early ELP; it is delicious
prog bliss. Track 7, 'Iscariot', is a fantastic song that moves
in many directions. 3 mins into it the tracks changes gears into a psychedelic
freak out. The thematic content concerns judgement day and sin and the
consequences of the Judas kiss. Ahlund excels again on the scorching Hammond.
Black Bonzo have stamped their authority on the use of the Hammond on this
album. How do you end such a brilliant album? Why, with a
13 min multi-movement mini epic of course. 'Sound of the Apocalypse' is a
scintillating excursion of musical virtuosity that includes mellotron, multi
vocal harmonies and a wonderful vocal performance. It is broken into three
sections in the tradition of such prog classic bands as Caravan. These meld
together seamlessly to form a bonafide prog classic. Part 1 is 'Twins' (the
Twin Towers?) that begins with a series of chilling minimalist piano chords,
something like GodSpeed You Black Emperor's minimalist style. We hear a voice
talking: "Changes to the chemistry of the oceans. of the
atmosphere..." The Dave Gilmour style vocals begin and it builds slowly
into a huge wall of sound with Mellotron and multi-part guitars. At 5 mins into
the track, it suddenly changes time signature pace into part 2 'Towers
Collapse' (Must be a reference to 911, though the lyrics are subtle). This is
an instrumental with erratic piano and jazz drums. There are strange saxophone
sounds and it reminds one of the off-kilter middle section of King Crimson's
'21st Century Schizoid Man'. This is a showpiece for these musicians. Part 3 is
'The Boiling Point' and the track returns to the opening stanza but it is more
of an irregular time pattern. The swirling keyboards build to the type of
majestic finale as Yes's 'And You and I'; the soundscape of symphonic Mellotron
is backed by Karlsson's searing guitar solos. The heartbeat of a bass continues
underneath it all and it builds to the crescendo of finality, as good as I have
heard, and then it is all over. And I immediately put the CD on again and
listen to it knowing this is one of the best in my prog collection. So there you have it. Overblown and curiously true
to the retro 70s classic Golden era of prog, Black Bonzo have produced one of
the most exciting and surprising concept albums of 2007. 899 A review by UMUR: I have only loosely heard the first two albums from
Riverside and therefore I have nothing to put “Rapid Eye Movement” up against.
What I can say is that this is a great album, and my interest was caught the
first time I listened to it. They are very inspired by Dream Theater, Porcupine
Tree and to a lesser degree Marillion and Tool. I hear hints of these bands
everywhere in Riverside’s music. I don´t find them to be ripp-offs though as
they set their own special mark on the music. You can clearly hear that it is
Riverside you are listening to. The sound quality and the musicians are top notch,
only good things can be said here. ‘Beyond The Eyelids’ starts the album of with a
Dream Theater inspired instrumental opening which after a couple of minutes
segues into the main song. It´s a great song even though I find the metal
riff´s a bit generic. ‘Rainbow Box’ is a great rocker, with some simple
but brilliant keyboard sounds. The vocals from Mariusz Duda are really strong
and the lyrics are clever; "Medication time, My favorite Part" what a
great start to a great song. ‘02 Panic Room’ is the single from the album, and
rightly so. This is a strong song with memorable melody lines. The main riff
reminds me of Depeche Mode from “Ultra” if anyone can make the link. A very
modern sounding song. The song shifts mood and the closing section reminds me
of Marillion, especially the guitar which could have been a Rothery riff. This
section is unfortunately cut from the single version of the song, and I just hate
it when bands chop their perfect songs up to match the single 3 minute mark.
Fortunately, this version of the song has it all. What a beauty. ‘Schizophrenic Prayer’ is one of the most beautiful
songs on the album, I just can´t get enough of this one. Again Duda sings
majestically. The rhythm in the drums is worth noting as well. ‘Parasomnia’ took me a while to get into, as it is
not easily accesible. It´s a great song though and especially the quiet passage
in the song is really godly. ‘Through The Other Side’ is a mellow Pink Floyd
inspired song, and one of the more weak moments on the album. Not bad, just not
the most exciting song. ‘Embryonic’ is another mellow song. Here we hear
the Porcupine Tree influence very much. It´s a very nice song. ‘Cybernetic
Pillow’ is a rock/ metal song and a pretty good one. ‘Ultimate Trip’ which is a song of epic proportions
(it last for 13+ minutes), starts out very well, but I feel it´s losing it´s
breath midway. I think it is a bit too long for the material displayed in the
song. Maybe it will grow on me in time. It´s good but nothing more right now. I was about to give this one 5 stars, but when I
came to think of it, some things made me give it 4 instead. First of all, I
don´t know if this will stand the test of time. Will I listen to this in 20
years? And then there is the question of the heavy metal riffs in some of the
songs which I find kind of generic. It´s really funny because generally I
review metal bands with prog rock tendencies and this time it´s the other way
round as I find Riverside to be a prog rock band with metal leanings. It
doesn´t suit them that well in my opinion. If they could lose those metal
riffs, I think their music would transcend to a higher plain.
A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Shine On Riverside You Diamond! The darlings of Poland, Riverside, are a band that
I have grown to love over the years and they have produced some masterpiece
work such as the recent "Anno Domine High Definition". This album
"Rapid Eye Movement" is certainly not without some outstanding
moments but it is also not as heavy as they eventually became. The symphonic
sounds dominate, and very heart felt performed vocals. The vocals are similar
to Steven Wilson's style. Mariusz Duda on lead vocals plays bass and acoustic
guitar; Piotr Grudzinski is the guitarist; Michal Lapaj excels on keyboards and
Piotr Kozieradzki is the drummer. The band capture a range of emotions and
always produce quality music, though on this album not as consistent as others. One instance is the powerful lead break in the
acoustically driven 'Embryonic'. The song is brimming over with serenity
including wind howling and intimate vocals, perhaps the band in their most
gentle mood. 'Parasomnia' features a heavy infectious riff and a
crunching instrumental break. '02 Panic Room' is the single that stems from
this album and features in their live set often. The rhythmic pulses and
swathes of synth are reminiscent of the 80s such as Human League or Depeche
Mode. 'Beyond the Eyelids' features one of the great
basslines of Duda. 'Through the Other Side' has very ambient textures, layers
of synth and spacey nuances. There are some killer riffs such as the metal
distortion of 'Cybernetic Pillow.' This track also has a sustained string sound
on the keyboards and inventive lead work very much like Porcupine Tree. The lengthy epic 'Ultimate trip' is a 13 minute
standout track. The lead break is incredible, and the consistent metal riffing
is a terrific augmentation. The structure takes on dark and light passages of
musicianship par excellence. Duda's vocals are hypnotic over the spacey music
sections. Grudsinski's guitar soars and sings beautifully. The bonus disc is a worthy addition with a
dreamscape of mellotron on 'Behind the Eyes' with its captivating space prog.
The guitar work on the instrumental 'Lucid Dream IV' is masterful and in a
sense reminded me of Alex Lifeson's style. The odd fractured time sig and
Hammond organ sound are embellishments that lift the sound to a crescendo. The
synth and metal guitar trade off wonderfully in a Dream Theater fashion. This
is one of the definitive highlights of the album. 'Back to the River' has an
ethereal outer space drone, then a 6 note phrase that locks in as a lead guitar
chimes over, very similar to Pink Floyd's 'Shine On'. The lead break on this
instrumental is exquisite sounding like Gilmour, or Steve Hackett. This even
finishes with the 'Shine On' riff becoming a cover version of the classic, so
the obvious influence is now evident. No doubt this is a solid Riverside album but I was
not as blown away by this as "ADHD" or "Second Life
Syndrome", nevertheless it is great to hear these tracks live and to
return to some of the songs as part of the Riverside catalogue. 900 Of All
The Mysteries A review by Mellotron Storm: I'm still going to say i prefer "Between
Sunlight And Shadow" to this release but that could change because this one
is just getting better and better with every listen. I'm actually very
surprised how much I like this compared to the first few listens. "Between
Sunlight And Shadow" really had the same sort of sound throughout, a sound
I really like, while this one has more
variety on it and is different, and the Rush elements are pretty much gone on
this one. Fantastic lyrics as well, just like on their previous album. Things get started with an upbeat instrumental
called "Mongrel". This tune reminds me of a cross between Frogg Cafe
and Echolyn, especially the former. Lots of piano and angular guitar. This is
just a pleasure. "Smile" opens with acoustic guitar and reserved
vocals. Flute before 2 minutes before a powerful outbreak of drums and guitar 3
minutes in and even more so a minute after that. Nice. The vocals remind me of
Roine Stolt 5 minutes in as he gets theatrical. Piano and mellow vocals before
we get strummed guitar and violin, and a minute later we get some cool vocal
arrangements. He then sings "I remember his smile" then all hell
breaks loose! A very pleasant and relaxed ending, as he sings "Who's
smiling now?" over and over. I can't help but think the lyrics here refer
to a son who's father has left, and he says he remembers his smile, which is
followed with the words "Who's smiling now". I love the guitar 13
minutes in on this amazing tune. "XOT" is the second and final
instrumental. The synths are very prominent early with drums, but the bass is
also chunky and the guitar has lots of bottom end. We get a Rush moment after 3
minutes with the bass and guitar interplayon this very good song. "Patchquilt" lyrically looks at how we
all develop into the person we are from our past experiences, and our childhood.
This is a reserved song for the most part with vocals and piano dominating the
sound. "Kaleidoscope" is mostly reserved vocals and piano for the
first 2 1/2 minutes. Guitar then grinds away tastefully as a fuller sound
arrives. The vocals soar as it ends with another Rush moment. "Islands" is the 20 minute closer. Cool
vocal arrangements to open as violin plays on, solo piano 2 minutes in as
solemn vocals and acoustic guitar come in. A more upbeat sound arrives after 4
minutes with synths, drums and soaring guitar. It's almost euphoric when the
vocals and organ join forces 7 minutes in. Light drums, piano and synths take
us in a new direction 10 minutes in. Flute and vocals eventually join in,then an
outburst of heaviness 13 minutes in is surprising as it settles back down
quickly. Vocals and piano then lead the way before synths and drums take over.
Guitar comes in playing over top of the drums and piano. Nice. The guitar/drum
section 16 minutes in is great as synths join in as this just goes on and on. I have to take my hat off to these guys,as they did
it again and in a different way. Singularity are a talented group of musicians
to say the least. 901 A review by UMUR: “Paradise Lost” is the seventh studio album from
progressive neo classical US power metal band Symphony X. Their previous album “The
Odyssey” is one of my favorite progressive metal albums and without a doubt my
favorite from the band. So it´s understandable that I was awaiting the release
of “Paradise Lost” with some expectations. My expectations were unfortunately
only partially met. The music on “Paradise Lost” continues the more
heavy and dark path that was started on “The Odyssey”. This is a positive thing
in my opinion and songs like ‘Set the World on Fire’ and ‘Domination’ are great
examples of Symphony X when they are most heavy. ‘The Serpent´s Kiss’ is also a
good song and with the title track we have a beautiful power ballad. Maybe the
most well composed power ballad ever written by the band (Micheal Romeo). It´s
very much in the vein of former power ballads written by the band but I enjoy
it. Of the last five songs I´m most fond of ‘Revelation (Divus Pennae Ex
Tragoedia)’ allthough the quality is high throughout the album. The musicianship is as always excellent and the
production is probably the best Symphony X has had up until now. I said that my expectations were only partially met
with “Paradise Lost” and I have to mention why. First of all the music is very
similar to what Symphony X have made in the past. We have the sharp edgy
riffing, neo classical and power metal elements and we have the symphonic epic
approach to writing music that has always been one of the trademarks in Symphony
X music. It´s done well on “Paradise Lost” and Symphony X is maybe the best
band in their particular sub-genre. They are definitely much heavier than most
other bands in the genre which is something I greatly enjoy. The problem is
that I´ve heard it all before and if you ask me it´s time for a change of sound
for Symphony X. They´ve simply used all the water in the well. Despite my
growing concern regarding Symphony X stagnated sound I still think “Paradise
Lost” is an excellent album and it fully deserves 4 stars. But next time I want
to hear something new or I´ll probably not be so kind again. A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: "Paradise Lost" is a heavy powerhouse of
prog metal. "Paradise Lost" is a great Symphony X album,
as heavy as the band get featuring a much more aggressive approach. Gone are
the heavy reliances on big bombastic orchestras from "The Odyssey"
and gone are the pretentious conceptual themes of "Twilight In
Olympus"; this is just solid power metal with killer riffs, and it's
awesome. Russel Allen is angry and darker on these tracks. The concept is
present though it is more based on John Milton's epic poem rather than
retelling it. It begins with the instrumental 'Oculus Ex Inferni' that
features mass choirs and orchestra, but it stands alone in this regard. 'Set The World On Fire' is a riff
heavy guitar dominated thrasher. The lead break is incredible trading off
between Romeo's guitar and Pinella's keys. My favourite track on the album is 'Domination' that riffs along at
a blistering speed. There is a scorching lead solo that tears the fabric of
time itself apart. 'Serpent's Kiss' is
another very good track with a strong melody. Romeo goes ballistic on guitar
with time sig changes to die for. 'Paradise Lost' slows things down
a little with a nice piano interlude and sustained synth pads. It builds up to
an infectious chorus with catchy lyrics. 'Eve Of Seduction' is a quick tempo speed metal blaster, with
very significant time shifts in tempo and feel. 'The Walls Of Babylon' is a
wonderful metal triumph. Russell tears it up on this with dynamic expression. ‘Seven' is a fast metal bltzkrieg
that has an onslaught of drums and bass. Romeo is incredible on guitar
throughout and the lead solo is a fireball comet of power. 'The Sacrifice' is like an
80s power ballad that is interesting to compare with the rest of the power
metal and makes a nice break form the blistering riffs, showcasing Allen's
vocals. 'Revelation' is
ultra heavy and violent with chunky distortion and crunching riffs like machine
gun blasts. There are synth passages and piano to break the mayhem and then it
locks into an infectious riff after 7 minutes. "Paradise Lost" is the best thing
Symphony X have done; creative, powerful, intense and a strong melodic approach
are the main points. I am not into the concept, which is way too dark for my
tastes; demonic and overbearing in places, however credit where credit is due;
this is a monster riffng metal powerhouse. 4 blazing stars. Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 19 2012 at 01:08 |
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: October 19 2012 at 01:09 | |
2008 coming soon...
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: October 29 2012 at 19:27 | |
2008 902 A review by Mellotron Storm: Jean Louis are an all instrumental trio out of
France. Drums, bass and trumpet are the instruments of choice here. What I find
unique are the boxes and devices that are used on the trumpet and slide trumpet
which makes it sound like there's electronics involved. This is chaotic at
times as well as complex and intricate. Powerful is another word I'd use. ‘Tourlac’ has some nice prominent bass around a
minute as the drums pound and the trumpet makes these ungodly sounds. A calm
before 2 1/2 minutes as "it" starts to come back to life after 3 1/2
minutes. ‘Maximator’ has intricate percussion and chunky bass then the beast
(trumpet) arrives after a minute and all hell breaks loose. ‘...’ features
percussion and the sound of the sleeping beast. ‘Zakir’ opens with bass as
drums join in then trumpet. The sound gets intricate at 1 1/2 minutes then it
settles back again. It's building into intense stuff, then it settles down
after 7 minutes, and kicks back in a minute later. ‘...’ is an experimental
piece with a heart beat-like ending. ‘Airbus’ has these quick little outbursts as sounds
come and go. It settles back and we get a great sound 4 minutes in as the
trumpet goes insane. It's slower but heavier before 6 minutes. ‘Tranche’ has
these intricate sounds early on and it's fuller after 2 minutes, heavier a
minute later then chaos after 4 minutes. ‘Chasseurs En Transe’ has this
rumbling bass and drum soundscape as the trumpet lights it up over top, then it
all turns more powerful. A calm before 4 minutes then it builds. ‘...’ is
experimental as the trumpet cries out. ‘Kasams’ is hard and heavy from the get
go; atmosphere and a calm a minute in, then it kicks back in after 2 1/2
minutes. Another calm around 5 minutes but not for long as it turns heavy.
Check out the drumming 7 minutes in! Silence then trumpet that sounds normal
for once after 8 minutes. This is a killer album that I originally gave 4
stars but here I am less than a year later to bump that up to 5 stars.
903 A review by Warthur: Jannick Top's “Infernal
Machina” is a masterful attempt to create a modern Zeuhl masterpiece without
compromising the elements which made the genre so fascinating in the 1970s. An
album-length piece along the lines of “Mekanik Destruktiw Kommandoh” and other
Magma classics, the composition incorporates all the pulsing rhythms and choral
vocals you expect of vintage Zeuhl but also adds some more modern elements;
there's electronic samples and interventions here and there, and in the final
track ‘Resolutio’ there's a brash and dirty guitar solo which wouldn't be too
out of place on a Nine Inch Nails album. Overall, it's a dark and fascinating
album which is a real grower; it might not sound too special at first, but the
adept way in which it builds to the climax of the piece makes it addictive
stuff. A review by Mellotron
Storm: This is an absolute monster! Jannick Top is back! I
was awestruck by his "Soleil D'Ork" album from 2001, which was really
a compilation album of songs he had done over the years. If it's possible this
one is even better.This is really one long suite divided into 11 parts, plus
there is the concluding track ‘Rosolution’. All the tracks blend into each
other, at times you wouldn't know when one part ends and another starts, and at
other times there is a change,but the music never stops.This album builds up
slowly to a feverish pitch that is dark, heavy and relentless. It's so exciting
to have a new Zeuhl album to listen to in 2008. Christian and Stella Vander
guest, as does Klaus Blasquis and James Mac Gaw, among many others. What I like
about Top's two solo records more than Magma's recordings are how heavy, dark
and furious they are. ‘Part I’ opens with spacey sounds as slowly played
piano comes in. Deep bass growls come and go slowly as well, including some
cellobass and fuzz bass. This is all so cool sounding, with female vocal
melodies or chants that come in after 4 1/2 minutes to join the piano and bass.
‘Part I’ is the longest section at 7 1/2 minutes. ‘Part II’ continues with what
went on before along with some heavy industrial sounds. The tempo is picking up,
drums pound slowly as the bass growls and female vocal melodies join in. ‘Part III’ opens with the first change as we get
guitar riffs to open as female vocal melodies continue. Drums and bass both
create the bottom end as guitars continue to light it up. The tempo picks up 3
minutes in with an awesome sound! ‘Part IV’ begins with a heavy and angry sound
before Blasquis comes in with his unmistakable vocals. The sound pulses slowly
and heavily. Piano joins in, then guitar very late as it blends into ‘Part V’
where we get more of a beat as the guitar makes some noise. Here comes that
pulsating bass with a fantastic sound! The tempo picks up before 3 minutes as
female vocal melodies come in and the guitar continues. The tempo picks up another
notch 4 minutes in and the guitar is great. ‘Part VI’ continues with the same melody as the
sound is getting very intense. This has to be heard to be believed! They even
go one better 2 minutes in; a furious pace. I can't believe how long this goes on!
It's almost 3 1/2 minutes in that we get relief when the guitar comes in
ripping it up. Then that relentless melody comes back briefly then stops as the
guitar lights it up again. The drumming is off the charts, has to be Vander! An
absolute frenzy! It all finally ends as ‘Part VII’ starts with piano melodies
and lighter drums and bass. The drums and bass become more prominent 2 minutes
in. Male vocal melodies arrive, and check out the drumming. ‘Part VIII’ continues with same melody. It's
getting more intense as piano continues,then lightens 2 1/2 minutes in and
continues into ‘Part IX’ but the bass and drums take over as it starts to get
dark and heavy. Lots of bottom end during this part,and the intensity is
rising. Guitar comes in around 4 minutes to add to the hysteria. Male vocal
melodies arrive. ‘Part X’ continues with the same sound. Great sound 2 minutes
in. ‘Part XI’ continues with the riffs and heavy drums.
Nice. Female vocal melodies come in and then piano. Blasquiz too as they go for
the dramatic finale. ‘Rosolution’ is very interesting sounding. Experimental
might be the word as drums keep a steady beat; sounds cool though. Riffs and
female vocal melodies 2 minutes in. It ends just like the first song began, in
that same spacey manner. Zeuhl fans will think they've died and gone to
heaven with this release. A must have. 904 A review by UMUR: "obZen" is
the 6th full-length studio album by Swedish technical/experimental extreme
metal act Meshuggah. The
album was released in March 2008 by Nuclear Blast Records. "obZen" has
seen both a CD and a vinyl release. Meshuggah are a
grinding and alien sounding machine. Razor sharp and bone crushingly heavy
riffing delivered in odd time signatures, groove based precision drumming,
aggressive, distorted and shouting vocals and those Holdsworthian jazzy guitar
solos as the icing on the cake. In the early-to-mid nineties Meshuggah were tagged groove
thrash but they've become something more beastly, mechanical and cold since
then. The change started with "Chaosphere”
(1998) and Meshuggah have
since experimented with their sound. There haven't been much of on any of the band's
releases between 1998 and 2008 that signalled a return to a more groove thrash
dominated sound, but I'll be damned if "obZen" doesn't show signs of this. A track like opener "Combustion" especially reminds me of the early
technical groove thrash days of the band. When that is said, the music on "obZen" is still
complex, challenging and anything but an easy listen. There are more
"hooks" on the album than on any of the band's releases since "Destroy Erase Improve” (1995) though. Besides "Combustion",
which is one of the standout tracks on the album, I simply have to
mention "Bleed".
It has to be one of the most relentlessly aggressive and punishing pieces of
music I've yet encountered. The fiercely fast paced and rythmically complex
riffing in that track are "out of this world" to say the least. We're
talking riffs that will hurt playing for even the most enduring
guitarist/bassist. The rest of the tracks are of an outstanding quality too and
simply among the best the band have yet released. The clean yet raw and
powerful sound production only further enhances the listening experience. As such "obZen" doesn't
add much new to Meshuggah's signature
sound, but it brings together the greatest components from all their previous
releases and ends up as a demonstration in how to create powerful, memorable
and punchy extreme metal without sacrificing clever songwriting. As in the case
with most Meshuggah releases, "obZen" has taken a
couple of years to really sink in. It's not the kind of album you listen to
once and fully grasp. The songs take time to grow, but patience is the key to
the irresistible hypnotic grooves on "obZen"; grooves that only Meshuggah create to this level of
perfection. A 5 star (100%) rating is fully deserved. 905 Bantam To Behemoth A review by UMUR: “Bantam To Behemoth” is
the debut full-length studio album by progressive rock act Birds and Buildings. The album was
released in 2008 through Emkog
Records. Birds and
Buildings features members from Cerebus Effect and Deluge Grander. The music on the album is a very eclectic mix of
progressive rock, prog folk and jazz rock/ fusion. I hear as varied acts
as Gentle Giant, Frank Zappa (1973-75), Kaipa and Genesis in the music, but it's
hard to pin down one specific influence as the music is very diverse and
intriguing. The variation is great and there are beautiful symphonic passages,
mellow prog folky ones and some really challenging jazz rock/ fusion parts. The
musicianship is outstanding on the album. Keyboards, saxophone, flute and
clarinet colour the music in addition to the more regular rock instrumentation
of guitar, bass and drums. The music is mostly instrumental and that's probably
a good idea because when the male vocals occasionally pop up they sound a bit
like a drowsy John Wetton.
