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CIELI SOTTERRANEI

Mappe Nootiche

Psychedelic/Space Rock


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Mappe Nootiche Cieli Sotterranei album cover
3.50 | 3 ratings | 2 reviews | 0% 5 stars

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Studio Album, released in 2011

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Fratelli D'Italia (11.46)
2. Ahimsa (8.03)
3. Cieli Sotteranei (9.21)
4. Terra! (6.35)
5. La Stanza di Mandelbrot pt1 (6.42)
6. La Stanza di Mandelbrot pt2 (11.17)
7. Cieli Sotteranei- Frattale (11.58)


Total Time 65.42


Line-up / Musicians


- Umberto Schirosi / guitars
- Luca Galimberti / drums
- Marco Fiorin / keyboards
- Andrea Fiorin / bass, voice

Releases information

Ma.Ra.Cash Records Italy

Thanks to tszirmay for the addition
and to tszirmay for the last updates
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MAPPE NOOTICHE Cieli Sotterranei ratings distribution


3.50
(3 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(0%)
0%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(50%)
50%
Good, but non-essential (50%)
50%
Collectors/fans only (0%)
0%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

MAPPE NOOTICHE Cieli Sotterranei reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by tszirmay
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
4 stars I hunted this new release with a vengeance, enthralled as I was by the previous 2008 Terra! , certainly one of the finest space/psychedelic albums I have ever heard. I am delighted to report that Subterranean Skies ("Cieli Sotterranei") is in the same fluid vein as its predecessor. All the main ingredients are there, powerful bass-fueled sonic landscapes with a strong Pink Floyd atmosphere (the band dedicates the album to the memory of Rick Wright), sizzling electronics, thoughtful percussives and Umberto Schirosi's howling guitar forays. The sound engineer is none other than Beppe Crovella of Arti + Mestieri fame, a prolific keyboardist and soundscaper on his own with Romantic Warriors, Secret Cinema, Mosaic and Tower among others. Needless to say, the sound quality here is pristine; the arrangements are cosmic introspections that cannot qualify as background music because of the constant changes and intense contrasts that abound within each track. The aquatic "Fratelli d'Italia" is a breathtaking plunge into synthesized seas of tranquility, echoing guitar arpeggios and sedate drum patter that never seem listless or tedious, a whistling synth flirting with a twangy fretboard as if in amorous fusion or a thunderclap suddenly announcing a lovely organ ramble, flickering piano by the bedside. The mood is sensuous and dreamy yet vibrant and earthy, the synth solo even has hints of the traditional 'Greensleeves', a ballsy maneuver that makes this such fun to listen to. Both the wild guitar and the humming organ burn together like phosphorescent bonfire, a total orgasmic experience. Ridiculously good music. "Ahimsa" starts off with sampled words from Mohandas Gandhi, arguably one of the few heroic figures of our history, followed by a startling piano lullaby expertly fingered by Marco Fiorin and marshaled by a solid drum beat, very much in a Floyd "Meddle"- era style that is exhilaratingly effortless and organic, showing clearly this bands ability to diversify and incorporate Eastern motifs into their spacecraft. Percussor extraordinaire Luca Galimberti is very adept at creating a modern /classical climate with his precise yet sparse drumming. The title track provides a darker subterranean ambiance, booming bass from Andrea Fiorin, resonating wildly off the stalactites and stalagmites of sound, rivulets of icy piano droplets pooling gently while cascades of string synths coalesce with sprinkling spurts of crystalline electric guitar. The drums now hammer proudly, hypnotic panacea reverberating with abandon leading to a gentle fade away. "Terra!" is perhaps the closest to being ear-friendly, a simply fantastic excursion into synthesized euphoria, with bulbous peaks and grandiose valleys, dragging a lush melody along as if some delicate kite caught in a serene breeze. Sweeping background choruses make this an enigmatic composition that is brought back to earth with a stylish lead guitar solo, all picking and plucking. Again, nothing sounds forced or contrived, as if flowing naturally from within the musicians' collective conscience.

Next up the epic 2 part "La Stanza di Mandelbrot". "The Mandelbrot set is a particular mathematical set of points whose boundary is a distinctive and easily recognizable two- dimensional fractal shape. The set is closely related to Julia sets (which include similarly complex shapes), and is named after the mathematician French-Polish ?American BenoƮt Mandelbrot, who studied and popularized it" (Wikipedia). The music reflects the complex geometric fractals and simple sequences embodied by the inspiration which provides the listener with a much more experimental approach than witnessed up to now. The composition becomes quite mathematically serious, measuring the sonic distances between Chaos, Form and Equilibrium. We are far from any Pinkish Floydisms, in fact perhaps closer to some of Eno's more abstract work but with way more commotion from the oblique synths, the mobile bass and the agitated guitar. Part 2 in particular gets very abstruse and well?. fractal, I guess. The bass suddenly starts carving out a melody and they start sounding like Mappe Nootiche again. Brooding, ominous, deranged and frenzied. I am so impressed, it's preposterous!

The finale is a reworking of the title cut, a sensational solid drum beat propelling the synthy melody along until the ringing guitar jangles enter the procession, pinging gently and most resolutely. The final four minutes are a collage of weird samples, colliding words, sounds and pleas, extremely psychotic and unnerving. A fine companion to Terra and a wondrous new Italian band that all you well-travelled space cadets need to hear to believe. What makes it so special, is the sheer modern element that makes all this chill/lounge/house crap look like yesterdays music. Yes, it's that good!

Get Terra first and then this one, you will not regret leaving this galaxy.

4 cavernous heavens

Review by Mellotron Storm
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars I wish I was as enthusiastic as tszirmay about this record. I do like the style of music they play but listening to almost 66 minutes of that same repetitive style is just too much for me. The last song is my favourite but by the time I get there i'm done. Regardless, if you like laid back Psychedelic music chances are you'll like this alot.

"Fratelli D'Italia" opens with atmosphere then the drums come in and build after 1 1/2 minutes. The guitar echoes and piano helps out too. Organ before 5 minutes as the thunder booms and the rain comes down. Guitar and spacey sounds follow.Spoken words before 11 minutes as the guitar lights it up, then it turns spacey again and blends into "Ahisma". Spoken words come and go throughout this track.

"Cieli Sotterranei" opens with piano only then it turns spacey as the guitar echoes. A beat comes in before 3 minutes. A fuller passage comes and goes. "Terra !" is once again laid back. Some vocal melodies before 3 1/2 minutes. Guitar to the fore after 4 1/2 minutes and some good organ late. "La Stanza Di Mandelbrot Parte I" is spacey as sounds come and go. "La Stanza Di Mandelbrot Parte II" is more of the same really. "Cieli Sotteranei-Frattale" builds and we get some vocal melodies half way through. I like this. Silence 7 minutes in for over a minute. Then we get what sounds like music from a parade. That earlier soundscape with a spacey vibe takes over. Church bells end it.

So a good album that fans of mellow Psychedelic music should enjoy.

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