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Riverside Progressive Metal
Review by
Mellotron Storm
Prog Reviewer
This feels like a record that needed to be made and really it's a one-off in the sense they are a trio not replacing Piotr yet because the three remaining members need to do this together. Yes they brought in three guests with two adding guitar on some tracks and one adding violin on a few songs. Duda's vocals are rough at times, a different style for him but only when he's singing in a reserved manner. These guys are in mourning. Travis Smith nails the art work and we get nine tracks worth 51 minutes.
I do feel this is a four star effort, I mean they really hit some highs here but it's also inconsistent in my opinion. Also it's just too sad for me to even want to play it again. "Little Man" at least had those uplifting moments while "Journey To The End Of The Night" is about as dark an album as I have heard. No light, no hope but they would follow that up with "Light Of Day, Day Of Darkness" an incredible record. Those two are like ying and yang.
So I do have two tracks that stood out for me on this RIVERSIDE record. "Vale Of Tears" for one is just so interesting and I love when it turns heavy 3 minutes in. The next track "Guardian Angel" gives us some light at least early on but eventually I'm reaching for the kleenex. "The Struggle For Survival" is interesting in that it's a 9 1/2 minute instrumental and after 8 minutes I'm thinking PORCUPINE TREE. I feel like there is a ton of meaning in the lyrics for "River Down Below". The lyrics are so emotional on "Lament" and the violin offers that too late to end it.
I love the way the remaining three members honoured their guitarist here on "Wasteland". They certainly dealt with it head on. ONE SHOT decided to make a live album bringing back their original keyboardist but not replacing guitarist James Mac Gaw. A night of emotion no doubt for all in attendance. Keep in mind ONE SHOT is an all instrumental band. A solid 4 stars for album number 7.
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Ian Gillan Band Jazz Rock/Fusion
Review by
BrufordFreak
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator
1. "Clear Air Turbulence" (7:35) atmospheric opening with butterfly-flutes suddenly burst forward with a somewhat- funky bass-led rock motif over which Ian sings (with some growling poorly-effected vocals). Reminds me of one of Jean-Luc PONTY's hyperdrive songs from the same era. Around 2:30 it suddenly slows way down for a different motif. Bass and drums are quite impressive in this section with nice electric piano support. (13.25/15)
2. "Five Moons" (7:30) solo flute opens this before Fender Rhodes takes over. Ian's treated, John Anderson-like singing joins the electric piano before the end of the first minute. At the two minute mark the full band joins in with a bombastic burst of sound but then calms back down to Fender and voice after only 25-seconds. Too bad for Ian's effected voice cuz I can't really get a sense if he's a good singer (his melodic choices are nothing to write home about). The bass is about the only element of this song that is not rock--that is kind of jazzy--though maybe the dreamy Fender Rhodes qualifies at times. It's a voice like Steve Hillage uses on his first couple solo albums. (12.875/15)
3. "Money Lender" (5:38) purely a rock song with Ian going off with some raunchy stereotypic rock singing. The music is also pure two-chord rock though horn section and jazzy bass somehow work into the song's foundation. It sounds a bit like GRAND FUNK RAILROAD with Mel Shacher in the lead. The secondary motif in the third minute is pleasant and melodic in a pop-jazz way. The rest is pretentious (unless, I suppose, you take stock of the message of his lyrics). (8.6666667/10)
4. "Over The Hill" (7:14) nice Cauca-funky bass, drums, and rhythm guitar within a driving rock-vocaled song. Some of the best musicianship of the album. Great keyboard solo in the fourth and fifth minutes. Too bad about the vocal. The moslty-instrumental second half of the song contains some great music but then Ian's "Smoke on the Water" vocal rejoins. (13.375/15)
5. "Goodhand Liza" (5:24) hand percussion opens this one for 30-seconds before bass and drums join in--voice at 0:45. Whole-group vocals join in with keys and rhythm guitar over the cruisin' conga play giving it a kind of STYX or feel. Interesting and not bad instrumental passage in the fourth minute before John Gustafson starts a STANLEY CLARKE/ RTF-like bass chord sequence at 4:00. Off set by cat-like synth sounds, John's bass and Mark Nauseef's play out to the end. (8.66667/10)
6. "Angel Manchenio" (5:17) almost a variation of QUEEN's "Another One Bites the Dust." Nice guitar and keyboard performances. The work of the steady, fast-drivin' rhythm section eventually hypnotizes the listener into liking it--as well as the THIN LIZZY-like twin-melody-making of the guitar and Fender Rhodes. (8.75/10)
Total Time: 38:38
Despite jazz elements (mostly coming from the wonderfully-talented bass player, John Gustafson), this is not Jazz-Rock Fusion, not even jazz-rock; it's just rock 'n' roll. Why the guys decided to allow their identity to be lead by their singer (who, I'm sure, had little to do with the writing of the album's music) I do not know. I guess the dude had star power-- "name recognition" as they say.
