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Last 50 reviews
The Butcher's Ballroom
Diablo Swing Orchestra Review by jampa17
Crazy well oriented music. There's no other way to describe this music. While most of the music is getting formulaic, DSO manages to make very original music putting their feet into a very complex and dangerous places. Merging twist, jazz, tap, boogie and even spanish guitars with prog metal was enough, but putting operatic voices on it is maybe too much. But I don't care, I really enjoy the originality and the versatility of the players. It's complicated to describe, you have to hear it to believe it. The female vocalist sound a little bit different than Tarja and the music will take you to a complete different place than Nightwish and all the bands alike. While the style on each song is different, the vibe of the album is very up lifting. The musicians really projects a pleasant mood and is evident that they are having fun while making great and entertaining music. Now, if you are not that much into crazy music (some could call "misdirection" to this music) or into operatic voice, maybe it can be annoying. But I really enjoy when the bands make metal interesting and experiment way out of the regular standards of music. This is the best case I have seen in years and deserves a lot attention. Diablo Swing Orchestra made a great opening with this album, but better things were in the future. For stars because it really is a excellent add to any collection... MEMBERS LOGIN ZONEAs 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).
The Human Equation
Ayreon Review by jampa17
Too much brilliancy... maybe too much... When I first heard this project I felt a lot overwhelmed by the whole concept. Maybe two discs is too much and the amount of guest players and the variation of the music is quite impressive, so maybe this album is not for an outsider or someone who has not "get" prog metal. Once said that, I feel that the album is too much eclectic to be considered as an exclusive "prog metal" album. It has a lot folk-eclectic-heavy prog elements that merges into a complete new thing that sounds great and you can really dive in and enjoy the journey. But, be prepared, maybe is too much to digest in one sitting. Some people said this is cheesy but I don't agree with that. The story flows with a lot of great singers who develops a different character each and have talks about many existential things. In some vein, this can be categorized as a "Christian Rock Opera" but in a good way. The music works for the story and the guest player work for the songs. There's metal themes and some ambience and folk little spaces for the story to breathe more. I won't mention all the guest players because they are a complete army. I'm happy with the participation of James Labrie (from Dream Theater) who is the key roll in the story, but all the characters made a great work in their each part. I think the creativity is evident. Having violins, cellos, flutes aside of keyboards, mellotrons, hammonds, heavy guitars and some growling vocals, you have to be very good to merge all that in a good form. So, I won't detail each song because it will take too much time. My advise is that you come and try this album only if you are already familiarized with long themes and epics. If you like prog metal, you HAVE to hear this. If you like folk and prog rock in general, you can give it a try. A masterpiece, maybe, but for the doubts I will leave it in four stars. Sometimes I feel exhausted when I end the album? so, maybe is great but too much. This is an album that any prog fan needs to listen to before they die. MEMBERS LOGIN ZONEAs 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).
Cincinnato
Cincinnato
Review by
sinkadotentree
This is a pretty good Jazz/Fusion album from Italy released in 1974.For me it's really lacking on
dynamics,which is okay if they used
a lot of atmosphere instead,but they don't.So the music sort of plods along changing slightly
at times as it goes.I enjoy the vocals on the side long track but that's the only time we get to
hear them.
"Il Ribelle Ubriaco" picks up before a minute with piano playing over top.It turns jazzier after 2
1/2 minutes.The guitar takes the lead 3 minutes in but it's brief.A calm with piano before 5 1/2
minutes.it kicks back in before 8 minutes. "Tramonto D'ottobre" is a short,mellow track with
acoustic guitar and piano leading. "Esperanto" opens with piano as drums and bass join
in.The song sort of meanders along aimlessly. "L'ebete" is the side long suite.I really like the
vocals here and the melancholic mood.It picks up 3 1/2 minutes in.A calm after 5 minutes with
synths.Guitar before 6 1/2 minutes.It settles a minute later.A change before 11 minutes as
piano and drums lead.Guitar before 12 1/2 minutes.Good sound here.Guitar stops after 14
minutes as bass,drums and piano play in a relaxed way.Guitar is back after 15 minutes.It
picks up 16 1/2 minutes in with piano out front.A catchy way to end it.
Good album but not great.
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Spiritual Healing
Death
Review by
Bonnek
A few months ago I was quite surprised to see a number of Death reviews making their appearance on
the PA home page. Although I have the odd death-metal album in my collection, I had never checked
out Death as I assumed they were over-hyped. Well, that's my natural disposition I'm afraid.