It helps a bit when they put some psychedelic effects on the vocals but still
the vocals are the weak link on the album. ‘Chronicle
of the Invisible River of Stone’ features female vocals which
unfortunately don't do much for me either. Fortunately the songs are all of
high quality and the vocals don't ruin my experience, even though I wish the
band would have chosen a more interesting vocal style. The production is really well sounding. It's seldom
that you hear an album from 2008 with a warm and "authentic" sound
like this. Great production work. Despite my complaints about the vocals, “Bantam To Behemoth” is an
extremely impressive debut album by Birds
and Buildings and I really hope to hear more from this exciting act
in the future. A 3.5 - 4 star rating is deserved. A review by Warthur: Imagine if National
Health, the Mothers of Invention, mid-1970s King Crimson and perhaps Magma were
all in the same tour bus and they had a really nasty crash, and you were tasked
with cobbling the bits together into a functional band. The resultant
Frankenstein's monster of a group would probably still not sound quite as strange
as Birds and Buildings, but you'd be most of the way there. Presenting an eclectic,
heavy, and relentlessly fast-paced brand of avant-progressive rock on this
debut album, the band bring a fresh and new approach to the jazzier end of RIO,
and if I name dropped any more prog styles on here you'd probably think I was
making this review up. But I'm not, they really do integrate all that different
territory into a novel, coherent sound which makes this one of the most
exciting prog debut albums of the past decade. 906 Discesa agl'inferi d'un giovane amante A review by Finnforest: A musical crime of passion in progress, straight
for the jugular. Best new thing I've heard in ages. Every once in a
while, quite unexpectedly, a band shows up at my door and just takes my breath
away. A band that I really feel honored to not only experience but to share
with others. Il Bacio della Medusa (Medusa's Kiss) is such a band. This is
their 2nd album in what I hope is a long career. BdM combine progressive rock
with hard rock, blues rock, moonlight folk, and stunning contributions of
flute, violin, piano and saxophone. You really get the whole package here;
amazing composition, passionate performance, great melody, and tons of
enthusiasm and spark. This is a band that pays homage to the greatest 70s
Italian bands, English bands like Purple and Tull, and even flash the bluesy
burn of Wicked Minds or Jack White. They are every bit as fresh and exciting as
Finisterre but with more edge. But as powerful as their rock side is, equally
dynamic is their softer side, perfectly blended with extended passages of flute
and violin. Before I get further into their album just a brief bit of history
for you. BdM (from the Perugia area) began in 2002 when
vocalist Simone Cecchini, drummer Diego Petrini, and bassist Federico Caprai
launched the project. Later they would add Simone Brozzetti on guitar, Eva
Morelli on flute, and Daniele Rinchi on violin. The six piece line-up labored
intensely on this album and you can literally feel the great efforts put into
each track to make them special. Each song is so well rounded musically and
artistically, like great art the pieces take the time they need to develop but
without ever getting boring. Drummer and multi-instrumentalist Diego Petrini
composed the majority of this fine music. The band are big fans of art in
general as noted by Simone: "we
are all students of Art and we like very much Renaissance and Baroque; one of
our favourite painters is surely Caravaggio, and not only by artistic point of
view but also for his crazy life, a life spent to run by something, a short
life for sure but he left an incredible sign of his presence with his painting" [Simone
Cecchini]. The band cultivates sort of a dark image in their
album art and dress which gives them a somewhat menacing public image when in
fact it is but one side of their music. Believe me, there is more than enough
beauty here to balance the dark edge; this music will lift you, not depress
you. Most tracks in this conceptual album flow together
without breaks, adding to the sense that it unfolds like a grand play. They
have a bit of that dramatic theatrical flair that recalls Ange and Queen at
their finest. According to Cecchini the album is "a sort of Dante's "Paolo e Francesca" but made in our
way, it's the story of a lover who is in hell with his women, flash backs
feelings and many sensations by the point of view of the lover." The
first two tracks provide the album's introduction, slowly and softly bringing
the listener in with gentle piano, violin, and flute. We are introduced to
Cecchini's outstanding vocal talent which is rich and provocative and
commanding, but unlike the way some bands get carried away with constant
vocals, he knows when to lay back and let the music have the stage. He does
often, as there are long instrumental passages. As I mentioned, they masterfully build up to the
rock stuff rather than just diving into it. Throughout the album they
transition so well from bombast to gentleness, running the emotional gamut.
When the full band does begin to come alive during "Confessione d'un
Amante" they feature feisty keyboard runs, raunchy electric leads, and a
powerful rhythm section. They'll rock for a bit and then out of nowhere drops
these change-ups, like one interlude with devilish gypsy-folk sound, with
fiddle and handclaps over acoustic guitar. You will hear a spooky dirge with storms,
spoken narrations, strange voices, and vultures overhead. The middle section of the album is the meat of the
heavy and bluesy rock. Arrangements are impeccable as the keys and guitar are
so effortlessly woven into the sax and flute parts. They make the traditional
rock so much zestier and it's all laid over Petrini's drumming which would make
Bonham proud. "Melencolia" is my favourite track, a gorgeous amalgam
of Camel/Floyd/PFM with glowing acoustic guitars, beautiful whispered
harmonies, warm bass lines and soft percussions. Heaven. After this will come
extended saxophone and electric guitar solos of great feeling and drama. The
final tracks close this show with great pizazz. There is a section of spacey
keys and affects laden guitar followed by a long melancholy piano/violin
section with female chorus vocals that are beautiful. And finally they close
with mournful piano and violin. If you love hard '70s rock and/or classic period
Italian progressive this album is an absolute sure thing. Fantastic. My only
worry is that I can't imagine how they're going to top themselves next time.
This is music without cynicism-birthed purely with sincere motivations of
pleasing the music lover. When I recognize that certain authenticity in a band
it always makes it special to me. And now I undertake the mission of spreading
the word about this deserving band. I'll be picking up more copies of this CD
as gifts for rock loving friends. 10/10 Bravo to these lads and fair lady. 907 A review by Mellotron
Storm: Three of the four members of this band have a Zeuhl
background as they all have played in Magma. I'm talking about James Mac Gaw on
guitar, Emmanuel Borghi on keyboards and Philippe Bussonnet on bass. Daniel
Jeand'heur is one of my favourite drummers as well. He played on Amygdala's
latest and was simply outstanding. This is truly a band effort as 3 of the 4
members composed 2 songs each, and Mac Gaw composed the other one. These guys
are truly brilliant musicians who play a heavy, dark and atmospheric brand of
jazz that i cannot get enough of. This band is very close to being in my top
ten of all time favourite bands, which for me really speaks volumes about how I
feel about them. "Black P" is a Bussonnet composition and
one of my top three songs on here. The way it opens with the dark keys and bass
really brings Magma to mind before a
full sound takes over quickly. Some feedback from Mac Gaw's guitar as the bass
chugs along. Borghi becomes more prominent on keys before 4 minutes. Nice.
Incredible sound before 5 minutes. I just can't praise this song enough. "Opus 12" is a Borghi tune. Keys not
surprisingly lead the way in this more uptempo song. Again I just love the sound. Bussonnet is a genius on
bass and this one is more jazzy than the first track. The tempo slows down 3
minutes in as James solos on his guitar. Philippe takes over on his bass after
5 minutes. "Def MK1" is Daniel's song. This one is darker and slower
with keys and bass standing out, although the drums are active they are light
at this point. The song gets heavier after 4 1/2 minutes. Some angular guitar 6
minutes in starts to rip it up as Bussonnet offers up slabs of heavy bass, then
check out the drumming 8 1/2 minutes in! "Blade" is a Bussonnet composition and
the shortest track at just under 5 minutes. It opens with a dark atmospheric
soundscape as cymbals clash and keys come in. It ends as it began; a very cool
song. "Automate" is Borghi's tune and it opens dramatically.This has
a sinister vibe to it as the deep molten bass comes in and drums pound at a mid
pace. Keys arrive as haunting guitar sounds come and go. Borghi starts to take
a more prominent role before 4 minutes. Themes are repeated. "Downwards" is Mac Gaw's track and one of
top three. The guitar fortunately takes a big role in this one. We get a nice
heavy backdrop as James just lights it up throughout the 9 minutes. Amazing!
"Nosh Partitas" is Daniel's second tune with a great drum intro as it
then settles down quickly as keys and bass take over. Incredible sounding
guitar 2 minutes in as it grinds away before turning angular, then keys take
over a minute later, and the bass is just throbbing. So hard to pick between this one and their earlier
masterpiece "Ewaz Vader". By the way this one comes with a fantastic
DVD of them playing in concert earlier this year. With Jannick Top's new
record, and this new one from One Shot, 2008 has already been a huge success. 908 Love Remains the Same A review by Mellotron
Storm: I've heard about this band for a couple of years
now but to be honest I never had the
desire to check them out mainly because of how commercial they supposedly
sounded, and also I kept seeing Queen
mentioned as a reference. Also females apparently often made up the majority of
their audience, and yes, they are superstars in their home country of Finland.
As I combined all these thoughts I just didn't think I'd like the music. It took
a few listens but, did I get sucked into
the Von Hertzen Brothers vortex. How do they do that? Muse I think is a good reference along with Kingston
Wall. "Bring Out The Sun (So Alive)" is the
longest track at almost 11 minutes and by far my favourite.The intro is
mournful and it goes on and on for almost 4 minutes. It does start to build
after 2 minutes and vocals come in just before 4 minutes. A change 5 minutes in
as we get silence then synths and strummed guitar, then it kicks in at 6
minutes. Some killer organ here and the vocals follow,so emotional. Incredible
track. "Spanish 411" is guitar and synth led as
the organ joins in. Vocals before a minute. Killer stuff as the guitar is
lighting it up before 4 minutes. "Freedom Fighter" hits the ground running
with lots of piano too. Synths come in just before a minute with vocals. Damn
this is so uplifting, then it turns intense once again. "Somewhere In The Middle" calms down just
before a minute with guitar and atmosphere. Reserved vocals and piano before 2
1/2 minutes then it kicks in again. There's a Brian May reference 5 1/2 minutes
in. "In The End" is one I enjoy a lot. It kicks in fuller around 2
minutes with a great sounding instrumental section with prominent guitar
leading the way. "Faded Photographs" is such a passionate
song. "Silver Lover" opens with some cool sounding guitar that
reminds me of The Tea Party. Yes there is an Eastern vibe to this one. "I Came For You" has some good contrasts
between the laid back and more intense passages. Great section before 3 1/2
minutes with vocals and piano. "The Willing Victim" has a beautiful
instrumental intro and we get some violin after 1 1/2 minutes. Reserved vocals
follow; it's maybe a little too ballad-like 3 1/2 minutes in when the vocals
get more passionate. It's building 6 1/2 minutes in and guitar comes to the
fore late. Nice. So I have to reluctantly give up 4 stars for this
one despite my earlier reservations. I'm so glad I checked them out. 909 Sleeping In Traffic: Part Two A review by Gatot: Unlike the Part One album which I have reviewed
previously, this one is harder for me to digest. That's why it has taken three
weeks since I received the CD to review it after more than 8 spins, I think. It
sounds awkward at first as I can not hear the melody clearly from the first
spin of the CD. As I spin some more finally I find the key to listening to this
CD is to focus more onto the musical composition by forgetting the melody line.
That's something as a mystery in prog music as I experienced the first time
with Yes’ "Tales From Topographic Oceans" or "Gates of Delirium"
which did not sound familiar. Innovative and brilliant! The opening track "As The Sun Sets"
(1:13) is an acrobatic keyboard solo which is nice. When it moves to "Into
The Night" (8:52) the vocal line does not seem to produce something catchy,
but, forget the vocal line and focus on the music. I can find the beauty of the
composition; the music flows neatly with each instrument playing complex notes
producing a unique listening experience especially when I play it loud with a decent
sound system. I like the organ maneuvers in some passages that really enrich
the textures of the music; it's brilliant! It moves seamlessly into friendly passages in the
next track "The Hunter" (5:57) where bass guitar plays tight lines
and so powerful accompanying the guitar work. The sounds of Gentle Giant are
now becoming prevalent and it mixes beautifully with Zappa like music. The
break using vintage organ sound reminds me of the old days of prog. It's so
stunning! The vocal quality is also great, I really enjoy this passage! Observe
the tight bass lines and singing style; so powerful and so inspiring! In "South Of The Border" (7:43) the band
tries to bring a catchy musical riff through combined guitar work and followed
by powerful low register vocals. There are many surprises throughout this track
and I really enjoy it. "Cashflow" (6:08) is probably the funniest
part of the music as the sound of keyboard is a bit awkward but funny and entertaining!
I really admire the band especially with this passage of musical magic! "The
Downward Spiral/Chimay" (7.10) follows with another style of music
focusing more on the style of Gentle Giant with tight arrangement, combining
dynamic singing and tight bass lines, with dynamic drumming. The peak is of course the epic "Sleeping In
Traffic" (35.44) which has varieties of styles and tempo. There are so
many breaks during the passage of the music with some textures of Gentle Giant.
If you listen to this track carefully, you might find some riffs that remind
you of Gentle Giant's "I Lost My Head" even though it's not the same.
The album concludes with "Sunrise Again" (1.37). Overall, I do believe if you like eclectic prog
like Gentle Giant or Zappa, you can definitely enjoy this album. Not only that,
you will LOVE this album. I am very sure that this album deserves a full five
star rating. The rationale is: it has neat and tight composition in every
single segment of the music when, if everything is combined together into song
and later into album, they all form a cohesive whole that is hard to beat. In
addition, they are all brilliant musicians, I truly believe. Production quality
is top notch! Highly recommended. 910 A review by
AtomicCrimsonRush: Diagonal's dynamic debut. Rise Above labels has latched onto a real gem here.
Diagonal encompasses all that I love about prog: unusual mixture of
instrumentation, shimmering Hammond and Moogish washes with off kilter
percussion rhythms. The odd time shifts and erratic jazz drumming shift off the
4/4 meter to 7/8, 6/4 and beyond. There are piano and forte passages and
penetrating spaced out echoing vocals with reflective surreal lyrics. Heavy
guitar merges with tranquil synth. Welcome to Diagonal's debut. At first listen one may be forgiven for thinking
they are hearing a 70s classic prog album because the band sit comfortably in
this genre, even using the same styles and instruments in homage to the prog
70s. Familiar sounds echo the likes of Camel, Caravan, Gong, ELP, King Crimson,
Gentle Giant, Pink Floyd and Hawkwind. The sound is refreshing and vibrant
throughout. The first track 'Semi Permeable Men Brain',
a "Freak Out" Zappa like title, is a treasure full of prog elements.
The track is featured on the Classic Rock meets Prog magazine CD 'Prognosis 1'
and this is where I was first interested in more from this band. The compelling
power of the track is immediately apparent. It begins with a strange spacey
wind effect and then crunching staccato stabs of Alex Crispin's organ punch a
hole in the silence. The Hammond sounds wonderful and then a guitar picking
effect plays. It suddenly takes off with an out of sync prog riff. The lyrics
are as bizarre as Yes; “there will be time to sleep or rest... time leads on?
don't tell the sun how to rise it may fall from the sky.” The melody is gloomy
but always changing and building. The simmering sax and the chaotic Hammond are
blissful and there is an ominous synth line that descends lower until it builds
again to a crescendo. This lengthy instrumental section is almost worth the
price of purchase alone. A heavy guitar locks into an off beat time signature
and then a delightful sax solo played off the scale, reminding me of Van der
Graaf Generator in places. Then a drum solo by Luke Foster crashes in and the
metronome bounces wildly out of control. There is a distinctive 70s phased out
sound then the track steers in another direction, a blast of jazz fusion and improve,
and it ends abruptly. Next track is 'Child of the Thunder Cloud',
and it is another great highlight. Diagonal are inspired by Colloseum and
Nucleus according to the liner notes and it's easy to see how on this track. It
begins with minimal piano and clarinet, the piano picks up the strange
signature and Luke Foster's drums kick in. The vocals are reminiscent of Pink
Floyd. Midway through there is a build up and then all goes silent before a
guitar strum plays. A low rumbling fades up in the mix and chiming bells
twinkle. The atmosphere builds into a jazz prog drum triplet, and organ stabs
break in played with finesse. Psychedelic effects soar over the sounds
gathering momentum. Another definite reason to get hold of this debut. Track 3 is 'DeathWatch' and it is
not as innovative as the rest of the album, but still captures the essence of
prog beginning with somber quiet keyboards and complemented with a King Crimson
type drum pattern. Alex Crispin's vocals are moody and melancholy; “frightened
by a chance to try the habits your darkest, find out where the magic finds you”.
A great guitar riff breaks the mood full of energy and vibrant flourish. Track 4 is the instrumental 'Cannon
Misfire' featuring virtuoso guitars from Nick Richards and Dave
Wileman and one of the best basslines you will hear from Dan Pomlett. The sound
is mesmirising, sounding a little like a cannon in places, Nick Whitaker on sax
is superb, as good as Banton or Perry. The time sig changes a few times and it
even halts midway through and the bass blasts a short solo. Wonderful stuff. Track 5 ends the CD on a high note with a lengthy
mini epic of some 14 minutes called 'Pact'. The ELP sound alike
Hammond is great and saturates the ambience. The melody is reminiscent of Pink
Floyd's 'Shine On' even in the lyrics there are references; “there's a broken
path, there's a world for you, everyone will go, start them young, let 'em
leave, and you burn.” The Space out lyrics are minimal and give way to a
lengthy instrumental break featuring wild guitar riffing and many instruments
taking their turn. It unifies together in a disquietening way, with very jazzy
drums and bass. A smoldering sax solo is a delight as is the synth of Ross
Hassock. The mid section is a very ethereal piece, haunting and compelling. A
gong is heard and two solemn guitars pluck till it concludes. The album is an absolute delight and I recommend
grabbing this if you see it in the stores. I changed the rating to masterpiece
as this has really grown on me over the years. Remarkably inventive music and a
throwback to the golden 70s era when prog was king. I look forward to more from
the innovative bold Diagonal. A review by Bonnek: Diagonal sounds like a lost gem from 69. Full of
psychedelic heavy rock influences and early progressive rock. Next to the
superb songwriting and inspired musicianship, the band really surprises me with
having such a vintage vibe while never sounding like any particular band.
Nevertheless, I'll throw a few dozen band names at you in the hope of
convincing you why they might appeal to you. A first influence that comes to mind is heavy
psychedelic rock from Iron Butterfly and early Deep Purple. Especially the lead
vocalist Alex Crispin with his warm soulful voice seems to come right out of
the 60's. The music is decidedly British, with those typical dreamy melancholic
melodies and harmonies. So obviously the 60's sound of Pink Floyd must be added
to the list. The songwriting mixes jamming with accomplished
progressive song structures that bring Van Der Graaf and Gentle Giant back to
mind. Saxophones, organs, Hammonds and mellotron complement the solid and
swinging rhythm section that fires these long songs forward. The spirit of The
Doors is never far away neither. I can't find any fault with any of the 5 tracks
here. Each of them brings something else to the table: the jazz-rock of
Colosseum on ‘Semi Permeable Men-Brain’, lighthouse keeper plagues
on ‘Child of the Thiunder-Cloud’, warm melancholia on ‘Deathwatch’,
irresistible bass grooves on ‘Cannon Misfire’ and stirring
blues on ‘Pact’. For some reason this album hasn't caught the
attention of Astra's “The Weirding”, an album with a comparable
vintage sound. Diagonal resides entirely in 1969 spheres and they sound perfectly
at ease there. A masterpiece of songwriting, musicianship, intensity and love
for music. Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 29 2012 at 19:33 |
||
AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: October 29 2012 at 19:34 | |
2008 continued...
911 Who's The Boss In The Factory?
A review by Gatot: Talking about Karmakanic we cannot ignore the
existence of bands like The Flower Kings and The Tangent as they are all
actually a big family. As far as The Flower Kings are concerned, one of the
musicians that I admire is Jonas Reingold (bass guitar). In The Flower Kings he
has played his bass wonderfully and in fact he is one of the best prog rock
bass players of the 90's and 2000's. Well, the third rebirth of progressive
rock was quite impressive with bands like Spock's Beard, Porcupine Tree,
Transatlantic, in addition to The Flower Kings. The interesting thing about
Jonas Reingold was that during his spare time he composed music and joined
forces with Roine Stolt, Jaime Salazar, Zoltan Csörz, Johan Glössner, Göran
Edman, Robert Engstrand and Tomas Bodin, all prominent members of the
progressive rock family. Karmakanic was born with a good debut album “Entering
the Spectra” (2002) followed by 'Wheel of Life” (2004). This third album titled as “Who's The Boss In The
Factory” (2008) represents the best release so far. It sounds to me that the
band has been perfecting their compositions learning from their previous two
releases. The beauty of prog music is when we previously had an album that was
not quite impressive and later on we find another excellent release of the band
and we can trace back to the older albums. That is true with me as I spin this
album and I start to have a curiosity with its previous release. In general,
Karmakanic is the prominent prog rock band of the 2000s in my opinion. Do not try to understand, just enjoy
it... For me, this album is quite hard to understand and
it reminds me of when I first enjoyed Yes’ “Tales from Topographic Oceans” for
the first time in the 70's. I think I spun it more than 5 times and I still did
not quite get it. Then I remembered experiencing a similar thing with The
Flower Kings’ “Paradox Hotel”. I felt that I was being 'topographicized' by
Jonas Reingold and his friends. But when I tried to enjoy the music segment by
segment I found the treasure of Reingold's great bass playing. Not only that,
but Zoltan Csorsz's drums as well as Lalle Larsson's keyboard playing. And I
then tried to shift my paradigm from trying to understand the
music to just enjoying it. The major cause is I think because the opening
track 'Send A Message From The Heart' is an epic that does not sound quite
catchy at first. The track that consumes more than 19 minutes duration has
practically little orientation towards a song because it changes unexpectedly
in medium to fast tempo. Melody-wise there is nothing peculiar that I can draw
from the epic, but when I look into segment by segment movement, it starts to
create an enjoyable feel and it really grew on me. I grew to really love this
opening track and its powerful lyrics. The ending part of this epic sounds like
the epic continues to Roine Stolte's debut album titled “The Flower King”. I
think the band did it intentionally. When the band plays the next track 'Let In Hollywood'
(4:53), it does not really grab me, especially the intro part that comprises
acoustic guitar rhythm in fast tempo with energetic vocal line by Göran Edman.
Unfortunately, it's not something that creates enjoyment, but as the song moves
I like the keyboard solo in the vein of Chick Corea in 'Return to Forever'. On
top of that, the guitar solo is stunning and rocking. The title track ‘Who's the Boss In The Factory'
(13:04) is another great track with an intro part which starts with lyrics; “One
by One, step by step”; a similar style to Roger Water's 'What God Wants' in “Amused
to Death” album. I think the band was not aware of it and this song is quite
unique as it blends beautifully the components of symphonic prog with jazz rock
fusion style like Chick Corea's 'Return to Forever' band. I can see this clearly
through the piano work by Larsson, where he provides a nice shot during the
musical break with catchy soft notes that moves wonderfully into jazzy music.
Not only does the piano sound nice, but also the guitar solo is truly stunning,
reminding me of the guitar sound typically played by Mick Box of Uriah Heep
fame. 'Two Blocks From The Edge' (9:51) starts mellow in
Floydian ambience through the use of guitar soloing. The song moves with
saxophone solos as well as rhythm sections when vocals enter. The song features
a nice bass guitar solo in the middle of the song. I am really impressed with
Reingold even though he does not play complex bass guitar, the sound is really
great especially when it continues with guitar and sax. Acoustic guitar also
creates good textures combined with stunning electric guitar solo by Krister
Jonsson who plays in a different style compared to Roine Stolt. The closing tracks 'Eternally Part I' (1:51) and
'Eternally Part II' (6:21) make an excellent closure to this album, overall.
With the first part focusing on piano solo in classical and jazzy style, it
opens a great gateway to the next final track, Part II. Part II is a wonderful
track with great combination of bass guitar and piano touch, backed beautifully
by string arrangements. Bass guitar plays as main melody while piano creates
fills, strengthened by string sections. When the vocal line enters, it sounds
jazzy with clarinet serving as filler in the background. It's a mellow track
with great clarinet/ soprano sax solos and excellent piano playing. Conclusion After listening to this album in its entirety for
more than eight spins, it really grew on me, and I finally cannot afford to
give this wonderful album no less than five stars. It's really a masterpiece!
Remember, do not try to understand the music! Just enjoy it segment by segment.