B/four stars; a nice addition to any rock-oriented prog lover's music collection.
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Robert Genco Jazz Rock/Fusion
Review by
BrufordFreak
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator
1. "Angosia" (10:15) funky bass and drum line runs through the whole five-part jazz-rock suite. Excellent drumming and composition but the bass line gets rather old. The lead instruments over the top (flute, trumpet, electric guitar, electric piano, and reverbed voice)) do a pretty good job of distracting as do the accent horns in the third motif. (17.75/10)
2. "Beyond The life" (5:11) excellent emotional song sung very powerfully by Robert. Impressive guitar play from Giorgio Cocilovo but excellent sound and play from Tuccio Garofalo on electric piano, bassist Silvio Condemi, and Robert on drums. Beautiful Smooth Jazz. (9.75/10)
3. "All Recomposes" (5:24) a more symphonic approach to jazz pop. Sounds like a cross between Donovan and Greg Lake-led PROCOL HARUM. Robert really does have an excellent, very emotive singing voice. The song builds beautifully after Robert finishes singing the first verse, eventually climaxing in a kind of "Space Oddity" finish. (9.5/10)
4. "Nature And Transmigration" (18:32) this seven-movement suite starts out very atmospheric/pastoral for the first two movements--like a classically-formulated song, but then it gets funky with the arrival of the fifth minute. Flute solos over the first minute of this movement before Robert starts to sing, then electric guitar gets a turn to solo. The fourth "chapter" or movement starts at 6:57 and flattens out into more-Mahavishnu-like speed sprint with Hammond organ dominating the first minute but then turning over the reigns to electric piano while electric guitar shreds and bass and drums drive the song forward. At 11:18 we subtly shift into yet another motif--this one more rock-driven with the Fender taking the first solo over the hypnotic bass and hard-driving drums. When the trumpet takes over in the lead position the bass drops down an octave or two while Robert's drums get a little more adventurous. Some stop-and-go staccato play in the final portions of this allow Robert a little more show-time before settling into a slightly different pattern to support more electric guitar lead play. The sixth "chapter" finds the band settling into an-almost Canterburian rhythm for some silliness, but then, after a little Mont Campbell-like singing, everybody shifts gears to into some more jagged, angular jazz musicianship. The seventh and final "chapter" finds us listening to a flange- effected drum solo. Nothing here is quite as compelling or quite as beautiful as the other songs on the album. That third "chapter" is the best one here. (34.75/40)
5. "Passagio" (5:15) opens with a flange-effected drum solo (a continuation, obviously, of the previous song)--one that starts out impressively but then gets too simplistic. Eventually, the rest of the band joins in and establishes a kind of poppy STEELY DAN-like motif over which Griogio solos on electric guitar before and between Robert's charged singing. The guitar solo eventually sounds just like The Eagle's at the end of "I Can't Tell You Why" (sung by Timothy B. Schmit). Another beautiful song! (9/10)
Total Time 44:37
An incredibly-well recorded and produced album--especially considering its self-recorded and self-published history-- and a surprising one for its infectious melodies and skilled musicians.
B/four stars; an excellent little gem plucked out of obscurity for any prog lover historian.
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The Moody Blues Crossover Prog
Review by ken_scrbrgh
The following day, I found myself in the South Bend airport, preparing to fly home for Thanksgiving. At the same time, roughly, Dr. Leary arrived to head to the next location on his tour. I couldn't resist the opportunity to shake his hand, and remark, "Dr. Leary, the Moody Blues were wrong, you're not dead . . . !" Not particularly amused, Leary responded, "Nice Suit."
