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FreddeGredde
Forum Newbie Joined: March 21 2013 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 6 |
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Hey!
My new progressive rock album Brighter Skies was released yesterday! You can listen to it in its entirety on bandcamp: http://freddegredde.bandcamp.com/album/brighter-skies (I also noticed that the info at http://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=45503 is a little wrong. Date should be july 14, the song lengths are not the final ones. Feel free to help me out if you're able to. Thanks!) |
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progbethyname
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 30 2012 Location: HiFi Headmania Status: Offline Points: 7849 |
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I dig your enthusiasm. You sound very adamant and convincing. I shall give my ears a go at this. Sounds interesting. :) |
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Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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Drumstruck
Forum Newbie Joined: July 15 2014 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 33 |
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The Hadouk Trio / Quartet
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Bérghem
Forum Newbie Joined: May 25 2014 Location: Monza Status: Offline Points: 17 |
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http://www.bastapuntoesclamativo.it/music/
I found out about these guys a few weeks ago and really like them.
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E per tutti il dolore degli altri è un dolore a metà
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jayem
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 21 2006 Location: Switzerland Status: Offline Points: 995 |
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Aha !...This one |
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Drumstruck
Forum Newbie Joined: July 15 2014 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 33 |
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Yes - and this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVR2JFPZhMs and every other one ;-)
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hollyweird
Forum Newbie Joined: August 06 2014 Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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Tartufi. How they are not on progarchives is beyond me....
http://www.tartufirock.net/
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
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Brief Nocturnes and Dreamless Sleep by Spocks Beard
Prog Masterpiece! my review I just put this latest Spock's Beard album on one late lazy Friday night after listening to a bunch of other bands. To be honest I just wanted a relaxing music experience to settle me down for sleep, but what I got instead was more than enough to wake up my senses. This is an absolutely stunning album from start to finish. I had to reawaken my brain to really take in the immense intricacies in each track and by the end of this I was completely in awe of the brilliance of a band that has been around for so long and still manages to create such incredible music, as good as they have ever achieved even after 11 studio albums in the catalogue. The previous album 'X' was X-cellent but they have surpassed themselves with this latest release 'Brief Nocturnes and Endless Sleep', an instant masterpiece. What stood out from the outset is the bright production and mixing of the album where every instrument simply shines with strength. Spock's Beard have reinvented themselves after losing their lead singer and who would have thought they would return with such a ferocity releasing such a brilliant album. The heavy riff on 'Hiding Out'is glorious and kicks the message home without dominating too much. The keyboards are a force to be reckoned with played with incredible virtuoso strength by Ryo Okumoto. Alan Morse is a fantastic guitarist but it is the voice of Ted Leonard that enhances the songs and his guitar work is very well executed too. Nick D'Virgilio was a fine vocalist but Leonard injects an unreserved enthusiasm and much needed passion into this new sound. Jimmy Keegan's Drums maintain a strong rhythm and have a great timbre amongst the layers of musical excellence. Leonard's voice is crystal clean and easy on the ears, reaching many octaves it seems effortlessly such as on the melodic uplifting 'I Know Your Secret'. There are some beautiful passages of flute on this album too such as on 'A Treasure Abandoned'accompanied by gorgeous lead guitar licks and synth flourishes. The bassline by Dave Meros is certainly a feature on this track too. There are many twists and turns on this song with extended keyboard and guitar trade offs and an organic soundscape culminating in a stirring finale of grand proportions; simply amazing and emotional music to caress the ears. The next track is 'Submerged', with a strong melody and sing a long chorus 'throw me a line, I'm sinking down, submerging further, further from you, not doing so fine, further and further, further from you'. The rhythm guitar riff is terrific too the way it breaks all the keyboard layers; a great song that could easily be a hit single. Following this is a synth and guitar feast on 'Afterthoughts' embellished by vocoder by John Boegehold. The vocal style is akin to vintage Neal Morse SB style. The riff is heavy and endearing throughout, but the main showcase is the jittering organ notes that are played with staccato rhythms. There is even a monosyllabic lead break and then a Gentle Giant harmonised a Capella section. In fact this is reminiscent of some of the vocal harmonies on Neal Morse's masterful 'Momentum Live' album. The synth solo