912 A review by Conor Fynes: Back in 1994, progressive metal band Cynic
disbanded, leaving a string of demos and a debut which has since gone on to be
considered a classic of the genre. Suffice to say, with the band members moving
onto different projects, in seemed as if this band would go down in history as
being a one-album wonder; the sort of act that metalheads could speculate over
for years, wondering what other great albums could have come to fruition, had
the band simply stayed together. A good twelve years passed, and it was
announced finally that these pioneers of 'jazz metal' have decided to get back
together, and another two after that, their second album would hit shelves
worldwide. Although fans would have every right to worry whether or not the
follow-up to their beloved “Focus” would be worth the wait, Cynic's comeback
effort “Traced In Air” not only matches the intensity and intelligence of “Focus”,
but rather triumphs over it, creating a record that would be otherwise perfect,
were it not for its somewhat disappointing brevity. Back are the technical riffs, ethereal
atmospherics, jazz inflections and distinct 'robot' vocals that made “Focus”
such a unique organism back in the day. However, with plenty of time now for
each musician to develop a more distinct sound for the band, “Traced In Air”
does feel like the album the band was meant to make. Technically vicious,
progressive, and, surprisingly enough for a band labelled as death metal, some
beautifully done melodies. Although there's no question while listening to any
song on “Traced” that it is well-fitting of the technical and progressive
labels; project mastermind Paul Masvidal has a very melodic side to his music
here that really props the act onto another level entirely. While each
composition is tightly arranged and sharply delivered with solos, scales and
all, there is the sense that beyond the metal madness are pieces of songwriting
that could easily be transposed into heartfelt pop songs. Have no fear though;
while the melodies are memorable and even 'catchy', there's nothing but
complexity and depth to the instrumentation and arrangement of this album. Something that is sure to be a divisive point among
fans will continue to be Masvidal's signature harmonized vocorder vocal work.
While comparisons have been made to that of a 'robot' or even as far as being
labelled as blatant auto-tune, Paul makes it clear in the more subdued moments
of the record that his voice is emotive and sharp regardless of any
technologies. The use of a harmonizer in his voicework stands as a creative
decision, and considering the rather spacey feel of the album, it does work
well. Although the band has been called 'death metal' quite often in part due
to the band's intermittent use of growls in the past, it is mostly clean
singing here, which is better performed than the somewhat sparse growls of
Tymon Kruidenier on the album, that feel at times quite out of place in the
album. In terms of musicianship, there's no surprise here;
great performances from these legends, as well as some incredible guitar riffs
and solos. Sean Reinert's drumwork does not feel as if it has been given complete
justice however; some of Reinert's best moments here are during the jazzier
sections, but it is a bit difficult to make out the details sometimes under the
constant psychedelic effects and guitar-driven nature of the album. A highly philosophic and intelligent metal album
that could even be said to weave its way into the spiritual realm, there is no
doubt that “Traced In Air” is among the best metal albums released in its
decade, although it will certainly be panned by the most 'true' metalheads
wanting nothing more from this band than growls and 'evil' riffs. The only
thing that keeps the album from being truly perfect is that it always ends far
sooner than I would like it to. At only over the half hour mark, it almost
always feels like a journey that could have done with at least another ten
minutes of the same quality added onto it, considering the fourteen year wait. However,
brief as it may be, Cynic has released another classic with “Traced In Air”;
this will be an album that will be listened to by metalheads decades from now,
mark my words. 913 A review by Ivan_Melgar_M: When I listened to "Lover's End", I was a
bit disappointed, even though I liked the style and performance because the
album left me cold. However, as Moon Safari plays the kind of music a Symphonic
fan could die for, I decided to get “[Blomljud]” and give the band another
chance. My greatest fear was the length of the album, it's
hard to keep the interest of the listener for 90+ minutes. I remember the 70's
with the limited time format of the LP; it was very common to see double
albums, many of which had 50 or 60 minutes of great music and 30 minutes of
fillers. Once the CD appeared, the flexible time format made
the double albums less common, (I'm sure that if not all Yes members, at least
Rick Wakeman would had been happy with a solid 50 minutes version of
"Tales from Topographic Oceans" than with almost 90 minutes full of
weak spots). Now the bands are able to make a long release without the need of
filling an album with sub-standard material. But Moon Safari took a the risk;
they released a double CD with more than 100 minutes of music with almost no
weak moments. The music in “[Blomljud]”
is less pompous and brilliant than in "Lover's End", but I find much
more coherence and original ideas; they lean towards an electro, acoustic side
of rock with the choirs being a fundamental part of the music. Even when I'm a
fan of the excesses made by the Prog heroes and the abundant Mellotron solos
(As any Proghead with blood in his veins), I like the blend of piano and synths
that are simply brilliant. “[Blomljud]” starts with "Constant Bloom" or
what I would call Beach Boys oriented Gregorian Chant, being that I have a
weakness for "A Cappella" music, so I like this short intro very
much. But almost immediately Moon Safari takes us to a different scenario with
the epic "Methuselah's
Children". During 15 minutes, the band takes us though a magic path
with brilliantly structured music and radical changes, but always keeping their
feet on the earth. The sound reminds me a lot of Magenta’s epic "Children
of the Sun", but the band adds their own personality to create a new and
unique product in which they manage to keep a perfect balance between
adventurous and melodic. "In the
Countryside" is not my cup of tea, though I admit the choirs are well done, but
the music is not as strong as in the previous song. Some of the softer moments
remind me of four men Genesis, especially songs like "Entangled" (not
one of my favourite styles), but again the performance is flawless and the
ideas are coherent. Progressive Rock is essentially a fusion of styles
and sounds and "Moonwalk" gives
us all of this and more. It starts aggressive and close to Hard Rock, but
immediately morphs into a soft display of beautiful melodies and lush keyboard
solos, combined with piano; another high point for the band, reminiscent of the
best era of Pendragon ("Masquerade Overture") but with a unique edge. Now it's time for my favourite track of disk
1; "Bluebells". It is
simply beautiful, and has a distant resemblance with "ABWH" but
better. My first impression was the lead vocals are incredibly strong, but it get's
even better when all the backing vocals are added. The interplay between the
instruments in a second plane are impressive; they manage to sound perfect but
with the exact volume not to hide the voices in this very classy song. Disk 1 ends with the mysterious "The Ghost of Flowers Past" where
Moon Safari shows us a new facet and how versatile they can be. The keyboards (especially
the melancholic Mellotron) are simply impressive, a powerful ending for the
first disk. CD 2 begins with another surprise, "Yasgur's Farm", as frantic
as never before on the album. The organ, guitar and drums interplay are
delightful, but when the synth solo begins it’s even better. Maybe the only
weak point is in the vocals, too acute for my taste, but the perfect keyboards
and fierce guitar almost made me forget this minor flaw. As if the variations hadn't been enough, the folksy
and Medieval oriented "Lady
of the Woodlands" caught me by surprise, again with some Yes
reminiscences (mainly ‘Machine Messiah’) but more ethnic. It is a nice change
and more proof that Moon Safari can be absolutely versatile and unique when
they want. Now it's time for the longest song of the
album, "Other Half of the
Sky", a 31 minutes epic that didn't impress me at the
beginning; the first 5 minutes were extremely tedious and to be honest, I was
tempted to press the skip button, but then everything changes radically. The song
becomes vibrant and absolutely unpredictable, frenetic passages followed by
calmed sections, guitar solos, amazing keyboards and a solid rhythm section.
This is the opposite to what I meant in my "Lover's End" review when
I said that the album sounded empty and unoriginal. “Other Half of the Sky” is everything a fanatic of Progressive
Rock and good music can expect, I don't care who influenced Moon Safari in this
song (I listen to a lot of Glass Hammer), because they give so much of
themselves that the sound is absolutely unique, innovative and interesting. A
highlight. I believe that the band should have played "To Sail Beyond the Sunset" as
a preparation for "Other Half
of the Sky", being that such a soft and melodic song sounds too
bland after the climax created by the previous track. It is not bad, even
beautiful, but doesn't work as a closer. Due to a few minor flaws, I can't rate “[Blomljud]” with 5 stars, being that this
rating should be left for perfect masterpieces, and even when the album is
amazing, it doesn't reach perfection. I believe I had the luck to listen to
"Lover's End" before “[Blomljud]”,
because I didn't expect such a great album after what I consider a weaker
follower, but enjoyed it much more than I expected. 914 A review by SouthSideoftheSky: So far they have
come! This 2008 album was my first exposure to Abel Ganz
a couple of years ago. After now having listened to and reviewed all the
earlier albums, I had to go back and re-listen to this album and update my
review and add another star to my rating. The first thing to notice in comparing this with
the earlier albums of the band, is how very different this album is from the
rest of the band's discography. Abel Ganz was formed in 1980 and was part of
the original Neo-Prog movement in Britain together with the likes of Pallas
(whose present lead singer Alan Reed sings on the longest of the four tracks on
this album). The present album has not that much to do with Neo-Prog at all,
often coming across as a mixture of Caravan and Mike Oldfield with hints of
Pallas. Interesting, right? The first track, ‘Looking For A Platform’, is very
similar to the style of Caravan, especially the whimsical vocals remind me strongly
of that band’s “Cunning Stunts” album. But there is also a nice Rick
Wakeman-like piano solo in the middle of the song. The keyboards and guitars
used here have a vintage sound and are similar to the Canterbury Scene bands of
the 70's with their Jazz and Folk music influences. Indeed, there is an
impressive plethora of very pleasant vintage and traditional instruments on
this album with keyboards, electric piano, violins, mandolins, and flutes. But
there are also more modern sounds that contrast sharply and appealingly with
the vintage ones. The second track, ‘So Far’, in particular, has a
more modern sound and a much harder edge. There are passages in this 20 minute
plus track that remind me very much (both musically and lyrically) of Pallas' ‘Ghostdancers’
from their “Dreams Of Men” album. And it is, after all, Alan Reed of Pallas
fame who takes the lead here and he does a very good job. I certainly would
have preferred having him sing either all the album's lead
vocals or none. Since the two vocal styles employed on the album
are so radically different from each other, this adds to the somewhat
disjointed feel of the album. With this said, I must emphasise that all four
songs here are highly enjoyable and pleasant. The folky passages sometimes
sound like the wonderful and much underrated Prog Folk/Neo-Prog band Red Jasper
and any Prog fan will be reminded of many sounds from the 70's and 80's. This music
is not groundbreaking, but it is very well-crafted and certainly not your
regular Neo-Prog album. Compared to the more playful and whimsical ‘Looking
For A Platform’, ‘So Far’ is more serious and dark, musically and lyrically,
and also a more structured piece. There are some heavy passages
in this track and even some occasional, light "growls" somewhat
similar to those pre-historic "growling" vocals on Mike Oldfield's “Tubular
Bells”! I enjoy both styles very much, but having them on the same album comes
across as a bit disjointed and gives the impression that the band didn't quite
know in which direction they wanted to go. This was the primary reason I gave
only three stars on my original rating of the album. But this album remains
enjoyable time after time, despite its flaws, and deserves a higher rating. “Shooting
Albatross” is, after all, highly recommended despite some minor objections. It
is particularly recommended for fans of Prog Folk and Canterbury Scene, perhaps
more so than for fans of Neo-Prog. Great cover art too! 915 A review by Ivan_Melgar_M: A very interesting change Since the release of “Believe”, it was obvious that
Pendragon was facing a major evolution jump in their style, but still the
pastoral and softer side of 4 men Genesis influences were present. Now “Pure”
is a giant leap, since I saw the art cover, and it was obvious that something
more aggressive and violent was happening in their music. The great paradox is that they have not left behind
their natural sound, they have sharpened it and mixed it; with the soft
Mellotron you can listen to a heavy guitar that leads the band almost along the
whole album. Even Clive Nolan, one of the most talented Tony Banks pupils, has
accepted this new sound and adapted his clean and pristine sound to this
obscure and vibrant music. The change of the talented Fudge Smith for the more
rockier Scott Higham, helped to accelerate the evolution, and even his
distinctive voice blends perfectly with Nick's to create a new and unexpected
sound in the border that divides Neo, Symphonic and Heavy Prog. The album is opened with ‘Indigo’ an almost 14
minutes epic that hits us from the start with a heavy distorted guitar and a
strong drumming, only softened by subtle Mellotron touches as the cherry over
the pie. When Nick and the band start to add the vocals, it's obvious Pendragon
is trying to change from the “A Trick Of The Tail” fairytale oriented style to
something more radical. No more naive children stories and soft legends,
this is one of the heaviest Neo Prog tracks I ever heard, but of course not
everybody changes so dramatically; if they wanted to keep their personality,
Clive Nolan had to provide the necessary relaxation with his elaborate
sections. Excellent opener and a slap in the face of those who believed Neo
Prog was soft and predictable. ‘Eraserhead’ starts more frantic (if this is
possible) but with a more prominent participation of Clive Nolan, but when Nick
starts to sing, their original essence is revealed. They haven't betrayed their
style, they have simply changed it. One of the strongest criticisms towards Pendragon
was their predictability; once listening to the first part you knew what was
coming later, because they were a bit reluctant for dramatic changes inside a
song. Well, this is over; you can expect anything from them, even terrifying
screams and howls blended with the music, while an electric guitar played in an
almost acoustic style provides some relief, a very good song for an album that
really promises. ‘Comatose (I. View From The Seashore)’ begins more
in the style of earlier albums, with a soft piano that supports Nick's vocals. Again
the band is privileging their melodic side over the new aggressive persona,
even when the change is positive; it's nice to listen tosome of the old band,
but don't expect this to last too much. After a couple of minutes the change
begins and the music goes in crescendo announcing a climax that reaches with
the heavy guitar and frenetic keyboards, and they go even further touching the
limits of Prog Metal in some moments, but again keeping something of their
identity alive. Special mention to Clive Nolan's fantastic performance and Scott
Highan who really makes a difference. ‘Comatose (II Space Cadet)’
begins with a fast guitar supported by Clive Nolan and Peter Gee, solid
as always with the bass, as before. The song suffers several radical changes,
but the most impressive improvement is the use of the Mellotron, when the song
requires; Clive still uses it as in “A Trick Of The Tail” but when necessary he
explores a darker sound previously unusual in the band. As if this was not enough stylistic change, ‘Comatose
(III Home and Dry)’ starts a bit dissonant (something almost impossible to
imagine in Pendragon; probably the most melodic Neo Prog bands), but they
manage to come back to a sound that reminds me of “The Masquerade Overture”, as
if they didn't wanted to abandon the sound that took them to the peak. The rest
of the track has some Pink Floyd reminiscences, with Barrett playing some
sections in David Gilmour's vein with Clive creating a dense atmosphere and
even some sound effects; a very nice change and a band doing what Prog is
about, exploring possibilities beyond their usual sound. ‘The Freak Show’ is a return to the roots, melodic
and softer, but more melancholic and obscure than usual. Again Peter Gee is
impeccable, and this track will probably be the favorite of the old time
hardcore fans, because it's the closest they get to their natural sound; again a
nice change. The album is closed with ‘It's Only Me’ and another unusual intro,
this time with harmonica and keyboards, but as in ‘The Freak Show’, is closer
to early Pendragon than to this new aggressive band. As in “The Masquerade
Overture”, the song flows from start to end with little surprises but with
incredible beauty. This is easily a four stars album and I grant them
an extra star, because any band that after 23 years and despite having a loyal
fanbase, that dares to change so dramatically, deserves a special recognition. However,
it's not a perfect masterpiece, so will have to stay with 4 solid stars. Progressive Rock bands don't need to evolve or
progress, but if they dare to do it, it's much better. This is a great album
for anybody, especially for those who believed Neo Prog is a bland, predictable
and boring sub-genre. 916 A review by Conor Fynes: With 2006's “Ghost Reveries”, Opeth burst out onto
the world stage and became a household name in the world of metal. Now, with
new members and a fresh new perspective, Opeth has released yet another
fantastic album. Falling just short of perfection, “Watershed” offers a dose of
some great Opeth material, paired with some rather half-baked material. There
are some instant classics on this album, such as the innovative track 'The
Lotus Eater,' which stands as being both the highlight of this album and one of
the best, strangest songs Opeth has ever recorded. The new band members, while they will obviously
meet criticism from hardcore purists regardless, are in fact incredibly
talented. The new drummer, Martin Axenrot is a fair improvement from his
predecessor, and although the jazz percussive influences can't be heard as much
anymore, there's an added dose of metal to be heard here, which compensates for
the added focus on prog-rock. This album can be thought of as one part “Ghost
Reveries” and one part “Damnation”. While Opeth is typically thought of as a
death metal band, only three of the songs to be found here have death growling!
This is a sign of the future for Opeth... Potentially they will come to the
point where they scrap death metal altogether. However, 'Heir Apparent' offers
some of the most bone-crushing death metal Opeth has ever done, and stands as
being one of their heaviest songs yet. The beautiful ballad 'Burden,' while being
something of evidence of Roadrunner's commercial pressures on the band, still
works out to be a really nice prog-rock song, reminiscent of classic 70's prog.
The only song on this album that dissapoints is the closer 'Hex Omega,' which,
although having some good riffs, doesn't really pass as being a very fitting
closer. In fact, if 'Hex Omega' had been replaced with a better finishing song,
this album would have received five stars. But as a final impression, it
injures the album's overall effect. Despite this shortcoming, the album pulls
through however, and stands as being a great Opeth release, and does not
dissapoint. Definitely worth the purchase. A review by
AtomicCrimsonRush: Transition to greatness. The Collaborator’s Top Prog Album of 2008 choice on
progarchives.com. I was inspired to check this one out after having
seen “Live at the Royal Albert Hall” DVD, so indulged in more Opeth, almost
hoping that the brutal growling vocals would be used sparingly. The opening
track did it for me; beautiful acoustics, Mikael's wonderful clean voice, and a
guest vocal from gorgeous angelic Nathalie Lorichs. The lyrics are filled with
passion and pain; "Yes I can, see you, Running through the fields of
sorrow, When you get out of here, When you leave me behind, You'll find that
the years passed us by." A fantastic start. 'Heir Apparent' is a killer thrashing dark thing
with tons of black metal influences and caustic brutal vocals. The riffs are
even Morbid Angel meets Sepultura sound alikes. This is perhaps as heavy as
Opeth get referencing their earlier material. It settles into synth flute and
acoustic but only for a moment, and then more riffing from newcomer Fredrik and
speed double kick drumming from Axe who also does a great job on his first
Opeth album. 'The Lotus Eater' is a great track that I first
heard on the Albert Hall DVD. I liked it better live, but this is still full of
innovation. The transition from clean to growling vocals is okay with me, and
the lyrics are inventive; "All years caring for a liar, Benefit road is
winding higher, You're a moth too close to the fire." The creepy interlude
of synth is fantastic as are the lead breaks. The psychedelic passage of music
is estranged but with a wonderful time sig culminating in the final moments and
some of Akerfeldt's best singing. The end is talking to some girl about
nonsense but it is effective. 'Burden' is an acoustic dreamy piece with some
gorgeous vocals and atmospherics. The lyrics are somber and melancholy;
"Some will ask goodbye, A broken line but underlined, There's an ocean of
sorrow in you." Per's keyboard solo is fantastic. The song features a
specific out of tune guitar outro that is rather chilling. It would be a pain
doing that downtuning effect in concert as the guitar would be useless for the
next number. 'Porcelain Heart' is another of the light and dark
tracks, with quiet verses at the start and reeking of sadness and despair. The
riff is okay, but the real drawcard is the sarcastic or cynical lyrics and
Akerfeldt's vocal technique on sections such as; "I see roads beneath my
feet, Lead me through wastelands of deceit, Rest your head now, don't you cry,
Don't ever ask the reason why". The fade in of lead work and blasts of
distortion are an effective augmentation. 'Hessian Peel' is a strange one with some
interesting moments, even beginning with the weird note that doesn't belong
there. The lyrics are melancholy expressions; "Will the children cry, When
their mother dies, And in the autumn of their lives, Will they feel the
same?" The reversed lyrics that follow are actually "My sweet satan I
see you" and before one gets on their hobby horse about this backmasking,
the whole thing was a joke reference to the backmasked words of Led Zeppelin's
'Stairway to Heaven' that is now legendary ("here's to my sweet satan, no
other made a path for it makes me sad who's power is satan"). I don't know
how I acquire all this information. Anyway, the song here is rather well
structured with a heavier guitar sound in the middle, and growls at the end
that explode suddenly and make me reach for the volume switch. 'Hex Omega' ends it all with an organ driven track.
This is a rather pedestrian track without a lot of innovative moments. It has
nice vocals for most of it singing about the demons we lock inside over the
years that become harmful to our sanity. The riffs are good but I prefer other
tracks, though I love Per's majestic keyboards and his gentle piano. So, overall, this album is a transitional album
breaking in the new members but has nothing masterful on it unlike other Opeth
albums to follow. It is what it is, a good album with average to good songs. If
you are used to master works of the band you may be disappointed. At least I
can say it is not as bad as the mess of “Deliverance”, but sits in between 3 or
4 stars for me, as Opeth are capable of so much better. 917 A review by Conor Fynes: When I first listened to the vocal samplings
released on the internet a few months before “01011001” was released for sale,
I was a little bit concerned as to what this album was going to turn out like.
There was no doubt in my mind that it was going to be good, but having been so
used to masterful works such as “The Human Equation” and “Into The Electric
Castle”, I was worried that this third double album wouldn't match up to the
other two. Upon listening to the finished project in it's entirety, it was a
pleasant feeling to realize that not only was this a good album, but it was
more or less on par with the other two double albums (which exist as the
defacto core of Ayreon's repetoire.) What Arjen has done here is apparently
wrap up his epic Ayreon storyline with an equally epic album, that uses a
relatively unique style of storytelling to get the plot across. Instead of
having recurring, filled-out characters, each singer, or 'character' is used to
compliment the whole, instead of taking a shape of his or her own. While this
different conceptual approach took a while to get into, it ends up working well
for the story Arjen is trying to tell. The heart of this tale consists of the three 'epics'
the album has to offer; 'Age Of Shadows,' 'The Fifth Extinction,' and 'The
Sixth Extinction.' Each clock in at least ten minutes, and do the best job of
telling the story. For those unfamiliar with the Ayreon concept, a race of
alien beings called 'Forever' populated Earth with lifeforms in their own image
(humanity) in order to experience emotions and primal feelings once again.
However, in their blindness, they let humanity become too advanced and in the
process, mankind destroys itself in a great war. While the concept is a little
morose, it has a profound social message to tell, and that added dimension
makes “01011001” a really moving experience. Despite the fact that most of the singers portray
alien characters, there is a resounding feeling of humanity that emanates from
each performance. Despite each ‘Forever’ character being named as nothing more
than a symbol (such as a heart or pentagram) each character manages to forge
it's own distinct personality. The music itself passes off as being darker then a lot
of Ayreon's previous works. Elements from electronic and folk music are used here.
There's a strong metal influence here, second only to the metal-centric “Flight
Of The Migrator” album. The heavy use of synthesizers adds to the science-fiction
theme, and the concept. Of special recognition is the beautiful Thomas Bodin
keyboard solo in the song 'Waking Dreams.' Another highlight of this album is
the mind-blowing choral arrangement 'We Are Forever' performed by one of the
best female vocalists in Prog, Annette Van Giersbergen. The compositional
talent required to write four-plus singing counterparts is massive. Arjen Luccassen does not dissapoint on this album. “01011001”
stands as being one of the best albums of 2008. A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: The packaging of “01011001” is fantastic even before we get to the music, featuring scintillating
artwork and all the lyrics represented on a well set out booklet, and all the
guest artists are listed when they sing which helps a lot. The best way to
purchase this is to ensure you get the special edition which comes in a
beautiful sturdy box with a DVD of certain tracks and some higher quality
versions. The guest artists are an incredible plethora of
talent from a variety of genres. Namely there is the amazing Anneke Van
Giersbergen of The Gathering, Bob Catley the power vocalist of Magnum and
Daniel Gildenlöw the extraordinaly voice of Pain Of Salvation. Floor Jansen is
brilliant as always, and has featured on Ayreon projects especially Star One.
