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Madrigal - Waiting... CD (album) cover

WAITING...

Madrigal

Crossover Prog


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5 stars Madrigal "Waiting" is (in my opinion) one of the best prog albuns of the late 80"s, and fairly superior to next albun("On My Hands") from this North-American band. The styke of sound is a mixture of bands of the 70's like, Gentle Giant and Queen (mainly) and pinchs of Yes, Rush and King Crinsom. The GENTLE GIANT influences is present in the alternate of "swinging" pasages and vocal counterpoints. The QUEEN influences are in some theatrical choir vocalizations.( like in the firs track "Siter Happy"). The RUSH influences be especially in more heavy moments and riffs. (like in track 4 "Experience") The KING CRINSOM style is more emphatic in the track 6 "Jericho". ( I listen cleary Fripp guitar moods). The YES influence is present in guitarrist style ( with a strong( Steve Howe influence, in spite of track 6). Another singularitv in the guitarrist style is the use of acoustic guitar mix with the eletric guitar in almost all tracks. I like to detach the fantastic bass & drums combination, which are in many times surprising. My rate is 5 stars !!!
Report this review (#279345)
Posted Sunday, April 25, 2010 | Review Permalink
apps79
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars Fantastic obscure US Prog band,formed in 1977 in Spokane by teenagers Kevin Dodson and Dave Cebert.MADRIGAL toured extensively in Northern US and Canada,playing both covers and original compositions,but never had the chance to record an official album.So they reasonably disbanded in early 80's.However they came back in late 80's with only Kevin Dodson from the original members and recorded their debut ''Waiting''.

The sound of the album is an absolute surprise considering the time of its release,strong GENTLE GIANT influences all the way with some lighter KANSAS overtones.The result is so close to another unknown band,TERRACED GARDEN or even ECHOLYN and SPOCK'S BEARD without commercial traces.The vocal department is excellent,no matter the band delivers multi- or mono-vocal harmonies.A variety of keys,piano and synths along with the changing climates and sudden breaks produces the atmosphere only GENTLE GIANT could create.Guitars alternate constantly from acoustic to electric with a bit of banjo on some tracks.Some strings and flute doses make the album even richer.Complexity,atmosphere and melody combine almost perfectly in every track.

It is certainly a crime this band is so overlooked.In late 80's you could find plenty of Jazz Rock albums,some Symphonic or Classic Prog works but definitely not such an eclectic effort.MADRIGAL belong from today among my favorite all-time bands and their debut comes more than highly recommended by my side.

Report this review (#464686)
Posted Sunday, June 19, 2011 | Review Permalink
siLLy puPPy
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
4 stars When you think of progressive rock in the 80s you would probably immediately think of the British neo-prog scene blossoming with bands like Marillion, Pallas, IQ and Twelfth Night or you may even think of some of the RIO bands that emerged in the late 70s and carried on to the 80s like Univers Zero, Present, Art Zoyd and a few zeuhl bands from France and Belgium however there was a few artists that sprang up in the US as well. While the main contenders fall into the avant-prog camp such as Thinking Plague, The Muffins and Birdsongs of the Mesozoic, there were also some early crossover acts that prognosticated some of the sounds that would emerge in the 90s and beyond.

This US band named MADRIGAL picked the wrong time to form in 1977 when two teenagers Keven Dobson aged 18 and Dave Cebert aged 15 began this band in the city of Spokane, Washington. MADRIGAL began and would remain the sole project of Dobson who was immensely inspired by Deep Purple's keyboard sound by the late great Jon Lord and other 70s progressive rock which was a rarity in the US outback during the day but nevertheless found a few nerdy customers seeking out all those crazy sounds from overseas. Initially MADRIGAL simply covered the big bands of prog such as Genesis, Gentle Giant, King Crimson, Jethro Tull, Yes and even pseudo-prog bands like Ambrosia.

Considering the band formed the very same year the punk rock scene completely changed the musical landscape, the MADRIGAL project was swimming upstream from the very beginning but nevertheless toured the Pacific Northwest in both the US and Canada in the late 70s but sadly despite writing a lot of material and recording a bunch of it never got a chance to release an album. It didn't help that the band name MADRIGAL was already taken by a UK folk band, a Canadian psychedelic pop band, another US experimental rock band and even in the prog world was taken by a French band. Facing a bleak future MADRIGAL ended in 1980 but changed its name to UVU and played period covers until 1986.

With only Kevin Dobson carrying the torch along with guitarist Steve Dornbier by his side, MADRIGAL reformed in the late 80s and finally released its first album WAITING in 1989 which took a lot of the influences of the aforementioned bands and crafted a rather interesting blend of prog that sounds like it was a few years ahead of similarly sounding band such as Spock's Beard, The Flower Kings and even Echolyn. WAITING is a very symphonic sort of prog album although its composiitons are catchy enough for crossover appeal but the complex melodies exhibit a quirky off-kilter procession with equally unorthodox counterpoints that include arpeggiated guitar runs evoking Gentle Giant and equally demanding vocal polyphony. The symphonic compositional style reminds a lot of bands like Kansas and even Yes with flute and pastoral segments reminding of Genesis but overall MADRIGAL sounds like the 90s bands before they existed.

Given that this album consists of eight tracks from over a decade's worth of material to work with, there are myriad musicians appearing on different tracks but amazingly the album sounds rather consistent due to Dodson's leadership role in the project. Perhaps the one weak spot on WAITING is the oft mopey vocal style Dodson displays but somehow despite sounding like a prototype of Neal Morse makes it all fit in fairly well. The highlights of this album are the longer tracks like "Best Laid Plans" and "Old Moon" which have the time to explore the world of symphonic prog in much greater depth. The album ends with the surprising track which features the classic 20s ragtime sounds of "Skinbo Hambone" which is a fun little track that despite sounding completely out of sync with the rest of the album is pretty freaking cool. This is an interesting obscurity from the 80s world of prog. WAITING appears with the second album "On My Hands" in its entirety on the MUSEA compilation that was released in 2012.

Report this review (#2349749)
Posted Saturday, April 11, 2020 | Review Permalink
Mellotron Storm
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars 3.5 stars. I've seen at least ten bands with the name MADRIGAL but this one is from Spokane, Washington and they released two studio albums about 10 years apart. They formed in 1977 and this is their debut over 10 years later. Drummer Kevin Dodson is the leader here and only original member left I believe. Some unusual sounds from this one with a lot of guests helping out. Banjo, toy drum set, guitar synth to name a few. Different vocalists and they are all okay. I think of this band as more Eclectic than Crossover but whatever.

Side one is called "Day" and side two "Night". The opener "Sister Happy" reminds me of a cross between GENTE GIANT and GENESIS and it's quite good if not that original sounding. There's really only one track that I'm all in on and that's "Experience". Right from the first listen my thoughts were "This is much better sounding" especially with the upfront guitar to start but the keyboards take over quickly. Guitar comes and goes. Complex stuff here and I like the instrumental break at 3 1/2 minutes. The closer is usually one of the better tracks but it's the worse one here. A Ragtime special and yes the perfect name for that style of music. And no I'm not big on acoustic piano and we get plenty on this album.

This was a tough one to rate because they clearly were very proggy and talented but my ratings reflect the fan in me not the critic. I agree with Bogdan on the 3.5 stars. And I really don't like the cover art(haha).

Report this review (#2596611)
Posted Friday, September 24, 2021 | Review Permalink

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