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Shamblemaths - Shamblemaths 2 CD (album) cover

SHAMBLEMATHS 2

Shamblemaths

Eclectic Prog


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BrufordFreak
COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
5 stars The mature veterans who appeared out of no where with their debut album five years ago have upped the ante-- chosen to travel in a direction that may surprise some--yet do so with intelligence, resolve, and incredible talent.

1. "Måneskygge" (1:05) very cool horn over droning bowed double bass. Sounds like something exotic from the Middle East. (5/5)

2. "Knucklecog" (9:56) I had forgotten how mischevious Simen Å. Ellingsen's Ian Anderson/Peter Gabriel voice of impishness could sound: quite the theatric performance! Otherwise, the feel of this song and its sound palette feels quite like that of countrymen SEVEN IMPALE's 2014 debut, City of the Sun. Impressive drumming--very much like something out of the lexicon of the great jazz masters. And I love the insistent VDGG-like push of the main chordal theme's rhythm section. Great work on the keys and horns. (18.25/20)

3. "D.S.C.H." (Op. 110 String Quartet No. 8 in C Minor, Movements 1-2) "Imaginary Friend" (6:24) the sound here is so similar to the music Paolo "Ske" Botta was doing with Francesco Zago in the band NOT A GOOD SIGN that I'm rather shocked to see that Ske is not listed as a participant in its composition and studio rendering. Beautiful performance by the vocalists. I especially love the brief little duet between Ms. Pia Samset and the Mellotron! I understand that this is a rock rendering of a classical composition (intelligently done--with admirable creativity in the choices of instrumentation!), so it's a bit of a challenge to comment on the composition, so it comes down more to the piece's selection and arrangement. Interesting and commanding. (9/10)

4. "Lat Kvar Jordisk Skapning Teia Pts. 1-4" (6:37) beautiful innocent vocal-led introduction--almost child-like--from Anna Gaustad Nistad, which is then overtaken by the thick, driving VDGG-like bluesy rock of the full band, saxophone leading the barrage. The contrast with Ske's frequent and brief solo electric piano interludes is brilliant! Even culminating in a little two-minute mediæval motif in the fourth, fifth, and sixth minutes. Are my ears deceiving me in that I hear some traditional Christmas-like melodies entwined with a variation on Beethoven's "Ode to Joy"? (9.5/10)

5. "Lat Kvar Jordisk Skapning Teia Pt. 5" (5:38) opens like the disorganized primordial soup that is the beginning of EUMIR DEODATO's opening to "Also Sprach Zarathustra"--even using the same Fender Rhodes and bass and drums sounds. As it begins to congeal it morphs into a kind of Miles Davis Jazz-Rock Fusion foray. The deep bass chords at 3:40, however, dispell any jazz pretensions--as does the UNIVERSAL TOTEM ORCHESTRA/Ana Torres Fraile-like layered vocalizations of Pia M. Samset Very cool song! (9.25/10)

6. "Lat Kvar Jordisk Skapning Teia Pts. 6-8" (3:43) the oddest, most angular stop-and-start, zig-zagging song on the album--even with an all-acoustic movement in the middle. Again, the similarities to the music of YUGEN/NOT A GOOD SIGN/SKE are striking. Great drumming and electric guitar work in the 8th movement. (8.75/10)

7. "Lat Kvar Jordisk Skapning Teia Pt. 9: Mørker vik på all Hans veg" (2:18) basically horns and piano over which small human (Eivor Å. Ellingsen, aged 6) sings. (4.25/5)

8. "Been and Gone" (2:13) a sparsely-populated YUGEN-like composition that has double bass and droning chorus of vuvuzela-like horns as its central elements. Nice cinematic tension filler. (4.25/5)

9. "This River" (9:04) a delightful and deeply rewarding exercise in restraint and spaciousness that includes two wonderfully tender performances by the male and female singers. The rise in intensity during the fifth and sixth minutes is probably my favorite 90 seconds of music that I've heard from 2021! I love the vocals and the drummer's cymbal play! Perhaps my favorite song of the year! (20/20)