Six years earlier, Mike Pinder, Ray Thomas, Graeme Edge, John Lodge, and Justin Hayward had issued forth their second musical deliberation regarding Dr. Leary, "When You're a Free Man" on "Seventh Sojourn." Their earlier "Legend of a Mind" on 1968's "In Search of the Lost Chord" contained a certain amount of satiric, but reverential treatment of Leary's propagation of LSD and psychedelics as a "shortcut" to spiritual, mystical insight.
In 1972, as Mike Pinder and The Moody Blues' "When You're a Free Man" emerged, Dr. Leary had endured any number of incarcerations for his advocacy of and promulgation of psychedelics and other prohibited pharmacological substances. Through the recent scientific studies of the efficacy of psychedelics, under carefully controlled situations, in the treatment of depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, some aspects of Leary's cause may be subject to reconsideration. Pinder's "When You're a Free Man" pays tribute to the once and future, "Give Peace a Chance" Leary, symbol, for Pinder and The Moody Blues, of a "love that will last an eternity."
I would also like to suggest that Mike Pinder's role on "Seventh Sojourn," not only in his two compositions, "When You're a Free Man" and "Lost in a Lost World," but also in his instrumental contributions bears recognition.
Since 1967's "Days of Future Passed," Pinder has fashioned a lead, almost mystical role for the Mellotron. On "Seventh Sojourn," with the addition of the Chamberlin, this function has intensified. In support, accompaniment, and accentuation, Pinder's Mellotron and Chamberlin dominate the proceedings, not only in his two compositions, but also in "You and Me" and "I'm Just a Singer in a Rock and Roll Band." Hayward and Edge's "You and Me," with its layered vocals of Hayward, Thomas, and Pinder, corresponds to Yes' contemporaneous "And You and I."
In addition to Mike Pinder's considerable contributions to this album at the Chamberlin and Mellotron, Thomas, Lodge, Hayward, and Edge all contribute substantially to each other's songs. "The Land of Make-Believe" begins and ends with Ray Thomas' flute; at certain points during "I'm Just a Singer in a Rock and Roll Band," I hear his saxophone. During this final song, of the original album, Hayward delivers a potent guitar solo, and Lodge performs an almost legendary bass line joined by Edge's dynamic, gradually forceful drums.
In "The Land of Make-Believe," Hayward exalts, "Fly little bird up unto the clear blue sky" in a fashion evocative of Yes' "sister bluebird" from "Starship Trooper."
How do you know but ev'ry Bird that cuts the airy way, /Is an immense world of delight, /clos'd by your senses five?
William Blake
"Seventh Sojourn" is the imaginative interregnum upon which the Moody Blues landed in 1972, drawing upon the musical tapestry established in their previous six albums. As with any collective effort, the five "Moodies" had attained a point in which their creative process had reached an uneasy path. However, the final product, this seventh "refuge" need not to have necessarily translated to the six year hiatus between it and 1978's "Octave." Hayward and Lodge's 1975 "Blue Jays" certainly functions as a de facto Moody Blues album. By the release of "Octave," Mike Pinder found himself no longer interested in touring, opening the door for Patrick Moraz's tenure with the band.
Dr. Leary may have passed away in 1996, but that "legendary" mind endures. Somehow, almost 55 years later, the voices of John Lennon, Yoko Ono, and Timothy Leary (among others) resonate from that hotel room in Montreal's Queen Elizabeth Hotel on June 1, 1969, proclaiming "Give Peace a Chance." Perhaps, today, this exhortation may be equally, if not, more important than in 1969 . . . .
