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<item><title>THE SOFT MACHINE The Soft Machine (Canterbury Scene, 1968)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287156</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/633/cover_483119112016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Fercandio46 &mdash; If we talk about trios in the sixties, this one stands out especially, not only because it was an unusual formation of <br>bass, drums and organ, unlike others such as Cream, the Jimi Hendrix Experience, but also because they changed <br>the musical metrics and rhythms, reversing times and formats, achieving one of the foundation stones of what <br>would become the Canterbury scene. A trio by accident, since its other founding member, Daevid Allen, was unable <br>to return due to a bureaucratic issue in Paris (and that's how he founded Gong there), this genesis so linked to <br>chance and destiny, so chaotic, would make the debut a surreal work, where what was offered exceeded the <br>musical.<br><br>Hope For Happiness begins with vocals taking center stage. It's not until well into the song that Kevin Ayers' deep <br>bass and organ join the repeating mantra, and one of the first laws of Canterbury seems to be written in the air: <br>there's no guitar, only the organ, which takes the lead and attacks from all sides, bass, drums, and vocals, <br>sometimes like jazzy scat singing, other times like a somewhat distorted chorus that underlines everything with a <br>fluorescent marker. Each track flows seamlessly into the next, without respite, like a waterfall cascading over the <br>listener and settling on the floor like a carpet inviting you to fly if you step onto it. That's the Canterbury scene: an <br>experience that transcends the merely musical.<br>However experimental they sounded, there was a pop freshness, with bossa nova that adorned their kind of <br>psychedelia in a different way; perhaps the presence of Kevin Ayres had a great influence, but their jams with the <br>organ sounded different from Egg, or Caravan, bands that were companions in the movement and with stylistic <br>concerns that were initially similar.<br><br>So Boot If At All is much wilder and here the organ completely dominates, with Mike Ratledge at the helm (by that <br>time a graduate in psychology and philosophy from University College of Oxford) followed by Robert Wyatt on <br>drums who was so versatile that he could be everywhere (like an enlightened Keith Moon) and also doing the more <br>subtle percussion, while Kevin Ayers improvised on the piano.<br><br>A Certain Kind did have some more traditional, classical organ elements, which Wyatt's voice ultimately made <br>unique. Meanwhile, tracks like Save Yourself were his own take on rock, with keyboard intros reminiscent of those <br>Brian Eno would use a few years later in Roxy Music, altering the senses...surprising with the unexpected.<br>For Lullabye Letter the gears are running smoothly and sounding well-oiled like a perfect machine, fast, the bass, <br>the organ and the drums were one...following them was a task that was both artistic and demanding in terms of <br>concentration, which awakened other senses along the way, that was the experience that happened with each <br>listen.<br><br>We Did It Again would become a classic and would always be performed live by Kevin Ayers in his solo career, and <br>Plus Belle Qu'une Poubelle with its sinuous cadence gives way to another highlight of the album, Why Are We <br>Sleeping?, sung by Kevin, almost recited, which he would also take over for his repertoire in even longer versions, <br>and whose lyrics were also a reflection of the times, the choruses only reinforced the contained force...which <br>screamed for the awakening of consciousness.<br><br>No subsequent album would resemble this Soft Machine debut, just as none would resemble another, not only <br>because of the changes in their lineups, but also because of that sense of searching that identified the band from <br>its inception and that would condition it like a recurring dream.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 13:09:28 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287156</guid></item><item><title>THE PARADOX TWIN A Romance of Many Dimensions (Crossover Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287140</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/10887/cover_253218942026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by luisanchez19 &mdash; A Romance of Many Dimensions is the third studio album from The Paradox Twin, arriving five years after the well-<br>received Silence from Signals, and it finds the band at their most conceptually and musically developed. The <br>narrative centres on a protagonist whose only sense of purpose and identity comes from logging into a digital <br>world, exploring themes of loneliness, addiction, escapism and what it means to be human in an age of <br>technological dependency.<br><br>The core trio of Danny Sorrell on vocals, guitars and keyboards, Sarah Bayley on vocals and Graham Brown on <br>drums is augmented throughout by John Mitchell, who contributes bass across the album and delivers a notable <br>guitar solo on the closing track, in addition to co-producing and mixing the record. The two-vocalist dynamic is <br>central to the album's emotional range, with Sorrell and Bayley trading and combining their voices across <br>contrasting musical moods with considerable skill.<br><br>The eleven-minute centrepiece "My Main Function" is the album's most fully realised piece, moving through <br>polyrhythmic complexity, odd meter shifts and a dramatic build that showcases the band's compositional ambition <br>at its peak. The shorter tracks around it balance atmospheric, synth-driven passages with heavier, Porcupine Tree-<br>influenced rock moments, and the album flows as a coherent whole from the haunting opening "Linter" through to <br>the warm, guitar-driven resolution of "Nested Scratch".</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 10:57:20 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287140</guid></item><item><title>MOONRISE No Rewind (Neo-Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287139</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/3956/cover_4201632026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by luisanchez19 &mdash; No Rewind is the latest album from Moonrise, the long-running project of Polish multi-instrumentalist Kamil <br>Konieczniak, who once again handles keyboards, guitars, bass, drums, production, mixing and mastering entirely by <br>himself. Since the band's debut in 2008, Konieczniak has built a consistent body of work within the melodic neo-<br>prog tradition, and this new album finds him in strong form across eight tracks and just over fifty-two minutes.<br><br>The vocal duties are shared between two singers with very different qualities. Marcin Staszek, a returning <br>collaborator, handles four of the tracks, while Ania Batko ? known from her work with Hipgnosis, Albion and <br>tRKproject ? takes the lead on three pieces including the closing "All About You", a ten-minute centrepiece that <br>showcases both her voice and Konieczniak's most developed compositional writing on the record. Guitarist Marcin <br>Kruczek contributes solos on "Friends of Blood", adding a further layer of expressive colour.<br><br>The music sits comfortably within the neo-prog tradition that Moonrise has inhabited throughout its career ? <br>atmospheric, melodic and carefully arranged, with influences from Marillion, IQ and Pink Floyd running through the <br>fabric of the compositions. The album balances quieter, more introspective passages with moments of greater <br>intensity, and the dual-vocalist approach gives No Rewind a wider emotional range than some of its predecessors.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 10:49:18 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287139</guid></item><item><title>PLINI An Unnameable Desire (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287138</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/8695/cover_4448442026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by luisanchez19 &mdash; An Unnameable Desire is Plini's third full-length album, and it represents his most expansive and compositionally <br>adventurous work to date. The Australian guitarist and composer has spent the better part of a decade building <br>one of the most distinctive voices in instrumental progressive music, drawing on influences that range across shred <br>guitar, jazz fusion, ambient music and progressive metal, and this record pushes each of those elements further <br>than before.<br><br>The ten tracks are remarkably varied in character. Heavier, riff-driven pieces sit alongside intimate acoustic <br>passages, jazz-inflected fusion writing and broadly cinematic orchestral arrangements, with transitions between <br>these moods handled with the compositional intelligence that has always been Plini's strongest quality. The <br>supporting cast is extensive and well-chosen: Dave Mackay contributes piano, keyboards and synthesizers across <br>the majority of the album, John Waugh adds saxophone and flutes, and A.J. Minette's string arrangements ? <br>performed by violinist Misha Vayman and cellist Yoshi Masuda ? give several tracks a richness and depth that <br>marks a genuine step forward. Emily Hopkins adds harp to the penultimate track, and Jakub Zytecki contributes a <br>guitar solo to the sweeping "Ciel".<br><br>Mixed by Simon Grove and mastered by Adam Nolly Getgood, the production is suitably large and clean, giving each <br>instrument the space it needs. The result is Plini's most complete and fully realised album, one that rewards both <br>casual and attentive listening in equal measure.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 10:47:42 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287138</guid></item><item><title>EINAR SOLBERG Vox Occulta (Crossover Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287137</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/12530/cover_05101612026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by luisanchez19 &mdash; Vox Occulta is a record built around a clear and fully realised vision: orchestral metal in which the orchestra is not <br>decoration but architecture. The Norwegian Radio Orchestra appears on four of the eight tracks, and its presence <br>shapes the entire sonic logic of the album, with the rock instruments winding through the orchestral textures rather <br>than standing apart from them. The result is a genuinely integrated sound, one where brass, strings and <br>woodwinds share the compositional weight equally with guitars, bass and drums.<br><br>The album opens with "Stella Mortua", a slow-burning piece that builds from restrained strings and delicate vocals <br>to a full orchestral and metallic eruption, establishing the record's central dynamic immediately. "Medulla" follows <br>with a darker, more groove-driven character ? knotty guitar riffs and a propulsive rhythm section beneath an <br>infectiously melodic chorus that stands as the album's most immediately accessible moment. The title track is the <br>most theatrically cinematic piece on the record, a lumbering, multi-movement affair in which the orchestra <br>dominates and the guitars serve as rhythmic underpinning rather than lead voice.<br><br>The album's second half is more patient and demanding. "Serenitas" strips the sound back to gentle orchestral <br>arpeggios and Solberg's most vulnerable vocal performance, building slowly to a bluesy guitar resolution. "Vita <br>Fragilis" showcases his full vocal range most explicitly, moving between whispered passages and full-throated <br>intensity over the album's most prominently orchestral arrangement. "Grex", at nearly twelve minutes, is the <br>record's centrepiece and its finest achievement: a multi-movement piece that passes through mournful chamber <br>music, a technically exceptional guitar solo from Pierre Danel, and a genuinely devastating climactic section in <br>which harsh and clean vocals collide over a seismic rhythm section.<br><br>The closing "Anima Lucis" resolves the album in quiet, almost spiritual terms, Solberg's voice floating over adagio <br>strings in a deliberately understated finale.<br><br>Mixed by Adam Noble and co-produced with David Castillo, the production handles the balance between orchestra <br>and band with considerable intelligence.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 10:46:00 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287137</guid></item><item><title>CZYSZY Electric Egg (Symphonic Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287136</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/10903/cover_122152342026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by luisanchez19 &mdash; Electric Egg is the latest release from Czyszy, the solo project of Polish composer and multi-instrumentalist Marek <br>Kr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[l, and it is presented in its most stripped-down structural form yet: two pieces, each exceeding twenty minutes, <br>comprising the entirety of the album. Everything here ? guitars, bass, keyboards, saxophone, chiptune sounds, <br>programming, mixing, mastering and cover artwork ? was handled by Kr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[l alone, with no outside contributions.<br><br><br>The first piece draws on classic symphonic progressive rock as its primary reference, building layered arrangements <br>of considerable complexity around a compositional logic that owes something to the grand architecture of the <br>genre's founding works, while incorporating NES chiptune sounds and electronic textures that give the music a <br>distinctly personal and contemporary character. The interplay between these contrasting elements ? analogue <br>warmth and digital nostalgia ? is one of the album's most distinctive qualities, and Kr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[l manages the transitions <br>between them with a lightness of touch that prevents the eclecticism from feeling forced.<br><br>The second piece is the more expansive of the two, introducing a stereo Telecaster and a Minimoog clone solo as <br>focal points within a structure that shifts through multiple moods and textures over its duration. The compositional <br>density here rewards repeated listening, with details emerging on subsequent plays that are easy to miss on first <br>encounter.<br><br>Kr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[l's vocals remain an acquired taste ? idiosyncratic rather than technically polished ? but they carry a genuine <br>personality that suits the music's DIY spirit. Importantly, the album is proudly free of AI involvement in either its <br>music or artwork.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 10:43:39 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287136</guid></item><item><title>35 TAPES Veil on Life (Symphonic Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287135</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/10874/cover_2939102732026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by luisanchez19 &mdash; Veil on Life is 35 Tapes' fourth studio album, and it marks a deliberate shift in the Norwegian band's sonic <br>approach. Where their previous work leaned into slow-burning atmospheric restraint, this record introduces a more <br>assertive, riff-driven character while preserving the analogue warmth and careful production that have always <br>defined their sound. Recorded at Frydenlund Studio in Oslo, the album benefits from wide dynamic range, a bold <br>low end and immersive stereo imaging, all achieved through vintage hardware rather than digital shortcuts.<br><br>The six tracks are thematically unified around memory, identity and time, and the songwriting is tighter and more <br>hook-oriented than before, with cinematic passages emerging from within structures that feel genuinely purposeful <br>rather than exploratory for its own sake. The instrumental palette remains rooted in Mellotron, Therevox and <br>vintage synthesizers, but energetic electric guitars and shimmering twelve-string acoustics now carry considerably <br>more weight, giving the album a physicality that earlier releases lacked.<br><br>Individual tracks reward close attention. "Hallway" opens with meditative distance that gradually draws the listener <br>in, while "Waters" moves through a slow metamorphosis of mood and texture. "Bris]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ Vol]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[" is the most introspective <br>piece, holding its emotional content with quiet precision. "Clueless" introduces a restless, yearning quality, and the <br>closing "Cities" gazes outward with a melancholy that lingers. The vocals throughout are warm and searching, <br>complementing the music's emotional register without overpowering it.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 10:40:21 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287135</guid></item><item><title>JOHN MCLAUGHLIN Johnny McLaughlin - Electric Guitarist (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 1978)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287134</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/2627/cover_5737103012008.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by BrufordFreak &mdash; An album of orphans that were recorded at various times and in various places throughout 1978 using almost a <br>completely different lineup of musicians for each and every song. The album was produced by John McLaughlin in <br>association with Dennis McKay. Sessions took place in early 1978, with specific dates ranging from January 16 to <br>February 2, 1978, at Sound Mixer Studios in New York and Devonshire Studios in Hollywood. The album was released <br>by Columbia Records on September 18, 1978.