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Schicke & Führs & Fröhling - Ammerland CD (album) cover

AMMERLAND

Schicke & Führs & Fröhling

Symphonic Prog


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3 stars Very acoustic album: Frohling made a very interesting work in the acoustic guitar, nicely joined by the excellent combinations and harmonies of the mellotrons and moogs of Fuhrs. Every piece is fresh and welcome, but in the end, the album looks very repetitive. Anyway, their sonority is still rather unique and beautiful. This is an acoustic guitar / keyboards album. If you like this path, then you should try it.
Report this review (#43443)
Posted Friday, August 19, 2005 | Review Permalink
greenback
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars This rare LP is made by 2 German musicians: a guitarist and a keyboardist. The style of this instrumental music is very varied: we can talk about a mix of progressive folk, New Age and an emulation of classical music.

There are omnipresent sophisticated acoustic guitars a la Steve Hackett, Anthony Phillips or Jan Akkerman, combined with tons of melodic and symphonic keyboards. there are no drums and the bass is rather rare on this record. There are many moog and floating mellotron parts: sometimes it sounds like Genesis' "Wind and wuthering", Focus and Vangelis. The sound is really pure and modern. The music is really well recorded, relaxing and beautiful. The ensemble is rather symphonic. The last track on side 1 is oddly strange: there is a man who expresses pathetic laughs and/or cries: this is the only weak point on this album.

Report this review (#43446)
Posted Friday, August 19, 2005 | Review Permalink
5 stars It took me so long to get into this album. At first I liked it - and almost cried at how good 'Dance of the Leaves' was - very reminiscent of Mendelssohn's Lieder ohne Worte, but arranged for 12-string and mellotron. Now I adore it, almost every second of it. It is a misty, sunset album of half-lights and nostalgia. I admire the concision of the pieces too - which manage to be more than just mood music or soundtracks for imaginary TV series. A minimalist masterpiece.
Report this review (#94845)
Posted Tuesday, October 17, 2006 | Review Permalink
Cesar Inca
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars Führs & Fröhling is but the simplistic name adopted by the duo of Gerhard Führs and Heinz Fröhling given the creation of a remnant act from Schicke, Führs & Fröhling (still active at the time, by the way). "Ammerland" is a beautiful album of melodic prog music, with a particular predominance of acoustic pieces (90% written by guitarists Fröhling) on a pastoral or classicist note. The presence of classical and acoustic guitars is heavily featured, being consistently in charge of elaborating the tracks' basic harmonies and main melodies; Führs, in turn, is mostly in charge of completing the melodic lines, state precise ornaments and layers convenient to either fulfill or enhance each current mood. This is mainly what happens in this album: using a symbolic image, picture Anthony Phillips travelling to Germany to record a sort of continuation of his "The Geese and the Ghost" album with back-up keyboardists from Eloy, Neuschwanstein or Novalis. There you have it then, or at least, something close. The namesake opener displays a magic majesty with those lovely classical guitar harmonies softly joined by eerie orchestrations on synths: it's a minstrel thing with an extra touch of soft, spacey undertones. 'Gentle breeze' portrays a similar melodic candor, but the lyrical momentum finds a somewhat tighter fruition due to the synth interventions; the track includes a mysterious interlude built around Renaissance times' spirit (Führs sounds a bit like Kit Watkins at times). 'Dance of the Leaves' is more frontally academic-oriented, much akin to Phillips' habitual pastoral side mixed with the bucolic side of Oldfield. The same goes for the Baroque 'Sarabande' and the romantic 'Circles of Live'. All three pieces fulfill a mixture of intimate classicism and clever keyboard textures (very German symphonic, indeed). Among them stands 'Street Dance', a fine exercise on playful Celtic moods, with certain nuances of urban folk. 'Every Land Tells a Story' is the longest track in the album, lasting almost 14 minutes - being a piece tried in SFF concerts, it is no surprise that the spirit of the trio is present in this epic, but the overall arrangements are evidently suited to the duo format. The opening motif is based on solid 12-string acoustic guitar arpeggios, with symphonic-spacey synth layers filling the mood; a second motif is more playful, quite close to some "Sunburst" tracks. At this point, there is also a connection with late 70s tangerine Dream. Before getting to minute 7, a piano motif emerges on a melancholic note, using empty spaces between chords quite effectively. With the addition of synths and picked guitar phrases, things get pompous in a controlled way. This very section is doubled after some cosmic effects (including an echoing thunder), enhancing the spacey facet until the final section nbrings an introspective ambience. Brilliant, really brilliant. The album's final 5 minutes are occupied by 'Ammernoon' (yet another track from the SFF days), which exhibits a mixture of TD and Cluster: the mysterious background includes whispers, moans and other vocal sources, while the mellotron and Moog provide a certain disturbance. "Ammerland" is a lovely album, certainly a demonstration of the sort of creativity that Führs and Fröhling had in store beside the SFF project.
Report this review (#185534)
Posted Monday, October 13, 2008 | Review Permalink
4 stars Pastoral instrumental beauty,German style., 23 Jun 2010

