Showing posts with label 2014 Review Lists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2014 Review Lists. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 15, 2023

2014's Best Prog Epics and Mesmerics

These are my favorite songs of over nine minutes in length from 2014 studio releases:

Masterpieces:
1. "Fiori, frutti, farfalle" (20:00) - HUMANA PROG - (40/40) = 10.0
2. "God Left Us for a Black Dressed Woman" (14:12) - SEVEN IMPALE - (30/30) = 10.0
3. "Don't Let Go, Feels Alright" (13:32) - TIGER MOTH TALES - (30/30) = 10.0
4. "Kuun Tytär" (10:39) - AALTO - (20/20) = 10.0
5. "Escape from.../Heaven/Nebayilhaye" (10:54) - JERZY ANTCZAK (20/20) = 10.0
6. "Celestial Fire" (15:23) - DAVE BAINBRIDGE - (29.75/30) = 9.916667
7. "Spirit Photography" (10:06) - KAYO DOT (19.5/20) = 9.75
8. "Antítesis"(16:02) - KANT FREUD KAFKA - (29/30) = 9.6667
9. "Suite Beef" (13:54) - ELECTRIC ORANGE (29/30) = 9.6667
10. "Hell, part 4-6:  Traitor/The Tapestry/Swiss Cheese Mountain" (12:21) - MOTORPSYCHO (24/25) = 9.6
11. "Oh, My Gravity!" (9:49) - SEVEN IMPALE (19/20) = 9.5
12. "Offramp Cycle, Pattern 22" (9:25) - KAYO DOT (19/20) = 9.5
13. "Io" (18:25) - SEVEN THAT SPELLS - (38/40) = 9.5
14. "Hombre" (10:56) - KANT FREUD KAFKA - (18.5/20) = 9.25
15. "The Grotesque Pageantry of Fading Empires" (9:17) - UT GRET - (18.5/20) = 9.25
16. "Dama" (12:34) - KANT FREUD KAFKA - (23/25) = 9.2
17. "A Mysterious Cup of Tea, Parts 1-5" (23:28) - MARGIN - (46/50) = 9.2
18. “Eastern Fields” (11:52) - PROTEO - (23/25) = 9.2
19. "Tigers in the Butter" (14:54) - TIGER MOTH TALES - (27.5/30) = 9.166667
20. "In This Puzzled Roundabout" (15:05) - ARLEKIN - (27.5/30) = 9.16667
21. "Venivo da un lungo sonno" (9:12) - LOGOS - (18.25/20) = 9.125
22. "For Such a Time as This" (10:33) - DAVE BAINBRIDGE - (18.25/20) = 9.125
23. "Obsolescence, Parts I-V" (23:22) - ABEL GANZ - (45.5/50) = 9.1
24. "Anima" (16:30) - INTROITUS - (27.25/30) = 9.083333


Other Very Good songs:
"The Mortality of Doves" (11:54) - KAYO DOT - (22.5/25) = 9.0
"Resolve" (9:11) - JAKOB - (18/20) = 9.0
"Learning to Fly" (12:02) - CIRRUS BAY - (22.5/25) = 9.0
"Shaking Hats" (9:46) - UNIVERS ZERO - (18/20) = 9.0
"Ótta" (9:38) - SÓLSTAFIR - (18/20) = 9.0 
"Lapse" (12:32) - NEW KEEPERS OF THE WATER TOWERS - (22.5/25) = 9.0
"Out of the Box" (9:28) - CIRRUS BAY - (18/20) = 9.0
"Echoes Mankind (part II)" (9:22) - PROTEO - (18/20) = 9.0
"Sky and Sea" (13:53) - ALEX CARPANI - (27/30) = 9.0
"Visions of Death" (9:25) - NEW KEEPERS OF THE WATER TOWERS - (18/20) = 9.0
"Love and Inspiration" (14:05) - HELIOPOLIS - (27/30) = 9.0
"Sjø & Land" (12:19) - BRIMSTONE - (22.5/25) = 9.0
"I'm Hiding Behind My Eyes" (9:15) - KNIFEWORLD - (18/20) = 9.0
"Walkabout" (9:15) - PERFECT BEINGS - (18/20) = 9.0
"Behind The Wall of Sheep" (20:25) - ELECTRIC ORANGE - (35.75/40) = 8.9375
"Love Remains" (13:03)  - DAVE BAINBRIDGE - (22.3333/25) = 8.93333 
"Now The Waves of Sound Remain" (10:21) - PHI - (17.75/20) = 8.875
"Ocean Mind" (18:24) - FREDDEGREDDE - (35.5/40) = 8.875
"Slipping Away" (11:14) - INTROITUS - (17.75/20) = 8.875 
"Náttmála" (11:15) SÓLSTAFIR - (17.75/20) = 8.875 
"Caged Creator" (11:32) - DEAN WATSON - (17.625/20) = 8.8125
"Four-Leaf Clover" (10:37) - PROTEO - (17.5/20) = 8.75
"In principo" (11:28 - LOGOS - (17.5/20) = 8.75
"The Isle Of Witches" (11:03) - TIGER MOTH TALES - (17.5/20) = 8.75
"Stranded" (Pts. 1-5) (10:32) - DAVE KERZNER - (17.5/20) = 8.75
"White Car" (9:35) - COSMOGRAF - (17,5/20) = 8.75
"Shadow in Light" (10:14) - EMERALD DAWN - (17.5/20) = 8.75
"The Autotelic Self" (11:05)  - FREDDEGREDDE - (17.5/20) = 8.75
"Memories of The Water" (11:16) - PERVY PERKIN - (17.5/20) = 8.75 
"Redemption: Stranded (Pts. 6-10) (17:25) - DAVE KERZNER - (30.5/35) = 8.714
"Song of Innocence, Parts I & II" (12:09) - MY BROTHER THE WIND - (21.75/25) = 8.7


Also considered:
"Lullabies in a Car Crash" (13:27) - BJØRN RIIS - (26/30) = 8.6667
"Unconditional" (14:05) - ABEL GANZ - (26/30) = 8.6667
"Broken Glass"(10:28) - INTROITUS (17.333/20) = 8.6667
"Last Exit to Pluto" (10:41) - MARGIN - (17.25/20) = 8.625
"Nadir" (9:31) - ACCORDO DEI CONTRARI - (17.25/20) - 8.625
"Worn Utopia" (15:19) - ELECTRIC ORANGE - (25.75/30) = 8.58333
"Beyond The Wall" (12:05) - EMERALD DAWN - (21.25/25) = 8.5
"New Frontier" (10:11) - HELIOPOLIS - (17/20) = 8.5
"Palefeathered Wind" (13:48) - PALEFEATHER - (25.25/30) = 8.416667 
"Psychedelic Underground - The Long Trip" (10:38) - MARGIN - (16.75/20 = 8.375
"Stay Calm" (10:09) - BJORN RIIS - (16.5/20) = 8.25
"How Long We Wait" (9:29) - DREAM THE ELECTRIC SLEEP - (16.5/20) = 8.25
"Out of Reach" (10:02) - BJORN RIIS - (16.5/20) = 8.25
"Republikflucht" (10:54) - PROTEO - (16/20) = 8.0
"The Infinite Room"  (14:17) - ALEX CARPANI - (24/30) = 8.0
"Silk Road" (12:58) - ALEX CARPANI - (20/25) = 8.0
"Time Spiral" (13:22) - ALEX CARPANI - (24/30) = 8.0
"Burning Blood" (14:03)  - SEVEN THAT SPELLS - (24/30) = 8.0
"Berlin" (12:55) - PROTEO - (20/25) = 8.0
"Pyre for The Red Sage" (12:05) - NEW KEEPERS OF THE WATER TOWERS - (20/25) = 8.0
"Buridian's Lament" (10:50) - EMERALD DAWN - (16/20) = 8.0
"In Search of the Lost Key" (11:06) - EMERALD DAWN - (16/20) = 8.0


As-yet Unrated:
"Moaning Lisa" (14:08) - CORVUS STONE - (/30) = 
"The Dance of the Drastic Navels" (23:51) - DAAL - (/50) = 
"Morphosis" (26:23) - PERVY PERKIN - (/50) = 
"T.I.M.E (Part 3, The Sign on The Wall)" (20:55) - PERVY PERKIN - (/40) = 
"In the Moment" (14:22) - DAVE BAINBRIDGE - (/30) = 


Great Songs Just Shy of Nine Minutes:
"Visit to Chigwick" (8:50) - TIGER MOTH TALES - (20/20) = 10.0
"Lágnatti" (8:48) - Solstafir - (10/10)
"Boots for Hire" (8:58) - CORVUS STONE - (/20) = 
"Camelus Bactrianus" (8:42) - CORVUS STONE - (/20) = 
"Song of the Wind" (18.5/20) - CIRRUS BAY - (18.5/20)
"Elizabeth" (8:22) - DREAM THE ELECTRIC SLEEP - (18/20) = 9.0
"Crowded Corridors" (8:44) - IAMTHEMORNING
"The Tower" - FREDDEGREDDE
"The Road of Bones" (8:53) - IQ - (/20) = 
"I Fought Against the South" (8:52) - TIM BOWNESS
"It Must Taste Good" (8:32) - DREAM THE ELECTRIC SLEEP


*Bold print denotes a song that has risen into my pantheon of All-time favorite "epics."

Wednesday, May 18, 2022

Top Albums from the Year 2014, Part 2: The Near-Masterpieces

  Somewhere beneath the level of timeless masterpiece status lies a group of albums whose quality and merit deserve categorization of something like "near-masterpiece." These are albums that have either achieved a Fishermetric score of between 90.0 and 87.0 or whose high points or quality level make it remarkable enough to remain affixed in my memory.

From the Year 2014, you will find below 10 albums releases deserving, in my opinion, of the "near-masterpiece" designation.  


4.5 Stars; Near-Masterpieces
(Ratings of 89.99 to 86.67)



20. MARGIN Psychedelic Teatime

Rather saccharine and predictable but highly effective Neo Prog.