Total Time 46:58

Shedding the comfort of pleasing melodies (the former Strawbs-iness that I alluded to in my review of their previous album), and treading into the dangerous waters of more chromatically-based musical constructs is a risk Simen and Ingvald were quite willing to make--and I think that their efforts have paid off: They have, here, created a work of sophisticated, intellectual music that bears witness to their other contemporary grandchildren of King Crimson, the Yugen/Not a Good Sign and Seven Impale world is not so surprising were it not for the fact that nearly one half of my 2021 Top 15 Albums of the Year are coming from either Norway or have some connection to Paolo "Ske" Botta! While Shamblemaths 1 really knocked my socks off with their out-of-the-blue technical and compositional high end, this one astounds me in the risks taken by the band to move away from the crowd-pleasing Yes-standards and, instead, explore more obtuse and angular fare. Kudos! Bravo! An even bigger and, ultimately, more impressive surprise than 1.

A-/five stars; a modern masterpiece of progressive rock music that every prog lover should definitely check out! I have no doubt that this will soon be considered one of the 21st Century's essential prog releases!

Report this review (#2634899)
Posted Wednesday, November 17, 2021 | Review Permalink
5 stars Shamblemaths are a band that I discovered until I checked the top albums of 2021. This band is heavily unknown, unfortunately, and I say unfortunately because they're seriously amazing. Being mostly an eclectic progressive rock band that adds hints of jazz fusion in their music, Shamblemaths provides abstract tracks that manage to be very memorable and addictive to listen to.

Despite having hints of jazz-fusion, this record shouldn't really be too inaccessible, matter of fact most songs have a memorable verse or chorus made to stick in your head and help you digest the album more easily. Five stars might be a stretch for some but for me it's well deserved. Essential and I can definitely see this album becoming a classic in future years.

Report this review (#2634900)
Posted Wednesday, November 17, 2021 | Review Permalink
5 stars Great. I accidentally hit the back button and lost my entire review. I'm going to do a shortened version. This is definitely the best record of 2021 in my opinion. It has great melodies, amazing musicality and musicianship.

Standouts would be Knucklecog and This River. The first being a bombastic instrument-fest and This River features an absolutely amazing build-up at the middle of the song that works absolutely amazingly. Highly recommended to any King Crimson or Van Der Graaf Generator fan.

If you want to listen to an amazing album, I highly recommend it. This album is absolutely phenomenal. Five Stars for sure!

Report this review (#2635395)
Posted Friday, November 19, 2021 | Review Permalink
4 stars Wow, this surprised me out of the blue! What a great album!

I didn't know this band. Just stumbled across it out of the blue here in PA, and seeing this album with such a high rating, I was compelled to listen to it immediately. Of course, now I understand the rating! Norway is becoming one of my favourite musical countries. It is very probably in the top 10 if we talk about symphonic music.

This album has such a clean, natural, great sound and is so well produced that it's really a serious contender for album of the year. I, as far as my humble knowledge goes, put it in my contenders for album of the century so far.

These musicians have done a perfect and memorable job, and I'm pretty sure many of them are fans of Anglagard and early King Crimson (especially the Islands-Larks' Tongues In Aspic stage)!

In all seriousness, this is a work that definitely needs to be talked about. If you're reading this, you're already obliged to listen to it. Well, it's a joke, but you'd really be doing yourself a favour.

The first bite of the album "Maneskygge" provides a simple but forceful flute that maintains its impact on two or three specific tones. Thus it functions as a subtle and quiet entrance. Well, this quietness stops right at the beginning of the second song. Due to the ambience of the first song, which seems to be the noise of a van engine, one could imagine that the peace would crumble in a matter of seconds. But all for the best!

"Knucklecog" is the first masterpiece of the album. It reminds me so much of "Larks' Tongues In Aspic (Part I)" that it makes my skin crawl. I've always thought that metal-style electric guitar plucks combined with wind instruments like saxophone or bassoon engender too much prog sound! The lyrics are too subjective and at the same time interesting. It could be a sort of "Welcome To The Machine" but with more focus on the human body and its myriad of details and characteristics. The instrumentation is absolutely brilliant and neat. Here they have already entered an intellectual and complicated terrain, but what awaits us next is even more complex.

