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Saga - Worlds Apart Revisited (CD) CD (album) cover

WORLDS APART REVISITED (CD)

Saga

 

Crossover Prog

3.53 | 30 ratings

From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

Evolver
Special Collaborator
Crossover & JR/F/Canterbury Teams
3 stars Saga is one of those bands that I never listened to, despite being an avid record buyer since the late sixties (damn, I'm old!). When this album was released, I saw it was on sale at my friendly neighborhood CD store (actually, I received an email newsletter) at a temptingly low price. So I checked out the band here at ProgArchives, and made the investment.

The first advice I would give to the band and thier road crew: learn how to do a sound check! The album begins with a mix that Charles Barkley would call "turrible". The guitar is too loud, the keyboards are not loud enough, and the lead vocal is booming and distorted. Because of this, the instruments don't blend well. The sound gradually gets better until it levels around the halfway point of the first disk. It's astounding that a band that's been together for thirty years could be this unprofessional.

Secondly, and this is more of a personal issue: I hate when a live album features a lot of audience singing. I suppose that it pumps the band up to know that an entire hall full of people knows the lyrics to their music, but on a live album it should be used sparingly. On this album, over and over again, Michael Sadler goads the audience into singing along, and stops singing himself. Used sparingly this is tolerable, but not to this extent.

On the whole, I find, at least on this album, which is primarily a live recording of "Worlds Apart" (I presume that was one of their most successful albums - I remember On The Loose getting airplay), that Saga's songs are not that well written. Mostly they are perdictable arena rock anthems. What saves them, and the album, in the band's proficiency at adding interesting flourishes around the 4/4 beats and standard chords. And the soloing by guitarist Ian Critchon and keyboardist Jim Gilmour also keep it slightly interesting.

Conversations, on the other hand, is a good song, and makes me wonder if the group has more albums with songs of it's stature.

2.5 stars, rounded up.

Evolver | 3/5 |

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