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Cave Sermon Experimental/Post Metal
Review by
siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
Fresh out in January 2024, DIVINE LAUGHTER is one of those albums in the modern world that is ever increasingly difficult to classify as all the once traditional subgenres of metal have confluently joined at the hip and created a rather bizarre array of hybridization efforts with traces of death metal here, sludge metal there, blackened elements, moments of core, prog, classic heavy metal melodies and so forth and so on. To convey it all on paper requires a vast list of up to six genres (at least) just to try to grasp the contents in this art metal extravaganza. While the caustic dissonance and guttural growls point first and foremost to the world of death metal, the compositional styles are fairly unique in that they don't adhere to any particular style of metal and as heard on the lengthy 9 1/2 opening "Beyond Recognition," moments of metal are dropped completely in lieu of a sprawling lysergic journey into the world of Krautrock-ish psychedelia.
But this is indeed an extreme metal album through and through with caustic sludge metal tones and drumming techniques, blackened overtones and even bouts with post-metal, CAVE SERMON certainly has done its homework in the exploration of the larger metal universe and crafted a abstractly wild beastly ugliness with DIVINE LAUGHTER. The dissonance at full decibelage enhanced by thundering tempos and frenetic blastbeats may point to Ulcerate, Artificial Brain or a number of modern bands but where CAVE SERMON differs in the completely unorthodox shifts in where the compositions take you. The core elements from deathcore, metalcore and even moments of mathcore, Park keeps you guessing what will be the next hairpin turn move yet never strays to far for too long from the crushing death sludge that squeals and churns and evokes the very bowels of hell.
A crushingly brutal album for the most part however lush psychedelic interludes occur ("Beyond Recognition") in the middle of tracks as to pacifying post-rock moments ("The Pain of an Invader"). Intros and outros also serve as the opportunity to pain the canvass with different colors of sound and although the metal aspects are dark and ominous, these contrasting elements are actually quite bright and cheerful but also fleeting in the big picture compared to the dominance of the caustic deathened sludgery. The lengthiest tracks are quite progressive and offer excursions into varying motifs, tempo shifts and even time signature deviations. The strangest head scratching track on the album is the penultimate "Birds and Machines in Brunswick" which completely drops the metal and rather offers an electroacoustic birdsong with a droning background. Sounding more like something from Nurse Than Wound than say Convulsing, this cements the fact that this album is pretty out there and attempts to take extreme metal into territories that nobody has dared gone before. However as cool as the track is, it sounds completely out of sync with anything else on the album and probably was too "artistic" for its own good.
In a way the electroacoustic turbulence is more like a 5-minute fluffer for the closing title track at 12 minutes plus which is by far the longest track. This one jumps right back into the metal with a series of stomping riffs with an accompanying atmospheric guitar sweeping all over the backdrop. The keys add a nice ambient touch as well. This one begins more as a posty death doom sound in the vein of classic Neurosis or Isis only with death metal bantering and growls. The addition of the chaotic swirls of sound above the main chugga-chug adds nice layers of tension. This last track is the most focused as it tends to use a post-metal structure of repetition which makes it easier to follow than the abstract nature of the rest of the album. It also delivers all the elements in the right doses and in the right logical procession and in a way provides a recap of what you just experienced. It's an amazingly clever slab of weirdo metal freakery!
A veritable stab of psychedelic death / sludge / progressive / experimental metal, CAVE SERMON delivers exactly what the artistic album cover insinuates and that is something completely new for the world of (mostly) death metal. While i think the album could've been streamlined a bit better in the vein of the final track, overall this is an exhilarating slab of psychedelic freakery meets technical brutality. Yeah the electroacoustic "Birds and Machines in Brunswick" seems a bit like a fish out of water without any thought as to how it relates to the rest of the album but i have a feeling this was basically just a warm up album for more to come. Despite my own thoughts about how element A should've been replaced with element B and so forth, i do find this to be an excellent listening pleasure in its own right and perfect for those who love the crushing caustic nature of extreme metal augmented by moments of psychedelia.
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Psicosfera Experimental/Post Metal
Review by
siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
This idiosyncratic band has found a way to amalgamate disparate styles of metal and offers a totally new methodology of delivering. By taking the tones, dissonance and cosmic dread of Deathspell Omega, PSICOSFERA has forged a veritable blend of djent-ish post-metal that drifts mid-tempo through 9 tracks (simply titled as Roman numerals) that add up to almost 43 minutes. While sounding like a strain of black metal, the musical procession is not anything like the torturous bleakness of bands like Germany's Ascension or Blut Aus Nord but offers a touch of dissonant death metal in the vein of Ulcerate or Gorguts without really being death metal all the while meandering through semi-progressive game changers without truly being prog.
