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<item><title>CRIPPLED BLACK PHOENIX The Wolf Changes Its Fur But Not Its Nature (Psychedelic/Space Rock, 2024)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287761</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/5084/cover_541107112024_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Alexander6061 &mdash;  I was completely stunned by this psychodelic rock record, I originally only heard the album because well look <br>at that awesome cover and name, however I enjoyed the hell outta this album, the heavy prog elements <br>combined with some great rifts and eerie psychodelic melodies make this album a great unique experience, <br>the highlight of said eerie melodies being the song "goodnight europe, part II" that also have great vocal work <br>by Belinda Kordic whose singing imo MAKES the song into my favorote of the album. Other standouts include <br>song for the unloved who starts as a very simple acoustic guitar melody and great raw vocals and slowly <br>develops into a heavy percussion and just escalates and escalates to a beautifull instrumental.<br><br><br>Must listen album imo</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2026 13:32:30 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287761</guid></item><item><title>KING CRIMSON The Power To Believe (Eclectic Prog, 2003)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287749</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/191/cover_42172317112009.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by A Crimson Mellotron &mdash; 'The Power to Believe' is undeniably one of the most significant studio releases from King Crimson,<br>and arguably their best work since 'Discipline'. The band's thirteenth studio album is both a<br>technically aggressive and disarmingly atmospheric collection that is heavily informed by the<br>predominant at the time progressive metal and post-industrial sound, as found within the output of<br>Tool, Nine Inch Nails, and even Ministry. Taking up the dense but fractured compositional nature of<br>'The ConstruKction of Light', this 2003 release is a more cohesive, driven and experimental-leaning<br>collection that features several extended ambient sections as well, which have almost always been<br>present in Crimson's more contemporary music. The use of electronic drums is quite interesting, too,<br>as we hear an extended emphasis on electronic and industrial sounds all over this album, blending in<br>swiftly with the angular riffs and occasional dissonance in the guitar work of Fripp and Belew.<br><br>In any case, what makes 'The Power to Believe' so special is the (perpetual) reinvention of the<br>Crimson sound and the overtly futuristic edge within the music. There is hardly anything in common<br>between this band and the one that had recorded the dream-like psychedelic opuses of the early 70s,<br>and this is to me absolutely brilliant. As for the album itself, about half of it is instrumental,<br>which is not uncommon for Crimson. There is an aggressive anxiety that penetrates the utter<br>complexity of the songs here, presenting a rather visionary approach to songwriting; one that has<br>certainly inspired the next generations of avant-garde and experimental bands. Stunning tracks like<br>'Elektrik' and 'Level Five', both of which would become staples of the band's live performances<br>during that time, counterbalance the strikingly atmospheric and lyrically charged numbers like 'Eyes<br>Wide Open' and the multi-part suite 'The Power to Believe'. Then the zany and surrealist tracks<br>'Happy With What You Have to be Happy With' and 'Facts of Life' work as brilliant references to the<br>band's 90s material, always with that Zappa-esque acuteness.<br><br>The entire album is a visionary exercise in composition, technical playing and existential<br>reflection, representing one of the monumental 21st century releases by King Crimson - a mandatory,<br>essential listen by all means.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2026 12:22:14 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287749</guid></item><item><title>RPWL Tales from Outer Space (Neo-Prog, 2019)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287738</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/298/cover_5141112832019_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by ArturZientalski &mdash; RPWL is a decent, average band playing music bordering on rock, classified as a semblance of progressive music. They've <br>never been good, or at best average ? but not every band can be good :) Usually, bands are average or weak. The art of <br>musicianship is a very difficult one, and few can master it. In my opinion, this is the band's best studio album, and <br>moreover, their most progressive and cohesive, while also being good and charming. Here, the band has reached their <br>creative peak and finally recorded something worthy of attention :) A 4 rating may be overstated, but it's a good album <br>and deserves appreciation :)</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2026 09:51:13 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287738</guid></item><item><title>FRANK ZAPPA Sheik Yerbouti (RIO/Avant-Prog, 1979)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287723</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1023/cover_13251562016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by BrufordFreak &mdash; Released on March 3, 1979. It was the first album released on his own Zappa Records label (after leaving Warner <br>Bros).<br><br>1. "I Have Been in You" [Live *] (3:33) styled after 1950s-1960s pop music. (8.75/10)<br>2. "Flakes" [Live *] (6:41) styled after an older (late 60s) kind of music. I enjoyed the Bob Dylan imitation vocal <br>performance as well as the "I am a moron ... " passage and the Todd Rundgren-like instrumental finish. (8.75/10)<br>3. "Broken Hearts Are for Assholes" [Live *] (3:42) sounds so much like Todd Rundgren at his most rowdy-mischevious. <br>The music concr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[te element (thanks to Terry Bozzio) are . . . entertaining. (8.75/10)<br>4. "I'm So Cute [Live - soundcheck *] (3:09) another parody (Why didn't they get Frank to write for Saturday Night <br>Live?!) drawing from acts like Little Richard and Meat Loaf. (8.667/10)<br>5. "Jones Crusher" [Live $] (2:49) a blues rocker that feels to me like anything and everything done by Alvin Lee, The <br>Tubes, Jimmy Vaughan, Rory Gallagher, or even the Rolling Stones. (8.75/10)<br>6. "What Ever Happened to All the Fun in the World" (0:33) musique concr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[te ]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ la Loony Toons cartoons-gone-wild. <br>7. "Rat Tomago" [Live %] (5:15) guitar soloing over organ, bass and drums. Sounds like Frank working out something <br>on his guitar that he'll use for future polished songs. It's just an excerpt from a much longer jam. He's a fine guitarist <br>but not every solo by even the greatest guitarists are perfect or hair-tingling. (8.75/10)<br>8. "Wait a Minute" (0:33) Terry and Patrick caught in conversation over music playing in the background.<br>9. "Bobby Brown Goes Down" [Live *] (2:49) great misogynistic fodder for pimply teenage boys of the privileged <br>classes. (8.667/10)<br>10. "Rubber Shirt" (2:45) excerpts of some (probably accidental) Weather Report imitation jam between Patrick and <br>Terry that clicked for a bit. (4.5/5)<br>11. "The Sheik Yerbouti Tango" [Live %] (3:56) organ and drums with Frank doing some more explorative soloing over <br>the top. He's getting ready for the "Shut Up and Play Your Guitar" era of his career--taking advantage of the rising <br>notoriety and acclaim for his guitar playing skills. (8.667/10)<br>12. "Baby Snakes" [Live *] (1:50) more weird entertainment for teenage boys. (4.25/5)<br>13. "Tryin' to Grow a Chin" [Live *] (3:31) a song that sounds like an Alice Bowie (Cheech and Chong) parody of Meat <br>Loaf's Bat Out of Hell rock opera. (8.6667/10)<br>14. "City of Tiny Lites" [Live *] (5:32) on this one vocalist Adrian Belew sounds like an over-the-top cross between Todd <br>Rundgren and Grand Funk's Don Brewer. Then Frank takes over with a solo using a new and awesomely-effected <br>guitar tone. The background layers of guitars could be him or Adrian or both. A lyric that is lost on me while the music <br>is among the most interesting (and most developed) on the album. (8.875/10)<br>15. "Dancin' Fool" [Live *] (3:43) a popular song of Frank's for its satirical light cast upon the Disco social-cultural <br>phenomenon. Musically, I find this a rather poor song--until the finish. (8.667/10)<br>16. "Jewish Princess" [Live $] (3:16) another snide social commentary built over some anachronistic music from the <br>1950s-60s. The xylophone and kazoo are the best parts. (8.667/10)<br>17. "Wild Love" [Live *] (4:09) a lyrics-based parody of the Hollywood world of Elvis et al. built over some cinematic film <br>music that is highlighted by Ed Mann's xylophone work and the Latin motifs used during the instrumental sections--<br>and then it just ends! Weird. (8.75/10)<br>18. "Yo' Mama" [Live *] (12:36) great opening palette and mood set that is spoiled when Frank and his musique <br>concr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[te crew of voice theater performers enters and then a two-chord synth & organ motif takes over to allow for <br>some aggressive and fairly-typical Zappa guitar soloing to play for nearly eight minutes before returning to the <br>opening motif for more of Frank's social commentary and "life lessons." The full band doing what it did. If this was an <br>example of the 1978 Frank Zappa concert experience (juiced up by studio manipulation) then I don't think I missed <br>very much. (22.25/25)<br><br>* Recorded at the Odeon Hammersmith, London , January 1978<br>$ Recorded at the Palladium, NYC , October 1977<br>% Recorded Live at the Deutschland Halle, Berlin , February 1978<br><br>Total Time 70:22<br><br>Apparently this album was mostly created from songs that were recorded in live stage concert performances (one <br>reviewer goes so far as to title his review as "The complete Zappa studio concert experience!"). It is quite tongue-in-<br>cheek humorous with many send-ups of older styles and artists. What would this album be without Terry Bozzio and <br>Patrick O'Hearn? (After the way Frank cut everybody in this band's line-up at the end of their European tour--leaving <br>several band members stranded on The Continent--perhaps this was meant as a backhanded tribute to the core <br>members--perhaps it was meant as mean-spirited slap in the face by their former boss.)<br><br>A 3.5 to four star musical listening experience that makes me feel that familiar "should have been there" feeling due to <br>the low impact of the album due to its non-visual, group-energy lack. If you want satirical entertainment or solid <br>samples of Zappa guitar playing (in the Shut Up and Play Your Guitar vein) this might be your jam. If you seek polish <br>and earnest decorum you should probably keep looking elsewhere.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2026 09:01:34 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287723</guid></item><item><title>QU&#65533;SAR Qu&#65533;sar (Symphonic Prog, 2023)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287722</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/12962/cover_2640123042025_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by XixoTheRock &mdash; It's been nearly two years since Quasar's debut (self titled) album, and it still rocks! While the band has not <br>released a new record, they are still relatively active live and their gigs do not disappoint, they certainly are a set <br>of very talented musicians and have a great dynamic together.<br><br>Their album is an interesting journey, it feels sort of a child between camel and yes, the first track "Ser eterno" <br>(Eternal being) being an epic length track divided into section, has a frightening resemblance to close to the edge, <br>which means, very VERY high quality composition, the lyrics and vocals are not all that great but the album is <br>mainly instrumental, the musicianship is great and so are the compositions, which are white melodic, emotional <br>and complex, the track "C]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[digo quasar" (Quasar code) replicating Rush's idea on YYZ of using Morse code to <br>create music and rhythm, the album borrows a lot from classic symphonic prog, and it's very synth heavy, with its <br>best sections being those led by the synthesiser.<br><br>It also has small jazz fusion sections.<br><br>The production is great, the audio is clear and most instruments (the bass not so much) can be heard and <br>appreciated, it makes the album even more enjoyable.<br><br>Now comes the negative aspect, if the compositions are great, the production is clear and musicianship is strong, <br>why is this album not a 5/5? It doesn't feel like it has a big identity of its own, it's so similar to other prog bands, <br>particularly yes, that it can feel comfortable at times, it really doesn't add new ideas and experimentation into the <br>genre, feeling more like a modern homage to classic prog, the acoustic sections are also quite slow, uninspired <br>and almost copied from Steve Howe's style, not adding much that hasn't already been done, even the cover art <br>mimics that of Yes, with the band logo using almost the exact same typography as them, it's not all that special, <br>and although it will be enjoyed by classic prog fans (I certainly do enjoy it!), it's not a new, revolutionary proposal <br>to prog, and specially latin american prog, enjoyable album, but with very little identity of its own.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2026 08:58:08 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287722</guid></item><item><title>SCOPE Scope I (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 1974)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287712</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1662/cover_481617752026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; Existing for a five year period from 1971 to 1976, the Dutch band SCOPE in many ways exemplified the<br>classic jazz fusion act of the 1970s drawing its influences from the usual energetic styled suspects<br>including Mahavishnu Orchestra, Return To Forever and Passport only blending its all instrumental<br>improvisational jazz with elements of progressive rock. Formed in Zwolle by keyboardist / flautist<br>Rick Elings and drummer Henk Zomer who stuck together after playing in their previous jazz rock act<br>Strange Power, the duo solicited the services of guitarist Rens Nieuwland and bassist Erik Raayman<br>who together released two rather rare albums in the mid-70s. This debut self-titled release emerged<br>in 1974 with the sophomore unit simply titled "Scope II" in the following year. A third effort would<br>eventually compile all the unpublished material in 2010.<br><br>This first SCOPE release is the more complex and uncompromising of the two with the second offering<br>more funk infused fusion while this debut focused more on technical wizardry that found the four<br>musicians playing tight knit fusion frenzies at quickened tempos laced with dizzying hairpin turns<br>and energetic soloing performances. One of the guitar driven fusion outfits, SCOPE was all about the<br>rock aspects as it was about dishing out the serious jazz chops. While the compositional flair was<br>set to jazz mode, the energetic delivery system was as feisty as the Mahavishnus and the additional<br>flute sounds added contemporary prog rock and folk flavors. Like many European acts, this side of<br>the pond had its own distinct vibe with sounds reflecting the developing of bands like Isotope and<br>Canterbury flavors from the likes of Soft Machine and others.<br><br>The album was recorded in Hamburg and in the process latched onto some of neighboring Germany's<br>hottest fusion acts of the day right at the peak of the jazz fusion frenzy and although to the<br>uninitiated SCOPE's debut may sound a bit too generic for its own good, the band actually fortified<br>its sonic wake with distinct virtuosic techniques which offered its own unique synchronicities<br>tucked away in the rather traditional approach. While the second album featured more funk-infused<br>compositions, the debut wasn't devoid of such ingredients especially on select tracks such<br>as"Kayakokolishi" which provided some merciful relief from the incessant technically challenging<br>high brow fusion-fest moves that the band was more than adept at dishing out. Every musician was a<br>seasoned performer and like many such bands sounded as if it had existed for years of daily practice<br>before finally laying down its ideas onto recordings.<br><br>It wouldn't be a complete fusion album without some serious saxophone squawking and guest performer<br>Jochen Petersen stepped in to offer those supplemental sounds. While i wouldn't call SCOPE's debut<br>the most creative fusion album to emerge from the era as that distinction surely must apply to Frank<br>Zappa, the Mahavishnus, Return To Forever or the likes of Herbie Hancock and Miles Davis, what SCOPE<br>did deliver is an addictive aural assault of top level European fusion firing on all pistons.<br>Stocked with plenty of mood shifts, tempo changes, time signature excess and moments of reflective<br>contemplation, SCOPE was a master of its trade leaving no room for filler or second rate material.<br>Rendered obscure throughout the decades simply due to the glut of excellent similarly minded bands<br>that existed simultaneously, SCOPE certainly deserves all due respect and resurrection from the<br>bottom of the pile and luckily has found a proper reissue on the Sireena label in 2020 on CD with<br>bonus tracks. Not a dull moment on this one for fusion fans.