Line-up / Musicians:
- Lutz Meinert / voices, all instruments
- Carola Meinert / voices (6, 7, 9)
- Arne Spekat / acoustic guitar (1-5, 7)

1. "A Mysterious Cup Of Tea - Part 1" (6:33) lush and pregnantly paced with great electric lead guitar work. (9.25/10)
2. "A Mysterious Cup Of Tea - Part 2" (4:50) Lutz' vocals over 12-strings. (8.5/10)
3. "A Mysterious Cup Of Tea - Part 3" (6:50) more spacious PINK FLOYD like atmospheric music over which electric guitar and other computer keyboard generated sounds take turns soloing. Very cleverly constructed. (14/15)
4. "A Mysterious Cup Of Tea - Part 4" (2:16) electric guitar soloing over harpsichord and 12-string guitars before Lutz returns to sing in his plaintive Roger Waters voice. (4.25/5)
5. "A Mysterious Cup Of Tea - Part 5" (2:59) the big climax and finale. (10/10)

6. "Psychedelic Underground - The Short Trip" (3:36) part THE THE, part early THE CHURCH--very poppy like a 1980s New Wave hit. (8.75/10)

7. "Landscapes On The Sky" (8:05) vibes and Spanish acoustic guitar strums provide all Lutz needs for his creepy ROGER WATERS/HARRY NILSSON-like vocal. Nice b vox from Carola Meinert. The simple Wurlitzer organ play in the instrumental bridges and interludes is cool. (14/15)

8. "Last Exit To Pluto" (10:41) opens with spacious music like for a Euro-spy movie (Bond or Clouseau). At 2:40 the dynamics amp up with electric guitar power chords and searing lead lines before thinks revert to quiet with bass, rim & hi-hat hits, vibes and piano tinkles. In the fifth minute the guitar wails as if from afar over piano and synth before the full complement of prog instruments crashes in, taking us into far outer space. More Wurlitzer soloing alternating with other instruments. (17.25/20)

9. "Psychedelic Underground - The Long Trip" (10:38) a reprise in variation of song #6. It was much tighter and had a much better sound palette the first time--though it does have an excellent "guitar" solo in the eighth minute. (16.75/20)

Total Time 56:28

This one sounds a lot to me like a continuation of 2013's AIRBAG and COSMOGRAF albums along with 2012's I AND THOU, NINE STONES CLOSE, MYSTERY, and RIVERSEA albums with a bit of THE PSYCHEDELIC ENSEMBLE (especially in the singing voice). The album's highlight is, of course, the five-part epic entitled "A Mysterious Cup of Tea" which sounds most like the brilliantly nostalgic music of Andrew Marshall's WILLOWGLASS only with singing and with more emotional guitar leads. The rest of the album is really good Neo-Prog with quirky, tongue-in-cheek ANDY TILLISON or Thomas Thelen-like lyrics and singing. 

Enjoyable and nice to come back to once in a while. Some really great lead guitar soloing. Often feeling a bit too familiar in the Neo-ness of it. 

89.34 on the Fishscales = B+/4.5 stars; a rather cheesy but really well done Neo Prog-with-a-New Wave edge album that I highly recommend for your own perusal. 




21. SYNDONE Odysséas

Line-up / Musicians:
- Riccardo Ruggeri / lead vocals, lyrics
- Nik Comoglio / keyboards, composer & orchestration
- Francesco Pinetti / vibraphone, composer
With:
- Pino Russo / acoustic guitar, oud
- Sara Marisa Chessa / harp
- John Hackett / flute (4)
- Luca Biggio / alto sax
- Paolo Porta / tenor sax
- Gianni Virone / baritone sax
- Gianluca Scipioni / trombone
- Marco Braito / trumpet
- Marco Pierobon / trumpet
- Stefano Ammannati / tuba
- Nilo Caracristi / French horn
- Federico Marchesano / bass
- Marco Minnemann / drums
- Labirinto String Orchestra 
- Fabio Gurian / conductor

1. "Invocazione Alla Musa" (3:11) impressive musicianship on this Oriental-themed and styled song. Am I going to be listening to a Pucchini-like Turandot? Impressive keyboard display, great electric bass, and very supportive drums and vibes. No orchestration. (8.75/10)
 
2. "Il Tempo Che Non Ho" (5:33) very nice classical guitar opens this song. When vocalist Riccardo Ruggeri enters, it sounds like a lullaby. Violin joins to weave within Riccardo's singing--as does the guitar. Quite beautiful with wonderfully memorable melodies, chord changes, and orchestral string support. A top three song for me. (10/10) 

3. "Focus" (4:24) opens with a very Duke/ABACAB sound and feel. But then Riccardo enters singing in a very raspy, aggressive Broadway voice while banked horns and aggressive Hammond organ support the campy music. Pure stage theatric! Nice vibe solo over a brief Zeuhlish section in the third minute. (8.5/10)  

4. "Penelope" (4:44) oud and Riccardo's excellent Arabian vocalise open this one. At 0:50 solo piano takes over, playing a very Chopin-like nocturne until 2:10 when the oud returns and Riccardo sings a very impassioned, theatric lyric of love. Interesting and fresh! Sounds like Camelot's "If Ever I Would Leave You," only in Italian. (8.5/10)

5. "Circe" (2:31) bluesy lounge jazz with rhythm section providing solid backdrop for Hammond, vibes, and MiniMoog to take turns soloing. (4.25/5)

6. "Ade" (5:01) piano, bass, harp, and vibes take turns declaring their melodic contributions to the weave that follows before MiniMoog takes the lead. Then the keys, vibes and strings take over weaving it all together for Riccardo to sing over. The falsetto highs that he hits early on--just before the music turns more IL BALLETTO DI BRONZO/OSANNA/MUSEO ROSENBACH-like with its power chords and Hammond organ dominance. Still, the contribution and presence of the bass, strings, and vibes makes this one special, different. Very cool song! A top three for me. (10/10) 

7. "Poseidon" (2:21) Hammond intro, joined by cymbals, drums, and bass for a rapid-paced little romp. Vibes and piano also join in in the second minute, reigning it in and slowing it down slightly. ELP-like Tarkus theme in the final 30 seconds. (4/5)

8. "Nemesis" (5:10) vibes, Fender Rhodes, cymbals, harp, and breathy vocals open this one. Around 0:45 a bridge establishes entry to a more standard Broadway rock sound, but is alternated with a more spacious, tempered motif. Very LA COSCIENZA DI ZENO-sounding. Hammond and MiniMoog take turns in the lead during the instrumental section beginning at the end of the third minute. Nice Alessio Calandriello vocal--Riccardo really stretching his pipes. (8.75/10)

9. "La Grande Bouffe" (4:52) piano, harp, and Riccardo in the sedate first minute, which then morphs into a straighttime driving prog rocker. Side tangents right and left lead to some interesting and contrasting pathways--as if we are on a chase on foot, following someone through the nooks and crannies of an old Italian city at night. (8.75/10)

10. "Eros & Thanatos" (2:04) raunchy Hammond organ and militaristic drums open this one before bass and vocals enter, then a Hammond chord progression establishes the song's basic structure and flow as vibes, MiniMoog, and Riccardo take turns expression their emotions. (4.5/5)

11. "Vento Avverso" (3:43) theatric Broadway-like song with plaintive vocal from Riccardo. (8.75/10)

12. "Ελευθερια / Freedom" (1:47) slow, sensuous jazz vibes solo that returns to the Oriental themes from the album's opening. Could be a solo member of one of Steve Reich or Phillip Galss's ensembles. (4.5/5) 

13. "Daimones" (4:54) a richly textured, almost seductive palette over which Riccardo sings perhaps his finest vocal of the album. (I always get this song mixed up with Alessio Calandriello and La Coscienza di Zeno when it comes up in one of my playlist shuffles.) Great way to go out! (9/10)

Total time: 63:32

The drums!!

Some very polished (well produced) RPI with a story (Odysseus) and some music made most interesting for its full synth sound and the presence of tuned percussion (Francesco Pinetti on vibraphone) and horns throughout. The impassioned vocals unfortunately feel a little over-the-top (melodramatic) due, I am sure, to the fact that they are sung in Italian—which I do not understand. The music is sometimes jazzy, sometimes Broadway-esque, sometimes classical in its presentation. Perfect RPI. It is always well-polished and cleanly performed. For those of you enamored of the vocal talents of La Coscienza di Zeno’s Alessio Calandriello you will be well pleased with the ambitious offerings of Syndone’s Riccardo Ruggeri. Considering that Syndone was a one time solo project of Nik Comoglio, you have to say that he’s come a long way—and has gotten very good at finding great sidemen and guests for his projects (including drummer extraordinaire Marco Minnemann and flutist John Hackett). 

Favorite songs:  “Il tempo che non ho” (5:33) (9/10) and the finale, “Daimones” (4:54) (9/10).

Overall this is an admirably solid, well-conceived, and beautifully realized music. Definitely four stars. Maybe worth more. 

89.32 on the Fishscales = B+/4.5 stars; without question an excellent addition to any prog rocker's music collection.




22. KAYO DOT Coffins on Io

Toby Driver keeps on evolving. Perhaps more than any other artist . . . ever. Miles. Fripp. Genesis. Sylvian. Herbie. Mahavishnu John. Zorn. Ulver. Trying new styles, new personas, stretching himself instrumentally and compositionally, Toby Driver's Kayo Dot discography alone would compare favorably to any of the above shape-shifting artists--and Coffins on Io does not disappoint on that account. The much-mentioned Goth/glam-synth-pop sounds from the 1980s are absolutely present here (the over-long "Library Subterranean" [8:23] [17.5/20], the feel of the guitar chord sequence and vocal in the first two sections of "The Assassination of Adam"), but there is so much more. There is a haunting soundtrack jazziness to the saxophone-laden "Spirit Photography" (10:06) (19.5/20). And yet there are still vestiges of the Post Metal heaviness of previous Kayo Dot albums, such as on the second half of "The Assassination of Adam" (5:47) (7/10; a bit too grating for my ears), as well as some of the sensitivity and enjoyable melody-making of Toby's maudlin of The Well era ("Longtime Disturbance on the Miracle Mile" [4:07] [8/10]). Parts of "The Assassination of Adam," interestingly, also fit into the realm of psychedelia.

Two of my favorite three songs sound like they came straight out of the 80s. In the haunting "Offramp Cycle, Pattern 22" (9:25) (19/20) I hear bits and pieces of bands like DIF JUZ, TALK TALK, BLUE NILE, THE CURE, GENE LOVES JEZEBEL, NEW ORDER, DEPECHE MODE, ICEHOUSE, ROXY MUSIC, and even STEELY DAN (in the drumming). 

