Progarchives, the progressive rock ultimate discography
Time Horizon - Living Water CD (album) cover

LIVING WATER

Time Horizon

 

Neo-Prog

4.11 | 42 ratings

From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

sepia_blob
4 stars Living Water is a debut album by Time Horizon, consisting of Ralph Otteson on keyboards, vocals, Bruce Gaetke / vocals, drums & percussion, Dave Dickerson / guitars, Steve Gourly / bass with Jeff Garner on Guitars & Vocals and Phil Segrue on Bass, the latter two being special guests on this record. It is a 10 song journey clocking up at almost 54 minutes.

The album opens up with 1. Life Fantastic (7:38). Mild percussion and some bass riffage with synth joining later make for an interesting start. Nice guitar passages here and there. Quite pleasant and adventurous vocals come in near 2 min mark. I dig that guitar tone, think it could have been louder in the mix. A good start. (7,5/10)

2. Living Water Prelude (1:09) is a little number which showcases several vocal harmonies and acts as a transition between 1st and 3rd compositions.(7/10)

3. Age of Wonders (7:16) A spacey start. Vocals after 2nd minute. A good keyboard solo near 5-minute mark transitioning into a respectable guitar solo. Can hear Yes influence in the writing.(7/10)

4. Time Horizon (4:11) begins with a synth pattern with a baby cry. Robot voice after the 1st minute, then vocals appear. This one is even spacier than the previous song.(7,5/10)

5. Forgiveness (7:14) starts with a drum intro, then guitar and bass (fretless?) join. Very melodic and soulful vocals. Guitar solo after 4 min-mark, when the pace picks up. Not a big fan of 'yes-yes-yes, forgiveness' line. Other then that, a pretty nice song.(7,5/10)

6. Feel the Change (4:32) is a different composition, mood-wise. The guitar playing here brings Rush to mind. Keyboard solo after 2nd minute, guitar is ripping it up after 3rd. A very Styx-like track.(6,5/10)

7. Me Chili Caliente (2:49) is a fully acoustic number, has an intro which develops into a (sort of ) melody at 1:30. It is calm and relaxing.(6/10)

8. I Am Not Alone (Til the Dawn) (8:35) starts off with a full sound, nice guitar melodies after 1st minute. Piano after 2 minutes, vocals come in (it's a ballad at this point). The vocal delivery is on point, very Steve Perry(Journey)-like, the voice is similar too. A dynamic shift before 6th minute with quite impressive guitar soloing, vocals return later. Nice.(8/10)

9. Living Water (3:24) begins with the same vocal harmonies from the eponymous prelude but this time with some sparse instrumentation to support. Have to admit - really nice vocal work in here, fun stuff. (7,5/10)

Ending the album 10. Paradise (7:00) has a guitar intro this time, like the swing early on. Keyboards act like a vocal support + satisfying organ pressence. Spoken words after the 3rd minute, everything else is laid back in this section. After that we return back to the theme for a positive finish.(8/10)

Living Water is a good neo-prog album, it maintains its own identifiable sound, even with such a variety of influences like Kansas, Styx, Pink Floyd and Yes (if you like those bands, you'll probably like this record). The music on here is built around pleasant melodies and supported by driving guitars, symphonic keyboards and rich vocal harmonies.

My only complaints would be the line in the 5th song and length, - I'd like it to be shorter for a better experience. Other than that, this is a 4 PA star album.

sepia_blob | 4/5 |

MEMBERS LOGIN ZONE

As a registered member (register here if not), you can post rating/reviews (& edit later), comments reviews and submit new albums.

You are not logged, please complete authentication before continuing (use forum credentials).

Forum user
Forum password

Share this TIME HORIZON review

Social review comments () BETA







Review related links

Copyright Prog Archives, All rights reserved. | Legal Notice | Privacy Policy | Advertise | RSS + syndications

Other sites in the MAC network: JazzMusicArchives.com — jazz music reviews and archives | MetalMusicArchives.com — metal music reviews and archives

Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.