Progarchives.com has always (since 2002) relied on banners ads to cover web hosting fees and all. Please consider supporting us by giving monthly PayPal donations and help keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.
From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website
Cesar Inca
like
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator
Drachenblut is the fifth item of Asgard's constant explorations into the traditions of ancient magic
within the realms of musical art in prog rock. After the original line-up's singer andguitarist left the
band, you could really suspect that the album after Arkana was destined to retrace the band's steps
in pursue of a proper refurbishment of their neo-symphonic vision, since the aforesaid members' inputs
were crucial and determining for the band's core sound. Drachenblut took some time to complete
given the fact that the definitive line-up changes didn't ultimately gel, but eventually, the remaining
members, keyboardist/flutist Alberto Ambrosi and bassist/2nd guitarist Chris Bianchi d'Espinosa,
managed to restore the quintet format. The sound production is far from perfect, but that's another
issue tha twe won't get into now. New vocalist Ivo Gallo, given his style and tone that are more related
to hard rock and Stone Temple Pilots-type grunge, had to bear on his shoulders the burden of carrying
the lyrics' messages over a rockier development of Asgard's sound. Hardening the sound of prog was
nothing new for Asgard: the excellent concept album Imago Mundi was actually very prog metal-
related from the neo-prog shoreline that Asgard had created out of the influences received from Fish-
era Marillion, Gabriel-era Genesis and the pastoral factor of vintage Italian symphonic prog. But now
the band's style has become a bit darker, even more related to the somber vibe that we can find in
IQ's epic moments and teh stamina than we can find in many heavy prog and prog metal bands. The
first two tracks are manifestos of the symphonic trend that the band is now headlong for: 'Blue Fire' is a
ceremonious mid-tempo rocker, while 'Red Fire' delivers a more frantic rhythmic structure, both finding
a comfortable place in the crossroads of heavy prog and Imago Mundi powerfully metallish neo.
Gallo's voice and style work well in the energetic passages, but they don't at all in the softer ones. The
pastoral first half of 'Dragon's Blood' and the dreamy atmospheres of 'In the Lands of the Dragon of
Midgard' are very hard for him to merge well into the whole integral mood. The same goes for the first
of the two epics, 'Quid': it is beautifully constructed as in the eerie climaxes one can find in 2Esoteric
Poem and Arkana, but the vocalist of the moment is not the right messenger. Of course, he is very
efficient in the majestic mid-tempo 'Drachenfels', as well as the other epic 'Initiation' (the album's
apex). 'Initiation' states a compact cohesiveness through the various motifs, in a sequence that goes
from the mysterious to the solemn, and from there to the bombastic: the pastoral closure is an
effective way to complete the idea. I Am the Udder is a short yet catchy rocker that also fits Gallo's
style well. The character of Sigurd had been introduced in the spacey brief instrumental tha tis track 3,
and now it meets the two melodic rockers 'Memories from Sigurd's Past' and 'Danger!', preceded by the
piano solo piece entitled 'The Bathe'. The piano solo is fine, but teh two rockers do not work quite right:
they are agile and catchy, but they are in danger of trivialising the Asgard ideology
(especially 'Danger!'). Luckily, the last track 'A Time-Leaf Was on His Back' corrects things in pure
splendorous fashion: the track's development fits the standard of neo-symphonic at its best, even
reprising some motifs from 'Initiation' in its closing climax. Drachenblut is a very good album, but
Asgard had proved to be capable of much better things, more productive for the preservation of the
prog rock flame through the 90s. This album doesn't represent the real Asgard: Yes could do
realyessian music with Moraz instead of Wakeman, Genesis did the same without Gabriel for a while,
DT without Moore, etc. Grade: good, at times very good with moments of Asgardish greatness.
Cesar Inca |3/5 |
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).