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2026 08:16:15 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287712</guid></item><item><title>SAGA To Whom It Concerns (Symphonic Prog, 1979)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287711</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/12206/cover_34621262022_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; SAGA is a progressive rock from Canada. What? Oops, wrong one. SAGA was a psychedelic prog band from<br>Sweden in the 70s. Not the one? Try again. SAGA was a progressive rock act from 1970s Portugal?<br>Still wrong? Geez! Yeah there have been literally dozens of bands with this name throughout the<br>decades but for some reason an easy go to moniker for prog bands. Well here's yet one more SAGA only<br>this was came from the Netherlands formed in Amsterdam in 1975 and disbanded in 1983 releasing its<br>sole album TO WHOM IT CONCERNS in 1979. Apparently oblivious to the more famous Canadian act, this<br>obscure band was actually very prescient in prognosticating the neo-prog 80s by advancing the<br>symphonic prog sensibilities of Genesis' early works like "Foxtrot" and "Selling England By The<br>Pound" a few years before bands like Marillion and IQ even came into existence. <br><br>This band featured a bunch of unknown musicians including guitarist Jos Wernars, bassist Ernest<br>Wernars (apparently brothers), keyboardist Guido Goebertus, drummer Alex Eeken and lead vocalist /<br>percussionist Paul van Velzen. This rarity appeared on the UAP label and has been pretty much<br>forgotten at least until the Paisley label finally remastered it on a CD format but even in the<br>modern prog revival turning of every stone, this SAGA remains relatively off the radar of even<br>symphonic prog stalwarts looking for the next fix. The wonderful thing is that despite its obvious<br>Genesis worship, TO WHOM IT CONCERNS is surprisingly a very intricately and beautifully designed<br>album that may have been a fish out of water in the relatively prog free year of 1979 but as a<br>revival / retro act SAGA really did its homework by crafting five effective tracks that tracked all<br>the expected Genesis-isms in a very convincing way and not as clone-like as perhaps Starcastle was<br>to Yes.<br><br>As time has gone by though and intrepid prog sleuths have been sniffing out every possible trace of<br>influence for modern sounds that have become common place, there's no argument that SAGA served as a<br>proto-neo prog act that tackled the "Foxtrot" style of the Genesis classic and forged it ahead a few<br>notches as a veritable fluffer for the likes of Marillion, Twelfth Night, Pallas and the other early<br>British neo-proggers to take notice of. Of course SAGA was not the only one with Germany's Anyone's<br>Daughter and the Florida based Babylon also taking the same approach. SAGA was without doubt the<br>earliest of the neo-groups to emerge in the Netherlands predating the early neo-prog Arkus which<br>wouldn't release an album until 1981. The music is highly symphonic and complex as one would expect<br>with lots of acoustic guitar parts and varying motifs that engage in stylistic shifts and<br>atmospheric cadences that are based in a complex melodic tapestry of contrapuntal effects.<br><br>While the first two tracks are on the shorter side of things, the final three tracks all hover<br>around the 10-minute mark with lush synthesizer layers courtesy of the Hammond A3 organ. Piano, ARP-<br>Axe and mellotrons. Van Velzen also stands out as a unique vocalist in this style as he sounds<br>nothing like either Peter Gabriel or the neo-prog vocalists that followed therefore SAGA is a unique<br>entry in the transition from Genesis inspired symphonic prog to the 80s neo-prog scene. I know it's<br>sacrilegious to say this but "Nursery Cryme" and "Foxtrot" have never really floated my boat and i<br>have never really been able to detect exactly why which makes it odd that i actually prefer Genesis<br>inspired bands like Babylon and this SAGA better than those albums themselves! While many hardcore<br>Genesis fans will find this too close to the parent tree but quite pleasing for those of us who<br>aren't so staunchly rigid about such things, i find SAGA's one and only album to be much more<br>stimulating than Genesis in many ways as SAGA is more daring and experimental and seems to gel in a<br>way that early Genesis didn't. This one is totally worthy of rediscovery and a beauty of a<br>transitional album from the 70s to the 80s.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2026 08:15:57 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287711</guid></item><item><title>BRAINBOX Brainbox (Proto-Prog, 1969)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287710</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/3372/cover_444083152018_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; Best known as the launching pad for future Focus members guitarist Jan Akkerman and drummer Pierre<br>van Der Linden (and perhaps the cool album cover art that really evoked the zeitgeist of the late<br>60s), the Amsterdam based BRAINBOX was an influential progressive blues rock band that mixed the<br>blues rock sensibilities of bands like John Mayall's Bluesbreakers with folk music and the<br>psychedelic rock styles that dominated the latter half of the 1960s. Although the band was active<br>from 1968 to 1972, the only album anybody really remembers is this self-titled debut that appeared<br>in October 1969 at the dawn of the progressive era and one of the lesser acts that existed when King<br>Crimson, High Tide and others were ushering in the more adventurous progressive rock era. <br><br>Cited as one of those key proto-prog releases, BRAINBOX sounded a bit like The Who with vocalist<br>Kazmir Lux sounding a bit like Roger Daltry except the band had one foot in the psychedelic 60s and<br>another slightly in the future world of prog especially with the 17-minute closer "Sea Of Delight" a<br>sprawling psychedelic jamming session that offered a lot of room for exploration of extended tones,<br>textures and meandering musical motifs. Another viable comparison might be The Groundhogs with its<br>blues based approach only with progressive liberties thrown in for good measure. The band was a<br>foursome with the final member Andr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ Reijnen filling the bass slot. The album was a hit in the<br>Netherlands with three singles: "Down Man," "Sea Of Delight" and "Summertime" all cracking the Top<br>30 on the Dutch charts.<br><br>While the band tailored a very distinguished sound and stood out as competent as any other with a<br>nice array of diverse tracks, the BRAINBOX debut is a bit of a mixed bag though. The album opens<br>with the strongest track on board, the instantly catchy and powerful "Dark Rose" is one of the only<br>originals to appear leaving the majority of the album cover versions of songs ranging from Simon &<br>Garfunkel's "Scarborough Fair" to the George Gershwin "Summertime" from the opera "Porgy & Bess."<br>"Dark Rose" gives a glimpse of the future Focus sounds as it includes guest flautist Tom Barlage.<br>Lesser known cover songs include Jimmy Reed's "Baby, What You Want Me To Do" and Lowell Fulson's<br>"Sinner's Player" which emphasize more of a pure blues rock tribute to traditional blues masters.<br>Reissues have found even more of these blues covers featured as bonus tracks.<br><br>Both Akkerman and Van Der Linden left shortly after the release of this album and launched Focus<br>which would become one of the top Dutch progressive acts of the era. Despite their departure<br>BRAINBOX remained popular in the Netherlands despite a series of musicians coming and going. As for<br>this release it's not as bad as some reviews would leave you to believe. It's a solid release of<br>above average blues rock with early prog touches. Even the sprawling jam session of "Sea Of Delight"<br>is pretty good despite the ill-fated drum solo that could've been edited out. While BRAINBOX showed<br>few signs of giving birth to Focus on this debut release, it stands as a competent slice of blues<br>rock in its own right and like Vanilla Fudge did a rather remarkable job in owning the cover songs<br>presented. The weakest aspects for my ears are the more faithful blues covers as i would have loved<br>to hear a whole album similar to the opener "Dark Rose" which reminds me of what the band Faces with<br>Rod Stewart would sound like. As it is, it's a strong enough album if not the best the era had to<br>offer.<br><br>3.5 rounded down<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2026 08:15:31 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287710</guid></item><item><title>FRANK ZAPPA Sleep Dirt (RIO/Avant-Prog, 1979)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287707</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1023/cover_552161762016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by BrufordFreak &mdash; The end of Frank's association with Warner Bros. Records, this was officially released on January 19, 1979, by the <br>Warner subsidiary, DiscReet Records.<br><br>1. "Filthy Habits" (7:33) opening with a very interesting sound palette: one instrument that sounds like a Middle <br>Eastern nose flute (probably one of Frank's new effects finds for his guitar), it retains the slight Arabian flavor even <br>when the palette congeals behind Frank's lead guitar with bass, Terry Bozzio's drums and some unmistakeable <br>keyboard sounds that are mysteriously uncredited. A very cool, almost Crimsonian, though it reminds me more of the <br>Chicago-based Zeuhl band GA'AN with the addition of an adventurous guitarist playing over the top. I have to admit: <br>not being much of a fan of Frank Zappa music I was not expecting such a cool song! Maybe what the others have been <br>saying: that he got better more serious, more focused on his guitar playing, as his career progressed, is true! <br>(14.25/15)<br><br>2. "Flambay" (4:54) George Duke's barrel hall-styled piano opens this one before Patrick O'Hearn's double bass, Ruth <br>Underwood's Gallic xylophone, and Chester Thompson's lounge-style Jazz drumming fill the sonosphere with a <br>bombastic music that feels as if it would/could have accompanied the public screening of a German silent movie back <br>in the 1920s. It seems so serious that it must be meant to be taken as over-the-top tongue-in-cheek fun. (9.125/10)<br><br>3. "Spider of Destiny" (2:33) using the same line-up and instruments as the previous song, this is another theme, style, <br>and palette from an era gone by: this one kind of in the vein of a soundtrack piece for a Sergio Leone film. It starts out <br>quite formal and processional with lots of stops and gos before Frank's fuzz guitar takes over the leadership role. But, <br>in the end, it's just an ]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[tude, filler for contractual obligations. (4.5/5)<br><br>4. "Regyptian Strut" (4:13) more excessive bombast that was probably inspired by an iconic older film like The Ten <br>Commandments where Yule Brynner plays the Egyptian Pharoah. It's good but, again, feels so over-the-top "formal" <br>that it must be meant as a tongue-in-cheek slap back to Warner Bros. (8.875/10)<br><br>5. "Time Is Money" (2:48) lesson learned. A song that sounds very German, very authoritarian--and very concise. <br>(Another ]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[tude.) (4.5/5)<br><br>6. "Sleep Dirt" (3:21) a bluesy acoustic guitar duet between Frank and James "Bird Legs" Youman. De rigueur for the <br>times (but totally unncecessary). (8.75/10)<br><br>7. "The Ocean Is the Ultimate Solution" (13:18) a Jazz-Rock jam between Frank's guitars (effected acoustic for the first <br>half and electric), Terry Bozzio's drums, and Patrick O'Hearn's electric bass. It's a little scattered, often feeling <br>directionless (or, in actual fact, pointless). The highway-speed section launching at 5:20 has obviously been edited in as <br>we suddenly find Patrick playing a double bass with quite a little aggression as Terry tries to keep up and Frank fades <br>into support and background with his acoustic guitar. In the eighth minute Frank pops up with an electric guitar whose <br>tone sounds quite a bit like Robert Fripp's at this time. Terry's drums are little flat and rudimentary for the seventh <br>and eighth minutes but come to life a bit after that as Frank and Patrick continue to fly around the necks of their <br>respective axes. It's by no means my favorite Frank Zappa song but it is interesting to hear Frank give himself to such a <br>free-form improvisation-laden jam. If you had to twist my arm for an opinion, I'd say that Patrick O'Hearn's <br>performance here (on both acoustic and electric basses) is the most impressive of the three as neither Frank or Terry <br>feel particularly inspired or connected: more rote and mechanical. (26.5/30)<br><br>Total Time: 38:39<br><br>A-/4.5 stars; a near-masterpiece of contract-completing musical farce and free-form jamming; it was probably <br>performed, recorded, mastered, and mixed all in one day.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2026 07:45:38 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287707</guid></item><item><title>ARGOS Doctor Wilde's Twilight Adventure (Neo-Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287705</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/4316/cover_03692812026_r.jpeg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Rysiek P. &mdash;  This album is like a theatrical tale of science, fantasy, and a certain enigmatic figure. Each track is a chapter <br>telling a story, one based on the life of that figure, and one that reaches beyond the facts, beyond the real and the <br>"mundane," toward a fantastical vision steeped in the history of ancient Ireland with its folklore, fairy tales, and the <br>uncanny. It tells the story of a man who is, on the one hand, excessively rational, yet believes that the legends and <br>myths of Ireland are not entirely fairy tales.<br> But first, let's introduce the "heroes" of this theatrical production. Here is the protagonist ? the archetype for <br>the stories sung on this album - Dr. William Wilde, MD (incidentally, father of Oscar Wilde). He was a real person. An <br>Irish otolaryngologist and author of significant works in medicine, archaeology, and folklore, particularly concerning <br>his native Ireland. As a physician, he ran his own hospital, St. Mark's Eye and Ear Hospital, in Dublin, and was <br>appointed Chief Ophthalmologist to Queen Victoria. At the height of his fame, he was accused of raping one of his <br>patients. After losing the case, he withdrew from public and professional life and moved to the west of Ireland, to <br>County Galway, where he built a house, Moytura, overlooking Lough Corrib in Connemara. In addition to his <br>scholarship, Wilde was one of the greatest scholars of Irish folklore, and his life (full of paradoxes) led him to <br>advocate evidence-based medicine. On the other hand, in his works on mythology, he advocated folk methods. He <br>was torn between common sense and empirically proven hospital practices and his belief in mythological events, <br>such as the Battle of Moytura in 3303 BCE. It was this split between the two sides of his personality that became the <br>starting point for the creation of Argos' latest album, "Doctor Wilde's Twilight Adventure." This split between what is <br>real, tangible, and what is romantic, Celtic mythological - what we would probably today call a hobby that goes <br>beyond mere interest and enthusiasm, entering the realm of faith in what the hobby reveals. Moreover, the new <br>album is also a story about Wilde's complicated fate: work, accusation of rape against a patient, withdrawal from <br>(whatever one may call) a rather riotous life.<br> Time for hero number two. This is the legendary Northern Irish prog-rock band FRUUPP, which existed from <br>1971 to 1976 and released four studio albums and two live albums. The band's musical style is described as follows: <br>"(...) FRUUPP demonstrates great compositional maturity, fusing diverse styles and presenting a wealth of <br>instruments and a shifting atmosphere: classical with oboe, folk with acoustic guitars, and symphonic with the <br>driving interplay of electric guitar and organ." It was this band and its unrealized 1976 plan to create an album <br>about Dr. Wilde that became the impetus for the Argos album. It should be noted here that the title of this <br>announced FRUUP album was exactly the same as the title of an Argos album. Furthermore, this continuation and <br>the use of the same title were fully supported by the surviving members of FRUUPP - Vincent McCusker, Stephen <br>Houston, and Martin Foye. The entire album was dedicated to Peter Farrelly and John Mason - deceased members <br>of the band.<br>     Now for hero number three. Robert Cochrane, born Roy Bowers, is an English occultist and founder of the <br>Wiccan witchcraft tradition known as the Clan of Tubal Cain. He is also the author of poems about Dr. William Wilde. <br>His work served as the basis for the Argos' lyrics.<br> Time for music...? Absolutely, because this time we've got an incredibly refined album, meticulously prepared, <br>arranged, and recorded. We've got an album that doesn't tempt, doesn't evoke any special musical mix. We've got <br>eight incredibly sublime tracks that should delight with their rich instrumentation, the perfect blend of vocal lines <br>and melodies, and captivate those seeking a wildly intelligently crafted album straddling progressive rock, art rock, <br>and something I'd dare call theatrical-atmospheric rock. I'll add a touch of delicate jazz-rock to these descriptions. <br>We've got another album that could easily become one of the most important albums of 2026.