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RITO

Vespero

Psychedelic/Space Rock


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Vespero Rito album cover
3.86 | 75 ratings | 3 reviews | 21% 5 stars

Excellent addition to any
prog rock music collection

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Studio Album, released in 2007

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Inverno (4:19)
2. Triptych: To The Falling Sun (10:07)
3. Rito (9:44)
4. Inna's Burst In Tears (7:58)
5. Crabs Ashore (7:09)
6. Skat (4:23)
7. Silence Breath Echo (8:41)
8. Ambience In Blue/ Altarage To The Thunder (13:11)

Total time 65:32

Line-up / Musicians

- Natalja Tjurina/ vocals (3,4), whisper voice (5)
- Alexander Kuzovlev/ guitar, bass (1), electronics, whisper voice (5)
- Alexei Klabukov/ keyboards (4,5), whisper voice (5)
- Valentin Rulev/ violin (1,2,5,8), synths (8)
- Arkady Fedotov/ bass, vocals (3,5), synths (2,3,6,7), flute (3,7)
- Ivan Fedotov/ drums, percussion

With:
- Karnelia Mangoe / vocals (7)

Releases information

Artwork: ZonderZond

CD R.A.I.G. ‎- R024 (2007, Russia)

Recorded and mixed by Alexander Kuzovlev in Astrakhan, 2005-2006
Mastered by Alisa Coral at KZI Studio in Moscow, 2007

Thanks to prog-jester for the addition
and to Quinino for the last updates
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VESPERO Rito ratings distribution


3.86
(75 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(21%)
21%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(47%)
47%
Good, but non-essential (23%)
23%
Collectors/fans only (4%)
4%
Poor. Only for completionists (5%)
5%

VESPERO Rito reviews


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

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by Prog-jester
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars Recently we had a conversation with Ian "Vibrationbaby" Gledhill about Russian Prog. The main idea that can be taken from it is that Russian Prog Artists are less influenced by world music trends, so they take inspiration from their own sources. This is why most bands sound so fresh and innovative.

I lie if I'll say that VESPERO is NOT that kind of band. In fact, they're very creative and challening unit, sheer brilliance in terms of Psychedelic Rock. The album may sound a bit too straight-forward and TOO Psychedelic (fans of the genre, add an extra star here to the rating!), but this is because it's a compilation of instrumental tracks written during band's career - it's not quite an album as a union of songs and ideas. Ranging from jam-based grooves to loose ambient soundscapes, music flirts with related genres like Post-Rock, Kraut-Rock and Space-Rock. Evoking GONG, CAN, HAWKWIND and OZRIC TENTACLES shades in listener's mind, "Rito" never becomes neither a clone nor a blueprint fo something unfinished. Experience and professionalism, maturity and assurance - need more synonyms to VESPERO?

Highly recommended and simply the best Psychedelic Album from this year so far...but if you need more Prog Rock instead of Psychedelic one, check other VESPERO tracks on their RealMusic page (details on web-site)

Review by Rivertree
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator / Band Submissions
4 stars Psychedelic pure from Astrakhan ...

VESPERO is a south russian band which plays trippy, spacey music with references to some other styles too. This album is a collection of recorded songs from 2005/2006, instrumental, except some male and female voices here and there. The tracks are blending into each other building a compelling one hour trip. The complete album is well designed therefore with a very special drumming and sometimes in a droning dramatic mood caused by heavy psych guitars and many synthy electronic elements which also refers to experimental/post rock.

The album is opened by the very mysterious Inverno with violin and distorted guitars. Triptych - to the falling sun is starting canterbury like - a catchy bass line brings tempo to the song but then we glide into a more jazz rocking part with a nice guitar solo and finally change to a dizzy dissonant interaction between violin, synthesizer and the band's rhythm branch. Rito, the title song and the album highlight works just like a krautrock jam. The band conjurs a wonderful gloomy psych gem gathering a dub groove, flute, synths and spacy guitars.

Inna's burst in tears shines as a space rocker with melancholic female voices whereas Crabs ashore escalates during the seven minutes, every instrument gets more and more dramatic. Skat and Silence breath echo are spacy improvised - good but not that spectacular. Ambience in blue - altarage to the thunder is ambient floating, near to avant and chamber because of an intense violin interplay, for the last minutes surprising because getting tempo with a happy reggae flavour.

This album has a great aura, not suitable for background listening and not everyone's taste for sure - appealing to fans of experimental psych and krautrock music.

Review by siLLy puPPy
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
4 stars Russia has always been a bastion of amazing music even under the totalitarian rule of the former Soviet Union where all that fiery passion was channeled into more traditional ethnic folk, pop and of course Western classical however since the breakup of the once almighty empire, the newfound freedom that has emerged from the vast nation that spans a dozen or so timezones has been no less than outstanding with brilliant musicians taking on virtually every genre and then some more and while Moscow and St. Petersburg may steal the lion's share of the glory, there is a whole lot of Russia beyond the boundaries of those two cities.

The band VESPERO formed in 2003 and went under the Cyrillic moniker Веспер when they released four CD-Rs, two studio and two other live before adopting the Latin alphabet and making their official label debut with RITO in 2007. The band comes from the city of Astrakhan which is situated on the Volga delta not too far from the Caspian Sea. The band was founded by brothers Arkady Fedotov (bass, synthesizer, keyboard, vocals, flute) and Ivan Fedotov (drums, percussion) before recruiting like-minded lovers of psychedelic rock that resulted in the inclusion of Valentin Rulev (violin, keys) and Alexander Kuzovlev (guitar).

The music of VESPERO is 21st century neo-psychedelic rock taken to the trippiest extremes. While primarily an instrumental journey into the farthest possible trips imaginable, there are the occasional female and male wordless vocals of Natalya Tjurina and Arkady Fedotov that add a human element to the otherwise cosmic wandering through a nonchalant musical parade where each track seamlessly cedes into the next with only a bass groove as the beacon of light that keeps it all from spiraling away into the depths of space and time. The album is split into eight tracks and extends past the hour mark at 65 minutes and 35 seconds but despite the lengthy dream sequences taking their sweet time to unfold, this band masters the art of keeping things interesting throughout.

While the band implements the traditional role of a bass groove as the stabilizing force while the synthesizers and guitars reach for the stars, the band finds cleverly fresh ways to play with sonic textures and stretch them out like cosmic rubber bands. The elaborate display of playful drumming techniques, often tribal, and Ozric Tentacles styled electronic wizardry in tandem with outstanding glissando guitar work, psychotropic violin passages, fluttering flute runs and sensational sound effects is tantamount to an astral projection after participating in a remote shamanic ritual where interdimensional crossroads are experienced with high density spiritual beings playing tour guide. The music is utterly creative with traces of Hawkwind, Gong, Hidria Spacefolk and Vibravoid never far away.

Gentle reggae rhythms make their appearance as Rastafarian visions gently embrace an early Pink Floydian zeitgeist along with the excellent echoey rich production that grounds VESPERO in the modern day world of the 21st century. The music is sublime and utterly timeless as it drifts along like gentle zephyrs only laced with crystal corpuscles that evoke the spirit of the eternal. Wow. No drugs needed to enjoy this one. This is truly sonic bliss and the soundtrack to Planet Lysergia if there ever was one. While so many bands blandly crank out tired stoner rock with a few whirling synth parts, VESPERO construct complex edifices of interwoven sounds that independently evoke the exotic while collectively elevating the mind to higher dimensions. This is the stuff that 21st century space rock dreams are made of. VESPERO is truly the king of Russian Kraut, psychedelia in Cyrillic or the ambient air of Astrakhan and it only gets better after this.

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