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SBB - Follow My Dream CD (album) cover

FOLLOW MY DREAM

SBB

Eclectic Prog


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4 stars This is a great album... it consists in two very long tracks, but beautifully made. almost instrumental, it has a very fluid but complex sound, with lots of different combinations of keyboard sounds and atmospheres, tpically from the seventies, always changing and each time bringing new delightfull harmonies. Sometimes, there are some calm vocal parts from Skzrek, in polish, adding a dreamy atmosphere to the music. The guitar in this album is rare, at least as a lead instrument, but when Apostolis plays, he can grab all the attentions to his notes, which proves that is a discreet but a top notch guitar player. This is an essencial album, highly recommended, with a sound totally different from other bands, including polish bands. Excelent!
Report this review (#17815)
Posted Sunday, August 8, 2004 | Review Permalink
erik neuteboom
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars The name from this known Polish band is an abbreviation from Silesian Blues Band. In the early Seventies they started as members from a musical project by musician Czeslaw Niemen. From 1974 they decided to make their own music and S.B.B. started to give concerts and to make albums.

This album is from 1978 and contains two long parts (each has a running time from at about 20 minutes). The first one entitled "Going away" starts with the powerful and distinctive sound from the Hammond organ, then soaring keyboards and Gilmourian guitar work ("Meddle"-era). Due to the vocal similarities with Steve Hillage the music evokes Gong and early Hillage-solo. The more fluent parts feature flashy Moog synthesizer flights and other vintage keyboards like the clavinet and string- ensemble, a very pleasant colouring. The second composition "Follow my dream" delivers more jazzrock inspired music, the Moog work often reminds me of Jan Hammer (Mahavishnu Orchestra and Jeff Beck solo). We can also enjoy swinging parts with a fat bass sound and Fender Rhodes piano and some good guitar soli. Unfortunately the final part sounds more poppy, not a very representative ending of this fine and varied album.

Report this review (#47354)
Posted Monday, September 19, 2005 | Review Permalink
5 stars I started listening to this album lying in my bed because i couldn't sleep so I took my headphones and started rolling it. My first impression was really good (two 20-minute epics is not bad) and was very pleasent in that precise moment, due to the quiet character of the first part of Going Away. I kept listening to every detail in the beginning of the song. There are lots of things going on, lots of sounds, nice sounds, very calming. The voice is espectacular too, I've no complains about Józef Skrzek's way of singing. When 3th Reanimation started I was completly blown away, after being so calmed with Freedom with us, the entrance to 3th Reanimation is like a slap of the face, but then you get to realize the idea and you can enjoy the song. The rest is (not technically) very much like Freedom with us, but just a little bit harder. Then comes the tipical end of an epic song, for about 4 minutes which is calles Mountain Mellody. WHAT AN ENDING!. Speaking of song's endings i'ts nothing compared with As sure as eggs is eggs or It, but is a great ending though. After getting out of that psychedelic, technic and jazzy voyage I got into another one, but this time was different. Even when the structure of both of the songs in the album are very simila, they both have a distinctive mark that makes them different, i mean, imagine that each song is a picture on an exhibition; now, they both have the same height and width, in the same figure painted, but in diferent colours. Now, I don't want to give more clues to the readers. This album is a MUST HAVE. I've no doubt that you wont be dissapointed with it, i'ts a remarcable sample of what this polish guys have to offer, along with Memento Z Banalnym Tryptykiem but in my opinion this is far much noble and better. and for the people who likes it, ¿why isn't among the 50 top albums? In my humble opinion, i think that in this page's rankings are a lot of albums overated, and there are others that are underated. this one is definitly underated. You can see that in the number of reviews that it has. Im sure that if people get to know FOLLOW MY DREAM they wont stay with their hands in their pockets. Buy, listen and rate this album... it's a masterpiece (and i say it to the young too). Thank you for your time, and 7 stars. (you will see just five stars, but that is just a drawing) Good bye and God bless South America and Piñera for president. Peace out.
Report this review (#166376)
Posted Friday, April 11, 2008 | Review Permalink
Mellotron Storm
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars In the liner notes it talks about how SBB really blazed a trail for Eastern European bands back in the seventies. After signing a deal with some West German businessmen they were allowed to use Western European liscence plates which angered a lot of the border guards who would often hold them up for hours and even strip them naked in order to humiliate them. Meanwhile they were conquering Europe with their jaw dropping instrumental work and live shows. This album is far more synth laden the earlier ones and the guitar has been pushed to the background.The two longest tracks have vocals and are by far my least favourite compositions. He sort of sounds like Adrian Belew when he sings, not bad it's just better when they concentrate on the instrumental stuff in my opinion.