<br> Argos is no newcomer to the crossover progressive rock scene. They have released seven full-length albums, <br>the first of which ("Argos") was released in 2009, and the last ("Halfway Between Heaven And Mirth") in 2024. The <br>shortest description of the band's music is: "(...) Argos explores a musical landscape heavily influenced by vintage <br>symphonic progressive rock; with leanings towards folk, jazz, and pop ? with contemporary musical details as the <br>last but vital ingredient." And on their latest album, all of this and more can be heard intensified. <br> Story No. 1 - " Here's a man in the prime of life / Seeking progress in so many ways / A doctor, starngely <br>starnge / His fortune's soon to change"<br> The first track, "A Doctor Strangely Strange," begins with such an unusual, rock-like quality. It's full of <br>interwoven guitar chords, which, along with unconventional instruments like violin, create an unfolding carpet of <br>sounds bordering on light jazz improvisation. There's a chorus that would be a credit to an indie-rock band. And an <br>incredible-sounding jazz improvisation, which, combined with the "Talking Head" vocals, gives the track a multi-<br>dimensional, interspersed style.<br> Story No. 2 - " The stars are ghosts, the moon a lie / And still the weaves continue by / In tides of grief, I <br>disappear / A silent drift through endless years"<br> A bare piano and voice evade each other in a story about the other side of dreams. About a world beyond, <br>about sailing beyond the boundaries of reality and the surrounding world. "Sea's Lament" is a magnificent ballad <br>with percussion reminiscent of pounding footsteps into the unknown and the soft sounds of a violin.<br> Story No. 3 - "Behold the man, now fallen down / A father to a son / Whose grand descent did echo his / As <br>if his race was run"<br> Beneath its lightness, "Under the Influence" conceals a story about a "fall" resulting from a rape accusation. <br>Musically, it's a delightful, light, almost pop-inflected track with a distinctive guitar solo in the second minute. <br>However, it doesn't lack the elements that make this album so surprising. The arrangement's flirtations with jazz, <br>pop, and rock make this track, and the entire album, an incredibly intelligent release that demands attention. <br>Martin Foye of the band Fruupp appears on percussion.<br> Story No. 4 - "The purpose of closure / of samll dry tympanic / membrane perforations / is to restore the <br>continuity / of the tympanic membrane / in order to improve hearing / and decrease the incidence / of middle ear <br>infections".<br> The above is an excerpt from a recitation that appears at the beginning of the album's most incredible <br>instrumental track ? "Aural Surgery." A musical tale of a surgical procedure, filled with numerous inserts from both <br>jazz and improvisational music. It's also a four-minute test of our imaginative abilities? could we describe a surgical <br>procedure this way? is this what a procedure from gritty, everyday life "sounds like?"<br> Story No. 5 - " A theft in silence, born of greed / By hunger so inspired / What will not yield, the ether bends / <br>To match the souls's desire". <br> The musical aspect of this story seems at odds with the narrative. It's a story of rape using ether. It's a <br>story of the collapse of professionalism in the face of desire, a story of lost trust in the doctor-patient relationship. <br>Musically, it's a piano miniature with an almost melodic vocal. Additional solo threads make the stiff piano narrative <br>even more eerie. And the violin section at the end sounds like a mournful hymn.<br> Story No. 6 - "From one lone letter came the law / Then laughter, chasing tears / Absurdity soon followed <br>close / Her face a mask of fears".<br> "Speranza" is both the title of the song and the name of the protagonist who accuses Dr. Wilde of rape. <br>Historically, it's unclear whether this was heroism in exposing evil or a false accusation. Musically, it's the most <br>unsettling composition on this album. It's unsettling with familiar sounds from previous tracks, blended with <br>stronger synthesizer passages and jazz-rock arrangements, with incredible guitar work around the four-minute <br>mark. It's also the longest and most expansive track on this release, revealing the band's compositional mastery. I <br>particularly recommend the saxophone solo performed by Mark Arnold.<br> Story No. 7 -" A farthing for your pain, dear girl / A farthing for your pain / Your suffering, hushed to silence <br>all / Your shame, their small refrain".<br> We don't know how Speranza's story ended. The musical description in "A Farthing As Reward," still calm, <br>slightly saddened at the beginning, reveals its sympathetic arrangement, expressed through stronger <br>orchestrations hidden behind the synthesizers. This composition is also the most progressive track on the album, <br>blending a somewhat mournful string section with extraordinary guitar solos. For almost eight minutes, we <br>encounter intertwining styles that separate the musicians' solo performances. Arrangement perfection.  <br> Story No. 8 - " When memories arise / Drawn from another life / Just like the paint, scatterred wide / The <br>gate is now cvlosed / Doors slammed in the brightest sun / Passions died, does the mood reside".<br> After Speranza's accusations, Dr. Wilde withdrew from life and settled in a house at the "edge of the world." Or <br>has he immersed himself in the world of beloved myths and legends? The final track from Argos's incredible album, <br>"Moytura House," is the perfect culmination of a story about the fate of a realist and a dreamer, a doctor and a <br>criminal. A multitude of melodies, a multiplicity of styles, and a wide range of musical threads lead this nine-minute <br>composition along truly diverse musical narrative paths. The whole is accompanied by extraordinary vocal calm and <br>complete control over the refined instrumental parts. <br> I haven't yet mentioned the art rock, theatrical approach to the presented stories and the corresponding music. <br>The words, lyrics, and music work together to create a truly extraordinary performance of words and music. The <br>performance is perfect in its arrangement, intelligent in its instrumental performance, and captivating from the very <br>first note. This is not only a perfect story about Dr. Wilde's fate, but also an extraordinary, almost perfect album <br>that sounds perfect, intelligent, and captivating. You just have to try it to find out. This album ranks very high on my <br>shelf. <br> The band consists of: Thomas Klarmann (bass, keyboards, vocals, guitars, flute), Robert Gozon (vocals, <br>keyboards), Bog]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ti-Bokor ]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[kos (Yesterdays) (guitars), Ulf Jacobs (drums) and additionally participated in the <br>recordings: Martin Foye (FRUUPP) (drums), Alexei Tolpygo (violin), Marek Arnold (Seven Steps To The Green Door, <br>Cyril, Toxic Smile, Damanek, U.P.F.) (saxophone).</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2026 07:32:53 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287705</guid></item><item><title>CARAVAN Waterloo Lily (Canterbury Scene, 1972)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287689</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/613/cover_133882312008.JPG" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Fercandio46 &mdash; With a few changes to the lineup, like pieces on a chessboard whose placement is crucial to the game's outcome, <br>Caravan brought in Steve Miller on keyboards and organ, his brother Phil Miller on guitar, and Lol Coxhill on <br>saxophone, formerly of Kevin Ayers and the Whole World Band. The result was a distinct album, a departure from <br>their previous work, more jazzy and funky, more rock-oriented, and freer within the framework of a band that had <br>always been inherently free-spirited.<br><br>Already in "Waterloo Lily," the strong personality of this album is evident, rising on its own merits with those <br>improvisations on the Wurlitzer electric piano, as well as the bass and Richard Sinclair's vocals, prominent in this <br>opening movement.<br>There's a certain excess in "Waterloo Lily," a kind of excessive nobility, of lavish privileges. "Nothing at All / It's <br>Coming Soon / Nothing at All" plays in a funky, jazzy jam session with piano, then bass and saxophone. The sense of <br>jazz improvisation, of playing live in the recording studio, is balanced on the album with that great sense of song <br>harmony in its purest form that the band has always possessed and maintains here as well.<br><br>Songs that play between bossa nova and English pop like Songs and Signs, or Aristocracy under this new format of <br>a funk rhythmic base with a very marked bass and electric harpsichord. They prepare the ground for more <br>ambitious works such as The Love in Your Eye / To Catch Me a Brother / Subsultus / Debouchement / Tilbury Kecks, <br>with string arrangements, something they would later experiment with on an entire album; more subtle <br>arrangements are noticeable, as well as the intrusions of the oboe, and Jimmy Hastings on flute, and at times it <br>gives the impression of being one of those great Brazilian orchestras where Hermeto Pascoal played improvising.<br><br>There are parts very much in the Canterbury tradition, mysterious, keyboard-driven...sinuous, and making us go <br>through dark and narrow corners...where the band sounds tight and dangerous like King Crimson...then an oriental <br>riddle like Gong, suspended in the air, until Steve Miller plays the electric harpsichord and plays it until he builds his <br>own caravan to space, which led him like those black holes that make you travel in time to the France of Versailles.<br>Caravan has never sounded so funky; it almost sounds like Santana, except for tracks like "The World Is Yours," <br>which remind us of that folky and intimate side they also possess, and which balances that world that is so much a <br>part of Caravan. This is further enhanced when listening to the bonus tracks, "Pye's June Thing," "Ferdinand," and to <br>close, the best of a psychedelic jazz-rock jam session sung in "Looking Left, Looking Right / Pye's Loop."<br><br>Neither before nor after would their music be the same in the band's discography, with Waterloo Lily remaining as <br>its own French revolution...which would erase everything in its path...but yes, with elegance and style.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2026 04:19:34 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287689</guid></item><item><title>GRUPPO D'ALTERNATIVA Ipotesi (RIO/Avant-Prog, 1972)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287650</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/3409/cover_2381725122007.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by The Progolyte &mdash; Out of all the Italian albums I'm reviewing, Gruppo D'Alternativa and their sole record, Ipotesi, were one of <br>the most experimental works in the scene. Sure, it may not be at the level of some of the other bands in <br>the genre they're performing (Henry Cow, Art Zoyd, and Present, just to name a few of the RIO/Avant-Prog <br>bands), but in terms of their country, they are definitely quite out there. The music is dominated by <br>intricate keyboard arrangements backed by actual rock instruments, with a very uncanny and at some <br>points even a scary sound. Overall, I really liked the classic edge of this album, but I didn't like that most of <br>the songs were based around vocals, and while I think the singer is good (he's very similar to Blocco <br>Mentale's singer, who has what is easily one of my favorite voices in the Rock Progressivo Italiano scene), <br>sometimes it doesn't match the more far-reaching sound of the band. Speaking of the vocals, their singer is <br>Tino Guasconi, and the other players include Gianfranco Fumagalli on flute, Leonardo Dosso on bassoon <br>and acoustic guitar, Rodolfo Pace on other guitars, Roberto Romano on keyboards, Paolo Rizzi on bass, and <br>Nino Flenda on drums. <br><br>Most of the songs are quite short, and while they are still long enough to have a good impact on me, I <br>would've liked it more if the songs had lengthy sections that allowed the band to exercise their creative <br>ability and showcase their talent. And while I still liked how the songs were complex, it felt like they lacked <br>energy and sometimes felt a little soulless. The music here is still quite good and has its high points for <br>every rough patch, and you can still find tons of interesting details and sections sprinkled into the whole <br>record. My favorite composition on the album was La Tua Lotta, which is the longest number on the album <br>at eight minutes. It has the most technical arrangements and has the peak of power all focused on this one. <br>Before I reach the end of my review, I want to quickly note that I really liked the album cover, and its <br>mysterious and unconventional look perfectly fits this album. Moving on, all of the songs have their own <br>really good qualities. Whether that be influences from jazz rock, Canterbury scene, or folk prog, they each <br>have their own very unique and distinctive qualities that set them each apart from the other songs and <br>keep things fresh all the way through, while still retaining the band's own sound present for all the <br>numbers. <br><br>In conclusion, this was a fun piece to explore. I had an intriguing sound that very few other artists had, and <br>it was overall a great record that had tons of great ideas. This one would probably be a strong 3.75/5 for <br>me.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2026 21:27:05 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287650</guid></item><item><title>LARRY CORYELL Difference (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 1978)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287642</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/3039/cover_3248142322017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by BrufordFreak &mdash; Six Larry Coryell originals and one cover of a Herbie Mann song ("Memphis Underground") were recorded and edited <br>in New York City between Electric Lady Studios and Sound Ideas Studios and the 1975 Montreux Jazz Festival then <br>released by the French label Egg sometime in 1978.<br><br>1. "Octaves" (3:49) Larry, Oregon's Glen Moore, and "the forgotten virtuoso" Arthur Rhames (who died at tragically at <br>age 32 in 1989 as result of the first wave of the AIDS epidemic) on guitars at the same time while Will Lee and Tony <br>Williams man the rhythm section. Saxophonist Michael Brecker commands the foreground when he enters, except <br>when the lead electric guitar is playing, then that person (probably Larry) is stepping on everyone's toes. But it works! <br>Even when all three guitarists are flying around their fretboards it still somehow works. Even as they slow down in the <br>fourth minute, it still works! Interesting. And cool! (9.25/10)<br><br>2. "Acoustic Solo" (5:35) Yes, Larry is in love with his acoustic guitars--his new Ovations, no doubt. There are some <br>excellent nods here to Bill Evans and John McLaughlin (intentional?) as well as many other great contemporary <br>guitarists. As a whole this isn't anything so very exceptional, but as a conglomeration of many styles, riffs and themes <br>it is a very fun listen. (9/10)<br><br>3. "Memphis Underground" (3:38) I know Herbie Mann's version of this song and the opening of this version is actually <br>something quite refreshing: truly an interpretation not a note-for-note rendering. I barely notice the presence of David <br>Sanborn's sax or Don Grolnick's keys! (9.125/10)<br><br>4. "Improvisation" (2:32) all solo acoustic guitar that would make Al Di Meola fans sit up and drop their jaw. (4.625/5)<br><br>5. "Picean Moon" (5:58) a repeat of the line-up for the album's first song, "Octaves" delivers more lushly-guitar-<br>estrated music with gentle sax woven into the fabric as Tony Williams' (distant) cymbal play seems to enhance and <br>enrich the weave of the three guitarists but I feel somewhat cheated by having to strain so hard in order to hear <br>Tony's drums. Overall, this song feels and sounds as much like an OREGON or CoDoNa song as anything by  (9.125/10)<br><br>6. "Serabond" (4:45) a recording of a live acoustic guitar performance (probably captured at the 1975 Montreux Jazz <br>Festival) which seems to express various interpretations of Rodrigo's Adagio melodies in his "Concierto de Aranjuez." <br>(9/10)<br><br>7. "Aquarian Mode" (5:07) I can almost hear Tony's drums and Will Lee's bass as Michael Brecker's sax and Arthur <br>Rhames and Larry's guitars seem to dominate the foreground of the sonic field. I wish the mix were better--I find it <br>hard to believe that it couldn't have been--despite the fine performances by the lead instruments. Larry and "the <br>scariest musician of all-time" (sax, piano, and guitar master Arthur Rhames) burn it up. (8.75/10)<br><br>Total Time 31:24<br><br>It's hard to believe how far into the background Tony Williams' drums are mixed in each and every one of these songs.<br><br>A-/4.5 stars; an album of exciting and different Jazz-Rock Fusion songs that are marred (and demerited) by poor sound <br>mixing and the album's overall brevity. <br><br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2026 17:27:23 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287642</guid></item><item><title>LARRY CORYELL Larry Coryell and Alphonse Mouzon: Back Together Again (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 1977)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287625</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/3039/cover_524682322017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by BrufordFreak &mdash; And John Lee and Philip Catherine as well! The result is some of Larry's finest "classic rock" feeling compositions and <br>performances of his career. The album was released by Atlantic Records in June of 1977.