Just when it seems that the album will not go up a level and all the music will be as spectacular as the second song, "D.S.C.H. (Op. 110 String Quartet No. 8 in C Minor, Movements 1-2)" comes along and elevates everything even more! It just all happens here. One of my principles as a human being is "If you can't describe something in words, you don't know it yet". Well, some segments of this song have left me speechless and happy because while I was listening to this song I was thinking that I'm only on my first listen, and I can still enjoy and squeeze this album a lot more. The vocal work is chilling and magnificent. For fans of 50% prog/50% classical music, this song will be a colossal pleasure.

"Lat Kvar Jordisk Skapning Teia" is the longest song on the album at 18 minutes. It consists of 9 parts and treads in all the spaces you can imagine, from risky instrumental chaos to a piano that peacefully accompanies a 6 year old singing. I would go so far as to say that this song cannot be pigeonholed into a genre. Another one would have to be invented! Everything is still fantastic here, the album doesn't let up at any point. The passages and small transitions are very neat and careful, so that one is not bored but in constant amazement. If I had to choose the best song on the album, it would be a very difficult decision but I think I would go with this delicate and superlative suite, and I would argue that it is the most dangerous and experimental song on the album, and the transitions from one sub-genre to another are so neat and methodical that they become imperceptible. The adjective "pragmatic" defines the procedure of this song better than any other word.

"Been And Gone" begins to close the album. Its brevity makes it work as an interlude of drama and fear, with a double bass that seems to be pacing and raw horn arrangements.

At the end of it all is "This River", or rather, the perfect closer. It's probably one of the best album closers I've ever heard. And by this, I mean that, within the hundreds of albums I've listened to, I'd place it roughly in a top 7. Let me be complimentary: Here everything is planned flawlessly, with the saxophone as pure as ever and percussion that provides just the right amount of tension (it could very well be the song that represents Gustavo Fring!). The sounds of water have never been so well implemented in a full-length song. Marianne Lonstad's voice is worthy of being an emblematic progressive rock voice. Her work on this album is totally flawless. To be clear, I would compare her voice to divinity itself. The song (and the album) closes with only the sound of a river.

I feel that the meaning of the album is very deep and it's going to take me a while longer to understand it in its entirety (or almost), and that motivates me to listen to it several more times. I hope it will become one of my favourite albums. It's one of the most intelligent and best planned albums I've ever listened to, and from now on it's on my list of essential recommendations.

Long live this album!

Fun fact: was released on the same day as Dream Theater's "A View From The Top Of The World" and Premiata Forneria Marconi's "I Dreamed Of Electric Sheep".

Report this review (#2636365)
Posted Tuesday, November 23, 2021 | Review Permalink
siLLy puPPy
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
5 stars SHAMBLEMATHS exhilarated the prog world with its ambitious retro meets modern day prog attack self-titled debut which was released in 2016, a mere twelve years after the act officially gestated in its Norwegian homeland. Led by the intelligent and ambitious Simen Ådnøy Ellingsen who serves not only as main songwriter, band leader and multi-instrumentalist, SHAMBLEMATHS reemerges five years later with its second coming simply titled SHAMBLEMATHS 2. While utterly and unthinkably uncreative in the titular department, this brilliant concoction of cultured and curated prog attacks showcases an act that is firing on all cylinders and once again rousing the progheads of the world into a feverish frenzy!

For this sophomore release, SHAMBLEMATHS hosts a completely new set of characters delivering a plethora of progginess and finds bassist Eirik Mathias Husum from the first album jumping ship and replaced by drummer / xylophonist Ingvald A. Vassbø joining as the newest half of the dynamic Norwegian duo. In addition is a star studded guest roster of 12 performing on a host of extra instrumentation and vocals. Most notably is Paola Botta known as the keyboardist from Yugen as well as his stage name Ske. Unlike SHAMBLEMATHS 1, #2 does not take prog to the stratosphere with 20-minute plus tracks but rather keeps things on the shorter side but make no doubt about it, this second offering is chock full of frothy whipped prog in doses so dense and delicious that you may risk certain gluttony if you indulge too much!

Clocking in at only 47 minutes, #2 features nine tracks that are more direct than the debut. Likewise the music casts a darker shadow with heavier guitar workouts, starker contrasts and a much richer assemblage of harmonious vocal performances. The addition of several female vocalists adds a dramatic divine feminine touch which contrasts beautifully with the loose-wire masculine freneticism of the instrumentation which is much more chaotic and complex than the debut as a whole displayed. While album #1 featured every kind of retro influence from the avant-prog of Univers Zero to the zeuhl of Magma, #2 takes on a heavier King Crimson approach with heavier passages evoking the "Red" era whereas the jazzy softer parts reminding of "Islands." Due to the heavinesss bands like Anekdoten and other 90s prog revivalists come to mind as well.

