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Van Der Graaf Generator - Trisector CD (album) cover

TRISECTOR

Van Der Graaf Generator

 

Eclectic Prog

3.51 | 545 ratings

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Sean Trane
Special Collaborator
Prog Folk
5 stars After Jaxon's eviction from the Generator (for obscure disagreement about his participation in one of those exploitation career overviews), how was the trio to go on without one of their most noticeable members absent and the sonic void bound to happen? Would you believe that Jaxon is hardly missed? I mean this album is sooooo good (in the songwriting and overall execution) that Jaxon's absence goes barely noticed. Actually I'd hate to think how perfect Trisector would've been, had Jaxon been part of it.. Yes!!! That good!!! All fears of another average Present album cast aside, Trisector is actually excellent enough to rival with Godbluff or Still Life.

With the ever solid Guy Evans still as inventive and right on the dot as he's ever been, Peter clearly kept some of his best songs for the group (not sure it was the case for Present) and he's particularly fine form vocally (the best album vocal performance along with Incoherence), he's obviously taking more space left empty with his electric guitar (never his strongest instrument >> the instrumental surf music Zep-esque Hurly Burly and the punkish Drop Dead), but the album is clearly Hugh Banton's. Not only is he playing bass guitar brilliantly, but his organ parts are absolutely brilliant and shinning like a thousand suns. Indeed he fills even more of the void left by Jaxon's exit. To make a point, most likely the group avoided the usual logo and chose to pass it trough as the triangle present on the front artwork and throughout most of the booklet's pages.

After the unusual but fun Hurly Burly, Banton hammers away a very complex riff pattern that fits the song title perfectly. Interference Pattern is so off-beat, that it indeed can be mistakebn as an interference, Hammill's verses reassuring us we're not in some crazy KB-dominated progmetal band, while Peter's chorus brings complete madness, the middle section veering obtusely complex. What a pure nightmare and what a contrast with the calmness of Final Reel, which is maybe the low point of the album, better suited for a solo album, IMHO. Lifetime is the first masterpiece of this album, Banton's organ resonating with Hammill's quiet electric guitar, the song gradually picking up solemnity through Peter's superb lyrics (ceremonial quicksand is a FIND!!) and great melody.

The punkish powers of Drop Dead (just the title is punk enough) would've been better suited after Final reel, rather than lifetime, but nevertheless it gives the proper boot in the butt for the rest of the album to glide ever so smoothly, even though it's not an easy ride home. As much a stark contrast DD was, wait till you get to Only In A Whisper, which starts on Hammill's electric piano, while Evans provides much background Banton coming in like a sonar (keeping for the length), preceding Peter's superb solemn voice. Another stunner. All That Before returns to the beefy rock of the hard&fast/slow&quiet alternation of tracks, with Hammill's fat's guitar riffs echoes away Banton's heavy organ lines, while Peter is quite talkative and an absolutely whacky ending in chaos. But you haven't heard anything yet as the 12-mins+ Over The Hill is the peak of the album, starting slowly a bit like in Jaws-like move from Hugh, than Peter taking the song on the Killer trail (the riff around the 8th minute), but ultimately, the track grows quickly to monster-like Lighthouse (with Hammill showing progress in his electric guitar playing), before dying away slowly. Not Here is starting solemnly on a descending riff then veering a tad dissonant ala Lemmings. Absolutely fabulous a track, Hammill's voice overdubbing to create a chorus over the descending riff is haunting, until a gradual fade-out over train noise, it creates a stunning end to the album.

While the previous album had given the same kind of thrills as Trisector on the first two listens, they went quickly away: but for Trisector, these thrills are clinging on and often ceding to admiring shrugs of how close to perfection it is. Sorry Jax, but you're long over with, but hopefully not completely forgotten. Many of these tracks, I can't wait to see in concert again.

Sean Trane | 5/5 |

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