<br><br>1. "Beneath the Earth" (3:03) excellent Power Fusion from Alphonse straight out of the blocks! What an opening! And <br>then John Lee and Philip Catherine's acoustic guitar support: Awesome! I can't remember hearing this Rock 'n' Roll <br>electric guitar tone used by Larry before. (9.375/10)<br><br>2. "The Phonse" (3:48) Southern-fried funk of the highest order! And, surprise, surprise! It's a John Lee composition! <br>Larry just cooks it--on multiple tracks, I believe. (9.25/10)<br><br>3. "Transvested Express" (3:51) this very complicated Philip Catherine composition sounds as if Al Di Meola were <br>playing (and composing) with The Dixie Dregs. (Thank you, Mr. Catherine!) It's very sophisticated and unpredictable <br>Power Fusion with an acoustic orientation; this song cooks and impresses with every turn--and not just the two <br>guitarists but John and Alphonse as well! Probably my favorite song on the album. (9.5/10)<br><br>4. "Crystallization" (3:19) a kind of Steely-Dan-ed two-chord vamp over/within which Larry burns it up using multiple <br>tracks as if he was with Jan Akkerman in a Thin Lizzy world. (9.125/10)<br><br>5. "Rock 'n' Roll Lovers" (4:04) another two-chord blues-rock construct (for the verses) over which Larry just cooks and <br>delivers on all counts. Al, too! Rockers will absolutely love this song (as promised by the title). It could use a little more <br>variety and/or development. (8.875/10)<br><br>6. "Get On Up (We're Gonna Boogie)" (2:50) Did I mention Thin Lizzy? Surprise! Maybe it's the JB's! One of Al's songs <br>that inspires Larry to soar. (8.875/10)<br> <br>7. "Reconciliation" (2:34) one of Larry's songs on which we get to hear John Lee trying out his slap bass techniques <br>while Al screams out the song title from the background while Larry and Philip duke it out with their rock guitars. <br>Another song that would have benefitted from a little more development. (8.875/10)<br><br>8. "Back Together Again" (3:05) An Alphonse song with singing of the title throughout while John's deep funky bass <br>reverberates at the bottom and Larry near-constantly flies around on his rock-effected guitar over the top. The sound, <br>styles, and constructs are sounding too much the same, not varied enough as they were with the opening few tracks. <br>(8.75/10)<br><br>9. "Mr. C" (3:28) A Coryell composition that actually shows some of the sophistication and complexity of the album's <br>opening songs. Though Philip Catherine is only listed as the rhythm guitarist for this one, it's hard to believe that all of <br>the layers of lead legatos and ostinati woven together are just Larry (but entirely possible). The team is dialed in! (9/10) <br><br>10. "High Love" (5:51) acoustic guitars rule on this one though John and Al are playing as usual (though, a little <br>mechanically despite the numerous tempo and thematic shifts occurring throughout the song). The first soloist is <br>Philip and, once again, he proves why he should be included in the conversation of the "greats." So smooth! But then <br>Larry takes his turn and simply blows me away (and Phillip out of the water). Then Al gets his solo time in the fourth <br>and fifth minutes--wowing us with subtleties and speed more than power or syncopation. BUT, it's really the two <br>guitarists who steal the show. (9.125/10)<br><br>Total Time 35:53<br><br>What we have here is a collection of short but impactful rock tunes that often bridge styles and genres but always <br>inspiring Larry to very high levels of energy and displays of amazing skill on an instrument that we don't get to hear <br>him let loose on very often: the Rock 'n' Roll electric guitar. Though John Lee and Alphonse Mouzon represent <br>themselves very well, they do not feel quite as free or inspired as Larry and Philip (especially Larry). Knowing as I do <br>what a rough period this was for Larry, I am very pleased and proud of his ability to focus and hone it in for the <br>recording sessions that led to this album.<br><br>A-/five stars; a minor masterpiece of virtuosic guitar playing--electric and acoustic--over some truly powerful Rock-<br>infused Jazz-Rock Fusion. If you like to impressed by guitar skills, I highly recommend you give this album a listen. An <br>over-looked gem!<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2026 16:41:28 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287625</guid></item><item><title>LARRY CORYELL Larry Coryell, John Scofield and Joe Beck: Tributaries (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 1979)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287611</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/3039/cover_436162322017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by BrufordFreak &mdash; Though "The Guitar Trio" was made famous with the lineup that included Al Di Meola, Paco De Lucia and John <br>McLaughlin, Larry was actually in the Trio's original touring lineup. Obviously, Larry was really into the trio format. <br>Though Larry had been doing guitar duet performances, songs, and albums for years (with the likes of John <br>McLaughlin, Ren]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ Thomas, Steve Khan, Ralph Towner, Al Di Meola, and Philip Catherine), the idea of the "Guitar Trio" <br>has been attributed to British promoter Barry Marshall. It began in 1979 with Larry serving among the Trio's first <br>membership (as evidenced by his appearance in the YouTube video footage from 1979 of Larry performing on stage <br>with John and Paco in their rendition of The Mahavishnu Orchestra's "Meeting of Spirits") but he was soon asked to <br>leave (and famously replaced by Di Meola) due to issues with his (at the time) severe drug addiction getting in the way <br>with both his night-to-night skill level during performances as well as his reliability to the tour's schedule. <br><br>With Tributaries we get a look at Larry's more personal, more Americana expression of the Trio format with friends <br>John Scofield and Joe Beck. The music here is actually quite sublime--especially for those of us who like a little less fire <br>and a little more beauty and emotion in their guitar music--like fans of artists like AMERICA, ANTHONY PHILLIPS, JOHN <br>PRINE, LEO KOTTKE, BERT JANSCH and JOHN RENBOURNE, PHILL KEAGGY, JOHN FAHEY, and, of course, DJANGO <br>REINHARDT.<br><br>Recommended--especially for guitar lovers.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2026 15:23:45 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287611</guid></item><item><title>SPIRIT The Complete Potatoland (Proto-Prog, 2019)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287522</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/2643/cover_8489752026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Fercandio46 &mdash; A concept album revolving around a tuber couldn't possibly have any other fate than to be buried for years... and so <br>it happened. The Adventures of Kaptain Kopter & Commander Cassidy in Potato Land was originally recorded by <br>Randy California and Ed Cassidy during Spirit's hiatus in 1972 and 1973, but when it was about to be released in <br>1973, Epic Records cancelled it. A version with re-recordings and overdubs was finally released in 1981, but it <br>definitely didn't do justice to the original, because the themes left out add another layer to the overall work, nor did <br>another version in 2006.<br><br>To begin with, the recording style is strange; the vocals are in the background, and it's a psychedelic space rock, <br>with folk passages reminiscent of the Byrds. When they got more acid-tinged, they reminded me of what the <br>Flaming Lips would do years later on some of their albums. 1984 doesn't resemble Bowie's version...interrupted <br>constantly by dialogues that advance the story...and somehow it works for me. There's something postmodern <br>about it...as if we were witnessing it from behind frosted glass...not seeing the true essence of things, but rather <br>what we imagine to be real.<br><br>From classic blues we move to a more cosmic one in Turn To The Right with reminiscences of the Doors, it is a link <br>between Feedback from 1972 and Spirit of '76, it is a more group effort but with this edition blended in the style of <br>Frank Zappa, which while it contributes to the conceptual story, it does not contribute to the follow-through of the <br>music. The acoustic version of "Nature's Way" is a highlight, as is the fast-paced, Who-esque "Salvation: Matter Of <br>Time Suite," which was previously unreleased.<br>It's with "Oil Slick-Million Years: Suite" that another surprise awaits us, a sound that is very modern and chaotic, <br>more akin to the psychedelia of the 90s than that of the 60s or 70s.<br><br>With "It's Time Now" the original work closes, and Randy somehow pulls a rabbit out of a hat to find feeling and <br>confirm that something different could be done on a parallel path to the band Spirit, despite continuing under that <br>name. Fifty percent was guaranteed with him and Ed Cassidy on drums and percussion.<br><br>The 1981 version features horns, backing vocals, and at times even a touch of disco and funk, as heard in <br>"Potatoland Theme." It also includes some very accomplished, almost electronic tracks like "Potatoland Prelude" <br>and jazzy numbers like "Donut House." In short, it's a nearly completely different album. The bonus tracks add a lot, <br>such as "Salvation" and a totally different, much rockier version of "We've Got A Lot To Learn."<br><br>The live recording from KPFK FM Radio in Los Angeles on September 13, 1972, is pure Randy Hendrixian, a style he <br>inherited from his time playing with Hendrix. While the sound quality isn't perfect, it doesn't detract from the <br>enjoyment and the ability to piece together the puzzle of that period. The same applies to the September 6 show <br>and the demos and studio recordings, among which are several gems that, once unburdened by the passage of <br>time, shine with justifiable brilliance.<br><br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2026 11:41:54 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287522</guid></item><item><title>SUFJAN STEVENS Enjoy Your Rabbit (Crossover Prog, 2001)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287501</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/13272/cover_2636103032026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by kenethlevine &mdash; Based on the Chinese zodiac with a few liberties taken, including in the lagomorphic vein per the title, "Enjoy Your <br>Rabbit" is about as far from SUFJAN STEVENS' debut "A Sun Came" as any second album in history, thereby skirting <br>the sophomore jinx narrative.  By this stage he is still relatively unknown anyway, and still charting his own course <br>seemingly independent of even an internal compass, which is what makes him so fascinating from day 1.  Here is a <br>glitch project, which is a genre that began in the mid 1990s and would probably remain unknown to me were it not <br>for Sufjan.   It appears to simulate the random mutations in the world of viruses caused by errors in their own <br>apparatuses, only in electronic form.   With HIV for instance, that was critical to know since these <br>glitches resulted in resistance to medications over time.  That's where the parallel breaks down for me, well, apart <br>from any sense of musicality as I have come to appreciate it, so my first question is, why?<br><br>Each track of this essentially all instrumental project is supposed to somehow convey the spirit animal for which it <br>is named in musical (?) form but I only hear snippets, like the kookiness of "Monkey", albeit one of the most bleepy <br>and blurpy numbers here, and the movements of "Snake", but, while images appear in my pre-verbal musical <br>mind, they are rarely of anything as concrete as a critter.  As the album proceeds, it luckily folds more conventional <br>electronica and mesmerizing keys into its glitch, no doubt due to an error of some kind, and the best examples of <br>these are "Rat", which spends most of its relatively short life in a form of postural hypotension that reminds me of <br>a less playful TALISMA, a contemporaneous group from Montreal;  "Ox", with its krautrock pretensions; "Rooster", <br>which I guess sort of struts and croons; the more maximalist "Dragon"; and the sloppily lovable "Dog".  In the best <br>sequences I am reminded of some of EVELYN GLENNIE's marvelous percussion work, but it could barely aspire to <br>be as inspired.<br><br>The title cut has a brief riff with a TULL-ish vibe but is otherwise nothing but hammering and drilling.  I can only <br>think of the saber toothed rabbit which probably hasn't been part of any zodiac for millions of years, or the <br>dreaded wererabbit.  Best avoided.   And so for the finale we get to the point of the whole exercise, "Year of Our <br>Lord".  Chinese zodiac be damned.  I'd wager that the cycle is apt to repeat much more often under this paradigm.  <br>Regardless, it's a float without the soda.<br><br>So the question after 2 vastly opposing releases is, which way do we go next?  I'm hoping this is just a glitch in his <br>discography but, to be clear, it's decent for what it is, but it's not the way I'd serve hossenfeffer</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2026 10:43:24 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287501</guid></item><item><title>PLINI An Unnameable Desire (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287500</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 Tobias_Review &mdash; After a 6 year gap between the last full album, Plini has given us a new experience. This album expands on Plini's <br>sound to the point where I wouldn't even class this as Jazz rock/fusion anymore (as listed here on progarchives). <br>This album sounds a lot more like Jakub Zytecki's music (who is also featured on this album) and has a heavier tone <br>than the previous releases; it is more along the lines of prog metal.<br><br>I believe this to be a step in the right direction as there is a lot more creativity here and experimental songs <br>compared to the previous albums. From the perspective of a Jazz Fusion enthusiast, this album does fail to deliver <br>quality soloing and instrumental interplay. However that is not what this album sets out to do. It manages to tell a <br>darker story which we have not seen before from Plini.<br><br>The guitar playing is great as expected from a top class guitarist like Plini. The drumming is the same as on previous <br>records, managing to add energy when needed but also being great in quieter and ambient sections. The bass is <br>great for the mix although never has any particular standout moments or interesting sections which is slightly <br>disappointing, although that is just the state of metal music in 2026.<br><br>Standout tracks for me include: An Unnameable Desire, Ciel, Verspertine and After Everything.<br><br>I recommend this album to those who enjoy Prog Metal and Math Rock. If you want a purely Jazz Fusion or Prog <br>Rock experience then this album may not be for you.<br><br>Rating: 3.5/5</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2026 10:41:15 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287500</guid></item><item><title>BONFIRE Bonfire Goes Bananas (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 1975)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287495</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1252/cover_37220652026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; One of the rather unsung Dutch prog groups that existed for a short time was the jazz fusion band<br>BONFIRE which emerged from the southern city of Bergen op Zoom and only stuck around from 1974 to<br>the following year but managed to release a single and a complete album in its short-lived history.<br>The band featured four amazingly adept musicians who sounded as if they had been playing together<br>for years rather than gathering for this one-off and calling it a day. Notable for their high energy<br>instrumental jazz-infused rock with a constant shifting from rambunctious energetic rock to slower<br>emotive almost proto-neo-prog sounding pastoral moments, the band has been compared to fellow<br>countrymen Finch for the razor sharp guitar work as well as Focus for its highly complex comparisons<br>that were as much progressive rock as it was jazz fusion.<br><br>The band's only album BONFIRE GOES BANANAS arrived when the prog scene was starting to cool off but<br>many acts were still forming and releasing albums especially in the field of jazz fusion as the<br>psychedelic haze of the 60s was starting to sober up and more complex musical styles filled the gap<br>before the new wave and punk takeover a few years down the road. The band featured the amazing<br>drummer Cees Meerman, the highly talented bassist Kees den Hoed, Eug]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ne de Hoed who doubled on<br>guitar and flute and Frank Witte who doubled on keyboards and vibes but also found some flute<br>playing as well. The original album featured six wild tracks with the highlight finishing it all off<br>with the near 19-minute multi-segmented "The Sage Of The Running Nose" giving a clue to some of the<br>Canterbury influences in addition to the Finch and Focus-isms. There are also small whiffs of<br>Supersister to be heard as well.