This album is a smooth flow of transitions although abrupt changes occur but despite heavy dissonant power chords ceding to clean guitar arpeggios and moments of respite erupting into loud frenzies of instrumental interplay, ALPHA logically connects and doesn't deliver a strange mix of avant-garde freakery but rather a coordinated attack of instrumental prowess most resembling a typical instrumental post-rock / post-metal act. The absence of vocals gives the entire affair an abstract feel to it but the relaxed oft sludgy chords are designed to evoke philosophical reflection and human suffering. Not sure that translated well but the darkened tones and bleak overall atmosphere certainly evokes a sense of discombobulation that doesn't resolve throughout the album's run.
The band is skilled at playing their unique spin on proggy djent delivered in a post-metal procession however the tracks begin to sound a bit repetitive by end's length and the addition of a wider pallet of influences might've served it well but as it is it's not a bad listening experience at all and allows for a nice drifting escapism albeit a noise boisterous din of one. I always admire bands that know how to develop their own style in between the cracks of the existing genre and evoke the sense of many metal styles simultaneously without really sounding like any. PSICOSFERA has certainly achieved that lofty task but at this point the band still lacks the ability to craft enough disparate ideas to take their stylized efforts to the next level. Still though a very interesting album despite it all.
3.5 rounded down
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Mostly Autumn Prog Folk
Review by
VianaProghead
Prog Reviewer
Mostly Autumn, as its name indicates, is a name that conjures the images of an October sky, and this is precisely the month when I'm writing this review, with leaves on the ground, trees preparing to sleep trough the coming season change and shortened days. This is a season sometimes with shining moments, others with raining moments and we have also sometimes storms over us. In the fall we enter to a twilight realm in which a kind of a mystical unfolding is taking place. Alike, the music of Mostly Autumn evokes all these natural diverse qualities. They've been bringing their mysterious music to us for many years now, treading the boundaries of folk, rock, prog and Celtic music, conjuring the ghosts of a past that's still subtly hanging on to the present. We have walked in their meadows, slept by the rivers, climbed mountains, strolled through valleys and journeyed to the Middle Earth. They created a very own music world.
I have always felt a very special soft spot for Mostly Autumn but unfortunately I've never had the chance to see them live. However, if their live concerts are anything like these live releases, then I have to say that I've lost too much. Certainly, their studio albums have revealed a band of growing talent and vocal prowess, but listening their music live is a very different thing. Hearing their music live for the first time, and this was my case with this live album, it opened up to me an amazing vista of hidden treasures that I didn't recognize in their studio material. Their music sparks as if something wild has been set free and, in a certain way, it has something special when performed live. I wrote all these before about this live album, because "Storms Over London Town" was my real first contact with Mostly Autumn live.
"Storms Over London Town" is the eighth live album of Mostly Autumn and was released in 2006. It was recorded from a live concert made by Mostly Autumn at the London Astoria on Saturday 4th June 2005. This live concert was played to celebrate the launch of their sixth studio album "Storms Over Still Water", an album that was released in the same year.
The line up on "Storms Over London Town" is Heather Findlay (lead vocals and tambourine), Angela Gordon (vocals, flute, keyboards and tambourine), Bryan Josh (lead vocals and lead and rhythm guitars), Liam Davison (vocals and electric, acoustic and slide guitars), Iain Jennings (keyboards), Andy Smith (bass guitar) and Andrew Jennings (drums). "Storms Over London Town" had also the participation of Ben Matthews (lead and rhythm guitars), Troy Donockley (low whistles and Uilleann pipes) and Olivia Sparnenn and Rachel Jones (vocals and backing vocals).