Despite its length, "The Mortality of Doves" (11:54) (22.5/25) has one of my favorite Toby Driver vocals of all-time. Though it is very heavily treated in reverb, it is his most consistently 'normal' vocal ever. It is also heavily steeped in similarities to the glam styles of 1980s Glam rockers like Brian Ferry, Ira Davies and Dave Gahan. And yet it is Toby Driver--his own fresh, new territory.
Where the song suffers, however, is in its lack of variation and 'development' over its twelve minute length.

"Spirit Photography" escapes being pigeon-holed in the 1980s umbrella due to its spaciousness and its jazzier drums (though 1990s TALK TALK does come to mind). The gentle central groove with its DICK PARRY-like breathy sax is quite reminiscent, to me, of the wonderfully soporific songs "Breathe" and "Us and Them" from PINK FLOYD's Dark Side of the Moon.

Still, this is, for me, the most impressive--and my favorite--Kayo Dot album since Choirs of the Eye. The others have been either too unpolished, too dark and depressing, or seeming undeveloped and without direction. While Toby's signature chunky, rolling bass remains central to every song, Coffins on Io has seen Toby & Co. take a definite turn down a "road less travelled by" other bands. Let's hope that it is the one that makes all the difference.

89.05 on the Fish scales = B=/4.5 Stars. One of the Best Albums of 2014.




23. JAKOB Sines

Flawless, sophisticated Post Rock from Australia.

Line-up / Musicians:
- Jeff Boyle / guitar,synth,samples 
- Maurice Beckett / bass 
- Jason Johnston / drums 
With: 
- Ben Knapp / piano (2) 
- Malcolm Struthers / double bass (2,4) 
- Rowan Prior / cello (2,4) 
- Andrew Thomson / viola (2,4) 
- Anne Loeser / violin (2,4) 
- Jonathan Tanner / violin (2,4) 
- Rebecca Struthers / violin (2,4) 
- Rhian Sheehan / strings arrangement (2,4)

Five star songs:  a soft, almost country/classical song due to its lavish strings arrangement, 2. "Emergent" (5:08) (9.5/10); a very catchy, melodic chord progression grows in a MONO way with tremolo guitars and great drumming before strings arrangement takes over the final third, 4. "Harmonia" (6:05) (9.5/10); atmospheric layers of guitars with insistent drums and bass, 1. "Blinded Them With Science" (6:57) (13.5/15); a spacious, spacey keyboard-filled soundscape with gently rolling tom play and bass lines builds gently, in a kind of ROBIN GUTHRIE-HAROLD BUDD way, 6. "Darkness" (5:37) (9/10), and; a really perfect soundscape with an awesome drum and bass play to go with the atmospheric guitars that flounders a bit in the second half--maybe didn't need to be this long, 5. "Resolve" (9:11) (18/20). 

Four star songs:  until the final two minutes, this rondo-like song is very formulaic in the standard PR tradition, 3. "Magna Carta" (6:15) (8.5/10) and the final song which sounds a bit like a slowed down, slightly edgier version of the first half of #3 "Magna Carta," 7. "Sines" (5:27) (7.5/10). 

88.82 on the Fishscales = 4.5 stars; B+; a near-masterpiece of progressive rock music.




24. FEM Sulla bolla di Sapone

With the drama and feel of a MEATLOAF album, the sound quality and musicianship are both excellent, the theatricity totally Italian. 

Line-up / Musicians:
- Massimo Sabbatini / lead vocals
- Paolo Colombo / electric, acoustic & 12-string guitars, backing vocals
- Alberto Citterio / piano, Rhodes, Hammond, Mellotron, synths (MiniMoog Voyager, Dave Smith Poly Evolver, Doepfer Dark Energy), glockenspiel, backing vocals
- Marco Buzzi / 4- & 5-string basses
- Emanuele Borsati / drums, percussion, timpani, glockenspiel, backing vocals

1. "Il Giardino delle Consuetudini" (5:12) (8.5/10)
2. "Microgen" (2:47) (8.75/10)
3. "Microgen (Parte 2)" (3:05) (8/10)
4. "Il Mondo Bianco Opaco" (2:32) nice piano & orchestra interlude (4.5/5)
5. "Consapevolezza" (2:41) (8.25/10)
6. "Incontro con i Saponiani" (2:06) (5/5)
7. "Nella Città" (6:15) (8.75/10)
8. "Il Signore dei Pensanti" (5:25) (8.5/10)
9. "Processo alla Verità" (5:18) (8.25/10)
10. "Riflessioni" (2:55) (5/5)
11. "Il Peso della Conoscenza" (4:56) Sounds quite as if it could come from a LA COSCIENZA DI ZENO album. A top three song for me. (9.25/10)
12. "Un Viaggio Lungo un Istante" (4:02) A cool synth-heavy instrumental. Another top three. (9/10)
13. "Reviviscenza" (2:51) Another instrumental--with great fretless bass, drums and synth leads. The other top three song. (9.25/10)
14. "Ritorno al Giardino" (5:57) beautiful if a little contrived and melodramatic. Very polished. Like a MYSTERY song. (9.5/10)
15. "E il Mondo Scoppierà" (4:13) again, country mates (and label mates) LA COSCIENZA DI ZENO comes to mind as I listen to this one. (8.25/10)

Total Time: 60:15

88.70 on the Fishscales = B+/4.5 stars; a near-masterpiece of dramatic Italian progressive rock music. Would that the whole album were as strong as the second half. 




25. HOMÍNIDO Estirpe Lítica

This is an amazing collection of diversified songs each of very complex and unpredictable structures and moods. From the very first listen I was literally blown away by the power, the complex weaves of the high quality musicianship, the raw power of the female vocals, and the broad spectrum of sounds and styles used by this group--in each and every song! The contrasts between song--from each and every song to the next--is incredible! An album that simply must be heard to be believed. 

Line-up / Musicians:
 - Francisco Martín / Bass 
- Rodrigo González Mera / Drums, percussion 
- Pablo Cárcamo / Guitar, keyboards
- Eliana Valenzuela / Vocals
Guest musicians:
- Cristopher Hernández / Trumpet
- Benjamín Ruz / Violin

1. "Simun" (6:04) opens with a very jazzy drum, bass and electric guitar interplay with singer extraordinaire Eliana Valenzuela's voice calmly and confidently providing the glue to hold it all together. Singing in Spanish, Eliana's (somewhat Shakira-like) voice is truly amazing. Her confidence and control are extraordinary--evoking such powerful emotion so effortlessly. The song definitely turns rocker--even metalish. Awesome opener! (9.125/10)

2. "Ciudades de Piedra" (5:21) opens with some gently strummed electric guitar jazz chords. Then the full band kicks in--joined by a haunting violin in the background--while Eliana again toys with our emotions with a sultry vocal. The virtuosic drumming on display is remarkable! So fluid and clear! And fine performances on electric guitar and bass--bringing in quite a Latin flavor to this polished rocker. The drum and heavy guitar interplay in the final minute are wonderful! (8.875/10)

3. "Insano Devenir" (4:58) is a rocker with a little harder edge and less development or signatory sound than I'd like. Maybe that's why it's called something like "becoming insane." Until the singing begins it could well be a heavy metal song from the 80s. (8.5/10)

4. "Desde las cumbres al mer" (5:00) begins as an instrumental build around a two chord electrified acoustic guitar three note arpeggio. Then suddenly at the two minute mark it burst forth as a very cool, very emotional violin-accompanied vocal. (9.125/10)

5. "Shalagram Shila" (7:16) is a Indo-Raga influenced piece that I adore. Great use of voice and electric guitar and violin. (13.75/15)

6. "Eterno retorno" (8:43) opens like a jazz-period SANTANA piece from his jazzy-jam period (Caravanserai to Moonflower) but develops as so much more! Into Omar Lopez-Rodriguez (The Mars Volta) territory and beyond! The horns are so awesome contrasted with the blaring guitar and roiling percussion interplay! And what drum and bass play! Outstanding jam! (18.25/20)

7. "Cabeza de Piedra" (4:30) starts so powerfully--almost metal-like--until the song settles into support for the A Section of Eliana's vocal. The chorus finds the music returning to the awesome heaviness--including the amazing power that emanates from Eliana's voice! Despite all this the song kind of misses something. It's like a Stevie Nicks song gone over the top. (Except for the amazing drumming.) (8.5/10)

8. "Mi roca interna" (3:57) opens with some percussive instrument that sounds folk-traditional and develops into a vehicle to accompany an amazingly controlled and sensitive vocal from Ms. Valenzuela. Awesome atmospheric keys and volume-controlled guitar play accompanying the vocal. (8.875/10)

9. "Adoquines queretanos" (5:11) opens with some ominous electrified acoustic guitar and ultra-deep bass tones before the song bursts into what sounds like an electrified folk melody. The traditional folk feel persists throughout this song--with an awesomely delicate instrumental collective occurring in the fourth and fifth minutes. (8.5/10)

10. "Estirpe lítica" (6:34) opens with some awesome slow volume pedaled electric guitar chords before the song bursts into full metal. Again the drums are really on display here. Great rhythmic interplay and weave among the drums, bass, and guitarist. At 1:30 when Eliana comes in things calm down--but this is only a feint as 20 seconds later everybody kicks it back into full drive. Eliana is kick-ass powerful yet sultry. How does she do this?! (8.75/10)

11. "Salar" (3:31) opens with the sounds of seaside gulls before hand-held box & tongue marimba, muted trumpet solo over hand percussion and beautiful, sensitive acoustic guitar strumming and picking. Beautiful relaxing song. (9/10)

12. "Magma" (8:26) is a wonderful Latin song sounding very much like LAGARTIJA's "Particelle" except for the fuzzed vocals and finger-tapped guitar play during the choruses. It even has some heavier, almost-Zeuhl sounding parts (instrumental sections beginning at 2:50, 4:30 and 6:26). Really a masterful song--not too heavy, nor too jazzy--more like UNIVERSAL TOTEM ORCHESTRA with a little Hendrix or Clapton thrown over the top. (18/20)

A powerful collection of intricately composed and virtuosically performed songs.

88.45 on the Fish scales = B+/4.5 stars; a near-masterpiece of progressive rock music. One of the best surprises of the year.




26. DISTORTED HARMONY Chain Reaction

An intelligent heavy prog with moderated use of the elements that often make metal music too abrasive for my senses. In this I would compare them to Tool, Karnivool, Proghma-C, and even Haken and Muse in their ability to salvage sensitivity and melody within their music.


