![]() |
HINTERLANDTiltCrossover Prog |
From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website


The menu is at times high octane and powerful, while at others loaded with brooding melancholy, each title expertly constructed, and played with profound passion and fortitude. It blew me sideways upon the very first audition and still love to bits today. On 'Assembly' the dismal atmospherics serve to introduce the pristine voice of Paul Dourley, that unexpectedly explodes half-way through into gritty desolation, choppy electricity in the guitars, snarling synth lines, and a beastly beat. Nearly 9 minutes of musical foreplay that bodes well for the onslaught of quality that kicks off with the title track, a metallic blast laden with persisting guitars, thrashing rhythm section flaying away like there is no tomorrow, all salted up with a husky Dourley evocation of Paul Rodgers (and that is quite the compliment). There is a sensorial attention to detail that comes across as very distinct, this contrast of hard chops with hints of electronic ornamentation as well as a keen sense of dosage.
A quartet of mid size pieces are up next and they do not disappoint at all, quite the contrary! When I first heard 'Against the Rain', the solemn tone completely hypnotized me, Dourley singing with emotional distress on a melody that was made somewhere in the heaven, with minimal accoutrements musically, but when the drums enter and the piano tingles, the guitar shrieks plaintively and the symphonics kick in, there is a terminal chorus that is crushingly beautiful, as the vocalist puts all his sensation into it. Oh my! The curt but punchy 'No Superman' is a bruising onslaught, verging on grungy and modern rock, with another sensational vocal delivery that has a hint of Robert Plant insistence. The greasy guitar shred is a hissy affair, all rage and rancor! 'Growing Colder' is another vocal tour de force, a strong rock voice that knows subtlety, control, and heartfelt impression. The chorus is a 'grower' but hotter than expected, as the piece ends in an orchestral fashion, showing all kinds of cleverness and adventure. 'Strontium Burning' is another sizzler, with Dourley unleashing a relentlessly plaintive microphone performance, polished off with acoustic sensibilities the man has a voice of gold, a rarity in prog for sure. Thumping drums and a screeching guitar finale. Then the proceedings get serious, as in serious prog, with the lumbering doomsday blitz of 'Bloodline', a brooding electronic-laden 9-minute groove -fueled monster, with burping bass and fisted drums, something verging on Porcupine Tree circa 'Fear of a Blank Planet' sliced through by Dourley's vocals that prove to be quite insistent, as are the crunchy guitars and the catatonic drums. An utterly convincing slash of exquisite melodic/metalloid fury. The equally 9-minute-long finale 'Disassembly' harkens to more experimental realms, though the mournful piano acts as a dislocating guide to a mystifying soundtrack that has no restraint, spooky and eerie, beckoning with breathless wonder as Dourley intones 'Is there no God? ', rapt in choral bewilderment.
This is quite the mature prog masterpiece, it must be listened to as a whole and not in parts, as it definitely has a destination in mind for the astute listener. Easily a top 5 album for 2016 and as mentioned earlier, criminally overlooked by way too many fans, pundits, reviewers, and websites. Look at our rating and then go get a listen online, hear for yourself.
5 skewed vicinities
TILT Hinterland ratings only
chronological order | showing rating only
-
bwood637 (Brandon)
-
CJSrans (Jose)
-
Redy60 (Radoslav Glushkov)
-
Pineapple Wilson (Fred Geiss)
-
nanczo
-
oldcrow
-
Pieromcdo (Pierre McDonald)
-
Dopeydoc (Pierre Nory)
-
vick (Victor)
-
Hazy7868
-
puzart (Artur)
-
albertovitt (alberto vittorini)
-
mbzr48 (Mayer More)
-
Moocanoe (Placeholder Name)
-
Hugh (Ugo)
-
jacobaeus (Alberto Nucci)
-
dannyb
-
nutulescug (George)
-
mortoc31 (Chris Morton)
Post a review of TILT Hinterland
You must be a forum member to post a review, please register here if you are not.
MEMBERS LOGIN ZONE
As a registered member (register here if not), you can post rating/reviews (& edit later), comments reviews and submit new albums.
You are not logged, please complete authentication before continuing (use forum credentials).