The Ske influences are obvious as well as the avant-prog leanings of the debut are ramped up into near-Yugen adroitness with a huge range of moods generated through myriad tones, textures, timbres and splendiferous motifs. Oft herky jerky and zolo-esque, SHAMBLEMATHS delivers breathtaking prog workouts that evoke the best of the best of prog adventurists reminding of classics like Il Balleto di Bronzo's "Ys" or Birds And Building's most adventurous moments. This winding stampede of progginess is what prog dreams are made of and unlike the debut doesn't waste any time dillydallying with repetitive loops that can derail a fixed attention span. The guitar and bass workouts are a few notches above the last album as well with crazy hairpin turns, dangerous deviations from any expectations and drop of a pin transitions back into soft lush folky pastoral pastiches.

The four part "Lat Kvar Jordisk Skapning Tela" really does evoke dreams of prog paradise with pretty much everything you could want from a modern prog band. Connections to the classic prog traditions only amplified and taken to the next level or two and then polished like a fine gemstone with a gorgeous production that allows all of the sounds to find their proper role in the scheme of things. While "Parts 1-4" are turbulent and tumultuous as a tossed vessel on stormy seas, "Part 5" oft reminds of "Dark Side of the Moon" with jazzy prog rock accompanied by soulful feminine vocal charm. "Parts 6-8" get all wild and woolly again with quick hairpin turn changes of ethnic folk, avant-prog, metal bombast and KC dexterity. This part particularly mines some complexity from Ske and Yugen's twisted world. The closing "Part 9" tones things down a bit in order to catch your breath and is basically 2-minute ethnic avant-folk down time.

"Been And Gone" on the other hand is sort of an atmospheric 2-minute intro for the closing "This River" which at 9-minutes is the second lengthiest track. Starting with a soft piano and some intimate vocal performances, this track slowly percolates into a jazz-fueled mid-tempo rocker and features a rare return to the bubbling zeuhl rhythms more prevalent on the debut. The classic bass stomps and Teutonic march style is softened by the sultry sax squawks and gentleness of the female vocal parts. No stentorian choirs or vocal bombast on this one. This last track sorta comes off as a 9-minute come down from the frenetic nature of the rest of the album. This track seems like a sonic representation of a reflecting pool where you can process the craziness that you just endured up to this point.

All i can say is - WOW! This is definitely one of those albums that has the key to the dopamine receptors! Contrast is the name of the game here. Brutal bombast, sensual pianissimo, chaotic frenzy and calculated harmonious glory. It's all here where much is familiar but even more is not. This is one of those roller coaster rides where you get off the ride and want to jump right back in and do it all over again. One excellent album is no big deal these days as there are many talented musicians lurking about but SHAMBLEMATHS has proven beyond a doubt that this is a talent that hasn't reached its apex, in fact it's only just begun! Well worth the five year wait as there are no disappointing moments on this one. All hail the giant red eye radiating stripes for all! In a very fruitful year of excellent prog releases, SHAMBLEMATHS 2 sits high on the perch of best albums of the year! Woohoo!!!

Report this review (#2636458)
Posted Tuesday, November 23, 2021 | Review Permalink
5 stars Shamblemaths - Shamblemaths II

This album truly left me speechless! Easily my album of the year, and I'm definitely excited for anything this duo does next. This album borrows heavily from King Crimson and Van Der Graaf Generator. There's heavy use of saxophone, and female vocals appear momentarily in certain sections.

The standout for me is Knucklecog, which is dynamic yet balanced, energetic yet mysterious. It also features a Dream Theater-like section in the middle. Lat Kvar Jordisk Skapning Teia is a very well made epic. This River has an amazing build-up around the middle.

Super solid and really good, definitely giving it the five stars. Recommended to any prog fan really.