1. “Every Time She Smiles” (6:46) Stylistically and vocally this song almost could have come off of FREDDEGREDDE’s Brighter Skies album. It even has quite a few attributes of the music coming from Indie-pop band COLDPLAY or maybe MUSE. Nice. (13.5/15) 

2. “Children of Red” (5:08) There is a heavier, more metallic musical foundation to this one, yet their are still parts (mostly vocally) that remind me of COLDPLAY—at least until the growl-vocals at the end of the third minute. Then it reverts back to the more Indie-pop style choral vocals. Back to machine gun kick drum-led metal sound before fading delicately. A bit incongruous. (7/10)

3. “Misguided” (8:30) opens with some layered, multi-insturmental presentation of an engaging melodic riff before settling into a song that sounds straight from HAKEN’s Vision album. Then around 1:35 a cool multiple chord bridge takes us into another FREDDEGREDDE-like section. The first exposition of the chorus at 2:20 reminds me of KARNIVOOL. A nice FROST*-like instrumental midsection ends with some awesome lead guitar blending into screaming voice (treated) and keyboard before returning to the chorus. This one is a keeper. (18/20)  

4. “Nothing (But the Rain) (2:16) is a very nice, melodic keyboard- and industrial sound-based instrumental interlude that builds on a repetitive chord progression into a quick climax. (5/5)

5. “As One” (5:48) begins softly with treated guitar and keys before the full band comes kicking in. At the one minute mark a “normal” vocal enters over some straightforward though heavier Indie rock sound. Chorus and later vocal sections are heavier and treated with effects. The number of tempo and style changes is again reminiscent of “quick change artist” FREDDEGREDDE, though the music is more similar to HAKEN. Cool song. (9/10)

6. “Hollow” (6:07) opens with some gentle, emotional, slowly strummed electric guitar and piano chords. How deceiving! All hell breaks loose at 0:44 with a creeping, haunting insistent heavy sound. The “I am the wave…” section only adds to this unsettled feeling. A very cool song with all kinds of sonic incidentals to surprise and/or distract you. Super high pitch fret-tapping guitar solo blasts its way in at 3:44. Wow! The three sections of the chorus return but with all balls out—to great effect. Great finish à la PROGHMA-C. (10/10)

7. “As You Go” (3:12) sounds like a nice MOON SAFARI or RPWL song. A nice break from the heaviness before (and to follow). (8/10)    

8. “Natural Selection” (5:14) begins with an aggression that belies its melodic vocal sections. Kind of LINCOLN PARK-like in its two-facedness (even the “it doesn’t matter” lyric!) The band seems like it’s kind of draping a couple songs together into one. Again, FROST*s Experiments in Mass Appeal come to mind here:  too much being compacted into five minutes. (7/10)

9. “Methylene Blue” (7:43) opens with a synth arpeggio repeating itself. Gentle almost whispered vocal enters soon. At 1:25 the voice moves up an octave as other instruments begin to join in. At 2:10 a piano-based section takes over for a bit. Gentle NOSOUND-like treated vocal begins. Very pretty section. Very sensitive and emotional—dreamy. At 3:50 the full band kicks in for “Praise the sun before she goes away” lyric. Electric guitar solo bridges between another louder, more aggressive section. Then, at the five minute mark, a drum-led staccato odd timed section ensues. Wonderful to hear the band weave their way in and out of this rhythmically complicated section. Just as suddenly it all drops out and we are restored to the piano arpeggios beneath the plaintive treated voice singing “Methylene blue. I am sorry for killing you” over a few time till the song’s end. Great tune! Feels like it should be accompanied by a sci-fi video (like KARNIVOOL’s awesome “We Are.”) (15/15)   

Probably my favorite prog metal/heavy prog album of the year (I eventually find one or two). Fully worth four stars and more. Excellent instrumentalists playing some awesomely complex and yet engaging and beautiful music—all topped off with a great vocalist. Their future is bright! I, for one, will be watching!

88.09 on the Fish scales = 4.5 stars, a near-masterpiece of progressive rock music.




27. CIRRUS BAY The Search for Joy

This is a very pleasant collection of pretty, melodic songs. Usually based in piano or strummed guitar, the songs provide strong foundations for the steady singing of Sharon Acle. There is an undeniable similarity to the music of 1970s prog heroes RENAISSANCE--though the instrumentalists are not as accomplished or as steeped in the traditions of classical music as John Tout or Terry Dunford. I've found this album much more accessible than their previous release, I feel the production is still lagging in the quality that one hears from modern musicians. Most of the time the sound and song stylings and moods evoked by In Search for Joy actually have more similarity to the "flower child" music of the late 60s and early 70s--bands like America and The Association (and, I have to admit,  Stereolab) playing beautiful songs by composers like Jimmy Webb, Burt Bacharach, Todd Rundgren or Gregg Alexander. Listening to In Search for Joy is like taking a leisurely stroll through the park on lovely summer day. 

     My beef with Cirrus Bay is that, in my opinion, the band has still not yet realized its tremendous potential. All of the musicians are playing it too safe, too straight and narrow, not enough adventurousness and craziness. This is more a like a search for Joy when instead they've stumbled into a permanent state of bliss. Sharon has a beautiful voice--so peaceful and calming. Bill writes very catchy melodies with supportive chord progressions and his keyboard and guitar play is competent. The drumming is solid but metronomic. But where is the vim and vigor, risk and reckless abandon that makes one reach the high joys of ecstasy?

Favorite songs:  5. "Waking Wild" (8:01) (13.5/15); 8. "Learning to Fly" (12:02) (22.5/25); 4. "Out of the Box" (9:28) (18/20), and; 1. "Song of the Wind" (8:58) (especially the final three minutes) (18.5/20); 6. the five-part instrumental suite, "A Door Into Yesterday" (7:53) (13.5/15)

Also good: 2. "Cotton Skies" (4:50) (8.25/10); 3. "Me and Wokara" (7:47) (despite its tedious lyrics) (12/15), and; 7. "The August Zone" (4:30) (thanks to the do-da-do/ba-ba-ba-ba harmony vocals) (8.25/10).

88.08 on the Fish scales = B+/4.5 stars; a near-masterpiece of progressive rock music.




28. IAMTHEMORNING Belighted

While not as breathtakingly fresh as 2012's stunning debut, ~, Belighted is a step forward for this young duo of Russian songwriters. With Belighted iamthemorning steps into modern recording studio, collaborates with seasoned prog rock musicians, and lays down a more diverse palette of songs. What for me (and other reviewers) has really caught my attention is the growth and maturation of singer Marjana Semkina. Her delivery of the lyrics adds such a powerful emotional depth and 'heaviness' as to in effect upgrade what could be fairly run-of-the-mill songs into powerful masterpieces. I know of very few singers in progressive rock music--past or present--who have this kind of effect on a song's overall impact. In particular, "Romance," "The Simple Story" (3:30) (9/10), "Gerda" (4:52) (9/10) and "Reprise of Light/No Light" (5:17) (8/10) and the first and last "Intermission" benefit most dramatically from Ms. Semkina's growth--though no song graced with her vocal touch fails to engage and win over the listener. I have to agree, however, with other reviewers that I think it an overall damaging flaw of the album that Marjana's vocals are not mixed more prominently into the forefront.

The theme of having "Intermission" songs between most of the full-length, vocalized songs continues from ~ though here there are only five to work their magic between the ten full-length songs (most of which are presented in pairs). There is a difference on Belighted as the Intermissions are not so folk/neoclassical oriented. They are more like sound experiments, each showcasing a different instrument:  Marjana's dreamy voice, guitar, piano & waves, cello & piano, and strings and voice, respectively. Each, in turn, is treated with various and sundry sound engineering effects. 

Again, I can't say that this album has hit me with the same kind of power as their debut--but ~ was so fresh and unexpected. Belighted comes at you with Marjana's now familiar voice and a greater variety of backup and stylings, though Gleb's extraordinary piano work and strings arrangements are still quite present and essential to most every song. I am quite fascinated and taken with the five Intermissions, but there are two rather delicate piano-centric songs that don't lift off as well as my hopes and expectations desire despite Gleb's extraordinary talent ("Crowded Corridors" [8:44] [8/10] and "Os Lunatum"[4:32] [8/10]). I think I'm waiting for Marjana's input to take the songs to another level, to a some kind of soaring crescendo. These are by no means bad songs--and are intricately crafted pieces of beauty. They just could have been . . . more. And then there are two songs that simply don't click with me: "The Howler" (3:57) (7/10) and "Romance" (3:02) (7/10).

I agree that this is no sophomore slump. Belighted is a collection of beautiful, intricately crafted songs. Gleb and Marjana both display extraordinary growth, artistry, and skill. I want to give these shining young stars of modern music five stars but I think--I hope--that there is more, even better, music to come.

Five star songs: "To Human Misery," "The Simple Story," "Gerda," the Kate Bush-like "5/4, "K.O.S." (6:06) (9/10), and all of the "Intermissions."

88.0 on the Fish scales = 4.5 star album that, though a near-masterpiece, unfortunately, leaves room for improvement. 