"Storms Over London Town" has eleven tracks. The first track "Out Of The Green Sky" was released on "Storms Over Still Water", the second track "Broken Glass" was released on "Storms Over Still Water", the third track "Answer The Question" was released on "Passengers", the fourth track "Black Rain" was released on "Storms Over Still Water", the fifth track "Never The Rainbow" was released on "The Last Bright Light", the sixth track "Distant Train" was released on "Passengers", the seventh track "Evergreen" was released on "The Spirit Of Autumn Past", the eighth track "Carpe Diem" was released on "Storms Over Still Water", the ninth track "Finlandia" is, from what I know, an unreleased studio track by Mostly Autumn. The tenth track "Storms Over Still Water" was released on "Storms Over Still Water" and the eleventh track "The Spirit Of Autumn Past ? (Part 1)" was released on "The Spirit Of Autumn Past".
"Storms Over London Town" is a great live gig in an unforgettable night. The first two songs are played in a very fast tempo. The up-beat tempo of those two songs continues with "Answer The Question" and the other two next songs. Ben Matthews brings "Black Rain" to a higher level with his tasty guitar playing. And with the excellent vocals of Olivia Sparnenn and a nice guitar solo at the end of "Never The Rainbow" became really worthy to be listened again. With the great instrumental track "Distant Train" the live gig turns into the more symphonic side with great keyboard riff and the unmistakeable guitar solo of Bryan. "Carpe Diem" and "Storms Over Still Water", with the lovely voice of Rachel Jones, are another two classical highlights. The show ends with "The Spirit Of Autumn Past ? (Part 1)" one of their best pieces.
Conclusion: "Storms Over London Town" is an excellent live album of Mostly Autumn that represents perfectly well their excellent studio album "Storms Over Still Water". As I wrote above, this was the album that represents my first live experience with the group, beyond the view of their excellent track "Mother Nature" on the DVD "Progressive Rock Anthology", a DVD with a collection of ten progressive live concert clips from several progressive bands and artists, already reviewed by me on this site. That clip represents also my first contact with Mostly Autumn's music. Despite be far from being one of the best live albums from the band, I recommend "Storms Over London Town" to everyone who likes melodic and accessible progressive rock with a touch of Pink Floyd's style. So, and as a conclusion, this is a nice live album, especially for all their fans, because there aren't enough typical titles from the older albums from the band.
Prog is my Ferrari. Jem Godfrey (Frost*)
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Devin Townsend Experimental/Post Metal
Review by
UMUR
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator
Compared to "Ziltoid The Omniscient", "Ki" is a completely different type of release. It�s still unmistakably a Devin Townsend album (although released under The Devin Townsend Project monicker), but it�s predominantly a non-distorted, non-metal oriented release (although it can still be pretty heavy at times). Instead Townsend have opted for a stripped down, organic, and earthy rock sound, which often works through tension and release type dynamics. It�s sometimes a pretty intense album, and often not meant for mellow listening pleasure, so it�s not one of those atmospheric and pretty acoustic guitar releases, although the album does feature a good share of mellow and laid back sections and tracks. Some of the tracks feature jam parts combined with more structured sections and the whole album feels loose and creative in spirit. Featuring 13 tracks and a total playing time of 66:50 minutes, it�s also a pretty long release.
"Ki" is probably Townsend�s most personal release in terms of the lyrical subjects which include subjects like dealing with sober life, self-discovery, and spirituality. "Ki" features a gorgeous organic and earthy sound production. It�s an absolutely brilliant production, where you can hear every detail of the music and all instruments and vocals are well balanced in the mix. It�s interesting to hear Townsend�s music presented in this type of production package, as it stands in great contrast to his usual wall of sound/multi-layered sound productions, but that�s pretty obviously the whole point of "Ki"...to produce a release which sounds vastly different from anything which Townsend had been involved in before.
Personally I find "Ki" a very hard album to get into and it�s taken me many years to get through the album and many re-visits to be able to write something about it. And it�s not because it�s an overtly complex release in terms of the song structures or challenging parts, but it�s the whole atmosphere and the sometimes slow building and repetitive nature of the music (which is often laid back and ambient), which has taken me a while (well...actually a very long time) to get into. Even after all this time "Ki" still leaves me a bit perplexed...
...I�m sure the often idiosyncratic Townsend would be delighted if he read my reaction to "Ki" and the struggles I�ve been through to understand what he has created, but at some point you do have to ask yourself if it�s worth it. Some albums just seem to alienate you even though you try everything to understand them and appreciate them. And that�s how I felt about "Ki" for many years. But understanding and appreciating music sometimes comes down to experience with different types of music, the real life situation you�re experiencing at the given moment, and maybe who you listen to the music with. Negative feelings often create a negative reaction to difficult music, because you don�t have the emotional surplus to grasp it.