Report this review (#2636563)
Posted Wednesday, November 24, 2021 | Review Permalink
3 stars Due to a cascade of euphoric reports on the Internet I decided to listen to this new Norwegian project. Well, to me it sounds like a blend of Anglagard (more experimental second album), King Crimson (avant-garde inspired early Seventies) and Il Balletto Di Bronzo (album Ys, a Classic Italian Prog gem). The compositions are very adventurous, daring and captivating, but also pretty complex and quirky, or even mighty close to cacophonic. Room for vintage keyboards, from sumptuous Hammond organ eruptions to majestic Mellotron choir layers. And more for brass/woodwind, often in the avant-garde style, not my cup of tea. At some moments I am blown away by this music, but in general it is too nerveracking for me.

Anyway, this Norwegian formation delivers interesting music, to say the least, only the vocals sound mediocre. I am not planning to buy their albums after my listening sessions, but thumbs up for these creative and adventurous minds, going their own way in the amazing world of prog.

My rating: 3,5 star.

Report this review (#2637326)
Posted Friday, November 26, 2021 | Review Permalink
5 stars A modern progressive rock masterpiece. Shamblemaths utilizes influence from King Crimson in a very musically mature way. Whether it is the use of saxophone for both bombastic instrumentation and atmospheric sections, or the blend of male and female vocals, this record manages to perform amazingly in many aspects, allowing for a non-repetitive and immersive experience all-along.

The songs vary in purpose, whether it is the opener's atmospheric calm-before-the-storm-esque ambience to prepare the listener to the heavy Knucklecog. Or Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence's use of overlapped vocals and a cappella combined with King Crimson inspired jams. Or This River's amazing sense of build up and tension released as a final climax in the album.

This record is very accessible for anyone who's a fan of progressive rock, and I highly recommend it to anyone. *****

Report this review (#2654565)
Posted Tuesday, December 21, 2021 | Review Permalink
5 stars What a freaking ride!

What's in the Scandinavian water? Seriously, I think the majority of my favourite prog acts from the past 20 years are from Norway and Sweden. Here's another.

Wow! What an album this is. It has a winning combination of elements and moods that deliver exactly what I want in this style of prog.

Others have made some good comparisons for describing this music: King Crimson, Seven Impale, Anglagard, etc. I'll add Anekdoten to those already mentioned. None of that is to say they aren't original. It's just to describe what it's like. It's their own through their own blend.

Just listen to it once or twice and be sure to go right to the end each time. The finale, This River is an epic, confident and climactic conclusion to a great album.

Report this review (#2656560)
Posted Wednesday, December 29, 2021 | Review Permalink
DamoXt7942
FORUM & SITE ADMIN GROUP
Avant/Cross/Neo/Post Teams
4 stars First of all thanks to every mate who has recommended this great album to me. "Shamblemaths 2" was released as the second full-length album by a Norwegian rock duo SHAMBLEMATHS in October 2021. This is my first Shamblemath album actually and a quick listen to "2" has notified me why this album is appreciated by lots of progressive rock fans. Very complex, very diverse, but very optimistic and very suggestive ... we could mention this creation as such.

After the prologue entitled "Måneskygge" featuring Simen's refined saxophone sounds, the real departure (and one of their masterpieces) "Knucklecog" possessing energetic sarcastic musical explosions goes forward with incredible rhythmic dissection and melodic distortion. Their intensely enthusiastic dissonance suddenly grabs our heart in a beyond-recovery manner. The sound formation may be sometimes called avantgarde, sometimes heavy, and sometimes jazzy. Such a diversity getting over the subgenre categories is also fascinating. The following "D.S.C.H. (8th String Quartet in Cm, Op. 110, mvts 1 & 2)" (I have had a listen to these quirky mysterious melody lines and found this is an opus by Shostakovich!) is superbly arranged and stabilized by the duo filled with deep strong eccentric rock essence, like "Starbird" by Manfred Mann's Earth Band. Yeah additionally SCH's tough and sensitive feelings can be expressed so badly. The last song "This RIver" is the grand finale featuring all of their heavy fuzzy dizzy instruments especially drastic saxophone, critical synthesizer, and fantastic female vocals. Earthy grassy flavour like a river on a mountainside or in a deep forest is awesome really.