Jonas Renkse from Katatonia is captivating as is Simone Simons, the wondrous
enchantress of Epica. Arjen as usual is utterly sparkling on guitar and keys,
and in fact all musicians are virtuoso talents. The concept is heavy handed and difficult to grasp
not that it matters, it is the overall experience of being transported to
another realm that is the ultimate pleasure for Ayreonauts. The guitars are
heavy at times but there are enormous slices of ambience. A lot of this is
familiar territory to early Ayreon though nothing compares to the masterpiece “The
Human Equation”. As a followup, this latest album is a delight, although not as
brillaint as THAT album, which is almost impossible to beat. This is more like
the kid sister of “Into The Electric Castle”, especially in concept and musical
dexterity. The songs themselves are not as memorable, but the
whole album as an entire epic concept works on the senses as it is playing.
Nothing really sinks in after the album has finished and this is unusual for
Ayreon. Highlights are still here and it is evident as soon as the track ends
that you have heard a classic, namely ‘Liquid Eternity’, and ‘Ride the Comet’. ‘The
Truth Is Out There’ is a standout where Arjen shines on vocals. ‘Unnatural
Selection’ has a huge passage of incredible instrumentation and really blows
the walls apart with sheer power and force. I have to say this is perhaps not the place to
start for newcomers to Ayreon as “Into the Electric Castle” and “The Human
Equation” bury it, both conceptually and musically, however there is nothing
wrong with taking the “01011001” journey after one has settled into the uncanny
world of Ayreon. 918 A review by Bonnek: From the man that never sleeps. The album of the
year! “Insurgentes” finds Wilson in a boundless creative
mood, stretching his legs in jazzy, trip, ambient and more than once, also in
new wave territories. The format is much looser and freer than it has been on
recent Porcupine Tree albums and reaches far beyond normal prog territory. Of course it's recognizably Wilson. I mean, you
should not expect the man has suddenly developed a deep baritone or made a
reggae album. But the music is very different from Porcupine Tree's recent prog
approach. So I'm hardly surprised the album doesn't click well with all prog
purists. In fact, this album would fair better promoted to an entirely
different target audience instead. Anyway, I'm sure this album could have
reached many of the open-minded Cure, Depeche Mode or Portishead fans out there
that have been hiding out in their caves for the last 20 years deploring the
downfall of good dark music. Yes, dark and gloomy it is, and because every track
is so excellent I'll even kick my lazy backside into action and do some kind of
song by song overview! 'Harmony Korine' is our link with Porcupine Tree. It's a
pop-sensible take on “Fear of A Blank Planet” with an absolutely gorgeous
chorus, easily obliterating all things Muse in its course. 'Abandoner' finds
Portishead veering off into pure white noise directions. 'Salvaging' is a very
gothic track with an entrancing bass line that reminds me of something 80's but
I can't put my finger on it. 'Veneno Para Las Hadas' is one of the brilliant
ballads on the album. It uses the same slide guitar loop that Wilson used on
his recent revision of “The Sky Moves Sideways”. 'No Twilight' is the odd
proggy beast of the album. Starting with a strong free-jazz guitar solo that
fades away into a dark minimalist middle part. Wilson is really at his balladry
best on “Insurgentes”. 'Significant Other' is another winner that stays far
away from the cheap melodrama that ‘Lazarus’ fell blindly into. With the
dazzling chorus it sits right next to ‘Heartattack in a Layby’. Next comes '17
Seconds', or actually 'Only Child' it is called here! The closing 3 pieces are
just some more proof of Wilson's rule in creating stunning ambient ballads. As if all that wasn't enough yet, there's some
extra tracks for special edition owners. Of particular interest are 'Collecting
Space', the superb Depeche Mode/Nine Inch Nails study 'Untitled' and 'A
Forest'. Oh no, wrong again. 'Puncture Wound' it is called I believe. The
sneaky Cure-thief! Hot on the Heels of the prog masterpiece that was “Fear
of a Blank Planet”, Wilson is back with this more introverted but equally
appeasing masterpiece of new dark experimental prog wave. Yes, I like genres
that feature only one album in their ranks. So, needless to say it's the best
album in its genre.
919 The Magus
A review by Finnforest: A provocative, appealing epic Even though I've written a few reviews here I still
get intimidated at the thought of writing about albums under the Zeuhl tag,
feeling generally inadequate in my knowledge. And despite my unease Universal
Totem Orchestra (UTO) made the excursion from my usual musical digs effortless
and enjoyable. This Black Widow Records release is truly an epic, clocking in
at 80 minutes, a double album in the vinyl days. The band describes their new
work as "the new Opera of
Universal Totem Orchestra. It's a jazz/rock symphonic composition which
concludes a Trilogy (hidden Opera, Rituale Alieno, The Magus) dedicated to the
Human Alienation; from the most esoteric state to the most psychal complex one,
crossing extreme forms of analysis and autoanalysis." The band
was formed in 1998 by Uto Golin and Dauno Buttiglione, the latter who left the
group in 2005. Back are Ana Torres Fraile and Antonio Fedeli, and new members
include Yanik Andreatta (bass), Fabrizio Mattuzzi (keys), and Danielle Valli
(guitar.) Describing the UTO sound on this album is challenging but the bands
that came to my mind while listening include Discus, Little Tragedies, Cafeine,
Deus Ex Machina, NIL, and Lost World. Long explorations of a generally
medium-heavy fusion are sifted with various keys/e-piano textures, and
intricate, dynamic vocal parts and arrangements. Following are some specific
impressions of the six long pieces. "De
Astrologia" (19:32) show they waste no time getting ambitious, opening with a nearly
20 minute piece of controlled tension. The opening section involves chanted
vocal repetitions and repeating riffs before exploding into an occasional solo.
Slowly it evolves into a dramatic call to arms musically, rolling and marching,
almost evoking the visual of warriors marching across the plains to battle.
Doubtful the band was aiming for this but since I do not understand Italian
lyrics, I am left describing what the music alone "feels" like. The
latter part maintains the heavy grooving bass undercurrent but the mood
lightens some as the march breaks, the vocals become more free-spirited, and
the piano becomes playful. Enter a laid-back horn solo to complete the shift
with a reprise of the tension at the very end to complete the circle. "Coerenza Della
Percentuali" (17:30) has a crazy-wild opening with a frantic and heavy 90s Crimson
sound in the guitar. Blistering angular-rock splashing in occasional pools of
quiet shimmering keyboards. In the middle, during the calming exchange between
the male and female vocals, it becomes clear that Fraile is the secret weapon
of the UTO. This woman is an exceptional vocal talent, utterly amazing. She is
one of the best vocalists on today's stage and the band has the skills in
arrangement to use her to maximum effect; soft and serene or heavy and
powerful, chants, solos, duets with male or choir vocals, wordless, and formal
operatic, she puts it all over the top. Again the track ends as it began with
plucked strings (or simulated ones, not sure which). "Les Plantes
Magiques" (7:35) is one of the album's most beautiful moments where the guitars
and drums take a break. A gorgeous and contemplative rolling piano intro
highlights the beautiful wordless vocals of Fraile. It is a peaceful respite
from the modern, sounding warmer and traditional, but it doesn't last. After
the halfway point you can feel the tension building again in the vocal and
encroaching strings. Soon the drums are rolling ominous underneath but it never
gets overly heavy, only dramatic, yet with delicate vocal interplay between
solo female and choired male vocals; a very, very nice ending here. "Ato
Piradime" (15:50) features opening sounds of almost Celtic-New Age feel, with
serene vocals over soft, spacious synths. But quickly it shifts to the edgy
guitar riffs alternating mid-paced fusion with sax, keys, and guitar leads.
Golin and Andreatta show some nice tight work here in the rhythm section and I
like Mattuzzi's choice of key sounds in any particular moment, not always what
you'd expect. The middle third of the track is a slower paced, almost soft
dream-jazz with hypnotic vocals and sax, sad and somehow hopeful at once. At
times it reminded me of Joni Mitchell's "Paprika Plains" from the “Don
Juan” album. The final third of the track returns to a steady paced fusion with
some adventurous shredding reminiscent of Indonesian avant-jazzsters Discus. A
soaring, uplifting vocal with harmonizing electric lead finishes. "Mors, Ultima Linea
Rerum" (6:05) has quirky woodwind opening shifts to laid-back trade-offs of sax
and electric lead guitar. Later it moves to some ripping rock/fusion grooves
battling a somewhat "droning" keyboard sound to good effect. "Vento
Madre" (13:23) is the fourth long piece on the album that covers little new
ground, but by this point you're either frustrated or completely fixated and
deliriously happy. Notable again is the discipline and forcefulness of the
guitar/bass/drums as they mercilessly dig in. Ana lays a repeating wordless
vocal melody over the muscle and harmonizes nicely with the male vocals. It
breaks 4 minutes in with e-piano leading to extended jamming over a literally
galloping bass! The ending reprises the tight, driving beginning and then moves
to a controlled, succinct ending. This track will benefit from a significant
punch in your volume if you can manage it; turn it up! Potential criticisms here involve the album's
length which may be off-putting to casual fans and I admit at times I felt some
trimming could have been used. On the contrary, fans will be pleased that the
band took full advantage of time to explore to their heart’s content, but this
question may determine how successful the work is to the individual. For me
personally, "The Magus" is not a masterpiece but deserving of the
fourth star on the basis of the incredible work in making the vocal
arrangements so interesting and so unique. Recommended to fans of unusual
fusion packing surprises but appreciative of long-winded efforts, "The
Magus" is a great achievement for something their bio describes as a
"side project" and many full time bands should be so lucky as to
deliver a work of this magnitude, despite my minor complaints. Black Widow
offers it up in a handsome tri-fold digi-pak with a very nice lyric booklet
containing full-color photos, though sadly, no English translations. Another
title to add to the list for those guys who keep saying progressive music is
dead. UTO begs to differ! 920 A review by Sean Trane: Third studio album from this Verona quartet with an
unchanged line-up, although their lengthy silence had us fearing the worst as
it had been almost nine years since “Duty Free Area”. Aside from some erratic
festival appearances and a Live album dating from '02, the only thing we had
was their new label Moonjune re-issuing in '07 their first two albums in a
compilation with bonus live tracks, but it left us clueless as to their
adventures. Rest assured in the spring of '08 came out their fourth album (in
all) with a rather ugly squared off artwork, but the music was anything but
worrisome, because the main songwriters remain drummer De Grandis and
keyboardist Bonomi. Indeed, musically DFA is still sounding quite the
same as they did in their first two albums, developing a symphonic jazz-rock
somewhere between Canterbury (I am thinking of the US group Volaré) and Gentle
Giant, and the opening Baltasaurus fits exactly that description. After the
much gentler (if you'll except the crunchy riff guitar) almost 8-mins ‘Flying
Trip’, standing out a bit, the almost 7-mins ‘Vietato Generalizzare’ is more in
the ELP or Egg mode, even though there are plenty of guitars, but the organ
fireworks are more reminiscent of early Emerson or early Dave Stewart. The obvious centrepiece' of this album is the 19
minutes ‘Mosoq Runa’, which was long in being finalized as its writing dates
back to '04, but it's obvious that keyboardist Bonomi is a slow worker in these
matters, but his results are outstanding. This is a piano (ac or el) gargantuan
feast (as well as other keyboards) with the odd flute bit that never stops
dazzling and the added string arrangements (just a cello and a violin) bringing
it even more to notice. The last two tracks are sung, the first by drummer
De Grandis and in English, but it comes down to one verse at the start of the
10 minutes of ‘The Mirror’, so soft you don't realize it. The track is mostly
an improvisation in its second part, disappearing into a drum solo. The closing
track is quite different, Ballate starting on some Hackettian guitar lines,
before triple female folk & classical (polyphony) vocals and string
arrangements. It is a bit "hors-propos" from the usual DFA, and I'm
glad they left it out until last on this album, so it doesn't disturb the
album's smooth flow of the other tracks. Well almost nine years after “Duty
Free Area”, “4th” is much in the same league, probably a tad better.
DFA is probably my fave Italian band from the 90's and 00's and is consistently
at the top, even if there was a quiet period. Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 30 2012 at 00:45 |
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Finnforest
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 03 2007 Location: The Heartland Status: Offline Points: 16913 |
Posted: October 29 2012 at 20:06 | |
Quite the work, Scott!! Bravo!!
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: October 30 2012 at 00:46 | |
Thanks! you helped too. Getting into a great year now with 2009 albums!
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progbethyname
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 30 2012 Location: HiFi Headmania Status: Offline Points: 7849 |
Posted: October 30 2012 at 05:26 | |
An incredible body of work indeed. I hope to help you one day as well.
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Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: October 30 2012 at 19:10 | |
2009 921 Part the Second A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: It's all about other-worldly atmosphere. I was introduced to Maudlin of the Well through
this album and the reviews that are lavishing unmitigated praise upon this
unusually titled 2009 album. I expected heavy experimental guitar riffs and
dark aggression as it was in the same genre as Tool and Devin Townsend. Instead
I received something more, so much more. I was stunned at the dexterous
creative approach of the music and the ferociously original song structures.
The moments of dark and light are juxtaposed as polar caps on every track. The
songs begin differently to how they end and in the middle there is a maelstrom
of huge raging instrumentals of virtuoso intensity that shoot out of the
musical hemisphere. The guitars are tools for light textures playing host to
violins and keys, creating calm and mellow melancholic ambience. ‘An Excerpt from
6,000,000,000,000 Miles Before the First, or, the Revisitation of the Blue
Ghost’ (10:55) opens very quietly and surprisingly subdued with Greg Massi's acoustic
gently played guitars and then a very sombre violin played to perfection by the
incomparable talents of Mia Matsumiya. As far as I know, this is Maudlin of the
Well's most accessible album, yet this is quite difficult to get into as it is
sporadic, jazzy and eclectically out of the box. Check out those astral lyrics
that are sung breathily patient by the quiet vocals of Driver; "I asked the fading Dynamo of the
serpentine blaze which seemed to hold a life apart from the Trinity, and seemed
stronger than their combined force. I wondered aloud at the infernal flames
that wrapped like boiling vines about the clouds, and illuminated them with an
ethereal glow, and shot down with all the speed of a blinking eye, lost in
thought and trying to count seconds. I was answered with the steady pulse, the
rhythm of the waves that spun slowly atop the dreamily oozing altar within the
sunken structure that had no beginning or cause, save the toil of an immortal
imagination." I am not sure we are meant to make sense of
these stream-of- conscious words but there is no denying the impact of these
with the surreal soundscape. The musical structures are way off base at times
and rather disturbing sounding like they come from Planet Mars. The low piano
throbbing chords of Olson mixed with a higher range are a prime example. Though
there is true beauty mixed with darker levels of intense ethereal paint strokes
on the canvas. Sam Gutterman's drums kick in with a steady beat after a
duration of piano motifs. There is a genuine post-rock feel to this track and
it breaks into a series of sections with many metronomic time shifts. A great
start to the experiential journey. ‘Another Excerpt: Keep
Light Near You, Even When Dying’ (5:59) is a very ethereal and brilliantly
realised master work. It begins with a haunting musical box intro that captures
the innocence of childhood with swooping violin jabs that enhance the pastoral
texture. A huge instrumental ensues with an off kilter drum pattern from
Gutterman that is as unsettling as the psychedelic phased estranged vocal
technique from Toby Driver; "Like
a stone I fell, and was engulfed in winter darkness, Silence filled each sphere
that from my lips escaped, And ceased but for a breath, Before rising to the
surface and waves like fireflies." Driver's bass is
technically proficient and esoteric, as are the hand claps and Madeleine Craw's
arcane cello embellishments. Such an amazing rhythm signature and then the
music disappears with a minimalist choral voice to end it; very Avante garde
but utterly brilliant stirring progressive music. ‘Rose Quartz Turning to
Glass’ (7:30) is a spacey out of this world piece of atmospheric ambience beginning
with Matsumiya's sad emotive violins and a lush string quartet. The exploration
and experimentation of musical forms is a key feature, leaving vocals as rather
a new instrument more than a frontline feature. The massive violin solo is
divine, emotional and actually chilling with the alienating vocal noises
reminding me of Magma or Can. It is creepy and ethereal but appropriate sound
bites of disturbia. Then David Gilmour-like vocals appear from nowhere, and
lift the song to a new level, it actually becomes an accessible song discarding
the hyper jazz fusion elements that were the foundation; "Fade from the shade that you see,
Every morning, every noon, It's the colour of this room, Even with your eye
unclear, There's some kind of azure dust on your pillow." Maudlin
of the Well rip that foundation down and create new textural nuances, and it is
absolutely delightful. "Clouds
are painted on in difference, A worn signpost for your dream flight, It's all
about atmosphere." The lyrics are an appropriate description
of the music. The angular riffing and lead break are wondrous. An absolute
masterpiece. ‘Clover Garland Island’
(8:18) has more guitars than the previous tracks with an excellent driving riff
and angular guitar chords. The psychedelic vocal harmonies enhance the overall
experimentalism and there is an incredible instrumental passage that is utterly
mesmirising. The guitars shine brightly as stars amidst the universe of orchestrated
string sections. There are dogs heard barking in the distance transporting you
to another locale and this reminds me of, well, Pink Floyd’s'Dogs'. The lyrics
are as surreal as the others; "I
imagined the bottom of the Rainbow, Tunnelling through the roots of the
Mountain, I walked Violet to the Equator, Where I dug my own grave then died in
it, Beneath the ground I rode the royal hue, All through the Earth for
Eternity" An excellent guitar riff locks in for a passage and
then the soft violins pierce the fabric of the music as the final verse is
sung; "And as the sun became too
dim, The frame dissolved and The Greyous blanket fell. It lay upon the grass
until the Morning When it was hoisted up again, By a spinning Rainbow over the
vale." The astral projection existentialist theme the band
hold on to is part of all this strangeness but it is easy to dismiss what they
are on about as the music is the real feature and there are intricate
structural fractures worthy of the most estranged jazz breakdown. ‘Laboratories of the
Invisible World (Rollerskating the Cosmic Palmistric Postborder)’ (11:50) begins with a
mellow fragmented guitar free form rhythm, Hackett-like in its spaceyness, and
improvisational, Driver's vocals return at the forefront this time, and quite
passionately emotive too in a falsetto octave; "We're bound together forever by currents of electricity, I am a
memory burnt onto thin air". Work out the meaning for yourself
if you can. The riffs that follow are fabulous, heavier on guitar and atonal
complex shapes. This is a mini epic that closes the album with a powerful
dissonance. There are a myriad of time sig swings from gentle and passive to
chaotic with injections of sporadic jazz. The organ sounds are shimmering and
solid. The screaming lead solo is excellent virtuoso musicianship. The King
Crimsonish rhythms are hypnotic. The twanging deep guitar licks are powerful
against the background of choral effects and frenetic keyboard motifs. There is
a brief reprise at the end reprising ‘Another Excerpt: Keep Light Near You, Even When Dying’ on
piano reminding us of the beauty of that track. Then it fades out and it's time
to spin this treasure again. This is an album full of unsurpassed virtuoso
musicianship and serious conviction without a splinter of jocular frivolity,
and it has an indelible impact on the listener. 2009 had some lows and highs
like any other year but mark this down as a definitive highlight. 5 tracks that
are all killer, no filler; an irresistible package. A freebie on the Maudlin of
the Well official website, this has to be the download of the year, and you are
well advised to visit the site now and get this outstanding showcase of Proto
Prog. 922 Chronicles of the Waking Dream A review by UMUR: "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 parts
of the music are impressive enough, it´s the vocals by Jim 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 it´s 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 Circle probably aren´t
strangers to these guys. "Chronicles Of The
Waking Dream" is not an easy listen and it´s taken me quite a few listens to
grasp the full 59:15 minutes long album. There´s 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. A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Arcane 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. A review by Bonnek: Arcane is a progressive metal band from Australia.
Arcane drops the metal element more frequently then they use it, in a way
similar to recent Porcupine Tree but more proggy. 'Chronicles of the Waking Dream' is an ambitious
piece of work, as it offers a full hour of near continuous music, strung
together with recurring themes and a brilliant rocking energy that pervades the
entire album. Due to the excellent clear vocals and the occasional heavy sound,
it sometimes reminds me of Haken's 2011 album “Visions”. But this album is more
progressive and complex, it is melodious, but more playful and creative compared
to Haken, which brings me to another highly valued recent Heavy Prog album,
namely the 2010 “Excavations Of The Mind” from Sky Architect. Bonus points for Arcane for preceding these two references. If you're a fan of Heavy Prog, and the names Haken
and Sky Architect won't make you seek out this album right away, then nothing
will. Recommended. 923 A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Aus proggers Karnivool released a dynamic
alternative heavy prog album "Sound Awake", reminiscent of Tool,
Cardiacs, Live or Soundgarden. Many cite this album as their pinnacle, as it is
consistent in quality and innovative approach. It is a lengthy album of almost
80 minutes of powerful melodic and inventive prog rock. 'Simple Boy' drives along on a powerful time sig,
confident loud vocals of Ian Kenny, crashing explosive drums, and an infectious
chorus. 'Goliath' starts in 7/4 then locks into a weird 6/4 tempo, before the
more conventional chorus. The bass tones of Jon Stockman are incredible, with a
fuzzy sound and this is complimented by chiming jangly guitar phrases. 'New Day' has a guitar rhythmic intro then some
tempo beats come in over the relaxed singing style. It builds to a measured
rock vibe, some reverb guitar motifs and a new feel midway through; "hey
let's get lost in a crowd, I'll show you much more". The heavier guitars
are welcome in the instrumental break and it sounds somewhat like Live, one of
my favourite 90s bands, especially their masterpieces "Throwing
Copper" and "Secret Samadhi" that they never topped. 'Set Fire To The Hive' is much heavier with caustic
phased vocals and some aggressive guitar riffs. This sounds a bit like System
of a Down in places. It is the band unleashing a furious attack of raw guitar
and pounding drum and bass rhythms, complete with police sirens. 'Umbra' has a
nice melodic intro with some complex time sigs to follow. The guitar crashes with
high powered drum ferocity, but the vox are soft and gentle in contrast. The
light moments are darkened with brutal guitar tones. The lyrics are thought
provoking; "Imagine that everything's effected by a cause, well I don't
feel so lucky you know" and "set in stone and blood, hold your
promise." The ending is wonderful, with low guttural guitar splashes on an
urgent drum beat that fade into a spacey tone. 'All I Know' segues seamlessly
with an odd quirky riff and nice harmonised singing; "Are you with me,
this is more than just infinity, I'm a soul taker, hey is this the end of all I
know." The lead guitar break is very pleasant with sustained tones and it
breaks into a Tool like rhythm. 'The Medicine Wears Off' is a short piece at
1:49, which is rather melancholy with outstanding singing from Kenny. It leads
to 'The Caudal Lure' that veers into odd time sigs from 4/4, 3/4 to 2/4, and
the drums of Steve Judd are intricate throughout. It has a rock feel and some
blasting guitar riffs. 'Illumine' begins with sonic feedback and very
distorted guitars leading to the verse; "don't listen, don't even hear a
sound they make, it breaks you, words that haunt you while you're sleeping, you
seem afraid, don't be alone." This has a nice melodic line and more
commercial in sound then previous songs. 'Deadman' is the longest song at 12 minutes, with
cool percussion grooves and rhythmic guitar picking. The vocals are well
executed with lyrics such as; "Grab your belongings the exit is near, this
can't be happening." The song breaks into a new time sig with faster
tempos at the 4 minute mark, this leads to a glorious lead break from Drew
Goddard and Mark Hosking. The jerky off sync guitar riff at 9 minutes is a
dynamic touch, and then it moves to a low vocal and bells on this excellent
highlight. The last section is gentle high register vox, and Pink Floydian
guitar sounds. 'Change [Part 2]' is also long (10:47) and another highlight
opening with machine grinding crushing guitar blasts. The didgeridoo is killer
along with cool vocals and it moves to a section reminding me of Live at 3 and
a half minutes in; "what a way to see this thing out, what a way to lay
your burden down". The low grinding drone has a Tool sound and the way it
blazes into the odd riff sig. The drum solo at the end by Judd is fantastic. 'Roquefort' closes the album with a bright riff and
very low end bass, and the vocals are more aggressive. It is more of an FM
radio track than others but finishes on a rocker with melody and heavy riffs. Overall "Sound Awake" is a very dynamic
and powerful album that will resonate with fans of Tool yet Karnivool inject
their own style with some passion and fire. The riffs are ever changing along
with tempo shifts, and the mood throughout is consistent with a dark edge and moody
atmospheres. It is an excellent lengthy journey and showcases the best of
Australian music at its most alternative and progressive. 924 A review by Mellotron Storm: MiRthkon are from Oakland, Calfornia and they bring
Zappa and Miriodor to mind because of their zany and freakishly good "stop
on a dime" style of play.This is quite heavy at times with the dual guitars,
bass, drums and horns all bringing it at once in a very intense way. I had the
pleasure of listening to this late Saturday afternoon on a trip up north to get
my daughter who was camping. It was sunny and my drive was relaxing but if
anyone could hear what was blasting away in my vehicle they would be shocked. The album opens with a funny spoken word piece
called "Congratulations!" about the benifits of buying a Mirthkon
vehicle. "Flashbulb Of Orgasm" is fantastic with the odd-metered
drumming and dissonant horns. "Banana" opens with vocals before the
music gets intense, then it settles back as the contrasts continue. Some heavy
guitar after 2 minutes and it ends with experimental sounds.
