I’ve always have a soft spot for the Netherlands in the
history of the Progressive Rock/Metal scene with bands such as Supersister,
Within Temptation, Earth & Fire, Trace, Ayreon, Focus, and Golden Earring.
They always have my ears lit up when it comes to both Jazz, Hard Rock,
Orchestral, Story-telling, and Adventurous rock as they take me to other worlds
on where they would take the Progressive genre and head into those journey’s
that is like opening a new book and seeing what is about to happen.
One of the artist from the Netherlands that completely blew
me away is an artist name Joost Maglev. He has been writing music when he was a
young man and throughout out his grammar school years whilst playing Bass
Guitar in various projects. About 14 years ago, he started to record his own
music and released his first mini CD entitled, Prelude in which he wrote, sing and played various instruments.
He played not just Bass, but Guitar, Keyboards, and Drums. A
virtuoso in the making since he got the ball rolling and then he released his
first full-length album back in 2005 entitled Voluntary, and then another mini-album Undeaded Blood in 2008. His influence range from Tim Smith of the
Cardiacs, Valensia Clarkson, and Yono Kanno. He is a very busy man when it
comes to projects. This year in 2016, he released his first full-length progressive
rock album called, Overwrite the Sin.
I’ve always wanted to discover more of the Prog genre. So I
remember watching the Album trailer on YouTube and I was on the edge of my
seat. I ordered the album straight away from the Kinesis Progressive Rock store
website. There are five tracks that clock in between 8 and 9 minutes, and with
one clocking in at 12 minutes. I remember putting the album on my little old
portable CD player and then, my eyebrows and jaw dropped right to the floor.
It’s this combination of late ‘70s/early ‘80s Album
Orientated Rock (AOR), Symphonic, Prog-Pop, Electronic Dance, and Metal thrown
into the mix. It’s a strange mix, but it works well to blend it in together and
closing your eyes and imagine it is 1975 all over again. Alongside Joost, he
brought along Pianist Robby Valentine, Violinist Myrthe van de Weetering, Guitarist
Sebas Honing, and backing vocalists Emmy Van Gemert and Scarlet Penta.
Confined starts
off with a gentle acoustic/string quartet ballad in the styles of Kansas’ Point of Know Return-era for the first
4-minutes before kicking into overdrive with the elements of Power Metal thrown
in and it’s a speeding rhythm punch that Sebas heads into intense riffs and
soon to be sing-along sections in the chorus. The lyrics hit with what they
have done and the damage they cost in themselves by making them their own worst
enemy and the music itself hits like an eruptive bang with an explosion at the
right time!
The electrifying and dance-like yet thumping and pounding
melodies of Judith, which I think is
the character on the front cover of the album done by Emmy herself. Electronic
Rock and a cross between ABBA meets Queen’s golden-era from 1974-1976 period, shows
Joost writing a mini-opera about her on her obsession with her looks and how
she controls and the love of the person’s feelings for her, is disturbing, but
it can rock like a shining diamond.
Not to mention that Operatic movement and then back into the
forefront to close it off. You gotta love the lyrics of “Thunder strikes! Radioactive Sky!/An arrow through my head/We mourn the
fallen 2-14/It betrays! But what does it betray?/A trace of care or love/I’m
looking at the smile on your face/But after a second or two: disappear!” You
could tell that the guy is really in love with this woman.
Opener, Play the Game starts
off with the ‘80s futuristic dystopian atmosphere with synths setting the
heavier and melodic ascending tones before delving into the styles of Kayak
meets Styx’s Pieces of Eight-era meeting
a modern version of Electric Light Orchestra’s Eldorado in the chorus and you could imagine the AOR sound blends
well to capture the eruptive way to start it off. Joost knows his influences
spot on and he is not messing around, he’s got the chops down!
Song of a Dead Bard begins
with a waltz-like acoustic intro before heading into the balladry momentum
featuring a Mellotron and the movement through three people into the mini-opera
format, features gentle piano and guitar with soaring melodies that you can
imagine essence of The Beatles thrown in. And Scarlet Penta’s vocals as the
first person, is like a flower ready to burst.
The way she sings is chilling and emotional and I was really
amazed of how she nailed the part in the suite and not just the she sings, but
getting inside the character’s head and she’s asking the person to sing about
as a spirit and thanking them for everything they have done. The closing
12-minute, The Hand of Time is a
bitter-sweet finale to close the album off.
The Queen influences along with City Boy, flow in as Sebas
goes into the mind of Brian May and feature calming ballad structure followed
by more of the climbing rhythm movements that it’s a way to end it up climatic
curtain call to a roaring applause before delving into effects of people
talking, helicopter noise, and steam pumps. Overwrite
the Sin is almost like the mini-Rock Opera style that Joost has written on
here.
He is also with the Prog-Metal band Equisa which features
Sebas Honing also. But I’m getting ahead of myself. It is soon going to be one
of my favorite albums of 2016 and there’s going to be a lot of competition on
what will be album of the year for the end of the year. It captures the power
and the glory that Joost brings into his songwriting and I hope he continues to
do more.
If you love bands like Queen, City Boy, ABBA, Ayreon, and
Kansas to name a few, then buckle your seat-belts and enjoy the album adventure
of Maglev’s Overwrite the Sin.
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