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Majestic - Arrival CD (album) cover

ARRIVAL

Majestic

Neo-Prog


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4 stars I stumbled onto this "band" by accident.....and what a terrific find! I haven't heard as competent a multi-instrumentalist as talented as Jeff Hamel since Mike Oldfield. And that's a mighty high bar. The first listen I had to this CD, I had no idea I wasn't hearing a 4-piece band. That's how good Hamel is.

The songs are long, but keep the listener entranced. What we have here seems a new breed called symph prog metal. The closest thing I can compare this music to that is current (excuse me, please, Mr. Oldfield) would be Project Creation. The production quality doesn't seem all it could be, and that element IS present with PC.

This project deserves keeping a close watch on. As a keyboardist/multi-instrumentalist myself, I will take an apprentice's eye view of what Jeff Hamel does here and down the road.

Fans of prog metal, symphonic prog, Project Creation, and others of this ilk would do well to give this a listen.

Report this review (#258876)
Posted Saturday, January 2, 2010 | Review Permalink
Windhawk
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars Strong effort by US one man band Majestic here, and a substantial improvement over 2007's Descension. Of the four tracks on this most recent effort, only two of them really makes buying this one worthwhile admittedly, but as those two efforts clock in at 58 minutes alltogether that's still very good value for money.

Musically we're obviously treated to epic length songs. The style is pretty close to mid 70's Pink Floyd, rich symphonic and space-tinged backdrops over wandering clean and acoustic guitars as key features, strong and distinct lead vocals and a good mix of instrumental and vocal segments. The vocals in this case is mostly provided by a woman though, unlike Floyd, but Jessica's strong voice and controlled emotional delivery does fit this music well. Main man Hamel does blend in a few metal-tinged touches to these songs as well, which alongside a few subtle modern touches adds a slight Porcupine Tree sheen to the proceedings.

Still, fans of the symphonic part of the Floydian back catalogue is probably the main audience for this effort, and is an easily recommended album to that particular crowd.

Report this review (#268511)
Posted Friday, February 26, 2010 | Review Permalink
5 stars In 2009, American progressive rock band, Majestic, released their third album Arrival. Majestic is comprised of multi-instrumentalist Jeff Hamel and vocalist Jessica Rasche. Both of them create their own brand of progressive rock that involves stepping into the progressive metal camp. The biggest difference with Majestic is that they are not clones of what's been released in the market. One band I'm reminded of, when Jessica sings, is another American band called Leger De Main.

Arrival is comprised of 4 long tracks, the longest being 36 minutes and the shortest, 9 minutes. Opening this album is "Gray" (22:39) and showcases both Jeff & Jessica's vocals. They compliment each other flawlessly here. The song flows perfectly going from full on progressive metal to progressive/space rock in the course of the track. The way the instrumentation is, reminds me a little bit of Anbeon (an Ayreon off-shoot band).

"Wish" (9:12) which is a vehicle for Jessica's vocals. Jeff plays a softer almost acoustic guitar playing here. The song reminds me of a Wish You Were Here vibe. Next up is "Glide" (9:36). The instrumentation switched gears to a metallic guitar assault, almost a flip side of "Wish". About 4 minutes into the song, there tempo slows down then continues on with the metallic wave. This song will satisfy most progressive metal and heavy progressive rock fans alike.

The ending song, is the title track (36:04) aside from having the album title, this is the main focal point of the album. It also showcases how the band sounds in 2009. From it's spacey beginning, "Arrival" takes the listener on an aural journey. While having some metallic guitar parts, especially towards the end, this is further from the progressive metal vibe the rest of the album has. This song alone is, to me, what the Majestic output is all about (in 2009). I was told by Jeff that the next album will have a different sound.

In closing both Jeff & Jessica create what has become a favorite of mine. Had I received this back in 2009, it would surely grace my favorites of that year, hands down. If you like long epic lengthy tracks and a fan of Pink Floyd and the spacier side of Ayreon then Arrival is the album you need in your collection. With excellent instrumentation and vocals, Arrival gets a high recommendation! For me a 5 Star, Big find!

Clover, a 4 part suite was recorded after Arrival, and are a separate entity, I felt it important to mention Clover here within this review. According to Jeff, he wanted to have some shorter pieces of music to show what Majestic was all about. It was also recorded while Jeff & Jessica were contributing to the Proximal Distance project. The Clover suite is available as a FREE download on the Majestic website. If you're already a fan of the band or even a newbie (such as myself) this would a perfect starting point within the Majestic catalog.

