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WhiteWing - WhiteWing CD (album) cover

WHITEWING

WhiteWing

 

Crossover Prog

3.11 | 15 ratings

From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator
PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
3 stars Once you get the prog bug and have exhausted the bigwigs of the classic era, inevitably you will want to start digging deeper into the obscurities that fell between the cracks during the seemingly endless wellspring that was the 1970s. While England led the prog parade which quickly caught on in Europe, the USA lagged behind a bit with only acts like Frank Zappa and Captain Beefheart giving the Brits their money's worth. However once the 70s hit bands all over the North American continent were getting in on the act including in some of the most unthinkably remote regions like South Dakota, USA. One of these true obscurities has to be the Rapid City based WHITE WING which formed in 1968 and originally consisted of Mike Drew (vocals, organ), Rod Schroeder (vocals, guitars), Mike Coates (guitars), Gary Cass (bass) and Norm Curtis (drums) but would coalesce with Mike Drew being replaced by Mike English (vocals) and Tim Renshaw replacing Schroeder and picking up keyboards.

The band started out more as a typical hard rock band with some Moody Blues inspired symphonic ballads and proved to be quite popular across the Middle regions of the USA. By 1975 they scored a record deal with the Minneapolis based ASI Records where they released this one and only self-titled album that even managed to experience a bit of Billboard single action with 'Hansa.' Given the number of years of performing live, this eponymous debut provided a nice diverse mix of testosterone filled heavy bluesy rock riffing, boogie-woogie piano rolls and AOR styled ballads that were made popular by Styx and slight touches of progressive rock that took the songs to the next level with slower tracks finding themselves drenched in mellotron and slightly more sophisticated compositional constructs than the average hard rock band of the era.

WHITE WING was a victim of record label neglect much like many a newbie bands from the era. While the band carried out a robust touring schedule, the album was rarely able to be found in many places which stunted any sort of progress. The band was also promoted as America's version of the Moody Blues which for the slowest ballads was somewhat true but WHITE WING's palette was much more diverse sounding something like the crossover prog of Styx mixed with the harder rock free spirit of bands like Triumph and even Deep Purple on tracks like 'Harbringer.' The album is quite a pleasant listening experience and while WHITE WING didn't exactly create a truly innovative sound in any way, the band certainly did an excellent job of synthesizing the disparate influences that provided the inspiration.

Ultimately a second album that was supposed to be released was scrapped and the record label instead dropped WHITE WING. The band regrouped but changed their name to Asia in 1976 and released two albums and were on the verge of breaking through the mainstream barriers around 1981 just as the other Asia, the supergroup power pop English outfit usurped the name and created legal nightmares for the band. While the first Asia would focus more on straight forward hard rock with AOR sensibilities, WHITE WING was the band's only foray into any sort of progressive territory albeit with only slight traces of the more sophisticated touches of the genre. This album is a true pleasure to experience not only as an obscurity but every track is laced with instantly addictive melodies and Mike English had the perfect voice for this style of rock. With a bit more promotion and a better production value, it could've been possible for WHITE WING to join the ranks of Styx or Kansas if the band was allowed to develop their potential further. Consider this prog lite but excellent pop rock.

While utterly forgotten by all but the locals who supported them throughout the decades, the original one and only pressing of WHITE WING's debut (some sources cite 1975 and others 1976 so not sure) has finally found a second coming with the remastered CD edition that offers all the original artwork, liner notes and a 12-page booklet with archive photos, lyrics and the band history. The album was remastered by guitarist Mike Coates himself and a worthy collection of anyone who loves beautifully melodic crossover prog from the interesting time period of 1976-82. South Dakota is hardly a state that generates much music that hits a larger audience in any way shape or form so it was quite a pleasant experience to discover WHITE WING and the following two Asia albums ('Asia' 1979 and 'Armed To The Teeth' 1980) as they are much better than i possibly could've imagined. Still though, not quite essential but not far from it.

3.5 but rounded down

siLLy puPPy | 3/5 |

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