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Third Ear Band - Necromancers Of The Drifting West CD (album) cover

NECROMANCERS OF THE DRIFTING WEST

Third Ear Band

 

Indo-Prog/Raga Rock

2.74 | 8 ratings

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Sean Trane
Special Collaborator
Prog Folk
3 stars A never-released-before-this album, A&H is the soundtrack made for a German TV film Unlike the Materiali Sonori albums released a decade earlier, this is a very worthy original TEB release that honours the name, much more so than the second incarnation did, especially that the line-up is one that was not yet heard of in other works. Indeed, besides Sweeney and Coff, we find Paul Minns and Ursula Smith, who hadn't recorded together in the historical albums, with Mel Davis having already left the band and Dave Tomlin is not yet in the band; all of which gives a unique interest to this work. Released in 99 on the Blueprint label (a sublabel to Voiceprint) without much explanation (expected from VP) in a very sober but solemn artwork, this is a six-movement piece that totals 36-mins+, and musically, it hovers between Alchemy and Elements, while it has some sombre elements that their future Macbeth release will be famous for. Ranging from just over three minutes length (part 3 & 4) until 13-mins+ (part 1), the suite is obviously meant to be listened as a whole, even if the parts are somewhat disjointed, probably on the account that the music had to be edited to fit the TV movie's needs. The mood is quite medieval and early-classical, despite also bearing some slight raga influences, and if you liked their first two historic releases, this is a sure bet to hit the bull's-eye.

On the concept side of the film and music, this is about XIIth Century French philosopher and theologian Pierre Abélard and his wife Heloise Fulbert and their relationship ruined by the clergy. Soooo, A&H is a full-blown TEB album, like The Magus (released the following year) is ione as well, and it might've been their second album (therefore preceding Elements) had it seen the light of day. The album's release comes over two years after oboist Paul Minns' death, and it can be seen as a posthumous homage. If you can't find the minimal Blueprint release with the superb blue artwork, you can always turn onto the Hymn To The Sphynx 2001-released compilation, where it is stuck in the first side on a collection of second-era tracks, which, while interesting by themselves, don't do the A&H suite much favours. So if you're not really a second-era TEB fan, you might want to search this release (especially for the neat artwork), but if you like both eras, then the choice is obviously reversed.

Sean Trane | 3/5 |

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