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THE FIFTH ELEMENT

Deaton LeMay Project

Neo-Prog


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Deaton LeMay Project The Fifth Element album cover
4.06 | 26 ratings | 3 reviews | 27% 5 stars

Excellent addition to any
prog rock music collection

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Studio Album, released in 2022

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. The Great Awakening (5:32)
2. A Different Place in Time (7:24)
3. Dragonfly (3:35)
4. The Nightmare (4:28)
5. Exordium (6:24)
- Elements of Life Suite:
6. Overture (4:43)
7. Fire (6:10)
8. Water (6:11)
9. Air (4:19)
10. Earth (6:53)
11. Music (7:25)
12. Voice of Freedom (6:57) (EU Bonus Track)

Total Time 70:01

Line-up / Musicians

- Roby Deaton / keyboards, acoustic guitars, vocals (9)
- Craig LeMay / drums & percussion

With:
- Hadi Kiani / vocals
- Ehsan Imani / guitars (1,5,6,8,11)
- Josh Mark Raj / guitars (1-4,7,8,10,11)
- John Haddad / bass (1,3-5,7,8,10)
- Charles Berthoud / bass (2,6,11)
- Liza Evans / violin (9)

Releases information

Label: P.P.R.
Format: CD (Only 250 EU with bonus) , Digital
October, 17, 2022

Thanks to windhawk for the addition
and to mbzr48 & NotAProghead for the last updates
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DEATON LEMAY PROJECT The Fifth Element ratings distribution


4.06
(26 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(27%)
27%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(35%)
35%
Good, but non-essential (27%)
27%
Collectors/fans only (12%)
12%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

DEATON LEMAY PROJECT The Fifth Element reviews


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

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by kev rowland
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Reviewer
5 stars Back with their second album, Roby Deaton (keyboards, guitars) and Craig LeMay (drums, percussion) have again invited singer Hadi Kiani and guitarists Ehsan Imani and Josh Mark Raj to take part, as well as also bringing in bassists John Haddad and Charles Berthoud with violinist Liza Evans on one track. When I heard their debut, I said it reminded me of Kansas in many ways, and this album sees them also bringing into play another classic prog band, Emerson Lake & Palmer. Deaton is an incredible keyboard player who is at home on beautiful piano as he is belting out synth rockers, while LeMay is incredibly technical and is a drummer who fully understands the need for space, which means he sits back at times and is driving hard at others.

Kiani has an amazing voice, and I am so glad they have brought him back as his vocals are incredible, and he is perfectly linked with the others. The bass is an important element throughout, providing powerful linkage but a special mention should be made of Charles Berthoud on "A Different Place In Time" as some of his bass runs are just perfectly formed. It is the guitars which moves this more into Kansas than ELP, as it has that innate feeling of American prog/melodic rock, but when Deaton brings the Moog to bear, we are definitely in the realms of the latter, and possibly even the later project, 3.

It is difficult to find a fault with this album as somehow it is firmly rooted in the Seventies yet is also modern and up to date, with the result being something which many progheads will thoroughly enjoy if they can bring themselves to find something new. This album has been out for some time, but only one solitary review on PA, which means it has slipped under the radar somewhat, which is nothing short of criminal as if you enjoy any of the bands mentioned, then this album should be on your list. It is fresh, old, new, and so much more, containing wonderful songs and amazing performances from all involved to create a very special album indeed.

Latest members reviews

2 stars A great voice, great musicians, great playing, interesting hooks, and nice signature changes. Those are the positive things I can say about this latest instalment of the Deaton LeMay Project. But there's hardly a moment that hits me or grips me. They walk the beaten track of prog music. Especiall ... (read more)

Report this review (#2853521) | Posted by WJA-K | Monday, November 21, 2022 | Review Permanlink

5 stars Second offering from these guys and damn are they legit. Prog heads and keyboardists are going to drool over this one as there are tons of vintage keys, organ and beautiful piano passages. LeMays drumming is beyond extraordinary. He sounds like a mix of Peart, Palmer and early Genesis Phil Colli ... (read more)

Report this review (#2696560) | Posted by Imagesandwords55 | Thursday, March 3, 2022 | Review Permanlink

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