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Glass Hammer - Rogue CD (album) cover

ROGUE

Glass Hammer

Symphonic Prog


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4 stars This is my first review ever, sorry if it's not very good.

1: What If: The album starts with a very melodic song, which reminds me a lot of older Glass Hammer albums. Very good song. 2: The Road South: This song is very melodic and symphonic and very peaceful, a lot more peaceful than the last song. A good song, however not as good as the last one. 3: Tomorrow: This song is very atmospheric and faster than the previous song. The song slows down after the beginning. I like this song more than the previous one. 4: Pretty Ghost: Not a bad song, however not my favorite either. 5: Sunshine: This song is again very peaceful and atmospheric. I like this song, however not as much as some of the others on this album. 6: I Will Follow: This song begins with organs and it begins very peacefully and when the drums come in, the song becomes faster. I like this song. 7: The Wonder of it All: This song is faster and very atmospheric. I like this song. 8: One Last Sunrise: A very peaceful and atmospheric song. I like it. 9: Terminal Lucidity: An atmospheric song. Really brings on a journey. I feel like there's some Tangerine Dream influence in it? I like it a lot. 10: All Good Things: This song is peaceful, it also seems to bring on a journey, very good song. Probably my favorite song on this album.

Conclusion: A very good album, with lots of great melodies and its a very atmospheric album. Rating: 4/5.

Report this review (#3178202)
Posted Tuesday, April 15, 2025 | Review Permalink
4 stars GLASS HAMMER's 23rd album, loaded with melodies, from space rock from the 70s to today, a beautiful progressive spectrum. A return to the roots with the story of a man's final journey, a temporal parable.

"What If?" shakes my ears, a return to the GLASS HAMMER of the past, more melodic, less heavy, sung with the fruity sounds of Yes, acoustic guitar, and electronic keyboard worthy of 80s BOSTON. The vibes of Mike OLDFIELD are compelling for this bright, airy, symphonic track with a bucolic guitar solo. "The Road South" opens with a tune by BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST, RADIOHEAD, and a soaring atmosphere of ALAN PARSONS; gone is the prog-metal sound that boosted me, back to the keyboard-laden sounds of 70s-80s YES and ELP. "Tomorrow" is a text oozing with religious hope, a tune leaning towards pop love song with velvety synths and a pervasive bass. A hint of Jon Anderson on the holiday air of these bucolic, marshmallow bells. "Pretty Ghost" continues, a few notes from the cruise s'amuse to emphasize the cheerful tune. Olivia takes the stage accompanied by the Yessian bass, a languid 80s pop tune and her Genesis-esque keyboards like in the band's early days. Fresh without overthinking it, but so far from the sound of the last two albums. "Sunshine" continues with Olivia, YES exploding into reminiscence with the pad and plaintive lap-steel guitar. A languid vocal ballad for 80s regression with this thoughtful keyboard smelling good of THE CARS. A progressive finale on a marshmallow slope hurtling down the notes of a country meadow. "I Will Follow" is a classic organ intro. YES, yes again, although U2 fans will have been listening for a while. The punchy rhythm, velvety keyboards, and diverse hooks give this track a measured power. Layers of vocals, Oliver's vibrant melancholic guitar solo, and Steve's keyboards amplify the progressive side.