29. HUMANA PROG Flori, Frutti, Farfalle

The music from Flori, Frutti, Farfalle (link to Italian promotional video) is an unusual musical ride in that its pop-folk-flavored music is acoustic guitar based. But, when confronted with the story of the origins of these songs (all penned by MAXOPHONE's original lyricist, Paolo Farina, in 1972-3 and all, until now, previously unreleased), one can understand.
1. "Fiori, frutti, farfalle" (20:00) begins with a beautiful, HARMONIUM-like first few minutes. The gorgeous tapestry of picked acoustic guitar, violin, harpsichord, flute, and hand percussives weave their magic for the first 2:25. Then Paolo's vocal introduces a new section--which is soon backed by a more traditional rock band (including full drum kit and electric bass, guitars, and synths.)
     At 4:35 things slow back down into a dreamy, wordless vocal passage in which Paolo sings in his upper registers while a violin plays below him an octave. At 6:05 a section of full-out rock ensues (think "Sweet Home, Alabama"). The vocal, however, continues to anchor the music firmly in 1970s RPI. Then a very surprising turn occurs at 7:21 in which a new section begins with strumming acoustic guitars backing a bird-like call and mokingbird-like echo response by flute. Gorgeous. The final 30 seconds of this 'duel' is an all-out war of screaming, jamming instruments. Awesome.
     At 9:07 begins the most majestic section of the song. First Paolo's beautiful vocal backed with electric piano & organ, then at 10:08, we are introduced to one of the most beautiful melody lines to have ever graced these music-loving ears. This melody from Heaven is at first introduced by a quiet flute, and then taken over by a gorgeous violin backed by an organ-lead rock combo. Even as Paolo and the band return to some previously exposed vocal melodies and band structures, the 'divine melody' continues to maintain its distractive presence. Even at 13:44, when the songs tempo is doubled, the violin-carried melody continues to run away as Paolo and his band seem to give chase.
     At 14:44 a JAN AKKERMAN-like lead electric guitar takes over with an  incredible  two-part solo (think of the "Tommy" section of Moving Wave's "Eruption"--the second of which maestros JEFF BECK or CORRADO RUSTICI would be proud). Gut-wrenchingly emotional!
     At 16:44, a kind of laid back whole group recapitulation of some of the song's high points ensues. There is a great call and response section happening here between Paolo and his background chorus.
     At 17:49 things wind down with a slower, minor-keyed return to the song's opening acoustic guitar arpeggio, some gorgeous floating flute work, and this time with the addition of a bluesy lead acoustic guitar jamming along. SERGIO LATTUADA (MAXOPHONE)'s harpsichord play joins in to take the song to its "Cinema Show"-like conclusion. This is the best prog epic I've heard from a 2014 release. (40/40)

2. "Bianco, Rosso, Verde" (3:51) rhythmically strummed acoustic guitar, hand drums, and spacey synths over which singer-songwriter Paolo Farina and his background vocalists sing a light, bouncy pop melody. (7/10)

3. "Cerce in Te" (3:27) opens with a tanpura and santoor giving it a Middle eastern sound. But when an AMERICA-like acoustic guitar riff joins in--and hand drums and flute--the song takes off in another direction. (7/10)

4. "Mamma Pubblicita" (3:50) acoustic guitar and hand percussives accompany Paolo on this pleasant jaunt into Kindergarten. Later male b box, jazzy flute, and second guitar join in on the storytelling. (7/10)

5. "Nel prato più verde" (4:47) is a favorite in spite of the almost exact lifting of AMERICA's chords and strumming from their song "Three Roses" (from their 1972 eponymously titled debut album). Luckily, Paolo has chosen to use his own vocal melody (and, hopefully, lyrical content). Hand percussives, airy flute, and acoustic lead guitar help out on this one. (8/10)

6. "Ti chiedo scusa" (2:25) Both the acoustic guitar work and vocal on this one are a little grittier in the A Section--which I really like. The chorus, however, finds Paolo returning to an upbeat and very catchy melody (begging his pardon?) Paolo is helped out here by tambourine, violin and second guitar. (9/10)

7. "La ballata degli amici perduti" (5:00) begins with a lovely, slow folk delivery of guitar picking/arpeggiating with the accompaniment of a string quartet and hand percussives. The wonderfully delicious intro is followed by an equally wonderful vocal in Paolo's most plaintive tones. This song reminds me strongly of some of the best work of the legendary Jacques Brel. (9/10)

87.0 on the Fish scales = B/four stars; a wonderful prog folk addition to Prog World.

 Overall this album is really a very pleasant if sometimes innocuous listen. The highlights being, of course, the prog epic that opens the album, and its two final songs. The near perfection of the album's epic title song alone cause me to rate this album at least a four star value. The good but not-all-great pop-folk songs that make up the remainder of the album make it impossible for me in good conscience to rate Fiori, Frutti, Farfalle full five star masterpiece. But I want to! This is an album well worth hearing!



The Rankings from 2014


1. BENT KNEE Shiny Eyed Babies
2. SEVEN IMPALE City of the Sun
3. ANTOINE FAFARD Ad Perpetuum
4. LATTE E MIELE Passio Secundum Mattheum - The Complete Work 
5. KANT FREUD KAFKA No tengas miedo
6. TIGER MOTH TALES Cocoon
7. ELECTRIC ORANGE Volume 10
8. DAVE BAINBRIDGE Celestial Fire
9. MOTORPSYCHO Behind The Sun
10. SYD ARTHUR Sound Mirror

11. AALTO Ikaro
12. 
JERZY ANTCZAK Ego, Georgius
13. PINGVINORKESTERN Push
14. THE CONTORTIONIST Language
15. UT GRET Ancestor's Tales
16. THE MERCURY TREE Countenance
17. FAUN Luna
18. MONO The Last Dawn
19. MAGIC BUS Transmission from Sogmore's Garden
20. MARGIN Psychedelic Teatime

21. SYNDONE Odysséas
22. KAYO DOT Coffins on Io
23. JAKOB Sines
24. FEM Sulla bolla di Sapone
25. DISTORTED HARMONY Chain Reaction
26. CIRRUS BAY In Search of Joy
27. IAMTHEMORNING Belighted
28. HOMÍNIDO Estirpe Lítica
29. HUMANA PROG Flori, Frutti, Farfalle
30. ACCORDO DEI CONTRARI AdC

31. TAYLOR WATSON (A)Synchronous
32. DAVE BAINBRIDGE Celestial Fire
33. DREAM THE ELECTRIC SLEEP Heretics
34. KING GIZZARD & THE LIZARD WIZARD I’m in Your Mind Fuzz  
35. NOMADS OF HOPE Breaking the circles for a while
36. DEAN WATSON Fantasizer
37. PHI Now the Waves of Sound Remain
38. FREDDEGREDDE Brighter Skies
39. AGORÀ Ichinen
40. ATOMIC APE Swarm

Honorable Mentions:
41. 3CORVUS STONE II
42. SUNN O))) and ULVER Terrestrials
43. ALEX CARPANI 4 Destinies






Saturday, December 10, 2016

2014, Part 4: Other albums worth checking out for your selves

Below you will find albums from the hundreds of 2014 releases that I happened to hear that impressed me enough to collect them for possible future review but which, ultimately, failed to hold enough interest for me to want to invest the extra time and effort necessary to write a proper review. Meritorious music should be shared--even if it is not to my own personal stylistic liking. I understand that everyone else has unique and differing likes and preferences to those of mine, thus I "unleash" these albums to the general public with the recommendation that you check them out for yourselves. Good luck! and Happy listening! I hope you find some gems here for your own music listening pleasure!





FACTOR BURZACO III

Another confounding yet mesmerizing adventure into the Freak House of avant-garde composer Abel Gilbert, this one does not disappoint. Once again the listener is accompanied by vocalist Carolina Restuccia as your guide through the aural maze that is a Factor Burzaco album. I have to admit the awe and amazement of hearing an FB album has passed over me, but this album for some reason seems more comfortable, more coherent, more cohesive, and more familiar, which then translates into a more comfortable and interesting listening experience than the previous albums. Someday I will do an experiment by listening to all three albums back-to-back-to-back to try to get a feel for the different effects they have on me, but for now, let's suffice it to say that Abel & Co. have done it again: a masterpiece of thought-demanding, sanity-questioning, boundary-pushing music.




NORTH SEA OSCILLATION The Third Day






THE MERLIN BIRD Chapter and Verse

Brilliant concept: combining mediaeval and Baroque vocal and instrumental traditions with the modern prog world, but pulled off with minimal attention to sound engineering and other performance and production details. Chapter and Verse is an album that feels too scattered, unfocused, lacking cohesion and consistency--as well as lacking good production--but I LOVE the concept of blending medieval, Renaissance, and sacred church choral music stylings with both ancient acoustic and modern rock instrumentation while often using prog rock song stylings.
     I wish the singing was of a higher quality. The bands attention to and/or budget for recording/engineering needs great improvement. Many of the songs sound as if they were recorded in one take with the full band and no engineer and then left that way!

Favorite songs:  the anthemic, "Chapter and Verse" (2:56) (9/10); the pretty little instrumental, "In Dreams of Egypt" (1:23) (9/10); the beautiful harpsichord accompanied vocal of Shakira Searle on "Of Night and Day" (4:59) (8/10); the gorgeous Sergio Leone/Mediterranean-sounding instrumental "The Word That Was" (3:30) (9/10); the troubadour style story-song, "Unto Rome" (4:17) (9/10), and; "Another Told Story" (7:17) (9/10).

A band with a great idea and awesome but as-yet-unrealized potential.
  




ARLEKIN Disguise Serenades 


Throughout the listening experience of Disguise Serenade I was flooded with reminders of 1980's one off wonder BABYLON. It's that kind of sound, that kind of engineering, that kind of showman vocals, that kind of musicianship, that kind of naiveté. Like Babylon's eponymously titled album, I like this album very much.

1. "The Lost Path" (8:26) opens with quite a dramatic feel, with the incredible emotion packed into the vocal like Peter Gabriel or Matthew Parmenter or BABYLON's Doroccus. After the vocal opening The music takes over in more of a DISCIPLINE and then PINK FLOYD way. Excellent emotional lead guitar play with perfect band support make this song a sheer masterpiece--that is until the bouncy 80s drum beat and chord progression that takes over at the 6:20 mark. During this section the vocal matches less well. Excellent guitar play almost saves this song. (9/10)

2. "Dance of The Jester" (8:47) has so much of a Peter Gabriel-era Genesis feel to it. The dramatic vocal 'storyteller' presentation is so much like Peter Gabriel's--and Fish's--'in character' approach to performance vocals. However, the song on its own has nothing really new to add to the prog lexicon.(8/10)

3. "Romance" (5:00) is a bare-bones blues-based song almost like a DOORS song--in which, unfortunately, the vocal is rather weak and almost over the top in its dramatic affect. Again this song seems to lack anything new or fresh to make it very interesting. It might even be called dull. (7/10) 

4. "In This Puzzled Roundabout" (15:04) begins very powerfully like a classic DISCIPLINE song with some very simple instrumental support to the dramatic vocal performance. The spaciousness in the instrumental support is perfect for this vocal opening. At 2:05 an awesome instrumental section ensues in which an eerie keyboards solos while the background instruments build in intensity and volume. A minute later the rhythm section kicks it up to overdrive for thirty seconds before a gap of stillness opens the way for a very GENESIS sounding organ-led section. At 5:00 the vocal--now doubled up--returns with a strong melody to mirror the guitar arpeggios preceding and following it. This guitar-vocal cycle repeats a couple times before a brief TONY BANKSian solo bridges the way into a heavier almost BLACK SABBATH-section begins at the seven minute mark. Organ and then very fluid electric guitar solo lift us out of the dirge and back into the more upbeat realm of Foxtrot-era GENESIS--complete with Steve Hackett-like guitar work. Suddenly, at 10:05, a militaristic drum style takes us into a kind of "Get 'em out by Friday" section--except an awesome wah-treated guitar solo plays over the top. Awesome section! All too brief as at 11:52 the organ again leads the listener back into GENESIS/BABYLON land. Definitely my favorite song on the album--an "epic" for the ages. (9/10)

On progstreaming.com the album has a fifth song that is not listed in the liner notes of the official album release. 
  5(??). "Old Father East" (20:02) on progstreaming this song comes up as a 20 minute song but with a six minute gap of silence after the first instrumental song ends at the 3:59 mark, a second song begins at the ten minute mark--and it turns out to be an alternate (demo?) version of song #2, "Dance of The Jester."

