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Senmuth - Precession CD (album) cover

PRECESSION

Senmuth

 

Experimental/Post Metal

3.02 | 3 ratings

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octopus-4
Special Collaborator
RIO/Avant/Zeuhl,Neo & Post/Math Teams
3 stars The usual "Industrial noises" that have been a constant background in the first four Senmuth's works are still present but teir volume is lower so that we can better appreciate the melodies. There are also less percussive sounds and the metal component is now occasionally superseded by the electronic one.

currently the only other review is about the album in its whole, so I will go track by track in order to be complementary to that.

The opening track (In The Shadows), in particular starts electronic with sounds more close to Vangelis than to techno.It's the usual Senmuth just after the singing starts, but it's less chaotic and, I don't want to say melodic, but we can clearly hear a melody without having to extrapolate it from the other sounds as in his prevoius works. This requires less attention to the listener and it's not a bad thing.

"Reinkarnation" alternates the industrial metal to electronic moments, but I have the impression that there's more attention to the sung parts. There's also a good guitar here.

"Limit of Reality" continues in the same vein. There's a dialog between two metal screamers, at least they seem to be two different singers that alternates with a powerful electronic interlude. A very good song with a very nice piano/harp coda. (piano/harp are likely a keyboard of course).

"Sandbeach"'s melody is influenced by traditional russian music in the chords and melody, but the singers have something of John Lydon with PIL.

It fades into "2 Days Up to Dawn" on which I was suspecting that the singer was that Annie Red Hat that we have found on Cognitive Discord. Some Skand21 is credited instead. I still hear traditional folk elements. Should I decide which Senmuth's song propose to a non- prog audience, this would probably be the one. "Lost Purposes" Is prog-metal oriented. The industrial noise is disappeared except for some distorsion. This is probably the first time that a metal guitar is clearly diistinguible in a Senmuth's song. The drumming on the chorus is tipically metal . "The art is impossible" reminds me to Ayreon because of the two singers and a distinctive electric guitar. Of course it's just a remind. There's nothing else that can point in that direction. A spacey coda completes the track.

"Troy" is again very powerful. The female vocalisms have a Greek flavour and looking at the track's title there's obviously a reason for this. The percussions and the guitar describe a state of war and when the percussions slow down is like the end of a battle.

"Caribbean" has percussions in evidence until the keyboard joins, then guitar, then percussion only. This is an almost symphonic instrumental with elements that could make it suitable for a movie soundtrack.

"Forever" is a prog-metal song with a "song" structure. Another "easy" one. The singer seems to be the same of Sandbeach, likely Senmuth himself. The most melodic song of this album. It would have been an excellent closure if it wasn't for the disco-like remix of "Niti". The singer is again Annie Red Hat, as in his debut album. Only, the industrial noises are totally over, and what remains is good electronic suitable to be played by a mainstream radio.

Not yet enough for having 4 stars, but this is currently the best Senmuth's album of the first 5. (only 73 left to review)

octopus-4 | 3/5 |

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