Whenever something special my ears would come around for a
piece of music that might peak my interest, I know it would hit me at the right
moment. One of those moments is a band called Pixie Ninja. Now mind you, it
sounds like an Anime series or a Video Game, but the title of the band’s name
as I’ve mentioned a second ago, peak my interest. They’ve released their debut
release this year on the Apollon Records label entitled, Ultrasound.
The band came around with two individuals who have a love of
the Scandinavian Progressive scene. Now, again, I admire the Scandinavian
scene, and this band is going to be up on my list that is up there with
Anglagard, White Willow, Motorpsycho, and Beardfish to name a few. Jostein
Haugen and Marius Leiranes started to work on the album back in 2015 and then
recorded the album a year later.
And bringing Mattias Olsson to the score by mixing the album
and producing it along with the overdubs and drumming, that’s a combination.
And throw in people like Johan Hals Jorgensen and guest musician Ketil Vestrum
Einarsen (White Willow, Wobbler, and Motorpsycho) to the mix, you’ve got
yourself a weekend. But let’s go ahead and get straight to the album.
The album itself has this dark futuristic setting. It always
has this reminisce at times as if Pixie Ninja were doing the score for the 2017
video game, Prey. Now for me as a Geek, I would love to
see them one day do something like that in the near future. The album with six compositions that both Haugen and Leiranes wrote and arranged, takes you into the darker areas that you've never seen before. It’s almost at times that you can feel as if a pin
dropped and knowing that trouble is brewing.
And getting out is the hard part. There are elements between
Goblin, Anima Morte and the Sorcerer-era
of Tangerine Dream thrown into the mix. Whenever an album I mentioned before as
if the movie inside your head, well think of this like an extended director’s
cut of a sci-fi dystopian movie. It blends well of the past, present, and
future. It’s creepy, deep, and vast, but it is an interesting release this
year.
I have listened to Ultrasound
five times now. It’s not an easy album to listen to, but I will hope they
continue to do more in the years and years and years to come. Ultrasound is one of the scariest and
compelling releases I’ve listened to.
No comments:
Post a Comment