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Amarok - Canciones De Los Mundos Perdidos CD (album) cover

CANCIONES DE LOS MUNDOS PERDIDOS

Amarok

 

Prog Folk

3.25 | 16 ratings

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TenYearsAfter
4 stars "Another overlooked interesting Spanish prog album".

The previous studio-album Sol De Medianoche from Spanish prog band Amarok (not to confuse with the Polish Amarok) appealed very much to me, I consider it as a captivating and adventurous blend of jazz, prog and ethnic music, topped with a wide range of instruments, including lots of exotic woodwind, string and percussion instruments. This successor entitled Canciones De Los Mundos Perdidos is not a new studio-album but a reissue ((Luna Negra, Musea, 2008) from their second studio effort from 1995, including 4 bonustracks. The band was not pleased with the results in 1995, due to a lack of time and lots of stress. To me this reissue sounds as a very pleasant blend of folk and Seventies symphonic rock (elements of 70-77 Genesis and Hackett solo), very melodic and harmonic.

The opener Prologo is a good examplex how Amarok sounds on this reissue: first a swinging rhythm with percussion and celestial female vocals with a xylophone solo, then the atmosphere turns into dreamy with soaring Mellotron violins, twanging acoustic guitar and wonderful work on the violin.

The other 14 tracks also deliver lots of variety (moods, tempo, instruments).

Mellotron violins with piano, an interlude with warm violin and Glockenpsiel with Mellotron choirs in Danza Y Lamento.

Acoustic guitar, a bagpipe sound and flashy synthesizer runs in Bolero.

Dreamy with hobo (frequently used on this album), high pitched vocals and a sparkling harpsichord solo in Homenaje A J.H.T. Tolkien.

The 12-string acoustic guitar, Spanish guitar and congas in Esqui De Fondo (first bonustrack).

And the lush sound of 12-string guitars with beautiful vocals and again the distinctive sound of the Glockenspiel (just listen to Mike Oldfield his legendary Tubular Bells album) in the final composition Solo Faltas Tu (the 4th bonustrack).

In general the atmosphere is dreamy or laidback but, at some moments more powerful and bombastic, like in the alternating second bonustrack Los Bosques De Irati (church organ sound with 12-string guitar and Mellotron choirs, blended with Spanish guitar, wow!), the third bonustrack El Ciclo Del Tiempo (Glockenspiel and swirling synthesizer runs in the vein of Rick Wakeman) and the up-tempo song El Vuelo Del Pelicano (sensitive electric guitar with echoes from Steve Hackett and fluent work on keyboards).

What a wonderful, elaborate and adventurous blend of folk and symphonic rock, and the 4 bonustracks are "no fillers, but all killers!".

TenYearsAfter | 4/5 |

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