<br><br>What BONFIRE delivers on its sole release it's extraordinary and comparable to the bigwigs of the<br>day such as The Mahavishnu Orchestra, Return To Forever's later releases or even Billy Cobham's<br>energetic solo offerings. The band excelled on all fronts with incessant tempo and mood changes that<br>created startling shifts without warning all delivered with highly complex musical motifs raging on<br>with high energy stampedes yet without losing any of the emotive expressionism. The album ticks off<br>all the progressive rock trademarks as well as the world of jazz fusion. Perhaps an early version of<br>what now is deemed brutal prog, BONFIRE was a master of bowling your senses over with frenetic<br>fusion-laced over the top technicality and then without notice delivering a soft tender passage of<br>highly melodic magic with a never-ending reference book to all kinds of varying rhythmic shifts and<br>crazy angularities. <br><br>In reality this sounds like some sort of supergroup where Keith Emerson is on keys, John McLaughlin<br>on guitar, Christ Squire on bass and perhaps Bill Bruford on drums. Yeah, it's really that good.<br>Unfortunately music like this had peaked a couple years prior and complex instrumentally driven<br>jazzy prog rock was falling out of fashion but despite it all the band found a home on the EMI label<br>for its one shot but the album remained with no reissues well into the 1990s when the prog revival<br>was underway but since then it has seen remastered versions. This one is truly a lost gem that has<br>everything a seasoned stalwart of jazzy prog could ever hope for. It's playful, offers plenty of<br>technical bedazzlement and shifts mood styles that it's impossible to get bored with this one as<br>there is never a dull moment to find yourself drifting off. <br><br>It's hard to believe none of these guys moved on to better things as they seemed to have come out of<br>nowhere to deliver this scorcher of an album only to fade into utter obscurity. This is what you<br>call a lost classic as it works for me on every level. Better than Finch or Focus for me. Overall<br>it's an excellent album and almost worth 5 stars. The A side is definitely as good as it gets<br>however what drags the album a bit for me is the multi-suite closer "The Sage Of The Running Nose"<br>has many points where it plods along and loses the momentum that the A-side so brilliantly captured<br>however as a whole this is one amazing album and i really wish this band had stuck around to dish<br>out a few more doses of this intoxicating cauldron of coolness.<br><br>4.5 rounded down</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2026 10:14:24 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287495</guid></item><item><title>THE GATHERING Always (Experimental/Post Metal, 1992)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287493</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1618/cover_17533162017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; Formed in 1989 in the Dutch city of Oss, THE GATHERING has existed in three distinct forms since its<br>inception with only guitarist Ren]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ Rutten, keyboardist Frank Boeijen and drummer Hans Rutten<br>remaining through all transitions. The band's history can be divided into the early atmospheric<br>death doom metal years which roughly covered the years 1989-94, the classic era where the band<br>shifted to atmospheric progressive rock with lead singer Anneke van Giersbergen at the helm and the<br>last era which kept the style in tact but found Norwegian vocalist Silje Wergeland replacing<br>Giersbergen. Like many i personally have been most familiar with the classic years that started with<br>the album "Mandylion" and ending with "Home" but in the beginning the band had a very different<br>style making it unrecognizable as the band that would find international fame. <br><br>The 1992 debut ALWAYS? is where it all started and given the almost universal low ratings for the<br>first two albums i sorta just ignored them but as it turns out, i seem to be on an opposite spin<br>from all the others who have joined the cult of THE GATHERING as i've never been blown away by the<br>band's prog rock years but am actually quite enamored with this debut album that sounds like a mix<br>of early Amorphis meets Type O Negative. One of the earliest examples of atmospheric death doom<br>metal with gothic rock influences, the first two albums featured the guttural growly vocals of Bart<br>Smits with the ethereal goddess charm of clean vocalist Marike Groot offering one of the earliest<br>examples of the "beauty and the beast" contrasting system. The album has also featured at least<br>three distinct album covers over the years with two emerging even in the same year 1992 when it was<br>released.<br><br>Stylistically THE GATHERING was quite unique when ALWAYS? hit the scene. It really doesn't sound<br>like anything else. With the snail's pace flow of something like what would become funeral doom<br>metal, the guitar tones and playing are more akin to the old school death metal scene yet the<br>atmospheric touches from the keyboards and piano remind me a bit of what Septicflesh would make a<br>career out of except THE GATHERING featured a compositional style all their own with lots of<br>attention paid to developing compositions that contrasted slow plodding tempos with occasional<br>faster tempos. The keyboards add the melodic touches imbued with gothic rock tones and textures with<br>a few moments clearly referring to the "Koyaanisqatsi" soundtrack from Philip Glass. The eclectic<br>touches are topped off by traces of flute, the triangle and wind chimes which offer some folk fueled<br>flavoring throughout its run.<br><br>Perhaps the keyboards come off as a tad cheesy at times but honestly this one works for me and quite<br>well. The death doom is eerie, gloomy and dark just like the style should be and the gothic touches<br>offer an extra dose of bleakness. The guitar tones are quite satisfying bringing back that<br>satisfying 90s distortion style that wasn't overly concerned with making everything so complex that<br>you had to revisit the album a hundred times like some modern tech death albums can demand. I'm not<br>necessary hating on the second era of the band but it has never really lit my fire either as it<br>seems a little too tame in many ways and none of the musical styles really have clicked. This one on<br>the other hand is as exhilarating as the earliest Amorphis releases bringing "Tales Of The Thousand<br>Lakes" to mind. For those who are into atmo-death doom and have skipped these early albums thinking<br>they suck, well i couldn't disagree more! <br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2026 10:13:53 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287493</guid></item><item><title>YOLK Solar (RIO/Avant-Prog, 2017)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287491</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/3101/cover_555142722018_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by VianaProghead &mdash;                                    Review N]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ 966<br><br>Yolk is a RIO/Avant-prog band from Dunkirk, in northern France. Their music is characterized by its subtle approach <br>to vocals, effects, and electronics, and has taken unique directions under the influence of bands and artists such as <br>Gong, Fred Frith (from Henry Cow) and The Residents, etc. Yolk is known for its experimental sound that blends <br>psychedelic rock, avant-prog and elements of Zeuhl. The band's music is characterized by being highly technical and <br>experimental. Their compositions can be extensive, with abrupt changes in rhythm and atmosphere, ranging from <br>intense and heavy moments to ambient and haunted passages. The use of saxophone and keyboards, along with <br>complex guitars and striking bass lines, reinforces their progressive rock vein. Their sound often includes <br>unconventional vocals. Vocalist Delphine Delegorgue often uses wordless vocal expressions and chants instead of <br>the traditional use of the lyrics.<br><br>Yolk apparently was formed as a pastime for French high school students. Initially, they operated in different music <br>styles, but a joint visit to a Gong concert then enriched their repertoire with spacey elements and jazz-rock. In 2001, <br>after several line up changes, the band met Fred Frith at a workshop, which would decisively influence Yolk's music, <br>transforming them into one of the stylistically improvisational bands quite typical of the new millennium. In that <br>year the band released their eponymous debut studio work, which established their experimental identity. In 2009, <br>they released a mini-album and performed at the RIO Festival in France. "You Decide" was released in 2011, a  <br>continuation of the exploration of prog sounds. It was followed in 2017 by "Solar", which is considered their most <br>ambitious work.<br><br>"Solar" is probably their best work and one of the most pleasant and unexpected surprises. The rare beauty of the <br>beautiful cover is confirmed in the three extensive songs that make up "Solar". It's often cited as Yolk's masterpiece <br>and a landmark in modern experimental prog rock. It's a minimalist album in terms of the number of tracks, but <br>colossal in length and sonic ambition. If anything, the structure of epics over 10 minutes long seems to fit Yolk <br>perfectly. The recipe is based mainly on the stunning performance, interpretation and spark vocals of Delphine and <br>the energetic orgasmic playing. True to the band's identity, the album doesn't use conventional lyrics. The vocals <br>function as an additional rhythmic and melodic instrument, evoking rituals or trance states. Melodies and themes <br>follow one another with an enviable flow that conveys the listener to an avant-prog with a RIO base, intense <br>pompous and the peculiar psych Yolk element that makes the whole result unique. Rhythm is the main driver and <br>catalyst with an inviting groove.<br><br>The line up on "Solar" is Delphine Delegorgue (vocals), Valent]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[n Carette (guitars), Adrien Michel (keyboards and <br>saxophone), Antonin Carette (bass guitar) and Fabrice Brzoskiewicz (drums).<br><br>"Solar" consists of only three long compositions totaling approximately 38 minutes. The album opens with the title <br>track "Solar", which is more than 14 minutes long. This is an epic piece that begins with tribal percussion and <br>evolves into a haunting atmosphere, culminating in Zeuhl's style chants and an intense guitar work. It represents an <br>excellent start and is rather haunting. A catchy rhythm takes all over the track with a true experimental sound. The <br>second one, "Vanitas", which is more than 13 minutes long, explores dynamic contrasts, alternating between calm <br>keyboard passages and complex instrumental explosions. It begins with these nice guitar melodies followed with a <br>very special atmosphere and drums. Then, the vocals appear very powerfully. I like this intricate guitar work, as well <br>as the keyboard work. This is a powerful and intricate track with some amazing contrasts. The third and last track, <br>"Sepulchre", which is more than 10 minutes long, was chosen to end the album. The album's closing track, marked <br>by a strong presence of electric piano and a powerful vocal performance by Delphine. This is a track dominated by <br>drums, keyboards and guitar and the vocal melodies are amazing. This is really an amazing track in the same vein <br>as the opener, and is quite great.<br><br>One last thing. The cover art of the album features a painting titled "Sepulchre" by artist Marc Burckhardt, reflecting <br>the dark and surreal tone of the music of Yolk, not to be confused with the other RIO/Avant-Prog band from <br>Switzerland.<br><br>Conclusion: "Solar" is particularly recommended for fans of bands like Magma, Guapo, or the Japanese Avant-prog <br>universe, due to their ability to blend controlled chaos with hypnotic melodies. As I mentioned above, "Solar" is a <br>very minimalist work in terms of the number of tracks, but colossal in length and sonic ambition. "Solar" is a fairly <br>cohesive album. It offers an intense and varied journey through Zeuh influenced and avant rock landscapes, which <br>develop a quite unique character. But, we cannot say that it's exactly easy listening. "Solar" is quite challenging and <br>intense for long stretches, which makes it difficult to access the music initially, as it only fully unfolds after repeated <br>listens. But, in the end, "Solar" proves to be a thoroughly successful album that should appeal to any adventurous <br>Rio/avant-prog fan.<br><br>Prog is my Ferrari. Jem Godfrey (Frost*)</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2026 09:57:27 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287491</guid></item><item><title>RAINBOW Difficult to Cure (Prog Related, 1981)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287489</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/2735/cover_1381731102016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by A Crimson Mellotron &mdash; First Rainbow album with new frontman Joe Lynn Turner and newcoming drummer Bob Rondinelli, as we<br>see the further commercialization of the band's sound, most likely reflecting Ritchie Blackmore's<br>fascination with Foreigner. 'Difficult to Cure' is, of course, the fifth studio album from Rainbow,<br>a well-established rock band by the end of the 70s that had to reinvent itself in order to stay<br>relevant. With the general public's growing fascination with radio-friendly music (in the face of<br>new wave, synth-pop and AOR), the Blackmore-led collective attempted to record an album that is<br>heavy but pleasing and accessible, with just the right number of commercial elements. To me, this<br>record preserves a lot of the characteristic Rainbow traits, particularly the strong melodies and<br>the classical-inspired guitar riffs, together with the energetic rhythm sections that we were used<br>to hearing on albums like 'Rising' and 'Long Live Rock 'n' Roll', but the overall sentiment is that<br>of a repetitive and at times mediocre collection.<br><br>Starting off rather well, with three really strong songs that are stylistically similar to the<br>material on 'Down to Earth', we get to experience the powerful voice of Joe Lynn Turner, who would<br>sing a little higher than usual for Rainbow, and would gradually adjust his technique to this mode<br>of singing, which is quite interesting. And so, we have 'I Surrender' - one of the most recognizable<br>Rainbow hits, together with 'Spotlight Kid' and 'No Release', both of which are vibrant rock tunes<br>with fantastic instrumentation. The last track on side one, however, is pretty underwhelming<br>('Magic'). Side two then impresses with two excellent instrumentals: 'Maybe Next Time' and the<br>closing title track, both of which focus on the guitar mastery of Ritchie Blackmore but also feature<br>some delightfully technical playing from Mr Don Airey on the keyboards. Of the other songs<br>completing the album, 'Midtown Tunnel Vision' is perhaps the more intriguing one, while the rest is<br>mostly predictable AOR that once again strongly resembles Foreigner. And while this record is<br>definitely not among the band's best, it is a decent attempt at a more marketable rock sound, which<br>is why it is probably one of the more underrated Rainbow albums ever.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 7 May 2026 09:45:36 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287489</guid></item><item><title>PLANETARIUM Infinity (Rock Progressivo Italiano, 1971)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287444</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1643/cover_31521630112008.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by The Progolyte &mdash; I was originally planning to skip over this record and in its place put a more famous and acclaimed album, <br>but I was just captivated by the record's really cool cover and decided to check it out. In the end, while it is <br>far away from being listed as a true classic or masterpiece of Rock Progressivo Italiano, it still did its job as <br>standing as yet another sole album by a one-and-done Italian band. The music here isn't quite as heavy as <br>other bands around this time, and instead Planetarium creates a trippy and pastoral atmosphere in their <br>music, something that's a lot more calming and less insane. While there are no vocals on the record, <br>judging by the song titles, I'm assuming it's another concept album that was centered on the history of <br>Earth and its life and surroundings, sort of similar to the idea of Io Uomo by Ricordi D'Infanzia. The lineup <br>includes Franco Sorrenti and Mirko Mazza on guitar, Alfredo Ferrari on keyboards, Piero Repetto on bass, <br>and Giampaolo Pesce on drums. <br><br>The album's opening is an atmospheric sound collage with minimal input from the band, so I won't really <br>touch on that, but the next two songs, Life and the two-part suite titled Man, are a soft and easygoing form <br>of folk and the Rock Progressivo Italiano sound, sometimes even coming close to chamber folk and <br>chamber music in the second part of Man after a bunch of cool classical instruments are introduced via <br>various keyboards. Most of the record follows the direction of the second song, Life, where it is mellow and <br>quiet all the way through, maybe something close to soothing rock is introduced, and then the song ends. <br>It's not that complex, with all of the tracks being quite short, but they're still enjoyable and have a pretty <br>element to all of the numbers. All of the tracks have their own characteristics that make them stand out <br>from each other, but that is basically the whole album. There really isn't much more to add, but the songs <br>were between good and really good and nothing more or less (ignoring the opening piece). <br><br>In conclusion, I think the certain style the band was going for with this album could've worked, it just <br>needed some more work and a deeper depth in the central core of the music. This one is probably a mid <br>3.5 for me, as I liked the direction and overall sound, but it could use some improvements.