"Automation" is such a good tune. Nice bass early as the song seems
to take it's time. Some intensity 2 minutes in and 3 1/2 minutes in before a
calm ends it. "Zhagunk" has some powerful outbursts throughout; heavy
duty after 3 minutes. Cat sounds (yes cat sounds) end it along with a crashing
noise. "Kharms Way" has lots of tempo shifts in it. Incredible sound
2 1/2 minutes in then it turns dark before kicking back in. A calm with piano
and spoken words 6 minutes in. "Daddylonglegz" is a catchy tune; check
out the bass 1 1/2 minutes in and the horns on this amazing track! Crickets end
it and coyote howls as it blends into "Coven Of Coyotes". This is
intricate and powerful. Vocals 1 1/2 minutes in, and funny stuff as coyotes are
back late followed by experimental sounds. "Johnny Yen" hits the
ground running but it's the contrasts that impress me the most.
"Bappsciliophauega" is once again an incredible display of talent, powerful
with horns which get dissonant after 3 minutes with percussion. Funny spoken
words end it. "Trishna" is intense and powerful. Enough
said. Okay there is a calm with flute at one point. "Honey Key
Jamboree" is very Zappa-like with vocals. Some killer guitar too that goes
on and on. Nice. "The Black Fruit" is kind of dark and eerie as most
black fruits tend to be. It kicks into gear before settling again.The spoken
words with piano are hilarious. "Camelopardalis" has a nice heavy
sound before a minute,horns then lead. The tempo continues to shift and we get
some organ in this one too, and love the dissonance late. Just a brilliant
album in every way. 925 The Underfall Yard A review by Mellotron Storm: Big Big Train's drummer had left making them a trio
on “The Underfall Yard”. Nick D'Virgillo who guested on the last one takes care
of all the drum duties this time (still a guest though). There's a new singer
as well in David Longdon who was suggested by Martin Orford. David sang on
Martin's solo record "The Old Road". Once again the words and music
are by Greg Spawton (guitar, keys, bass), while Andy Poole (bass, keys)
produced and recorded this album. The lyrics focus on the unheralded people who
had different roles in England's history. Greg is very interested in the
history of his country and draws attention to these unsung heroes. There's been
so much hype about this album. I think it's excellent but I still prefer the previous album "The
Difference Machine". I just really like how different and spacious it is.
This one's more pastoral but just so beautifully arranged and performed.
Speaking of performances, Dave Gregory from XTC plays some real mellotron on
"Victorian Brickwork" the rest of the mellotron as with their past
albums is sampled. Dave also plays guitar throughout. Gem Godfrey from Frost
and Francis Dunnery from It Bites both guest on the title track. There are
other guests as well. "Evening Star" opens with multi-vocal
melodies then it turns melancholic when they stop. It kicks in after 2 1/2
minutes with some flute from vocalist Dave Longdon (he also plays dulcimer, mandolin,
organ, psaltry and glockenspiel!). Lots of mellotron here too, and it settles
with horns. "Master James Of St.George" opens with drums, bass, guitar
then vocals. It becomes fuller a minute in, and settles right away and
contrasts continue. Nice guitar solo from Dave Gregory 4 1/2 minutes in.
Whistling ends it as the waves roll in. "Victorian Brickwork" opens with reserved
vocals and a pastoral soundscape. It kicks in around 2 minutes and some nice
bass follows. The tempo and mood continue to change. A calm 8 1/2 minutes in
with cello and mellotron, French horn joins in and this is fairly uplifting. It
ends with those reserved vocals. I must say that the last three songs are much
better than the first three. So we get cooking with "Last Train" which
opens with vocals, guitar, drums and chunky bass. Mellotron joins in then
organ. Guitar and a great sound 3 1/2 minutes in. I like the guitar/drum
section after 4 minutes that goes on and on. I love the mellotron that rolls in
around 6 minutes. "Winchester Diver" sounds heavenly to start out
with those deep bass lines and dreamy soundscapes. Cello comes in followed by
mellotron, flute and organ. A calm with reserved vocals after 2 1/2 minutes. He
sounds like Hogarth after 3 minutes, and a fuller sound follows. I am so into
these last two tracks. The final song is the 23 minute title track. Lots of
tempo and mood shifts along with more chunky bass, mellotron, flute and
cello.The guitar and synths solos are great. We also get tuba, cornet, French
horn and trombone, lots of vocals too. A real trip back into history. Easily 4 stars, and this album does reveal new
things with each listen; a real depth and class to this recording. 926 A review by Mellotron Storm: I must admit
I was disappointed with Nemo’s last
album "Si Partie II" but after seeing so many positive reviews about
their latest "Barbares" I took
the plunge. “Barbares” might be my favourite from these French rockers,
surpassing even "Si Partie I". As usual with this band we get a
concept album and as usual the lyrics are in French so I have no idea what it's about, though reviewers
point out that it's about current conflicts and wars. What I'm so thankful
about with this album is that they've gone back to that heaviness and
aggression that I like and contrasted it
with lighter passages to great results. I'm surprised to hear some celtic and
jazz flavours at times as well. "Loi" opens with some atmosphere that
borders on haunting as we hear some guitar sounds. It kicks in before a minute
and they kick hard. It settles 2 1/2 minutes in where i love the guitar. Vocals
after 4 minutes for the first time. I like the percussion 6 1/2 minutes in and
the crazy synths that follow. "19:59" is my favourite, with nice drum
intro before it kicks in, then it settles with vocals. Great sound and check
out the drums and keys; and riffs come and go. Nice. Killer sound 4 minutes in.
"Le Film Di a Vie" opens with guitar and
drums as reserved vocals join in. It's all very relaxed then turns sort of
jazzy and piano joins in. It settles as bass becomes prominent followed by
synths then vocals. It starts to rebuild until we get an incredible sound 4
minutes in. I feel a lot of emotion after 6 minutes for some reason.
"L'armee Des Ombres" features some nice crunchy guitar as the drums
pound. It settles some when vocals arrive, contrasts continue, then a calm 6
minutes in as piano slowly plays. Drums then guitar join in as the tempo starts
to pick up. "Faux Semblants" opens with a good sound
before turning jazzy with light drums, bass, piano and vocals. Nice guitar work
before 2 minutes. I like the vocals after 5 minutes and the heaviness that
follows. "Barbares" is the 26 minute closer. It opens with this
celtic sounding guitar melody that goes on and on as the synths wash in.
Fragile vocals 1 1/2 minutes in, then flute comes in a minute later and it too
gives off a celtic vibe. The guitar around 3 1/2 minutes sounds fantastic as
drums and piano join in, then vocals are back 7 minutes in with a heavy
soundscape. An instrumental workout follows, a calm after 12 minutes as
acoustic guitar comes in, then flute joins in as well a couple of minutes later
as we get a full sound. Vocals are back 16 1/2 minutes in and I like how the
guitar and piano play over the heaviness. A calm before 21 minutes then piano
comes in followed by tasteful guitar as it builds. Vocal melodies join in.
Nice. Then we get a calm to the end; time to reflect. Wow, this is so close to 5 stars but is a must have
album from Nemo. 927 Anno Domini High Definition A review by Bonnek: After three excellent albums, Riverside finally hit
their stride with “Anno Domine High Definition” and exceed the safe and sound
approach they had applied before. Don't get me wrong, I absolutely loved the
preceding albums but still, I wasn't entirely satisfied. The music was too
similar to their peers (Anathema, Pink Floyd, Marillion) and they seemed
unwilling or unable to stray far from the tried and true sound and style
established on the debut album. Not so on ADHD. As the title already suggests this
album surges with energy and finds Riverside taking a more dynamic and metalized
direction. The result is superb, it's been quite a while (since Opeth's “Ghost
Reveries” in fact) that I have heard an album so full of focussed inspiration
and enthusiasm. Each song is a breathtaking adventure through prog, metal,
melody and emotion. All of them perfect in their own right, with a standout
track ‘Egoist Hedonist’, which launched itself from out of nowhere right into
my top 10. So instead of dissecting this album song by song, let's focus on the
musicians for a change. Mikael Åkerfeldt excluded (as he is in a league of
his own), Mariusz Duda must be the best rock singer of this decade. At least I
haven't heard anyone recently with his exceptional gift for melody or with a
voice that can be both so subtle and warm or loud and harsh. On ADHD he shines
in all of these aspects and even adopts a few new tricks like the casual and
slightly hoarse timbre on ‘Hyperactive’ and ‘Driven To Destruction’. Whenever
he's not too busy singing he puts in some exceptional bass guitar lines like
the opening strumming on ‘Driven to Destruction’, and the fat rolling groove
that drives the closing track. Piotr Grudzinski stands out on electric guitars.
Some people will probably miss the prevailing clean melodic lines from earlier
albums but they shouldn't. The reason is that first of all, the clean melodic
solos have not entirely gone, but most of all, he has diversified his playing a
lot; adding lots of metal flavours, a bit of funk and also some vary fragile
plucking as in the first short solo of ‘Left Out’, almost Reine Fiske from
Landberk here. Piotr Kozieradzki is not the type of fellow you
want to meet in a dead end street after dark so evidently we will only praise
him! Not only is his drumming as adequate as always, but, due to the excellent
production here, it is put much more to the foreground and shines as it never
has on a previous Riverside album. But the man of the album would be Michal Lapaj.
Those of you who have stumbled upon one of my reviews of the classic prog era
might have noticed that I'm not too big a fan of the way keyboards are usually
utilized in prog. Well, on this album they absolutely astound me, both on the
prominent Hammond Organ and on the keyboards he continuously adds excellent
leads, solos or backgrounds; world class. There's even some theremin at the
end! With this album Riverside have outshone many of
their previous tracks. This album will be hard to beat in the 2009 year lists. PS. I don't know what all the 4-hype is about
though. It's their 4th album yes, but it has 5 songs, its length is 44.42 (not
44.44 according to my CD-player) and it has a definite 5 stars, not 4! A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: “Anno Domini High Definition” (ADHD) is all killer,
no filler, a full blown masterpiece. I publicly announce my official conversion to
Riverside. Although I am new to this band, I am absolutely convinced they are
setting the bar high with their last 3 albums. This, their latest, is
absolutely stunning music from end to end. The musical virtuosity is excellent,
I love that pounding Hammond sound and the guitars are intricate and soar over
the music. The vocals are easy to listen to, similar to Steven Wilson's style,
and every track rises and soars with lengthy instrumental sections that feature
incredible guitar and burning keyboards. ‘Egoist Hedonist’ utilises trumpets by guest stars
and it is an effective moment on the track. The ambience of the quieter
sections are balanced by all out psych prog freakouts and this is a heavy album
with melancholy singing mixed with aggressive growling at times. The guitars are
Jon Petrucci like, but there is a signature trademark sound that Riverside
captures. Every track seems to blend seamlessly into one 44
minute track but definitely a real highlight is 'Left Out' and the closer
'Hybrid Times' absolutely kills, featuring Theremin would you believe! 'Hyperactive' is a short (5:45) opening number to
get things started beginning soft piano that builds to a fortissimo of
keyboards and bass. The killer riff chugs along frenetically and the off kilter
drums are outstanding. 'Egoist Hedonist' would be one of the best prog
metal tracks I have heard. It delivers with symphonic glacial landscape
atmospherics with the warm vocals chiming in. The ambience of serenity is
broken with the fractured angular guitars; an all out metal onslaught off the
scale. The absolute icing on the cake is the limited
edition DVD that feature the band Live at the Paradiso in Amsterdam, a popular
venue for prog metal such as Pain of Salvation on their 'Ending Themes' DVD.
The Riverside concert is resplendent with colourful lighting and a tiny display
screen but the music is the main star. 'Volte Face' hammers along with
shimmering organ and relentless guitar riffing. The band play many tracks from
their last 2 albums. 'Volte Face', 'Conceiving You,' 'I turned you Down' and
'Reality Dream III' are from "Second Life Syndrome" and are played to
perfection. The Tracks from "Rapid Eye Movement" are 'Beyond the
Eyelids', '02 Panic Room' and 'Ultimate Trip'. Though this is not their best
album, the tracks are equally good on the live stage. The crowd absolutely adore them and the band
effortlessly perform one track after another with little explanation or
introduction whipping them into a frenzy. The DVD runs for 40 minutes only, but
it's well worth getting hold of. So this package features some of the best of
the band thus far and is a pleasant experience. If you are new to the band you
can expect accomplished musicianship with intricate drum patterns, screaming
guitar breaks, keyboard flourishes and complex time signature changes. There is a thread of Dream Theater, a layer of
Porcupine Tree, a spattering of Deep Purple, and a teaspoon of Pain of
Salvation, but Riverside are carving a niche in prog metal that is their own
and deserved of cult status. If they were not mega stars in the prog world
after their Reality Dream Trilogy, ADHD seals the deal and launches them to the
stratosphere. Poland bands bow down and worship the new masters. They are
undisputed brilliant musicians and this CD package is indispensable. A 5 star
triumph! 928 A review by Ivan_Melgar_M: The magic never ends. They say you can't teach new tricks to an old dog,
but from my personal experience I can say this well known aphorism is not
always truth. For more than three decades I've been a Symphonic Prog hardcore
fan, it's true that I also loved some albums from other genres, but always some
limits. Normally I loved a Fusion or Avant album from a determined band, but
the rest of their discography hardly caught attention, so even when I love
several releases from diverse genres, it is very unlikely that I loved almost
all the discography of a non Symphonic band. But things change, and about 5 months ago when I
re-discovered Magma through an online video, I bought that album and became an
instant fan, and since then I managed to grab all their releases and never
found one less than satisfying; "Ëmëhntëhtt-Ré" is not the exception. Some friends which who I join with very frequently
to watch DVD'S and listen to music of Prog artists, don't share my addiction
for MAGMA; most of them think the band is too repetitive, but I believe that
this variation over the same theme are the central and most impressive
achievement of "Ëmëhntëhtt-Réª", the capacity of the band to slowly
move from one passage to another through continuous repetitions with subtle
deviations. Instead of radical changes, they opted for some form of progressive
metamorphosis that can be enjoyed step by step if we try not to lose an instant
of the music. Surely it's not as magnificent as “K.A.” (Well,
very few albums are remotely on that level), but Magma’s latest release is not
too far from it's predecessor. Again the epic sound that seems a Progressive
Rock soundtrack for an epic movie, makes me feel some weird emotion I haven’t felt
felt since I heard "The Musical Box" for the first time; simply
impressive. This time Emmanuel Borghi's piano is better than
ever, and mixes the strength of keyboard wizards such as Rick Wakeman or Keith
Emerson, with the sober classical sound of Par Lindh, a delightful touch of
Jazz and a lot of masters like Wagner or Karl Orff. The choirs are as always impressive from start to
end, as usual Stella Vander and Isabelle Feuillebois are impeccable and the
fantastic contrast with Aknin is something almost mystical; these singers are
among the few that are able to take me from a combative mood to tears of
emotion, their skills are beyond any doubt. Last but not least is Christian Vander, who's
frenetic vocals and peculiar drumming are always the center of attention for
most of the fans. I won't even dare to make a song by song review,
because it would take me several pages just to describe the six minutes of
"Ëmëhntëhtt-Ré", but I must say that if I have to choose one song I
would go with the versatile "Ëmëhntëhtt-Ré II", a 22:25 minutes epic
where I feel they show the magnitude of their skills and the flexibility of
their sound. But in general terms, the whole album is outstanding. As with “K.A.” I have no problem with my
"Ëmëhntëhtt-Ré" 4 star rating, even when I accept it's not as
impressive as the previous release; it's almost a masterpiece that deserves a
special place in any musical collection, so 4 stars it is.
929 A review by Finnforest: Back with their most accomplished sound ever. A few years ago PFM pulled off an amazing comeback
album called "Stati di Imagginazione" which struck me because latter
day comebacks of some favorite English bands had always disappointed me. Now
Delirium have returned with the remarkable "Il Nome del Vento"
proving that the Italians have bested the formula for comebacks. Frankly, I
think the difference is that some prog giants see a comeback with dollar signs
in their eyes, whereas Delirium are in it for the right reasons, first and
foremost the love of music. Many prog writers have proclaimed the 3rd Delirium
album to be the best of the '70s lot. While I've not heard their first two
albums I can safely say that Delirium 2009 has impressed me much more than the
'74 album did. This is a work that feels painstakingly crafted with mature
composition and sophisticated, beautiful arrangements. The band is legit
without a doubt; back are Ettore Vigo, Pino di Santo, Martin Grice, and Mimmo
di Martino. Newer members include guitarist Roberto Solinas and bassist Fabio
Chighini. They are joined by a string quartet and guests including the amazing
Sophya Baccini among others. No shortage of talent! Lyricist Mauro La Luce was
brought in and the perfectly representative cover art was painted by Anna
Ferrari. The album "Il Nome del Vento" (which if
my awful translations skills are accurate would be "The Name of the
Wind") is a skillfully blended and thoroughly fulfilling combination of
sophisticated symphonic progressive rock and jazz-rock excursion. I have heard
many attempts by today's decent high-profile bands at capturing something this
ambitious, and even when the results are mostly good, there can be some
sections that make me wince a bit for reasons of either poor composition or
iffy production/performance. You will find none of these kinds of bush league
mistakes on “Il Nome del Vento”; this album is flawlessly executed with carefully
considered compositions, painstakingly perfect production, and immaculate
performance from top to bottom. If there is any negative charge to be leveled
at Delirium for this album it will come from those who feel they play it too
relaxing, not wild enough for adrenalin loving prog fanatics. Consider a quote like this from the book Scented
Gardens written about 1974's Delirium 3: "All Delirium albums are
pleasant enough but sound too common and pedestrian to be really
interesting." [Scented Gardens of the Mind]. I have written often
enough myself that even the high quality modern Italian prog albums lack the
"avant-garde" surprises of the early '70s heyday. While that
sentiment is true to some extent one should not write off an album like this
because it is far from "pedestrian." True that much of the
high-minded weirdness of the old days is gone, but what remains is not
"common" but exceptional this time around. Maturity is a word the
band might not appreciate, but the composition demands that I use it. These
tracks are so beautifully written and perfectly arranged that I've realized
sophistication isn't necessarily the harbinger of soft middle age as I might
have thought. Like Wyatt's recent "Comicopera", Delirium have infused
a degree of elegance that few bands of any age pull off. In attempting to describe moments of beauty for
which words don't do justice, I would say that “Il Nome Del Vento” almost has
the classic symphonic influence of "Days of Future Passed," the
occasional jazz leanings of a Robert Wyatt album, and the upscale rock of a
Zuffanti project. The symphonic moments are my favorite when you have these
glorious melodic passages rising from the piano, Hammond, or Mellotron. They
are grand and stately, adorned with Baccini's lovely backing vocals, gentle
flute and string passages, lovely to the point of intoxication. The title track
is the perfect example of this with Sophya's harmonies just heavenly. From
these sections they will quite frequently veer into jazz-rock territory with
saxophone often taking the lead for some extended workouts. The third component
are the rock guitar leads which break through here and there to keep things
from getting too laid back, and the bass playing is strong and bubbly
throughout. During some of the rock sections with flute the inevitable Jethro
Tull comparisons may pop up again, but really this album sounds little like
Tull to me. It sounds a lot like Delirium delivering the masterpiece that
perhaps eluded them in the 1970s. This is an hour long journey that is going to
please many progressive fans of all stripes. My favorites are of course the melodic lushness of
the title track and the amazing blend of saxophone, flute, and piano jamming on
the 10 minute highlight "Dopo il Vento." Every song is strong and the
little details keep popping up with each new play. I am truly grateful that these
legends of the Italian scene were able to have the chance to make this music
and that I was fortunate enough to hear it. This is one title to embrace in a
relaxed manner. It's not a "type-A" personality album you want in
rush hour traffic, it's really an album that begs one to pour a drink or two
and listen to relaxed and without multi-tasking. Take in the high level of
detail and care given to the performances. Listen to how effortlessly the
string quartet is woven into the composition, how the performances just excel
from everyone. Listen for the vocal debut of the young Valentino Vera who I
believe makes his first appearance and does a wonderful job! Feel the optimism
in the cycle of life that the band seems to exude throughout every inch of this
project. It is music that feels reassuring, somehow wise, not something you
feel everyday. This is without question one of the premier releases of the
2000s, a triumphant return for this outstanding progressive band and I imagine
they must be thrilled with the results. Black Widow Records scores another big victory with
this Delirium return. They deliver the disc in a tri-fold digipak boasting
great artwork, a beautiful 24 page booklet filled with color photos and lyrics,
a bonus track, and even a bonus video. I've only spent a short time with this
album thus far because I wanted to get a review up and get the word out about
its release. I give them 5 stars based on a quick initial impression of about a
week, but we'll have to see if that holds up over time. Sometimes they don't
but I've a feeling this one just might. Bravo Delirium! 930 Barbaro
(Ma non troppo) A review by Mellotron Storm: It's been 8 long years since the last Present album
("High Infidelity") so I was
very anxious to get the new one. I received it about a week ago and have been
giving it plenty of spins. Interesting that the core six of the lineup from
"High Infidelity" are still here. Roger Trigaux and his son Reginald
on guitars, Pierre Chevalier on piano and keyboards, Dave Kerman on drums and
percussions, Keith Macksoud on bass, and Matthieu Safatly on cello. We also get
Pierre Desassis on sax, and our own Udi Koomran is back to make sure this
sounds perfect (and it does). This comes with a 3 hour DVD of live material as
well. I'm going to focus on the studio album only. One of the first things I noticed is that this album has no vocals, it's
an all-instrumental affair. The length of this cd is just over 44 minutes of
music, which for me is really refreshing after all those 70 plus minute cds we
seem to get these days. Three tracks including a cover of Univers Zero's
"Jack The Ripper" from their "Heresie" album. Maybe it's
just me but this new Present album has more in common with their first two
records then the ones in between. "Vertiges" is a good example of this with
the collage of sounds that fill the soundscape. It's just a joy to try to pick
out all the different sounds that come and go. Some great piano then it settles
with cello. Some huge bass comes and goes as well. This is great as the tempo
continues to shift in an intense 6 1/2 minutes, then sax 8 minutes in. A
haunting calm before 10 minutes then it kicks back in after 11 minutes in this
great section. Eerie sounds as it settles before 12 minutes, then lots of cello
and abrupt outbursts. The tempo starts to pick back up before 14 minutes, then
nice bass lines with guitar, and the piano that follows really impresses. "A Last Drop" opens with piano then these
prominent bass lines join in. So much going on though,and check out Kerman!
