Purson have never disappointed me. This year they have
released their second album on the Spinefarm Records label entitled, Desire’s Magic Theatre. Inspired by the
Rock Operas of Sgt. Pepper and The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the
Spiders from Mars, Rosalie Cunningham and her fellow comrades show no sign
of stopping.
From hearing them on the Rise Above Records sampler, Poisoned Apples along with their 2013
debut The Circle and the Blue Door, the
new album is a real spine-tingling yet amazing follow-up to show that the band
have the power and the glory to keep the train going.
The opening title track begins with train horns and audience
applauding before the band kick into gear with an essence of Roxy Music meets
Alice Cooper with a shuffling groove a-la ‘70s Glam Rock style! It then all of
a sudden delves into the psych folk in 3/4 time signature of a dooming and
dreamy waltz and then Rosalie sings her heart out in the lines “Down in a spiral/Where start meets the
end/Tongue tied/I just comprehend/Language that mainlines to the brain/BABBLE
ON BABYLON!”
I nearly cried because I was thinking to myself, “This is
the music I’ve been expecting to hear something really good!” And I was right!
I love the twist between the essence of Sonja Kristina meets Peter Hammill in
her vocal styles in the way she sings in that section. The instrumental part
has an eruptive keg from ‘60s organ, powerful guitar lines, and the improving
jazz section finale of the cross between the Moody Blues and Jethro Tull, gives
it a surreal end before seguing into Electric
Landlady.
It is a nod to Jimi Hendrix and of course the Canterbury
group, Caravan which mention the line “In
the Land of Grey and the Groan.” it erupts with blaring guitar rhythm and
riffs with spooky keyboards, ghost-like vocals, dreamy midsections, and crosses
between the Beatles, Sabbath, and the Syd Barrett-era of Pink Floyd thrown into
the mix with a hypnotic wah-wah guitar solo that Rosalie does.
Dead Dodo Down deals
with the corruption and the deal with the devil and not trusting a word they
say on TV and not knowing the truth and not buying a single word they say. The
music again features the nightmarish and dystopian atmosphere on what is to
come while The Sky Parade channels the
mind of the Abbey Road-era, Fairport
Convention, Van Der Graaf Generator, King Crimson, and the Atom Heart Mother Sessions thrown in.
I love the dooming militant acoustic intro and featuring
ascending melodies with an intense rhythm section that has a swirling punch
into heaven before ending with an abrupt silence. The Mellotron comes in with a
dreamy pop and the essence of Barrett is in there as Rosalie goes inside the
mind of the Madcap genius and pulls the brainstorming ideas with The Window Cleaner.
The stomping rhythms and horn sections for The Way It Is, captures the time of the
golden-era of the 1970s and the late ‘60s with more adventurous tones as they
back into the voyages of Space as to meet Mr.
Howard with a captivating section filled with drama, excitement, and on the
edge of your seat on what this character is going through with the crimes he
committed. It is like something straight out of Jethro Tull’s A Passion Play and The Pretty Things S.F. Sorrow as the character witness
what he has done and the music nails it down to a punch on what the penalty
will be for him.
I Know is back
into the styles of the early Beatles with the 3/4 waltz acoustic ballad in the
styles of This Boy and you can feel
the chills and beauty to take a break from the hard rock sounds and into
soaring clouds to a dance. Then, we come to the 7-minute epic, The Bitter Suite.
This is where you turn this up to maximum volume on your
headset. And you can close your eyes and picture an underground theater with three
acts and seeing where these characters singing through the pieces. It’s almost
as if both Terry Gilliam and Alejandro Jodorowsky had worked together to create
this story with the band telling the music in where they would go forwards to
and closes the curtain for the Theatre.
The bonus tracks feature two acoustic versions of I Know and a gothic acid-folk version of
The Sky Parade followed by Unsure Overture. This time George Hudson
takes over on the vocals and he and Rosalie share the vocals between each other
and this gives George a chance to shine. I always imagine Rosalie will one day
give the band members a chance to write their own material one day. Spooky organ intro, stomping drum section by Raphael Mura,
and the haunting cello section by Anna Scott, it is a driven down the highway
sing-along song.
This is my fifth time listening to Desire’s Magic Theatre. It is another return of the band’s music
and they know they have accomplished another job well done. And enjoy the
adventure as the late great Bette Davis from the film All About Eve says, “Fasten your seat belts, It’s going to be a
bumpy night!”
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