The point is that "Ki" is one of the most unique but also one of the most difficult releases in Devin Townsend�s discography, and it�s one of those releases which is an aquired taste. Just because you think of yourself as a Townsend fan doesn�t mean you�ll be able to appreciate "Ki". In parts maybe, but probably not the full album in one sitting unless you�re one of those rare folks who get it right away. But while you should consider yourself warned at this point, I would still urge you to give "Ki" a listen. This is the work of a real artist trying something new and working outside his comfort zone, and while I still have a way to go before I completely surrender to "Ki", there are arguably musical treasures buried on the album, which deserve to be discovered. The only way to find them...is to keep digging. A 3.5 star (70%) rating is deserved.
(Originally posted on Metal Music Archives).
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Nektar Psychedelic/Space Rock
Review by
Hector Enrique
Prog Reviewer
Beyond the introductory and digestible sixties rock of 'Astral Man', the album moves between gentle melodies like the sensitive 'Early Morning Clown' and its acoustic similarities to the song 'And You And I' (Yes), or the beautiful and crystalline 'Little Boy', and pieces complemented by arrangements adapted to the circus show, such as the trumpets, saxophones and trombones preceded by the introductions of Bob Calvert (late ex-singer of Hawkwind), occasional master of ceremonies, in the persistent half-time of 'Nelly the Elephant' or in the active 'Fidgety Queen', adorned with the brief and effective guitar slides of Roye Albrighton.
In the last section, and without departing too much from the general atmosphere of the album, the bubbly 'Oh Willy' picks up the pace (brief jazz interlude included) with a very active Ron Howden on percussion accompanied by the intense bass of Derek Moore, and the rousing 'Show Me the Way' with the rhythmic cadence that Allan Freeman's keyboards and Albrighton's riffs impose and a beautiful vocal counterpoint in between, precede 'Finale', the instrumental appendix taken from 'Nelly the Elephant' that brings the show to a close.
Down to Earth", which reached number 32 on the US Billboard 200, is a few steps below the contemporary "A Tab in the Ocean" and "Remember the Future", perhaps because of the lightness of its development at times, but it is a remarkable attempt by Nektar not to repeat themselves and to continue experimenting with different sonic structures, and that gives it a special appeal.
3/3.5 stars
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Rauduskoivu Progressive Electronic
Review by
Matti
Prog Reviewer
Dark Ambient is a suitable description, and so is Dungeon Synth, which was a new term for me used in the promo sheet. Despite these terms, the music doesn't turn out to be distubingly sinister or depressive. In fact any listener deep into the world of Electronic Music (or "Progressive electronic") will feel fairly at home and probably think of reference artists within the genre that may come to mind. TANGERINE DREAM sounds sometimes a bit similar, for example on their soundtrack album The Sorcerer.
The overall sharp soundscape has perhaps more in common with some post-70's stuff by artists such as ROBERT SCHROEDER or ED STARINK. And something you might hear on the compilations of Innovative Communication label, although they're usually not this dark in tone. Rauduskoivu's approach is also rather minimalistic, leaving a lot of empty canvas in the background instead of building layered sonic carpets. In that sense one could think of VANGELIS at his most minimalistic (Beaubourgh for instance), with the crucial difference of tighter track structures.
On some tracks there's a threateningly throbbling low sound joined by crystal-bright higher sounds sometimes slightly reminiscent of morse coding. The low, see-sawing sound may make you think of John Williams' soundtrack for Jaws. On 'Lurking III' the see-sawing low sound sounds a lot like cello and makes me think of sleeping. This album could be used as a soundtrack for somewhat disturbing Sci-Fi/horror series. The deliberately blurry and synthetic cover art -- indeed very fitting for the music in spirit -- features a submarine and some men on its top deck, I think.
These days pure Electronic Music isn't too crowded as a genre, so initially I warmly welcome this album. However, on the long run the impression may soon wear out and the listener is bound to turn into old classics instead.
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