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 22:18:52 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287444</guid></item><item><title>MIKE OLDFIELD Music of the Spheres (Crossover Prog, 2008)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287429</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/839/cover_1626181552016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Dapper~Blueberries &mdash; With a career spanning easily five decades, Mike Oldfield has had quite the lofty discography to go<br>around. It's much thanks to his incredible skills as a composer that he reached some level of<br>stardom. However, there is something that always bugged me about his composition style, and that it<br>would be perfectly suited for a classical sound, like Beethoven or Mussorgsky. Well, he does have<br>one, and that happens to be Music of the Spheres.<br><br>Now, normally I don't do this, but I'd actually like to tell you why I am reviewing this record of<br>his in specific, and not any of his other dozens of records. Simply put, I think this record is<br>underrated, and yes, I know, underrated is a word that has been thrown around a ton, especially<br>online. "Everything I like is underrated and everything I don't like is overrated" and yada yada<br>yada. But in this case, I honestly really do mean it. This record feels like it's rated way too low<br>for what it is worth.<br><br>I find Music of the Spheres to be a joy to listen to, as it feels though this was where Oldfield's<br>music was naturally heading, ever since his debut of Tubular Bells. He creates a suite that, while<br>not totally ground breaking, does carry a lot of weight as it certainly does feel like he has always<br>wanted to make something to this equivalence.<br><br>I think aided by the fact this was released in the late 2000s, and thus the production sounds as<br>good as it does, and this album shines quite well amongst the man's other suites like Ommadawn and<br>Amarok.<br><br>I will say though, this certainly does pull a bit from Tubular Bells, which isn't that surprising as<br>Mike Oldfield was having a nostalgic frenzy over the thing since 1992. The intro of Harbinger is<br>very much based on the little piano melody of Tubular Bells and Tubular Bells II, almost down to a<br>T, and the ending movement of Musica Universalis is basically the ending movement of Tubular Bells<br>Part 1. I don't mind this as much as some people do, but I will be quite critical. It does kind of<br>feel like Mike Oldfield is using his own music as a crutch more than anything on here. I think<br>overall, Music of the Spheres does hold its own, but at the same time feels like it's dipping a bit<br>into the old.<br><br>But yet, I still wonder why this one isn't as popular as it should.<br><br>My working theory is that because it's classical, through and through. Mike Oldfield has always had<br>a knack for making music in more modern styles, throughout his career. Rock music, pop music, new<br>age, world music, house, trance. All of these are genres that are seen as "new" in some capacity.<br>Rock music is not even a century old yet, pop changes on a dime, new age has become more<br>electronically focused, world music may have been around for centuries but has only become public<br>knowledge fairly recently, house is most certainly new, and trance as well.<br><br>And even if Mike's projects in these genres might not make as much of a splash as you would think,<br>they still have some noteworthiness within the Mike Oldfield fandom. Yet, I rarely see any talk on<br>Music of the Spheres, and that might be because, since this is purely classical, this record is seen<br>as much older, or less inventive as Oldfield's other works. Sure it's not hated, but it's not loved<br>either, which is a shame because if you give it a chance, this record does feel quite magical, and<br>I'd say just as well as the stuff Mike Oldfield is known for.<br><br>I think, if there is one record I'd unironically call underrated, it'd be this one. Music of the<br>Spheres is a treat that deserves more recognition, even if its negative recognition. Because it<br>should be as big as the work that Oldfield has been known for in his 50 year long career.<br><br>Best tracks: Animus, Shabda, On My Heart, Harmonia Mundi</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 20:20:33 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287429</guid></item><item><title>JAN GARBAREK Places (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 1978)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287403</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/5696/cover_3761511122017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by BrufordFreak &mdash; I have been avoiding Jan Garbarek albums for a while and they're piling up: nine to go in order to complete his 1980s <br>projects as bandleader. Wish me luck. (I'm going to need it!) This album was recorded in December of 1977, the <br>original album being released by ECM in 1978.<br><br>1. "Reflections" (15:05) a song that opens with sparse saxophone wailing over droning organ chords with nary a string <br>or cymbal sound until the fifth minute when light ministrations of both (acoustic guitar strings and drum kit cymbals) <br>join in. De Johnette and Connors both expand their footprints with snare and toms and guitar chords and legato runs <br>in the sixth minute--Garbarek even clearing out while the two play off one another. Bill Connors on steel-stringed <br>acoustic guitar sounds a lot like a cross between Al Di Meola and Larry Coryell: at times deceptively smooth, at others <br>dynamically abrasive. Jan returns in the ninth minute as Bill returns to chord strumming and arpeggiation as Jack <br>continues playing his funky syncopation. (Whatever happened to John Taylor? Oh! 11th minute: there he is!) The music <br>is made far more interesting by Jack's drumming; I'm not sure I could bear it without. (Does Jan Garbarek ever play <br>anything differently? I feel as if he's playing the same notes and style here that he did back in 1971 and will in 1986!) At <br>12:30 it sounds and feels as if the song were going into a long, slow fadeout but then the three melodists show <br>themselves: at first very lightly but then with increasing presence. Meanwhile, Jack just keeps on keepin' on: grooving <br>on that funky syncopated foundation. (26.25/30)<br>  <br>2. "Entering" (7:50) the sax and organ opening here sounds like we're being prepped for a heart-strings-pulling movie <br>soundtrack. Connors takes the lead over from Garbarek at the 1:30 mark, but only for a few bars before Jan returns <br>with the organ swelling slightly. Yes, it's a Burt Bacharach soundtrack to a schlocky rom-com like Arthur's Down in the <br>Dumps. At 3:40 the intro finally ends and Jack joins in with some organ and guitar chords to set up a forward-moving <br>pop-rock motif (slow). Jan takes the first verse, then Bill, then back to Jan. It's a duet! Kenny Loggins and Dionne <br>Warwick! Smooth Jazz without any of the Jazz! (13/15)<br><br>3. "Going Places" (14:12) a little Pat Metheny-style take on Star Wars' "Main Theme." I do like this style for Bill Connors-<br>-and the atmospheric drumming (dominated by cymbal work) from Jack. It reminds me of Pat and Lyle's (and Nana <br>Vasconcelos)' 1981 epic, "As Falls Wichita, So Falls Wichita Falls." And Jan's octave-oscillating sax play here actually <br>works--doesn't bore or feel like finger nails on a chalk board. And John Taylor's long-sustaining organ chords feel very <br>much in line with the stylings used by Lyle in "Falls." In the middle Bill's solo begins to sound a bit like a melodic John <br>McLaughlin solo (Time Remembered: Bill Evans period)--which I fully endorse. And Jack seems to really be getting into <br>it, which I always love. But then Jan starts blowing the Star Wars theme notes really hard and I find myself recoiling <br>despite John and Jack's efforts to distract me. Raise your hand if you really like Jan Garbarek's sax playing! Anybody? <br>Anybody?! See! Nobody! So why did he get so famous--and how did he get into ProgArchives when so many other <br>deserving artists have not? (26.75/30)<br><br>4. "Passing" (11:18) same palette: organ, sax, acoustic guitar, drum kit, all seeming to celebrate the space they can <br>create in opposition to their notes. Again, there is something that previews many of the softer, heavily-nuanced <br>passages that Pat Metheny and Lyle Mays will become quite famous for in the next decade. Is this where they learned <br>it? Were they just trying to emulate the Jan Garbarek effect? And, if so, why? What is so consuming about Jan's music <br>(or playing) that people want to make stuff just like it?<br>     My favorite part of this song are the occasional tidal swells of John Taylor's organ play--which, of course, Jack is <br>quick to react and respond to. The very sudden ending is a bit bizarre but what can the consumer do? You get what <br>you get! (18/20)<br><br>Total time 48:25<br><br>B-/3.5 stars; an interesting collection of drawn out, often cinematic or tension-filled spacious music that, for me, is <br>made most tolerable by the presence of the great Jack De Johnette. The album seems most noteworthy to me for <br>showcasing a style of music that future artists like Pat Metheny and Lyle Mays would be championing in parts of their <br>compositions over the next ten to 15 years. <br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 14:04:32 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287403</guid></item><item><title>KING CRIMSON Jakszyk, Fripp and Collins: A Scarcity of Miracles (Eclectic Prog, 2011)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287398</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/191/cover_2514212552011_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by A Crimson Mellotron &mdash; Sometimes considered the last studio recording of King Crimson, 'A Scarcity of Miracles' is more of<br>a one-off off-shoot project involving past and future members of the band, as the name of the<br>project actually suggests. This is a collaborative work between guitar architect Robert Fripp, sax<br>and flute player Mel Collins (member of Crimson from 1970 until 1972), and gifted English musician<br>and actor Jakko Jakszyk, who would later go on to become the frontman of the reformed and touring<br>King Crimson. The trio is joined by longtime bass and Stick player Tony Levin as well as ex-<br>Porcupine Tree drummer Gavin Harrison, who would also go on to spend significant time with Fripp's<br>updated Crimson. Born from extensive instrumental sessions between Fripp and Collin, 'A Scarcity of<br>Miracles' is a serene and improvisational record that features a rather ethereal mixture of ambient<br>soundscapes and jazz fusion playing, laying the foundations for the sound of the future incarnation<br>of King Crimson.<br><br>The basis of most of the songs appearing on this LP are electronic soundscapes recorded by Robert<br>Fripp, with Jakszyk building upon these existing recordings. While different compositions were<br>taking shape, originally there had been no intention of recording an entire album. In any case, the<br>six pieces that became 'A Scarcity of Miracles' do represent a beautifully haunting collection of<br>Crimson-esque compositions, elegant and soaring, but also inviting and refined, with the excellent<br>production also shining through quite often. The sound is contemporary yet nostalgic, remotely<br>echoing some of the mid-70s Crimson records ('Starless', 'Red'), while the vulnerability and finesse<br>of Jakszyk's voice complement the graceful songs in a befitting manner. The fine balance between the<br>electronic soundscapes, the swiveling saxes of Mel Collins, the ethereal and melodic guitars of<br>Jakszyk, and the more angular playing of Fripp speaks of great instrumental mastery, confidence, and<br>maturity, rendering this album a delightful jazz-rock treat even for the most dedicated of prog<br>enthusiasts. The highlights on this record would definitely include the gorgeous title track, the<br>atmospheric number 'Secrets' as well as the poetically determined 'The Other Man', but really, each<br>piece on here is cinematic and contemplative in its own way.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 12:21:35 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287398</guid></item><item><title>FINCH Glory Of The Inner Force (Symphonic Prog, 1975)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287383</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/829/cover_5338132752017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; One of the big three of 70s Dutch symphonic prog, FINCH was formed in Den Haag in 1974 as a rather<br>latecomer in the prog party but stood out for its eclectic all-instrumental approach that<br>incorporated healthy doses of jazz fusion and knotty technical virtuosity to the more reserved<br>symphonic prog acts of the day. Formed by ex-members of the R&B band Q65 that included bassist Peter<br>Vink and drummer Beer Klaasse, the band evolved into a quartet once guitarist Joop Van Nimwegen and<br>keyboardist Cleem Determeijer joined ranks. Despite all best efforts to score a competent vocalist,<br>FINCH settled on crafting wild energetic instrumental compositions which found them compared to<br>contemporary acts like the Mahavishnu Orchestra or Camel. <br><br>The band released three well regarded albums from 1975 - 1977 beginning with the strongest of them<br>all, the stunning debut release GLORY OF THE INNER FORCE. The album is characterized by four lengthy<br>tracks, all of which exceeded 9 minutes playing time with the closing "A Bridge To Alice" exceeding<br>13. Modern reissues include even more bonus tracks titled "Colossus Parts I & II" which were<br>originally released as a non-album single. What's immediately apparent when the feisty "Register<br>Magister" begins the album is how heavy and feisty this foursome was with fast tempos, extremely<br>rough around the edges rock energy and the technical wizardry of the band members playing in tight<br>unison while navigating hairpin stylistic shifts and a plethora of varying musical motifs.<br><br>Emulating somewhat the virtuoso majesty of Emerson, Lake & Palmer, this foursome could pull off the<br>same technical chops with ease and although the guitar is a lot more pronounced than the average<br>prog band of the era (save the Mahavishnus), the keyboard antics of Determiner are equally<br>impressive showcasing a clear reference to Keith Emerson only with a more reserved Rick Wakeman<br>finesse. Equally dynamic however are the powerful bass and drumming sections which exceed mere<br>rhythmic time keepers and exhibit crafty skill equally as impressive as the guitar / key combo<br>effect. The band easily holds their own without the aid of a vocalist to deliver some kind of lyric<br>based message and although the music can come off as abstract as it almost sounds like a precursor<br>to prog metal in many ways, the dynamic diversity of tempos, timbres, tones and triumphant energetic<br>performances is awe inspiring.<br><br>Perhaps where FINCH falters is that the influences are rather apparent and despite the technical<br>displays of a powerfully played album's worth of material that it's clear that Van Nimwegen isn't<br>quite up there in creative talent as John McLaughlin and Determeijer is clearly in Emerson worship<br>territory much of the time however despite the band perhaps not rising to the absolute top royalty<br>thrones of the 70s prog world, there's not denying that GLORY OF THE INNER FORCE is a tour de force<br>second tier prog act to be noticed laced with enough musical mojo and subtle creative fusion ideas<br>to keep it fresh enough to warrant an essential tag for prog lovers who want to explore beyond the<br>absolute cream of the crop. The band's melodic touches are quite beautiful and the attention paid to<br>the dynamics which cast atmospheric drenched softer passages with more guitar angsty heaviness is<br>the absolute essential ingredients to craft a cleverly designed prog winner from the era AAAND gotta<br>love that stunningly gorgeous album cover art. Personally i prefer this album to many of Focus'<br>works.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 09:42:50 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287383</guid></item><item><title>MR. ALBERT SHOW Mr. Albert Show (Crossover Prog, 1970)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287382</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/7196/cover_154420552026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; The comically named MR ALBERT SHOW was a short-lived Dutch progressive act that formed in Eindhoven<br>in 1969 and stuck it out until 1973 releasing two albums along the way and a few singles. Known for<br>its psychedelic take on bluesy jazz rock, MR ALBERT SHOW was named after their road manager and<br>known for their robust sound that has been referred to as a cross between Colosseum and the German<br>Kraut-jazz act Xhol. The band was a six-man act that featured Bertus Borgers (vocals, flute,<br>saxophone), Tom Fautubun (bass guitar), Bonki Bongaerts (organ, piano, harmonica), Erik Lintermans<br>(lead guitar) and Roeland (Broer) Boogaart (drums, percussion) along with vocalist Floortje Klomp.