<br><br>Line-up / Musicians:<br>- John McLaughlin / electric guitar<br>With:<br>- Billy Cobham / drums (1 & 6)<br>- Stu Goldberg / electric piano, organ and mini-moog synthesizer (1)<br>- Jerry Goodman / violin (1)<br>- Fernando Saunders / bass (1)<br>- Neil Jason / bass (2)<br>- Tom Coster / organ (2)<br>- Alyrio Lima / percussion (2)<br>- Armando Peraza / congas (2)<br>- Carlos Santana / electric guitar (2)<br>- Michael Walden / drums (2)<br>- Alphonso Johnson / Taurus Bass Pedals and bass (3)<br>- Patrice Rushen / piano (3)<br>- David Sanborn / alto saxophone (3)<br>- Tony Smith / drums (3)<br>- Stanley Clark / acoustic bass (4)<br>- Chick Corea / piano and mini-moog (4)<br>- Jack DeJohnette / drums (4)<br>- Jack Bruce / bass (5)<br>- Tony Williams / drums (5)<br><br>1. "New York on My Mind" (5:45) with Billy Cobham and Jerry Goodman we have a bit of a mini-reunion of the First <br>Incarnation of the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Stu Golberg is a perfect replacement for Jan Hammer while Fernando <br>Saunders delivers a much more melodic and approach to the bass--which is actually quite nice. The song--and <br>"Johnny"'s performance are way more blues-oriented than I've heard from the Mahavishnu for a long time. Though <br>more subdued, it is nice to hear that heavy Mahavishnu Orchestra sound again. (9.125/10)<br><br>2. "Friendship" (7:00) sounds half like a lost movement from FOCUS' "Hamburger Concerto" and half like a Latin <br>carnival jam--which is probably due to the reunion of John with latest Santana lineup as well as Second Incarnation <br>Mahavishnu drummer Narada Michael Walden. Though the jam feels very loose and unscripted (and the musicians <br>seem far less inspired or "on" than they did on the 1973 Love Devotion Surrender collaboration), it is a nice sound <br>palette to hear. (13.25/15)<br><br>3. "Every Tear from Every Eye" (6:50) gentle and spacious opening turns jazzy at 0:25 with the progression into a totally <br>different and unexpected key/chord. I thought we were going to hear some Smooth Jazz and instead we're hearing <br>serious blues jazz. Though everybody alongside John performs adequately, nobody rises to the fiery heights of Fusion <br>the way John does: though their movements are sophisticated, Patrice Rushen, Alphonso Johnson, David Sanborn, and <br>Tony Smith just kind of lull us to sleep with their gentle sounds and low volume--not unlike a Weather Report <br>production. Patrice and Alphonso's solos are all nice, even impressive, just not so dynamic as those of the sax and <br>electric guitar. (13.25/15)<br><br>4. "Do You Hear the Voices that You Left Behind ?" (7:39) the plaintive guitar sounds being plucked by John on this <br>sleeper sound like he's trying to be JEFF BECK. Stanley Clarke, Chick Corea, and Jack De Johnette are impressive and a <br>perfect match for the changing tempos that the song takes us through over the course of its nearly-eight minutes <br>though I wish A) the tone of Stanley's bass would pop a little more, B) Chick's electric piano tone had a little more bite <br>and volume to it, and Jack were also hitting his targets with a little more force (and, therefore, volume). This could have <br>been an awesome RTF-like Power Fusion song had everybody just been a little louder. Stanley's double bass solo is <br>quite impressive, as is John's Al Di Meola-like electric guitar solo, and then when Chick switches to Mini-Moog you <br>finally have the dynamic snap that the song (and band lineup) seems to be promising. Jack is great but he feels kind of <br>stuck in the acoustic Jazz world despite his band mates transition into more electronic expressions. (13.5/15)<br><br>5. "Are You the One ? Are You the One ?" (4:41) The Trio of Doom! (only with Jack Bruce in place of Jaco Pastorius). I <br>love it from the very start due to the attention-commanding drumming (and perfect sound capture) of Tony Williams. <br>Hearing John use a wah-wah pedal and talk box is something very special--and he's very good at it. The "chorus" <br>sounds very much like a Weather Report riff/song--as does a lot of Jack's solo--while the vocal banter of the trio gives <br>the impression that the band members are really having a fun time. However you look at this one, it is entertaining, <br>fun, and quite impressive. Quite probably my favorite song on the album--certainly the most memorable. (9.375/10)<br><br>6. "Phenomenon: Compulsion" (3:21) just John and Billy Cobham (shades of 1971 when the two would jam with each <br>other in the down times between takes on Miles Davis studio sessions and live concerts). The two really do have a neat <br>relationship--an "interesting conversation," if you will. John, especially, really tears it up. I especially love the third <br>minute when John starts doing chords like Pete Townsend and strings shredding like Adrian Belew. (8.875/10)<br><br>7. "My Foolish Heart" (3:22) a nice "old-fashioned" (despite the chorused use of heavy-reverb) solo guitar rendering of <br>the great Victor Young and Ned Washington jazz standard from the classic 1949 film of the same name. Preview of <br>John's amazing 1991 tribute to Bill Evans. Fine guitar playing--really using space well and never rushing anything; I just <br>don't like the guitar tone John selected here. (8.875/10) <br><br>Total Time 37:18<br><br>Though the music is nice--even kind of crossing over into the Smooth Jazz engineering sounds--this is not my favorite <br>tone/sound Johnny Mac has ever chosen for his electric guitar (and it's a sound that remains fairly constant <br>throughout the course of the album). At the same time, I really do enjoy how each song perfectly represents a phase <br>of John's 1970s career: Mahavishnu, Santana, Power Fusion, sound, style and technology experimentalist, as well as <br>respectful lover of the old classics/standards. <br><br>B+/4.5 stars; a near-masterpiece of eclectic iterations of John McLaughlin bands and styles--which makes it feel kind of <br>like a "Greatest Hits" album. Definitely a fun and interesting listen.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 10:37:54 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287134</guid></item><item><title>PHILIPPE BESOMBES Besombes-Rizet: P&#65533;le (Progressive Electronic, 1975)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287119</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/2766/cover_2110730122006.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; The P]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[le Records label was short-lived lasting only two years from 1975-77 but has become one of<br>those cult album treasure troves that yielded some of the best progressive electronic sounds that<br>emerged from France. The P]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[le Collective was a group of musicians that collaborated their talents<br>which made the lineup of the artists presented a bit murky. Not only was there a P]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[le Records but<br>two albums released under an artist named P]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[le and if that wasn't confusing enough also released in<br>1975 was an album titled P]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[LE by the team of PHILIPPE BESOMBES & JEAN-LOUIS RIZET. BESOMBES was a<br>pioneering composer, multi-instrumentalist and prominent figure in the 70s electronic underground.<br>Starting off as a traditional chemist his attention was diverted after being exposed to modern<br>classical composers like Stockhausen and Xenakis and set forth to create similarly styled music in<br>the context of more modern electronic sounds.<br><br>JEAN-LOUIS RIZET on the other hand was a French sound engineer, producer and also a multi-<br>instrumentalist and a key figure in the P]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[le Records lineup appearing on many albums on the label's<br>canon. Together these two collaborated for a single double album's worth of material that featured<br>six tracks that added up to nearly 75 minutes of psychedelic progressive electronic sounds that<br>blended the stylistic approaches laid down by Klaus Schulze, Tangerine Dream and Cluster with traces<br>of German Krautrock, progressive rock and jazz. The album is chock filled with an arsenal of<br>synthesizers and keyboards that included VCS 3 AKS, ARP 2600, Mellotron 400, Hammond organ, and<br>Fender Rhodes but unlike the two P]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[le artist releases, this album of that title featured more space<br>rock textures and heavy percussion. Also featured are sounds performed by RIZET including the flute,<br>trumpet and guitar amongst others.<br><br>While directly akin to the German scene, these two seasoned performers deliver it all through the<br>lens that only the French culture could deliver making it somewhat comparable to fellow countryman<br>Richard PInhas and his act Heldon.The album runs the gamut from the sputtering opener "Haute<br>Pression" which features more rhythmic textures to the space synth otherworldliness of "Evelyse" and<br>"Armature Double." Generally on the more melodic side, the album loses none of the surrealistic<br>trippy excursions of the koschmische style of neighboring Germany yet retains many of the<br>sensibilities of the world of modern classical inspirations that punctuate the composing style. As a<br>chemist, BESOMBES applies his studious approach to sonic alchemy where a laboratory of sounds<br>coalesce into something completely unique and innovative. After two sleepy numbers, "Lundi Matin"<br>picks up steam with a robust tempo and trippy layered synth sequences.<br><br>The sprawling behemoth "Synthi Soit-il" is the longest track at almost 22 minutes and likewise<br>features some of the most diverse and satisfying soundscapes. Slowly oozing from the depths of<br>imperception, the track slinks around like stardust while synthesizers and erupting percussion<br>slowly coalesce into the mix and throughout the track's run offer some of the wildest experimental<br>outbursts to emerge before slowly cooling off from the eruption. While almost exclusively<br>instrumental, the album ends with some of the only vocals to be heard although muffled and set in<br>the backdrop beneath playful electronica and soft acoustic guitar strumming. Overall it's a highly<br>exciting journey into exquisite electronic psychedelia that remains firmly controlled but let off<br>the leash from time to time to engage in true cosmonaut space exploration. Long out of print until<br>the early 2000s, P]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[LE has found a new cult following for aficionados of classic analog electronica<br>and this one is definitely one of the best of the French scene. Bogged down only by a lot of slow<br>churning sleepiness in the middle, the album is a vital release in the 70s French underground.   </em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 07:42:17 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287119</guid></item><item><title>PENDRAGON Masquerade 20 (Neo-Prog, 2017)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287114</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/288/cover_1233111032017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by ZowieZiggy &mdash; I rated the original ''Masquerade'' with 5*****.<br><br>This commemorative live album taking over the entirety of this excellent album; I couldn't be deceieved with this live set.<br>Filmed in Poland where they always have been acclaimed. one can see how happy the band is happy to be there in front <br>of a p[acked theatre.<br>But was it really necessary to mention that they love Poland so much that they would like to stay there, Except that they <br>had to leave Poland for their next gig. Which had to take place in ...Belgium. <br><br>The faithfull rendition of ''The Masquerade'' is wonderful moment of music. So 5***** for this part.<br>Then the ''new'' numbers of which I was not really found of. But to prove me wrong, the closing number ''Indigo'' is really <br>excellent. clocking at around 15 minutes. Which makes this very long concert a very good moment.<br><br>I still remember their gig at the ''Spirit of 66''. In 2006. It is my turn to salute this 20th anniversary.<br><br>Four stars. <br><br> </em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 07:01:27 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287114</guid></item><item><title>BEARDFISH Sleeping in Traffic - Part Two (Eclectic Prog, 2008)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287084</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/2808/cover_8232330122010.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Lolion &mdash; I discovered Sleeping in Traffic Part 2 by Beardfish*around 2011?2012, and it immediately left a strong impression <br>on me. It's one of those albums that feels playful and unpredictable, yet surprisingly emotional at the same time. <br>The band mixes quirky passages with more reflective moments, creating a really unique vibe that keeps things fresh <br>from start to finish.<br><br>What I love most is how natural it all feels. The transitions, the melodies, even the oddball sections just flow without <br>feeling forced. There's a charm to it that makes it easy to come back to, even years later. It's progressive rock without <br>being overly serious?creative, warm, and full of personality. For me, it's a really special album that captures that <br>sense of discovery I still remember from back then.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 03:52:03 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287084</guid></item><item><title>SIGILU Beta (Psychedelic/Space Rock, 2025)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287080</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/13000/cover_587121372025_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Lolion &mdash; I recently stumbled upon this Spanish gem, and it truly feels like discovering a hidden treasure within the rock <br>landscape. While it's often labeled as progressive rock, that description doesn't quite capture its essence. It leans <br>closer to the approach of Steven Wilson?less concerned with technical exhibitionism and more focused on <br>atmosphere, mood, and emotional resonance.<br><br>What stands out immediately is its sense of restraint. Instead of the constant push-and-pull of virtuosity that can <br>sometimes overwhelm progressive rock, this music breathes. It allows space for melodies to unfold naturally, for <br>textures to settle, and for songs to exist as cohesive, meaningful pieces rather than showcases of complexity.<br><br>Although the lyrics are partly lost on me, my Italian roots offer glimpses into their meaning, adding an extra layer of <br>intrigue. Even without full comprehension, the emotional delivery carries enough weight to transcend the language <br>barrier.<br><br>In a genre that can occasionally feel crowded with excess, this is a refreshing reminder that progressive music <br>doesn't need to be dense or overly intricate to be powerful. Sometimes, it's the atmosphere, the subtlety, and the <br>sincerity that leave the deepest impression.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 03:39:39 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287080</guid></item><item><title>GODSPEED YOU! BLACK EMPEROR Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven (Post Rock/Math rock, 2000)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287077</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1245/cover_2245122992016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Lolion &mdash; Discovered around 2010, *Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven* by Godspeed You! Black Emperor stands <br>as a monumental achievement in modern music?an unparalleled masterpiece that continues to defy convention <br>and expectation.<br><br>This double album transcends the traditional boundaries of composition, unfolding across four expansive <br>movements that feel less like songs and more like vast, evolving soundscapes. Each piece builds patiently, layering <br>delicate instrumentation with field recordings, distant voices, and haunting drones, until it reaches overwhelming <br>crescendos that feel almost apocalyptic in scope.<br><br>What makes the album truly remarkable is its emotional and narrative power without relying on lyrics. It <br>communicates a profound sense of desolation, hope, and fragile beauty purely through sound. The listener is not <br>merely hearing the music but inhabiting it?drawn into a cinematic world where every swell of strings and every <br>crackle of static carries meaning.<br><br>Even years after its release, few works have matched its ambition or impact. It is not just an album to listen to, but <br>an experience to surrender to?one that rewards patience and immersion with something genuinely transcendent.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 03:36:12 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287077</guid></item><item><title>OSANNA Osanna and David Jackson: Prog Family (Rock Progressivo Italiano, 2009)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286920</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/276/cover_143481892016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Fercandio46 &mdash; After touring together in 2008, David Jackson participated in this Osanna album, where they recreated songs from <br>their 70s repertoire, plus some tracks from van der Graaf Generator. Lino Vairetti on vocals, Nello D'Anna on bass, <br>and Gennaro Barba on drums are among the founding members, along with surprises like David Cross on violin. The <br>versions are very different and contribute to the band's sound, such as a shorter rendition of "Animale Senza <br>Respiro," which nevertheless emphasizes this new incarnation, sounding fresh, jazzy, and equally progressive.<br>Mirror Train, on the other hand, is a longer version, with a more extensive and richer jam session than the original, <br>taking advantage of Jackson's dual role as a saxophonist and flautist.<br><br>L'uomo already brings differences with it, a part after the acoustic more of hard rock and even rap in the style of Red <br>Hot Chili Peppers that suits the energetic rock and the Italian language well...so much so that it seems that it has <br>always been like this.<br><br>The free jazz fragments of Il Castello Dell'Es suited Jackson's style well, where the saxophone seems to be linked to <br>rock as in King Crimson's debut, yet it sounds current at the same time, partly thanks to Fabrizio Fedele's sound.<br>The choice of themes from Milano Calibro 9 and L'Uomo flows so naturally that it sounds like the original. In Un <br>Vecchio Cieco, Cross's violin benefits so much... and I would even say that this faster version gives it more feeling. <br>Without competing with the original classics, distancing itself is the raison d']]>&#65533;<![CDATA[tre of a successful and honest <br>reinterpretation.<br><br>Theme One, that theme that was left out and would later see the light as a bonus track from the Pawn Hearts era, in <br>1971 for Van der Graaf generator, is brought here to our time respecting the spirit and central skeleton, but with small <br>variations that contribute, deviations that give it strength and underline its characteristics of a cry to the sky, of jazzy <br>saxophone that then mutates into a martial flute and finally an Italian anthem...completing a cycle that was always <br>natural to it.<br><br>Osanna does not disappoint, and There Will Be Time is an atypical gem to end with Sas]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ Priore on piano and renews <br>that reputation for versatility of Italian bands not only in the past, but also in the new millennium.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 4 May 2026 11:35:38 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286920</guid></item><item><title>HOMELESS ART EntElMus (Eclectic Prog, 2023)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286887</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/12628/cover_3827121712024_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; Founded as far back as 2012 in the city of Athens, the Greek jam band HOMELESS ART settled on its<br>respective name after being inspired by a musical event that was created exclusively for the<br>homeless population in the Greek capital city. A quartet of virtuosos that includes Theodoros<br>Grigorakakis on guitar, Orestis Diamantaras on keyboards, Stergios Liuras on drums and Gavriel<br>Stefanidis on bass, the band released its so far one and only album "EntElMus" in 2023 in<br>excessively digital form. The odd album title comes from an abbreviation of the Greek phrase<br>"&#941;&#957;&#964;&#949;&#967;&#957;&#951; &#949;&#955;&#955;&#951;&#957;&#953;&#954;&#942; &#956;&#959;&#965;&#963;&#953;&#954;&#942;" (entechni elliniki mousiki), which translates to "artful Greek music."<br><br>"EntElMus" is a lengthy sprawler of an album that features seven tracks that add up to 73 minutes<br>and 22 seconds. This all instrumental album is a veritable progressive jam band tribute to many of<br>the greats in prog history and beyond with the main influences of Frank Zappa, King Crimson, Rush<br>and Greek classical composer Yiannis Markapoulos cited by the band as the primary sources. The music<br>is quite varied but generally finds itself as a wily mix of heavier King Crimson, 70s jazz fusion,<br>Soft Machine styled Canterbury jazz especially in the keyboard works along with wild angularities<br>lifted out of the RIO / avant playbook ranging from Samla Mammas Manna and touches of Henry Cow<br>although the band is more on the melodic side of the equation.<br><br>The 14-minute opener "Jazzusis" starts things off quite unimpressively with a slow building sequence<br>that makes you think. You've set sail on a post-rock type of excursion but then somewhere a few<br>minutes in the full power of HOMELESS ART suddenly is left off the leash and it's apparent that this<br>team of musicians are quite seasoned veterans of the most complex prog playing styles. While the<br>bass and drums are primarily reserved for the rhythm section, the band adopts a Symphony X technique<br>of alternating sizzling guitar and keyboard soloing through a series of repetitive cadences before<br>switching over to a totally new musical motif. The band are experts at milking a jamming groove to<br>exhaustion and then moving on to something completely new several times before a reprise of the main<br>theme which leads to a satisfying conclusion.<br><br>The album excels with its creative journey approach through treacherous prog turf. While "Vertigo"<br>lives up to its titular subject matter with dizzying keyboard contributions, "Boomba" reminds me a<br>bit of some of the crazy 80s avant bands such as Switzerland's D]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[bile Menthol or even a bit of<br>Cardiacs. "Zapparakatranemia" pays tribute to exactly who you would expect with such a track title<br>but a lot heavier than anything Zappa himself cranked out with crunchy KC inspired riffing as well<br>as a bit of funk inserted into the fabric. The album pretty much continues its intrepid prog jubilee<br>through a never-ending variation of ideas that at least for my ears work quite nicely. The album is<br>quite brilliantly performed with plenty of stylistic shifts, dynamism, tempo changes and rich in<br>hairpin turns. Best of all it sounds fairly unique while still exuding somewhat of a retro appeal.