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FROM ANCIENT TIMES

Ainur

Rock Progressivo Italiano


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Ainur From Ancient Times album cover
3.27 | 33 ratings | 5 reviews | 6% 5 stars

Good, but non-essential

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Studio Album, released in 2007

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. How It All Began (1:47)
2. The Beginning of Days (5:46)
3. The Firstborn (5:44)
4. Ungoliant / The Power of Unlight (5:37)
5. Ulmo's Voice (2:36)
6. The Fall of Nargothrond (4:44)
7. Nienor / The Weeping Maid (2:40)
8. The Fall of Gondolin (10:32)
9. Earendil & Elwing (6:57)
10. War of Wrath (9:00)
11. The Lost Elf / Maglor (3:46)

Total Time 59:09

Line-up / Musicians

- Luca Catalano / guitars
- Gianluca Castelli / piano, keyboards, Moog
- Federica Guido / voice
- Urania Pinto / voice
- Elena Richetta / voice
- Marco Catalano / drums, voice
- Massimiliano Clara / voice
- Simone Del Salvio / voice
- Alessandro Armuschio / keyboards, Moog
- Giuseppe Ferrante / bass
- Cecilia Lasagno / harp
- Daniela Lorusso / cello
- Luca Marangoni / violin
- Chiara Marangoni / horn
- Chiara Garbolino / flute
- Alberto Paolillo / clarinet
- Carlo Perillo / viola
- Wilma Collo / lyrics' adaptation

Releases information

Electromantic Music ART420

Thanks to ProgLucky for the addition
and to projeKct for the last updates
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AINUR From Ancient Times ratings distribution


3.27
(33 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(6%)
6%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(42%)
42%
Good, but non-essential (39%)
39%
Collectors/fans only (9%)
9%
Poor. Only for completionists (3%)
3%

AINUR From Ancient Times reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by Andrea Cortese
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
3 stars Ainur's debut has rapidly reached a cult status between many prog lovers. This new italian band has had the idea of recording and releasing a whole work inspired by "The Silmarillion" by J. R. R. Tolkien. After having analized the music I cannot say this is prog in the true sense. Apparently the album isn't too complex and is based upon, mainly, a melodic new-ageish flavour sometimes tinged with serious prog parts as in the sixth track "The Fall of Nargothrond" (4,43 mns). This one could be easily one of the most favourite recent track I've listened to in the last year. Excellent hard electric guitar work accompained with exciting synthesizer's excursions that reminds a little bit of the classic itralian prog band Biglietto per l'Inferno.

The album's lyrics are in english language, sung with some (obvious) italian accent. An important thing to remark is the vocal richness: five singers, three female, two male (one is a bass-baritone). In a similar vein to what contemporary important italian prog band Randone has already made within their 2005 big opus "Hybla Act 1". The listening is very pleasant due also to the fact that the band is composed by 18 membersproviding instruments like harp, horns, flute, clarinet, cello, viola, violin.

Another exciting track is the long "The Fall of Gondolin" (10,31 mns) which is builded on varied arrangements. From soft folky introduction to a hard-prog experience from the fifth minute on. Excellent guitars and synth again. Great track. In a similar vein is also the tenth song "Wall of Wrath" (8,59 mns) with a quasi medieval touch.

Generally speaking the album reminds me of a fantasy-like concept album from the seventies released with the contribution of many artists: Mandalaband's Eye of Wendor (1978). The same "commercial" feelings, the same serious proggy tendencies and the evocative musical horizons. In that case it was the mellotron of Woolly Wolstenholme to give the prog flavour. In From Ancient Times, hammond, moog, synthesizer and piano, even if not played massively, provide, at least, three wonderful tracks and evocative atmosphere!

Well done, Ainur. I hope to listen more from you.