<br><br>The band scored an instant top 40 hit in their native Netherlands with the single "Wild Sensation"<br>which demonstrated the band's crossover appeal where 60s psychedelic pop cozily coalesced with the<br>more demanding sounds of jazz rock and early prog that were gestating about this time. The band's<br>debut eponymously titled album was released in 1970 after attracting attention with their highly<br>energetic and captivating live performances throughout Holland and quickly scored a recording<br>contract on the Philips label with many reissues on various other labels over the years. <br><br>While the songs themselves are pretty much geared towards crossover success, the musicians on board<br>were competent enough to dish out some serious chops which included a beefy bass groove, excellent<br>funky guitar work and lots of saxophone and jazzy touches. One of the most prominent features is the<br>trippy psychedelic organ sounds that keep the album rooted in the 60s while capturing the zeitgeist<br>of the blossoming more progressive realms of music although the album is more akin to proto-prog<br>than anything from the King Crimson or High Tide camp for sure. The album itself featured nine<br>tracks at slightly over 37 minutes and brings to mind many of the brassy jazz rock bands of the day<br>in the same camp as bands like Brainchild, Colosseum, Galliard, The Greatest Show On Earth, Heaven,<br>If, Walrus and the Keef Harley Band.<br><br>Overall MR ALBERT SHOW's debut is a competent and pleasurable slice of the more accessible side of<br>jazz rock from the era and unlike many of the vocalists of the era, Floortje Klomp's style is quite<br>pleasing as well reminding me a bit of the vocals in Gnidrolog. A nice throwback to the brackish<br>waters of 1970 where the rules of the prog playbook weren't established and creativity was running<br>amok. Unfortunately despite the competency displayed on this debut album, the album doesn't really<br>stand out in any particular way as the style had been done better by Chicago and Colosseum and MR<br>ALBERT SHOW doesn't exceed that level of creative edge. For those digging into the nooks and<br>crannies of early 70s Dutch progressive music though this one should not be missed. The band<br>released one more album titled "Warm Motor" in 1971 and managed to stick around for another two<br>years before taking that proverbial permanent leave of absence. <br><br>3.5 rounded down<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 09:42:36 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287382</guid></item><item><title>ALPHONSE MOUZON In Search Of A Dream (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 1978)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287369</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/7547/cover_4652145102018_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by BrufordFreak &mdash; What a line-up! My expectations can't help but be elevated. In Search of a Dream was recorded in Stuttgart, Germany, <br>at Zuckerfabrik, between November 20'24, 1977, for MPS Records, with the album bing released as a vinyl LP early in <br>the next year.<br><br>1. "Nightmare" (6:07) one of the Philip Catherine performances that reminds me that he probably should be <br>considered among Jazz-Rock Fusion's greatest guitarists. Miroslav Vitous and bandleader Al really shine throughout <br>this up-tempo Power Fusion tune as does pianist Joachim Kuhn. Al lays down an absolutely awesome drum solo in the <br>third minute. (9.333/10)<br><br>2. "Electric Moon" (4:50) encroaching into the territories being explored by Third Wave J-R Fusion artists like Return To <br>Forever, Nova, and Brand X, a slower, more television-soundtrack-oriented tempo is played while Stu Goldberg's keys, <br>Miroslav's fretless "underwater" bass, and Al's drumming sound like NOVA's team of and Narada Michael Walden, <br>respectively. Nice song with a very comforting sound palette. (9/10)<br><br>3. "Shoreline" (4:30) here's one that opens sounding like a Weather Report tune--complete with the Jaco-like fretless <br>bass sound being played by Miroslav--but then at 0:45 the sax and keys take it into a more Jazzy motif but Miroslav's <br>Jaco Pastorius-like bass play, Bob Malik's Smooth Jazz tenor sax, and Joachim's Chick Corea-like piano playing bring it <br>back into a kind of Weather Report area. Thanks to Joachim's wonderful keyboard work I like this better than most WR <br>songs. Al's work here is subdued, making his contributions practically negligible. (9.125/10)<br><br>4. "The Light" (3:21) violin-sounding bowed double bass is the featured instrument on this otherwise-RTF like song. Al's <br>drumming are right in the Power Fusion category occupied by Lenny White and Narada Michael Walden. Nice. (9/10)<br><br>5. "The Unknown Journey" (4:00) opening with a two keyboard-arpeggiated chords within which guitar, bass, and <br>drums drive us forward at a comfortable, leisurely pace while Bob Malik plays a sax line as the presenter of the main <br>melody. Nice. I like Al's almost-aggressive play--even the crashing cymbals. Miroslav gets the second solo before an <br>electric piano gets a turn. (Is that Al or Joachim?) Nice song--especially if you want to really get a listen to some great <br>drumming. (9.25/10)<br><br>6. "The Ram And The Scorpio" (5:53) flying out of the gate like a bat out of Carlsbad Al, Miroslav, Philip, Stu, and <br>Joachim seem to be on an important delivery run as they collectively support solos from electric guitar, organ, and <br>electric piano. As with the album's opener, Philip Catherine is really impressive. (Why couldn't he be more consistently <br>impressive like this on every album I've heard him contribute to?) Stu Goldberg's organ play is also quite impressive <br>and enjoyable and his MiniMoog duel with Philip is top notch. (9.25/10)<br><br>7. "In Search Of A Dream" (4:51) mellowing us out a little after those last few, we're almost in the comforting near-<br>Smooth Jazz territory of Narada Michael Walden's solo career. But this turns out to be yet another showcase for the <br>talents of Philip Catherine. (Which begs the question of why was his career so spotty: why weren't all of his <br>contributions as a collaborator as good as this?) Al, Miroslav, and Joachim are so solid--each worthy of singling out. <br>Unfortunately, Bob Malik's sax kind of lowers the bar by bringing the music into that Dave Sanborn area of schlocky <br>Smooth Jazz. (9/10)<br><br>8. "Playing Between The Beat" (2:34) flanged drum soloing opens this and then continues for the song's duration with <br>some clapping and vocalized percussive noises joining in the mix during the song's second half. Weird that it's taken <br>me so long to appreciate Alphonse's skills and talent because he is good! (8.875/10)<br><br>9. "Nothing But A Party (incl. "Happy Birthday")" (3:58) group singing of "Happy Birthday" in a single room setting <br>opens this before the band set up a Disco funk motif for multi-track sax harmonized melody to play over. Nice to hear <br>that these guys can play funk and Disco--Philip Catherine rhythm guitar and wah-wah lead, Miroslav Vitous slappy funk <br>bass and wah-wah bass, Alphonse Disco drums, and even Joachim Kuhn the chord-stylings required of the electric <br>piano. Kind of cool! (9/10)<br><br>Total Time 40:04<br><br>Finally Al has realized that his skill set enables himself to make music of the highest caliber of Jazz-Rock Fusion's Third <br>Wave: as a Power Fusionist--especially if he surrounds himself with the right crew of collaborators. With this album he <br>has accomplished that. <br><br>A-/five stars; a minor masterpiece of excellent Third Wave Jazz-Rock Fusion. Highly recommended for the EXCELLENT <br>drumming, bass play, and lead guitar work. <br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 07:29:43 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287369</guid></item><item><title>WOBBLER Hinterland (Symphonic Prog, 2005)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287329</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1698/cover_3944152342016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Fercandio46 &mdash; There are bands that have boots from their very first steps and leave their mark; these Norwegian boots leave the <br>W of Wobbler on the floor in their wake, even in their early days...where inspirations and influences are the starting <br>point to build something more, perhaps something new, a floor and not a ceiling.<br><br>Hinterland begins by recalling Emerson, Lake & Palmer, but then, with the mellotron, they construct truly original <br>sections. Later, influences of Peter Gabriel are evident in the vocals, and musically, Gentle Giant, with its guitar and <br>keyboard progressions. Not many bands have followed such a winding path, with the possible exception of Spock's <br>Beard at times. But despite all these influences, a unique sound emerges, and more importantly... the will to create <br>it even before it's fully realized.<br><br>When they delve into medieval territory, they do so with such realism that you can almost see the candles until the <br>wind blows them out during the dark and heavy sections, with guitar and keyboards twisting and turning like Keith <br>Emerson's, classic and groundbreaking at the same time. Most importantly, they take the time to play, to <br>experiment with sounds, noises, and atmospheres. You can hear the bass and a keyboard... they take the time to <br>build connecting sections and leave them in the final mix, and all of this on their debut album!<br>The final section of Hinterland is reminiscent of Genesis at times, transitioning into almost chamber-like <br>atmospheres, with that signature sound that Tony Banks, Steve Hackett, and Mike Rutherford knew so well how to <br>create. Lars Fredrik Fr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[islie, their keyboardist, would become one of their main driving forces, both in terms of <br>composition and sound. A touch of metal in the rock section is welcome, which they skillfully alternate with <br>keyboards and then flute in a symphonic, flamenco-infused finale.<br><br>Rubato Industry has the ability to make us abstract ourselves from reality, from the era we live in, and introduces <br>us to the Crimson universe, but then it goes further. There's deep metal, more than one arrangement layered <br>simultaneously, new ideas, and this capacity for abstraction is present throughout the entire album and promises <br>to be a hallmark of the band, whose imprint will be so strong that it will endure despite future lineup changes. In <br>this case, the whole is also greater than the sum of its parts.<br>Kristian Karl Hultgren on bass and Martin Nordrum Kneppen on drums are ever-present, forming an unbeatable <br>foundation upon which the rest of the band rests.<br><br>This is a winter album...it's a Shakespearean album, evident once again in Clair Obscur, and I never cease to be <br>amazed by such a display of nuances, like in the pioneering bands, and yet it sounds like snow, ice and thawing, the <br>Baltic Shield.<br><br>At times, the trio of keyboards, bass, and drums sounds incredibly rich...only then does the guitar join in, <br>crystallizing a strange melody, a new harmony. Isn't that what we're looking for?<br><br>It's like rolling dice...we know what goes in...each number is an influence, an inspiration...but we don't know what <br>will come out when we put them on the table, because those same numbers...those same influences...will result in <br>something completely new.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 04:00:34 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287329</guid></item><item><title>JETHRO TULL 50 for 50 (Prog Folk, 2018)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287327</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/418/cover_3254103032018_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by fuxi &mdash; A fascinating collection, but who is it for? For your long-lost uncle, who was stranded on a far-away island for <br>over 40 years without electricity and whom you're trying to introduce to classic rock? For your teenage niece or <br>nephew, but do they ever listen to CD compilations? For yourself perhaps, if you're a Jethro Tull fan and you just <br>need a collection of juicy bits? (I myself once bought a double album similar to this but less comprehensive: the <br>1993 ANNIVERSARY COLLECTION.)<br><br>Let's presume this is Ian Anderson's visiting card. After all, he compiled the whole thing himself, so it seems this <br>is how he wants us to remember the band he co-founded. There's just one small problem: ever since 5O FOR 50 <br>appeared, Jethro Tull has been resurrected! At the time of writing (May 2026) they've released three brand-new <br>studio albums, so in the not too distant future we can probably expect a new compilation called "60 FOR 60".<br><br>Did Mr. Anderson do a good job? On the whole, I'd say: 'Yes, definitely.' The collection starts out really strong, <br>with no less than 14 tracks that mainly cover the band's early blues/heavy rock style. The music is very forceful, <br>there's not a weak track to be found, but I must immediately modify my statement: (1) Ian's idiosyncratic vocals <br>and flute-playing have never really been bluesy; right from the start they lend a folksy flavour to the music; (2) <br>superb as they are, 'Mother Goose' and 'Life's a Long Song' are predominantly acoustic, i.e. not 'heavy' at all.<br><br>After that, the music takes a left turn, with a delightful passage from one of the greatest JT albums, A PASSION <br>PLAY. And things then get REALLY weird: we haven't even heard anything from SONGS FROM THE WOOD, and <br>suddenly there's the turgid 'Weathercock' (from HEAVY HORSES)  which hardly has a tune and which is <br>completely spoiled for me, by Ian's over-harsh voice.<br><br>CD no. 2 starts promisingly, but Ian then makes the mistake of including the full 8:53 min. version of 'Heavy <br>Horses' (the title track), which just goes on and on and on... Would have been far better if he'd given us a longer <br>excerpt from THICK AS A BRICK. (He now cuts off just before "The poet and the painter...", which is a shame.) <br>Now I must admit he's adept at choosing the most appetising tunes from each album (after the quirky 'Hunting <br>Girl' even 'Bungle in the Jungle' sounds refreshing) but sometimes I wonder if he's fully aware that Jethro Tull <br>have never been what they once were since John Evan, Dee Palmer and Barriemore Barlow flew the coop. <br>Anyway, there are no further problems with CD 2, all the remaining compositions are delightful (apart from <br>'Pussy Willow'), it seems obvious that neither Jon Anderson, nor Peter Gabriel nor Tony Banks have treated us to <br>as many sprightly tunes as Ian!<br><br>CD 3 is the most problematic of the three. The fact that every JT studio LP simply HAD to be included causes <br>trouble here: 'Kissing Willie', 'North Sea Oil' and 'Broadsword' are all eminently forgettable, but hey, that still <br>leaves us with ten fully enjoyable tracks and I'm glad both 'Budapest' and 'Farm on the Freeway' are included, <br>Ian impresses me even as a Mark Knopfler copy-cat.<br><br>So if you have that uncle, niece or nephew... You could always encourage them just to stream this collection. <br>Only one thing's clearly missing, in my opinion: something like 'Back-Door Angels" or 'Black Satin Dancer', which <br>features one of those incredible (Barriemore Barlow-supported) Martin Barre lead guitar outbursts.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 03:15:13 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287327</guid></item><item><title>PAIN OF SALVATION Road Salt One (Progressive Metal, 2010)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287293</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/284/cover_2238172552016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Fleishmann &mdash; Road Salt One by Pain of Salvation is, for me, easily their best album. It feels like a bold left turn that totally pays off. <br>Instead of leaning into their usual polished, progressive sound, they went for something much rawer and stripped-<br>down, almost uncomfortably honest at times. That lack of heavy production gives the whole record a gritty, organic <br>vibe that's seriously refreshing. You can hear every imperfection, and that's exactly what makes it work?it feels real. <br>The songs hit harder emotionally because nothing is hiding behind layers of gloss. It might not be what every fan <br>expected, but that's part of its charm. Honestly, this is Pain of Salvation at their most authentic, and I don't think <br>they've topped it since.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 02:31:59 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287293</guid></item><item><title>TOOL Lateralus (Experimental/Post Metal, 2001)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287280</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1199/cover_123121062016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Fleishmann &mdash; Lateralus is, honestly, Tool at their absolute peak. For me, it's their masterpiece?everything just clicks in a way that <br>feels almost unreal. The mix of complex rhythms, trippy structures, and deep, almost spiritual themes never feels <br>overdone; it all flows naturally. Every track pulls you in and demands your full attention, but it pays off big time the <br>more you listen. There's a sense of balance here?technical but still emotional?that's really hard to pull off. I <br>genuinely doubt they'll ever reach this level of creative fullness again in any later release. Lateralus isn't just a great <br>album, it's the kind of record that sticks with you and changes how you hear music.