<br>Nice stuff for lovers of instrumental prog.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 4 May 2026 07:19:17 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286887</guid></item><item><title>SATAN Satan (Symphonic Prog, 2016)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286881</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/11050/cover_28561417112019_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Sean Trane &mdash; OK French Symphonic prog that had not managed to release an album in their days, but the band had been around since the  or just after the May 68 unrest under a different names like Heaven Road/Gate, like many French groups of the era. Actually the only release of theirs was through a side project Ciel d'Et]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ and released a single.<br><br>The band's sonics on this archival release is closer to Pulsar (mostly) & Atoll (and eventually Triangle or Martin Circus), rather than Ange & Mona Lisa, though if the tracks are any indication, there might have been a fairly theatrical dimension on stage. Hopefully, despite their "evil" name, these guys were not too "Grand Guignol" on stage.<br>Catharsis and Ame Son can also be thought of as the archival release unfolds. From memory (I heard these archives a fait while ago), Pulsar's debut Pollen comes closest, though there are obvious early Floyd remenisces (the organ player mainly), especially during La Nuit Des Temps.<br><br>Enjoyable & interesting archival release, but your world won't budge an inch if you've not heard them in your life, because it's nothing I would call essential.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 4 May 2026 06:48:03 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286881</guid></item><item><title>TRIANA Hijos Del Agobio (Symphonic Prog, 1977)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286841</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/828/cover_4319151492017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Lolion &mdash; I'm from Italy, and I still remember discovering Hijos del agobio by Triana while on vacation in Spain back in the 80s. <br>That album completely changed how I saw both traditional Spanish music and progressive rock. It blends flamenco <br>influences with prog in a way that feels natural and deeply emotional. The sound is rich, atmospheric, and full of <br>feeling, with Andalusian roots shining through every track. There's a raw honesty in the vocals and a sense of <br>melancholy that really stuck with me. It opened my ears to a whole different musical identity, showing me that prog <br>rock didn't have to follow the same patterns I was used to. Even now, it feels unique and powerful.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 4 May 2026 02:40:04 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286841</guid></item><item><title>KARNIVOOL In Verses (Heavy Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286788</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/5448/cover_434121692025_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Lolion &mdash; In Verses feels like a solid return for Karnivool, landing around an 8/10 for me. It keeps their signature prog sound <br>but trims some of the excess, focusing more on atmosphere and groove. The riffs hit hard, but it's the layering and <br>dynamics that really stand out. There's a strong sense of control in the songwriting?nothing feels overdone, yet it <br>still has that expansive, emotional pull. Some tracks take a bit to grow, but once they click, they stick. It may not <br>reinvent their sound completely, but it refines it in a way that makes the album really satisfying to revisit.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 4 May 2026 02:33:32 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286788</guid></item><item><title>STEVEN WILSON To the Bone (Crossover Prog, 2017)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286785</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/4135/cover_3315171442021_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Lolion &mdash; For me is perhaps his most commercial release, leaning into more accessible structures and polished production. At first glance, it might seem like a departure from the complexity often associated with his work and progressive rock as a whole. However, that accessibility becomes its greatest strength.<br><br>For me, it's one of the progressive rock albums that conveys the most emotion. Tracks like "Pariah" and "Song of I" feel intimate and deeply human, blending pop sensibility with Wilson's signature atmospheric touch. There's a strong sense of nostalgia and vulnerability running throughout the album, making it incredibly easy to connect with.<br><br>It may not be his most experimental record, but it's one of his most sincere?and one that resonates on a deeply emotional level.<br><br>I love it very much!!!!!!!<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 4 May 2026 02:28:25 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286785</guid></item><item><title>HASSE FR&#65533;BERG AND MUSICAL COMPANION Powerplay (Crossover Prog, 2012)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286771</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/6431/cover_135461462019_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Rysiek P. &mdash;       I enjoy exploring the realms of symphonic-progressive rock, perhaps much more than any other. I'm not <br>sure if this admission of musical preference has any significance or not, but hearing a track from an album that's <br>twenty or thirty minutes long gives me a thrill. And although in this case, which I'll discuss in more detail later, there <br>are no such compositions, the album, originally released in 2012, filled a certain feeling of lack that arose back then. <br>Although, to be completely honest, 2008 would be the year I felt that "lack."<br> A year earlier, a very good album, "The Sum Of No Evil," was released, featuring a wonderful cover by Ed <br>Unitsky of The Flower Kings. The album featured a distinguished lineup: Roine Stolt, Tomas Bodin, Jonas Reingold, <br>Zoltan Cs]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[rsz, and Hasse Fr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[berg. The second track from that album, "Love Is the Only Answer," remains at the <br>top of my personal playlist to this day (it's only twenty-four minutes long). And everything went quiet. Of <br>course, the band went on tour (November 2007), but with a new drummer, Pat Mastelotto. In 2008, the US tour was <br>canceled. Jonas Reingold focused on his own project, Karmakanic, recording the album "Who's The Boss In The <br>Factory." Tomas Bodin was recording a solo album, "Cinematograph". In an interview from that period, Roine Stolt <br>said: "(...) yes, work on compiling material for the next Flower Kings album is already underway, but this time it will <br>be a very long process. We will put 50% more effort into finding the right songs/lyrics, and we will also make sure <br>that whatever we play will be 100% valuable and straight from the heart, as well as played from the heart, with <br>precision and passion. It may take a year, maybe two, but we will give you everything you love about TFK and <br>progressive rock in general, only better this time." In short, silence fell on the Flower Kings camp. 2009 brought the <br>album "The Fading Ghosts Of Twilight" by Agents Of Mercy, on which Roine Stolt played the lead role. Around April <br>of that year, news emerged about the supergroup Transatlantic's renewed recording plans. The result of this <br>"reunion" was the captivating album "The Whirlwind," released in late 2009, featuring the magnificent title suite <br>(arguably one of the most important in the history of symphonic rock). Tomas Bodin formed a new band, Eggs & <br>Dogs, and recorded the album "You Are" (Michael Stolt played bass on this project). Finally, Roine Stolt and Jonas <br>Reingold participated in the work on the band's debut album, An Endless Sporadic. 2010 saw the Transatlantic tour <br>and a joint US tour with Karmakanic and Agents Of Mercy. And in this entire "puzzle," there's no information <br>about... Hasse Fr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[berg, which doesn't mean he "hid in the comfort of his home and rested." In announcements <br>regarding the reissue of the album, which will be discussed in just a few sentences, the beginning of his own <br>musical project called Hasse Fr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[berg & Musical Companion (HFMC), Hasse commented: "(...) HFMC released their <br>debut album, "Future Past," in August 2010. In July 2011, the band re-entered the studio to begin recording their <br>next album, "Powerplay," which saw the light of day in April 2012. This time, the band decided to work with his <br>colleague from The Flower Kings, Tomas Bodin, as co-producer. What started as a relaxed and enjoyable recording <br>session suddenly turned desperate due to a tight deadline. The reason was that HFMC received invitations to two <br>major festivals: Night of the Prog at Loreley in Germany and RoSfest in Gettysburg, USA. Powerplay helped the band <br>connect with fans on both sides of the Atlantic, playing shows in both Europe and the United States. And since <br>"Powerplay" has never been reissued since its 2012 release, it's fitting that, thanks to the efforts of Freia Music, we <br>now have in our hands a remastered version of this fantastic album, with two additional bonus tracks from shows <br>in 2022 and 2024.<br> The remastered "Powerplay" album contains nine tracks plus two bonus tracks, and despite a fourteen-year <br>hiatus, it sounds... symphonic, rock, progressive... fantastic. From the very first moment, you know more or less <br>what to expect from this album. "My River to Cross" - the first track on the album - begins, continues, and ends as <br>befits a true symphonic composition. Keyboards, guitar, polyphony, and everything needed to occupy the musical <br>spaces for just over ten minutes. I wrote above - more or less because please listen to the powerful guitar <br>threads, which touch on a metal style, supported by Hasse's slightly raspy vocals.<br> The guitar opening of "The World Keeps Turning" adds a rock edge to this composition. This arrangement is <br>perhaps the hallmark of this album. Powerful rock guitars are supported by powerful organ chords, which enchant <br>during quiet moments and shifts in tempo to more lyrical ones. "The Final Hour" ? this composition sounds almost <br>like the calmer songs of The Flower Kings. It has a delicacy and playfulness reminiscent of that band, and its <br>distinguishing feature is the guitar's role as a tempo setter, with the magnificent organ and backing vocals matching <br>it. "Waves" follows suit. It sounds elegant and perfectly arranged. It simply flows like a river of melody, lapping its <br>banks with a calm current and a romantic atmosphere. Please put this composition on loop, because you truly can't <br>tear yourself away from its hypnotic melody.<br> I've never been to Venice, California, but after listening to "Venice CA," I think I have some idea of what I could <br>do there... Hmmm, let me think about it. This track also marks (in my opinion) a kind of caesura between the <br>progressive and rock parts of the album. A strong sound with an American rock flavor, a rock-pop chorus. Simply a <br>good, melodic song. Similarly, "Is It Ever Gonna Happen" is simply a rock march with strong, rock vocals reminiscent <br>of those known from hard rock bands. After the heavier riffs of the previous track, the next one, "White Butterfly," <br>conjures up a delicate story about inner turmoil with the help of slide guitar. Although "The Chosen Ones" begins <br>similarly to "White Butterfly," it's not a pretty song, returning to the rock genre, enriched by the pleasant sound of <br>keyboards. The familiar sounds of the 1970s are here, artfully blended with contemporary rock stylings. The final <br>track from the original album is "Godsong," with its piano opening, again somewhat reminiscent of the symphonic <br>work of The Flower Kings, with a small but significant addition... a sort of Queen-esque musical and vocal interlude. <br>Listen to this track from around the three-minute mark.<br> The remastered version includes the aforementioned two live bonus tracks: "White Butterfly" and "Venice CA." <br>There's a distinct vocal difference between the 2012 recording and those from 2022 or 2024. It's clear that the live <br>recordings are more mature. "White Butterfly" sounds dignified, accompanied only by electric piano. "Venice CA" <br>still quickens the pulse and shows its rock edge. It's a recording from two years ago. Both compositions prove they <br>haven't dated, that they still possess a palpable charisma, just like the entire album.<br> It took a long time for this album to reappear in stores. I'll just say this... it was worth it, because doesn't (as the <br>saying goes, or as some folk wisdom goes...) waiting whets the appetite...? And while this refined version of the old <br>album has somewhat eased the hunger for new music, it hasn't quenched it. Something more would have been <br>nice, and rumor has it that patience pays off. I recommend this release, because it's both a return to the near-<br>beginnings of the Hasse Fr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[berg & Musical Companion group and, at the same time, a still-sounding portion of <br>good music.<br> see also MLWZ.pl</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 4 May 2026 01:39:07 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286771</guid></item><item><title>SUFJAN STEVENS A Sun Came (Crossover Prog, 2000)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286735</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/13272/cover_3419103032026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by kenethlevine &mdash; Completed at the tender age of 24 by a singer/songwriter and instrumental polyglot with some college band experience already <br>to his credit, "A Sun Came" is like a wide dispersal seeder that is attempting to determine, almost through trial <br>and error, which ones will be the most viable.  Or like a nervous pre-date individual trying on 15 outfits to see <br>which is the one most likely to...and finally deciding to wear 7.5 of them at once.   <br><br>To the prog folk crowd though, it's a rare opportunity to hear him in this style as opposed to the more eclectic, <br>experimental or indie pop sound that has dominated his daunting output, underscoring his innocent commercial savvy.   As would <br>become customary, it's a top heavy concoction, with, apart from the dispensable and off the wall sub-minute <br>interludes, the first 6 tracks being mystical mini masterpieces or at worse, vivid brushes with the Medieval, Celtic, and <br>Middle Eastern axes.  The absolute best are the TULL-like "We are What you say", the neo folkish "A Winner Needs <br>a Wand" that presaged HEXVESSEL by a decade and a half, and the creepy "Dumb I sound" with guest ghost <br>references from across every diaspora in every realm known and unknown.  "Rake" engages in weird vocal effects and I <br>prefer the bonus version at the end of the re-release.  "Demetrius" is somewhat drone-ish but is more than <br>rescued by its last few minutes in the key of Asia Minor.  "Wordsworth's Ridge" seems to have poured the mold for <br>the later English folkies CIRCULUS.<br><br>This is where the seeder gets jammed and something more like a nut is alchemized, particularly on the <br>chaos theory unfortunately put into practice on (but not in a good way) "Rice Pudding", an accidental grandchild of KING CRIMSON's "Cat <br>Food".  "Super Sexy Woman" really kills the mood though the lyrics are deliberately so unfunny they are good, <br>and "Happy Birthday" is forgettable due to being slightly less offensive.  Luckily the race to the finish includes the <br>trio of "Kill" (which is starting to sound like his signature balladry in its infancy),  the hypnotic "Ya Leil" with "exotic" <br>vocalise from Ghadeer Yaser, and finally the Appalachia tinged title cut, so we can't simply bisect the album <br>without voiding the warranty.<br><br>"A Sun Came" illuminates, if not Sufjan's future trajectory, then his larval wizardry that, while by definition immature, is a <br>blessing to fans who still long for a complete folk album from he who has done pretty much everything else.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 3 May 2026 22:22:38 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286735</guid></item><item><title>STORMY SIX L'Apprendista (RIO/Avant-Prog, 1977)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286728</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/2561/cover_152206102009.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by The Progolyte &mdash; After I was left generally displeased with the band's 1975 album titled Un Biglietto Del Tram, I was <br>surprisingly still pretty excited to check out their 1977 record, L'Apprendista, as it apparently didn't carry <br>the Eastern and vintage feel the other album had, and it also supposedly was more complex and <br>interesting. It also just had a higher rating, so going into this, I had high hopes. And yes, I did actually enjoy <br>this one, but not as much as I thought I would. Unfortunately, the band's soulless vocals and slower sound <br>are still evident throughout the whole record, and though the music is now a lot more intricate, something <br>felt missing. Moving on, the music is a lot more experimental and uncanny, with its low atmosphere making <br>for a really good listening experience. The personnel includes Franco Fabbri on guitars, vibraphone, and <br>xylophone, Umberto Fiori on acoustic guitar and vocals, Carlo de Martini and Tommaso Leddi on violin, <br>mandolin, and various other instruments, Luca Piscicelli on bass and vocals, and Salvatore Garau on drums. <br>There are also a ton of guest musicians on here, adding various horn and string arrangements to the <br>record. <br><br>On this record, the tracks are much longer than what was found on previous Stormy Six records, with some <br>of them reaching over seven or eight minutes long. All of the tracks have a lot more details and are each <br>really good, with tons of explorative music that reaches into a sound very similar to normal Rock In <br>Opposition while at the same time making itself very unique from other bands. It's very technical, although <br>not as complex as bands like Henry Cow and Present (although Present would come out only a few years <br>after this would be dropped). I thought the band could've had more energy put into this record, but it's <br>enough to please me and still leave a good impression on me, even if I didn't like the vocals. Now, while the <br>music itself is amazing by having various intricate arrangements and passages, it does lack emotional depth <br>and deeply touching parts (which is actually common in Rock In Opposition). I also thought that the cover to <br>the record was unique and eye-catching in the funny yet strange picture that holds an album of this nature. <br><br>In conclusion, this is not only the best Stormy Six record (although I haven't listened to their full <br>discography yet) but also probably one of the top twenty Rock In Opposition records. It's amazing in the <br>way they make music this quirky and interesting and are still on the more obscure side of the genre. My <br>final rating is a strong 4/5.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 3 May 2026 22:00:17 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286728</guid></item><item><title>SINGLELITO In Absence of Velocity (Eclectic Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286725</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/12581/cover_1954192042026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by VTr Storm &mdash; Musically, it is easy to place Singlelito in the orbit of progressive rock, however, that only explains part of the <br>story. The sound flirts with jazz rock, wanders through that slightly eccentric atmosphere of the Canterbury <br>scene and when you think you understood the path, it already seems to want to go somewhere else. There is <br>always an unexpected element emerging and a shift in mood, in addition to a rhythmic turn or an idea that <br>seems out of place, but that always ends up fitting in the right way.