is wonderful and echoed by fret melting lead guitar work as good as I have heard from SB. It is nice that Neal Morse guest stars on guitar along with Craig Eastman on violin, viola, hurdy gurdy, both featuring on 'Something Very Strange'. This showpiece opens with ethereal howling wind and psychedelic phased vocals. A happy Hammond sound follows a fractured time sig and some glorious keyboard string pads. The guitar riff is heavy following the broken rhythm of the organ. Then it locks into a glorious prog time sig repeating a motif until it breaks again into lush Mellotron soundscape and warm synth washes. The vocals sing of a journey and something coming fast our way, 'a race to revelation with the ringing of the bells'. The song is infectious melodically but the musicianship is outstanding in itself, a lead and synth break by Okomuto and Morse that even surpasses other work on the album, making this a spellbinding experience. It is stunning innovative music at its highest calibre, and I was not really expecting this on the latest Spock's Beard album as many of their earlier albums do not measure up to such virtuoso musicianship. What a pleasant surprise and there are still 5 songs left. The question is will it remain consistently so masterful? I hoped so when I first heard this. Next is 'Waiting For Me', with a slow measured cadence at first building with backwards violin and pulsating bassline that dominates wonderfully. Leonard really sounds a bit like Neal Morse as it has his influence and similar melody that he pens. The bassline during the lead break is absolutely killer and I like the way it settles down and some quiet vocals are heard over gently piano, a release after all the tension in the music previous. Alan Morse violins out a solo of exquisite beauty, so emotional and captivating it made tears fill my eyes. I love those tremolo passages and speed picking after all the high string bends. Ryo launches into a mind bending solo and enhances this song into one of the masterpieces of the album in a long line of masterpieces. I am just stunned at the brilliance of this album; it is virtually flawless in every department. Next on the menu is 'The Man You're Afraid You Are' that opens with some loud bombastic music and merges into a funky instrumental break with guitar vocoder and some amazing bass work from Meros, as good as Geddy Lee gets. The keyboard and guitar lines over this bass are incredible interplaying so well and so whimsically answering each other in a musical conversation. An acoustic vibration comes in with sweet guitar tones and harmonised vocals. It really is a beautiful composition of immeasurable virtuosity. 'Down A Burning Road' has a warm lead break to intro it before it builds to a stirring Mellotron layer and some gorgeous guitar picking in the background; did I mention virtuoso? The vocals are reflective and melancholy 'all alone, carry us back to a better way, carry us back with the setting sun, carry us back on a wave of love and grace, carry us back as the day is done.' The meaning becomes clear of a man searching for the past when things were better, obviously suffering some trauma. The twin guitars cry over a layer of keyboards and more Mellotron washes; a sensuous soundscape. The band can do no wrong with this latest lineup or incarnation, that much is sure. 'Wish I Were Here' follows and it is a synth driven track with some very heavy lead guitar distortion and a formidable riff as harmonised vocals take over. That riff is very catchy and always a moment on the album on every listen. The other version of 'Something very Strange' the Sanctified Version is one of the bonus tracks and is shorter but still as powerful with that cool voice vocoder reminding me of 'The Raven' by Alan Parson's Project. The melody is so endearing it is impossible for me not to enjoy this compelling track. There are other bonus tracks too but the main album is worth the price of admission on its own. I honestly did not expect a masterpiece with this album as it has not really stirred up too much conversation in the prog community outside of a bunch of reviews, but it hit me with full force on a late night listen. I did notice the reviews overall are arc welded to the 5 star rating and I have to throw my iron in the fire and add to those 5 stars too. Every listen adds so much more depth and it really grows on the ear after a while too. It is too great to award it anything less as it captivates on every listen and exudes such a dynamic energy it is quite extraordinary. This is the type of music I was mesmirised with on Neal Morse's 'Momentum Live' that is absolutely outstanding. 'Brief Nocturnes and Endless Sleep' is equally as exceptional; a masterpiece undoubtedly as it encompasses everything that makes prog great. When prog reaches such a brilliant standard it is because it does not rely on just clever complex musicianship and a myriad of excellent breaks but it also has to have some meaning in the lyrics and reach the listener on an emotional level. This album does that instantly and also has some of the most infectious and melodic songs I have heard from the Beard and they are confident on every song injecting so much passion and dynamism, seemingly reborn after some turmoil in the ranks. I was entertained by 'Spock's Beard Live', enjoyed 'Octane' immensely, loved 'The Light', adored 'Snow' and "V" and also was knocked out by 'X', but 'Brief Nocturnes and Endless Sleep' is on another level in terms of musicianship and innovative song structures. It is simply the pinnacle of Spock's Beard I am delighted to report to the prog faithful! |
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progbethyname
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 30 2012 Location: HiFi Headmania Status: Offline Points: 7849 |
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^ that good huh, Scott ?
