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ENTHEOGENIC FREQUENCIES

Aghora

Tech/Extreme Prog Metal


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Aghora Entheogenic Frequencies album cover
3.07 | 9 ratings | 1 reviews | 11% 5 stars

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Studio Album, released in 2019

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Path (6:34)
2. Arrival (10:09)
3. Kingdom of Ea (6:16)
4. Cave (6:38)
5. Portal (6:36)
6. Tree of Answers (8:32)
7. The Marduk Prophecy (8:58)
8. Truth Is Alien (10:09)

Total Time 63:52

Line-up / Musicians

- Santiago Dobles / guitars, banjo, keyboards
- Alan Goldstein / bass
- Matt Thompson (King Diamond) / drums
- Gustavo Dobles / orchestration & keyboards

Releases information

Format: Vinyl, CD, Digital
December 29, 2019 (Digital), January/February 2020 (CD, Vinyl)

Thanks to mbzr48 for the addition
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AGHORA Entheogenic Frequencies ratings distribution


3.07
(9 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music (11%)
11%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection (22%)
22%
Good, but non-essential (44%)
44%
Collectors/fans only (22%)
22%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

AGHORA Entheogenic Frequencies reviews


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

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by UMUR
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
3 stars "Entheogenic Frequencies" is the third full-length studio album by US progressive metal act Aghora. The album was independently released in December 2019. Itīs the successor to "Formless" from 2006, so itīs been quite a few years since weīve last heard from Aghora. Guitarist Santiago Dobles and bassist Alan Goldstein remain from the lineup who recorded the predecessor, while drummer Giann Rubio has been replaced by Matt Thompson (King Diamond, Imagika...etc.). Lead vocalist Diana Serra has left and has not been replaced, and as a result the music on "Entheogenic Frequencies" is fully instrumental.

Changing from an act featuring a vocalist to playing fully instrumental music would be a major change for most artists but Aghora already played a music style on their previous releases, which could well have worked without the vocals. In fact the vocals were often a distraction and felt like an afterthought on the preceding albums, so the lack of vocals on "Entheogenic Frequencies" is to my ears a bit of a blessing.

The jazz/fusion/world music influenced technical/progressive metal style of the preceding releases is continued in all other departments, and Aghora are still an incredibly well playing band. Thompson surprises me here, as Iīm only familiar with his playing from the King Diamond albums he plays on and the King Diamond concerts Iīve attended through the years, and Iīve always felt that he had a stiff, unimaginative, and sligthly tedious playing style which held King Diamondīs music back, but his playing on "Entheogenic Frequencies" has given me another view on his abilities and the dynamics of King Diamond as a band (clearly Thomson just plays what he is told, and is not allowed much imput and creative playing), because this guy can play and thereīs nothing wrong with the creativity and power of his playing. In fact the playing from all involved is amazing.

"Entheogenic Frequencies" features a detailed and well sounding production job too, so upon conclusion itīs a good quality release from Aghora and fans of artists like Cynic and the related Portal should find lots to appreciate here. A 3.5 star (70%) rating is deserved.

(Originally posted on Metal Music Archives).

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