Overall there is something lacking in the recording/engineering/mixing of this album that is again quite reminiscent of early Genesis and the 1980 Babylon release. Is this intentional? I do not know. But the musician's performances--including the vocals--are quite good and usually quite engaging. The album's two bookends, "The Lost Path" and "In This Puzzled Roundabout" are quite good.

82.5 on the Fish scales = a solid four star album; an excellent addition to any prog lover's music collection.




MY BROTHER THE WIND Once There Was A Time When Space and Time were One

This is a more diverse mix of improvisatinoal jams caught on tape than the previous studio album. Unfortunately, several of the songs fail to either engage me from the or else they fail to develop enough during their play to keep my interest (I can only listen to improvisational soloing for so long); the background grooves remain too static or else do too little of interest to gain my notice. (Even with close headphones listening.) The increased use of Mellotron is amazing wherever and whenever it is used, especially on “Garden of Delights,” “Thomas Mera Gartz,” and “Epilogue.”

Song #2, “Song of Innocence, Part 1” opens wonderfully with a guitar sound like THE AMAZING or Jesse Colin Young’s “Get Together”—which continues to wend and weave throughout the duration of the song. The drum play is quite enjoyable but the bass is very boring. This is unfortunately an example of both the strengths and weaknesses of this album: some great tracks are accompanied by some very boring parts.
  
Favorite songs:  the addictively groovin’ “Epilogue” (4:19) 10/10; the hard-driving “Into The Cosmic Halo” (6:40) (9/10); “Song of Innocence, Parts 1 & 2” (8:10), and the title song.   

A nice listen but nowhere as mind-blowing or engaging as I Wash My Soul in the Stream of Infinity. Three and a half stars. 




A SECRET RIVER Colours of Solitude

Colours of Solitude is a collection of melodic, catchy if rather simple, neo prog much in the same vein as 2012's Speak by I AND THOU. The delicate vocals are beautifully rendered by founding member and bassist, Andreas Ålöv. He sounds a bit like David Crosby, Chris Flynn from ART IN AMERICA, and the lead vocalist and creator of THE PSYCHEDELIC ENSEMBLE. The drums and bass playing are solid, the guitars quite nice (especially the jazzier sounds) but the keyboard work is the most interesting and enjoyable to tune into. Yes, Björn Sandberg is a real find--the "final piece of the puzzle" as the band itself says.

Favorites: the ANT PHILLIPS/MIKE RUTHERFORD-sounding opener, "Blinding Light" (5:59) (8/10); 4. "Colours of Solitude" (5:32) (8/10); the delicate and sensitive, 5. "Are You Coming With Me" (5:14) (9/10), and the pop-jazzy 6. "A Place to Start" (7:41) (8/10).

Nothing earth-shattering or particularly groundbreaking, just nice, pretty music. 3.5 stars.



UTOPIANISTI II

Another submission of quirky avant music that people are allowing to be included into the "progressive rock" genre with similarities to Pingvorinkestern, Humble Grumble, UneXpect, Atomic Ape, Major Parkinson, Knifeworld, and even the modern Univers Zero--though Utopianisti is much more closely aligned to true jazz, if of the avant-garde stylings. All these groups are very talented, very tight, and very entertaining. But, gone are the smooth, slow developing songs--especially the long-playing "epics." Now seems to be the new era of staccato, stop and start, avant-garde and theatric production. It's as if today's bands are trying to pack nine minutes of music, story, and emotion into four minute songs. Is this the new prog?

My favorite songs include: "Pohjola" (8:09); "Bisphenol A" (4:11); "The Sundays of Love and Peace" (5:14);"Kynttiloitakin Vain Yksi" (6:16), and my favorite; "U.L.J.C. The Unnecessary Leftover Jam Compilation" (9:38).

A masterpiece of modern avant-jazz composition and performance. Upbeat, quirky, and unusual. However, this is just not my favorite kind of music.

3.5 stars rated up for quality.



MOE-TAR Entropy of the Century

A collection of quirky, intelligent and delightfully melodic "avant-pop" songs that are, in my humble opinion, distracted from by the highly engaging vocals of the uber-talented singer, songwriter and founder Moorea ("Moe") Dickason. I find it quite challenging to really listen to the music because of the draw of the intelligent song lyrics and their delivery style (which does, however, at times, get a bit repetitive and 'old'). Clearly a group of very talented musicians led by a duo with a clear and mature vision, this is highly recommended as another polished example of this new modern era of "poppy prog."

Favorite songs:  "Where the Truth Lies" (4:49) (9/10); "Confectioner's Curse" (3:02) (8/10); "Entropy of the Century" (2:52) (8/10); "Welcome to the Solar Flares" (3:03) (8/10), and; "The Unknowable" (6:26) (8/10).





THE BLUE SHIP The Executioner's Tale





UNIVERS ZERO Phosphorescence





SWANS To Be Kind



MAJOR PARKINSON Twilight Cinema

This music would probably be very entertaining to see live--kind of like a Sweeny Todd barrel house Broadway musical--but I'm not sure how progressive this is. I guess it's not unlike the work of Humble Grumble or Nemo or even UneXpect, but, I'm unconvinced. More like DeVotchka (which is a great band but not a prog band), or THE CURE in their early years, with a kind of LEONARD COHEN/LON CHANEY as its lead singer (And DIDO for its female counterpart). While there are certainly rock and even prog elements and influences to make this creation what it is, the result, to my ears, is still little more than the recording of a Broadway play. Or the next Rocky Horror Picture Show (which, again, is not considered a prog album.) Interesting how this kind of Euro-creep soundtrack music is creeping more and more into modern progressive rock. Atomic Ape, Utopianisti, Pingvorinkestern, and Major Parkinson are four that I've discovered so far. All very talented, very tight, very entertaining. No epics or smooth, slow developing songs. All staccato, stop and start, avant-garde and theatric. Humble Grumble, UneXpect, It's as if today's bands are trying to pack nine minutes of music, story, and emotion into four minute songs. Is this the new 
prog?

Favorite songs: "Beaks of Benevola" (4:27) (10/10), "Impermanence" (4:25) (9/10), and the title song (5:44) (8/10).

Cool stuff, lively and entertaining, but not anything I'll come back to--nor deserving, IMO, of a place here on PA.




SLEEPMAKESWAVES Love of Cartography

I've been listening to this one for a while. I've been having trouble pinpointing just what it is that makes me like this album less than their previous release, 2011's ...and so we destroyed everything, which I love. I think I've finally got it.
     Most of the sounds and weaves used in the songs of Love of Cartography are far simpler, far more melody-oriented and less filled with the subtle keyboard and computer generated "layers" beneath and between the main chords and melodies of. The songs on Love of Cartography fall too easily into the bin of "Post Rock for the masses", whereas those of ...and so we destroyed everything each possessed so many delightfully unexpected twists and turns to keep me fully engaged throughout. The band's intimate and idiosyncratic touch to each song of ..and so we destroyed everything was so magical and so interesting that I feel that I could practically feel the joy and enthusiasm these guys were having in the recording and mixing rooms while making that album. I do not feel the same transferral of energy here. As a matter of fact, I feel myself 'tuning out' at some point during almost every song of Love of Cartography. The guitar chords are strummed more aggressively, played with more distortion, and recorded more loudly, and they feel more rehearsed and more methodical, less free-wheeling and spontaneous. Also, what were subtly layered beneath and within the mix before are now right up front and in your face. I can still feel emotion--especially in the solos, but everything else feels so . . . 'by the book.' Are the band members focusing more on composition and the mental side of their music--trying to produce a "perfect, polished" album?
     Is this just an example of the dreaded "sophomore slump" or is this the more mature band exhibiting the "true" direction that they'd like their music to take? Don't get me wrong, this is a collection of fine song. They are incredibly well produced, but they come straight at you more in the vein of a band like MASERATI than that of a synth-generated GYBE as their previous album had exhibited (at least, potentially).
     While ...and so we destroyed everything felt new and fresh--like a new great hope for the potentially for growth and 'progress' within the Post Rock subgenre, Love of Cartography feels like good ole Post Rock. Nice stuff for Post Rock enthusiasts. Nothing very new or exciting for the rest of the world.

Favorite songs:  the gentle trip-hoppy-turns-rock anthem 10. "Your Time Will Come Again" (8:56); the gorgeous yet simple melodies of 9. "Something Like Avalanches" (5:30); the PINK FLOYD- and MASERATI-influenced 4. "Emergent" (8:28); the straight on power of 2. "Traced in Constellations" (4:37), and; 5. "Great Northern" (4:58).
 
3.5 star effort rounded down for disappointment factor.



MONO Rays of Darkness

Companion release to The Last DawnRays of Darkness is really, at 35 minutes in length, almost an EP—though in 1960-70 time it qualifies as a full album. This album is by all admissions and intentions a much darker, more depressing album than its companion. 

