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Osjan / ex Ossian - Ossian (Księga Deszczu Plus) CD (album) cover

OSSIAN (KSIęGA DESZCZU PLUS)

Osjan / ex Ossian

 

Indo-Prog/Raga Rock

3.88 | 13 ratings

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siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator
PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
4 stars Modern day Poland has produced some internationally successful musical artists in recent decades with bands like Riverside, Behemoth, Vader and Mgła finding worldwide success. The communist era of Polish music isn't quite so well known though. In prog circles SBB, Czesław Niemen and Anawa have gained some recognition but there were so many others that still lurk in the misty brume of obscurity. OSSIAN (also spelled OSJAN) is one such band that formed in Krakow in 1971 and still exists to this very day as a band unit.

Known more for their improvised live shows rather than their sporadic album releases, this band has played in unusual venues such as Swedish prisons as well as homeland venues in their native Poland. Unlike many of its prog contemporaries, OSSIAN offered a unique mix of elements that make it hard to classify. Existing somewhere in the hazy nebulous regions where avant-folk, psychedelia, avant-garde jazz and minimalism intersect, OSSIAN has been most known for crafting its own unique style of peaceful and meditative music that while not Indian raga in nature still exudes the same transcendental vibe.

OSSIAN released two self-titled albums back to back in the mid-70s with this one appearing first in 1975. Some claim this to be a live album and other sources cite it as the first studio album. Given there are few audience noises it's impossible to say however given the band's improvisational nature the album was probably recorded live in the studio and therefore allowing both statements to be true simultaneously. This album originally featured six tracks at the standard vinyl playing time but some CD reissues feature two extra bonus tracks adding an additional 18 minutes. There actually is some audience participation sounds on "Księga deszczu VI" but this could be the only track to have been lifted from a live performance.

This is indeed a unique sounding album that only features the three musicians Jacek Ostaszewski on flute and dholak, Marek Jackowski on guitars and drum and Tomasz Hołuj playing tabla, gongs and other percussive instruments. For being improvised music, the tracks seem to have preordained structures that once introduced are allowed to take off into the improvosphere and in many ways brings the improvisational nature of jazz into the world of progressive world of avant-folk.

While melodies are common throughout the album especially with the flute, there are also many droning elements such as the repetitive acoustic guitar riffing and the tribal percussive outbursts of the tabla. At moments the album really does sound like it was inspired by the Indo-ragas of the Indian subcontinent and at other moments reminding a bit more of the Chilean progressive folk band Los Jaivas with especially with some of the flute scales. What's clearly absent from OSSIAN's approach is any trace of Polish or any other Slavic folk influences. The music offers a very escapist approach and unlike prog contemporaries like SBB and Anawa (which featured some members here) doesn't rely on classical music as its parent source of influence.

OSSIAN's members were masters at taking repetitive cyclical rhythmic riffs, grooves and percussion ensembles and ratcheting up the intensity much like much of modern day post-rock slowly works its way up to thundering crescendoes. While an album like this may sound a bit boring on paper, the actual performances are very captivating. This almost sounds like an impromptu drum circle by first rate musicians who happened to bring along a few more instruments where it turned into a bonafide jamming session. While the minimalist approach in composition seems limiting, the interplay has somehow figured out how to alchemize the soul and take you to a higher level of awareness into a cosmic cosnsidcuness expansion.

This is a very interesting album actually. While minimalism can be quite uninspiring and boring, somehow OSSIAN uses the subtle changes in tones, timbres and rhythmic variations to weave a larger than life mediative practice that insinuates the world of Indian ragas but exists in a parallel universe. This is truly a unique style that i've never heard and to think this has been around for almost 50 years and i've never heard it! Of course the Indian instruments do bring the world of Indian raga to mind when they dominate the soundscapes but OSSIAN transcended into a much more esoteric style of mixing everything so beautifully. What an interesting band that has been under my radar for so long despite having heard the name for quite some time now.

siLLy puPPy | 4/5 |

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