<br><br>And it is precisely in this scenario already full of crooked paths and loose ideas, along with an increasingly <br>sharp identity, that 'In Absence of Velocity' appears as one of the great progressive forces of 2026. An album <br>that already arrives fully embracing this experimental spirit that has become a trademark of the project, where <br>the listener never seems to know which way the music will go, but always seems to want to find out.<br><br>But even with a whole progressive vein pulsing strongly and full of twists, along with nuances and paths that <br>unfold all the time, 'In Absence of Velocity' is far from being a difficult album. On the contrary, it flows with a <br>naturalness that surprises and hooks through curiosity. So when the listener realizes, they are already <br>completely involved even without having 'deciphered' every detail. The melodies play a fundamental role in <br>this, as they are well constructed and sometimes even intricate, but never sounding inaccessible. There is <br>always a guiding thread in the middle of the layers making everything sound cohesive and almost intuitive. It is <br>like walking through a complex terrain, but with the certainty that someone thought about the path <br>beforehand.<br><br>In the end, the album finds a very beautiful balance between technique and emotion, where it is neither empty <br>virtuosity nor sensitivity thrown at random, but rather, everything well measured and fitted, showing an artist <br>who understands not only music, but construction, narrative and how to create a striking experience.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 3 May 2026 20:51:48 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286725</guid></item><item><title>DIFFERENT LIGHT Binary Suns (Part 2 - Alternate Reality) (Crossover Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286697</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/5777/cover_1756103132026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by roriiri &mdash; This is my first review, i have really enjoyed this album. Specially the first part of the album!!! The first song is so epic and <br>the other songs that follow goes hand in hand perfectly. <br>    I really like the sound of the instruments, the melodys are very catchy, the piano is brilliant, the guitar is very well done <br>and the voices are very good. <br>I didn't listen other of their albums, but if those are as good as this one, I really need to give those a chance!! I really <br>recommend this album.<br>Not a long album, but neither a short one. 20 songs that are very well done with a very good production.<br>Give it a chance, It's incredible!!</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 3 May 2026 14:52:09 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286697</guid></item><item><title>KATATONIA Night Is The New Day (Progressive Metal, 2009)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286680</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/9887/cover_457142822019_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by A Crimson Mellotron &mdash; Katatonia released their best material between 2001 and 2006, and this opinion is shared by many of<br>their fans. However, the Swedish band's 2009 LP 'Night Is the New Day', which is the follow-up to<br>'The Great Cold Distance', happens to be the blandest and most forgettable album of theirs - the<br>formulaic, goth-inspired alt-rock that the band plays here features lots of morose synths and<br>occasional electronic bits, but the insufferably uninspired riffs are what makes this record so<br>disappointing and repetitive. On the surface, 'Night Is the New Day' sounds like yet another dark<br>and melodic collection from Katatonia, and the production on this record is actually quite good, but<br>what separates this album from the excellent preceding releases is the utter lack of originality,<br>the absence of intriguing or exceptional ideas, and the overall drab atmosphere that the majority of<br>the songs on here occupy.<br><br>There is a strong influence from Opeth and Porcupine Tree on this album, as Katatonia experiment<br>with extended acoustic sections and broodingly dark melodies, but the ideas behind the songs on<br>'Night Is the New Day' are simply not as compelling as on their previous works. It seems like the<br>riff-heavy alt-rock style is now exhausted and played out for the band, with opener 'Forsaker' being<br>the only great song on here. Everything else is moody and hefty, also significantly forgettable;<br>almost like the same idea has been copy-pasted ten times or so. The voice of Jonas Renkse might be<br>the single most enjoyable aspect of this record, which is inevitably a lower-echelon Katatonia<br>release. And so, the follow-up to the band's excellent trilogy from the early 2000s is a bland and<br>disappointing release that captures Katatonia at their weariest and least exceptional.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 3 May 2026 12:51:22 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286680</guid></item><item><title>PROGHMA-C Equation Toxic A (Experimental/Post Metal, 2025)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286674</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/6022/cover_59169592025_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by BrufordFreak &mdash; Mysterious Polish Prog Experimental/Post Metal band Proghma-C appear out of the shadows of 16 years of silence <br>since their one and only previous release (which just happens to be my #1 favorite studio album release from Y2K9!) <br>The result is more than satisfying . . . if you give it a chance. Released in 2025 by Mystic Productions, the album had sat <br>in a drawer for over ten years before being released to digital media on September 5, 2025, with most of the material <br>having been composed and recorded in the 2015 period after new vocalist Patryk Zwoli&#324;ski had been announced to <br>have replaced previous vocalist Piotr Gibner.<br><br>1. "Oceanic" (26:55) a wild ride of wildly-contrasting styles and sound palettes sewn together as a suite. It opens with <br>an organ-fed atmospheric palette with tuned percussion keyboard MIDI instrument revealing a somber motif that <br>could be ULVER, could be LEONARD COHEN, could be Giancarlo Erra's NoSOUND, but is definitely highly evocative (in <br>that Nordic way)! In the fourth minute the music slowly transitions into a fully-sequenced take on modern Berlin <br>School that sounds like Tim Hecker and Steve Hauschildt before some squeaky-violin sounds and heavy djent guitar <br>chords begin eeking their way into the sonic field. In the background one can hear a kind of distant choir of ghosts <br>making wordless notes and chords but then the djent metal takes over full blast as lead singer Patryk Zwoli&#324;ski sings <br>in a mid-range, using multiple tracks to add to and embellish the field with multiple forms of voicings. This is <br>awesome! By the eighth minute the band is charging along at full speed like a cavalry riding into battle across the open <br>fields of Pomerania. Then things settle into an equally-dense but far more melodic and harmonically-rich motif in <br>which Patryk hits some really beautiful vocal harmonies. But then it's over and the band launches into the battle, <br>fighting with full force, all energies being loosed in a melée of chaotic 360 degree output. The use of synthetic game <br>station-like computer synthesizer noises over the top of this whole section reminds me of the kind of walls of sound <br>that Jem Godfrey churns up with his FROST* project. As we enter the 13th minute the battle seems to have come to an <br>end--or else we've switched scenes--cuz things get soft and gentle, pensive and retrospective--very much in the vein of <br>fellow countrymates Riverside and/or Retrospective. This TOOL- and PEARL JAM-like section is quite awesome. At the <br>very end of the 15th minute the music elevates back into high intensity with Patryk doing some amazing growly-<br>screams to push the band into its djent-mode again--but this turns far more melodic as both guitar, bass, and <br>synthesizers introduce melody lines that work with one another harmonically. 90-seconds later we're transitioning <br>into some of the most dirty, full-spectrum metal djent that I've ever been immersed in! Amazing! I feel purged and <br>healed--and that's even before coming out the other end into the hypnotic guitar Math Rock pattern that flows into <br>the 19th minute before drums and layers of vocals rejoin. Again there is a feeling of Mariuz Duda music, production, <br>and vocal performance here with so much going on all at once in a fairly straightforward passage. Amazing! It's Lunatic <br>Soul and Riverside both at the same time! But then the percussion and drum work seem to take us into uncharted <br>territory with the bass and guitars following along (as if they are the support system to Kuman's amazing rhythm <br>work). What a dedication to camaraderie! I love this! In the 23rd minute it all suddenly ends, leaving behind layers of <br>gentle though consistently-heavy low-end synth washes, guitar arpeggi, and variable volume synth drones warbling to <br>the forefront. Am I sane? or am I being reprogrammed? (Or, to follow the song title: is that what it feels like to drown?) <br>In the beginning of the 26th minute a low droning bass synth remains as a DOVES-like electric guitar arpeggiates some <br>lovely chords up top for the bedding for a complex weave of multiple voices to sing their closing remarks. This is so <br>Doves, so Ulver, so Pearl Jam, and so amazing! One of the best long-playing prog epic suites of the 21st Century! A <br>song that has continued to get better and better with each listen I've given it. (54.25/55)<br><br>2. "Stay" (5:16) opening with a rich, multi-layered soundscape of electronica sounds and repeating organ/electric piano <br>chords. Singer Patryk Zwoli&#324;ski enters with his deep voice singing in English sounding like , singing a verse before <br>layers of guitars, bass, keys, and prog drums join in for the next couple verses. At 3:30 the band launches into a more <br>metal passage of rapid fire bass drums and tom-tom interplay over which a three-chord pattern of dirty djenty guitar <br>chords and background choral vocals start chanting the song title--which carries through until the song's sudden end. <br>A very cool song that draws me back for more. (9/10)<br><br>3. "Inexplicable breakdowns" (9:06) oscillating bass notes and ætheric layers of electronic sounds open this one, <br>providing the landscape for guest vocalist Irena Zi&#281;ba to her two minute "contra feeling" monologue--in perfect British <br>English. Brilliantly separated into isolated and effected into a linear succession of multiple compartments of the <br>sonosphere, Ira seems to be telling us of the fallout of her psychotic experience of seeing things on the open sea, of <br>isolation and delusional thinking, even admitting to her 30-years of total self love which turned into an attempt to <br>make herself invisible (and abnegation) by taking on multiple lovers while feeling absolutely no feeling or attachment <br>to any of them. When she speaks of her parent's decision to die by refusing to eat one can finally comprehend that <br>this person is totally disconnection to any emotional capacity--is totally lacking any empathy. And yet her vocal is so <br>honest, so revealing and matter-of-fact, the affect of her recitation so brutally honest, that it make its effect totally <br>erotic, totally seductive. Then Patryk's voice arrives as the band ramps up their atmospheric metal soundscape into <br>something that starts around 5:24 to rival PEARL JAM's iconic finish to "Black"--only these guys extend it for three <br>minutes before unwinding with some gorgeous heavily-reverbed piano chord play--three and a half amazing minutes! <br>Awesome song! I find no fault with it--wouldn't change a thing; I applaud the absolute genius of it. (20/20)<br><br>Total Time 41:17<br><br>There is a lot of electronic work on this album which sometimes takes the atmospheric portions of the music further <br>away from the amazing high-quality metal but it all works: the layers upon layers of subtle tracks are so carefully crafted, so superlatively rendered that one comes away simply grateful for all of the care and time Smaga and Kuman put into the product they've given us. <br><br>When I first listened to this music back in the Autumn of 2025, I was a little intimidated as I didn't quite have <br>the time to focus and give myself to the music--especially a 27-minute epic like "Oceanic." But I've kept it on the shelf for further revisitations--and I am so glad I did! The result is one of my new favorite albums albums of the 21st Century. <br><br>A+/five stars; an absolute masterpiece of progressive rock music--one of the best 21st Century studio albums I've had <br>the joy and privilege to review. ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL for any self-respecting prog lover.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 3 May 2026 11:57:30 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286674</guid></item><item><title>KAATAYRA Caminhos de &#65533;gua (Experimental/Post Metal, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286667</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/12198/cover_3241202942026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; The multi-instrumentalist Caio Lemos has made quite a splash with his alter ego KAATAYRA after<br>debuting in 2019 with "No Ruidar Da Mata Que Mirra" which displayed a unique blend of atmospheric<br>black metal with traditional Brazilian folk sounds in cahoots with psytrance of all things. Proving<br>to be quite prolific, another album followed the same year and then two more in 2020 and then yet<br>another in 2021 but then a long silence elapsed, a five year one that would obviously make many<br>wonder if the alter ego musical output of KAATAYRA had come to an end. Returning as the slightly<br>differently spelled version KA]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[TAIRA five years later, Lemos' newest release CAMINHOS DE ]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[GUA finds<br>the artist returning with another dose of avant-folk meets black metal and Brazilian traditional<br>sounds.<br><br>Featuring seven tracks at only 45 minutes, CAMINHOS DE ]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[GUA returns Lemos to the Brazilian folk<br>traditions as he delivers a rather post-minamlist journey through ambient streams of sound that<br>feature acoustic instrumentation, nature recordings and raspy black metal vocal styles. Add some<br>elements of what sounds like samba and other flavors of Brazil along with heavy percussive driven<br>rhythms and it's a bizarre atypical take on folk music for sure. Despite all the claims of KAATAYRA<br>being a metal band, there is really no metal involved on this release except the harsh vocals which<br>in my book doesn't make it metal as the music is primarily on the mellow side save the festive<br>Carnival like jubilee sounding percussion.<br><br>It's often easy to peg a one-man band and such is the case with KAATAYRA since despite the wide<br>array of instrumentation on board, nothing really excels into what I would call actual over the top<br>mastery of any given sounds. What CAMINHOS DE ]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[GUA offers is more of an ambient atmospheric<br>procession into post-rock inspired compositions that rely on repetitive cyclical grooves and oozing<br>atmospheric backdrops that slowly generate climatic crescendoes. There are no traditional song<br>structures here at all and everything comes off more as a one-man jamming session when the steam<br>picks up. Honestly the percussion sounds rather programmed and the lack of guitar distortion renders<br>the black metal vocal styles sounding rather out of place as if Slayer were invited to perform at a<br>kid's birthday party only lost their equipment.<br><br>This is truly one of those newer artists that i simply don't get the hype around. Sure it's unique<br>in its approach. After all who else has thought of adding black metal raspy vocals to minimalist<br>compositions inspired by Steve Reich, Arvo P]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[rt or Philip Glass but every experiment doesn't really<br>generate the desired expectations. Overall i find that the stylistic approach isn't really what<br>makes this a meh experience for me but rather the shoddy execution of it all. Artists like<br>Q'uq'umatz have been blending indigenous folk sounds with metal, psychedelia and countless other<br>genres for quite some time now also as a one-man band only to greater effect. <br><br>It's really hard for me to pin down exactly what bothers me about this album and honestly all the<br>other ones i've so far experienced by KAATAYRA except that it all sounds rather amateurish in how<br>it's presented and mixed. In the end it's not a terrible album to experience at all. It's a nice<br>rhythmic folky dream world where different styles commingle for a short time but it's lacking any<br>true sustainability that makes me want to return. Given that each track is pretty much the same one<br>trick pony genre blend without really adding much variation to the overall theme, it all seems<br>rather monotonous in the end. The metal vocals sound like a fish out of water and some nice real<br>metal parts would've added some much needed contrast. The clean vocal parts remind me more of<br>Maudlin of the Well, another band that yields mixed results for me. In short, not really my thing<br>here.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 3 May 2026 10:19:00 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286667</guid></item><item><title>CODE 18 Two Places (Neo-Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286665</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/11478/cover_2755122822026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by tszirmay &mdash; <br>From the province of Qu]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[bec, and yes, still a hotbed of proggy activity what with the likes of Mystery, Huis, Red <br>Sand, Angine de Poitrine, Jacob Roberge and my band Enigmatic Sound Machines, as well as many others, CODE 18 <br>now releases its second album, after the 2020 debut  Human Error, which also sits in my collection. Encouraging <br>local prog bands has always been of keen interest to me , also venturing into the rest of the country, as I am a big <br>fan of Ontario residents Rick Miller (whose new album I will be reviewing very soon, so stay tuned) and Ken Baird <br>(Monarch Trail), both long-standing friends of the Prog Rogue.  <br><br>Led by the incredible keyboardist Johnny Maz of Huis (check out his numerous YouTube tributes to Triumvirat, <br>Genesis, Porcupine Tree, Real Life (Send me an Angel), Alan Parsons Project, Rick Wakeman, A-Ha, The Mission <br>etc..), Ben Plamondon on vocals and JF R]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[millard on the guitars, with the added veteran rhythm section of Martin <br>Plante and Bobby St-Louis, all scattered throughout the large province but working well with the wonders of <br>modern technology. Now "Human Error" was a really tasty effort, foretelling of the current 'conflict' between two <br>best friends and neighbours (no, not about hockey, but just maybe)   but this sucker is a treat that should propel <br>the band to further recognition, and I fully intend to help in the process with this review. I have always despised the <br>neo-prog tag (in fact, all labelling is good only for foodstuffs and medication, IMHO) as the musicianship can easily <br>rival any quality symphonic, fusion, or rock outfit anywhere . 'It's not about the close you wear', sang the Cars!  Proof <br>is often found in the structure, as this nearly 69-minute album kicks off with a nice, longer than usual "Prelude" <br>(how quaint!) and ends seven pieces later with a dozen minute epic called "Justice?", with the previous track "A New <br>Soul" clocking in over14 minutes. We are not in syrupy sing-along "Follow you, Follow me" neo mode. We are talking <br>Code 18! Bon, ca suffit!  <br><br>The afore mentioned "Prelude" sets off the spark that will shine throughout this release, an ode to insomnia with <br>Sylvain Descoteaux emoting within an orchestral umbrella , a throttling bass keeping the line and JF R]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[millard <br>setting the tone for all the magic to come, a bluesy conquest of the senses. The anesthetic is working, as the deep <br>dive into "Polyrhythm" is initiated, a chaotic collision between hard times and soft moments, the ideal foil for Ben to <br>express the turbulence of the world and how it affects our manic life. Edgy, at times serrated like a honed knife, <br>definitely  questioning the validity of just holding on. "There is a nice space, just a few pages over, in fact, I think it's <br>better than this place", the definition of restful sleep. <br><br>Time for a look back at simpler times, when routine was rarely boring as "The Old House" tells the tale of childhood, <br>where innocence held hands with learning from one's mistakes.  Musically, it's a windswept affair, ticking clocks <br>from Martin Plante, and flickers of liquid guitar, a dreamy soundscape that skillfully navigates the space between <br>each breath and every reminiscence. The orchestral elevation rises to a heightened crescendo, opening up the gate <br>for R]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[millard to further introspect, a bucolic symphony unveiled and a colossal finale. <br><br>A trio of lengthy instrumentals invades the space, setting the stage for the players to show their considerable. The <br>quirky and serpentine "Alors Je Cherche"  has a French language narration, in a very film noir setting as if recalling a <br>Phillip Marlowe/ Sam Spade criminal escapade with romantic underpinnings (long-legged temptress) and as such <br>has all the thrilling trimmings associated with the genre, including well-placed brass exhortations, blaring just above <br>the Peter Gunn-like bass line. Bloody brilliant, "L'Affaire Dumoutier" revisited. <br><br>Candidate (and surely winner)  for the best song title of 2026 , "The Lovers, the Incompetent and the Asshole"  <br>travels first into piano land for a stretch with slick guitar shadings (the two lovers, I presume), before a burly <br>synthesizer flare-up takes the mood into sombre reptile territory, a slithering and bumbling electronic declaration <br>of frivolousness, bashing a few hard drums in the process, a modern ode to Inspector Clouseau, peut-etre? <br>Invariably, with incompetence we get incontinence and the bowel movement gradually appears, with growling <br>stomach spasms, and the inevitability of human stupidity expelling its garbage. The congas and the hammered <br>piano keys, provide a monumental procession of percussive liberation, letting the savage synthesizer unleash its <br>venomous waste. Maybe also candidate for finest instrumental of 2026, qui sait?<br><br>The shorter but utterly fragrant "Moving in Peach Nightmare" has a psychedelic connotation that is hard to ignore, <br>swirling patterns of serene sounds, a tick-tock (no, not the app, FFS) somnolence that induces a kind of electro sonic <br>fantasy, the keyboards reminding me of some of Billie Currie (Ultravox) solo work.  Love this tracks as well. <br>Now, closing off an already thrilling album with not one but TWO epic pieces, is as bold a statement one can make <br>and Code 18 pull it off with gusto, bravado and presumably a fair amount of espresso. <br><br>"A New Soul" owns a running time of over 14 minutes and it's an absolute corker, perhaps candidate for epic of <br>2026, ben voyons donc! The tempo and atmosphere are instantly attractive in a cinematographic sense, with wide <br>shots combined with endless detailed inserts, the rhythmic brouhaha exhausting, and the mystery constantly <br>exposed. When the Plamondon vocals finally kick in, the starkness verges on sinister Armageddon, "where nature is <br>gone, ripped from the earth", and yet, there is still hope from the celestial watchers above, or so it seems.  The <br>confrontation between edgy chaos and sustained slumber, resurrects the invariable extremes of sleep versus <br>insomnia, of light and dark, of life and death. Only a new soul can provide any kind of resurrection, the instrumental <br>section has a wicked (I mean evil) St-Louis bass flutter that shuffles the bruising Hammond organ rage along, Plante <br>blasting away on his tectonic kit, Maz now adding synthesizers sorties in order to challenge the delirious R]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[millard <br>guitar assaults. <br><br>"Justice?" you surely mean injustice! Ending an album on the concepts of Waiting and despair, as well as the endless <br>fight to survive and wondering what in hell (or is it heaven) will be the verdict , is the exact definition of our times. <br>Well, I choose to be positive by filtering out the endless abysmal poison peddling  and judgmental opinion scourge <br>that weakens our resolve by promising endless blessings that are never fulfilled. How do we resist, you may ask? <br>Turn off the media tools and turn on the music, that is how! Screw the bad news ,look at the light and set yourself <br>free. A magnificent closer, showcasing the talented crew's deliverance. A dozen minutes that could be the requiem <br>of our times, whereby we eschew the focus on the problems and start looking at solutions, something the modern <br>world seems reluctant to motivate.<br><br>A master stroke of bustling progressive rock that will cause a fair amount of excitement in our global community. <br>Bien jou]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[, les gars! <br><br>5 dual spaces    <br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 3 May 2026 09:50:57 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286665</guid></item><item><title>CLARK HUTCHINSON Retribution (Indo-Prog/Raga Rock, 1970)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286659</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1709/cover_11291610122016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Nickmannion &mdash; I have all three C/H albums....this one being a junk/charity shop find for a quid in the early 80's, oh what a time to <br>be a fledgling collector/crate digger...and the contrarian in me has this as my favourite. How so? Well I guessed <br>before I looked at the ratings etc that this one would have the proglodytes turn their ears up at...but you know, <br>narrow musical snobbery is so passe...!<br>Explain then. For reasons unknown, C/H decided to go all blues/rock for this sophomore effort, not in a 'lets nod in <br>the general direction' way but more all in although (am assuming this was missed by most other raters) with <br>tongues firmly cheek planted. The opener 'Free To Be Stoned' comes out of the traps like Bakerloo meets <br>Stackwaddy at Vanilla Fudges place when the Pink Fairies and Edgar Broughton popped by and makes say Led Zep <br>sound staid and polite by comparison. You would think a fair few walls were pinned to back in 1970 on the needle <br>hitting the groove. Marvellous! Then a mid paced piano led blues lope that could come from a Steamhammer or John Dummer( bands various) <br>album although it is perhaps stretched a few mins too far/long. 'In Another Day' is probably the Deram execs. <br>insisting 'a hit single might be helpful' but it doesnt have say (thinking of contemporary crossover 'hits') anything of <br>the All right Now or even Devils Answer about it but a hint of Patto perhaps? 'Best Suit' lyrically is a satire on the <br>pop boy tries very hard to impress girl but fails spectacularly fare but musically is a bit Mott The Hoople (before <br>they went 'popish') with a melancholy Rory Gallagher feel without being a guitar fest. Finally 'Death The Lover' is a <br>possible cheesy Zappaesque/Hampton Grease Band take on more doomy stuff, the cheap organ sound (deliberate) <br>being the key before it morphs into a smooth pastiche on crooner things to fade...<br>Ok, I grant you there might be a bit of lets throw all this at the wall and see what sticks about it but it certainly isnt <br>safe or formulaic hence the contrarian in me is on board. Again, ratings dilemma as it is probably a 3.5 give or take <br>but am not going 3 to reduce the average but 4 to pull said average nearer to where it maybe should be.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 3 May 2026 08:32:40 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286659</guid></item><item><title>KARCIUS Black Soul Sickness (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286657</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1370/cover_31682322026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by alainPP &mdash; "Wallow" opens with a monumental flourish, featuring Gilmour-esque, Moor-like guitar work, delicate and <br>interwoven with piano for a solemn, bluesy feel; a warm atmosphere pervades Sylvain's vocals and the <br>acoustics, reminiscent of Steve Wilson. The organ and the syncopated, metronomic riff, reminiscent of Wilson <br>and Riverside, are energetic. The raspy vocals flirt with growls; a disciplined bass and pad break allows vocals <br>and guitar to converse. The track returns to a melancholic ballad with a touch of post-rock guitars, an intense <br>fusion of melody and cyclothymic evolution over the restrained, screamed vocals. Nearly fifteen minutes in, <br>S]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[bastien launches into a velvety keyboard solo, reminiscent of his early days with Hamadryad. The controlled <br>finale, with hints of Mot]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[rhead, features a distinctive voice etched deep into the brain, a real knockout. "Out of <br>Nothing," featuring Anathema's acoustic guitar, is an unplugged, melancholic ballad built on Thomas's crisp <br>drumming, guiding the listener down the steep slopes of alternative prog, distilling fiery heavy metal vibes. The <br>rollercoaster rhythm, sharpened by explosive, trance-like prog metal crescendos, culminates in an ethereal, <br>evanescent synth outro. "Darkest Heir," with its clock and sampled vocals, delivers a palpable musical tension. <br>The heavy riff and guttural vocals sound straight out of a dark metal band. The impressive, compulsive, choppy <br>sound of the keyboard solo is something Jordan Rudess would love to play. The Karcius-esque rogue wave <br>continues to swell.<br><br>"Slow Down Son," in an airy, Floydian synth style, features a radiant acoustic guitar note; the meditative <br>atmosphere of this world music interlude, somewhere between a ballad and a slow jam, has a touch of Peter <br>Gabriel. A moment of pure, disconnecting bliss. "Rise," an acoustic, archaic guitar piece by Simon, precedes the <br>onslaught of heavy progressive metal. The catchy chorus is radio-friendly, and we still believe in this superb <br>band where the raw guitars perfectly complement Sylvain's off-kilter vocals for a truly exhilarating build-up. The <br>acoustic outro is heavy, reminiscent of the sublime Pain of Salvation, featuring a frenetic organ-guitar battle. <br>"Awakening the Spirit" opens with a crystalline sound, ethereal piano, keyboard waves, and a melting vocal, <br>building to a restrained crescendo reminiscent of Hamasari, with the driving drums over the whispered vocals. A <br>progressive atmosphere emerges, the saccharine build-up envelops the listener, amplified by Simon's fiery solo. <br>Accompanied by a swirling organ in the style of Dream Theater, this excellent crescendo culminates in a blazing <br>guitar solo, organ, guitar, organ?epic. "Dusting My Coat" returns to a restrained, deliberate gentleness; the <br>metronomic drums lend a palpable heaviness to the initially measured tempo, which then accelerates to an <br>explosive crescendo. The chorus accentuates the frenetic build-up, creating a sense of longing.<br><br>KARCIUS dares to move beyond jazz fusion, and it's a very good thing. A dense album that proves this band is <br>clearly underrated. An opus that confronts the architecture of the human psyche, both calm and violent. A <br>powerful, cinematic exploration of this modern rock fusion, alternating between heavy and post-rock. A wave of <br>dense sonic emotion for this singular album that pushes back against today's progressive rock by injecting it <br>with melody, sensitivity, and technical skill. A major achievement.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 3 May 2026 07:48:38 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286657</guid></item><item><title>LITURGIA DEL PIOMBO Volume Primo (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286626</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/13229/cover_3510121922026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Fercandio46 &mdash; On Liturgia del Piombo's albums, Ludovico Maggi Padovan performs a complete solo work playing all the instruments, <br>just as on each of his covers the landscapes are solitary places, where except in the factory of the first one, no people <br>appear, and they are also monochromatic, this new album was titled Volume Primo, and unlike Ustica, where it could <br>sound more rock, here he makes a fusion more related to the oriental, which reminded me of his compatriots from <br>Area.<br><br>Its tracks are divided like the pages of a book, as vintage as the car in the cover photo. Just as Pagine 1-83 is <br>dominated by the organ, Pagine 84-168 features the clarinet prominently, and Pagine 169-253 features the guitar in <br>the style of Scott Henderson of Tribal Tech. In Pages 254-336, we reach the climax of this musical book, with a <br>theatrical treatment that does not need dialogues or lyrics to be sung, the clarinet whispers, the guitar shouts, the <br>interaction is there.<br><br>On pages 337-419, you can hear Steve Hackett with Djabe, a fusion of Western, Balkan, and Eastern sounds, where <br>the guitar still seems to want to speak. On the other hand, pages 420-505, despite their almost hard rock power with <br>touches of funk, have the sophistication of a rainy day under the city cobblestones, paved with the saxophone.<br><br>Pages 506-593 strum calmly with the guitar, jumping from balcony to balcony, holding on with the clarinet and its <br>notes as if they were a rope...until the rope tightens and the rock returns, which will be precisely the balance on which <br>Liturgia del Piombo will perform acrobatics, whose characteristic is to sound light despite being as heavy as lead at <br>times. <br><br>Pages 594-666 end the book, which sounds like those old cassettes with books read...whose conclusion is as obscure <br>as, again as Steve Hackett as Spectrum or his last albums, the specters covered by Padovan go there and beyond until <br>culminating with some guitar notes delicately placed on a wet cobblestone.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sun, 3 May 2026 03:10:31 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286626</guid></item><item><title>STORMY SIX Un Biglietto Del Tram (RIO/Avant-Prog, 1975)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286604</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/2561/cover_155841192017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by The Progolyte &mdash; Stormy Six is well known for their involvement in the original Rock In Opposition movement in the <br>seventies, especially for being essentially the Italian band to be involved in the genre. After a quick check of <br>the band's ratings on ProgArchives and Rate Your Music, I came to the conclusion that they had two major <br>albums in their discography, with this being one of them. Now, Un Biglietto Del Tram was indeed the first <br>exposure I ever got to the band, and I went into thinking I would get an experimental and highly technical <br>album (judging by the ratings and descriptions I saw), but I ended up with a generally bland folk album with <br>various interesting and complex parts mixed in every once and a while. I was disappointed with this record, <br>and I thought that it could definitely have more energy and life. Especially in the vocals. The vocals this <br>band has sound bland and overall drove my rating down for this album. When looking at the personnel, it <br>includes Franco Fabbri and Umberto Fiori on guitar, Carlo De Martini and Tommaso Leddi on violin, Luca <br>Piscicelli on bass, and Antonio Zanuso on drums, and then all of them (except Antonio) do the vocals and <br>do various other instrumentation such as mandolin or flute. <br><br>The music feels very Eastern, specifically taking influence from classic Russian folk music. The vocals and <br>overall playing also feel Russian, and that whole vibe is made even more evident when you realize the <br>opening song is literally called Stalingrado. This is one of (if not the) band's most popular songs, and though <br>it normally doesn't sound like a normal Italian song (it sounds like a World War II tune), it still manages to <br>be memorable and enjoyable. Most of the album follows this same path, being stylized in that same fashion <br>of WWII era war songs and also being folk songs that stick to you, even if there aren't many intricate details <br>going on. Much of it feels a bit boring, and I wish they had spent their time making more complex and <br>technical music, as while there are moments on here, it can sometimes get unbearably slow and lifeless. <br>Moving on, some of my other favorites include Arrivano Gli Americani and the title track, which are each <br>the longest two compositions on the album at nearly six minutes. They also have some really nice <br>instrumental passages that allow room for soloing and faster music overall. <br><br>In conclusion, I know it's an unpopular opinion to rate this album this low, but I honestly don't see the true <br>"genius" behind this record. I can definitely see why some people love this one, but I just don't feel the <br>same. This one is a weak 3.25/5.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 22:19:34 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286604</guid></item><item><title>MOONRISE No Rewind (Neo-Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286593</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/3956/cover_4201632026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by tszirmay &mdash; Kamil Konieczniak just keeps on making his brand of prog, another proudly talented musician who refuses to <br>conform to expectations or even endlessly dabble in flavor of the year trends.  After a lengthy seven year span of <br>silence since "Travel Within" in 2019, which went by rather unnoticed and surely underappreciated, the crafty multi-instrumentalist who masters the big four of prog, returns to loftier heights with the spectacular "No Rewind" , keeping his long standing vocalist Marcin Staszek but splitting duties now with the fabulous Anna Batko, formerly <br>of fellow Polish band Albion (a band I wish would rise from the ashes as Jerzy Antczak's music is sorely missed). <br>Regular guest Marcin Kruczek rejoins Kamil again delivering a blistering guitar solo on the penultimate track , he <br>has become the leading axe for hire guitar slinger, having played on numerous albums with Nemezis, Framauro, <br>Millenium, Metus, Gall, the Ryszard Kramarski Project and Mindfields. However, with this album, there has been a <br>major stylistic change, overtly less neo-prog than before, veering into more symphonic detailing, though the <br>melodies remain of paramount importance, and the vocal deliveries from both vocalists verging on the spectacular.<br> <br><br>As the album titles clearly implies, there is no looking back. The glittering opener "Two Roads" signals where the <br>artist was, as Batko impacts the piece with seductive efficiency and the following two longer pieces really showcase <br>the progress into more subtle realms, as both the extended "Shadows in the Dark" and the impressive "Single <br>Game" hit the proverbial bull's eye, with Staszek in particular blowing the mind with stupendous tone and overt <br>emotion. The first one sweeps into the conscience with atmospheric intent, solidly expanding on a short yet bold <br>chorus, then dropping back into crunchy rhythm guitars chopping the percussive block, dense keyboard <br>orchestrations and decorative guitar licks, but it's the mid-section vocal high notes that create the goose bumps. <br>The instrumental core is simply divine, a sense of flow that is unescapable, ambient passages where the majestic <br>piano appears to rule, albeit just for a tender moment (they are Polish after all!). The second is the perfect <br>companion, maintaining a quality that cannot be overlooked, even by the most casual ear. When Staszek grabs the <br>microphone, he combines plausibility with uncanny ardour, his upper scales in the Steve Perry realm (without the <br>corniness), the shimmering guitar effects sweeping the road ahead, steadfast and oozing romance. This is frightfully delightful, modern prog at its finest, inspired and prone to adventure.