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TIKTAALIKA

Charlie Griffiths

Progressive Metal


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Charlie Griffiths Tiktaalika album cover
3.95 | 73 ratings | 5 reviews | 29% 5 stars

Excellent addition to any
prog rock music collection

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Studio Album, released in 2022

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Prehistoric Prelude (2:14)
2. Arctic Cemetery (6:06)
3. Luminous Beings (5:57)
4. In Alluvium (8:13)
5. Dead in the Water (8:45)
6. Digging Deeper (4:31)
7. Tiktaalika (8:34)
8. Crawl Walk Run (5:06)
9. Under Polaris (3:06)

Total Time 52:32

Line-up / Musicians

- Charlie Griffiths / guitar, bass, synths, vocals

With:
- Darby Todd / drums
- Tommy Rogers / vocals (2,9)
- Daniel De Jongh / vocals (3,8)
- Neil Purdy / vocals (5)
- Vladimir Lalić / vocals (5)
- Rob Townsend / saxophones (5)
- Jordan Rudess / synth solo (4)
- Freddie Griffiths / drum hits (6)
- Ray Hearne / trumpets (5)
- Pete Rinaldi / backing vocals (6)

Releases information

(P) Inside Out Music
(C) Century Media Records Ltd.

Distributed by Sony Music Entertainment

Thanks to Cristi for the addition
and to projeKct for the last updates
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Buy CHARLIE GRIFFITHS Tiktaalika Music



CHARLIE GRIFFITHS Tiktaalika ratings distribution


3.95
(73 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(29%)
29%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(38%)
38%
Good, but non-essential (19%)
19%
Collectors/fans only (10%)
10%
Poor. Only for completionists (4%)
4%

CHARLIE GRIFFITHS Tiktaalika reviews


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

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by rdtprog
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Heavy, RPI, Symph, JR/F Canterbury Teams
4 stars This is the first solo album from Haken's guitarist, no it's not the lost album of Yes! It's a lot heavier than Haken in many places to be on a border of extreme metal. The vocals are sometimes on a death metal side and most of the time clean. There is a lot of versatility in the guitar and singing throughout the album. The music is on a rather fast pace, but there is some cool break where you enjoy a bit of air after the intense and heavy music. The acoustic guitar parts show that transition. It's like Charles Griffiths has taken the influence of Pain Of Salvation, Devin Townsend, and Metallica to mold this own dish and it tastes good! If you want to hear an impressive variety of guitar playing and singing with some strong compositions, you will enjoy this new prog metal album.
Review by Dapper~Blueberries
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars So we're past the halfway point of this year and so far there have been some really good releases in the progressive music sphere. It is honestly very impressive how well some of these releases have been so far in my opinion, a ton of albums in fact that I can say could land a spot as my favorite for this year, and they'll be more coming soon too. We got some big names like Jethro Tull and Marillion releasing albums that are very well made, retro Prog bands like The Tangent and Karfagen making some absolutely stellar albums that are possibly the best I've heard from them, and heavy Prog and Prog Metal are still going strong with the new live Between The Buried and Me album and the new Porcupine Tree studio album. This long cycle of amazing albums has shaped 2022 as a great year for Prog rock and metal, it honestly makes me wonder what's next for this year. While I am late on the ball with this release, this has been on my radar for a while. The first solo album from Haken's very own guitarist and backing vocalist, Charlie Griffith.

I was wondering if we might get a new Haken release this year, and we were with the release of a single a few months ago indicating a new album coming soon, but while that is still in the workshop, this one came out last month. I was interested in it but never fully committed to checking it out, until I learned that the drummer for Devin Townsend's and Martin Barre's live bands, Darby Todd, and the vocalist of Between The Buried and Me, Tommy Rogers, would be on this album, I immediately wanted to check this out. A trifecta of awesome metal was surely brewing and I was pumped and ready to see how well they could craft this album, and judging by the positive outlook it has been getting, I think it'll be a masterful experience.

The album starts with Prehistoric Prelude and even if it is a prelude, it is super great right off the bat. The guitar riffs are on point and the melody is just super tight and focused. The acoustic first half is great, the heavy metal second is fantastic. When I first heard this prelude, I knew I was in for a sure fire treat.

The next song is Arctic Cemetery, and the first thing I like about this song is how it transitions from the last so smoothly to where it effectively makes this entire album one big song since each song also has that same transitioning effect. As for the track itself, I'd say picture Haken's and Between The Buried and Me's sounds had a baby, that is effectively this. The super hardcore tech metal of BTBAM with that fun silly yet very in tune Haken sound we all know and love. Tommy Giles' vocals are very smooth yet they still retain that awesome screamo, Charlie Griffiths' guitar work is excellent as ever, and Darby Todd's drumming for this track is on point. So far this album is really great, and I felt it would only get better.

