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Lesoir - Babel CD (album) cover

BABEL

Lesoir

 

Crossover Prog

3.87 | 20 ratings

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tszirmay like
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars Finally, the moment has arrived to do a review of this band, having the previous 3 albums in my collection, and somehow not getting my thoughts down on paper (paper?) . This quintet has always possessed an original sound, mostly due to vocalist Maartje Meessen rather original tone and her bandmate Eleen Bartholomeus (guitar, synths) , guitarist Ingo Dassen, bassist Ingo Jetten and drum stool director Bob Van Heumen. Six short tracks are the ideal set- up for a monster title track extravaganza of over 20 minutes that really seals the deal, stretching way beyond any previous comfort zone. Adding strings only elevate the orchestral qualities to be found littering the pieces.

The haunting acoustics on "The Settlement" easily set the mood, Maartje's swooning wail a soothing revelation, as the echoing shudder moves along in a contemplative furrow, the glistening slashes of electric guitars giving it a wide birth and establishing the atmospherics which will dominate this recording throughout. Case in point, the clever e- piano droplets on "The Build", a more raucous rampage with overarching keyboard symphonics, amid the criss- crossing riffs, a stunning track that could easily have been stretched out with a more elaborate arrangement. In all fairness, these two initial impressions can and should be considered as one mini-suite.

Catching the ears completely by surprise, the twangy pedal steel guitar ornamentations from Jetten perfectly exemplify the meaning of the title "A New Life", a sunshiny diversion into sweet harmonic flight. The percussion- laden "The Warning" includes audacious raspy guitars colliding with flute meanderings, dense wall-of-sound atmospherics and a driving rhythmic throb.

"Derailment" is a darker sonic train wreck, brooding and despondent in a rather attractive manner, as the piano somehow conveys a positive hope, as orchestral sheets attempt to smother the slippery e-guitar swirls. Segueing perfectly into "Chaos/The Slip Away", the intensity rages on mightily with overflowing mellotron cascades, dam- busting dual heavy guitars unchained, spoken word confusion and escape, leading to a pleading vocal, all at a throttling pace.

All these half-dozen vignettes (that could have easily developed into much more expansive epics) eventually and as promised, give way to the stunning "Babel" and its rather towering (excuse the pun) conviction. The main melody wastes little time in establishing its credentials, with a masterful vocal delivery, as well as a restrained energy that proves my earlier point about the vignettes potential embellishments. The soft flute contrasts slam headfirst into opulent wind-blown mellotron, never a bad idea in my book, and just as the arrangement kicks in to full gear, a sudden acoustic guitar and voice duet changes the mood in an instant, the astute band playing the contrast game faultlessly, daring to infuse strings as well as the countrified pedal steel for another spin around the polder. Van Heumen and Jetten then take over the controls of the rhythmic onslaught, progressively raising the temperature on the underbelly, as the Middle Eastern flute and percussives dance along for the ride. Patiently waiting for the right moment to enter the fray, the dual fretboards come charging through the sandstorm, as if propelled by historical zeal. After the tempest, silence. Back to a sense of normalcy, I am reminded at times of recent Anathema in the keyboard/guitar combinations, as the emotions slowly buildup once again, the piano marking the pace, the lead guitar unable to hold back its emotions, both weighty and heartfelt, constantly adjusting the throttle, as if impatiently searching for an oasis of peace. Without question, one the finest 2025 epics, an exhilarating exploration of power and substance, full of vigorous intensity and profound reflection.

All in all, a thrilling 40-minute album that has gone on in my mind, a lingering sense of enjoyment long after the last note was played. Called afterglow, I think.

4.5 Towering nights

tszirmay | 4/5 |

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