<br><br><br>Three shorter tracks shift the focus onto more painful matters, altering once again the style as the first one up is <br>"Cheaters", navigating a more electronic urban reference, where synthesizers ping and drums pong, guitars <br>screeching and bass shuttling without remorse. The chorus hits the vocal plateaus previously reached apparently <br>with ease, this Staszek fellow is a revelation (he was always very good, but on this album, he kicks it up quite a <br>notch). This 5-minute romp remains concrete and stark, yet oozing feeling. Anna Batko enhances the pot with her <br>honey sweet voice, high up and near the Kate Bush zone, sugarcoating the wounded essence on "When We Played <br>by Heart", the emotions thrilling and devout, the  instrumental backdrop quaintly delicate. Kamil then elevates the <br>storm with a commanding expanse of sonic detailing, an upward surge that made me skip a few beats. "Silent <br>Rooms" deflects the attention to an ornate piano chamber, where the solitary  ivories resonate with a pressing <br>hush, a magnificent 3-minute interlude kept deliberately pure, another magical moment on a ride that has no rear-<br>view mirror. <br><br>Our guitar cameo shines on the stimulating  "Friends of Blood ", as Kruczek unpacks all his talented craft with his <br>good pal Kamil keeping the foundation structure secure, Staszek  convincingly relating the bond between them that shines through the grooves. The expectant guitar splurge is off the charts brilliant, an explosive flurry of gritty <br>fingers gliding all over the fretboard, all bending, caressing, touching and feeling the inner most expressions of the <br>musical soul. <br><br>Proof is in the pudding , and the dessert here is "All About You", the 10 minute + epic finale, proving my point about the slight upward direction undertaken during the 7-year itch. Batko sings and hushes with equal aplomb, the lengthy instrumental display from Kamil stamping not just this closing statement but the entire album with a <br>vigorous 'my best yet', a motion that I can concur with 1000% . With the apparent demise of Riverside and the silent Albion fade away, Polish Prog remains nevertheless still vibrant if one needs to judge by this stunning release.  Not a single weak moment on an album I intend to rewind many more times in the near future. Give it a try, you cannot be disappointed. <br><br>5 lunar zeniths   <br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 18:36:11 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286593</guid></item><item><title>ACHWGH&#65533; NEY WODEI Achwgh&#65533; Ney Wodei (RIO/Avant-Prog, 1986)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286591</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/13221/cover_2352201322026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; While the 80s were dominated by the likes of slick overproduced pop from Michael Jackson, Madonna<br>and Prince, a whole new underground was well underway. The world of heavy metal had dominated the<br>harder side of the rock spectrum but lurking in the shadows was a much stranger breed that worked<br>secretly in their musical laboratories like a mad occultist finding a new alchemical methodology of<br>summoning strange new sounds into our existence. One such act emerged from Paris, France. The<br>foursome that consisted of Fran]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ois Boiti]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[re (drums, keyboards, vocals), Didier 'Higgins' Copp<br>(bass, percussion, vocals), Eric 'Riton' Sterenfield (guitar, keyboards, percussion, vocals) and<br>Phillippe 'Wodi' Royer (percussion, trumpet, bass, vocals) rechristened themselves as ACHWGH]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ NEY<br>WODEI and released two bizarre albums in the late 80s when such experimental music was about as far<br>from the mainstream consciousness as possible.<br><br>A bizarre mishmash of post-punk, avant-prog and freak funk, ACHWGH]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ NEY WODEI delivered its self-<br>titled debut in a manner as unconventional as its music. Appearing in 1986 as a limited-edition<br>cassette, this album was hidden inside a handmade plaster model of a Citro]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[n DS and like a<br>traditional piggy bank the curious new owners had to break the plaster to be able to play the<br>cassette, a true first and only case of such in the entire history of music it seems! If that wasn't<br>enough once the product was obtained for playing, the musical style was self-described as "Razz!"<br>which featured highly experimental theatrical stream of overlapping (and oft contrasting) sounds<br>that mined their influences from various freak-a-zoids like Captain Beefheart, The Residents, Renado<br>& The Loaf, Neu! and another freaky French act Un D]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[partement. You can add some crazy zeuhlish<br>pulsating rhythms courtesy of Magma as well as the transcendental avant-prog roots traced back to<br>Univers Zero. The band found its way onto the short-lived V.I.S.A. label which featured Bourbonese<br>Qualk.<br><br>Musically ACHWGH]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ NEY WODEI delivered a wild frenzy of somewhat danceable grooves in cahoots with<br>unpredictable swarms of sounds that found oddly syncopated rhythms commingling with random sounds,<br>angular melodies, humorous vocal interactions and at times seemingly minimalist only dressed up with<br>freaked out vocal accompaniments that sometimes even can bring Alvin & The Chipmunks to mind!<br>Somewhat of an avant-funk and RIO flavored breed of NYC no wave, ACHWGH]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ NEY WODEI was the epitome<br>of DIY art rock in the 80s taking its influences and throwing them into the blender until they all<br>came out as a musical style all their own. Vocalwise interjections were mined from French chanson<br>and unlikely candidates such as Les Fr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[res Jacques and music hall. "Songs" are short with a total of<br>19 fitting into a classic playing time of just under 44 minutes. Very much in the tradition of other<br>Frenchie outsiders including Aksak Maboul and Etron Fou Leloublan only more suitable for Zappa and<br>Residents hardcores.<br><br>Part of the wild display of anarchy on this results from the fact that this band that met at the<br>Paris Tolbiac University and then joined an artist's community that squatted an out of commission<br>Parisian hospital where a gaggle of musicians took over and created wild music such as this. The<br>band was short-lived and only released two albums and until recently has all been but forgotten to<br>time as some of the most obscure releases ever to emerge from the Paris Underground but with the<br>renewed interest in all things wild and wacky out of the long sealed vaults, ACHWGH]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ NEY WODEI has<br>found a new audience in the modern world with its completely unhinged unorthodox approach to musical<br>mania and has found new digital releases making it more accessible than ever without resorting to<br>piles of broken plaster in the process. This is a fun crazy romp through short strange musical<br>expressions that defy all logic and expectations. One for the most open-minded avant-proggers but a<br>very satisfying one indeed and oddly as accessible as it is alienating.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 18:09:40 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286591</guid></item><item><title>DR. SPACE Dr Space's Wicked Sonic Bulls (Psychedelic/Space Rock, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286590</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/10173/cover_22817252026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by kev rowland &mdash; On Saturday 10th January 2026 at 10:30, four musicians started playing, and just two hours later they were finished. <br>Scott Heller then engineered, mixed and mastered the recordings, and here is the result. Scott, in his alter-ego of Dr. <br>Space (]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[resund Space Collective and many others), provides Mellotron, analogue synths, Hammond and Modular <br>Synth, and he was joined by guitarist Tom Ashurst (ex-Hawklords, China Bull Shop, Here & Now), bassist Martin <br>Weaver (]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[resund Space Collective, Doctors of Space, ex-Dark, ex-Wicked Lady) and drummer Darren Butler (Sonic Trip <br>Project).<br><br>Given that the album is by Dr. Space one would expect it to be far more synth-based, but in reality, what we have here <br>is a rhythm section keeping it all together, the synths often providing a backdrop but rarely coming to the fore, with <br>the guitar being the main lead instrument. The result is something which is obviously heavily influenced more by <br>Hawkwind than Tangerine Dream, but more of a modern version and less of the Seventies heyday that one might <br>expect. Given that Ashurst has been heavily involved with the modern incarnation of Hawklords, both touring and on <br>albums, perhaps that is not too surprising. It certainly feels that the other three musicians are following his lead as <br>opposed to sharing the improvisational/compositional load, which is not what I would expect from a Dr. Space <br>release. There is a sense of lightness about this recording, a sense of the guys smiling and enjoying themselves with <br>little or no pressure and the result is something which is a pleasant workout while never being truly essential.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 17:26:23 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286590</guid></item><item><title>DR. SPACE Dr. Paradiso meets Dr. Space - Liquid Soundscapes (Psychedelic/Space Rock, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286587</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/10173/cover_43716252026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by kev rowland &mdash; In March 2025 Scott Heller went to Boston to spend three days with  Dr. Joe Paradiso, who over the last 50 years has <br>built one of the world's largest modular synthesisers. They spent three days recording 14 pieces of music (which they <br>refer to as Movements), building layers of sound which somehow feels analogue and not digital, dated and certainly <br>not at all modern. One can imagine lovers of Tangerine Dream getting quite excited about this. What we have here is <br>Movement 13, "Swampworld", which has been presented in three parts, although it is in reality a single piece of music.<br><br>This is a very unusual album to listen to as although it is all keyboards I found myself thinking firstly of bagpipes and <br>then of a bugle, certainly not instruments one would immediately think of when listening to electronic albums. The <br>bagpipes are present as there is an underlying bass/baritone electronic drone throughout (which does change pitch <br>but is always there), while at times the lead melody can be thought of as being like a bugle (at one point I was sure I <br>could hear a smattering of "Last Post" and then it was gone). At other times they move into Hawkwind-like aggression, <br>as if the instruments are no longer things of beauty but are intent on destroying all before them as if in a futuristic <br>science fiction movie. It often feels as if the listener is encompassed by a world of sound, and all that exists is what is <br>happening between our ears (headphones are essential for the full effect).<br><br>It is an incredibly vital and intensely interesting piece of music, and one can only hope that if they recorded 14 <br>different Movements then there is a lot more to come. <br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 16:51:35 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286587</guid></item><item><title>PALLAS The Knightmoves (Neo-Prog, 1985)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286583</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/283/cover_3835151412015_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by VianaProghead &mdash;                                    Review N]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ 965<br><br>As we know, the progressive rock was founded in the end of the 60's and primarily developed in the United <br>Kingdom. It was gradually being exported to many other countries around the world, especially to Europe. <br>However, the great exponent happened in the UK with many bands that were responsible for solidifying the style. <br>During several years, prog rock flourished and was responsible for some of the best pages ever written in the style. <br>But, in 1977, with the advent of the punk rock movement, prog rock went into decline and some of the bigger <br>names in the style simply disbanded or simplified their music in a more commercial style. So, the genre almost <br>disappeared during several years.<br>But as we know too, in the early 80's a sub-genre of the pro<br>gressive rock developed in the UK and that became known as the neo-progressive rock. The reason for the <br>emergence of this new genre was to resurrect the progressive rock in its most pure style but with a slight <br>commercial touch. Several British bands appeared at the time and were able to solidify the style that was <br>influenced by some of the biggest names of the 70's progressive rock, especially Genesis. Some of the most <br>important neo-prog bands at the time were Marillion, Pendragon, IQ, Pallas, Galahad, Twelfth Night, Solstice, Abel <br>Ganz and Quasar. They were responsible for some of the best albums in the genre solidifying the style.<br><br>About Pallas, is a Scottish prog rock band that was founded in 1974 in Aberdeen and that started their life as <br>Rainbow. The band dropped their name after Ritchie Blackmore left Deep Purple and called his new band Rainbow. <br>In the early 80's they were one of the leading bands at the Marquee Club, a London club that was considered a <br>temple of the 80's prog rock scene. The band's first release was a self-produced live LP entitled "Arrive Alive" in <br>1981. Their first studio album "The Sentinel" was released in 1984. In the following year, Pallas released an EP <br>entitled "The Knightmoves". In 1986, Pallas released their second studio album "The Wedge" and the compilation <br>album "Knightmoves To Wedge".<br><br>So, "The Knightmoves", which is the subject of this my review, is one of the first works of the band. With the release <br>of "Arrive Alive" and "The Sentinel", the band didn't have a great commercial success with not many sales. So, due to <br>that and shortly afterwards, their vocalist Euan Lowson left the band. Having recruited a new singer Alan Reed, <br>formerly of Abel Ganz, Pallas released this EP to present their new singer. "The Knightmoves" has only three tracks, <br>"Stranger", "Nightmare" and "Sanctuary". With these first recordings with Alan Reed, Pallas performs a rather <br>mellow progressive rock style with some AOR type moments. It's an interesting release with a curious mix between <br>the more commercial and the more prog sound. Maybe we can say that the band was trying a kind of a new future <br>sound for their next album.<br><br>So, as I mentioned before, "The Knightmoves" is an EP by Pallas that was released in 1985. The line up on "The <br>Knightmoves" is Alan Reed (lead and backing vocals), Niall Mathewson (lead electric and acoustic guitars, ebow and <br>guitar synthesizer), Ronnie Brown (backing vocals, grand piano, keyboards and synthesizers), Graeme Murray <br>(backing vocals, bass guitar, 12-string guitar and bass pedals) and Derek Forman (drums, bell, timbales and <br>timpani).<br><br>So, "The Knightmoves" has only three tracks. The first track "Stranger" is pretty much a basic AOR pop rock track <br>with its opening chorale word, which sounds a little bit of the early Asia's sound. It's a high-gear neo-prog/AOR track <br>with some powerful vocals by Alan Reed and a straightforward musicianship, featuring pounding rhythms and <br>some tricky keyboard work. For a prog fan it's almost a guilty pleasure to hear. It's a nice track for the 80's, so in <br>vogue at the time. The second track "Nightmare" is also a good track, building on the creepy side of Pallas. It <br>features a haunting intro and a more theatrical approach to support the title of the track. Again the sound is clean <br>and epic with a fantastic guitar solo and some atmospheric synthesizer sounds. The track even features a fabulous <br>screaming synthesizer solo by the inspired Ronnie Brown in the very known Keith Emerson's unmistakable style. <br>This is another nice track. The third and last track "Sanctuary" ends this EP in the best way. It's its lengthiest track <br>and probably the best track too. It's a long, atmospheric, dramatic and epic neo-prog track with some new wave <br>and few symphonic prog vibes all over and some beautiful electric guitar work by Niall Mathewson next to Ronnie <br>Brown's spacey synthesizers. This track develops in a more mature set of instrumental arrangements and an <br>irresistible escalation toward the grand finale. It's actually a fine track to have been hidden away for so long on an <br>EP. I think we can say that "Sanctuary" is a nice close to this EP.<br><br>Conclusion: "The Knightmoves" is one of the less known pieces of Pallas. Fortunately, the three tracks were also <br>released in 1986 in a compilation called "Knightmoves To Wedge". As the name indicates, "Knightmoves To Wedge" <br>is the sum of the tracks of "The Knightmoves" and "The Wedge", a kind of an album with the ten tracks by a certain <br>order. As a conclusion, we can say that Pallas with this EP was here to stay. Despite Pallas making many much <br>better things in the future that was to come, we can say that "The Knightmoves" is a little known work of a nice and <br>solid neo-prog.<br><br>Prog is my Ferrari. Jem Godfrey (Frost*)</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 16:08:21 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286583</guid></item><item><title>PLANTOID Flare (Eclectic Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286574</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/12690/cover_52420122026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by BrufordFreak &mdash; The Brighton-based band returns with their second album of King Crimson/black midi-like music. <br><br>Line-up / Musicians:<br>- Chloe Spence / vocals<br>- Tom Coyne / guitar<br>- Louis Bradshaw / drums<br>- Nathan Ridley / composition, support musicianship, production<br><br>1. "Parasite" (6:27) opening with more than a minute of dynamic guitar-chord ripping rock that sounds like something <br>from a black midi album, in the middle of the first minute the band backs down to reveal the dulcet underbelly of the <br>beast (a pattern that I've now come to know and almost expect from plantoid music). The music is gentle yet subtly <br>hiding its mischevious potential energy despite the lulling into submission of Chloe Coyne's Siren-like voice (all of it <br>shades of my favorite album of the 2020s. Then, just as she's got your floating off to sleep (around 6:25) the band <br>comes pounding back with the machine gun blasts of the artillery to finish us off. Genius deception--like the deadly <br>beauty of the great legends of mythology--most of whom were, of course, women. (9.125/10)    <br><br>2. "Ultivatum Cultivation" (5:20) more genius in the palette, structure, and delivery of this one--Chloe Coyne is such a <br>vixen of allure and deceit: the way she can draw one in with her amazing voice despite the ambiguity of her (perhaps) <br>devious meanings hidden in her lyrics. It's just such a clever sound! (9.125/10)<br>  <br>3. "The Weaver" (4:57) a very simple Math Rock weave over (or is it within? or under?) which Chloe declares her <br>unwillingness to participate in the destruction and/or escape from the disintegrating planet. I really enjoy this song: it <br>has a surprising comforting psychedelic-hypnotic effect on me despite its doomer message and having to work really <br>hard to hear the message. (9.125/10)<br><br>4. "Dozer" (6:00) the first song whose setup turns me off a bit (I hate these one-two type of rock drum beats). Chloe <br>and the guitars do their best to quell my aversion--her lyrics about how to personally act when "the sky starts falling <br>down" ("golden" sleep). In the fourth minute the band switches their focus to theatric instrumental soundscaping--<br>which is entertaining in a King Crimson-kind of way--even incorporating quite a long blank space (to imply the silence <br>after the explosion of the "Big One"?)