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Crea - Dwarves & Penguins CD (album) cover

DWARVES & PENGUINS

Crea

 

Neo-Prog

3.36 | 8 ratings

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Second Endeavour
4 stars CREA is a four-piece act hailed from Linkoping, Sweden. The line-up includes: Peter Gren (guitars, E-bow & lead singing), Nicke Bjerke (bass), Sonny Johansson (drums / percussion), Anders Karlsson (keyboards & b/ vocals). In early 2019 these collaborators present a debut CD 'Dwarves & Penguins' to demonstrate their own assimilation of various musical strains and show song-writing skills. Now I am just going to describe as many as I can. The set begins with adventurous track 'The Marsch Of Penguins' full of instrumental meanderings. In some respects, this spectacular jam is reminiscent of Gamalon (to my ears, at least). After such an attention- grabbing opener, the things switch into mellow 'Some Of Us' featuring characteristic neoprog atmosphere. Whilst the vocal delivery might be comparable with Martin Wilson (Grey Lady Down), the guitar passages share a kinship with elegance of Steve Rothery (Marillion). Besides, the keyboard courtesy, convincing bass and precise drums are prominent in the mix. (Noteworthy is a fact that this song was dedicated to late Hansi Cross, a respectful person on the Scandinavian prog-rock scene. His label became a launch pad for his own music, as well as for many other groups, including: Grand Stand, Brother Ape, Magic Pie, Adventure, Soniq Circus, Violent Silence, and the ilk). Oddly enough, the next cut 'Shattered Vision' has a musical structure evoking memories of the British new wave. The similarities to Duran Duran and OMD are detectable, but the common approach isn't a real carbon copy. The follower 'Second Thoughts' hangs close to Simple Minds territory. The diversity fest continues with 'Millenium' which segues into a ballad-like palette. Next up, stunning 'The Marsch Of The Dwarves' that displays the band's orchestral wealth. The gorgeous chapter 'Walk Into Bright Lights' sounds like it would be a lost GLD jewel. It perfectly combines the powerful aspects and the fragile elements. The entire album reaches its ending with 'Barbarossa', fluctuating from hypnotic echoes of Ontofield to soft melodicism a'la Tears For Fears. This composition twins and turns, staying intriguing all the way through. Yet again (as always before), delectable guitar performance is heard at the right places. To sum, I'd say that 'Dwarves & Penguins' is a good debut CD with plenty of interesting moments. Once you unpack and then actively listen for each component woven into the fabric of this offer, additional details appear and overall appreciation grows. So folks' Just take some time to discover another Swedish newcomer and appreciate their debut release. It may not be the most innovating work. But who cares, indeed?
Second Endeavour | 4/5 |

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