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THE BURSTING

Edhels

Neo-Prog


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Edhels The Bursting album cover
2.62 | 9 ratings | 2 reviews | 0% 5 stars

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Studio Album, released in 2000

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Puzzle (17:39)
2. Sandrine (4:22)
3. Laure (7:05)
4. L'étrange quête (3:35)
5. Edhels (9:48)
6. Maleak (11:04)

Total Time 53:33

Line-up / Musicians

- Jean-Louis Suzzoni / lead & rhythm guitars
- Marc Ceccotti / 6- & 12-string guitars, synth guitar, keyboards, percussion, composer
- Noel Damon / keyboards, percussion, glockenspiel & drums (3)

With:
- Sandrine Brisson / violin (2)
- Jacky Rosati / keyboards (4)
- Philippe Perathoner / keyboards (4)

Releases information

Recorded in 1981

Artwork: Marc Ceccotti & Noêl Damon

CDr self-released (2000, Monaco)

Digital album

Thanks to ProgLucky for the addition
and to projeKct for the last updates
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EDHELS The Bursting ratings distribution


2.62
(9 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(0%)
0%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(22%)
22%
Good, but non-essential (22%)
22%
Collectors/fans only (44%)
44%
Poor. Only for completionists (11%)
11%

EDHELS The Bursting reviews


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

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by apps79
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
2 stars The only known Prog band from Monaco was found in 1981 by its leader Marc Ceccotti.Ceccotti was previously involved in several local bands, after having studied at the Monaco Academy of Music.He set up the band along with classmate Jean-Louis Suzzoni on guitars and Noel Damon on keyboards and percussion.The same year the Monegasques recorded the demo ''The bursting'' along with guest musicians Jacky Rosati, Philippe Peratonnere (both on keyboards) and Sandrine Brisson on violin.It became commercially available several years later, when the band kept solding it as a CD-R via its website.

Being original is a good thing, but it can also lead to stylistical confusions and that was the case with Edhels' early recordings.The band produced six pieces of synth-drenched soundscapes with a deep guitar background, which shifted between acoustic and electric parts, but inexperience and lack of professional equipment led to below average material.Extremely poor programmed drums (propably coming out of some sort of Casio technology) and thin electronic movements resulted a flat, cold sound with limited emotional content and total lack of coherence between one piece's variations.Propably they attempted to go for a combination of Electronic Music with symphonic overtones and guitar-based Instrumental Rock with occasional dark perceptions, created through the sinister, muddy and laid-back guitar solos and a dramatic approach on keyboards, but the weak sound quality left much to be desired.The short ''L'Etrange quete'' sounds a bit more consistent with Fusion-like guitar solos over eerie synthesizers and developing sound effects, quite similar to TIEMKO, while the following ''Edhels (symphonie no.1)'' and ''Maleak (symphonie no.2)'' contain hints of old GENESIS and intense keyboards ala ALPHA III, even flirting with Neo Prog but with a more sterile approach and pronounced electronic sounds and effects, the quality of the recordings though is below the acceptable levels.

Propably Edhels were too young to offer such serious musical experiments.Dark yet smooth Electronic-Fusion with some decent moves, but overall very incosistent and pale.For fans of the band or maybe TIEMKO and similar groups.

Latest members reviews

4 stars Oh now I understand at last why after their magnum opus, Still Dream, they released their abstract Astro Logical and their ridiculous Universal! They did not go bad, not at all. They just partially returned to their roots. Perhaps it would be wrong to consider The Bursting an instant instrumenta ... (read more)

Report this review (#2137999) | Posted by proghaven | Wednesday, February 20, 2019 | Review Permanlink

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