This builds to an intense climax then an eerie calm follows. A pleasant calm
after 7 minutes then it kicks back in, but it's building; this is amazing! It
settles once again after 8 1/2 minutes pretty much to the end. "Jack The
Ripper" has this dark and haunting intro (surprise) as cello joins the
sparse piano. More intense after 2 1/2 minutes as it builds, then settles with
guitar and cello 5 minutes in. It kicks back in with slicing cello and some fat
bass. A dead calm 7 minutes in then strange sounds come in as it builds. So
intense 10 minutes in then we get a calm. It's building again with piano this
time and strange guitar sounds. Suspense until 14 1/2 minutes in, then picks
back up 15 minutes in to the end. This has to be in my top three of favourite Present
albums along with "Certitudes" and "Le Poison Qui Rend
Fou". 931 A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: "The first atomic bomb was dropped on a
military base called Hiroshima...." "Frequency" begins with a voice over
speaking of a nuclear assault. The intro is unbelievable! The impressive music
is beautifully executed, Mike Holmes' clean soaring guitars, chugging riffs
like Led Zeppelin, ambient sustained mellotron and keyboard pads by Mark
Westworth, with expressive, creative drumming from Andy Edwards, the bass by
John Jowitt is played virtuoso style as well. The vocals of Peter Nicholls are
clean, inviting and uplifting, sounding somewhat like Neal Morse at times.
"Frequency" is an incredible followup to 2004's "Dark
Matter". This is marginally the better album of the two, though "Dark
Matter" was certainly a very good album. There is more innovation and
stronger compositions on this conceptual work. Due to the strong melodies
throughout this album it is a genuine grower, and you are likely to love each
track the more you listen to it, nothing on it is a throwaway or filler, it is
all solid prog at its best. I heard it three times in a row and eventually
succumbed to the fact that this, as far as I am concerned, is one of the most
uplifting prog albums of recent years and I rate it as a masterpiece of neo
prog. ‘Frequency’ is one of the
best IQ numbers, with solid time signature changes and a positive sound with
special effects and melancholy keyboards. Mike Holmes' guitar riffs are dynamic
and the lead breaks are emotive and Pink Floydian. Nicholls' warm vocals spell
out the main themes of the album: "Before
I was undiscovered, When I was invincible, Nobody could kill the silence, And
probably no one will again, The future was unrelated, Alternatives all pursued,
The lives that got separated, When others were split in two." It
is a brilliant composition and unforgettable. ‘Life Support’ begins with
beautiful piano and sustained pads and then those warm emotional vocals chime
in. This is so uplifting, and reminiscent of Transatlantic. The lyrics are
reflecting on life's trials and how to overcome. The mood changes as a
thunderous sound is heard and it builds to a crescendo then a lead guitar
swoops over as drums keep a steady metrical pattern. Westworth's spacey synth
is alienating and futuristic, similar to the type heard in electronic music. It
is a lengthy instrumental and as good as it gets. The synths merge with
majestic guitar leads. A very melodic motif repeats in various forms and locks
into your head. It is absolute bliss when the band are in full flight. The wind
effects are airy, ethereal and haunting towards the end. I adored this track
the first time I heard it and it gets better with each listen. ‘Stronger than Friction’, an ironic take on
Stranger Than Fiction, begins with a melodic guitar riff, and the positive
vocals of Nicholls harmonise about ways of living "until our worlds collide". At 3:50 the heavy beat
halts and an ambient mellotron soaked pad sizzles along as the vocals become
softer and the whole song becomes a"turning
tide". I like the fast riff at 6:40 where the time sig changes
completely again and the vocals are more aggressive. The sporadic bass and
drums are off kilter and there is a lilting keyboard and ascending lead guitar
break. One of the true highlights of the album and in fact the first 3 tracks
are prime example of Neo Prog at its best. ‘One Fatal Mistake’ is a
melancholic ballad, a gentle soothing sound that warms you up. The lyrics are
encouraging and lift up the spirits; "Imagine all you could have been, Eventually you would have seen,
The wanderlust, And all you dared to dream of, If ever you make one fatal
mistake, You broke me, you have no idea, In darkness I see more than hear,
Impossible, even I can say, Many would have walked away." There
is always a ray of hope injected into the lyrics that talk of how to overcome
despair and difficult circumstances. The melody is very pleasant to the ears
and musically there is a lot on offer here especially the transfixing guitars
and keyboards. ‘Ryker Skies’ features
thick buzzsaw synth and flowing acoustics. I first heard this on a Prognosis CD
from the Prog magazine and it stood out as much as it does here. Once again the
atmosphere is ambient textures of melancholy reflection. The lyrics are emotive; "I'm reeling, fighting for breath,
Running on empty, A fortress carved out of steel, Black and surrounding, No
other survivors, the walls without end, So where have I come to?" A
very strong bass and drum beat with crashing cymbals kicks in. The lead break
is replete with bends and pitched picking. The next section of vocals sound
like Ayreon's deep robotic effect voices on "Universal Migrator";"Welcome, hero, to Ryker Skies, Where
all your hopes are stored, You can leave responsibilities in ruins at the
door". The mellotron is ever present as the cleaner vocals of
Nicholls take over with high octaves; a very nice sound and killer melody as
the song swings in to full gear; "Get
it knocked into your thick skull, It's really not that hard, It's a cast iron
binding covenant, And this is just the start, There are insults and injuries, You've
heaped upon yourself, But you play the victim, While you pile the blame on
someone else". This track has some of the most memorable
lyrics of IQ and the chorus, once it gets in your head, you will never forget
that melody; "So before I
state my intention to live or die, I command your total attention In Ryker
Skies." I love the way the track merges into a full blown
keyboard attack. Once again a throbbing beat ensues like the machinated pulses
of Ayreon. The acoustic flourishes are a lovely touch, adding to the very airy
atmosphere. I would rate this as a proposed single from the album, as it is
more commercial in sound, but this does not detract from the musicianship which
is excellent throughout. A wonderful song. ‘The Province’ is a 13
minute IQ romp with textures of light and dark, moments of tension and release
are present and infectious melodic verses. The style at times is not dissimilar
to the sound of Peter Gabriel's Genesis. There is a heavy guitar riff that
overpowers the soundscape after a time. The staccato synthesizer chords are
fantastic as tradeoffs with guitar. There is a lot of acoustic work but it is
well balanced by the heavier sections. There are many changes in tempo and mood
and it progresses into minimalist piano and vocals at the end; "I cannot count the many ways cos'
there's nothing real... before the wireless kills." ‘Closer’ is as far
removed from the obscene industrial NIN song of the same name as you can get.
It is a balladic song with positive vocals that are close to Neal Morse or
Spock's Beard; "Slandered
and betrayed, A character assassination, Watch the guilty fade, Now the work is
done, Ghosts of early days, Gather round the later rivals, All parade upon the
earth to which they're bound, Silent in their course, They steal across the icy
stations, Words are useless now, They fall upon the ground." The
song builds gradually until we get a majestic instrumental break with soaring
keyboards and then a beautifully sung verse with powerful lyrics; "Hold on, when I'm dead and gone from
you, Remember me as light breaking through, Stay strong, any time you feel
you're lost, I will carry you back across". The piano motif
becomes hypnotic toward the end repeated as guitars and sporadic drums maintain
a melancholy mood, closing the album in style. Overall, "Frequency" is the best I have
heard from IQ, melancholy, with moments of heavy tension, and those soaring
powerful vocals; this is neo prog at a virtuoso level and I think it's one of
the albums of 2009. Accessible and soaring vocally, atmospheric and ambient
musically. A masterful work of high quality musicianship. 932 A review by Conor Fynes: Although music is not, and never should be confined
to narrowly prescribed music genres, most genres have one or two bands that
really pave the way for the rest. In the case of progressive metal, the torch
was lit by acts like Dream Theater, Pain of Salvation and Opeth, and most of
the bands now piled into that label are disciples of one or more of those
leading acts. In the case of these bands then, the mark of excellence comes
when the band is able to take the existing style and create something equally
as powerful with it. Along with other young progressive metal acts like Circus
Maximus and Haken, the band Leprous have distinguished themselves here not with
an album that breaks any of the rules, but rather that takes the existing
conventions of progressive metal and bombasts them to the level of being a
legitimately excellent listening experience of its own. While not well-known at this point by many, Leprous
play a familiar style of dark melodic progressive metal, with overtones of
classical music clearly heard in the songwriting. As with many similar bands,
Leprous' highly impressive technical abilities are among their greatest
strengths. Through tight, often melodic writing, the band's skills are still
able to show. Leprous are always sure to include an ample dose of beauty and
melody to metal, especially through the vocal work, which is quite simply
brilliant. Einar Solberg's higher register vocals may remind some listeners of
Pain of Salvation's Daniel Gildenlow, and the comparisons to that band probably
won't stop there. Perhaps the best thing that Leprous does here isn't
necessarily the songwriting, which is strong albeit derivative, but moreso the
brilliant way in which things are arranged. The background vocals are enriched
with lush harmonies, and intelligent riffs that play over each other. However,
much like other bands like Circus Maximus, the music itself may be great and
the band may be as talented as any other in melodic metal, but the lacking of
originality is what really holds back the band from reaching a level of mastery
they can truly call their own. As with any excellent album though, the promise and
potential shine through clearly, and one is led to wait eagerly to hear what
the talented Leprous will conjure up next. Put simply; 'Tall Poppy Syndrome' is
one of the best recent melodic progressive metal albums in the style of the
older legends. 933 A review by Conor Fynes: Since the 1980s, much of the so-called progressive
rock mainstream has become something of a contradiction. While the meaning of
the word 'progressive' inherently means to be moving forward with something,
many prog rock bands opt to go for a sound that might sound a little too much like
the old giants in Genesis or Yes. In other words; these bands may be able to
craft highly intelligent suites of music and play their instruments with often
virtuosic skill, though are not holding true to their label and actually moving
the sounds of rock music forward into the future. Such is the somewhat
discouraging case with prog rock supergroup Transatlantic, a band that features
an all-star cast of prog musicians. From well known bands like Spock's Beard,
The Flower Kings, Marillion, and Dream Theater, Transatlantic's reputation
preceeds them, and their individual talents as musicians and artists cannot be
disputed at this point. With their third album together, Transatlantic makes an
expansive two-disc set of music with 'The Whirlwind', an album that received
great amounts of praise from prog rock circles in 2009. Looking back on it, the
talents of each member is shown quite clearly in the music here. It is no small
feat to create an hour plus epic suite, and all things considered,
Transatlantic pays an immense gratitude to the old greats of progressive rock
with this album. However, even factoring the masterful execution of the album
into the judgement here, “The Whirlwind” still feels more like an homage to
1970s prog rock, than an individual artistic statement of its own. From start to finish, “The Whirlwind” dishes out
all of the cliches and trademarks of classic prog rock epics into one sprawling
piece; orchestral introductions, recurring musical themes, fantasy-based
lyrics, and liberal instrumentation. The first disc of this double album is
entirely devoted to the title track, a seventy seven minute observation that
draws upon each of the band member's talents and in no dearth of musical ideas.
Although mostly a Neal Morse and Roine Stolt driven project here, all of the
band members put their distinctive sounds into the music. Although having risen
to fame as being a metal drummer, Mike Portnoy's distinctive drum sound translates
very nicely here into the laid-back prog rock that Transatlantic plays.
Moreover, all members sing on this album, although once again, Stolt and Morse
take up much of the disc time with their voices. On top of a spot-on execution in terms of performance
and production, the album is also very well composed, although this should not
come as a surprise to anyone who has heard the music of any of these musicians'
flagship bands before. Although “The Whirlwind” is a bit shallow in emotional
dynamic, everything is given a lush arrangement, as is best heard in the
complex keyboard and vocal harmonies. However, although the execution of the
music here is close to perfection, the formula that Transatlantic is using
still feels stale, no matter how much flash they may try to douse it with. As
has already been said, “The Whirlwind” offers very little to a listener that
they have not already heard before; pleasant and cheerful symphonic progressive
rock was already mastered as an art form a good forty years before this album
dropped. Moreover, there does not feel as if there is much contrast or dynamic
throughout the seventy seven minutes of length. The emotions are kept fairly
light, and there are rarely any moments of cutting tension to give the epic a
sense of dramatic conflict. Although this constantly mellowed and 'rose-tinted'
music may have been exactly what Transatlantic was aiming for, it can feel
slightly monotonous even long before the epic wraps up. 'The Whirlwind' in
total though is quite an enjoyable piece of music, and although the whole act
feels fairly unoriginal and not as inspired as I may have liked a project like
this to turn out, the sheer depth of the performance and arrangement to the
music is alone worth the experience. Onto the second disc here; 'The Whirlwind' does
feel as if it ends on the first disc, and the second is simply a compilation of
bonus material. A compilation of some less successful original material and
cover tracks, the same musicianship is carried over here, but especially with
the covers; the whole thing feels somewhat unnecessary. Due to the fact that
Transatlantic's entire gimmick seems to be around making 1970's progressive
rock, the covers don't bring anything new to the songs that would be worth
checking out on their own, unless the listener is a big fan of any one of the
musicians playing. In any case, while the second half of Transatlantic's
project here is much less successful than the main attraction, it does not
deter from the power that the band has conjured here. Although I do feel
somewhat underwhelmed by the band's derivative style and the band would be a
failure were it not for the legendary talents of these men, “The Whirlwind” is
still a perfect record for a listener looking for a complex piece of revivalist
symphonic prog rock. 934 A review by Mellotron Storm: “Tick Tock” is a concept album based on the book "Wind,
Sand And Stars" by Antoine Di Saint-Exupey, which was about his real life
long distance flight from Paris to Saigon in 1935 that ended with him crashing
in a desert. Listening to this album with this in mind really adds to the music
considerably. The title "Tick Tock" is a metaphor for the walking
that this man and his co-pilot did through the desert. Check out the lyrics
though, as this is brilliantly done. And the music like on the amazing
"Night" album is so lush and atmospheric. Just a pleasure to get lost
in these soundscapes. I was reminded a lot of latter day Marillion only I'd say
Gazpacho do it better. "Desert Flight" opens with jarring
guitars as vocals then drums arrive. Synths and some killer bass before a
minute, Mellotron before 2 minutes as it settles and lots of atmosphere before
4 minutes. The tempo starts to pick up 6 minutes in, then it dies (they crash)
with violin and piano a minute later as the wind blows. I have to say that for
me this album gets better as it plays out which is such a cool thing. "The Walk" is very Marillion-like early
with percussion, reserved vocals and acoustic guitar. Mellotron before 3
minutes, violin a minute later, and an atmospheric calm 5 minutes in. It turns
to a Middle Eastern flavour after 6 minutes, and the second part of "The
Walk" is similar to the first part but even better with the strummed
guitar and mellotron being more prominent. Great lyrics here too as he sings
about the struggle to survive in this walk through the desert; "The long
haul back in no direction and no one knows we’re ok, And the curve of the
horizon a masterpiece, survival on adrenaline it's over soon, Doesn't everyone
have their own walk to walk". "Tick Tock" is the incredible 22 1/2
minute title track that's divided into three parts. A tick tock-like rhythm as
vocals come in, an amazing sound! Lots of atmosphere, and a fuller sound 4
minutes in. A sudden burst of a male choir upon the soundscape before 6 minutes
is a nice touch. In part two the drums and bass are heavier. Piano joins in and
there’s such an uplifting sound after 2 1/2 minutes. It settles after 5 1/2
minutes but you can still hear the tick tock as it builds. It turns even
quieter before 8 minutes, then flute and tons of atmosphere 9 1/2 minutes in.
Part three comes in and the song comes to life with the tick tock, drums, bass
and piano. The guitar sounds great 1 1/2 minutes in. The tempo and mood
continue to shift in an emotional section. Mellotron 3 minutes in. Check out the
lyrics in this part: "You silence every love, yet you always starve for
more, your'e only waiting time, lucky to be alive, lucky to be alive".
"Winter Is Never" is pure emotion for me, the triumphant conclusion; he
sounds like Hogarth here. 4.5 stars. Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - October 30 2012 at 19:16 |
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: October 30 2012 at 19:17 | |
2009 to be continued...
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: October 30 2012 at 19:20 | |
Wow that was post 11711
Looked very strange Joined: 02 July 2008
Location: Australia Online Status: Online Posts: 11711 |
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pianoman
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 28 2007 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 793 |
Posted: October 30 2012 at 19:23 | |
Until Sunrise - Until Sunrise (2010) or Ocean Architecture - Animus (2012)?
Just some self promotion (sorry!) Also Battlestations - In a Cold Embrace (2012) |
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pianoman
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 28 2007 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 793 |
Posted: October 30 2012 at 19:23 | |
Oh, and kickass list. You should make a book out of this. Whether it's you writing a little bit about each release, or collecting reviews with permission.
Edited by pianoman - October 30 2012 at 19:25 |
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progbethyname
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 30 2012 Location: HiFi Headmania Status: Offline Points: 7849 |
Posted: October 30 2012 at 19:29 | |
Gotta include Saviour Machine somewhere in the 1001. Come on Scotty! Lol
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Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: October 30 2012 at 20:18 | |
Yeah I got the PM - not a bad album from what I hear so far. Review inevitable. I have a heap I am working on now so I will get to it eventually.
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: November 15 2012 at 23:24 | |
2009 continued...
935 A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: “Crack the Skye” was my introduction to Mastodon
and it captured my attention immediately. The blend of extreme metal and experimental jazz
fusion psychedelia is well executed throughout. Each song is part of a thematic
master work about Eastern philosophies and Religiosity. The very off kilter
time changes are wonderful on each track. It contains a multi-movement suite
with songs within a song on the mini epic 'The Czar' which is worth the price
of admission on its own. Other highlights are the catchy metallic 'Oblivion'
and 'Divinations'. If you can get hold of the video clip of this latter track
it is worthwhile as it depicts an astronaut, very '2001'ish, trying to rescue
another astronaut who is drifting in space; the effects are great and it opens
up a new dimension to the meaning of the obscure lyrics. 'Ghost of Karelia' is another good track with some
beautiful lead guitar work and 'Crack the Skye' is excellent. The final track,
'The Last Baron', is the epic that features a rather strangled blend of jazz
time signatures and crunching chunky metal riffs clocking in at 13 minutes. The vocals by Dailor on each track range from clean
to agressive growelling. The vocals compliment the sound of the tracks and
there are some incredible lead guitar breaks from Hinds and Kelliher. The bass
work of Sanders is excellent and there are many strong harmonies and choruses
to stick in the memory banks well after the CD ends. The riffs are intricate and complex and never dull,
as you are not quite sure in which direction the tracks are heading. This is a
great album and worth checking out if you have never encountered this ensemble
of technical metal proggers. I recommend this to any one who likes their prog
loud and technical as this album has much to offer even the most discerning
prog addict. A review by UMUR: “Crack the Skye” is
the fourth full-length studio album by American experimental/ progressive metal
act Mastodon. The last
couple of albums by the band have elevated Mastodon to stardom in the metal world and deservedly so. A
new release by such a prolific act always comes with a lot of hype and it´s
always interesting to see if the artist can live up to that hype. “Crack the Skye” sounds
unmistakably like Mastodon but
the band keep developing their trademark sound, exploring new territories. The
music is more melodic and memorable than earlier releases by the band. The
multitude of influences from traditional heavy metal, thrash metal, sludge
metal, progressive rock/ metal, psychedelic rock and hard rock as usual
give Mastodon a unique
sound. They´ve toned down the technical playing a bit on “Crack the Skye” and I especially
noticed that Brann Dailor´s otherwise
highly adventurous drumming is now more restrained. There are seven tracks on the album. Two of them
are pretty long. ‘The Czar’ is
an almost 10 minute long affair while the closing track ‘The Last Baron’ is 13 minutes
long. I regard the latter as one of the most progressive songs written by the
band so far. All songs on the album are high quality compositions and several
are favorites of mine in the group´s discography. The above mentioned ‘The Last Baron’ is an excellent
song, the opening track ‘Oblivion’ is
also quite the experience (note the melodic and powerful guitar solo) and the
same can be said about ‘Crack the
Skye’, ‘Divinations’ and ‘Quintessence’. ‘The Czar’ and ‘Ghost of Karelia’ haven´t really
blown me away yet, but that might come with further listens. They are
definitely not bad songs. The vocals on the album are the most melodic Mastodon have done so far. The
raw vocal style is still present on the album but the clean vocals are more and
more prominent. I enjoy this development. The production is professional and well sounding. “Crack the Skye” is the Mastodon album so far, that has
most progressive rock leanings and older fans might miss the more aggressive
side of the band on this album. For those of us who enjoy the band´s more
experimental and melodic side “Crack
the Skye” is probably the best album they´ve made so far. I´m still
not a hardcore fan but it´s hard not to bow in the dust for a release like
this. A 4 star rating is well deserved and I fully understand those that
feel “Crack the Skye” is
a masterpiece. 936 A review by Mellotron Storm: I still feel that Beardfish sounds like a cross
between Frank Zappa and Wigwam. Yes, there is lots of humour in the lyrics and
they drop several "F" bombs along the way.The organ, vocals and drums
are most prominent. I felt that this album didn't hit me like the previous one;
it's not as dynamic as they seem to stretch passages out quite often. Still I can give nothing less than 4 stars and I do expect this one to grow on me more than it
has so far, and it is too long at almost 77 minutes. "Awaken The Sleeping" is a good instrumental
with lots of organ as drums and bass support. It's spacey late then this
powerful atmosphere ends it. "Destined Solitaire" sounds great early
with that guitar then it kicks in with vocals. Love the lyrics, and thereare some
brief growly vocals before 5 minutes. Nice crunchy bass in this one, and the
guitar is lighting it up before 9 minutes as vocals return after 10 minutes. "Until You Comply (Including Entropy)” is the
longest track at almost 15 1/2 minutes. Classic Beardfish with those Wigwam
styled vocals and humorous lyrics as the bass, drums and organ lead
instrumentally. It turns slower paced around 6 minutes and reserved vocals come
in at 7 1/2 minutes then it kicks in. It settles back again as the tempo
continues to shift, and It's lighter with silly vocal melodies 12 minutes in. Ripping
guitar enters before 13 minutes with powerful organ runs, then it settles with
piano after 14 minutes, as the vocals return to end it. "In Real Life
There Is No Algebra" I agree with! A catchy rhythm at first is heard with
vocals, but those vocals do become the focus. "Where The Rain Comes In" has a good
uptempo intro with lots of organ. Vocals enter 2 minutes in as it settles back,
and it is pretty funny as it kicks in with organ. "At Home...Watching
Movies" has percussion, clapping and strummed guitar as the vocals join
in. "Coup De Grace" has accordion in it with
bass and a beat. The organ floats in as it settles but kicks back in with power
after 3 1/2 minutes,and more accordion later. "Abigail's Questions (In An
Infinite Universe)" has some brief atmosphere as the music kicks in and
the vocals follow. It's fairly laid back overall and then turns a little jazzy
before 6 minutes. Female spoken words come in and then the male vocals are back,
then guitar after 8 minutes. "The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of" has
some excellent sounding vocals and piano at one point. It settles before 2
minutes then picks up at 3 1/2 minutes. It picks up more 8 1/2 minutes in with
the drums and organ leading. An enjoyable album that I am drawn to simply
because of that Beardfish sound. 4 stars. 937 A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Astra's "The Weirding" is an incredible
debut that is soaked in Mellotron and retro influences hearkening back to the
eclectic golden age of prog. Astra have made an indelible mark in the prog music
world with their debut, an unforgettable triumph. The mellotron takes front
stage throughout and a very Pink Floyd like atmosphere is created, including
the vocal style and slow build up on each song. There are free form lengthy
jams and musical virtuosity on every level. 'The Rising of the Black Sun' has an ominous
opening with distant flute trilling and atmospheric guitar picking sweeps. The
ethereal atmosphere is built on free form jazz drumming, and spacey effects on
the flute become more pronounced. It is a jazz fusion section for a while, the
guitars soon dominate, Hackett like and very spacey, over a one chord bass note
driven with Hurley's intricate drum fills and pounding beat. It is an
extraordinary sound created with musical virtuosity as good as I have heard. It
is 70s like and yet so refreshing for the new millennium; a reinvention of the
classic eclectic prog sound that is very much like Pink Floyd meets Yes in
places, with touches of Hawkwind, Camel and early Genesis. This track segues immediately into the epic title
track. A Rogers Waters like voice from Vaughan sings the estranged lyrics;
"The world spins out of tune and there's nothing we can do..."