However, when they made their appearance on PA I suspected I might have missed something after all.Indeed, when it comes to death metal, this is exactly my kind of thing: good musicianship, not only brutal but also clever, not just aggressive but affecting as well, full of real pain and extreme anxiety pouring out of freshly dug wounds. Oh yes I'm getting in the mood here! As with most extreme metal, I enjoy the music rather easily, but whether a band will captivate me or not largely depends on the vocals. Luckily those are very strong here, exactly that very mournful gruff wail that I like so much. Pretty similar to Obituary I would say. As a death metal album this is pretty much as good as they come, but it hardly registers on my proggo-meter. The compositions and arrangements are straightforward slow-fast death metal thrash, with the guitars as the most accomplished element but without doing anything innovative. The drums are generic metal beating and I've yet to discover any bass. Being a novice to Death, I'm not sure yet where exactly to place this album in their musical development, but it sure is a solid album in its style. MEMBERS LOGIN ZONEAs 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).
Dead Reckoning
Threshold Review by dmwilkie
This is excellent , tight, well-constructed prog-metal. It has the usual ingredients of heavy
guitar riffs, exotic keyboards and plenty of solos. What Threshold have in addition, is strong
melodic vocal lines rather than tuneless growls and these are excellently performed by Mac.
(Is there a better prog-metal vocalist?) 'Pilot in the Sky of Dreams' is a minor masterpiece, with
different moods, beautiful ballady sections interspersed with wilder instrumental passages,
and interesting lyrics. 'Safe to Fly' is ther other highlight with, again, a strong vocal line. The
shorter tracks are usually quite catchy. The absence of a second guitarist gives more space
for keyboard solos. Altogether, a fine effort.
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One Live Badger
Badger
Review by
Vibrationbaby
One Live Badger was one of the many albums that emerged from the early seventies art rock effusion that owed a lot to the creative talents of Roger Dean. In the early seventies his sureal concepts and paintings began to adorn the covers of albums such as Uriah Heep's Demons & Wizards and Fragile by Yes where the music contained as much allure as Dean's canvasses. Unfortunately this is not the case here despite some lively moments from ex-Yesman Tony Kaye's keyboards interacting with Brian Parrish's respectable rhythm and lead guitar licks. The association between these 6 enlogated spiritual Three Dog Night meets Grand Funk Railroad rave-ups and the hyperboreal image of two ( rather cute ) little Badgers weathering out a storm has always eluded me. Don't get me wrong, it's not a bad record and the live enviroment certainly compliments the energy and spontaneity of the pieces which get into some cool jamming moments but it lacks the substance ( unless you want to consider the religious overtones in the lyrics ) that you would expect from an album embelished with Roger Dean artwork. Original vinyl editions had a pop-up badger which confused things even more. But at the time I guess kids were just thrilled with the novelty of having a record with a Roger Dean cover.Invariably, someone who picks the CD edition up for the first time in 2010 will be overcome by the Dean artwork and will be further thrown off by the knowledge that Tony Kaye was the original keyboard player for prog leviathans Yes and swayed further still by the fact that it was produced by Yes guru man Jon Anderson. The best preparation for this anamoly would be to forget about the two cuddly badgers and think of the album as an extension of Yes' 1970 album Time And A Word when they were still in a sixties groove. Things started to get too serious on the subsequent Yes Album after which Kaye was given his pink slip. One Live Badger sort of de-mystifies some things regarding this departure with it's bluesy, upbeat and sometimes funky compositions . Not a monumental catastrophe by a long shot but an album that will come under scrutiny by hard core fans of Yes music with Roger Dean covers from the same period. Proceed with caution and beware of badgers. MEMBERS LOGIN ZONEAs 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).
Voyage 34 - The Complete Trip
Porcupine Tree
Review by
Bonnek
This is one of the few items in PT's catalogue that I wouldn't generally recommend. It can still
largely appreciate it but I guess it will be way too lengthy, self-indulgent and pointless for many
other people. Phase I & II are extended space rock jams with fine guitar improvisations. Rather then a compelling listen by their own merit, it's a tribute to Floyd, Hawkwind, Neu! and Tangerine Dream. For most PT fans, these phases are the preferred trips because they are closest to the main PT sound of that period. I think they are ok but nothing special really. As you may have noted from other reviews, Phase III is the most debated phase. Usually it's much criticized but it's probably the most relevant addition to your Porcupine catalogue. It stays clear of the rocking elements that made the previous phases a bit dragging. Instead it goes for a credible ambient techno flavour. It's the grooviest trip on the album, citing Klaus Schulze with its slowly building lush sonics. There are some spacey guitars in the background that remind me of Tangerine Dream's Edgar Froese. Also Phase IV stays in cosmic dream stratospheres and elevates my enjoyment album another notch. Be warned though, for people that need constant flashing action in music, this will be another "nothing happens here" track, but if you can appreciate the art of abstract music, this is a 4 star moment. Phase II was the very first track I heard from PT. It left me pretty much unmoved and it took me a few more years till I gave the band another try. Needless to say this shouldn't be the first album you should hear from the band. Of course it's still good enough on itself to deserve a 3 star average. Later on in his career, Wilson would reserve this kind of kraut tributes for one of his other musical persona called I.E.M. MEMBERS LOGIN ZONEAs 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).
