Please recommend me albums of year 2010 |
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Finnforest
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 03 2007 Location: The Heartland Status: Offline Points: 16913 |
Posted: July 18 2010 at 20:27 |
In Case of Loss..
Areknamés Eclectic Prog Review by
Cesar
Inca
More good news from Italy's progressive rock field: Areknamés is back on
the road and in
very good shape. 4 years after the excellent demonstration of epic and
somber retro-prog
delivered in "Love Hate Round Trip", Michele Epifani & co. manage to
offer yet another
enjoyable exhibition of art-rock with "In Case Of Loss?", the third
album that confirms
these guys as serious business. The VDGG and Hammill references remain a
solid
source of inspiration in the band's input, but in comparison to the
aforementioned
sophomore album, "In Case Of Loss?" exhibits more luminous textures and a
lighter
dynamics in places. In fact, the guitar parts are less intense in
general terms, although the
use of powerful riffs and creative harmonies remains a strong asset in
the band's
framework: in short, there is more Hackett and less Iommi in the guitar
inputs. All in all,
Epifani (call him the "Italian Matthew Parmenter" if you like) provides
less tense singing and
more colorful keyboard inputs in the overall repertoire. Well, now we
are going to the
repertoire itself, and so we find that the opener 'Beached' provides
almost 7 minutes of
agile space-rock moods set on an appealing rhythmic swing: picture
pre-"Absentia" PT and
the artsier side of Radiohead meeting halfway in the realms of the
softer side of Ozric
Tentacles and you will have a reasonable idea about what is cooking
here. This somewhat
up-tempo beginning prepares our spirit to face the nihilistic approach
incarnated in the next
two pieces, 'Alone' and 'Dateless Diary', which indeed keep a closer
relation with the angry
somberness of the "Love Hate" album. 'Alone' starts with a brief musical
box sequence,
then shifts toward a vandegraffian framework wisely elaborated with
uncommon signatures
and augmented with jazz-oriented schemes (very "Godbluff"-like);
'Dateless Diary' states
eerier ambiences that serves as a valid counterpoint to the caustic
moods predominant in
the previous track? and why does the fade-out have to arrive so soon?...
At this point, we
can easily notice the musical substance that makes this album such a
rich contribution to
the 2010's prog rock scene, but there's more to enjoy. 'Don't Move'
brings what is perhaps
the warmer atmosphere in the album: a progressive ballad that gives
Epifani enough room
to celebrate (one more time) the Hammill legacy (something like
"Over"-meets-"Silent
Corner"). Its ethereal mood is defining of the whole composition despite
the presence of
some intense passages in its main body's elaboration. Apparently, 'A New
Song' inherited
some of the previous track's contemplative aura for its first half, but
then the second half
shifts toward a robust expression of psychedelic developments, very
retro, a well
accomplished amalgam of early VDGG, Gnidrolog, Greenslade, and even some
classic
Deep Purple too! The resulting climax is forceful and brilliant. 'Where'
slows down thing a
bit (just a bit) by installing a middle term between track 1 and 3. So
far, this is how it goes
with the album's "shorter" tracks. Now, let's go for the suite entitled
'The Last Number'.
This piece shows the sort of disciplined progressive rock students the
Areknamés
musicians are: this suite bears the epic attitude and melodic ambition
that prog rock suites
are famous (and infamous) for. All in all, let us remember that this is
"In Case", not "Love
Hate", so this suite in question gives ample room to constrained
sonorities and sober
melodic developments in preference over the darker passages (which also
exist).
Introspection and melancholy are the dominant atmospheres in 'The Last
Number'. There
are also some sax solos that emphasize the occasional jazzy textures,
while the cello
arrangements display an extra dose of stylish beauty to some
symphonic-centered
passages. Right at the 12 minute mark, a motif installed on a 5/4 tempo
capitalizes the
controlled intensity for a while until it fluidly gives way to a softer
passage - here is an
example of the consistent brilliancy in this suite's arrangements. For
the last 4 minutes, a
lovely organ solo and a powerful section announce the majestic finale
that brings back
memories of 70-71 VDGG and "Trespass"-era Genesis. This is not the real
end: after a
minute of silence or so, Epifani plays a spinet sonata that mixes
Baroque and modern
dissonance (very much a Balletto thing, isn't it?). The listening
experience of this album is
just awesome: Areknamés reassures its status as one of the biggest items
in the current
European retro-prog area.
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WalterDigsTunes
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 11 2007 Location: SanDiegoTijuana Status: Offline Points: 4373 |
Posted: July 18 2010 at 20:45 |
b4usleep
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 21 2009 Location: Istanbul Status: Offline Points: 620 |
Posted: July 19 2010 at 02:21 |
Spock's Beard - X. Best of the 2010 Albums
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Really don't mind if you sit this one out.
My words but a whisper, your deafness a shout. |
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