Reminds me a bit like Diagonal too, a more recent band that plays similar
music. The emphasis is more on the music but still Astra are capable of very
strong harmonies and melodies. A powerful synth line sounding like a sax chimes
in between verses and there are killer Sabbathesque riffs and a really great
tune. This is an absolute masterpiece track for Astra, lengthy but never dull. There
is an extraordinary improv style guitar solo over an 8 chord structure of organ
and mellotron. The jamming is wonderful prog with angular guitar riffing and
sporadic drumming producing high quality music. The shimmering organ grinding
at the end is superb and the guitar solo ascends out of the stratosphere. It
ends on a catastrophoic apocalyptic bomb blast. This is headphone prog bliss. 'Silent Sleep' is a slow sleepy track that begins
with a pitchy spacey guitar solo and an atonal time signature. The Camel-like
flute chimes in softly building to a verse. The flute plays the verse in free
form style until the Floyd like vocals gently begin; "moving out away from
you...". This section is answered by a scorching duel guitar solo. The
next verse begins in the same tune as previous; "far beyond the gloom,
moving a million miles away from you". This feels more like a traditional
song at this stage. There is a violin like solo on mellotron and a tradeoff
between synth and guitar. The time sig changes towards the end into a half time
feel. A nice slower number to break the progressive jamming. 'The River Under' begins like a Floyd version of
'Careful With that Axe...' the low humming bass of Scalter keeps the rhythm as
the mellotron sinks its fangs into the murky waters. The vocals are different
on this, and there is a very strong melody throughout with a catchy chorus too. 'Ouroboros' features an incredible spacey guitar
solo. The instrumental really takes off with electrifying guitar fret melting
majestic melodies in time to a chant. As it progresses, the guitars become very
melodious with infectious guitar licks and riffs that are driven along a wave
of mellotron and very well executed flute passages from Hurley. An almost
hypnotic rhythm locks in and it becomes grandiose, filling in many various time
sigs till it ends on the same whooshing hum as the intro; astonishing music. This is followed by two more short tracks which are
satisfactory but I want to skip to the finale which is a delightful feast for
the ears. 'Beyond to slight the maze' sounds very much like Pink Floyd's
'Echoes' complete with long keyboard pads and harmonies. The whale effects are
not here of course but the same atmosphere is generated, an extreme ambience
that is serene and melancholy. The mood is fractured with the introduction of a
dominating fat Hammond organ sound that grinds and shimmers as Vaughan pounds
incessantly. To conclude, “The Weirding” is a must have album
and one of the best of the more recent debuts. Make no mistake, Astra have
produced an absolutely brilliant return to the roots of psychedelic and
symphonic 70s prog. Almost 5 stars, but 4 glorious stars for a debut is solid
evidence that the band are here to stay. 938 Detta
Har Hänt A review by Sean Trane: After an extremely promising debut Gösta Berlings
Saga released some three years later this much-awaited for “Detta Har Händt”.
First small deception: the much less charming artwork of this sophomore album,
based onto construction shots, which are quite a departure to the particularly
charming debut digipak package. The group also saw a change of guitarist,
Baldur's son stepping in for Daniel's son (too easy, but too hard to resist).
The first impression, once the disc popped inside the deck, is that you'll have
no problems recognizing the instrumental world GBS had installed with their
debut. Lundberg's keyboard array has grown impressively, even if they're
considered an additional instrument and mainly quoted on the Rhodes. I can't help but thinking of the early Anekdoten (“Vemod”
+ “Nucleus”) upon a few occasions on this album, mainly the guitar and
mellotron layers, but also King Crimson (the opening succession of chords on
Bergsl*g.n). Sometimes the electronic noises are intriguing, almost ambient,
like at the start and throughout ‘Svenska Hjärtan’; whereas they're announcing
a deeply involved frenzy in ‘Tem Trappar’. The little flaw detected on the
debut, overstaying inside the same groove without foraying around it, is
actually increased as we find long moments (such as the closing ‘Vasterbron’)
where the heroic wails and dramatic weeps from the guitar flatters shamelessly
your eardrums with much talent, but it might be more concise in its propos.
Nevertheless, even an old dog such as me will allow himself to fall into a
well-dressed up trap, such as this one. A bit less brilliant than its predecessor, DHH is
maybe more adventurous, but in the greater scheme of prog things, they're both
fairly sonically similar, even if I'd advise to start with the debut and move
to this one after. In either case, while certainly not groundbreaking (what is
in this end of the 00's decade?), GBS offers some orgasmic moments, even though
it might have a little too much déjà-vu feel and may sound a tad formulaic, in
regards to the Scandic retro-prog plethora. 939 The Mad Monk And The Mountain A review by Conor Fynes: Naturally when I come across an album by an artist
I've never heard anything of before, I have no preconceptions or expectations
about what the music will be like. Sparing a rather attractive front cover, I
went into listening to multi-instrumentalist Colin Masson's second album
without the slightest clue of it's quality, or even style. With that in mind,
it is an even greater pleasure to speak of what a classy and beautiful album “The
Mad Monk & The Mountain” really is. Tipping the hat to the sound of classic
symphonic prog and creating a work of music that thrives on it's marriage of
melody and complexity, Colin Masson has created an hour of vibrant and
intelligent music, as well as an underground gem of the progressive scene. Although the album is primarily instrumental in
nature, “The Mad Monk & The Mountain” opens with a haunting and highly
theatrical vocal piece, 'Two Lighthousekeepers.' Taking no time to get things
started, the song is filled with strong vocal harmonies, an upbeat rhythm, and
an orchestral approach to what could easily be considered a 'catchy' tune.
Telling a tale of bleak isolation and the two mentioned lighthousekeepers in
conflict with one another, Colin does a very good job of telling an interesting
story with the lyrics, while still maintaining a high level of musical
interest. While the second track 'Tilting At Windmills'
follows up on the high level of quality that the first track set, I was
originally a bit unsettled hearing it, because I realized here that this was
going to be a mostly instrumental journey. While singing is certainly not a
necessary trait in order for music to be 'enjoyable' at all, there was still a
resounding impression and enjoyment from Colin's witty storytelling ability and
penchant for rich vocal harmonies, so it was a dissapointment at first. After a
few listens however, the instrumental work of Colin Masson quickly warmed up on
me, and this track now stands as being one of my most enjoyed on the album.
Beginning softly, 'Windmills' slowly builds up tension until breaking into full
out rock instrumental fury. This track of the album also showcases Colin's
great skill with guitar; the track is filled with rapidfire riffage and
tasteful lead work. After such a dynamic track, the listener is greeted
with the most serene and beautiful piece on the album, 'The Ends Of The Earth.'
Instead of Colin singing here however, his associate Cathy Alexander sings
here. In what can easily be considered the 'ballad' of the album, Cathy's
soothing and folk-like vocals soar over a very celtic soundscape. Although the
song has less dynamic and inherent energy than the others, it is possibly the
strongest track on the album, and is also the part of the album where I
realized that I had a masterpiece on my hands here. Flowing perfectly into the next track, the album
presents it's title track; another instrumental. With a very fitting
introduction to the title of the song (very ethereal and almost oriental in
it's style), the song breaks into a more typical rock instrumental format. The
song very deliberately develops in intensity over time; the fantastic bass
guitar work here is undeniable. The track doesn't quite capture the glory of
'Tilting At Windmills,' though there are some great moments here, and plenty of
great rocking moments. To cap off the album, the last two tracks keep the
high level of quality going, and make for a consistent achievement. 'Caradon's
Surprise' is certainly the most forgettable track on the album, but it is
pleasant enough. It is a classical guitar piece, meant to be a segue between
the two longer songs. 'The House On The Rock' on the other hand, is a stunning
piece of work, opening up. The first few minutes are based in orchestration.
While the orchestral instruments aren't genuine, the feeling of 'epicness' is
conveyed in great amounts. This track is certainly the most dynamic; ranging
from the typical rock instrumentation, to traditional folksong, to
celtic-styled prog. While the track is as powerful as any other on 'The Mad
Monk & The Mountain,' there are very few musical ideas that are instantly
catchy and endearing; this 'epic' is a grower, undoubtedly. 'The Mad Monk & The Mountain' is certainly one
of the greatest modern symphonic progressive albums I've heard to date, and it
has put Colin Masson on my radar as a talented artist to look out for. Being no
stranger to the music scene, Colin has put his experience to great use here,
and has crafted a real gem here. Suffice to say, despite some minor flaws in
terms of occasionally over-indulgent instrumentation, 'The Mad Monk & The
Mountain' is a charming masterpiece. A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: The Mad Monk and the Mountain is a majesic
triumphant slice of prog. Colin Masson's “The Mad Monk and the Mountain” is
an ambient journey along a coastline of howling winds, moonscapes, Atlantic
horizons and lighthouses watching over precipices of mountain peaks. There are
conceptual faith leaps into fantasy and horror and these are juxtaposed with
thoughts of death and ghostly apparitions. The opening track 'Two
Lighthouskeepers' spells it out from the outset as the protagonist lapses into
a morbid insane frame of mind where the isolation and desolate loneliness
envelop his conscious being; "prancing figures in the howling screaming
night, casting monstrous shadows in the ever spinning light, waving to the
passing ships the sailors see, two lighthousekeepers dancing." Masson's vocals are subdued, sinister at times, but
overall clean and reflective, not unlike Peter Hammill though he does not use
the baritone of Hammill. The musical style is perhaps akin to the work of Mike
Oldfield, especially the guitar tones. The acoustics that begin 'Tilting at
Windmills' draws one in with a compelling rhythm, and very nice keyboard
orchestrations. The lengthy guitar solo is restrained and melodic, reminiscent
of Andy Latimer in some respects. The layered guitars and keys make a wonderful
soundscape of easy listening music. The time sig locks in eventually to a
rhythmic cadence. There is a well executed lead guitar flourish over an
ominous, even portentous, ascending chord figure. The instrumental is
masterfully delivered and delightfully innovative shifting into many moods, textures
of dark and light pervade the Symphonic atmosphere. 'The Ends of the Earth' continues the high class
musicianship beginning with minimalist 12 string acoustic picking. Cathy
Alexander is mesmirising on vocals, recorders and keyboards on the album. She
is given a chance to shine and her gorgeous vocals are lilting and haunting
with a peaceful beauty; "is this a dream, am I walking still, do I spread
my wings or the wings of illusion, will I fall to the earth like a stone, or
reach for the sky, one day I will fly where the waters run clear, one day I
will fly to the ends of the earth." I am reminded of the high octaves of
Mostly Autumn with Heather Findlay or Annie Haslam, and Alexander provides a
Celtic atmosphere with these dreamy angelic vocals. The recorder work is well
accomplished and enhances the ethereal atmosphere. I was delighted that Masson
included her on the album as it lends a genuine ambience when a melodic
crystalline soprano vocal is heard over ambient music. Simply a beautiful
masterful song, featuring a fantastic symphonic ending. 'The Mad Monk and The Mountain' features an intro
with Alexander's vocals and a chiming musical piece. The trumpet sounds augment
the musicscape, and the bass sounds excellent on this track. There is a progressive
time sig that drives it, and lead guitar dominates with a clean sound and
elongated notes struck. The sustain is wonderful and then the track breaks into
a fast tempo rock section, with some distorted riffs cranking along. Suddenly
the album has turned the tide into hard rock territory. The piece continues
with many varied melodies and is very easy to listen to, quite relaxing towards
the end, with ambience created from warm monochrome lead guitar sounds and
sweeping keyboard strokes. 'Caradon's Surprise' is a short instrumental track
that acts as an interlude between two long tracks, the last being an epic. In
true prog tradition, it is a transition point that prepares the listener for
the longer piece to end the album. On its own, the short piece is quite good in
itself, sounding medieval with 12 string acoustics. The tranquillity is akin to
Hackett's work prior to the Genesis epic on "Foxtrot" that needs no
introduction here among the prog community. The epic is an instrumental called 'The House on the
Rock', following the conceptual line of thought of craggy rocks and dilapidated
mansions as a metaphor for the struggles of a broken down life. Well, that's my
interpretation anyway. The keyboard motifs that begin the piece draw in the
listener and then the golden sounds of lead guitars wash over gently. Mike
Oldfield springs to mind again here and I especially love the way it builds
with orchestrated keys that have a majestic quality. The piece sounds royal due
to the regal trumpet sounds, but the phased lead guitar consistently overtakes
the music with delightful sustained string bends. At 5 minutes in the medieval
flavour is prominent with flute sounds and a quirky jig tempo. The melody
sounds familiar for some reason, and one can imagine some beautiful dresses
flowing out as beatific dancers jig arm on arm with joyful smiles. The
percussion crunches in soon and there is a very powerful lead riff that builds
to a crescendo, keeping the melody but augmenting it with a stronger display of
musical excellence. A new time sig at 8:50 breaks out and then it settles into
an acoustic rhythm and some Oldfieldish lead guitar work with a high airy
nature. The music becomes organic with a moderate cadence and the twin guitar
harmonies at 11:25 are wondrous. In conclusion, the album tends to peak early with
some amazing vocal tracks and soon the entire thing is an instrumental album.
This seems to work on subsequent listens but I found myself waiting for the
vocals to come in. The vocals of Alexander are especially a part of the journey
lending a calmness and tranquillity to the music. Masson is a very good
vocalist too and the lyrics are powerful and necessary in the early tracks.
When those vocals are absent the instrumentals have the tendency to become a
little laborious or repetitious for my ears. In any case, this album is a
remarkable artistic achievement for a virtual solo artist and Masson is a
virtuoso musician who knows how to inject just the right amount of light and
dark to the musicscape. I was delighted to experience such a beautiful emotive
album. After many listens I finally came to the conclusion that it is
definitely a 4 star triumph. 940 A review by Mellotron Storm: What a pleasant surprise this album was. I
did enjoy the debut but I felt it could
have been better, and "Realms Of Eternity" is a lot better. Carl
Baldassarre, the lead guitarist and vocalist, wrote all the lyrics, and
considering his personal faith, there is a strong Christian flavour to the
lyrics. This album is the whole package though, I've just enjoyed it immensly
this past week. "Darkfield" features guest vocalist Mark
Boals, who sings on 3 other tracks as well. I love this song. It's about
temptation and brings in the Garden of Eden (Paradise). This is just so well
done, with some guest cello in the intro and chunky bass a minute in. Yearning
vocals follow and check out the guitar 3 1/2 minutes in, with mournful synths
that remind me of Rush. Speaking of Rush I'm reminded of Lifeson as the guitar
comes in at 5 minutes. Nice bass 6 1/2 minutes in, I like the drumming late as
well on this fantastic tune; dark and melancholic. "Vanitas" is Syzygy putting on an
instrumental show early. It turns classical then kicks in around 3 minutes.
Great sound right here and check out the drum work. "Dreams" opens
with synths, piano and lazy guitar melodies. Kind of spacey actually before it
kicks in around a minute. This is nice and heavy, with vocals 2 minutes in as
it settles. There’s a Gentle Giant vibe here, it's fuller on the chorus and I love
the mournful guitar after 7 minutes. "Echoes Remain" features these beautiful
acoustic guitar melodies as reserved vocals and cello join in. Lots of flute in
this one as well, a mellow tune. "Dialectic" is laid back with synths
early. Vocals follow and the sound gets fuller, then it settles after 3 1/2
minutes as contrasts continue. Raw guitar 5 1/2 minutes in as it kicks in
heavier with nice bass and organ. I like the guitar 9 minutes in too as it turns
jazzy. Great sound after 11 1/2 minutes with synths, a chunky bass 13 1/2
minutes in then it turns mellow, almost spacey with strummed acoustic guitar
and vocals that sing over and over "Like seasons are inclined, We need
change to help us find, how old becomes anew, And it's all because of
you". "Arranmore Isle" is pastoral with
acoustic guitar melodies and theremin. "Overture" is a Spock’s Beard-like
tune. This is fun with the organ, fat bass and the guitar making lots of noise.
Yes, the drumming is incredible. "The Sea" opens with piano as a full
sound comes and goes, with vocals too, and samples late. "The Mourning
Song" features these strummed acoustic guitar melodies as percussion joins
in then synths. Reserved vocals follow and I like this track. "Variations Part 1" and "Variations
Part 2" are both highlights instrumentally and the vocal arrangements
recall Gentle Giant on part 1. Both songs are a blast with the growly bass, pounding
drums and prominent keyboards. "Reflections" opens with strummed
acoustic guitar as drums then vocals join in, kind of sad yet uplifting. It
blends into "Finale" where it gets fuller. Check out the bass! Guitar
comes ripping in as the drums pound it out. I like when the synths come in
around a minute. The guitar solo is just a beauty as it goes on and on. It ends
with the vocals passionately singing "I wonder if the tale is true, cross
the sea where I'll find you, smiles
a-waiting on the shore, Loved ones joyful evermore". Easily 4 stars and
highly recommended. 941 L'axe du Fou A review by Sean Trane: Latest (so far, the fourth) album from Forgas'
troupes, and maybe the best one yet, but it comes after a three or four year
silence (“Soleil 12” dates from 05) that had us worried. Actually, parts of the
compositions were already written a while ago (the next album was originally
scheduled in 06), but the line-up suffered a few changes (now a septet), then
some tracks were re-written (trimmed down), more added and by the time all of
this was dealt with, they were in the summer of 08. Just four tracks, all
penned by Patrick, packed in an uncompromising fluvial artwork It opens on one of the older tracks ‘La Clef’,
that's been on the live repertoire quite a while, and it shows because the band
is really tight on this track. Mlodecka's violin and Alexaline's trumpet on the
forefront, the latter distilling a light Spanish ambiance throughout the album,
are great The 16 mins+ title track is the album centrepiece, first as a
piano-driven tune where Trognon alternates on sax and flute, then allowing
everyone to have its moment in the sunshine. The other cornerstone on which the album is built
is the trimmed-down 14 mins ‘Double Sens’, a piece that lost over 20 minutes of
ideas, most likely to pop up on future albums. What's left is an impressive and
tight composition, starting on a strong bass line, but later (the second half)
featuring a grandiose exchange of brass, violin and guitar licks, lines and
solos over a delightful electric piano. No doubt the album's highlight. The closing ‘13th Moon’ starts out as a smooth bass
and electric piano-driven mid-tempo on which trumpet, flute and guitar and
violin are gliding, but gradually speeds up, gets frantic, than manic (love
these short brass answers between solos and ending up in a wild guitar solo).
Not only is Forgas a brilliant drummer, he's also
become an excellent composer (something he wasn't in the 90's), but he's also
letting his mates have plenty of room to express themselves musically. As good
as “Soleil 12” was, it is easy to understand that the FBP have jumped another
hurdle and reached the category of the giant JR/F of the millennium. One of my
albums of the year. 942 Whispers And Screams A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Prepare thyself for heavenly headphone heaven. Another great discovery for me this year, as far as
I am concerned, Shadow Circus are one of the best Symphonic Prog acts I have
had the pleasure to listen to. The new album “Whispers and Screams” is choc a
block full of innovative ideas and amazing virtuoso musicianship. Every track
adds a new mood and feel enhancing the overall experience. The band are highly
theatrical and emphasise the use of lengthy instrumentals to create incredible
tracks. It sounds a bit like Diagonal at times, or Pink Floyd, ELP, early
Genesis, Yes and Rush. You have to admire that front cover, a direct homage to
Alfred Hitchcock's “The Birds” complete with crows swarming in the screaming
girl's hair. The album begins with the lengthy 7 part epic ‘Project Blue’. Part 1 begins with a
wind effect and a low drone with a soaring synth. Then a convoluted wild drum
beat and jagged guitars crash in and a wall of sound is created. The Hammond
blasts away as Bobick's clean vocals begin, phased out and aggressively
psychedelic, very 70s like; kind of like Peter Gabriel in early Genesis.
Fontana's keyboards are masterfully executed, at times like the ELP ‘Tarkus’
sound. Folta's drums pound incessantly, dramatic and complex rhythms. The
metrical patterns are nerve shattering. The bass of Croft is relentless and
intricate. The keyboard solo is admirable, it is little wonder Fontana has
played onstage with the likes of Emerson and Wakeman; the influences are
obvious. The lead guitar is terrific, lots of fast picking and squeals. What an
incredible opener. Part 2 begins with minimalist piano, simple and
beautiful, and a quiet vocal that is very easy to understand; “follow your
dreams, to me they will lead you now, there's shadows in the fields, the dark
man just won't yield”. Who is the dark man, what is the long road and what the
heck is all this about? I have no idea but, similar to Yes, the obscurity of
the lyrics enhances the overall mood and atmosphere. In Part 3 ‘The Big Fire’, a warbling mellotron
effect is heard and some good vocals from Bobick. It has a quieter feel in the
intro but a great drum beat changes the mood which is somber and foreboding. It
feels as though you might be walking under a hot sun in a desolate wasteland.
The melody kicks in and is quite infectious. Multilayered vocals are effective.
The time sig stops and changes throughout. This blends seamlessly into the next
part. Part 4 is a wonderful instrumental showcasing the
talents of the band in full flight. A very off kilter time signature moves from
7/8 to 4/4 and back to more changes. The drums are awesome here, along with the
Hammond and guitar trade off, and I love that ELP feel the band have on this
instrumental. Angular guitar riffing and screaming keyboard flourishes; Fontana
is amazing, among the best keyboardists on the planet. The track ends with a
crescendo that builds into an explosive climax. My highlight for the album.