1. “Recoil, Ignite” (13:19) unfortunately for these ears, contains a very James Bond-like theme in the main melody of its first section (first seven minutes) which, at this pace and in this style, just doesn’t work for me. The theme gets reconfigured a bit, enough, for the middle section to make the experience somewhat better, but this one still never gets inside me and grabs me. And then the ‘Bond theme’ returns around 9:30 to spoil it all for me again. The heavier eleventh and twelfth minute also do more to distract me with thoughts of The Beatles’ “A Day in the Life” or “She’s So Heavy” and other stuff. (7/10)

2. “Surrender” (7:41) suffers from identity issues—it never seems sure of who or what it is and/or where it wants to go. I love the presence of the trumpet/horns holding part of the harmonic weave, but, again, it just never seems to establish itself, never seems to gel or congeal. (Maybe that is the point: dis-integration, distress and dis-function.) Disturbing and unsettling. Thanks, Jacob Valenzuela, for the first trumpet in the final two minutes—which stands sadly alone for a spell. (8/10)

3. “The Hand That Holds the Truth” (7:44) has become renowned for the presence of a vocal (Tetsu Fukagawa’s death metal growls). The YouTube video of this is quite entertaining and enlightening as to the group’s individual contributions as bassist/pianist Tamaki Kunishi-Yuasa dons an electric guitar to help produce the three-part weave that forms the second part of this three-part song (intro, weave-building, and climactic main explosion). (8/10)

4. “The Last Rays” (6:39) is an exercise in noise from distortion and atonal string plays. Again, if the theme of this album is the end of the world, then all of the compositions here make perfect sense. What surprises me is the dispassionate, detached feeling of the music—and this from a band that usually seems SO invested in the emotional impact of their songs! Maybe to them the end of the world is so matter-of-fact, such a foregone conclusion that they have decided to present it like this as an exercise in detachment. I commend them for their efforts but have to admit that I much prefer the impassioned efforts of albums like ULVER’s Shadows of the Sun or Nikitas Kissonas’ Suiciety to represent a sad goodbye to human dominion over the planet.

A good album that is better intellectually—especially when considering the tough subject matter.



Albums that are, in my opinion, over-rated:



IQ The Road of Bones

I own the special edition double CD release of this album, so my review is somewhat slighted by the "overall" impression that this collection of songs has left me. The Road of Bones contains a lot of very polished neoprog. None of it is very sophisticated. Most of it is fairly straightforward and repetitive with the occasional pleasing twist or turn. Peter Nichols' vocals are very clear and easy on the ears yet they lack whatever it takes to get the listener really engaged and excited.
      I find myself most drawn to the keyboard work--which is most often fairly simple though very lush and fully-filling of the aural landscapes. Mostly, I guess I just like the sounds and tones used by Neil Durant.
     The album does have a few gems--and, IMHO, they have improved their delivery from Frequency--though many of the "hooks" used effectively on that 2009 album are again used here. From Disc 1, "The Road of Bones" (8:32) (9/10) is great, beautiful, mature. The epic/show piece "Without Walls" (19:16) and the Wind and Wuthering-like "Ocean" (5:55) are both nice songs but neither leaves me with adrenaline pumping, neither lures me back for the "replay" button push.
      From Disc 2, "Knucklehead" (8:11) (9/10) is the best--offering the most complex and exciting music of the entire collection. Both "Hardcore" (the first half) (10:53) and "Until the End" (12:00) reminds me too much of Frequency's best song, "Ryker Skies." The rest of Disc 2's songs are a step below the offerings on Disc 1. The instrumental, "1312 Overture" (4:18), is engaging but it makes me feel as if the band is going through a rhythmic warmup exercise. The acoustic guitar play on Disc 2 and use of programmed drums gives the music a cheesy lounge New Age music sound. "Ten Million Demons" (6:10) leading the best of the rest. "Constellations" (12:25) sounds like it came right out of Genesis' And Then There Were Three/Duke era--I mean, straight out, sometimes note and sound-for note and sound.

Overall, The Road of Bones is a pleasant listen even if it doesn't excite me enough to extoll its masterpiece status. Still, I do recommend prog lovers give it a listen.



OPETH Pale Communion

This is a good album. The mixes are a bit off--vocals and drums often mixed too far back. Performances are top notch but they feel too often a bit too "heavy prog by numbers." The b vox are less-than inspiring as are some of the leads. And drummer extraordinaire Martin Axenrot doesn't have as many mind-blowing moments as I heard on Heritage. The electric guitar work is solid and shines most in its workman like steady-riffing. I was one of the few who really enjoyed (enjoys) Heritage. The folky, acoustic side of Opeth--like that of "Elysian Woes"--has always been what has drawn me in most to this group. The organ play on the album opener, "Eternal Rains Will Come" make it a pleaser. "Cusp of Eternity" is the one that best showcases Martin's drumming prowess--and feels the closest to the beloved Opeth of "old." The Goblin tribute is awesome. (It's nice to see more people acknowledging the genius of that Italian band). "River" could almost come from a Wishbone Ash album from the 70s. "Voice of Treason" is enjoyable but feels like . . . it's been done. "Faith in Others" is probably my favorite from this album for its dynamic range and the way it showcases the vocal variety of Mikael Akerfeldt. The album's "epic," "Moon Above, Sun Below" just never comes out and grabs me, kind of meanders and morphs around without ever seeming to know where it's going.
    This is a 3.5 star album that I will continue to listen to--though I have the suspicion that it will not hold my interest for very much longer. There's just too much other really good, fresh music that this has to compete with. In my opinion, there is nothing special here!



LUNATIC SOUL Walking on A Flashlight Beam

I was quite surprised at the palpable excitement I felt as I opened this album. I am equally surprised at my dramatic feelings of disappointment as I listened--as each song failed to meet my simple expectations: that Lunatic Soul's fourth album continue to show the signs of growth as the previous three had adequately done. Mariuz Duda's excellent and gifted voice isn't even put to good use until the third song!

1. "Shutting Out The Sun" (8:39) A lot of scratchy old-sounding samples and sounds drawn out offer an overly long development. The final 20 seconds are the best part! (7/10)

2. "Cold" (6:58) again I am disappointed with all of the old samples--including the rhythm box beat. Sounds like an early Kraftwerk song taken over by Alan Parsons Project. (7/10)

3. "Gutter" (8:42) the baseline bass riff is nice though it feels borrowed from a RIVERSIDE song. Awesome work in the fifth minute! And finally we get to hear the full power and talent of Mariuz Duda's voice! And I love the late entry of the keyboard wash at the 7:00 mark. (Why must Mariuz wait to the end of the songs to amp things up?!) (9/10)

4. "Stars Sellotaped" (1:34) is a very cute little spacey "outtake." More of this! (9/10)

5. "The Fear Within" (7:10) is an instrumental based on a simple and repetitive weave of a variety of tuned percussives--glockenspiel, wind chimes, Blue Man Group PVC tubes, to name a few. The stringed instrument that enters at the beginning of the third minute and, a little later, the "distant" industrial synth kind of disrupt the initial feel and mood bringing in an unsettling feel--which may be appropriate considering the song's title. The final two minutes follow the now-established "distant" industrial synth as an picked acoustic guitar plays over the top and, gradually, takes over--until the song's final minute, in which some very eerie synth washes, warbles, wooshes and whispers fill the void. (7/10)

6. "Treehouse" (5:31) begins with an electric piano's very simple chord progression. Mariuz' treated voice begins singing what feels like a fairly straightforward pop song. Straight time rock drum and bass beat joins in. The song often feels like it's beginning to unravel but then it seems to come back together again. Nothing very exciting or ear-catching happens for the first 3:10. Then a quite space with simple acoustic guitar strummed chord progression backs Mariuz dreamy voice--until the rock format returns at the four minute mark. (7/10)

7. "Pygmalion's Ladder" (12:02) opes with an ominous (promising!) guitar arpeggio progression--which is all too soon ruined by some cheap Middle Eastern "horn" (or fuzzed guitar) sound. By 1:30 the backbeat has become more like a classic Tangerine Dream keyboard-led sequence. Were the intermittent appearance by the annoying "horn" sound and it's equally grating melody removed from this song it might be pretty decent! In the fourth minute the foundation falls back to bass and arpeggiated guitar as a good (if typical) Mariuz vocal enters. The "chorus" at the 4:45 mark is a bit of a step down and then it's followed by an odd bridge of alternating synth (choral) chords and a disappointing fuzz guitar solo. Another shift at 6:18 while the Mike Oldfield-like muted fuzz guitar continues to solo. The eight minute shifts again into even more Oldfield-sounding territory. The section beginning around 8:14 is heavier and packs the kind of power and drama that one expects (and wants) from a Duda project. A beautiful little interlude of delicate sounds (arpeggiated acoustic guitar and kalimba) sets up a crashing entry into the near-end crescendo.
     Though this song is in constant forward development with very little thematic recapitulation, it just fails to ever really "get there." (8/10)

8. "Sky Drawn in Crayon" (4:59) is a ethereal vocal sung over finger-picked acoustic guitar and some various and sundry incidentals--playground children noises, midi-keyboard melodies, cyber-computer click/pop noises. This one never really gets anywhere. (7/10)

9. "Walking on a Flashlight Beam" (8:11) is a(nother) dull song until the Robert Smith/Cure guitar riffs of the last two and a half minutes. (8/10)

The antiquated sound samples used here feel so out-dated and simple and could have been so much more sophisticated. Plus, Mariuz' Lunatic Soul project seems hello-bent on taking the ANATHEMA Post Rock approach: taking simple melodies and rhythms for foundations and then slowly--sometimes painstakingly slowly--building over and around them. Unlike Anathema, however, Lunatic Soul's songs never seem to get anywhere--each song ends with me asking, "What was the point? What was the message? What was the intention?"
     As much as I like music like this that develops slowly, using space and time to convey a message with delicate timing, I'm beginning to think that Lunatic Soul lacks the vision to make lasting statements with their songs. Maybe they're tired. I cannot remember the last time I was so disappointed with an album I so highly anticipated.

2.5 stars. Definitely an album I feel deserves the "for collectors only" label.




LOGOS L'enigma della vita

Italian prog rockers have come up with a polished, well-produced album of mature prog compositions. The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway/Trick of The Tail-era GENESIS sounds and loud and clear engineering make this, to my ears, more akin to the Neo-Prog vein than RPI. The drums, keys, recording techniques and song structures feel so much like GENESIS 1975.