This review is from: Ammerland (Audio CD Esoteric Reactive Reissue 2010) Following the demise of the heavier power trio SFF, the FF component decided to concentrate on the quieter side of their music and created this forgotten gem, which up until now has only seen illegal `needle drop' release on CD. This is part of Esoteric's new imprint `Reactive' which promises many gems from the world of Krautrock.

This genre is a very broad church, and this is far far away from Neu! and Faust. The main instruments here are acoustic guitars and keyboards (largely Grand Piano, Mini Moog, Mellotron) .The music is strongly melodic and bright without being cloying, and will certainly appeal to fans of Mike Oldfield, Jade Warrior, maybe even Michael Rother. It is an entirely instrumental suite, whose sparkling textures like sunlight through leaves, or gentle waves on the water benefit greatly from a pristine mastering job.

After six short instrumentals which blend seamlessly to form the old side one, the centrepiece is the 13 minute `Every Land Tells A Story', which moves through various moods and tempos to create a pleasant journey. It's as gentle as the wind in the trees. It is a perfect record for a lazy summer day with the windows open and the birds singing in the background. The pieces really drift into each other and work as a whole suite, so forget the less than inspired titles and listen as a whole for a completely satisfying 40 minutes.

Report this review (#288029)
Posted Thursday, June 24, 2010 | Review Permalink
3 stars In this first albun without the drummer Eduard Schicke , the German couple Gerd Führs / keyboards & Heinz Fröhling / guitars presents a quite interesting work, based (in most of their 8 tracks) for the contrast among the classic guitar (with nylon strings) and the synthesizer, the one that does remember in some moments the albums from Italian guitarist' RICARDO ZAPPA (that also in the most of their music uses a classic guitar), associated the new age music in the molds of KITARO. That relationship is only broken in the two final tracks of the disk in that the twelve-strings guitar, takes the place of the classic guitar in the track 7 "Every Lands Tells Story" and in the track 8 "Ammernoon", where they appear in a "sovereign" way the keyboards. The result is a "meditative" symphonic-prog almost that a music of relaxation. The disk presents very beautiful melodies and although it is not a masterpiece is a very good work . My rate is 3,5 stars!!!
Report this review (#305204)
Posted Monday, October 18, 2010 | Review Permalink
5 stars I absolutely give this release a five star treatment.

Why you might ask?

Well because progressive rock doesn't always require the drum, bass, vocal formula to make a musical statement.

Ammerland is a lush adventure both thru the emerald ponds, tall forest of the Black Forest cultured with the Mellotron flutes, strings robust choirs, Moogesque leads and romantic nylon strings guitars.