The two side long suites are both broken down into 4 songs that all blend together. "Freedom With Us" opens with organ that just seems to hum. Nice. It fades out and vocals come in around 2 minutes. Inspirational lyrics here but i'm not a fan of this one. I do like how it turns dark towards the end. "3rd Reanimation" is an instrumental and my favourite track on here.This is uptempo and quite powerful as the synths and drums dominate.The drumming is very far out. It sounds so good before 3 1/2 minutes that it moves me. "Going Away" builds quickly to a full sound after 1 1/2 minutes. This sounds awesome like the previous song. It settles some after 2 1/2 minutes and vocals follow. Instrumental only after 5 1/2 minutes is so incredible ! "(Zywiec) Mountain Melody" is a trip as spacey synths eventually take over.

Side two begins with "Wake Up". Spacey to start before we get a melody after 2 1/2 minutes. Spacey again before 5 minutes. "In The Cradle Of Your Hands" is a short track with vocals. "Growin'" has a great sound to it once it gets going before a minute.The tempo picks up 3 minutes in. Love the drumming. The guitar comes in and plays over top. It goes on and on. Nice. "Follow My Dream" opens with drums as organ comes in. We're grooving now as vocals arrive. This is catchy but not my cup of tea. Guitar after 3 1/2 minutes.

It's almost a 4 star album for the second track alone, but in reality the vocals and lack of guitar bring it down a notch.

Report this review (#200213)
Posted Thursday, January 22, 2009 | Review Permalink
friso
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars SBB - Follow My Dream (1978)

On the Follow my Dream album of Polish symphonic/space/fusion act SBB the band acquired a new sound. With modern, professional equipment (perhaps influenced by '75 Pink Floyd) the band re-invents itself after a career that already gave rise to three major progressive releases. The production of the album is very good, which I can't always say about their earlier releases.

Follow my Dream was aimed at the western part of Europe, which of course had the biggest market for progressive music. Applying the Manticore-tactic, SBB started singing in English and Józef Skrzek does an acceptable job. The accent is however always disturbing and I myself had no problems at all with the Polish lyrics.

Though equipped with a new sound a fresh new market to be explored I must admit I think the band didn't have too much inspiration for this record. The opening section 'Freedom With Us' (they shouldn't have re-used the title of the powerful epic of New Horyzont) is utterly boring. Luckily '3rd Reanimation' is an exciting fusion jam with great slightly distorted synthesizer sounds and a remarkable bombastic ending section. 'Going Away' has again a boring intro and couplet theme but a compensating instrumental refrain that is highly rewarding. Somehow I always get the feeling of relieve listening to this song. The song evolves into the electronic sound-scape Mountain Melody, which is also very rewarding and well recorded. On side two Wake Up is an atmospheric opener. The English version of the Pamieç masterpiece 'In the Cradle of your Hands' is a strong effort, but I prefer the more mysterious sound of the Pamieç version. Still this is track that shows the best of compositional genius that SBB has to offer, and perhaps even the progressive genre itself. The adventerious section after the opening section is one of my favorite moments of progressive rock. The title track 'Follow my Dream' is a boring fusion track like the opening of side one. Luckily the instrumental ending section is highly rewarding. A good ending for the album.

Conclusion. This album showcases an important phase of SBB that would eventually lead to their later major progressive rock releases. The Follow My Dream album falls short to be mentioned in the list of SBB greatest records, but it does have some really amazing moments like '3rd Reanimation', the instrumental sections of 'Going Away' and the ending section of the title track. For me this is a good but non-essential prog record I would mainly recommend to fans of SBB. Three stars it is then.

Report this review (#442851)
Posted Wednesday, May 4, 2011 | Review Permalink
Warthur
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars SBB's Follow My Dream is another exercise in incorporating the trappings of other prog subgenres into the space rock-symphonic bedrock of their sound. On the one side, Going Away includes some electronic portions which sound an awful lot like the sort of territory explored on Klaus Schulze's work at the time or the better Tangerine Dream albums, whilst the title track culminates in a joyous crescendo with just a hint of jazz fusion to it. SBB master the different strands of progressive music they dabble in with astonishing ease, and weave everything together into a quite satisfying whole. A more than well-earned four stars.
Report this review (#556477)
Posted Monday, October 24, 2011 | Review Permalink

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