To everyone, I want to let everybody know that I'm doing okay. Hurricane Harvey landed in Texas on Friday and we got heavy rain Saturday night. My house didn't get flooded. But the reviews are now postponed until September. So....I will be back until September after the Hurricane is over. So I'll see you on the flipside.
Zack
Reviews of Progressive Rock, Jazz Rock, Hard Rock, and Stories from beyond.
Sunday, August 27, 2017
Monday, August 21, 2017
Dusan Jevtovic - No Answer
MoonJune Records has been on a roll with me since 2013.
Again, I have a love for this label after discovering them in the first of the Romantic Warriors series. It is almost
as if Leonardo Pavkovic has won both the World Series and the Super Bowl when
it comes to releases. One of the albums that has suddenly landed on my knees is
Dusan Jevtovic’s new release this year entitled, No Answer. With two albums in the can including On the Edge and Am I Walking Wrong? He paired up with keyboardist Vasil Hadzimanov
and drummer Asaf Sirkis.
The album was recorded last year in two days in February at La Casa
Murada Studio in Spain. This is something you might want to take notice of
these amazing musicians that have never disappointed me from day one the moment
I’ve put this album on my portable CD player that made me want to come back
more and more. Listening to No Answer is
walking towards the opened doors as if they have finally come out to embrace to
see where the possible universes will take you.
The six highlights on here are revolutionary and make you
embark to go back in time and seeing what the 22nd century lies ahead. You
have the title-track which at first you can imagine Dusan tipping his hat to
the genius of Alex Lifeson and the Frippertronics creating these ominous tones
which reminisce of Cygnus X-1 from A Farewell to Kings. But it’s when Vasil
and Dusan create these dark sinister yet dooming approach of film-noir.
The wailing moments that Dusan hits those tones, creates
these dramatic sections before crashing with an eruptive volcanic bang. Vasil
comes into the forefront and does a piano movement that lends through
classical, blues, and jazz that at times is both honoring the Perry Mason theme and Nina Simone. And
then, the last minute and 26 seconds brings everyone together and ending on a
heavier note.
Lifetime sees the
trio riding down the freeway in a deserted area with the Blues. Dusan cuts
through the trees to chop them down one by one with his virtuosic improvisation
while Asaf follows suit to keep on the mark on his drum kit as Vasil’s dooming Rhodes
into the tunnels. Asaf Sirkis is an incredible drummer for me. Not only he’s
great, but he hits those tom-toms, snare, and cymbals to keep up the ideas and
brainstorming moments he would come up with.
It’s evidential on Prayer
when he comes to the center stage as both Dusan and Vasil give him a chance
to bring his electrical force and energy into the ring. He goes through various
movements as if the three of them go into this middle-eastern sound by going
into the pyramids to discover the tomb of the Pharaoh, Tutankhamun. El Oro is Vasil channeling the three
Keith’s; Tippett, Jarrett, and Emerson.
He heads towards the Moog to make these sounds go into a low
and rising sound that has some odd-time changes from the intro right into the
very end and believe me, it is prog to the core! The opener, Al Aire/Soko Bira is the piano going
through a loop between Mike Oldfield’s Tubular
Bells-era and Italian Progressive Rock group, Goblin. It’s Vasil tipping
his hat for both artist and band. Followed by Dusan’s roaring chords and
mysterious vibes on the cymbals, the trio create this darker atmosphere and
lurking behind you by giving the listener, the creeps.
And then there’s Frusci.
It almost features the Tritone in the opening section by essence of early
Black Sabbath, but then it goes something straight out the sessions between
King Crimson’s Larks’ Tongues in Aspic and
Led Zeppelin’s No Quarter from Houses of the Holy. Vasil creates on the
Rhodes this delay/reverb effects along with the cavernous tunnels with his
Moog. Dusan takes you on his Aeroplane and flying through the frets by creating
magic and soaring into the unknown.
Jevtovic’s music never disappoints me. In my book, he takes
the listener to various levels wherever he would them either high or low. There
is some presence when you feel his appearance coming towards you by listening
to his music. And with No Answer, he
makes you looking at the Crystal Ball and seeing where your future will take
you beyond and before.