Negatron
Voivod
Review by
Bonnek
Second's Out. I never would have thought that the departure of vocalist 'Snake' would have had such
an impact on Voivod's sound. The style change after 'Blacky's earlier departure on Outer
Limits was a lot smaller actually. But maybe the personal changes weren't a decisive factor at
all, maybe Negatron was the trajectory that guitar mastermind 'Piggy' wanted to steer Voivod
into anyway. It's a direction that would take Voivod back to their thrash beginnings, entirely
forsaking melody and their grown progressive standing.There's absolutely nothing here that reminds us of the stellar, multidimensional music that Voivod had written before. Negatron is a mechanical sounding death metal-inspired thrash album that has a lot of power but that is completely devoid of interesting riffs and melodies. The vocals are gruff and tuneless throughout and will surely be repelling to everybody that is not into some or other form of extreme metal. But it's not the change of style as such that disappoints me; it's the uninspired song writing and the low quality execution. This is generic metal fluff with a faint Voivod after-taste, a hint of what this band used to be capable of that is frustrating rather then appealing. In fact, to me this sounds like Pantera on a bad hair day. A Voivod release that is better avoided. MEMBERS LOGIN ZONEAs 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).
Satellite
Panic Room
Review by
Tarcisio Moura
Formed around four of six members of Karnataka, Panic Room is a band that surely surpassed their
former band in almost every aspect. Paul Davies (guitar), Jonathan Edwards (keyboards) , Gavin John
Griffiths (drums), vocalist and multi instrumentist Anne Marie Helder plus new member Alun Vaughan
(bass guitars, who previously had a background only with jazz bands) had already release an excellent debut
album, The Visionary Position in 2008. So I was really anxious to see what this new album was like.
Could they outdo themselves? The answer is yes.it is very rare to see a team of musicians that seemed to work together so well not only surviving a major crisis when their former group disbanded after their leaders and main songwriters split, but also rarer to find out they manage to make it a blessing in disguise. They had lost none of the their musical tighness, but there is more to it. The band now is more than a sum of its parts. The arrangements are tasteful, and they are playing for the music´s sake, they are really team players who give their best for what the songs called for everytime. Just great! The new songwriting team of Helder and Edwards already displayed great promise on their debut, but now they show they have grown more mature, more secure and varied as ever. Also Anne Marie Helder, who had joined Karnataka as a harmony singer, is growing more confident on each relase. She has not only a beautiful voice, but also has a versatile, unique and powerful way to deliver the message, making her one of the most charismatic vocalists ever to appear on the prog rock field. I was glad to be able to get the two CD version of Satellite. The bonus record is short (only 24 minutes) but the four songs are as good as any of the main course. Production is also top notch. There are no fillers and every song is a gem on itself. It´s hard to point out a highlight since the variety of styles makes it hard to compare them (although I do have a soft spot for the title track, one of their very best songs ever). As on every good prog work I know, the CD takes time to grow on lyou, with each listening showing more subtle detais you didn´t notice before. A great melodic prog rock record that will please anyone who likes this kind of music. Nothing really groundbreaking, avant guarde or too symphonic, ok, but made with passion, talent and conviction. And I love it! While I haven´t heard the new Karnataka album and line up (only bassist Ian Jones reamaining now as an original member) I´m glad to know Panic Room more than fulfilled their promising start. I´m loking forward to hear their new stuff. Rating: I´d love to give it a five star rating based on my personal taste, but believe they still haven´t reached their peak. So 4,5 stars is more fitting for this fantastic work. Time will tell if it will become a masterpiece in the eyes of the world, but I wouldn´t be surprised if it eventually make it. MEMBERS LOGIN ZONEAs 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).
Zen House ( with Shawn Lane )
Jonas Hellborg
Review by
snobb
Unusual acoustic live show by great bass guitarist Jonas Hellborg. With his regular
collaborator electric guitarist Shawn Lane (he plays acoustic only guitar there as well) and
drummer/percussionist Jeff Sipe (aka Apt. Q-258), Jonas plays almost meditative raga-
influenced acoustic compositions there.Two first compositions under common name The House Stands Still are 30 + minutes long.They both are bass supported acoustic guitar solos with few percussion touches. Very Shakti-like feeling. Two second (and last) compositions have common name as well (Traces End Here, 23+ minutes).There guitr dronning support soloing acoustic bass."Conclusion", the very last piece, is faster and more energetic interplay between bass and guitar, with very Indian atmosphere. Excellent acoustic fusion work showing the unusual side of renowned electric bass artist. MEMBERS LOGIN ZONEAs 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). Latest 3 BLOG/Journals PostsView all BLOG/Journals entries | Submit post here
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