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Zyclope - Uno CD (album) cover

UNO

Zyclope

 

Symphonic Prog

2.36 | 12 ratings

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tszirmay
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
1 stars Zyclope is a Spanish group that combines flutes and violins to the usual mix of guitar, keys, bass and drums. First off, let's get one thing straight, this is not the find of the century; in fact it's not even on the same level than Spanish group Omni, with some revolting moments here that are difficult to ignore. A poor debut that has a few good ideas that ultimately need a massive dose of spit and tons of polish, a better drummer and perhaps a more creative palate of musical fantasy. "Asesinato en Orient Express." is a clever little opener with various contrasts, some elegant piano from leader Juan Olmos that really sticks out, a buzzing electric guitar that likes to rock and just as easily swerve into flamenco territory, slapped around by a bopping bass and some two-fisted drumming, conveying the impression of a train through Europe. "Merlin" (assuredly the most proggy title anywhere) has a strong violin led melody that chaperones the guitar lead, with axeman Javier Mira supplying some slithering acoustic work as well, a four minute piece that pleases the ear nicely. After a brief "country style" guitar interlude, these hombres decide that a wee little trip to Scotland is called for ("Viaje a Escocia"), a mid- tempo guitar led voyage that has a hint of Celtic underpinnings, some suave violin mixing it up with spirited flute, a rather simplistic drum beat ruins it a bit, being a tad puerile for such an arrangement. From this moment on, very little of the album (only one track) will please the listener. "Notre Damme" (why 2 ms is unclear) is heavily fluted and loaded with hysteric leads, bashed by more of that one-two drum beat from Ernesto Sanchez that just begs for some inventiveness. "Recorrriendo Mundo" sadly provides more of the same, a sense of plodding uniquely due to the metronome tapper, now influencing the fret man to start showing off his skills. Unfortunately, some structure would help, as this is starting to sound like "paint by numbers" prog. When Yasia Shevchenko's violin appears through the marshalling beat on "Zyclopea", there seems to be some kind of spark. Where French band Silver Lining simply shines with a violin-led style of symphonic arrangement, here somehow, it lacks conviction. "Locura Temporal" is heavily orchestrated, almost classical and is probably the craftiest slice of talent displayed here, with sound trackish feel, a stroke of genius. Unfortunately, the 4 remaining tracks have nothing really distinguishing about them, a pot-pourri of semi-cooked ideas that can frankly fall smack into ridicule like the pseudo-heavy "Electrickal Night"(penned by our drum meister) that verges on the farcical, complete with a laughable guitar solo that is pure Cheesezilla . Yet , both "Fantasias del Rey Arturo" and medieval companion "En El Corte" offer only slight glimpses of hope, both ruined by some Steve Vai-like attempts that have no place here whatsoever. "Feeling Your Breath" is a repulsive finale that leaves a rather poor taste in the mouth, with a ghastly accented vocal that spells fiasco. Beautiful cover though. Like the Cyclops, this has one starry eye.
tszirmay | 1/5 |

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