Gentle Giant really got the ball rolling with the release of their fourth album, Octopus, released in 1972 on the Vertigo label in the UK and on Columbia Records in the States and reissued in 2011 from the Alucard label, this was where the time of the group to go into a harder approach, but staying true to the difficult time signatures to follow as well in their music from their first three albums. But it was also the last album to feature older brother Phil Shulman as he grew tired of being on the road and missing his family and tension between Derek and Ray, was growing and then after the tour was completed, he would soon leave and the band would later be a quintet throughout the rest of their career.
But with the arrival of
drummer John Weathers, who was a part of bands/artists like Eyes of Blue
(Bluebell Wood), Pete Brown & Piblokto, and the late great yet overlooked
keyboardist, Graham Bond, everything started to come into place right here. The
opening track, The Advent of Panurge
is a perfect way to kick the album off with a bang as Kerry’s keyboards and
Gary’s guitar along with John’s drumming sets the tempo as they set the different
time changes going before Derek’s voice comes right in and it’s a powerful
improvisation between the character and his friend, Pantagruel.
Then the band switch the harder
edge sound into a Medieval-Renaissance vibe and a little nod to Elgar’s classical
compositions in the piece, makes it an astounding touch for them to pay tribute
to the composer while A Cry for Everyone,
goes back into the hard rock
sounds comes right back in with the story about Albert Camus, who was a
philosopher, wrote an essay called The Rebel in 1951 in which it dealt with the
opposing view of nihilism. Elsewhere, the musical jigsaw of acapella vocals
combined with chamber rock at times with the avant-garde twist is surreal, but
mind-boggling touch for them to have a blast on their tribute to psychiatrist
R.D. Laing’s view of psychosis on Knots.
The Boys in the Band begins with engineer Martin Rushent's laughter and the coin spinning to the
floor before the intensity improvisation comes kicking in like a cannonball
going off as the complex movement goes in as Kerry Minnear shines through his
keyboards and Phil Shulman’s horns, Gary Green’s Guitar, Ray’s Bass, and
Weather’s drumming fill in to have the touch of Jazz Fusion. Minnear is going
through in the midsection in the styles of Herbie Hancock and David Sancious
for a couple of seconds before closing into the climax ending.
Gentle Giant show their
softer side with the ballad on the moody composition on the love that the
people have is gone, but their memories is sorrow and showing no sign of
tomorrow with an emotional vibe and Minnear just sings so beautifully with the
soothing Think of Me with Kindness.
They also go back into the Medieval side as well as a tribute to their roadies
who have been on the road with the band with an acoustic folk touch as Phil
takes on the vocals that he is singing and its almost like an homage to Gryphon
on Dog’s Life.
The closer, River, is the band creating different
boundaries mixing with Ray’s Electric Violin and Gary Green’s Guitar playing
the melody in the moments the band would stop and go. And adding the electronic
noises of the spooky vibe with Ray and Derek sharing vocals in that midsection,
and the thunderous Weathers just nailing on the solo on the drums and Green’s
bluesy solo, it goes to show how much they can take it as a whole to close it
off with elements of the Jazz sound.
The bonus track and the 6-page booklet, which is on
their 2011 reissue from the Alucard label, is their live performance of
Excerpts of songs from Octopus they
performed at the Calderone Theater on July 3rd, 1976 in Hempstead,
New York in which they were promoting their eight album, Interview. Listening to the live performance during the
Bicentennial celebration, you could imagine and feel that you are at the
concert being blown away of the band and just rooting and cheering for them to
imagine what they would do next unexpected time movements and get the
audience’s stamp of approval.
The booklet features pictures of the band and talking about making the album and promo material at the time it was being released. Fans consider it at their peak and one of their finest albums to date. It is an integrated yet a mind-blowing album from start to finish for any fan of the Prog genre to really sink into their works. And if anyone who is a starter of Gentle Giant's music, this is a highly recommendation to get you started because it has everything inside the album; Chamber, Classical, Jazz, Folk, Hard Rock, and the Blues rolled into one.
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