1. "Antifona" (2:03) (9/10) sets the mood for the album with dark, ominous synths and incidentals before a volume pedal-controlled guitar lays down some nice play. The song then bleeds into song

#2. "Venivo da un lung sonno" (9:09). The addition of bass and drum rhythm section to the opening song's mood gives this a sound and feel like the foundation of "The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging" only with the sometimes lead guitar of David Gilmour. At 3:30 the song goes through a nice little shift with arpeggiated electric guitar notes. At 4:15 the entrance of the vocals of Luca Zerman brings to mind the voices of Ira Davies of ICEHOUSE, BRIAN FERRY, and even a little of THE DOORS' Jim Morrison. At 5:30 it returns to its original instrumental format. It is a very nice, steady and engaging, mostly instrumental song. Nice guitar play and band support throughout. (9/10)

3. "In fuga" (5:41) is a pleasant if straightforward and repetitive instrumental with keys and guitars trading solos throughout. (7/10)

4. "Alla fine dell'ultimo capitol" (9:20) fades in just like a classic Lamb Lies Down on Broadway song--heavy in mellotron and volume controlled guitar. Once the intro has passed and the song enters into its lyric-supporting section it loses a bit of its edge and becomes somewhat "by the numbers" prog. The organ and guitar spurt beginning at 3:28 are "Watcher in The Skies" like for a second before devolving into support for a fairly straightforward blues way-pedal guitar solo. The rather slow straight-time base shifts but continues in a kind of plodding way until 6:32 when a slight shift allows the bass walking and guitar picking to weave and shine a bit. Nothing very compacted or exciting, though, even when the mellotron moves to the front and does a kind of ANEKDOTEN solo.
The final minute is a rather simple synth supported vocal outro. Nothing too earth-shattering here. (8/10)

5. "N.A.S." (7:45) opens with a bouncy almost disco (bass line) rhythm foundation with some 'heavy' electric guitar power chords. At 1:28 the song slows down, settling into an industrial KC Red-like rhythmic foundation while an ARP-like synth solo slides around over the top. At 3:30 two guitars--one a FRIPP-like sustained, the other a light pizzicato jazz plucked--take over the leads. The Fripp-like guitar puts together an interesting, dissonant solo that takes us up to the five minute mark. Such PHIL COLLINS-like ("Supper's Ready/Fly on a Windshield") drumming! At 7:25 the song bursts into a mellotron crescendo of sound as the ARP-synth finishes its long solo. Odd song! (8/10)

6. "L'enigma della vita" (7:24) opens a bit like PHIDEAUX's "Thank You for The Evil" with a low bass line and hard-hitting spacious drum line. The vocals throughout this song sound very much like those of GREG LAKE. A tempo change at 3:40 brings it back into GENESIS/PHIL COLLINS territory. At 6:00 the song almost becomes a disco-fied 70s RPI song--but it quickly switches back to Phideaux/Genesis territory till its end. (8/10)

7. "In principio" (11:27) begins like a classic acoustic GENESIS/RENAISSANCE song with fast paced electronic keyboard arpeggios which then give way to 12-string guitar and synths supporting a male vocal. This vocal is strong--in the truest Italian sense. Nice bass line and steady drum line enter around 2:45 and 3:18, respectively. The shift at 3:45 to jazzy electronic piano keyboard is at first a bit odd but it works! At 8:00 we finally get the start of some action: electric guitar solo (à la TD's "Coldwater Canyon" by Edgar Froese) and interesting drum play. My favorite song on the album. (9/10)

8. "Completamente estranei" (7:06) begins almost like a slowed down version of the song "The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway" before heavier drums and guitar strums give it a kind of THE WHO/LOVERBOY power rock feel. At 2:35 a confident electric guitar defines an interesting melody.
Another limp vocal ensues to take over for a little while until a dramatic shift occurs at 4:12. Faster, more driven, almost URIAH HEEP-like, until the ARP synth renders a nondescript melody which it then pursues over the heavy rhythm section to the songs end. (7/10)

9. "In quale luogo si fermò il mio tempo" (2:32) is a nice, almost classical, piano solo. It could almost be a composition by CHOPIN, SATIE or some Russian pianist! (9/10)

10. "Pioggia in campagna" (10:28) opens with another GENESIS-like fadein (à la "The Knife"), building beneath several layers of keyboard sounds. At 1:31 there is a key shift, then all stops at 1:46 to make way for a very latin/RPI-like vocal with acoustic Spanish guitar section. Organ and flanged electric guitar add a prog feel to the song until at 2:51 several heavy electric guitar chords present an interesting jazz guitar solo. At 3:42 everything shifts again to a more complex chord sequence and tempo to support a decent 75 second organ solo, and then a minute of echoed- and synth emulated-guitar solo. At 6:18 we get another shift into some bluesy URIAH HEEP sounds before a shift back into the vocal section, this time supported by heavier electrified instruments. A PROCUL HARUM-like organ section appears in the ninth minute. The ARP synth finishes leading the way of this anthemic song for its last 90 seconds. Definitely the band's most complex and mature composition (on this album) but I'm not quite sure what it was intended to accomplish. (8/10)

11. "Il rumore dell'aria" (2:58) presents itself as a soundtrack support to a spoken narration. It is eery and perhaps even scary in an Edgar Allan Poe kind of way. Ties into the album's opening very effectively. (9/10)

A very pleasant listening experience that suffers a bit, however, from some lackluster vocals and rather simple song structures and instrumental performances. Also, the band seems to rely more on the use of a wide variety of sounds and emotion rather than very many impressive or virtuosic soli--which is okay--Pink Floyd got away with it, right?

Without a doubt L'enigma della vita is a solid album of high quality progressive rock music.

Definitely a four star record. 82.75 on the Fish scales = Solid four stars.




PERFECT BEINGS Perfect Beings

Drifting more into the domain of quirky indie pop, Perfect Beings represents quite a refined display of songcrafting and meaningful lyrics. All songs are pleasant and listenable with some clever lyrics and catchy melody presentations. I hear a lot of sounds from the late 70s and 80s, particularly reminiscences of THE BUGGLES ("The Canyon Hill" and "One of Your Kind"), XTC ("Helicopter"), 10CC ("Bees and Wasps" and "Program Kid"), ART GARFUNKLE ("Walkabout" and "Fictions"), YES (STEVE HOWE & RICK WAKEMAN) and Pat Metheny Group ("Removal of The identity Chip"), ABC ("Primary Colors"), and LOVE AND ROCKETS ("Remnants of Shields").

I find it interesting that Johannes Luley has given up the vocal reigns cuz he has a very nice voice--and Perfect Beings collaborator-vocalist, Ryan Hurtgen, sounds an awful lot like Johannes.

Favorite songs: "Bees and Wasps," "Walkabout," "Remnants of Shields," and "One of Your Kind."

It's not my favorite album, nor do I really consider this prog--prog-related or maybe Crossover, but it is interesting. 3.5 stars rated up for quality and variety and for the fact that I recommend others try this for themselves.




GANDALF'S FIST A Forest of Fey

More eclectic prog than perhaps straight Neo Prog, but very retro sounding.

Line-up / Musicians:
- Luke Severn / lead (5) & backing vocals, composer
- Dean Marsh / lead vocals, guitars, manolin, bass, keyboards, composer & story concept
- Chris Ewen / bass
- Stefan Hepe / drums
With:
- Melissa Hollick / vocals
- Dave Oberlé / vocals & bodhrán (10)
- John Mitchell / vocals (11)
- Dying Seed / backing vocals
- Jennifer Pederson / backing vocals
- Alicia Arthur / voice actor
- Matt Stevens / ambient guitar (8,11)
- Troy Donockley / Cumbrian bouzouki (6,10), low whistle (2,3), tin whistle (2,7)
- Clive Nolan / synth solo (8)

1. Childhood Ghosts (2:23)
2. Gardens of the Lost (6:03)
3. "A Forest of Fey (including Wisdom of the Reptile and the Lament for a Silent Verse)" (8:34) (16.5/20)
4. The Figure Speaks (0:44)
5. The World We Created (5:43)
6. The Circus in the Clearing (including The Fanfare for the King's Tournament) (4:44)
7. Blood for a Royal Pardon (1:37)
8. Drifter on the Edge of Time (6:38)
9. Forest Rose (Coming Home) (4:36)
10. Return from the Tournament (2:05)
11. Stories Old and Stories Told (Of Children Brave and Children Bold) (6:05)
12. A Poison Tree (2:38)

Total Time 51:50

Despite a cast of prog all-stars as guests, this album is formulaic "prog-by-the-numbers." There is nothing new hear, despite an admirable blending of styles (folk, metal, symphonic). The electric guitar chord playing is especially disturbing as it plays out in almost every song as if a studio musician is playing the same heavily-distorted guitar, chord by chord, as if from orchestral street music. No flare, no flourish, no soul. Several of the vocals are interesting, especially Melissa Hallick on the opener, "Childhood's Ghost"--I have to admit she and that first song got me hooked in enough to give this album a thorough listen. My other favorite, as predictable as it is, is "Drifter on the Edge of tIme." This and the other folk instrumental, "Forest Rose" are, to me, the album highlights.
     Troy Donockley (of IONA, not NIGHTWISH) adds some nice touches with his wind instruments--though I wonder on songs like "Garden's of the Lost" whether band leader Dean Marsh asked him to do his best IAN ANDERSON/J TULL impression (unless that's someone else on C flute). Clive Nolan and super guitarist John Mitchell's vocals-only contributions are negligible to the over all effect. In the end there is nothing new here. There is already too much of this kind of prog out there--Neo in the extreme. As pure as Dean's intentions were, this is the kind of album that has turned me away from the Neo-Prog sub-genre. For me, prog must keep its music evolving, not merely repeating old masters and old styles.



THE D PROJECT Making Sense

Like Stephen Desbiens' previous albums this album is all over the place. Some might call it 'eclectic' I just call it unfocused and too chaotic. Virtually every sub-genre of prog--of music--seems to be covered here--sometimes within one song! Too many radical and disruptive changes in directions; too many styles. The sound production is different--thanks to Andy Jackson--but I'm not sure it's better. I've always felt that FLOYD's The Division Bell was a bit too stark, too polished, lacking some of the dynamics that are natural to microphone-recorded music--and that's how I come away from each song from this album. It's just a little too Gilmour-esque for me (though Stephen and his mates may be better musicians than Floyd's).



DELUGE GRANDER Heliotians

Once again Dan Britten has created an admirably ambitious album that falls short due to its astoundingly horrible sound recording, engineering, and reproduction. I don't know why I seem to be the only one who complains about the constant track isolation and too-quiet sound level mixing that Britten uses on all of his projects but it really detracts and distracts from my listening experience. I am always straining to hear the intricacies and subtleties of Dan's very interesting and minutely layered and detailed song structures. "Turn up the volume!" you, the reader may be screaming at me, but that doesn't work--it doesn't solve the muddled-static ness of the sound mix.
    Also, Heliotians seems to display a weakness of Dan's that I am not familiar with in his previous work: there are many instances in which a particular instrument is played (or recorded) with such an economy of effort as to feel almost rudimentary, amateurish, over-simplified to such a degree that it almost feels unfinished or a demo run of that track. Weird album.