Saturday, August 19, 2017
Steven Wilson - To The Bone
Steven Wilson whether you love him or hate him, he is for me
one of the artists I championed since re-discovering his work back with his
time with Porcupine Tree in 2006 on Classic Rock Magazine and then as a solo artist in 2009 from the
first issue of PROG Magazine. Not to mention his work with Aviv Geffen on
Blackfield and with Opeth’s Mikael Akerfeldt on Storm Corrosion. And the 5.1
mixes with XTC, Gentle Giant, King Crimson, Chicago, and Jethro Tull to name a
few. With four studio albums in the can, he releases in what his known as a “pop”
album entitled, To The Bone.
Now, mind you, this was not an easy album to review. After a
few listens of To The Bone, I find
this to be a very interesting release. There’s a mixture of inspirations that
he mentioned including Tears For Fears' The Seeds of Love, Kate Bush's Hounds of Love, and Peter Gabriel’s So album. He’s not going to be a
gigantic phenomenon, nor going to hit the mainstream, but it’s a diverse
release so far he’s unleashed. But, he’s moving forward to challenge new ideas.
Same thing with bands and artists including David Bowie, Prince, Genesis, and
Pink Floyd.
Walt Disney once said about moving forwards is that “Around here we don’t look backwards for very
long. We keep moving forward, opening up new doors and doing new things because
we’re curious and curiosity keeps leading us down new paths.” That’s is
what Wilson is doing, he’s moving on, and seeing what new ideas he will come up
next for the years to come.
The follow up to his previous work, Hand.Cannot.Erase is not just a crowning achievement, but again in
my opinion another return from the master himself. Again Permanating which will one day become a live favorite, crosses the
barriers between Talk Talk, ABBA’s Mamma Mia, and Electric Light Orchestra’s Discovery-era,
has this catchy melody with the major and minor chords on the piano with some
emotional chorus and rising beats.
The opening title-track and Nowhere Now both co-written by XTC’s Andy Partridge showcases some
of the powerful lyrics he helped Steven with. The first track features a
blaring Harmonica sound done by Mark Feltham as the lyrics deal with opening
the door as the truth has finally come out of the rubble and it’s not a
pleasant site. I love how it brings this nod to Pink Floyd’s The Division Bell track, Keep Talking as if it was continuing the
form.
Nowhere Now deals
with that once for the hope of peace below has suddenly gone. But up above in
the afterlife and living in the clouds of Heaven of what happening down there
and being free from the violence and danger, makes you wonder that you’re no
longer part of the hard and difficult situation. Wilson channels the essence of
Pete Townshend-sque guitar styles and lyrics that gives you a tug with sliding
guitars and punching riffs.
It segues into the beautiful Pariah. This is the second collaboration that Steven has worked
with Ninet Tayeb since 2015’s Hand.Cannot.Erase.
Tayeb’s vocals will give you chills and kick you right in the gut on her
arrangements of her singing. The duet between her and Steven, brings essence to
both Peter Gabriel and Kate Bush’s Another
Day and Don’t Give Up.
While the song deals with depression, giving up, and
renewal, the blaring eruptive roar after Tinyeb sings “It will take time.” You can imagine yourself falling into space
and knowing that your time has come before someone grabbing your arm and
looking at your loved-one pulling you to the surface and knowing there is hope
for a second chance.
The intense heavy riffs on The Same Asylum as Before gives the situation on a gigantic reality
check and being back in the same hell you were in before, is come to you and
karma has come. And it is letting the listener know, that once you’re in, you
can’t get out after pulling the same crap you did over and over again by
becoming the worst enemy you are now.
And the chance of getting out is zero. Steven is describing
to the character by asking the questions of “Was it really worth it? Do you
need another reality check to be in the same shit? Or are you proud of becoming
your own worst nightmare?” Elsewhere, People
Who Eat Darkness has this very Space-Rock guitar riff that is almost a nod
to Hawkwind’s In Search of Space-era
and essence of NEU’s Michael Rother.
The opening line “I
live in the flat next door/And I can hear you fuck your girlfriend through the
wall.” That is very intense and knowing the subject of terrorism and danger
lurking behind those hallways is not going to be a pleasant by giving a 5
minute chance of escaping, but it is too late. Blank Tapes is an ominous haunting acoustic ballad featuring the
Mellotron with another duet between Tayeb and Wilson.
You can close your eyes and imagine yourself walking through
an empty house through the rubble and there’s nothing left. Detonation presents Wilson returning
back to 2009 from his solo debut with Insurgentes.