"The Wonder of it All" is an 80s-style intro, reminiscent of The Cars; I insist on the fresh use of the keyboard. The cinematic intro lets the velvety vocals unfold on the slopes of Alan Parson's, oozing melting marshmallow over a serious lyric. The keyboards bring the AOR-oriented, alternative, nostalgic break, harking back to the original Glass Hammer, sumptuous even if it lacks pep for me; the final keyboard is redundant and hypnotic. "One Last Sunrise" with the interlude, YES-style, coming from the Centaur star; electronic atmosphere, which is moreover, easy to access, bordering on new age. The unfolding of the air in fade on a vulgar drum machine embellished with bewitching keyboards, chiming with the dark outro. "Terminal Lucidity" matrix-like intro, soaring, obvious on OZRIC TENTACLES. A title winking at 'The Return Of Daedalus' by Arise, with the spaceship coming out of a black hole... In short, space rock full of electronics bordering on krautrock where the sounds of TANGERINE DREAM come to light. Velvety, distorted, on 'Tron'. The heavy guitar solo spurts from this black hole precisely, immense; Ariel's keyboard solo a tad hypnotico-oriental, bluffing. A little space-time later it's a bewitching alien western. The piano sets the scene after 8 minutes, introducing a solemn symphonic aria where vocals were not required. A grandiloquent moment with choirs, bells, and piano blending into the space of our psychedelic memory. "All Good Things" closes the album, with Alan Parson's vocal phrasing, ELO, and The Beatles. A sad, languid aria that evolves with the instrumental parts of Ariel on keyboards and Oliver on guitars. The solemn piece, a testament to the hero's journey, is effectively brought to life by this divine, captivating, psychedelic break. Prog like the good old days, with melancholic sequences that make you cry with joy and realize that beautiful music is still present today.

GLASS HAMMER returns to this gentle sound after their heavy trilogy, which had so much to talk about. A melodic album with a nod to the 80s, new wave to regress without getting too lost in the twists and turns of the Dinos. Original profilprog (4.5).

Report this review (#3180074)
Posted Tuesday, April 22, 2025 | Review Permalink
5 stars

I assume that you were waiting for the latest album by Glass Hammer in some way. Why do I assume? Although sometimes we say sarcastically that what can old hands do, what can they surprise us with, that it will probably be the same again... however (and please admit it to yourself) when such an album appears, we reach for it somewhere in the privacy of our homes to really convince ourselves whether it is as we expected, or whether there is something exceptional, surprising, some breathtaking novelty among the new songs.

You can like Glass Hammer, you can dislike them, but one statement cannot be disputed: they are, without a doubt, a legend of progressive rock in the American version. Although, in fact, a better description would be to say that they are an icon of American progressive rock. If someone asks about the most distinguished progressive rock bands from the New World, Glass Hammer will undoubtedly be among such aces as Rush, Styx, Spock's Beard, Dream Theater, Tool, Echolyn, Kansas. There is probably nothing else that can be said about a band that has twenty-two full-length albums to its credit, including: "Perelandra" (1995), "Chronometree" (2000), "Lex Rex" (2002), "Culture of Ascent" (2007), "One" (2010), "Valkyrie" (2016) and a trilogy consisting of the albums: "Dreaming City" (2020), "Skallagrim: Into the Breach" (2011) and "At The Gate" (2022). The albums listed above do not claim to be the best in any general summary, but in my personal collection they have their deserved place.

Let's consider another "myth" related to Glass Hammer. The band does not present its symphonic and strongly prog-rock face on all of its productions. It cannot be pigeonholed as a band playing symphonic rock. Although one could come to such a conclusion after listening to the Skallagrim trilogy, where strong, almost metal riffs intertwine with keyboard playing, right after the release of the trilogy, their portfolio includes, for example, the album "Arise" (2023), which is an excellent example of "musical exercises" carried out within the style that is usually called space rock. Over the years of its existence (the band's beginnings date back to 1992), Glass Hammer has presented songs on its releases that can be pigeonholed in many ways. And on the latest album - "Rogue" it returns to... melodic songs. I will risk saying (of course, only for the purposes of this description) that on the album we are dealing with a "new" musical genre - synth-prog. In the case of this release, synth-prog is a "mixture" of the styles of Mike Oldfield, Tangerine Dream, symphonic rock, neo-prog and music from the eighties (like new romantic and the like). And I can already feel the breath of ardent fans of progressive music in its "pure" form on my back.