From the start of listening to this release you will hear that romantic era Genesis flavor ala the best instrumentals passages of Wiind & Wuthering. Its a journey of the more contemplative side of progressive rock that at least for this reviewer made the experience all the more satisfying.

Ammerland is not your standard fair of progressive rock in fact I would call this a cross pollination of classical, electronica ala ambient music tho used diligently and some of the grandiose melodic bits of progressive rock.

The music is eloquently stated and the interplay of the guitar and keyboards is not over the top but rather as though two painters who could relate ideas upon an aural canvas converging for the final masterwork.

I am glad to see it was re-released just recently as I believe it to be not only a crucial release in progressive rocks vast catalog but a recording that had heart, soul and without the expected pomposity.

Report this review (#383422)
Posted Wednesday, January 19, 2011 | Review Permalink
apps79
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
2 stars There are two scenarios how the ''Ammerland'' album came up.First one says that Eduard Schicke had already parted ways with Fuehrs and Froehling, even if a third studio album by SFF had been recorded but not yet released.Second one appears Schicke to be still involved with SFF, but Fuehrs and Froehling had found time to create their own work in absence of drums and ''Ammerland'' was the fruit of their collaboration.One way or another this album marked the first effort of Fuehrs and Froehling as a duo, released in 1978 on Brain. Heinz Froehling appears to handle only acoustic/classical guitars, while Gerd Fuehrs plays Mellotron, Moog synth and grand piano.

As expected this work is quite different from the album of Fuehrs and Froehling with SFF, even if it has a strong symphonic flavor.Armored only with a guitar and some keyboards they leave SFF's powerful, symphonic textures for good to deliver dreamy, sensitive and very mellow instrumental music, which flirts with New Age and tends to be pretty minimalistic.First side actually sounds very one-dimensional, where the talent of Froehling is much highlighted and Fuehrs remaining in the background.So this is dedicated to classical guitar-drenched soundscapes with basically some nervous keyboard notes performed by Fuehrs.The exception comes from the short title-track, which contains some beautiful Mellotron waves next to atmospheric synths and the classical guitar alternating between cinematic and more sweet textures, while ''Circles'' has slightly more pronounced keyboard flavors in the vein of TONY BANKS, but even so it sounds pretty hypnotic.''Every land tells a story'' clocks at 14 minutes and seems to be not only the centerpiece of the flipside but of the whole album as well.This comes closer to SFF's classic works, switching from the melodic and ethereal lines to decent synth soloing and evident Classical vibes during the guitar parts, having a more balanced performance and sounding somewhere between SFF, MIKE OLDFIELD and STEVE HACKETT.The New Age atmosphere is still present and the absence of drums holds down the energy level, but this arrangement overall sounds charming and interesting.''Ammernoon'' will close the album in a spacey way with orchestral keyboards and cosmic synthesizers providing a not very familiar mood by Fuehrs and Froehling.

I would not recommend this work to fans of rich, progressive and intricate compositions, because it sounds rather hypnotic and extremely sophisticated.Basically the fan base should be New Age afficionados and lovers of minimalistic textures along the attempts of MIKE OLDFIELD.Rather dissapointing effort after the previous work of the duo with Schicke.

Report this review (#1158620)
Posted Tuesday, April 8, 2014 | Review Permalink
5 stars This album is very, very great. This is atmospheric, beautiful, relaxing, very progressive of course, hypnotic, etc.... This is the first of album of SFF without the drummer Schicke. So it's credited as Fuhrs & Frohling. The trio already made "Symphonic Pictures" which is one of the best 1976 progressive rock albums. The songs of "Ammerland" are based on acoustic guitar and synth melodies, with great developpement, some soloing, and great sound effects. The album is very calming and reminds me some Mike Oldfield moments. I think that "Ammerland" is one of the best discoveries that I made in 2015. Thanks to ProgLine who uploaded this masterpiece !
Report this review (#1356952)
Posted Thursday, January 29, 2015 | Review Permalink

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