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 02:29:32 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287280</guid></item><item><title>PENDRAGON Men Who Climb Mountains (Neo-Prog, 2014)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287272</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/288/cover_3221161012017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by A Crimson Mellotron &mdash; Of Pendragon's lesser-known albums, 2014's 'Men Who Climb Mountains' is a record that remains<br>somewhat of an outlier in the band's catalogue. The follow-up to the heavy-headed albums 'Pure' and<br>'Passion', on which the band had explored aggressive riffs and fast-paced writing, is a record that<br>oversees an alternative heavy prog sound, perhaps vaguely similar to the music of Porcupine Tree and<br>The Pineapple Thief, with a strong focus on the emotional resonance of the songs and the crafty<br>guitar work of founding member Nick Barrett. Yes, this album is indeed almost entirely deprived of<br>the symphonic sheen of the classic Pendragon albums, as the keyboards play a more background role<br>here. And with the songwriting to the fore as well, the arrangements are slightly more complex than<br>on 'Passion', for example, as the majority of the songs on this LP exceed the 6-minute mark and<br>feature peculiar shifts and tone changes.<br><br>'Men Who Climb Mountains' opens up with a short piece that anticipates and relates to the first big<br>song on the album, the excellent and moving 'Beautiful Soul'. This track is a perfect blend between<br>the emotive melodicism within Barrett's music, and his expressive guitar playing, exuding<br>similarities to what Steve Rothery does with Marillion. 'Come Home Jack' then features several fine<br>themes but its chorus is definitely not that great; and at eleven minutes, this mini-suite can feel<br>a little exhausting at times. 'In Bardo' and 'Faces of Darkness' are tremendous songs with a very<br>strong alternative rock influence, where the melodic guitar playing strikes you as moving but<br>comforting in a way that resembles some of the classic Camel records. Both of these songs are<br>slightly darker, however, especially by Pendragon's standards, so they might end up being<br>misunderstood by the fans of their more symphonic material. The album's finale is unfortunately very<br>forgettable and features a couple of mediocre songs ('Explorers of the Infinite', 'Netherworld'),<br>within which I struggle to find an intriguing hook or an astounding sound. And so, it seems like<br>some of the experiments on this album did not pay off as expected, rendering 'Men Who Climb<br>Mountains' as a fine and emotive album that nevertheless fails to capture all the qualities of<br>Pendragon's music.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 6 May 2026 02:24:05 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287272</guid></item><item><title>CINCINNATO Cincinnato (Jazz Rock/Fusion, 1974)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287254</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1646/cover_1820132352005.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by The Progolyte &mdash; Here we have yet another Italian band who had its life cut short. Lasting between 1970 with the name Eros <br>Natura and splitting up in 1973, the group Cincinnato has your classic jazz rock sound of the seventies, <br>although the Rock Progressivo Italiano twist that was found on other Italian jazz bands such as Arti E <br>Mestieri, Dedalus, and Napoli Centrale is still here, and the sound here is a lot smoother and less complex <br>overall. While it's still good, I would like if they had more keyboards on here instead of just an acoustic <br>piano and some minimal background synths. Another problem I had with the record is that it sounds like <br>their levels of energy on here are low and it isn't all that exciting. On the brighter side, the mostly <br>instrumental music allows for some great portions of soloing and jams to be sprinkled into the longer <br>tracks. The album's personnel includes Gianni Fantuzzi on guitar and vocals, Giacomo Urbanelli on <br>keyboards, Annibale Vanetti on bass, and Donato Scolese on drums. <br><br>The album is composed of only four tracks, with side one having the three shorter ones and side two <br>containing the giant twenty-minute-long side-long suite. Most of the music here is low and smooth jazz, <br>with the guitar tone rarely going into distorted territory and always remaining at a quieter level. Most of the <br>keyboard arrangements, as I mentioned above, aren't really taken up by real keyboards and are instead <br>filled with acoustic pianos. Moving on to the actual music, the album's opener, Ribelle Ubriaco, is a really <br>good ten-minute-long composition that is full of really interesting arrangements, though it still isn't the <br>most complex thing on the album. The shorter two minutes of material on Tramonto D'Ottobre and the <br>seven minutes of Esperanto are both okay pieces, although they are a lot quieter and smoother and lack a <br>driving force in them. Side two's lengthy suite called L'Ebete is probably the best thing on here. It can get <br>quite technical at points and is full of intricate passages. This is also the only song to actually contain vocals, <br>but they're only in the opening minutes so the band has space to fully exercise their creativity. <br><br>In conclusion, sure, it may not be the best Italian jazz album out there, but there is still some pretty decent <br>material on here that does a good job at pleasing me musically. I'll be awarding this album a very strong <br>3.25/5, but it might also reach the territory of a low 3.5/5.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 21:06:45 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287254</guid></item><item><title>DE DE LIND Io Non So Da Dove Vengo E  Non So Dove Mai Andr&#65533;, Uomo &#65533; Il Nome Che Mi Han Dato (Rock Progressivo Italiano, 1973)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287253</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/931/cover_65281352017_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by The Progolyte &mdash; Getting their name from the American model of the sixties, De De Lind is one of the most acclaimed Italian <br>progressive rock artists of the seventies, and like so many others at the time, they created a singular album <br>before disappearing and never coming back. Not even a reunion or a released archive recording, nothing. <br>They have also become known for their one and only album having one of the longest album names ever <br>known, with that title being Io Non So Da Dove Vengo E Non So Dove Mai Andr]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[, Uomo ]]>&#65533;<![CDATA[ Il Nome Che Mi <br>Han Dato, and it roughly translates to I Don't Know Where I Come From And I Don't Know Where I'll Ever <br>Go, Man Is The Name They Gave Me. Moving on to the music, it's an interesting blend of heavy symphonic <br>prog with minimal influences of jazz and folk, so it isn't one of the most original sounds in the Rock <br>Progressivo Italiano sub-genre. When looking at the personnel, it includes Vito Paradiso on vocals and <br>acoustic guitar, Matteo Vitolli on the other guitars and flute (among other various instruments), Gilberto <br>Trama on woodwinds and brass instruments along with keyboards, Eddy Lorigiola on bass, and Ricky <br>Rebajoli on drums. <br><br>There are only seven tracks that make up the record, most of which are around five to seven minutes, but <br>some can get as short as two minutes. Most of the music switches between pastoral and calming folk music <br>and heavy and psychedelic progressive rock, all wrapped in the excellent talent of the members and how <br>they play their respective instruments. One of my main problems, as with most Rock Progressivo Italiano <br>bands of this period, is the lackluster production. Yes, I understand that some of these guys probably <br>weren't in the best financial position, so that could explain it, but that was just a note I wanted to quickly <br>add. My two favorite tracks were Fuga E Morte and Paura Del Niente for their complex and constantly <br>moving structures combined with some great soloing and deep emotion in the tracks. I also really liked the <br>flute solo on the second one of these songs and how it sort of continues into the fourth and longest track, <br>Smarrimento. Overall, all the tracks here are great, and while they do blend in when it comes to what's in <br>their musical core, each of them is still fantastic. <br><br>In conclusion, De De Lind could've accomplished a lot more if they had stayed together and released a few <br>more records in that same Rock Progressivo Italiano realm. They definitely had the talent both <br>instrumentally and musically, but unfortunately, as of June 30th, 2025 (the time of writing this review), no <br>such album has come out. This one is probably a strong 4/5.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 21:03:46 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287253</guid></item><item><title>TRIANGLE Square The Circle (Neo-Prog, 2000)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287214</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/895/cover_274611842016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by siLLy puPPy &mdash; A popular band name that has been used countless times throughout the decades but not one of those<br>acts have exactly been popular. Here's yet another. This band named TRIANGLE is from Rotterdam in<br>the Netherlands although the band originally formed under the moniker SQUARE THE CIRCLE in 1993<br>before changing its name in 2000. As you can see once the this quartet of Martijn Paasschens<br>(vocals/keyboards), Roland ven der Stoep (guitars), Jan-Willem Verkerk (bass), and Paul van der<br>Zwaal (drums) finally got to releasing its debut, the band name became the album title and the rest<br>is history. Still active in the modern day these core members have remained staunchly faithful to<br>their trade and have worked together ever since, an amazing feat in the modern age of disposable<br>band members.<br><br>Modeled after the English neo-prog bands such as IQ, Arena, Pendragon and Fish-era Marillion,<br>TRIANGLE also added a touch of Canadian band Rush to the mix with its crafty time signature changes<br>and harder rock heft. SQUARE THE CIRCLE hit the scene in the year 2000 just when the progressive<br>rock revival was hitting full steam which may explain why this excellent debut release has remained<br>somewhat of an unknown entry in the neo-prog scene. The album features seven tracks with four of<br>them extending past the 10-minute playing time and features all those exquisite neo-prog attributes<br>of thick synthesized atmospheres reminiscent of the best known neo-prog acts along with the expected<br>guitar sweeps out of the Steve Rothery and Steve Hackett playbooks.<br><br>While not the most original style of neo-prog out there which may explain many not latching onto<br>this, one thing is for sure and that is that TRIANGLE were masters of crafting a beautifully<br>designed slightly darker version of the classic prog revival sound with eerier than usual<br>synthesizer effects and a touch of a downer vibe in the vocal department. Like most excellent neo-<br>prog albums, SQUARE THE CIRCLE is chock full of instantly lovable melodic constructs drenched in<br>synthesized excess and pulling the expected punches of tension building and climactic crescendoes.<br>What appeals to me most is that much neo-prog is more like extended arena rock music rather than the<br>angular type of progressive rock but TRIANGLE isn't afraid to dabble in shades of knotty time<br>signatures and polyrhythms although the songwriting structures are very traditional in approach. <br><br>While upon first listen TRIANGLE may not sound overly original in style but the band is actually a<br>bit more adventurous than many contemporary neo-prog bands of the era with the exception of perhaps<br>some of the Polish bands like Abraxas. SQUARE THE CIRCLE features the expected neo-prog shtick while<br>dressing it up with more moments of contrast with the usual softer ballad runs along with more heavy<br>rock however it's not just a build up from one to the other at all. Often the dynamics shift without<br>notice and all done in a respectful organic way that adds a sense of excitement to it all. I was not<br>expecting to really like this debut album by TRIANGLE but upon further review it's a nice surprise<br>that it's done so meticulously well and graced by a stunningly gorgeous production and mixing job.<br>Every musician really stands out in a good way as the bass lines are tastefully integrated and<br>although vocalist Martijn Paaschens may not have the most operatic vocal style, he certainly has a<br>charisma all his own.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 19:52:58 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287214</guid></item><item><title>ABSENTHIA Novecento (Atto primo) (Rock Progressivo Italiano, 2016)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287212</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/4562/cover_21021592016_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by Finnforest &mdash;  Stately, Heavy, Dramatic <br><br>Absenthia are a third wave RPI band from Vicenza who began in 2005 and were still active on social<br>media as of 2018. Time will tell if further releases are forthcoming. After their well-received 2009<br>debut "Tenebrae Vincunt"---five stars from my old friends Andrea and Chris!---they returned in 2016 with<br>"Novecento Atto Primo," which some places refer to as an album while others as an EP. To me, it's<br>their second album, just a short one as is very common in the history of Italian progressive rock. <br><br>The second album pretty much picks up where their debut left off and with essentially the same line-up although they have dropped from two guitarists to one. Their sound, which was somewhat unique<br>when they started, has now been replicated by many. The historical tenets of symphonic prog rock<br>were updated and supercharged with heavier guitars and more guitar presence, in somewhat of a break<br>from the second wave which could often be mellower and keyboard led. Bands were now taking their<br>guitar presence closer to the popular prog-metal sound. Although this is not fully prog metal in my<br>book, there is certainly full-on flirtation in many places. They often employ metal-tinged guitar<br>riffs and large, flanged, ringing chords not unlike bands like VIII Strada and S91. Bau's keyboard<br>work is modern sounding with cool samples of orchestral flair, clean piano, and even electronica to<br>contrast the dominating sound of the guitar.<br><br>Speaking of pushing back on the guitar dominance, this album is built around the stunningly good<br>Italian language vocals of Igor D'Aoconte, who is the most potent weapon in the Absenthia arsenal,<br>though every musician here is playing absolutely top notch. D'Aoconte brings a deep voice with a<br>very commanding and formal-sounding delivery. The dude could easily be employed in a world class<br>opera. He can turn on a dime from a soft, clean, vulnerable voice to a huge, majestic roar and even<br>occasionally spit a bit of metalish growl. In only 33 minutes, we are taken on a ride that covers<br>plenty of ground. There is a lot of depth and songwriting variety, even pulling in some classical<br>and folkish bits, much drama, and even some playfulness. Most important, the feel of the tracks<br>connect with me emotionally. Despite the language barrier, I can feel this. <br><br>Once again, it proves to me how short albums are wonderful; rarely do we need these 70-minute<br>behemoths. Sometimes warranted, sure, but too often feeling more like obligation in prog these days.<br>If you were one of the many who loved their debut, this is a slam dunk that you will dig this one<br>too. The CD comes with an extra bonus track that is not on the digital versions.<br></em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 19:50:00 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287212</guid></item><item><title>RIFFSTONE Mythical Creatures (Symphonic Prog, 2026)</title><link>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287168</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/13094/cover_84321342026_r.jpg" align=center width="300" /><p>Review by luisanchez19 &mdash; Mythical Creatures is Riffstone's third album in two years, and it is their most ambitious and fully realised work to <br>date. The duo of Dave Allen and Colin Powell have constructed a ten-track concept album of just over eighty <br>minutes, in which each piece is dedicated to a specific mythological creature ? Griffin, Dragon, Phoenix, Hydra, <br>Basilisk, Manticore, Selkies, Chimera, Leviathan and Unicorn ? treated not merely as folkloric subject matter but as <br>psychological archetypes, mirrors of ambition, fragmentation, conflict and eventual integration.<br><br>The music is dense, melodic and consistently inventive throughout its considerable runtime. Mellotron is the <br>dominant keyboard voice, present across the album in waves that give the music its characteristic warmth and <br>weight, alongside synthesizers, organ and piano. The bass playing is a particular strength, carrying both harmonic <br>and rhythmic authority in a manner that recalls the more assertive end of the classic prog tradition. Programmed <br>drums serve the music well despite their synthetic nature, with the arrangements structured to minimise any <br>mechanical quality.<br><br>Individual tracks reward close attention. "The Phoenix" builds from acoustic guitar and keyboards into a piece of <br>considerable emotional power, with guitar work that touches on early King Crimson territory. "The Manticore" is the <br>album's longest and most structurally diverse piece, blending folk textures, flute-like keyboards and medieval <br>atmosphere with more forceful progressive passages. "The Selkies" brings a Celtic edge and strong melodic <br>momentum, while the closing "The Unicorn" resolves the album in a warmly Beatles-inflected finale that provides <br>genuine emotional release after the weight of what preceded it.</em></em><p>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2026 16:16:42 EST</pubDate><guid>http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=3287168</guid></item><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> 

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