And it did get better with Luminous Beings. It decides to become a lot more Haken-isque with a lot less hardcore and more of the sounds that might be found on Virus or Vector. While I do already really enjoy this album, I do gotta drop in a few cents of criticism. The sound being very much like Haken or BTBAM is not bad, but it definitely lacks a bit in originality. I don't blame this aspect on Charlie in any shape or form with this aspect, this is their first solo project so having a sound similar to a band they worked with for so many years isn't surprising, however I do feel like it should be noted, in fact encourage for him to try new stuff, maybe find a new metal sound like maybe a folk metal album next time, or heck maybe get a little experimental and add some Avant Garde stuff, maybe even hook up with someone like Les Claypool and make an album sounding similar to a funk metal band or something. I would like a little bit more than what is on the plate already, which as it stands is a pretty sizable portion of a meal. Obviously we aren't even halfway through but I think I should speak about the elephant in the room sooner than later.

Next is In Alluvium, and it carries the same torch Luminous Beings did. Very Haken sound with some good vocal arrangements and drumming to really tie it all together nicely.

After that we got Dead in the Water, and wow, this gave me a ton of Devin Townsend vibes, heck the vocals sound very much like him. Seriously I had to look up if he was on this song, and he isn't, which is crazy. Speaking of, I love how weird and zany this track is with the added effect of a saxophone, and some melodic feels towards the end, it just gives this a chaotic vibe that I love and wanna see more of in Prog Metal as a whole. Hope to see more of this kinda style later on.

Afterwards is Digging Deeper, which takes a bit more of a melodic approach to sound, mostly dipping the metal sound with only the drums and small hints of guitar. It ain't the heaviest, but it certainly is the most vibrant and ambient in the whole album. I can definitely get why this was made to break free a bit from the heaviness the album had going towards, so it is nice to get a bit of a laxative song in the middle of this.

That relaxation ends though with the title track coming into play. This instrumental is super cool. It gives me a lot of Larks Part 2 vibes, especially that main riff. Every bit and minute feels super weird and insane that it makes this song feel like a trip just listening to it. It is super heavy, worbly, and fun, though I do wish it had a better music video, something this epic deserved a tiny bit more.

This album has been sort of straying a bit from the sounds that was once before with the whole BTBAM influence, but Crawl Walk Run really puts it forth once more with some awesome and tight hardcore riffs and singing. Tommy Giles' voice ages like a fine wine and this album, and the live album of The Great Misdirect shows this in full force. It is super fast paced, pumping and just straight up awesomeness all around.

And the momentum doesn't stop with the last track on the album, Under Polaris. While I do feel like the ending was a little anticlimactic, the reprisal of the first song definitely gives it some charm, and that focus on some awesome riffs and vocal works makes this a really fun song to listen to, and even more so on this album.

I do not think this is the best album that was released this year, but I do not think this is the worst album that was released this year, far from it, this album is a awesome work of art, and for being his first project, Charlie really hit the nail on this one perfectly in my heart. This makes me pretty excited to see what is next for Charlie's music, so I hope he continues making more awesome and heavy stuff, and seriously let Devin cover Dead In The Water like that song was MADE for him.

Latest members reviews

4 stars I love my portion of progressive metal. Especially when there's a combination of power, exceptional playing, and great music. This is an interesting and joyful listening experience. Luminous Beings, Tiktaalika and In Alluvium are current favourites. I am still undecided about my feelings involv ... (read more)

Report this review (#2776429) | Posted by WJA-K | Tuesday, July 12, 2022 | Review Permanlink

5 stars Charles Griffiths has joined the list of members of big bands who decide to start parallel or solo projects and who, with a select and diverse group of musicians, has managed to create -contrary to some musicians like John Petrucci who seek a solo career to realize more relaxed ideas and without ... (read more)

Report this review (#2774978) | Posted by JohnProg | Tuesday, July 5, 2022 | Review Permanlink

4 stars A great album, and a strong contender for album of the year. I was expecting someting far from Haken's style, but it sounds like an extension of it, so, If you like the band, you are going to like this too. To me, it's like a Haken album more focused on guitar, but you have the usual potent riffs an ... (read more)

Report this review (#2773564) | Posted by Soul2Create | Wednesday, June 29, 2022 | Review Permanlink

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