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Dreyelands - Can't Hide Away CD (album) cover

CAN'T HIDE AWAY

Dreyelands

 

Progressive Metal

4.00 | 2 ratings

From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

Diaby
4 stars Dreyelands chose to apply the downloading form of distribution and made the debut EP freely downloadable from their website. I hope that my review will drive many of prog metal fans to check this fresh band out.They recommend themselves those who like Dream Theater, Symphony X, Pagan's Mind, Circus Maximus, Jorn Lande, Evergrey or Redemption, just to mention a few bands. But one very important influence is left out: Pain of Salvation. Actually, on this EP it can only be heard in One Fall, but, I was at their first performance of the forthcoming (concept) album, House of Death (which will feature all the three songs here), and the PoS-impression became clear.

By the way, that night they were invited by Age of Nemesis to play before the most famous Hungarian prog metal band at their year-closing concert. Not to forget, they have enough individuality to be an original band and not an average prog metal-tribute bunch.

This EP is really great. Five excellent musicians (not unusual in the fields of prog) have come together, I especially enjoy the rhythm section: Omar Gassama, the drummer and Gergely Springer, the bassist.

1. Can't Hide Away: The best song! Starts with a distorted guitar playing the riff, then other instruments join in, and for some seconds you could be scared since it sounds like extreme metal. But after they play the first tonality change (0:15) you can settle: it's prog. This opening section is followed by a synth (Zoltán Kas) and a guitar solo (András Ádám Horváth), and then comes the first verse. The interlude between the verse and the chorus is genial. The first refrain is only hlaf-done, and the final note is a half note below what it will be later. A virtuoso bass leads the song to the calm middle part which has an additional funky guitar. The way it gets into the basic tempo is awesome: tension-enlarging vocal lines with an excellent yell on the climax by Nikola Mijic! Every time I hear it, I have the creeps! And finally there's the full chorus,which is fairly catchy. Another six-string solo, and once again the chorus with bigger speed and double bass drum. The cut-off's abrupt and professional.

2. Fearless: The first motives and the synth riff (which is often repeated throughtou the song) have arabic musical influences. Some strange disformed spoken parts can be heard in the background. The band is full with great melodies, like the one during the line and the bridges burn and the refrain accompanied by the piano. At 3:20 there is the most important Dream Theater-trademark: a guitar solo started by notes that remind the listener of Stream of Consciousness and played in the vein of Petrucci.

3. One Fall: The longest track with the intro that could easily be part of One Hour by the Concrete Lake, the second Pain of Salvation-album; responsible for this are the melody and the first sound of the keys. The other parts bring change into this tribute, a verse-chorus form is played twice in a row. More parts of the song, especially the pre-chorus is pretty interesting rhytmically. I have to talk about the outro: a bit back to PoS, first played by the full band, than on the very end by a piano and a high-pitched bass.

This could be a prototype of a very good EP, however, there are some week points, like the overrepeated riffs. I'm sure the band will make success if they can find a label and they don't let the time flow out of their hands.

Diaby | 4/5 |

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