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Ovrfwrd - There Are No Ordinary Moments CD (album) cover

THERE ARE NO ORDINARY MOMENTS

Ovrfwrd

 

Heavy Prog

4.15 | 44 ratings

From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

kev rowland
Special Collaborator
Honorary Reviewer
4 stars Back with their fifth album in ten years, all with the same line-up, instrumental quartet Ovrwfrd continue to prove it is possible to be dynamic, exciting and engaging without a frontman. Playing a genre such as progressive rock is to scratch an itch, not to make money and become household names (sadly), and to cut back the possible listeners even further by forgoing the use of a singer clearly demonstrates just how much this style of music means to them all. Mark Ilaug (electric & acoustic guitars), Chris Malmgren (keyboards), Kyle Lund (bass) and Richard Davenport (drums & percussion) prove that when all musicians are in sync, they create a world where nothing else exists.

It would be easy to say the band relies heavily on the skill and musicianship of Mark and Chris to drive the melodies, such is the interplay between them and the way they mix and weave the threads, taking over or leading the other one in, but that would greatly diminish the roles of Kyle and Richard who are key to the overall success. Take "Eyota" for example, for the vast majority of that piece it is just Mark and Chris, with the others eventually making their presence felt, but it is the not playing and allowing space to breathe which really makes this. That this album was recorded in just five days last August is hard to comprehend, which shows there must have been a lot of live interaction between them. A special note should also be made of trumpeter Dave Foley who plays on opening number "Red Blanket", taking the band much more in a JRF fashion, yet that is just for one song as here we have a band revelling in heavy prog, with some neo tendencies here and there (and some symphonic). This never feels like a prog band out to demonstrate just how clever they are, but instead there is a focus and direction which is often missing with instrumental acts.

Five albums in, and they continue to surprise and delight, long may it continue.

kev rowland | 4/5 |

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