The first 2 minutes and 20 seconds becomes this eerie atmosphere before it
changes into these darken yet hidden corridors. It is an intense mid-section
rumble as you run towards the door after you feel the creeps behind you.
The moment you open the door, The character’s eyes are in
disbelief and seeing now what is the Divided States of America and seeing the
violence, betrayal, and unexpected view and blaming the three gods; Greater,
Pale, and Whining. Now is To The Bone, Steven
Wilson’s finest? No. But it shows the textures and craft he brings to the
forefront with his fifth album.
Some will love this album, some won’t and want Steven to
return to his Prog roots, which is understandable. Again, it's a diverse album. But for me, as I’ve
mentioned in my introduction of this review, I had a very interesting yet
growing experience with To The Bone.
Sunday, August 13, 2017
Mumpbeak - Tooth
I know right from the moment I put a CD on my old portable
CD player from the RareNoise label, I can expect some amazing “holy shit!”
moments that will take me to another scenario. And believe me, this is a label
that has been on my map since 2016 and thanks to Sid Smith’s Podcasts from the
Yellow Room that have opened my eyes more to the label. One of those bands is
Mumpbeak.
This is their second album released this year entitled Tooth. It is their follow up to their
sole self-titled debut album which was unleashed back in 2013. Roy Powell is
the brainchild behind Mumpbeak. He had studied piano and avant-garde
composition at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester, England. He
released his debut album back 23 years ago with A Big Sky.
He moved to Norway and worked with Terje Gewelt and Jarle
Vespestad with the release of Holus which
was an album of free improvisational music back in 1999. Now I’m very new to
Powell’s music and along with Mumpbeak, but Tooth
is one of the most challenging albums I’ve embarked on from start to
finish. With Naked Truth bassist Lorenzo Feliciati and taking over Stick Men
and King Crimson drummer Pat Mastelotto is Elephant9 and Shining drummer
Torstein Lofthus.
There is some sonic and eruptive compositions that will take
you on a journey towards the light. I was completely blown away by not just Roy’s
keyboards and not just because he’s a killer musician, but he’s very much like
a conductor and giving both Lorenzo and Torstein some ideas and where to come
in and where to come out. For example like going to Point A to Point B.
The first 4 minutes of Caboose
is arrangement between Roy and Lorenzo as it becomes this electronic
Vangelis-sque 1980s atmosphere. You can imagine yourself walking across the
wastelands and hearing some deafening alarms thanks to the Synths that Powell does.
It then, suddenly changes with some intense bass lines and Torstein’s drumming
along with Roy’s clavinet chords following each of the ghost-town hallways and
no sign of life to be found.
The reverb heavenly clavinet improvisation, brings to mind a
cross-over as if George Gershwin had teamed up with Gentle Giant’s Kerry
Minnear as if they did an album together during the In a Glass House sessions. Torstein for me, is like rapid machine
gun fire that is sweating bullets. It’s shown on Saw as he goes all around the kit including the tom-toms and snare.
Roy and Lorenzo follow suit as Powell goes into uncharted waters with a
fuzztone wah-wah tightrope.
His textures are in a way by reigning the essence of Mike
Ratledge as if he is in awe of his insane but mind-blowing work on the
keyboards. At times, when he plays the clavinet, it sounds like powder-keg
riffs before he and Torstein go into a climatic end as it abruptly comes to a
halt. Opener, Boot brings to mind a
film-noir-sque score that Mumpbeak does knowing that the killer is still on the
loose.
I love how Roy goes to the Moog Little Phatty improvisation
that he does and it shows that the clues the detectives found just got even
challenging, bigger, and difficult to know the killer left ginormous tracks for
them to follow. They go from one door to another closing it off with a tidal
wave ending crescendo.
Stone, which
closes the album, sees Roy heading towards the Hammond Organ. It begins with a
Koto-sque intro and bass lines before the wah-wah door comes open and the
intense groove between Lorenzo, Roy, and Torstein is like jet engines ready for
take-off all around the room. There at times stop-and-go moments as the Organ
is rising from the grave. I always imagine Lorenzo brings the goods and carry
the torch for both Jaco Pastorius and Geddy Lee into one giant blender.
It this little nod to CAN’s Vernal Equinox and then the finale comes right in as Mumpbeak delve
into the waters of Van Der Graaf Generator’s The Least We Can Do Is Wave to Each Other-era for an alarming
crescendo climatic finale that brings everything into a gigantic circle.