Report this review (#1157073)
Posted Thursday, April 3, 2014 | Review Permalink
kev rowland
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Reviewer
4 stars In 2004, multi-instrumentalist Jeff Hamel (from prog-metallers Osmium) started working as Majestic, working mostly on his own with just the occasional guest singer. After releasing a couple of albums he joined forces with vocalist and lyricist Jessica Rasche, and together they worked on 'Arrival', which was released in 2009. There are only four songs, but with an album length of over 77 minutes you can work out for yourself that they are a little long. In fact, there are only two real epics, with the two in the middle being 'just' nine minutes each. At no point this this seem like a project, as there is a real band feel to the proceedings and there is also a great deal of restraint so that all of the music makes sense as opposed to self-indulgency, which can creep on some projects. Another thing that really hits home is the lack of fat within the songs. The first time I played this I was astounded when I realized that "Grey" has been playing for more than twenty minutes as I had the impression that it had only been on the player for a very short period of time.

Symphonic, yet with plenty of prog metal overtones, elements of Floyd mixed with some of Dream Theater, this is a heck of an album. If you go to the website and sign up to the newsletter you can download some albums free of charge so why not give it a try? www.majesticsongs.com

Report this review (#1175275)
Posted Thursday, May 15, 2014 | Review Permalink
tszirmay
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
5 stars 2009's 'Arrival' is a splendid career-making monument to multi-instrumentalist Jeff Hamel, a composer and artist of the very highest order who unfortunately does not yet receive his meritorious due. Well, I feel a gross injustice in seeing too few adherents to such a stellar musician and his craft. Majestic all started for me with the unexpected genius of 2012's 'V.O.Z.' a killer double CD of the very highest caliber. So I went out and got from Jeff the latest 2014 release 'Epsilon 1' and this slice of genius which had already received very high ratings. I was also inspired by the rather simple artwork which somehow harkened back to Robin Trower's classic 'Bridge of Sighs' (in my opinion, a huge missing link on PA). 4 tracks, two long ones and two shorter ones, all stellar stuff!

A bold move to kick off an album with a 22 minute rambler but 'Gray' gets it done. Both Jeff Hamel and Jessica Rasche combine to entwine their vocal chords in a brief serenade that precedes the booming explosion, a bull-dozing mellotron and guitar assault on the senses, sternly powered by some potent drumming. One can conjure similarities with Ayreon (or its softer off-shoot Ambeon) or Polish heavy-prog advocates Riverside but Hamel likes to bejewel his own diamonds into the mix, tallying voice effects, grandiloquent arrangements and sweltering soloing on the guitar. Essentially full-on turbo prog motoring, the relentless assault is vibrant and epic, a steamroller with attention to melody and detail. A playground section has children voices playing in apparent joy, sweeping synthesized winds blowing the leaves across some fictive carousel, leisurely building towards another glorious chorus (Jessica has a fine voice!), the bass climbs on the bandwagon and Hamel slithers up and down his fret board with apparent glee. A sudden morph into a quasi Hawkwind-like riff , more thumping organ and drums in unison and POW, a slingshot into the cosmos! An emblematic Floydian mood is then firmly established with sublime female wailing, Hamel then offering up a vocal counterpoint and letting his brash guitar do the ranting! Crash and burn outro gives this piece some serious credentials in terms of substance and power.

The immortally striking 'Wish' is perhaps one of the finest tracks in the last 10 years, an explosive cocktail of urgency and desire, complete with stunning acoustic guitar work and much later in the track, a long, sensual and saturated solo of incredible stature, feel and immensity, a true guitar solo classic of the genre. Crystalline droplets of shimmering beauty permit Rasche to blow the roof off with some Kate Bush-like wailing that will force any prog fan to kneel in absolute reverence. This uncomplicated piece has captured my deepest interest and I find myself returning to it often and with great anticipation. What a genial performance!

The rambunctious onslaught of crushing bulldozer rock found on 'Glide' will undoubtedly wake you up from any mid-afternoon siesta and get you pumped up, big time! Unwittingly on the heavier side of the spectrum, this 9 minute+ rocker will raise the heart rate and provide an exhilarating sense of enjoyment, again due to the explosive Rasche voice, as well as the stunning keyboard, bass and drum work executed by Mr Hamel. His gurgling synthesizer solo spot will enhance his leaden rifferama to the highest apex, twisting on a dime, stop- start accelerations and just merciless soloing.