Rogue tells the story of one man's fateful journey. "He leaves everything he knows behind him," explains songwriter and band founder Steve Babb, "?and thinks he's coming back to a place where he once knew happiness, but in reality his odyssey takes him somewhere completely unexpected." Babb explains that the ten-track album explores themes of regret and the mortal clarity that comes with age. "?It's a heavy subject for an album, but the music isn't as heavy as our recent releases. Rogue is much more like the Glass Hammer albums that our fans call 'classics.'" That's as much as the band's description of the album goes. And it's probably the music that's the most absorbing element on this record. It surprises with its stylistic combinations, unusual sound and a certain simplicity of arrangement, which (at least in my case) brings the intended effect ? delight in the melodic softness, simplicity of the message and melodic nature of the song.

And what happens if the first track on the album, "What If," sounds like something from the good, classic days of Mike Oldfield combined with the first Glass Hammer albums? The answer is very easy. We get a very cheerful song (with an almost one-minute instrumental introduction), which in its atmosphere resembles romantic synthpop compositions from the eighties. Just don't think that this is taking the proverbial easy way out. Just wait until the third minute for the guitar solo breaking through the delicate, electronic melody to make us, whether we want it or not, immediately let ourselves be seduced by the murmurando lurking in the background and the polyphonic vocals.

And please do not adjust any players because "The Road South" does not allow for even a moment of break. It captivates with the calm sound of synthesizers, which in some way bring us closer to what can be described as a symphony of spheres, and whose apogee is a half-minute guitar solo and the following delicate development of this vocal-guitar story. Maybe it's Alan Parsons, maybe someone else... or maybe it's a somehow changed Glass Hammer...

If you like clear bass guitar passages, then the third track is just for you. "Tommorow" will certainly delight lovers of clear organ lines and... bass, which plays almost its own solo fragments. The organ and bass occupy the entire space of this composition and pull it towards endless contemplation of heavenly beauty.

The song "Pretty Ghost" is a certain breakthrough. Drum rolls and booming bass, electronics, Olivia Tharpe's voice, synthpop rhythms from the eighties. Carefreeness, penetrating rays of sunlight, some subcutaneous joy. And when it seems that we are dealing with some ordinary pop song, in the middle of the song keyboards appear, which from something thoroughly pop create a slightly symphonic mix combined with an unusual, pop vocal.

It is similar with the song "Sunshine". Thanks to the guitar playing in the background, the ballad-pop song gains some drama, which contrasts with Olivia's "innocent" vocals. We are again in music from the eighties, but the guitar solo smoldering in the background is disturbing and absorbing, waiting for the finale, which is a flowing calm.

"I Will Follow" ? this is, in my opinion, the biggest hit from this album. It is proof that the band is still able to write a very catchy song, which, thanks to the balanced combination of two vocals and music, will find its place on every radio station in every music band. And while you're at it, please listen to the band's first albums, I think you'll find a few references.

I hope you haven't even had time to move, frozen in your listening, because it's time for "The Wonder Of It All". It's over seven minutes of travel in space and time filled with wonderful musical passages. I'm not kidding. A slightly cosmic atmosphere, mystery and? the desire to break away, to take off into the world of countless images and associations, into the world of contemplation and amazement at the harmony of the universe. This song simply overwhelms the listener with its majesty.

Please don't stop dreaming... "One Last Sunrise" not only creates an opportunity for this, but is simply a musical dream played. A three-minute, synthesizer, instrumental dream or a sweet dream if you prefer.

Another composition from the album "Rogue" - "Terminal Lucidity" - begins with electronics from the eighties. In several interviews, the band's leader Steve Babb said that his dream on the previous album ("Arise") was to create a composition in the style of Ozric Tentacles. And this is exactly how "Terminal Lucidity" begins - spacey, cosmic, psychedelic. The middle of the song is already "a different story" - heavier, guitar, krautrock. Distorted keyboard sounds, solos in high keys, a load of almost experimental music - as if a tribute to the group Tangerine Dream. The incredible atmosphere is complemented by the words that appear only in the eighth minute: "(...) I had a dream / My life, it seems, is the setting course of the sun / I know it began in brightness / and now the ashes and dust I hear calling me". Please listen carefully to this piece in its entirety - it is almost a musical space odyssey.