I’ve been waiting for something like this to come out.
RareNoise Records have scored another home run for me with Tooth. I hope one day to discover more of Roy Powell’s music, but
this here’s a start with their second album. They are on my watch list to see
what they’ll come up with next. Little advice, play this mo-fo up to a notch!
Jane Weaver - Modern Kosmology
Jane Weaver, married to DJ Andy Votel, founder of Finders
Keepers Records, visualizes the future sound of hypnotic cosmic-space-electro
rock. Now, mind you, I’m very new to Weaver’s music since hearing her 2014
album, The Silver Globe album. This
year she’s released her follow up to The
Amber Light with Modern Kosmology. Released
on the Fire records label, Jane takes you beyond the stratosphere with pop,
surrealism, shoegaze, post-rock, and the Krautrock sound.
It has these late ‘70s/early ‘80s vibration the moment I put
the CD on. And I knew right from the get-go, she was taking me to a whole new
infinite world. The six centerpieces throughout the journey from the outer
limits of space have taken me not just by surprise, but making my eyes open to
discover more of Jane’s music. Loops in
the Secret Society closes your eyes that takes you back to the golden-era
between the experimental scene in Germany and the Motorik rhythm sound which is evidential with the essence of NEU and Michael Karoli-sque guitars.
Then, everything sets into a mysterious driving beat as if
you were looking through the various doors to decide which one to open and see
where it will lead us to with the futuristic trip on The Architect while Jane dives into the river of the psych-folk
ballad on Valley. You can feel her
voice behind you as if she’s giving you goosebumps down your spine as if she is
hypnotizing you by walking through an abandoned forest.
The music itself brings to mind between Pink Floyd’s Atom Heart Mother-era and the Beatlesque
textures from the rhythm guitar that fits well on the composition. Jane herself
honors the Krautrock sound. I could tell from listening to this from start to
finish, she’s done a lot of research and whether you like her music or not,
Weaver herself has been around from day one from her work with both Kill Laura,
Misty Dixon, and her solo career.
Is there a stop sign for her? Absolutely not. She is
definitely going to keep going and knowing what brainstorm she will come up
with next. The homework she did is incredible between the essences of CAN’s Ege Bamyasi and Agitation Free’s 2nd as the synths set the
location of the wasteland as if you as a listener walk through the rubble
between the Bass, Drums, Guitar and Echoing effects from the percussion on Did You See Butterflies?
CAN’s Malcolm Mooney does this mourning spoken introduction
that is almost poetic before the double-track reverb/effect vocalizations that
Jane does as it comes across an Avant-Pop electro vibe as if CAN sessions
between 1968 and 1970 on Ravenspoint as
it segues to the closing track I Wish. The
track continues with the Motorik sound from the drum machine as if to say the
listener that a new day, a new beginning will happen to move forward.
I always imagine Klaus Schulze helping Jane out on the
arrangements on here and giving some advice on where the piece needs to start
and where it would end. You can always imagine a scene inside your head where
the layers would go to next with the eerie synthesizers and explore what will
happen next into the following pages after that.
This has been my second to third time listening to Modern Kosmology and I have to say I was
very impressed from what I’ve listened from beginning to end. It’s mixtures
again as I’ve mentioned before; New Wave, Krautrock, and Shoegaze music, it’s
all there. And I hope to see and imagine what will Jane Weaver think of next. Modern Kosmology may not be everyone’s cup of coffee, but this may
be in my albums of this year.
Monday, August 7, 2017
Saturn - Beyond Spectra
In the 2005 documentary of Sam Dunn’s Metal: A Headbanger’s Journey, Tour manager Joey Severance said, “Metal is a brotherhood. That’s what keeps it
alive. It’s in your blood. It’s the air you breathe.” And he’s 100% right.
For me, Metal has been with me since I was a kid, teens, and through College.
One of the labels that have always peaked my interest since 2009 after reading
about them in PROG Magazine is Lee Dorrian’s label, Rise Above Records.
One of the new bands alongside discovering Blood Ceremony,
ASTRA, Diagonal, Beastmaker, and Galley Beggar is a new band from Sweden called
Saturn. They have released their second album this year entitled, Beyond Spectra which is a follow up to
their 2014 debut Ascending (Live in
Space). I’m new to Saturn’s music, but holy shit! These guys are very good.
