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Syncope - Syncope CD (album) cover

SYNCOPE

Syncope

 

Jazz Rock/Fusion

3.41 | 12 ratings

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apps79
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars Syncope was a collective of Canadian musicians, based in the city of Hull, Quebec.The band's activities seem to start around early 1975 with several contests following, in which Syncope won a handful of prices.They were led by keyboardist Francois Groulx and other members were singer/trombonist Bernard Grenier, bassist Robert Villeneuve (also a participant on Connivence's first album), guitarist Serge Ippersiel, saxophonist Sylvain Soucy, drummer Jean Dumontier and singer Yves Lacroix.They recorded their only self-titled album at the Ottawa Studios between September 79' and May 80' with the help of Serge Mercier on trumpet and Michel Allaire on glockenspiel, privately pressed and distributed in 1980.

The style of the band was a CHICAGO-influenced dreamy Fusion with certain progressive overtones and clean, French vocals.Lots of brass instrumental parts, plenty of ethereal keyboards and electric piano and some lyrical depth in the process completed an airy listening experience, which was a bit too soft at moments yet contains impressive progressive interplays and stretched instrumental actions.Sounding nothing like an 80's album, ''Syncope'' is fairly grounded in the Quebec Prog fundamentals, they made careful use of expressive vocals, they added some Pop flavors here and there and they let their jazzy influences surface to create an enganging style, filled with smooth instrumentals, melodious themes and pompous brass echoes.The sound is very well balanced between keyboards, guitars and trombone/saxes, the eponymous track, clocking at about 10 minutes, is an excellent proposal on jazzy Canadian Prog with soft jazzy sax, marching trombone, guitar technique in display and efficient piano lines, but again there are pieces like ''Le bleu d'Hull'', which sound very dubious and accesible, despite maintaining an artistic profile.In general the album lacks the complexity and drama of pure prog products, but passes through as a creation of shiny jazzy Prog Rock with melodic overtones and positive vibes.

The underground distribution of the album and the choice to release it at the dawn of the 80's had a negative impact on Syncope's fame, the band apparently disbanded sometime later.This is still a lovely and optimistic approach on dreamy, jazzy Prog Rock, highlighted by its mellow still professional interactions.Recommended.

apps79 | 3/5 |

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