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Anekdoten - Vemod CD (album) cover

VEMOD

Anekdoten

 

Heavy Prog

4.07 | 489 ratings

From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator
PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
5 stars After the neo-prog dominated 80s, the entire world of progressive rock exploded in the 1990s with so-called prog revival bands jumping onto the scene. Bands like Spock's Beard, Dream Theater, The Flower Kings, Porcupine Tree, Tool, Symphony X and Thinking Plague were reviving the vast wealth of sounds that were incubated in the 1970s which mostly lay dormant through the music industry dominated 80s. The Swedish scene was one of the most productive with bands like Anglagard taking the lead with its outstanding debut "Hybris" in 1992 but right at its side was another Swedish band from Borlãnge that formed in 1990 and delivered its first powerhouse debut in 1993.

ANEKDOTEN formed by Jan Erik Liljeström (bass, vocals), Nicklas Berg [aka Nicklas Barker] (guitar, Mellotron, vocals) and drummer Peter Nordins took a different approach than many of its 90s counterparts. Eschewing the blatant Pink Floyd inspired space rock, the symphonic prog excesses of Yes and Genesis or the nerdy avant-prog workouts inspired by the Belgian chamber rock scene, ANEKDOTEN looked rather back to King Crimson, specifically its "Red" album and created a heavy style of art rock that implemented a bantering Rickenbacker bass, Fripp-ian guitar angularities and a turbulent atmospheric delivery. VEMOD was the debut album and in Swedish means "sadness" or "melancholy." The album indeed delivered the perfect mix of instrumentation that offered the perfect downer vibe.

Soaked in mellotron, the album featured a veritable mix of creepy atmospheres augmented by the lugubrious cello playing of Anna Sofi Dahlberg which contrasted starkly with the heavy rock workouts of the chugging guitar, bass fuzz and percussive pummelation which in tandem delivered an oddball mix of psychedelic folk style passages with heavier prog rock that verged on drifting into extreme metal territory. Also notable was the unique tender vocal style of Jan Erik Liljeström who added that detached Thom Yorke melancholy before Radiohead latched onto the same idea. VEMOD finds the extra touches of guest Per Wiberg delivering grand piano runs as well as Pär Ekström adding the occasional flugelhorn and cornet sounds.

The opening instrumental "Karelia" sets the mood with eerie old school mellotron synth sounds that burst into the KC proto-metal "Red" dissonance which dominate the band's first two albums before drifting off more into psychedelic territories. Given the uniqueness of ANEKDOTEN's sound, the opener allows an acclimation period before the album begins its vocal dominated aspects on "The Old Man & The Sea." By this time the various complexities of the instrumental interplay had been well established and then allow the cryptic English vocals to add an entirely new dimension to the band's overall effect. Taking things much further than KC ever did with "Red," ANEKDOTEN demonstrated that KC had plenty of life left after its sole offering of that particular phase of Robert Tripp's creative output and added a 90s spin that fit in with the alternative outsider music that dominated the decade.

The album perfectly balances the brooding slower passages with the frenetic and even jarring brashness of the heavy prog workouts that find the guitar, bass and drums in some sort of trance inducing psychosis but the skilled musicians maintain firm control of their seemingly uncontrollable beast and demonstrate an unshakable restraint. Perhaps the most "Red" sounding of all is the "ballad" "Thoughts In Absence" which evokes that same more chilled moment of "Fallen Angel" however ANEKDOTEN crafted a much darker, even depressive take on KC's 1974 classic. The juxtaposition of the spidery guitar parts with mellotron-soaked ambience gives ANEKDOTEN a sound like no other and despite comparisons with bands like Anglagard, Magma, Ruins and others, ANEKDOTEN remains to this day a unique prog force that somehow conjured up the perfect blend of bombastic hypnosis.

ANEKDOTEN was no one trick pony with a constant evolution throughout its run through the 90s and beyond and although every album is brilliant in its own way, for my personal tastes i still find this debut to be my absolute favorite of the lot. It not only captured the spirit of the 70s greats that launched the entire prog scene but gave it all a serious upgrade in a way that was quite effective with a multitude of interesting diversions into everything from classical chamber psychedelia to post-rock like repetition. Needless to say the band mastered all the Frippian techniques of "Red" and took them to the next level and beyond. Despite all these astute analyses, the album is just a pure joy to experience from beginning to end and one of those that i never tire of.

Everything blends together impeccably and no element is so dominant that it becomes monotonous. ANEKDOTEN delivered one of the most artful blends of classic prog with a new spin on VEMOD and delivers musically exactly what the eerie cover art depicts. While considered a form of retro prog, VEMOD excelled at true originality above and beyond the influences. This is one of 90s prog's greatest moments IMHO. ANEKDOTEN would take the extremities even further on the following "Nucleus" before abandoning the harshness altogether in favor of a more psychedelic and progressive take on the style of the space rock revival of Radiohead. While those albums are interesting, to my ears VEMOD is one of the band's finest moments.

siLLy puPPy | 5/5 |

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