Then to close off the proceedings with a whopping title track 36 minute finale ,well that takes guts, balls, cojones , call 'em what you will! Astrophysical seminar expertise effects , tolling guitars announcing some interplanetary event on the horizon , a hint of Yes (Soon section on Relayer), an unmistakable dash of Funkadelic's classic guitar rant 'Maggot Brain', some vigorous symphonics , incredible vocal inflections from Jessica Rasche that all conspire together to construct a memorable main theme that will sear your brain. Nothing rushed or formulaic, always fresh and exalting, constantly pulsating and energetic. The 'show me now, how to live' vocal section is outright orgasmic, terrifically inspired guitar blasting notes beyond the stars. No fluff here! Then follows an extended instrumental platform where the master gets to show some serious chops and intensive creativity. Loads of endless screeching wah-wah infused guitar, played by a man possessed but mostly, an unconcealed sense of effortless enjoyment. As far as massive epics go, this one reigns supreme! Jessica blasts forth some 'little pieces' with incredible energy, a vocal tour de force that will blow your mind or your speakers (or both). WOW!

It stands to reason that this is the highest rated Majestic album to date, a massive success in terms of heavy neo-prog but honestly, Majestic is a cinema show on its own standing, utterly deserving of the highest accolades and most exuberant applause.

5 Departures

Report this review (#1179246)
Posted Sunday, May 25, 2014 | Review Permalink
4 stars "Exciting harder-edged symphonic rock"

Majestic is a musical project of USA citizen Jeff Hamel (guitar, keyboards and vocals). He started to play guitar when he was 14 years old, in The Eighties he was a member of prog metal band Osmium and in the Nineties he studied a few years recording technology in Detroit. In 2004 his passion for symphonic progrock led to the foundation of Majestic, between 2008 and 2014 the very prolific Majestic released 8 studio-albums (along two compilation CD's), his latest albums is Epsilon 2 from 2014. This review is about his third album Arrival from 2009, considered as his best effort.

This very long CD (close to 80 minutes) opens with the 22 minutes composition Gray: first a dreamy intro with twanging electric guitar and pleasant vocals, then the music alternates between a fluent rhythm with bombastic keyboards, heavy guitar and a thunderous rhythm-section and a more mellow climate with wonderful female vocals. In between we can enjoy a blistering guitar solo. After a part with fine synthesizer flights, propulsive guitar riffs and ominous sounding keyboards, follows a mellow part featuring all sorts of sounds and soaring vocals. Then a great build-up, the music gradually turns into more lush and heavy, somewhere between gothic and prog metal with heavy guitar riffs and majestic organ. In the final part the music slows down but in the end it's again bombastic with heavy work on guitar and keyboards.

The next song Wish (almost 10 minutes) is an oasis of silence in comparison with the previous song: warm acoustic guitar with soaring vocals, then gradually the music slowly becomes more compelling and halfway we can enjoy an excellent, strongly build-up guitar solo with biting runs and sensational use of the wah-wah pedal.

The third track Gilde (also close to 10 minutes) starts in a prog metal atmosphere, then a spacey interlude and a captivating build-up to fluent and sumptuous with spectacular work on guitar and keyboards.

Finally the epic titletrack clocking 36 minutes! But despite this very long running time, Majestic succeeds to keep my attention, due to the many strong musical ideas and surprising twists and turns. After a spacey intro with subtle guitar work, a pleasant female voice joins, followed by a build-up to compelling and bombastic prog with emotional vocals and fiery wah-wah guitar. Then lots of shifting moods, breaks and great dynamics: prog metal, a slow rhythm with organ and slow drum beats, a hypnotizing guitar solo with fiery runs, a dreamy part with classical guitar, a blistering guitar solo with wah-wah, a compelling bombastic atmosphere delivering organ, vocals and a propulsive rhythm-section and finally a beautiful part with a moving guitar solo, accompanied by sequencers, very original!

If you like harder-edged symphonic rock, Heavy Prog, prog metal or gothic rock, I am sure this album will delight you!

Report this review (#1953693)
Posted Tuesday, July 31, 2018 | Review Permalink

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