This blends seamlessly into Part 5. Part 5 settles into a hushed lullaby, that is still
dark but gentle in its approach,with Mellotron pads and acoustic guitar. An
Indian, Shakti or Eastern sound locks in, a George Harrison Eastern influence
perhaps. “What's this coming over me, I cannot move I cannot see, There's
something that I just can't hide, alone here in the shadows of my pride”;
Bobick's vocals are effective as ever as he sings about a dark horseman. It
does feel like a horse galloping, the way the rhythms cascade. Part 6 is ‘The Hand of God’, another blistering
instrumental. It begins with an ominous “Blade Runner” Vangelis style synth
that echoes in the distance. The piano subtly introduces a new mood swing, it
feels like night, as the spacey guitar swoops over to prepare us for the
onslaught. At about 2 mins in it begins; a heart stopping frenetic beat, drums
pounding, Hammond stabbing and angular guitar. One of the best tracks that
highlights the virtuosity of the band. Its an all out prog jam, improvisational
sounding yet tight and complex with heavy emphasis on lead breaks. Part 7 is the closer to the epic and it simmers
down into a more mainstream feel. The lyrics make more sense here; “You had the
weight of the new world, Restin' on your shoulders, What a way for it to be,
But your face burns the memories deep into my mind, And the thought of you
moves me on, Through sickness I crawled, By the light of the moon, But the
shadow lent his hand, Through rain, sleet and snow he paved the way, And the
thought of you moved me on.” Beautiful lyrics and an infectious melody end the
epic. One of the best multimovement suites I have heard and worth the purchase
price alone. There is more to offer on other tracks though they
never measure up to the opening epic. ‘When the Morning Comes’ is soft, balladic and only
satisfactory due to the mayhem previously. The piano is beautiful. ‘Willoughby’ is a strange
one. The title and lyrics remind me of the Twilight Zone episode 'A Stop at
Willoughbys'. It begins quietly and I longed for more of the chaotic stuff of
previous tracks. At 2:30 it delivers again, locking into a wonderful metronome
swinging freak out. The time sigs are off the scale as the Hammond stabs with
staccatos and percussive metrical patterns explode. A complex guitar solo
ensues and is one of the best examples of Fontana's musical prowess. The fade
ins that create the violin sounds are beautiful and atmospheric. The last track is ‘Angel’, a song about a lady of the night; “So she sold her soul
unto the streets, Oh no, they burn right thru her feet, They cut you hard and
make you bleed, So you can never, never leave, So take a number wait in line,
Little John has paid for time, She wipes away the filth and grime, Back to do
the same old grind, Angel with the dirty wings” The music is tranquil and
melodic, a melancholy feel with lush soundscapes of percussion, bass, piano, Mellotron
and guitar. The lead break is once again exceptional, and this ends bookended
with the rainstorm effect. But there is one more instrumental to close it off
and it is the brilliant ‘Then In
July The Thunder Came’. This also has an Easterm Mystical feel with
sliding guitars and Mellotron. The drum beat is war like as though soldiers are
marching into battle. The majestic atmosphere is enhanced by a lead guitar
break that screams into the stratosphere. A very impressive album ends with an
equally impressive closer. The intricate musicianship and time sig changes are
a progger's dreamchild and this band delivers in spades. It has all the makings
of a 70s classic yet delivers something new in its approach. This is one of the
most innovative albums in recent years, and although it is not flawless, this
is definitely worthy of the 4 stars it is receiving from reviewers all over the
net. I am pleasantly surprised at the amount of bands that are rising up and producing
this unabashed style of prog that has everything that the 70s golden era of
prog offered and beyond. 943 Black Clouds & Silver Linings A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Time signature changes and virtuoso
instrumental breaks result in an orchestrated triumph. This Dream Theater album has been the talk of the
prog metal world when it was first released, and received mixed reactions
gaining new fans while alienating old ones. So it was with some trepidation
that I approached this, having heard and enjoyed all of Dream Theater's
previous albums. The album begins with the falling rain, a storm
brewing, and a soul chilling piano begins. A chorus of voices over a distorted
crunching guitar follows. Portnoy's pounding double kick drums are as ominous
as thunder and it builds to the killer riff that rips through the stratosphere
in head banging glory. Thus begins the ultimate Dream Theater track 'A
Nightmare to Remember'. LaBrie sounds seriously aggressive as he blasts the
enigmatic lyrics; “The sky was clear and frigid, the air was thick and still,
now I'm not one to soon forget, and I bet I never will.” The chorus breaks into
a crawling pace, a chugging guitar is heard and the soundwave of a car
screeching to a sudden crash;”Stunned and bewildered, cold and afraid, torn up
and broken, frightened and dazed...” At 4:55 it breaks into an off kilter
acoustic flourish, and the sound of police sirens is heard. A gorgeous guitar
lick follows and LaBrie's vocals are calmer, reminding me of his performance on
Ayreon's “The Human Equation”, and in fact the track here is a similar scenario;
a man is put in hospital and close to death as a result of a horrific car
accident. “Hopelessly drifting, bathing in beautiful agony, I am endlessly
falling”; no doubt LaBrie was inspired by his Ayreon experience. The man in the
scenario loses his memory in a similar way and is reflecting on his life. This
scenario appears on other prog epics such as Spock's Beard's “Octane” and is equally
powerful. We learn that the man is lapsing into a recurring nightmare as he
replays the events in his mind. At 8:36 there is a slick guitar solo with very
fast picking and virtuoso musicianship from Petrucci. Rudess has a trade off
moment with Petrucci as Myung pounds the rhythm; when these guys play off each
other, the result is pure Dream Theater magic. It is played effortlessly and
with complex arrangements: Dream Theater on a grand scale. At 10:30 the track
changes direction in another time shift returning back to the main melody
showcasing Rudess' keyboarding again. The Bio-hazard-style vocals begin on the
next verse with Portnoy and LaBrie singing similar to 'The Dark Eternal Night'
from the previous album. I prefer it when they steer clear of this gravel vocal
style as it does not sound sincere and a little forced for my tastes. However,
the music more than makes up for it. A classy riff begins at 12:00 which is irregular
and strange, not quite on time with the drums. The police sirens return at
14:00 ... the recurring nightmare signified by recurring riffing. It comes full
circle with the minimalist piano and thunder. In conclusion, one of the best Dream
Theater tracks and the definitive highlight of the album. 'A Rite of Passage' is the freemasonry
themed track that features great power riffs and more special effects to
enhance the style and feel. “Beneath an ever watchful eye, the angels of the
temple fly...” LaBrie muses on blood oaths, rituals, symbols and the
illuminati; as dangerous as one may find it, the track is encapsulating on
every level. The music is very melodic, sections that are heavy are counter
balanced by calmer moments. At 4:50 the band launch into a breakneck power
chord progression and Petrucci blasts out a lead break, with Rudess joining in;
it is pure bliss to hear the band in full flight. 'Whither' slows things
considerably with the beautiful ballad style that has become a mandatory
trademark of Dream Theater albums. There is a memorable chorus and the lyrics
are emotionally charged and sung with passion. There is an excellent soaring
lead solo towards the end to cap off another very good track. 'The Shattered Fortress' features a
glorious dark metal riff to carry it along. The growelling vocal trade off with
Portnoy and LaBrie returns, and once again, not exactly a welcome addition, but
I guess we are stuck with it. Moving onto the music, there are some amazing
sections amidst this mini epic. The broken bottles artwork in the booklet
reflects the mood that is punctuated by the broken drum patterns and shattered
metrical shifts. Listen to that awesome instrumental break with Rudess and
Petrucci duelling one another. The track is broken into parts continuing the
magnum opus begun on previous Dream Theater albums, continued from “Systematic
Chaos” to this album. Part X 'Restraint' speaks of a “fateful ascent
through darkest fires, and now I have finally seen the light, sometimes you've
got to be wrong and learn from mistakes”. Part XI 'Receive' includes a deep
voice over of regrets and hopes: “where there is doubt, faith” .... a similar
theme to “Systematic Chaos”. The slow pace is welcome here to allow breathing
space. The real treat for Dream Theater fans is the return to the familiar
songs of Dream Theater history ... when heard, it is likely to send chills down
your spine, as the familiar melodies are heard, you will recognise the tunes
immediately, and I felt that it showed great respect to fans to include these. Part XII 'Responsible' (the third Re-) concludes
the saga that has relayed the trials and tribulations of Portnoy's alcohol
soaked addictions ... a brave move to come out with this and it works as a
lengthy saga that Dream Theater will soon be playing from start to finish in a
live performance. These three parts cap off the saga beautifully bringing it to
a final denouement as the rain falls solemnly washing away the pain and
restoring peace. 'The Best of Times' took a while
to grow on me and actually is yet to resonate with me in the same way that the
rest of the album does. It feels very radio friendly and mainstream although it
clocks at 13 minutes. The music is the real star of the track, as the lyrics
and vocal performance are second rate in comparison to what has been heard
previously. There is a terrific intro with a sublime violin and an acoustic
solo. The rest of the track sounds like a different band and guaranteed to
alienate many fans as a result. I was not taken with the style and hope they
never return to this live ... it is an unwelcome transformation. Although, it
is a nice paean to Portnoy's deceased father. The lyrics even remind us to
'seize the day' a familiar Dream Theater theme. The lyrics seem a bit over the
top and I guess in the right mood you might be able to hook into this. Let's
move onto the next track ... which is sensational. The glorious epic 'The Count of Tuscany' explodes
the myth that Dream Theater have forgotten how to construct lengthy
compositions. The time signature changes and multi instrumental breaks are all
here and this is an orchestrated triumph that will rate highly with any Dream Theater
fan, alongside 'Octavarium' and 'A Change of Seasons'. It begins with an
acoustic progression and a lead solo overlayed. Then the harmonics and cymbals
are the calm before the storm. Portnoy takes off with triplets and drum
embellishments, a melody locks in and it feels as if it is building to a
crescendo. The intro is demonstrating the peak of Dream Theater's powers, the
band are working as a unit, taking turns with solo sections until the riff
slams into gear. It is a wonderful heavy riff that chugs along relentlessly.
The way the riff breaks unexpectedly throughout, chopping off rhythmically, is
prog at its best. The vocals are very good, and then the dreaded growelling
vocals return. Rudess has another solo stint and it's brilliantly executed; the
musical inventiveness and prowess of Petrucci cannot be underestimated. The
track gets into a complex rhythm and then slows down at 10:54, and there is
even the sound of tubular bells twinkling, and then my favourite part as
Petrucci violins his guitar adding to the ambience and tranquillity. I had
never heard him play like this. The soaring violining continues for a few bars
then at 14:30 an acoustic chord sequence is played with LaBrie turned up in the
mix; “Could this be the end, is this the way I die, sitting here alone, no one
by my side... what did I do wrong, I just don't understand.” It is emotionally
charged but this works as we really believe what he is singing. The heartfelt
pleas continue and challenge our senses in a melancholy sense. At 17:00 the
music builds again with another scorching lead solo. It is truly magical when Dream
Theater lose themselves in these epics, and it is wondrous to get lost with
them. It concludes with a beach scenario, gulls screeching and waves lapping on
the beach. Bonus CDs are always intriguing and here we have a
full CD bonus disk 2 of cover songs as diverse as Zebra, Rainbow, Queen, Iron
Maiden, and King Crimson. The version of 'Larks Tongues' is precision playing
with reverance to the classic. I love the rocker montage from Queen and Dixie
Dregs. It's great to hear these versions and well worth getting hold of this
bonus disk. Bonus disk 3 is the karaoke version of “Black
Clouds and Silver Linings”; it sounds empty without Labrie’s vocals but its a
weird experience listening to these instrumentals. Sing along if you must or
just listen to that musicianship and marvel. Soak yourself in the CD as a
background noise or discard, your choice. I managed to get through three tracks
before turning back to the original versions again. Did I mention the booklet? It features sensational
artwork and works well complimenting each track, enhancing the experience,
better than the usual artwork in CDs these days. The 3 CD package features a
great layout, with each CD cover having a distinct look to differentiate
between each, and the CD artwork itself is masterful. How does one conclude on
all this? Dream Theater have formulated a successful return to brilliance. Each
track captures the essence of the band; scorching blistering solo performances,
reflective lyrics and epic themes. 6 tracks, 4 brilliant. Not quite a
masterpiece, but its growing on me with each listen. Don't take notice of the
reviews that are blasting this album, Dream Theater most definitely hits the
target with “Black Clouds and Silver Linings”. 944 A review by UMUR: “The Incident" is
the 10th full-length studio album by UK progressive rock act Porcupine Tree. The album was released
through Roadrunner Records in
September 2009."The
Incident" features both a full album and a seperate second
disc with a 4 song EP. Disc 1 contains one 55:08 minute long concept story,
sub-divided into 14 tracks that seque into each other while disc 2 features the
4 EP tracks. I recently read an interview with frontman and main composer Steven Wilson, where he explained that
he wasn´t fully satisfied with the fact that the band had chosen to
release "Fear of a Blank
Planet” (2007) and "Nil
Recurring” (2007) as two seperate releases. He didn´t feel
that "Nil Recurring” (2007) got
enough attention compared to "Fear
of a Blank Planet” (2007). So this time around, when Steven Wilson had written some
songs that he didn´t feel fit the overall concept of "The Incident", he opted to
release those songs on an EP which would be released with the full album. So
with "The Incident" you
get a full album plus an EP for the price of only one album; a real treat if
you ask me. The 14 tracks that make out the 55 minutes long
concept story on disc 1 are quite the exciting journey to my ears. As always
it´s the melancholic emotions that are in focus and the songs go from subtle
quiet parts to more energetic and loud ones. The songs are generally shorter
than usual except for the 11:40 minute long ‘Time Flies’. The choice of track order is exceptionally well
thought out which makes for an excellent listening experience. It´s obvious
that the songs were written for the concept and they work well within that
concept. Tracks like ‘The Blind
House’, ‘Drawing the Line’, ‘I Drive the Hearse’ and ‘Time Flies’ are simply born
"classics" in Porcupine
Tree´s discography. Many of the shorter tracks are very enjoyable
too. Most work as atmospheric interludes that help bind the album together. I
have to give a special mention to ‘Your
Unpleasant Family’ too because the lyrics made me smile the first
time I listened to the song; great lyrics on that one. The 4 tracks on the EP
are of the same high quality as the material on the main album. ‘Flicker’ and ‘Black Dahlia’ are pleasant high
quality songs but it´s mostly the experimental ‘Bonnie the Cat’ and the beautiful closer ‘Remember Me Lover’ that stand
out. The production is excellent, powerful and perfectly
mixed, and one of Steven Wilson´s best. Porcupine Tree albums
usually take a while to sink in for me, but "The Incident" really nailed me to the chair from
first listen. It´s melodic, memorable, progressive, powerful yet pleasantly
subtle. It´s the most complete release by the band so far. A 5 star (100%)
rating is deserved. A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Porcupine Tree proves longevity is still possible
in the world of prog. Porcupine Tree are undoubtedly one of the most
influential groups of the past decade. Their albums in the early years are as
weird as it gets with some dedicated to one sole idea and one song. Now on this
latest release they present another one track conceptual album. The main reason to purchase this is the 55 minute
epic title track. 'The Incident' is a multi movement suite that features many
songs merging seamlessly together to capture a narrative concept concerning a
road accident, which is becoming popular on prog concept albums (“The Human
Equation”, “Octave”). The Incident is excellent in every respect,
musically and lyrically it delivers, merging crunching metal guitars and
ambient soundscapes of Mellotron effortlessly; shades of dark and light. There
are some tough fuzz guitars on these tracks and those melodic ethereal vocals
of Wilson have never been better. 'Time Flies' is Porcupine Tree at their best, an
incredible composition that is compelling and powerful. It is the highlight of
ths very competent album. The second CD features about 20 minutes of extras,
at least they feel like it. They are Ok but no where near the epic title track.
It’s a bold move to release an album in this manner but it delivers and if only
for 'The Incident' it will be hailed as a classic Porcupine Tree album. It does
not measure up to “In Absentia” or “Deadwing” but is still an excellent album,
showcasing the sheer inventiveness and musical virtuosity of Porcupine Tree. I
can't wait to see or hear them perform this live. 4 stars. 945 The Hazards of Love A review by UMUR: “The Hazards of Love” is
the fifth full-length studio album by American, Portland based progressive folk
rock act The Decemberists.
I enjoyed the band´s last album “The
Crane Wife” (2006) even though I wasn´t completely blown away.
Therefore my expectations were pretty high before listening to “The Hazards of Love”. “The Hazards of Love” is a concept
album where all 17 tracks seque into each other and there´s a conceptual story
in the lyrics. While most songs follow an ordinary verse/ chorus structure,
there´s still an undeniable progressive edge to the album. There are
re-occuring themes that serve as the glue that holds the album concept together
in addition to the lyrical concept. In that way “The Hazards of Love” kind of reminds me of “The Incident” (2009) by Porcupine Tree. The music on the album is centered around the
memorable song lines and strong vocal performance by lead vocalist/
guitarist Colin Meloy. He
has quite a few guest vocalists to help him out though, and I´m especially fond
of some of the female vocal performances on the album. Just take a listen to a
song like ‘The Wanting Comes in
Waves / Repaid’; that is attitude if I ever heard attitude. I was almost
reminded of good old Jenny Haan from
Babe Ruth when she was in
her prime. The mix of male and female vocals on the album is really a great
asset to the music and works well with the story in the lyrics too. The instrumentation is a mix of folky instruments
like banjo and accordian and more traditional rock instrumentation like guitar,
drums and bass. There´s quite a bit of organ and some synth on the album too.
The album features a bit more electric guitar and slightly distorted sections
compared to earlier albums by the band and that suits me fine. It brings some
good variation to the music. The music is still folk rock though; it´s just a
bit more rock than folk this time. I really think there´s a great flow on the
album and the 58:36 running time passes by in a second. I rarely find albums
that I think are perfect in length but “The
Hazards of Love” certainly applies. The musicianship on the album is excellent. Great
vocals and great interplay between the musicians. The production is also
excellent and suits the music perfectly. “The Hazards of Love” has really won me over and I´m much
more interested in The
Decemberists after listening to this album. This is a sure 4 star
rating. A review by Conor Fynes: Even though I had been mildly impressed by the
band's last album and hearing great things about “The Hazards of Love”, it still exceeded my expectations. The
Decemberists take on a much different sound than many of the cookie-cutter prog
bands that are coming out today, and what is being called by professional
critics and typical listeners alike as one of the greatest albums to come out
this year certainly deserves it's praise. “The
Hazards of Love” is no jaw-dropping spectacle of musicianship. Nor is it
heavy on strange sounds, or weird effects. While I've probably listened to more
mind-blowing music in my time, it's rare that an album with this warmth comes
along; especially considering it's a concept album revolving around creatures
of the fantastic. Like many concept albums, “The Hazards of Love” flows as if it could be a single
composition, with no gaps in between the segments of music. There are
interludes and all one would expect from a rock opera; the story of which I
haven't been able to decipher quite yet. From what I can ascertain however,
Meloy and company tell the story of a woman named Margaret, and her quest for
love. She meets a fawn named William and things start to get interesting from
there. The lyrics in this album are genius, perhaps even
more so than the music itself. While it's hard enough to write a story in
poetic form as it were, Colin Meloy fits in so much wordplay and rich imagery
into his words that it makes reading the lyric booklet alone an enjoyable
experience. Due to the fact that the album works as a single
song cycle, there are a lot of recurring themes in the music. Almost too many,
as at times, it feels like one is listening to an alternative take of the first
half of the work. Even so, I can surely understand this and it does wonders for
the cohesion as a piece. With that kept in mind, it's an album that must be
listened to from start to finish to enjoy it completely. This is definitely one of the best musical
discoveries I've made in quite a while, and for anyone that dismisses this band
of talented musicians as simply a typical indie folk band should check this
out. Total masterpiece. 946 The
Great Misdirect A review by AtomicCrimsonRush: Acoustics, brutal distorted riffs, incredible lead
breaks, diversity, beautiful singing and death growls, all on one album! Between the Buried and Me drew me in due to the
technically excellent and precise musicianship along with a diversity of
styles. The Death metal vocals are prevalent at times and dominate over the
music, and there are moments of inspired genius in the instrumental sections
that are mindblowing. It begins with a piece of beauty on acoustic and
delightfully clean vocals, reminding me of the quieter Opeth. The peace does not last for long as ‘Obfuscation’
hammers out with growls throughout and noisy guitar distortion, with the
occasional lead break thrown in. This is a noisy infernal clutter and I hoped
the rest of the album would not sound like this. It just sounded like any other
death metal band, caustic vocals, sparse lead work and a bombardment of
distortion. Unpleasant for my ears but I am sure many death metal addicts would
revel in this. ‘Disease Injury Madness’ continues brutal riffing
and death vocals for a short time and then breaks into a wonderful quieter
section that simply mesmirises. The musicianship is incredible and very complex
time sigs clock in and out of sync with the bass and drum, and yet are enmeshed
together with striking lead sweeps. The lead break is amazing technical precision
and perhaps showcases the band at their best. ‘Fossil Genera’ begins with a quirky piano motif
that some may mistake for an old Nintendo game. Love the vocals too as they
sound aggressive without screaming the wallpaper off. Death vocals do return
for the next section but I am okay with that due to the amazing innovative
music, and the structures with sporadic time sig changes are awesome.
Polyrhythmic sweeping guitar riffs blast over the growls, and the drumming is
well executed. There is a strange little instrumental break that stops and
starts and is way off kilter. At 5:30 the song is a blitzkrieg of brutal speed
riffing, sounding like Death or Sepultura. Some inventive instrumental work
follows, and a droning voice over. The quiet acoustic chimes in eventually and
it is a delightful break from the intensity, and I like that beautiful lead
guitar tone. Cleaner Akerfeldt style vocals take over, and some very sweet
violin sounds. The ending reminds me of Dream Theater, namely ‘Octavarium’. ‘Desert of Song’ is a wonderful country flavoured
ballad with slide guitar and some great vocals. The diversity of the band may
be maddening for some death heads out there, but I really love the way the band
launch into dangerous territories and provide risky little pieces like this.
The song sounds great and shows how diverse these guys can be. The epic at the end, ‘Swim To The Moon’, is a
masterful piece of music with some unusual shouting vocals along with the death
vocal style. This sounds weird after the country song previously. The vocals are
not all that bad even for those who may not be into this brutal stuff. The
music is as usual very complex and replete with lead breaks and odd percussion
and bass patterns. The death vocals cease after about 10 minutes of intense
metal blastbeats. The band are so tight it is criminal, the drum fills and lead
breaks are awesome. This sounds like Petrucci and Myung in places, the lead
break sweeping and hammer ons are incredible. My favourite part of the album
begins here and continues for 8 precious minutes. The trade offs between
musicians and time sig shifts are inspirational. I wished the band were more
like this on other parts of the album. The organ solo is astonishing too and
very Dream Theaterish. I know why Portnoy chose these guys for the Progressive
Nation Tour now. They are almost a death metal version of Dream Theater. So at the end of the album I am left with a problem
and that is personally I have outgrown death metal growls, though once loved
it, and yet the music is absolutely brilliant so I believe the music alone is
worth a 5. The vocals are great when the screaming stops but there is a heck of
a lot of growling on this, similar to Opeth. I can definitely recommend this to
fans of death metal and technical prog, and it certainly deserves its high
rating, 4 stars for the sheer inventive experimentation of metal. A review by Conor Fynes: As the year 2009 reached its final stretch, I was
pretty certain that I had heard the best that the year had to offer. The year
has seen some great achievements from bands both old and new, and by the time
November came around, I was almost sure that while the year had not yet ended;
there wasn't anything left musically to look forward to, so to speak. Of course
there was new music being released (albums are released every week) but there
didn't seem to be anything left that would really blow me away. At the behest of a friend, I went and purchased “The
Great Misdirect” a week or two after it was released. Until this point, Between
The Buried And Me has really been a mixed bag for me. The other album of theirs
I own “Colors” (and many other's introduction to the band) was fantastic
instrumentally, but it seemed a bit dry and rough at parts. Most of the other
material I had heard from the band had been less than impressive, to say the
least. Suffice to say, despite some great things I had heard about this album,
my expectations weren't exactly surging through the roof. Upon the first listen of “The Great Misdirect”, I
found myself paralyzed. From that moment on, I was sure I had heard the perfect
culmination of a band that was really going places. Don't get me wrong, “Colors” was an exhilarating
listen, but this new record goes above and beyond it. Three days after purchasing
the album, I had listened to it over 30 times. The only other time I've enjoyed
an album enough to be so stuck to the replay button was years ago, when I first
bought the cornerstone concept album “Scenes From A Memory” by Dream Theater. There's no denying it; “The Great Misdirect” is in
fact, one of the most innovative metal records I've ever heard. Between The Buried And Me has seemed to do away
with a lot of their metalcore sound and there's a prog sensibility here.The
record really takes the listener on a ride through time and genre. The album
starts with some dark jazzy chords and a meloncholic vocal line before letting
go into an incredibly beautiful and polyrhythmic section
before erupting into the first heavy song of the album, 'Obfuscation.'
Honestly, I don't think I've ever heard a band meld traditional beauty and
mind-numbing technicality before. All the same, the first two songs do resonate a lot
with “Colors” and existing fans of the band will certainly be pleased. It's not
until the heaviest number 'Disease, Injury, Madness' rolls around where it
becomes clear that this isn't just a victory lap for the band, and the expected
“Colors” formula is broken. From that point on, “The Great Misdirect” really
takes a form of it's own. Even the less fantastic sections on the album have
a role to play. 'Desert Of Song,' a hard- edged country/western ballad, is a
good song that would even shine on a lesser album, but it ends up being “The
Great Misdirect”’s lowest point. The album benefits greatly from it however, as
a mellow, less demanding track is a very welcome segue between heavy, technical
sections. The album's epic finale, 'Swim To The Moon' is 18
minutes of seemingly unrelelenting tech-metal madness. While there are parts in
the song that are among the best of the album, there could have been a bit more
of an 'epic' build up to the climax. With 'White Walls,' there was a very
gradual tension that put the listener on edge for minutes until the big climax
bursts out in full force. With 'Swim To The Moon,' the album seems to just 'end.'
There's no big payoff, although that certainly doesn't rob the epic of being a
great track. This is undoubtedly the greatest album I've heard
all year, and even one of the best modern metal albums ever made. Absolutely
brilliant, and I would say 'words cannot describe it,' but that's what a review
is for! Five stars, essential, masterpiece, whatever you want to call it, “The
Great Misdirect” has it all, and is living proof that Between The Buried And Me
are the great progressive metal band of the new generation. Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - November 15 2012 at 23:31 |
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: November 15 2012 at 23:32 | |
2010 coming soon...
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