Monday, May 23, 2022

Week of May 15, 2022

  This week really rocked. When I make these selections, I hope for the best. Keep in mind my goal is to find music to add to a playlist when forced to do some task or go for walks and runs. It is designed to be enjoyed as random selections, not contiguous album playing. The power pop of Game Theory, classic prog rock of Porcupine Tree, southern jam rock of Widespread Panic, art rock of Gazpacho, all combine to bring enjoyment as random segments. This particular mix this week could sustain over hours of listening. There’s over fifteen hours of listening combined that can be enjoyed for a long time.


Best of the Week


Gazpacho - Tick Tock (Remastered)
About my third Gazpacho album that I’ve listened to, this 2009 release has a lot of Muse elements. Where Muse keeps to a 3-4 minute song length, Gazpacho extends theirs, frequently hitting 7-8 minutes. That works because the added refrains are varied and provide a counterpoint to the base theme. Really good album. Several tracks were added to the playlist.



Rpwl - The Rpwl Experience (Special Edition)
Another good outing. I got a kick out of “This is Not a Progsong” which, of course, it is. “Silenced starts off the album giving the listener their meat-and-potatoes style of weaving in and out of a bass song pattern with small detours here and there.


Widespread Panic - Light Fuse Get Away
Listening to a random set on my player, I heard a live version of “Barstools & Dreamers” and thought, why haven’t I checked out their albums? Take Phish and add in a little Allman Brothers and you have WP. Great jamming band. This was their first live release and is the basis of the CD release party in Athens GA that was filmed and released as “Panic In the Streets”



Porcupine Tree - Signify (Remaster)
One of the few PT albums I missed, this 1995 release was during their more dreamy psychedelic period. Since some of the cuts I already heard or knew, there weren’t very many surprises. That said, there was new stuff (to me, anyway) that was worthy of noting.



Ozric Tentacles - Pungent Effulgent (2020 Remaster)
Many consider this being the best album of OT’s long historical output. The space rock king had it all working. Having the benefit of a remastering job adds clarity and focus that I’m sure wasn’t there in 1989 when it came out.


IQ - Frequency
Loved the album The Road Of Bones, hoping for more of the same. It is. Mostly long segments of vintage guitar and keyboard heavy prog rock. Stylistically not much different than other work I’ve listened to thus far, but why fix something that isn’t broken?


Interesting Finds


Held By Trees - Solace
A moody prog rock album with jazz elements. A number of things make this a fine album. The recording quality is top notch. A variety of instruments are interwoven to present songs of texture and depth.


Demians - Building An Empire
Discovered this band that was a mix featuring bands like The Pineapple Thief and Gazpacho. Turns out the “band” is Nicolas Chapel who composes, produces, and plays all instruments and vocals. Listening doesn’t offer a hint of being a one-man band. The album ends on “Sand”, a sixteen minute epic that starts out very strong, cycles the intensity a few times before finishing pleasantly.


Chroma Key - Dead Air for Radios
Another one-man band, the person being Kevin Moore who left Dream Theater after eight years of being with them. Quite a bit different than DT, this features more electronic and ambient elements. Most of it is good, but it would have been better to leave out some of the speaking dialogue snippets sprinkled through several of the songs. Still, it’s an interesting sound


The Lazy Eyes - SongBook
Well, retro pop is alive and well in 2022. But it is so much fun! The first thing I hear is “Where’s My Brain???”, a six-minute bouncy tune with girlie vocals that the Ventures would have been proud to make.


Pain Of Salvation - Panther
I didn’t like POS’s In The Passing Light Of Day, but this sounds like a different group. It’s still dark and dense, but at least they presented some assemblance of musicality. In fact, most of the tracks were darn right good and added to my list.


Steve Rothery - The Ghosts of Pripyat
Pripyat was the company town built to support the workers of the Chernobyl Power Plant site that is now vacant due to the nuclear incident. The album would seem to be an austere and sad commentary on the history of it, but it doesn’t sound that depressing, thankfully. Rothery, long-time member of Marillion, did this as a side project. Basically Marillion without the vocals, it is a little more reflective and makes for great listening  while doing other work around the house or yard.


Game Theory - 2 Steps from the Middle Ages
This is a catch-all album of work at the end of the band’s run. The 24 tracks include original work, some demo releases, and live segments. The demo work tends to be spartan and the live work suffers from uneven production. Stick with Lolita Nation. This was the last Game Theory album before Miller evolved into The Loud Family.


Forgettable


Roy Montgomery - Audiotherapy
I beg to differ. After listening to the track “Occlusione”, it’s more like audio torture. It starts out nice, with a constant strumming of guitar and moving bass line, a female voice speaking a language I don’t know (French?) interludes the musical space followed by a wall of industrial noise. Some redemption on "The Expedition Across Your Skin", but the layering of basic guitar riffs tends to make the overall music ambient and dissonant. Not for the squeamish.