The album ends with the song "All Good Things" - a treatise on things past, on the past itself, on everything that will never come back. And at the same time an expression of hope that comes with another sunrise. It is a very optimistic song to end with. One would like to say... to leave. And when you finally think... about halfway through this eight-minute song, that this is the end, the synthesizers begin their story. They destroy this original atmosphere of the ending, and after a moment of anxiety, they lead the listener back to a land where everything seems possible, so real and easy to do, to achieve. Just follow this path... you will surely succeed.

If you now demand that I write a few words to sum it up, I would like to say that I am angry. Angry? because I can't tear myself away from it. Angry because it destroys my previous image of Glass Hammer as a symphonic rock band. Angry because I keep hearing new sounds. Angry because I don't have time for other records. Angry because this record caught my ear. Angry? because angry.

From a formal perspective, it must be added that Glass Hammer is currently a solo project of Steve Babb. On the album "Rogue" he is accompanied by his old collaborators: Fred Schendel, Reese Boyd and David Wallimann (guitarist in the years 2006-2010). Two new vocalists appear: Thomas Jakob and Olivia Tharpe. Oliver Day also plays guitar parts, Argentinian Ariel Perchuck plays keyboards, and Evgeni Obruchkov (who currently lives in Poland, by the way) plays drums. In a word, we are dealing with an international project (vocalists are from the Netherlands and the USA). "It is no secret that Glass Hammer is reborn every few albums," says its leader.

This does not change the fact that I am angry. Angry because... angry.

Report this review (#3187584)
Posted Monday, May 19, 2025 | Review Permalink
A Crimson Mellotron
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars So the music of Glass Hammer has two primary direction in which it develops - one is the symphonic, mellow, lush and pastoral, inspired by the likes of early Yes and Genesis, and the other one is a heavier, raunchier style of rock that borders on alternative, perhaps coming from the band's fascination with Rush above other things. And being one of the most productive prog outlets of the 21st century has allowed them to explore both of these directories in great depth, and to kind of reinvent themselves with every couple of albums, which is also why we have several distinct phases of Glass Hammer. And their latest release, 2025's 'Rogue' pertains stylistically to the band's "classic" period from the early-to-mid 2000s, with Glass Hammer playing a rather retro style of progressive rock, with large, lush movements of textured and technical music, replete with fancy keyboards and effects, and of course, the pummeling bass playing of main man Steve Babb, who is also the "creative director" of the band's latest offering.

'Rogue' is not necessarily a concept album but a record exploring regret and heartache, seemingly following the journey of a supposed protagonist, an overall heavy topic for an album that impresses with its mellow soundscapes and nurturing melodies; unlike the recent conceptual "triptych" of albums, which was heavier and more robust. The band does sound a lot like an older self of theirs, yet there are glimpses of electronica, art rock and 80s production values, which is an interesting feature on a GH album, regardless of the overall quality of the record. And this album is in fact one of the rare instances of an hour-long record, in which the second half vastly overshadows the first one in terms of songwriting, vitality and originality. There seems to be something lacking with 'Rogue', a lack of direction perhaps or a shortage of excellent ideas, which is reflected completely by the first five or six tracks on here - really mellow and symphonic but in a way that sounds like a charmless prog soup, nothing overly exceptional. The second half of the album, which carries all the longer tracks, happens to be the one carrying the successful formula - here, the album seems intriguing and inspired, and all of a sudden the music has a personality. Just an overall decent but confusing release, neither as eloquent as the earlier symphonic trials of Glass Hamer, nor as punchy and memorable as the band's more recent LPs.

Report this review (#3191994)
Posted Sunday, June 1, 2025 | Review Permalink

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