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Snowball - Defroster CD (album) cover

DEFROSTER

Snowball

 

Jazz Rock/Fusion

3.39 | 18 ratings

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BrufordFreak like
3 stars Just looking at that all-star lineup one cannot resist giving this album a listen.

Line-up / Musicians: - Roye Albrighton (Nektar) / vocals, guitar - Curt Cress (Passport) / drums & percussion - Dave King (Embryo) / bass, synthesizer - Kristian Schultze (Passport) / keyboards

1. "Hold On" (3:19) nothing special here except for the brief bridges between the vocal sections (which take up 90% of the song). Not a very catchy melody or engaging song. (8.66667/10)

2. "Tender Storm" (4:08) instrumental with a nice groove and excellent percussion and synth play. (I hear no guitar!) (9/10)

3. "Devils Demons" (5:18) not loving the modern drumming effects, but I do respect and enjoy Kristian Schultze's keyboard play as well as Dave King's creative bass note choices. Roye's guitar and voice mirror Kristian's lead melody and it actually works. The chorus is a little questionable: like a jazzed up for the musical stage version of Nektar Recycled material. This reminds me a lot of the tangential jazz-rock fusion NOVA was making in London. (8.75/10)

4. "Country Dawn" (5:55) drumming rudiments with beginner's bass line and synth-dominated keyboard play opens this one before everybody shifts and settles into a Florida-cabana band motif for Roye to deliver a rathe rdull and ordinary (uninspired) guitar solo. Are these guys trying to make Yacht Rock? (8.75/10)

5. "Backfire" (3:06) using a rudimentary form of the bass line to The Ohio Players' "Fire" and some dynamic guitar and vocal lines, the song falls quite flat on its face. (8.5/10)

6. "Lilli Henri" (4:28) a decent Jazz-Rock Fusion theme that could have come from an album by Earth, Wind & Fire, Toto, Bob James, or even Narada Michael Walden, the band choose to let the instruments do the talking this time: especially in the voices of Kristian Schultze's keyboards. Despite the fact that it was more Roye Albrighton's rhythm guitar work that wowed me with Nektar, he is pretty lame here. (8.875/10)

7. "Paradise" (5:46) Roye's voice just doesn't suit the jazzy, funky realms of the fusion world so well as that of his and Alan "Taff" Freeman's rich prog soundscapes in Nektar though it does get a little better the thicker the sonosphere gets (like in the fifth minute). Is it only me, but does Dave King's bass play seem way too simplistic? (No wonder I've never formed any attachment to or affinity for his former band, Embryo.) (8.6667/10)

8. "Defroster" (4:51) here going for the power rock kind of Jazz-Rock Fusion--in my opinion the lamest form of J-R F and one that only compositionally-challenged artists and under-skilled musicians could go for. At least it's instrumental. Curt and Kristian are actually pretty decent here but Dave and Roye are pretty much useless (this despite a substantial amount of time and space given to Dave for a solo in the fifth minute). Roye's solo is so poor that he's backed by Kristian's Moog and even requires a second guitar track! (8.66667/10)

9. "Shade" (3:04) nice piano play opens this one before joined by synth strings and bass. An actually decent finale! (8.875/10)

Total Time 39:55

I guess I was expecting/hoping for more jazz-rock fusion of the nature that Kristian Schulze and Curt Cress had played over the previous eight years as part of Klaus Doldinger's PASSPORT. To hear Roye Albrighton's vocals be central to so much on this album is quite a shocker (and, I have to admit, a let down--and this while still loving Roye as a singer! I just wanted more J-R Fusion). When the music is jazzy, it is of a laid back Third Wave-Bordering-on-Fourth Wave type, yet the musicianship still of a high quality.

C/three stars; a nice record for posterity's sake--to commemorate the collaboration attempted by these lieutenants of 1970s prog and Jazz-Rock Fusion, but, ultimately, this is a failure with nothing much of substance or innovation to contribute to the music worlds. And: what a horrible name for a band--especially for one that wants to be taken serioiusly!

BrufordFreak | 3/5 |

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