Review by erik neuteboom
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars This new Italian band host many musicians on instruments that range from violin, harp and flute to bariton, Moog synthesizer and clarinet. Their debut CD From Ancient Times is based upon the book The Silmarillion by Tolkien, that's not uncommon in prog ....! During my first listening session I got more and more impressed by Ainur their album, what a pleasant and elaborate compositions featuring very flowing shifting moods and a lot of variation. The atmospheres in the 11 tracks alternates between dreamy with twanging acoustic guitars, flute, harp and piano to compelling and bombastic with propulsive electric guitar riffs and fluent synthesizer flights. The vocals have an important role in Ainur their sound with many male and female singers, even a bariton who sounds like an opera vocalist. Some songs contain great variety like The Fall Of Nargochrond (from sparkling piano to propulsive and bombastic with fat guitar riffs and delicate synthesizer runs along strong male vocals), The Fall Of Gondolin (many changing climates) and War Of Wrath (sparkling piano, fiery gutiar, a sensational synthesizer solo and howling guitar runs). This is a tasteful album that blends symphonic prog, folk and classical in a pleasant way. My rating: 3,5 stars.

Review by Marty McFly
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
4 stars OK, their debut is very similar to their next year's release, maybe they did it at once and released in this order. Maybe they just got a lot of inspiration (one of the greatest works of literature, Silmarillion I suppose, from which also Marillion draws at least name), I for example though about this masterpiece as the hardest book I know (then I encountered 1984 - hard in imagining it all, finally I've struggled with Zarathustra by Nietzsche and I'm not the winner). And as many others, I also think that it's unfinished (huh ? did I just heard somebody talking about Unfinished Tales ?) work and could be far better (better than masterpiece, uh oh). What I'm trying to say is that it's big world, completely unique world, set up to slightest details, with its own language, history and actually very well working universe.

These elements works in music too, because there's strange kind of harmony (excuse me, it's new for me to hear music inspired by book) between these two. Yeah, um, it works actually quite easy. I hear this music, first feeling that I'll have to laugh a little bit, but then I say to myself: "Why not, I mean, this works good, even it's not gothic choir, but rather bunch of merry elves singing together songs of joy".

4(-), 'cause they're still working it out. But in a very good way. I like it, I in fact wanted to give it at least (+), but there are gaps. And holes. And empty spaces, deaf parts of certain songs.

Review by apps79
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
3 stars A little different than your average Italian prog band,AINUR are a project formed in 2004 in Venaria Reale,Piemonte by three young musicians:Luca Catalano on guitars,Marco Catalano on drums and Gianluca Castelli on various keyboards.As the band claims,the need of transposing into music J.R.R. Tolkien's ''Silmarillion'' pushed the members to establish a project,consisting for their first album ''From ancient times'' of 18 members in total.This effort was finally released in 2006 by Electromantic Music.

Forget about the Classic Italian Prog sound here.''From ancient times'' has a dominant fairytale atmosphere throughout the album,not to mention that all lyrics are sung in English. Unfortunately the music often gets lost in the need of story-telling with lots of spoken/sung parts back-rounded by atmospheric keys and medieval flutes.Female vocals are really great,producing a result close to RENAISSANCE's musicianship,supported usually by nice piano and organ parts.I'm not really fond of the following male operatic vocals.Despite they are also qualitive,they seem to bore me a bit along the way.Musically speaking the album is closer to Folk/Acoustic Prog Rock with elements from Classical Rock OperasMassive use of string instruments,flutes,pianos and keyboards in order to capture and adapt Silmarillion's images.AINUR do that well at some point,though most of the tracks sound quite similar. Surprisingly the few tracks containing the electric guitars/bass/drums combination (the longer ones actually) are closer to Hard Progressive Rock than Classic Prog.Metal riffing and intense vocals support this claim.Yet the balance seems a bit lost trying to listen to the album in its full version.Calm spacey,classical or medieval parts are mixed with almost metal music and that's not the best thing I can face.

The band is talented,no question about it.The problem is that music in here is quite similar in moments,a bit too calm for most of its part,while this Tolkien adaptions-thing seems too old- fashioned for me.However,I believe these musicians can do much better things in the future and I will support them with a 3 star rating.Recommended,considering always the afore- mentioned warnings.

Latest members reviews

3 stars Another band inspired by J.R.R. Tolkien! Ainur, a 18 pieces band, is another band inspired by J.R.R. Tolkien's 'The Silmarillion'. And this is normal, today (unfortunately). This band sung in English and for me not plays RPI in a strong sense. Is this a problem for a correct evalutation? Mayb ... (read more)

Report this review (#233385) | Posted by 1967/ 1976 | Friday, August 21, 2009 | Review Permanlink

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