--but then they return to the abrasive Crimsonian palette for the finish before <br>another period of silence ensues--which is soon filled with string quartet work (as if we're on the sinking Titanic!) <br>Conceptually brilliant but not my favorite song. (I do so like a little more charm and marm!) (8.875/10)<br><br>5. "Good For You" (6:18) Chloe's delicate, almost child-like breathy soprano opens this as arpeggiated acoustic guitar <br>chords support her. The main melody in her vocal sounds like a delicate post-apocalyptic version of the previous <br>song's melody while the multi-layers of meaning in the lyrics seem to express the dream-like memory of romantic <br>summer evenings with a loved one who . . . is probably not there and may no longer be available. Very interesting. And <br>intriguing. I love the long, unnecessarily-protracted unchanging guitar outro. (8.875/10)    <br><br>6. "Worn" (3:46) gorgeous air-vocal over interesting undefinable world music hybrid. The intended meaning of the <br>lyrics to this one are beyond the capacity of my puny little language-addled brain. (8.875/10)<br><br>7. "Splatter" (2:49) the punk rock side of plantoid. This one could be about werewolves, vampires, or other night <br>creatures but I don't really know. It sounds like something that fits in with the Twilight movies. (8.75/10)<br><br>8. "Slow Moving" (4:38) slow rolling music befitting a gentle night on the veranda. This one definitely feels like <br>relationship stuff: unresolved negative patterns or of dysfunction that keep repeating despite having tried to deal with <br>them over. The singer is getting tired of the repetition but she appreciates the reset that day time routines afford and, <br>in the end, admits that she's not dead or "empty"--not yet ready to give up--that she's just "slow," needs time to move. <br>Beautiful and brilliant--both musically and lyrically. My favorite song on the album. (9.375/10)<br><br>9. "Daisy Chains" (7:26) an odd song whose lyrics cause me to get stuck on the imagery from the original Frankestein <br>film in which Boris Karloff's monster encounters the little flower-picking girl beside the river/lake. Sorry! But that's how <br>ambiguous the lyrics feel--and how heavy, dark, and noncommittal the music feels. (Moral ambiguity. Just as Mary <br>Wollstonecraft Shelley would have wanted.) The feelings of sadness and horror are revealed in the instrumental outro. <br>(13.25/15)<br><br>Total Time 47:47<br><br>I've been listening to this album since the day it was released (no, not continuously, you silly!) hoping to find distinctive <br>elements to each and every song but the plantoid formula runs deep, becomes predictable; it's all in the lyrics (to <br>which I am often obtuse--unless I work really hard to. I get the sense that, like many of the young (Gen X & Gen Z) <br>(prog) rockers out there, (as well as many of the young hippy-somethings in the 1960s and 1970s), Chloe, Tom, Louis, <br>and Nathan are quite concerned for the urgent fate of this version of the human race. There is so much in this band's <br>music that conjures up kindredness between some of my other favorite 21st Century bands, like iNFiNiEN (Chrissy <br>Loftus), Oiapok (Melanie Gerber), Bent Knee (Courtney Swain), and even A Formal Horse (Hayley McDonnell). It is quite <br>the concession on my part that I've made this kind of effort to find out what Chloe and Nathan are trying to say with <br>the messages of their lyrics: I have no truer testament to my love and interest of a band than this effort.<br><br>B+/4.5 stars; a near-masterpiece of King Crimson-invoking crossover prog that is, in my humble opinion, a bit too <br>dependent upon the lyrical messages than the music or musicianship--especially when compared to their amazing <br>debut album. At the same time I do not consider this a case of "sophomore slumping" just directional shift in focus. I <br>feel strongly that this band has much more wonderful music to give us and they should know that I will always be <br>coming back for more. <br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 15:15:08 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286574</guid></item><item><title>HOOFFOOT Phantom Limb (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 2025)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286562</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/9391/cover_451117242025_r.jpeg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Nickmannion &mdash; Sometimes we are surprised, when our ears are jaded with all things 'modern,' and then something organic and <br>valve-warm turns up. It also references some of the best influences ....yes subjective....and turns them into <br>something very 2025 through a 1975 equalizer if you prefer. I also like my jazz/prog/rock/fusion to be about the <br>whole and not so much a showcase for individual 'look at what I can do/did you just hear that?' These people just <br>ticked that box too.<br><br>Haven't heard the first two efforts so this is my intro to the collective. As I said above, but maybe didn't state clearly <br>enough, I am old school but always open to 'now' bands taking the best of the past somewhere ....you know, <br>'progressing'...but also revel in a band who 'get' what came before, both musically and sound wise, and can flex <br>their muscles within that. Props and all that. So we get 4 long tracks and not a hint of paying out the string to fill the  <br>grooves (old school reference there) or cobbling ideas together to make 'an epic song' . Everything follows, even if <br>some turns are sudden and oblique, and the complementary balance of the players creates the rich <br>soundscape...they must have used old gear/recording facilities.....as that sound cannot be digitally or AI created.<br>I will use one track 'When The Insane Go Marching In' as my example. The touchstones are mid 70's Zappa, <br>Canterbury (pick and mix whomsoever you wish) Nektar, Focus and, scuse my obscure jazz related references, <br>even Dave Holland and Abercrombie/Hammer circa 'Timeless,' without going all ECM. It is sublime and subtle yet <br>serrated and sharp, purposeful without being plagiaristic, organic without being ornate and damn fine and will be a <br>regular for this years playlist. I haven't had it long enough/heard it enough to rate it higher but it is well about the 4 <br>I shall give it. </em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 14:01:01 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286562</guid></item><item><title>GENESIS Wind and Wuthering (Symphonic Prog, 1976)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286557</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1/cover_62415312010.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by A Crimson Mellotron &mdash; Even after the departure of Peter Gabriel, Genesis continued to be one of the most innovative and<br>daring progressive rock bands of the UK, and the two albums released by them in 1976 capture the<br>quartet in a very interesting transitional period. The music of Genesis in the mid-70s is certainly<br>melancholic, quirky and woefully symphonic, with serpentine guitars and sweeping bass riffs,<br>accompanied by the fusion-inspired drumming of Phil Collins. The second of these 1976 albums, 'Wind<br>& Wuthering', was originally released by the end of December, written and recorded soon after its<br>predecessor 'A Trick of the Tail', a record that carried a lot of similarities to the Gabriel-era of<br>the band. 'Wind & Wuthering', on the other hand, is a record where texture, feel and introspection<br>are more prevalent, almost capturing a dreamy and romantic side of Genesis that could eventually be<br>traced back to the earlier days of the art rock pioneers, and to albums like 'Trespass' or 'Nursery<br>Cryme'.<br><br>The sound on this album is warm and pastoral, the interplay between the electric guitars and the<br>keyboards is exceptional all the way through, while the song structures are ostensibly more complex<br>than on 'A Trick of the Tail'. The music is incredibly atmospheric, almost similar to some of the<br>earlier Camel albums, with Genesis composing these mini symphonic suites that are usually defined by<br>two or three very characteristic sections - particularly the first two tracks 'Eleventh Earl of Mar'<br>and 'One for the Vine', which is a moody 10-minute-long exercise in melodic prog. 'All in a Mouse's<br>Night' is another pretty good song appearing on the album, and the same goes for the two-part suite<br>'Unquiet Slumbers', which contains some of the most mesmerizing instrumental sections on 'Wind &<br>Wuthering'. Many listeners enjoy 'Your Own Special Way' as well, but I tend to find this song a<br>little too sorrowful and somewhat solemn. Nevertheless, this is a very fine Genesis album with tons<br>of great music on it, and while it is an overall more assiduous listen (compared to the rest of<br>their catalogue), there is plenty of fabulous symphonic art rock to be explored here. Furthermore,<br>'Wind & Wuthering' is perhaps where we find the roots of what would later become the neo-prog<br>movement, which is quite interesting, too, and makes the album a tad bit more special.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 13:08:29 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286557</guid></item><item><title>THE CLAYPOOL LENNON DELIRIUM The Great Parrot-Ox and The Golden Egg of Empathy (Eclectic Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286544</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/10979/cover_563441342026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by arcane-beautiful &mdash; The Great Parrot-Ox & The Golden Egg Of Empathy by The Lennon Claypool Delirium is the project's first <br>concept album that has some interesting results. Taking their interesting blend of prog and psychedelic rock <br>into experimental territory, it isn't as strong as their first 2 albums, but it is overall an interesting experiment. As <br>always, Les Claypool's classic bass playing is as creative and impressive as always, while Sean Lennon's <br>psychedelic crooning and guitar licks oddly accompany Claypool's bass talents pretty well. If you enjoyed <br>Primus's The Desaturating 7, then you might get a kick out of this, because it is an overall more focused project <br>than that album. I'd give this a mid 7 out of 10. The track I'd recommend is The Golden Egg Of Empathy.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 12:07:40 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286544</guid></item><item><title>BRENDAN PERKINS Trading River Songs (Symphonic Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286522</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/13287/cover_403181642026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by tszirmay &mdash; <br>Its not easy being objective when having to write a review of an artist whose two previous works I simply fell in love <br>with and reviewed glowingly with oodles of praise! It's just that this style of British folk-prog has always resonated <br>with me, and Brendan is the consummate multi-instrumentalist, who can shine from one end of the stage to the <br>other, handling instruments like a battery of polished silverware, eager for a gourmet repast. Both last year's <br>"Stories from the Old Church Lane" and the previous 2024 "Favourite Places" were not only well received but also <br>managed to bowl over quite an army of critics, reviewers and DJs in the process.  Understandably, as it is very easy <br>to answer: incredible melodies, subtle instrumentation, poetic lyrics from Helen Flunder, all within an indelible <br>atmosphere that takes one away into dreamland and a hefty dose of passion, all combine to make this artist a <br>current favourite. Though I may be Canadian, I will not apologize (we have this reputation, you see). <br><br>The opening port of call is  "Rest at the Shoreline", where no time is wasted in setting the musical backdrop, a <br>delicate foundational set-up with his patented confident guitar strokes and a voice that entrances, as the tale is told <br>in most convincing tones. The liquid fretboard eruption is a caress one will likely not dismiss, Brendan's vocal tone <br>soothing and dream-like, 'as the distant gas lamps flicker' and with shuttered eyes, one can direct the movie playing <br>in one's mind. The underlining piano and keyboard orchestration, the bass equally prominent when prompted, and <br>one more fluid guitar stream, for good measure. Seduction incarnate. <br><br>"Banks of the Fleet" maintains the aquatic feel, lest we forget that the source is an island surrounded by empirical <br>oceans and seas,  a hardy people known to explore the boundaries of time and space. Lochs, lakes, rivers, streams <br>and rivulets provide endless continuity and tradition, which certainly comes across in the vivid music. The flowing <br>melodies show no surrender, the floating soloing moments only enhancing the story told.  One has to admire how <br>craftily the variations enter seamlessly, often guided by that up-front bass that , in all honesty, enchanted me from <br>the first day my ears discovered this artist! Simply beautiful. <br><br>The title track leaves the wavering emotion in the piano's delicate fingers, the electric guitar gliding gently above, <br>restraint incarnate. Melancholy, reflection and  introspective expression appear in the pleading voice, asking <br>desperately for answers, as the sweet sounds embalm the soul. This style of music is not laden with complex time <br>signature terminologies that will dazzle the diehard technicians out there but a magnificent grasp of passion, <br>atmosphere and melody that will tempt and seduce the most sensitive ears, every note played having a targeted <br>purpose in the seduction.   <br><br>Dripping with overt 'Britishness', the heroic 10 minute + "Binbrook Skyline" , the intro rekindling memories of <br>Smallcreep's Day, Mike Rutherford's first and surely best solo album, often regarded as one of the hidden jewels in <br>the prog pantheon. The command expressed here is immensely powerful, with massive mellotron-infused choir <br>colorations dominating in the first third, as the shape of things to come begins to tell the story. Brendan calls in his <br>secret weapon once again, as the bustling bass hurtles the pace forward, solidifying both the pace and the direction <br>of this extended piece, never letting go. The fretboards opt for a jangly chop reboot, recalling the choral grandeur , <br>crowned by the  delivery of a slippery axe solo that screeches, bellows and cries with heartfelt emotion. Applause <br>factory.   <br><br>A well-deserved moment of glory appears on "Angels in a Vacuum", the off the charts brilliant acoustic guitar work <br>coming unexpectedly as if a messenger from above, sweeping keyboard orchestrations where 'bells begin to chime', <br>the profoundly impactful lyrics hitting their mark, and that meaty bass elevating the celestial feel. The picking guitar <br>has a clever twang that can only elicit smiles of appreciation, a faultless insertion that speaks volumes of how <br>consummate this musician can be. The acoustic work resumes to finish off the thrill.<br><br>A gorgeous and resolute finale and the shortest track here clocking in with 6 and a half minutes, "Goddess Earth" <br>sets the spotlight of the luxuriant voice and elegant piano, recalling an RPWL ballad that once stirred 'my passion, <br>where there is no pain'. The chorus is gloriously enchanting, crushingly profound and an axe solo drowning in <br>meaning. You cannot afford to miss this ending, as well as the entire album for that matter, surely a 2026 highlight, <br>that will consolidate this artist's reputation even further in the community. A must listen.<br><br>5 raining tunes    <br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 07:02:55 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286522</guid></item><item><title>A.S.T.R.A Il Tempo del Tempio (Rock Progressivo Italiano, 1983)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286521</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/11064/cover_21591611112019_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Finnforest &mdash;  Fun ride without destination? <br><br>This is certainly an interesting instrumental rock album from 1983. A.S.T.R.A. was a short-lived,<br>one-and-done project from Trieste who left one short album in their wake. While placed here in RPI,<br>the band feels unlike most RPI bands and doesn't really match many of the components we typically<br>look for. But let's look at what we do have. With two keyboardists and two guitarists, there is<br>plenty of firepower here for some interesting instrumental forays, and it is the guitarists who grab<br>the limelight most of the time. Rather than the usual stately, organic, or classical RPI influences<br>one would mention, "Il Tempo del Tempio" feels like an interesting mix of early neo-prog (in the<br>rhythm section, particularly) symphonic (keys), and even psych, perhaps (guitars). <br><br>Yet, PA genres aside, I suspect they also embrace more popular musical forms like new wave and what<br>we used to refer to as just plain old art rock. I don't know their background, but I would not be<br>surprised if members of this band had heard artists like Gary Numan, Asia, Kraftwerk, or Ultravox to<br>name but a few, though it's certainly a different vibe without vocals. As others have pointed out,<br>the production is a bit thin, but the bigger problem for me is just a missing depth in the emotional<br>side of the songwriting. This is a pleasant listen and certainly a fun listen at first, but it isn't<br>something that digs in and makes me return to it long term. This album runs along pretty well, a<br>pleasant morning jog, but it never really seems to arrive anywhere particularly memorable. Maybe<br>that's the difference between a good jam and a good song, though I can appreciate both. <br><br>Ah! You know what else this album reminds me of? Parts of this sound quite similar in feel (and<br>production quality) to the 1978 French prog rarity called Skryvania! I know some of you guys will<br>remember that one. Since it had a CD release on Musea, it actually gained a lot more traction than<br>A.S.T.R.A., at least around prog fan sites. I like Skryvania more than A.S.T.R.A., but they're in<br>the same ballpark, I would say. This one is more of a fun rarity for the prog collector types.<br>Another 5/10 album, but this one feels like a round-down in PA rating system. Your mileage may vary.<br><br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 06:37:41 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286521</guid></item><item><title>PETER GABRIEL Peter Gabriel 2 [Aka: Scratch] (Crossover Prog, 1978)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286498</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/686/cover_3501021102008.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Fercandio46 &mdash; Right from the cover, we see a much darker Peter Gabriel, and that's how the album begins, with him singing with <br>that almost punkish edge. In fact, his band sounded spontaneous at times... and at others elaborate, even with <br>hints of Genesis's The Lamb... and that's because the songwriting style he invented on that double album, a farewell <br>to his time with the band, combined those two styles: aggressive and operatic. I think it defines Gabriel of that era <br>well. This second volume is full of subtleties, more so than the first, and D.I.Y. has them, with a modern rhythm, an <br>inverted guitar, and a spirit of immediacy.<br><br>Mother of Violence is another unconventional ballad, with many classical elements carried forward by the piano <br>and something country in the background which gives it a unique texture that makes it timeless. Once again, Robert <br>Fripp on guitars... Larry Fast on synthesizers, Tony Levin on bass, Jerry Marotta on drums, along with others forming <br>a tight-knit band, A Wonderful Day in a One-Way World flirts with reggae and country, but beneath that lies a classic <br>foundation that ultimately makes it epic and doesn't feel out of place. This second volume is much more <br>homogeneous without losing that playful, fresh feel that characterized the earlier volumes, where there was no <br>need to differentiate them with a name... because the music alone did the talking.<br><br>White Shadow has always struck me as the song most indebted to Genesis over the years... its long keyboard intro <br>and Eastern influences, Gabriel's epic vocals soaring from high to low... plus Marotta's Zeppelin-esque drumming. <br>And yet... a touch of country guitar here and there leaves a hint of it floating in the air, as it does throughout the <br>album, and even though I'm not a particular fan of that genre, it doesn't bother me.  