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Barclay James  Harvest - John Lees Barclay James Harvest: Legacy - Live At The Shepherds Bush Empire (DVD) CD (album) cover

JOHN LEES BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST: LEGACY - LIVE AT THE SHEPHERDS BUSH EMPIRE (DVD)

Barclay James Harvest

 

Crossover Prog

4.46 | 14 ratings

From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

erik neuteboom
Prog Reviewer
5 stars A few months ago my good friend Paul Rijkens (electronic prog specialist and reviewer for Dutch progrock magazine iO Pages) pointed me at the existence of this Mellotron drenched DVD and said that to him the sound evoked the great Seventies BJH, I didn't hesitate a single second and ordered it immediately!

Well, my friend was absolutely right, the exciting tracklist and the lush Mellotron M400 sound carried me away to the Progheaven of albums like Live and Live Tapes, goose bumps and shivers down my spine, what a wonderful musical experience: warm and compelling with abundant violin-Mellotron in For No One, beautiful piano work in the excellent performed Child Of The Universe, majestic Mellotron and sensitive guitar in The Great 1974 Mining Disaster, dreamy Mellotron and intense guitar runs in Poor Man's Moody Blues, a great blend of twanging guitar, Mellotron and warm vocals in Galadriel, a moving and dramatic rendition of Suicide (with wonderful organ and guitar), my highlight Medicine Man featuring propulsive guitar riffs, lush Mellotron, a spectacular synthesizer solo and howling guitar, a captivating rendition of the 'classic' Mockingbird (again delivering majestic Mellotron waves, a sumptuous church-organ sound and John Lees his son on the cornet), exciting keyboards and guitar in After The Day and a compelling version of the final composition Hymn (without acoustic guitar and again John Lees his son on cornet). I was also delighted about the songs The Iron Maiden and Poor Wages (dreamy with beatiful vocals by Woolly) and the dry, typically British humour in the intro of The Poet/After The Day in which we hear a black and old fashioned telephone ringing and then Woolly starts to introduce the band before making a cynical joke about a former band member.

THIS IS A COMPELLING MELLOTRON DRENCHED PROGROCK DOCUMENT, HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!

erik neuteboom | 5/5 |

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