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Octarine Sky - Close to Nearby CD (album) cover

CLOSE TO NEARBY

Octarine Sky

 

Crossover Prog

4.18 | 8 ratings

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tszirmay
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
5 stars This US -based band has released a scintillating debut album that has elicited an eyebrow twisting response from the Prog community, an offshoot project of Potter's Daughter, an already successful group featuring the supremely talented keyboardist-vocalist Dyanne Potter Voegtlin and multi-instrumentalist Jan Christiana. The duo has added the legendary Simon Phillips on drums as well as powerhouse guitarist Guthrie Govan and the raw talent of fellow guitarist Amit Chatterjee (Joe Zawinul) to supply some explosive pyrotechnics, flavouring the heady mix of prog, rock, jazz, and tossing in some modern tinges as well as tried and true classicisms.

Beyond the attractive cover art lies a musical adventure that will surprise, seduce, and stimulate all prog fans, setting the tone with 'One', an interpretation of Alberto Ginastera's (famous for ELP's 'Toccata') marvelous 'Piano Sonata no.1', a showcase for a vivacious and complex display from Dyanne on piano and keyboards, propelled by the whirlwind drum machine that Simon Phillips can definitely claim to be. Bold and brash, with plenty of accelerations, swerves, twists, polyrhythmic shuffles and tempo changes, this intro sets the tone of absolute musical quality from the outset, leaving no further doubt that we are in for a ride. 'Rosewind' offers a clever change of pace, a serene plunge into paradise, with echoing electric piano motifs upon which Dyanne's alluring voice gets to interact with the overall atmosphere, adding just enough occasional bite from crescendos, exalted guitar tweaks, and solid drumbeats to keep it all muscling forward. Totally delightful and musically aromatic.

Cinematographic prog has always been an ideal showcase for mood and melody and 'Night Sky/Into the Dream' completely hits the mark with a riveting, pulsating arrangement, showcasing sublime vocals (the amazing Ann Wilson of Heart comes to mind), scintillating synth riffs and a rather splendid Guthrie Govan guitar rant that shivers, quivers, and thunders with impossible zeal. The aquatic onset of 'The Mask' seeks to set a jazzy ambiance, more of that piano being at the forefront, together with the lead microphone singing a sorrowful song, and a luscious acoustic guitar phrasing, a breezy romance, a riveting melody, and masterful instrumental performance that, half-way through injects a Phillips rumble, the Jan Christiana guitar riffs working up into a frenzy, as the unexpected bombast kicks in, ferociously adamant. A sizzling finale that offers the two contrasts once again. Well played, Octarine Sky. Energetic jazz-rock (emphasis on the second part) is next up on the lethal '5', where all the players torch the bonfire and detonate into the night sky, like a musical fireworks display, complete with sensational vocal noodlings and superlative drumming that seek to contrast well with the wildly exquisite and jaw-dropping Govan guitar rantings. Smoking!

Let's keep the blaze burning with the molten lava of 'Midnight', crunchy rifferama, bruising bass detonations and a smoldering axe run from Guthrie once again, cannonading drum patterns and a persistent 'Nevermore' chorus, the boldness and sheer comfort zone of this tornado track is astonishing. Monsters in my room. 'VII' reverts back to another Emersonian piano exercise, a complex, hysterically controlled, playfully cagey, and exceedingly proggy display that stamps Dyanne's artistic credentials with a massive golden buzzer (especially when she whips out a ridiculously fabulous synth solo) . Seems like both Jan and Guthrie enjoy the interplay as the provide some 6-string delirium, while Phillips proves once again what a world class drummer he has always been. Masterful, indeed.

The very grand finale 'Hold' serves to close the book on this phenomenal release, as it offers everything one would expect from such talented musicians, not a single note is redundant, boring, or out of place, as one can sense the sheer enjoyment in playing theses compositions. Guitarist Chatterjee expresses his inner Steve Howe yearnings in a piece that is overtly classic Yes in style as well as substance, including some Jon Anderson recorded choir vocals, Dyanne soaring majestically into the highest expanses of celestial music, as this is pure symphonic prog, and arguably one of the finest tracks Yes never recorded.

Everything is just perfectly natural yet precise, it is an uncanny tribute to the pioneers of our beloved progressive rock. An amazing piece of music and a stellar album that begs to be heard, admired, and distributed to all those who crave for compelling music in their lives.

5 near neighbours

tszirmay | 5/5 |

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