Sunday, May 15, 2022

Week of May 8, 2022

 Along with new entries that are current releases, I added a touch of the eighties and the nineties which was an era of rock I really thrived on. In particular, there was a subset of bands from a record label that put together a portfolio of sounds that represented the energy and brashness of that period. Enigma Records. Long defunct, they had released a compilation of their offerings called the Enigma Variations. Really just a promotional album, the grouping of work isn’t too dissimilar to the playlists we play today. 



Best of the Week

IQ - The Road of Bones

One of my need-to-check-out bands. Often said in the same breath as Marillion, I think of them as more closely related to the later Genesis period before they became a ballad band but after Gabriel left. The twelve-minute song “Constellations” is a prime example. Several tracks made it into the playlist because they excel at making long extended compositions interesting.



Pure Reason Revolution - Above Cirrus
Well, 2020’s Eupnea was fabulous, so it was a given to listen to this 2022 release and see if they could match it. While Eupnea had an electronic dance music flair and lot’s of German lyrics, Above Cirrus has a more conventional prog rock feel by leaning on hard guitar riffs and a beat more akin to electronic music. Their knack for blending these two worlds makes them unusual, but in a good way.


Gazpacho - Night (Remastered)

Why a Norwegian band would name themselves after a cold soup from Spain is beyond me, but maybe some of this playfulness is part of their character and it shows. The A-Ha quality vocals belies the fact that they have great compositional chops and prog rock appeal. Four of the eight tracks exceed double-digit minutes and they use the time well to build the music into a multi-layered story.


Rain Parade - Emergency Third Rail Power Trip
Probably the most notable release by Rain Parade, the album sparkles with the catchy tunes, psychedelic guitars, and harmonizing vocals. It hasn’t lost a thing in the nearly forty years it was released. This should be an entry in the hall of fame for this period of rock music.





Interesting Finds

Soen - Lykaia
A Swedish supergroup that has compelling tunes using a hard driving sound similar to Tool and Flying Colors. Another words, pretty good.


The Leaving Trains - Transportational D. Vices
Lots of fast, quick songs ala The Minutemen. Don’t get too attached to the riffs they employ because they aren’t there for long.


Anathema - Distant Satellites (Tour Edition)
A KScope label band that has been around thirty years, this 2014 release supposedly had more electronic music infused from prior releases. It also has Steven Wilson’s production hands all over it which is a sign of good things. It’s pretty evident because songs that would have probably sounded boring or uninspiring by others have zip and impact.


Pattern-Seeking Animals - Only Passing Through
Lively energetic prog rock using a variety of keyboards, horns, strings, and of course, guitars to produce a sea of sounds. They sound a lot like Spock’s Beard which isn’t surprising given they are essentially Spock’s Beard without the Morse brothers


Lunatic Soul - Fractured
Probably compared to Muse and Tears For Fears because of their poly-rhythmic electronic style, A little light in substance but still listenable.


Airbag - All Rights Removed
First thing I hear is the 17 minute song “Homesick”. The only problem is, the song has no real changes, like alternate interludes or choruses to break up the main theme. Not as good as Disconnected or A Day at the Beach.


Alcest - Les voyages de l’ame
Translated as “Journeys of the Soul”, the sound embraces heavy metal, but in a warm melodic manner. A strong comparison could be made to Bob Mould’s band Sugar, but with better vocals.




Green On Red - Scapegoats
I forgot what was intriguing about Green On Red. If they had a doppelganger, it would be Camper Van Beethoven as they use the same bluesy folksy whimsical tunes that showcases simple musical lines instead of power rock. There are times that is a welcome change.


T.S.O.L - Change Today?
A rolicking rolling bundle of fun tunes, many of which are counter-culture themed. A lot of George Thorogood is in their music, but a little quicker and not quite as bluesy.




Forgettable

Secrets of the Moons - Seven Bells

Ugh.




Thursday, May 05, 2022

Quick Hits May 1, 2022

 Busy week on other happenings (rental home work, sports, family stuff), so no extensive listing this time. 


Robyn Hitchcock - The Man Upstairs

It's been awhile since listening to Robyn Hitchcock, so listening to an eight year-old album still sounds fresh to me. Not really a band release, more of an ensemble and layers of production surrounding Hitchcock's fine songwriting and gentle vocals. It isn't a rocker but it does soothe the soul. 



rodrigo y gabriela - 9 Dead Alive

If you are into intricate dynamic acoustic guitar playing, Rodrigo (Sanchez) and Gabriela (Quintero) will light up your life. The style is closely formulated to traditional flamenco, but contains jazz and rock influences. I compare them favorably with the Al DiMeola and Paco de Lucia duets though Rodrigo and Gabriela are much more consistently constructed. Even through the confines of two audio speakers, your jaw is likely to drop. 


Grant Hart - Intolerance

I've been on a ex-Husker Du rampage with Bob Mould and wanted to recall Grant Hart's work. He didn't have the volume of work Mould put forth, but his work, in many ways, was more musical and equally potent. Where Mould thrashes a power guitar lick, Hart mixes his guitar work with keyboards. His lyrical point of view is more pointed and rough, probably reflecting the hard path his life took.