One of those great tracks, with <br>a significant solo by Fripp that alone justifies the album. Indigo begins immediately, with solo piano, and it strikes <br>me as a testament to an artist unafraid of different nuances, and that touch he had in his youth of compositional <br>audacity, of boldness, of mixing genres and moods like a collage of tempera paintings, that's how Indigo and all of <br>Scratch, as the second volume was also called, unfold.<br><br>Alternatively, I prefer volume two...others volume three, always singing in this era with feeling, giving the <br>impression that those albums were alive, and that they become alive again every time they are played. Animal <br>Magic, without betraying the essence of the band's music, which already had its own personality even in such a <br>broad mix, plays with more accessible rhythms, almost pop within soul, and with Gabriel singing with the same <br>energy, that synergy suits it well; the textures keep passing, like a funk guitar joining two bridges, ending in a <br>complex result where truly complex compositions can be heard as something simple, fresh and fluid.<br><br>Exposure is another of Fripp and Gabriel's great collaborations, which would appear on this album and on the <br>guitarist's self-titled album. I prefer the ones that appeared on Fripp's album, which are more raw, but this one is <br>equally fabulous, modern...funk, electronica, krautrock. Tony Levin's bass does not disappoint and invents sounds, <br>as much as Gabriel's guitar and voice.<br><br>Flotsam and Jetsam and an irresistible ballad with that country feel again, but sophisticated, with a voice with a <br>glam echo and halfway through it changes...and remains suspended until Perspective begins where the repetitive <br>chorus gives it a lot of vibe, plus the energetic singing and the saxophone plus those rhythm changes that <br>characterize Home Sweet Home, the final track, and all those four volumes so similar and so different at the same <br>time...like children of the same father.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2026 02:27:29 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286498</guid></item><item><title>METAMORFOSI E Fu Il Sesto Giorno (Rock Progressivo Italiano, 1972)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286479</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/241/cover_17316872017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by The Progolyte &mdash; This record is the debut album of the semi-famous Rock Progressivo Italiano act Metamorfosi, and while I <br>think it pales in comparison to their sophomore record, Inferno, this is still an alright album. It still carries <br>that symphonic prog sound that would be found on Inferno, however it's a lot less original and complex. <br>While it isn't that original, the band still gets creative in how they go about playing these songs, and it <br>sometimes also approaches a form of hard rock but is still restrained. Also, much of the music is <br>dominated by vocals instead of being more instrumental, which, while I do sometimes enjoy music with <br>vocals, for the most part, I think it holds the band back a little. The personnel of the band at the time <br>consists of Jimmy Spitaleri on vocals and flute, Luciano Tamburro on guitars, Enrico Olivieri on keyboards <br>and some flute and vocals, Roberto Turbitosi on bass and various vocal sections, and Mario Natali playing <br>the drums. <br><br>The music here, while still good, can be quite lacking at parts. You obviously tell what direction the band <br>was heading towards and that they would make a better effort (that better effort being their masterpiece, <br>Inferno), but here the music still feels restrained and simpler. Most of the tracks are pretty short, being only <br>a few minutes long, but there is one nine-minute-long piece called Crepuscolo, which was really good and <br>had a handful of complex arrangements that sound like they belong in Inferno. Overall this is definitely the <br>best composition on the album, and it is possibly one of Metamorfosi's best tracks. The other songs aren't <br>really interesting. Sure, they are still good, but no more than ok tracks with some interesting music going <br>on in the core of the numbers. Before I move on to the end, I quickly want to add my opinion on the <br>album's cover. It's honestly pretty bad, and it's one of the main reasons I avoided the album for so long. You <br>can hardly tell what's actually going on, and it doesn't make any real impact on me, and even if they were <br>going for a mysterious vibe, it fails to invoke any actual mood in me. <br><br>In conclusion, Metamorfosi will always be remembered for Inferno, and though this album will be <br>overshadowed by it, there is still some stuff in here. This is probably the weakest album by Metamorfosi, as <br>their comeback records were actually quite good. My final rating is a mid 3/5.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 1 May 2026 23:20:36 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286479</guid></item><item><title>THE SOFT MACHINE Thirteen (Canterbury Scene, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286471</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/633/cover_442814112025_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Progfan1958 &mdash; A legendary band, and even though there are no original members left, Soft Machine are still creating highly evocative <br>and interesting music. John Etheridge is a long-timer though, now at 50+ years with the band, and his guitar playing is <br>still at a very high level. Theo Travis covering wind instruments and keyboards is over 10 years into his tenure as well. <br>This new album shows that they still have plenty of musical exploring to do, and I expect in one form or another a <br>group calling itself Soft Machine will continue to do so for many years yet to come.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 1 May 2026 19:52:25 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286471</guid></item><item><title>DEVOID OF THOUGHT Devoid of Thought (Tech/Extreme Prog Metal, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286444</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/13293/cover_45717152026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; Astro-death metal cosmonauts DEVOID OF THOUGHT return five years later for a second jagged journey<br>into the extremities of the metal universe where they forge their unique blend of progressive<br>caustically designed dissonant death metal with touches of doom and atmospheric elegance. Featuring<br>the exact same lineup of LG [Lorenzo Gagliardi] (guitar), AC [Andrea Collaro] (guitar, vocals), MS<br>[Marek Sollami] (bass) and DB [Davide Botturi] (drums), these Italian adventurists deliver an encore<br>presentation of the same style of exquisitely designed disso-death decked out with all the<br>caverncore charisma that fans have come to expect.<br><br>Pretty much adopting a similar approach that the debut album delivered in abundance, this self-<br>titled sophomore unit finds the band blending its intoxicating blend of Ad Nauseam styled<br>atmospheric disso-death with the more refined excursions into psychedelia a la Blood Incantation.<br>Powerful and pummeling like never before, DEVOID OF THOUGHT unleashes five punishing performances<br>that wend and wind in blitzkrieg mode touched by the grace of those wild nods to Timeghoul replete<br>with all the unexpected twists and turns that find a run the gamut of tyrannical schizoid tirades to<br>ethereal escapism that finds the band intricately blending all those fantastic flavors that range<br>from the likes of Incantation, Voivod, Ulcerate and others.<br><br>Highlights include the opening 9 1/2 metal marathon 'Panspermic Bio-Dome' which establishes the band<br>as a major contender for top dog in the crowded modern world of tech deathies vying to be heard with<br>razor-sharp guitar riffs raging into angsty angularity while contrapuntal bass and drum fire firing<br>on all pistons and crafting a turbulent trail of molten metal madness that remains rooted enough<br>within the death metal traditions without totally spiraling out of orbit. While firmly in control of<br>its eerie fusion effects of atmospheric cosmic death metal and the more claustrophobic sounds of the<br>monstrous cavernous deathened drama in play, DEVOID OF THOUGHT finds the four musicians delivering<br>unison destruction while also finding chaotic respites as found in 'Chronos' which offers a bit of<br>free improvisation playtime. <br><br>The album culminates in the 10-minute 'Entheogenic Ritual' which covers the entire spectrum of<br>brutal existential death metal run amok and the more dirging doom metal effects of molasses metal<br>while finding the proper astral ambience to terrorize the soul while the barrage of din pummels the<br>physical senses. It's a natural continuation of 'Outer World Graves' and although the tracks may not<br>be as instantly easy to connect with, DEVOID OF THOUGHT still find the right ingredients in play to<br>deliver the proper dose of demented disso-death that lives up to the high bar set in the mid-2020s.<br>Perhaps this second release sounds a tad more generic than the debut but it's all performed so<br>exquisitely well that i can't really fault it in any way shape or form. Whatever the case, fans of<br>demented deathly chaos meets divinely directed order will find lots to love with this one. </em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 1 May 2026 18:21:26 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286444</guid></item><item><title>NINE DAYS' WONDER Nine Days' Wonder (Crossover Prog, 1971)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286435</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/2730/cover_4852121012012_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by ThisGarbage1147 &mdash;  Even if I wrote two full pages about this album, I could not talk about every section across these four songs. <br>Furthermore, I fear less that I can't talk about this album in its entirety, but that's just because there's so much going <br>on. To quote Sean Trane, "I always felt that it was rather impossible to describe the music succinctly without omitting a <br>facet (or two, even three) of it," and I agree with him wholeheartedly. Just to show how many influences present <br>themselves on this album, I'll put all the bands/musicians referenced by other reviewers here in one place:<br>Captain Beefheart, Frank Zappa (a lot), King Crimson, Soft Machine, Deep Purple, Traffic, Jethro Tull, Tony Iommi, <br>Beardfish, Gentle Giant, Led Zeppelin, Monty Python, Peter Hammill, Van der Graaf Generator, Kraan, Family, the <br>Allman Brothers Band, and Moving Gelatine Plates.<br><br>This is an album you need to hear to believe.<br>	<br>The four songs are "Fermillon: Puppet Dance / Square/Hope? / Morning Spirit / Fermillon Himself," "Moss Had Come," <br>"Apple Tree," and "Drag Dilemma: Monotony 1 / Stomach's Choice / Monotomy 2 / Interlude / Dilemma." <br>Fermillon is the opener and the epic, sprawling over 15 and a half minutes, it's an incredibly dense through-composed <br>work with lots of rock and jazz sections. The part that will stick with you the most, however, is Morning Spirit, a spoken <br>word passage underscored by strange guitar warbling where the phrase "Morning spirits of the morning after all" is <br>said repeatedly in all sorts of different voices, not to mention the line before: "At first he was allowed to touch my <br>bottom / Then I led him to understand that the time for me was unnecessary."<br> <br>Moss Had Come is the shortest song at 3 minutes, and is the closest to being a normal song, with only two distinct <br>styles. The song starts and ends with a rock section, with a folk, Jethro Tull-like section in between. The rock fades out <br>into the folk, and the rock fades back in after the folk with a scream, fully bringing us back to the rock till a trash can <br>ending.<br><br>Apple Tree starts the second side and has the most beautiful moments on the whole album. The first theme has a <br>good rock feel before going straight into a sax solo that is my favorite moment in all music ever. As the solo climaxes, <br>it goes into a jazzy section with the one use of keyboards on the whole record, as the guitar is switched out for piano. <br>After less than a minute, it breaks down to a stripped-down rhythmic interlude before breaking into a rock section, <br>with the piano floating chords in the background. Then the piano drops out for one of the few moments of real <br>improvisation with an extended guitar solo. As the solo ends, a loud, growling riff comes in to go behind vocals, before <br>a final rock section and a refrain of the very first theme ends the song.<br><br>Drag Dilemma is the other epic track on the record, reaching up to nearly 13 minutes in length. The main <br>Dilemma/monotony theme is a great rock section with flute, sax, and vocal theatrics. Stomach's Choice is like the <br>spoken word sections of Fermillon, but with the full band behind the singer. Monotony 2 is like the beginning, but with <br>different lyrics and the introduction of the line "What a drag it must be to be a king." The interlude is truly a break in <br>the action, starting with flute and guitar interplay before the band joins in, then falls away again for more flute and <br>guitar play. Then, bongos introduce the next half of the interlude that has lyrics and a soft rock feel, for the most part. <br>The Interlude really takes up most of the song, with many themes coming and going. Eventually, the song wraps back <br>around to the Dilemma/Monotony theme to end with the "what a drag?" line, ending the song in a climax.<br><br>There truly are no words that can explain how much I love this album. So what are you waiting for! Listen to this true <br>masterpiece of progressive rock!!<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 1 May 2026 13:11:15 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286435</guid></item><item><title>TELEGRAPH Topography of Mind (Psychedelic/Space Rock, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286429</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/10635/cover_2516182122026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by BrufordFreak &mdash; Some excellent Israeli Retro/Neo Prog. The nostalgic music feels as if it came from early 1970s Pink Floyd and Camel. <br><br>1. "Topography of Mind" (11:07) great lush flute-led 12-string guitar NeoProg in the vein of ANTHONY PHILLIPS, CAMEL <br>and IVORY with just a little Klaus Schulze and Jan Akkerman "Tommy"-like fare thrown in there in the second half for <br>good measure--not to mention the KING CRIMSON "I Talk to the Wind" motif explored in the eighth minute before <br>turning back into Camel. The most independent and original concoction on the album--and the one that shows the <br>instrumental skills of the band members the best. (18.5/20)<br><br>2. "Field of Fade Memory" (11:48) who would have ever thought that anyone would ever want to recreate the weird <br>vocals of Camel's Moonmadness (which are, in my opinion, the weakest element of that otherwise wonderful album)? <br>But here they are! In the fifth minute the band moves into a 1-2-3-rest pulsing Tony Banks/GENESIS motif which moves <br>along at a bit of a faster pace until finishing in a guitar solo and synth-and-organ chord at the end of the tenth minute <br>before the bass and finger-picked delay-echoed electric guitar and Richard Mason electric piano space chords take us <br>into some inverted realm of Pink Floyd. Nicely done! (22.375/25)<br><br>3. "Valley of Delirium" (11:35) the dulcet almost-medi]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[val folk tones of flute and ANTHONY PHILLIPS-like picked <br>acoustic guitar open this one with the flute(s) performing in two different octaves as Mellotron-like synth warbles in <br>tremolo-like support. At the very end of the second minute the first movement closes and an arpeggiated electric <br>guitar chord emerges to be joined and supported by bass, drums, and electric piano in a JIMMY WEBB-like motif. <br>Lovely (if simplistic)! At 3:13 a JAN AKKERMAN-like "Love Remembers" solo electric guitar jumps into the lead position <br>as mutliple tracks/layers of an organ become a little more prominent in support. In the sixth minute the vocals <br>reappear and suddenly we're back in King Crimson's "I Talk to the Wind" mixed with The Eagles' Timonty B. Schmit's <br>1979 hit "I Can't Tell You Why." Then, at 7:45, the organ and rolling bass falls into a PINK FLOYD "Dogs"-like motif which <br>is then made more BOSTON- (and NEKTAR-) like with organ and guitar power chords. This is so ELOY! It's a great send <br>up but lacks any true originality except for the way they have melded all of these disparately-sourced riffs and motifs <br>together. (17.75/20)<br><br>4. "Somewhere Along These Lines" (10:51) a gentle, spacious full-on PINK FLOYD motif opens this one, filling our Atom <br>Hearts with the Dark Side of the Moon and Wishing You Were Here for a good six minutes before segueing into some <br>Tales of the Mystery of ALAN PARSONS's Imagination for a couple of minutes before ending in some Animals territory. <br>What a great homage! (18/20)<br><br>Total Time 45:21<br><br>I like the justification that the band uses for so much cut-and-paste borrowing of classic/iconic riffs and motifs from <br>the Masters of the 1970s: "Topography Of Mind reflects on memory - tracing both the inner terrain and physical places <br>that echo within it." At the same time, I do have to admit to liking the memories these "tribute" songs evoke within me.<br><br>A-/4.5 stars; a near-masterpiece of retro prog ear candy that, though cleverly-crafted and performed to perfection, I <br>feel compelled to down-grade a bit for its borrowing of so many (virtually all of its) melody and sound palette ideas. If <br>you like your prog to sound like the past masters, you will LOVE this!<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 1 May 2026 12:16:04 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286429</guid></item><item><title>MAGENTA Tarot (Neo-Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286424</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/450/cover_53379622026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by VTr Storm &mdash; After a considerable amount of time since "Masters of Illusion", Magenta finally reappears with "Tarot". A <br>strong return built around a concept that clearly shows the desire to create something beyond just a handful <br>of loose songs. As the name suggests, the album is inspired by the archetypes of tarot cards, unfolding almost <br>like a journey that is part symbolic and part introspective, where each track works as a chapter of something <br>bigger, not exactly the kind of album that reveals itself right away.<br><br>Musically, as usual, you can feel a stronger leaning toward the symphonic side. The arrangements come across <br>as broader, more open and at times almost cinematic. There is a clear care in how the atmosphere is built, <br>with those details that sometimes go unnoticed in a distracted listen, but make all the difference when you <br>really let yourself get carried away. Even so, it is clear the band does not let go of what has always been its <br>strong point, that is, clear and well resolved melodies that are also memorable.<br><br>"Tarot" is an album where the idea is to approach everything as a sequence of main chapters connected by <br>small interludes that help give flow to the experience. The fact is it is not just a collection of tracks, it is also a <br>path designed with a well defined beginning, middle and end, making it an extremely well written album with <br>ideas that unfold calmly within an execution that follows this precision.<br><br>The production also deserves attention, as it is clean, detailed and full of layers that gradually reveal <br>themselves as if there were always something new to notice with each listen. In addition, the themes explored <br>here have an appeal that goes beyond the immediate, after all, there is something compelling in this <br>conceptual construction and in the way symbols are turned into music that keeps the interest alive from <br>beginning to end. In the end, "Tarot" not only reaffirms Magenta's identity, but also reinforces the strong name <br>it carries within the contemporary rock scene</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 1 May 2026 11:50:42 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3286424</guid></item> 

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