"Lat Kvar Jordisk Skapning Teia" Suite is the piece de resistance. Melodic weirdness, quietness, harmonization and synchronization are coming out one after another. Dark ambience produced by wind instruments and cynical rhythmic nations is very impressive. Kind of fantasy is that silky-touched sensitive melodic texture is popping out immediately after the darkness. Their complicated melody lines are not common nor rational but two Shamblers' powerful sound launching should make us feel that they are theoretical. The former part of "Part 5" reminds me of the similar vein to French RIO jazz project Red Noise plus heavy metallic innovation. Various soundscape based upon their musical background heard here there everywhere should be enchanting and uncopyable. The following part has perverted deathcore-ish attachments amongst delicate quiet ambient intervals. And 6-year-old Elvor's pretty charming singing can relax us completely in the last "Part 9". Such an unimaginable combination should be cherished in a large scale.

Good work. In a good sense, I love such a 'wonderfully messy sound-polluted' creation indeed.

Report this review (#2657172)
Posted Thursday, December 30, 2021 | Review Permalink
Mellotron Storm
PROG REVIEWER
5 stars I must admit I get intimidated reviewing certain albums like this one and so I keep holding off the review plus I want to keep it in my play list for as long as I can. SHAMBLEMATHS is the project of Norwegian Simen A Ellingsen who is a multi- instrumentalist and composer. I gave his debut 4.5 stars and I feel that this is just slightly better and enough to hit that magical 5 star rating. Man I love the retro sound here with the mellotron then add Simen's adventerous sax work and compositions and man this is my album of the year right here. I was reminded of ANGLAGARD and that Swedish sound and it doesn't hurt that the liner notes contain some cool pictures of the "woods" in Norway which ANGLAGARD liked to do showing off those Swedish forests. There just seems to be a connection between the land and the music. This is often dark, mysterious and romantic.

Simen has a new musical partner who is a drummer plus we get many guests adding a variety of vocals, keyboards and bass. There's really only six tracks here spread over 47 minutes as that long track at 18 minutes translated "Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence" is divided into 4 separate tracks. That title reminds me of a combination of Zechariah 2:13 "Be still before the Lord all mankind because he has roused himself from his holy dwelling" and Habakkuk 2:20 "But the Lord is in his holy temple, let all the earth be silent before him".

Speaking of mysterious how about that short 1 minute opener called "Maneskygge" where we get that melancholic alto sax with the double bass helping out. "Knucklecog" is my least favourite only because of the bombast which isn't my thing but that's just a part of this 10 minute piece. Love those psychedelic calms as the keys echo. Jazzy drums and and picked guitar as well. Vocals arrive with mellotron in tow. It kicks in again as sax joins that beautiful atmosphere. Complex is the word 4 minutes in. Check out that sounds after 5 1/2 minutes! A calm follows as themes continue to be repeated then some female vocals after 7 minutes with sax, atmosphere and jazzy drums before kicking back in.

I am blown away by the remainder of this album beginning with the 6 1/2 minute "D.S.C.H." which starts with baritone sax before we are hit with power. Some nasty organ and man SINKADUS comes to mind, this is so good. It settles again quickly with some soprano recorder but that organ is nasty that comes and goes boiling away. Some mellotron as soprano female vocals arrive and other sounds that come and go. It kicks in after 3 minutes with the guitar out front. Soon it's a stampede! The sax is great here and the tempo continues to shift. So much going on at 5 minutes then a calm with piano only. Again it's brief as it kicks back in.

Next is that monster 18 minute piece called "Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence"and it opens with solo female vocals before mellotron then some depth kicks in as vocals continue. Oh my! Check out those heavy outbursts. Jarring and powerful. She will step aside as the sax takes the lead in a powerful setting. Some beautiful keyboard sounds after 4 minutes as it has settled followed by mellotron at 5 1/2 minutes. It's building bringing ANGLAGARD to mind before we get another calm.

The next section is dark with sparse sounds. The piano echoes as we hear cymbals and atmosphere. So good! It turns fuller around 2 1/2 minutes. Man this section ends so amazingly with those nasty keyboards, mellotron, sax and heaviness. Come on! Mellotron storms in to end it as we get the next section that begins with female vocals then heaviness with sax. Complex. Love that electric piano and intricate sounds as we get a calm. Picked guitar and xylophone too. Bassoon! Mellotron is ravaging the soundscape 2 minutes in then check out the sound after 3 minutes! The final section opens with a child singing in a reserved way in atmosphere.