Well. I guess I may have to save this one in my amazon cart. Thanks for the enthusiasm. I quite enjoyed SNOW, so I think it may be time to anti up again with the BEARD. I recommend a soundtrack this time around. Marc streitenfield did an excellent job composing a score for the movie, THE GREY. I think a lot of people will get a lot out of this blissful and mostly sedative classical score. Lots to be enjoyed. Prog on. Edited by progbethyname - August 11 2014 at 15:12 |
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Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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MMartin
Forum Newbie Joined: August 12 2014 Status: Offline Points: 1 |
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Hello my musical friends,
let me please recommend you a new progressive rock/metal project influenced by Porcupine Tree, Pain Of Salvation, Muse, Pink Floyd, ... Its called Face The Day and you can listen the brand new single on https://facetheday.bandcamp.com . Feel free to like, share or comment the fb profile on https://www.facebook.com/facethedayband . Take care! Martin Edited by MMartin - August 12 2014 at 04:36 |
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
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blueguitarman
Forum Newbie Joined: August 11 2014 Location: california Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Howdy Everyone
I'm one of the new kids on the site and was wondering if I could get some recommendations for the following two bands: Porcupine Tree and Opeth. I don't own any music by either and was wondering what albums would be a good introduction to these groups. I relalize that both bands have altered their styles, to a greater or lesser amount, over the course of their careers but any help you PT and Opeth listeners could provide would be lots of help. Thanks for your input
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Pontos
Forum Newbie Joined: August 14 2014 Location: Adelaide, AUS Status: Offline Points: 12 |
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I'm more familiar with Opeth's discography than I am Porcupine Tree's. Could only point you in the direction of the records that made me a PT fan, In Absentia and Fear of a Dark Planet. I was immediately impressed with Steven Wilson after those two and have since become a big fan of his work.
As for Opeth, are you approaching them as more a fan of progressive rock music or metal? And how do you feel about growled vocals? Damnation is a great introduction record to Opeth if you're opposed to unclean vocals. Otherwise my favourite is Morningrise, 5 songs all over 10 minute's long including a 20 minute epic Black Rose Immortal before ending with a beautiful ballad To Bid You Farewell
Edited by Pontos - August 18 2014 at 06:42 |
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blueguitarman
Forum Newbie Joined: August 11 2014 Location: california Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Thanks for your reply.
Those two PT albums were the ones I was thinking of purchasing. I like metal and prog both but I have to say that the ever popular growl vocals are a bit of a cliche in the genre. Having said that, If the songs are good then I am willing to set aside my predjudice to hear some good music.
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progbethyname
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 30 2012 Location: HiFi Headmania Status: Offline Points: 7849 |
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For PT... LIGHTBULB SUN--a very Beatles and pink Floyd inspired album. Listen to Russia on ice. It's actually my all time fav PT song. FEAR OF A BLACK PLANET--it's PT's heaviest album to date. It kills. :) In Absentia--Refined symphonic Prog with crossover styles all fused together wonderfully. Can't lose cranking COLLAPE THE LIGHT INTO EARTH. Bloody amazing and beautiful no less. OPETH.... Just go doom and gloom with this band. They are awesome. THE WATERSHED GHOST REVERIES BLACK WATER PARK DAMNATION STILL LIFE. all amazing albums and a true showcasing what great Prog metal mixed with doom metal is all about. They even through in a ballad or 2 to balance out the album. Great band. Also, their last 2 albums like Heritage have a much softer side. Not a big fan. |
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Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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maglemer
Forum Newbie Joined: August 18 2014 Location: sweden Status: Offline Points: 15 |
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Slapp Happy, with the marvellous singer Dagmar Krause. My favourite album is Deja Vu.
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www.nomadsofhope.net
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rhinehartd
Forum Newbie Joined: August 22 2014 Status: Offline Points: 7 |
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Everything Everything have a pretty unique sound; I'd classify them as progressive pop. I found out about them through Steven Wilson's playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RUq7tbuH00E Their debut album Man Alive is one of my favorites.
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psicolorama
Forum Newbie Joined: August 23 2014 Location: seville Status: Offline Points: 3 |
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i recomend Psicolorama new album "Fear". You can listen for FREE in hd streaming at
official link: www.psicolorama.blogspot.com
a new concept od prog rock with mellotrons , pianos and all the instruments from the classics!
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manolo578
Forum Newbie Joined: October 04 2014 Location: Montreal Status: Offline Points: 1 |
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I'm going to go ahead and recommend this really awesome 'turbo prog' band from England that goes by the name of Cleft. If you're into syncopated riffage and haphazard song arrangement, this band is for you. Consisting of only guitar and drums, this two piece is incredible for the sound they make and how tight they are. I'd suggesting giving their album BOSH! a listen and seeing how you like them. Here's a link to their Bandcamp page.
https://cleft.bandcamp.com/album/bosh |
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DEn Kot
Forum Newbie Joined: October 17 2014 Location: Ambivalence Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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I recommend prog \ art \ acoustic\ atmospheric \ instrumental rock album.
"Told of acoustic burnout" - Crypt of Insomnia This long play i recorded about 2 years. acoustic and electric guitars, drums, percussion, keyboards, cellos, many fx for instruments and ambient. 18 tracks is not similar each to other in all senses. in hi-quality you can hear here additional info on official website http://cryptofinsomnia.com
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