"Been And Gone" is a short 2 minute track that is haunting and dark like those woods in Norway. Double bass with experimental sounds along with some mellotron and whispers. "This River" ends it with Simen's understated vocals with piano. I am surprisingly drawn to this. We do get some mellotron, bass and female vocals joining in. Sax will follow as it gets a little fuller and check out that mellotron before 4 minutes. It ends with dual vocals and piano.

What a ride or should I say adventure. I need to do a retro list of my favourite albums I just love this style of music. So many great ideas on this album. I wasn't expecting the mellotron and Simen told me he thought I would like this new direction he went in given my penchant for Rio as he put it.

Report this review (#2670410)
Posted Saturday, January 8, 2022 | Review Permalink
3 stars After several listens I can say that I do not share the enthusiasm that this album has aroused and that, according to its reviews, it would seem like a must listen. Perhaps this is due to the odious but inevitable comparisons that this album arouses from the first minutes (mainly King Crimson and All Traps On Earth) and that hinder listening when the music does not reach the level of said bands. Only when the band -always in an experimental way- moves away from musical histrionics almost close to free jazz does it manage to develop its best moments (listen to the first minutes of "Lat Kvar Jordisk Skapning Teia Pt. 5") and not when, deliberately and a little clever, try to imitate the frenetic musical forms of All traps on earth.
Report this review (#2672798)
Posted Sunday, January 16, 2022 | Review Permalink
4 stars Shamblemaths. I never would have discovered them if it weren't for Progarchives. Their second album is absolutely great, taking what we know from prog and making it their own.

Knucklecog - starts slowly, but has many dynamic shifts. With many references to King Crimson. I recognize snippets of Starless in the guitar, drumming and sax. Especially in the loud parts and the climax. But the track as a whole sounds like it took inspiration from different eras of King Crimson. From the first album (20th-century schizoid man) to the 2000s. That said, it has enough uniqueness to not be a shameless copy. Rather, it is a feat of standing on the shoulders of giants to create their own unique sound. 8.5/10

D.S.C.H. - I love this proggy take on Shostakovich's motif. Very interesting and entertaining and has a lot of drive. 8/10

Lat kvar jordisk skapning teia 1-4 - Starting off with a soft voice, this track is an exercise in dynamics too. These change in dynamics again have many similarities with the best work of King Crimson. 8/10

Lat kvar jordisk skapning teia 5 - nice jazzy piece, reminiscent of what happened on this front early seventies. But with some punch and not a lot of needless noodling. 8/10

Lat kvar jordisk skapning teia 6-8 - We enter King Crimson-eske territory again. Everything we hear is heavily inspired by them, with touches of jazz and classic music. Shamblemaths doesn't worry that much about genres. And creates a great unique mix. 8/10

Lat kvar jordisk skapning teia 9 - Nice outro of the 9 part suite. I have some issues with the uneven voice of the kid singingr. I would have preferred the female voices of before. I type this without knowing what actually is sung. 7/10

Been and Gone - nice little interlude. Nothing shocking compared to the rest of the album. Perhaps the lowlight. 7/10

This River - Starts very restrained. Which I love. The sax solo is beautifully mellow too. Around the midpoint, the track picks up speed in a mellotron heavy part. Again reminiscent of King Crimson. We reach the climax at about 6 minutes. And then ending in a mellow way, fitting for the album. 8.5/10

I think this is a strong album. It takes inspiration from the greats, especially Crimson, but with its own voice. In contrast to other artists like Wobbler. I love it. I recommend it. This is why I rate it 4 stars. As an excellent addition to any prog rock music collection.

Report this review (#2737335)
Posted Thursday, April 14, 2022 | Review Permalink
Warthur
PROG REVIEWER
5 stars The second Shamblemaths album finds the band continuing to refine and polish their capability of visiting pretty much every style of progressive rock at once and integrate them all into cohesive and compelling compositions. This time around, there's a little less zeuhl on the menu, an extra helping of Canterbury, and perhaps more than a hint of Änglagård (and other Scandi-prog outfits of the mid-1990s like Sinkadus and Landberk), especially when it comes to the use of vintage-sounding keyboard textures. Maybe it's just because I am a sucker for the particularly melancholic Mellotron moods of that latter influence, but this feels like it really helps take Shamblemaths' sound to the next level.
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Posted Tuesday, June 27, 2023 | Review Permalink

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