The band considers Robin Tidebrink and Linkan Lindgren on
Electric Guitars, Ted Carlsen on Drums, and Oscar Pehrson on Lead Vocals and
Bass Guitar. The album cover which is done by Maldo Illustration to pay nod to
Marvel’s own Steve Ditko and Jack Kirby as if it’s done right to give Sci-Fi a
real kick in the gut. But let’s get to the music. Saturn honors the New Wave of
British Heavy Metal as if the album was recorded between the late ‘70s and
early ‘80s.
You can tell Saturn shows the inspirations between Judas
Priest, UFO, Iron Maiden, and Angel Witch. You can imagine both Sounds and
KERRANG in the early ‘80s had reviewed an album like this during the heyday of
the NWOBHM movement and the album got reviewed, they would have gotten some
word-of-mouth. Now in the year of our lord 2017, Saturn honors the legacy of
the movement with Space and Hard Rock at it’s finest.
The guitars from Tidebrink and Lindgren are lightning rods
to raise the thunder between the minds of K.K. Downing and Glenn Tipton; Dave
Murray and Adrian Smith; and UFO’s Michael Schenker and Paul Raymond. Oscar’s
voice has eye-lifting momentum and at times jaw-dropping for me. You can hear
the essence of Rob Halford, Bruce Dickinson and King Diamond combined into a
gigantic solar system in a parallel universe.
Listening to Beyond
Spectra, you can close your eyes and imagine the ship is ready for ignition
to be lifted off in space as if the band is receiving to prepare to hurtle
through the cosmos with four centerpieces (reference to Ren & Stimpy’s Space Madness). The rumbling guitar
riffs is riding down the highway with some revving rhythm sections on Still Young. The shuffling moments and
duo guitar structures both rhythm and lead that makes it fucking good, is a nod
to both Maiden and Angel Witch.
Opener, Orbital
Command starts off with a classical spacey introduction for the first 39
seconds before setting the controls for the spaceship ready to make the jump to
light speed and fly off into the outer limits. The double guitars are again
eye-opening and in the 3 minute and 25 second mark, there is a melodic
midsection, shows that they have landed into another planet and discovering
that the aftermath of the battle is a gruesome mess and knowing they won’t come
back from this.
Helmet Man features
almost as if Saturn were doing a score for a Video Game as they continue to rev
down the highway. It could almost be a theme to Marvel’s own Ghost Rider’s Johnny Blaze. He knows
that the danger is near. And he has a plan ahead of everyone and doing whatever
he can to stop the badness that is happening around and do justice his way and
not the law.
It has this epic and militant sound thanks to Carlsen’s
drumming as the guitars become a feeling essence between Ritchie Blackmore and
Glenn Tipton while it becomes a warning with a terrorizing effect that are
lurking behind their prey on Nighttime
Badger. You can imagine the victim is tied up and knowing that their time
is up and the lyric; “If you have seen
the things that I’ve seen/You wouldn’t sleep at nighttime/If you had heard a
word that I’ve said/You would not laugh at all.”
It’s a chilling and disturbing lyric. This character in the
story, I can imagine is an outsider and never fitting in with the cool crowd in
School as he plans his revenge to those who’ve hurt, bullied, and tortured him
through the rough years in High School. Not only that situation, but there’s
also another moment of selling you soul for fame and glory and the heavy price
you pay for to the bitter end. I’ve adored this album from day one. It is worth listening
to if you admire Saturn’s influences.
They’re not ripping off the NWOBHM
movement, but they're honoring it and keeping the flames alive of the genre by making
sure it is alive and well. For me in my opinion, Beyond Spectra is right in your alley. And to close out with the
back cover disclaimer of David Bowie’s The
Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, “To Be Played at
Maximum Volume.”
Corciolli - Ilusia
With his 25-year career and 2 million albums sold, Corciolli is a unique artist in the instrumental music scene in Brazil. He’s opened doors
to see which landscape he would embark on between Tibetan, Middle Eastern,
Celtic, and Classical Music. He would take these genres with his arranging and
composition to find infinite universes for the listener to see what is behind
these various doors that are about to be open. His new album released this year
is called, Ilusia and it shows his
origins of the rock influences he grew up listening to.
Listening to llusia, it has this crossover between Jean-Michel
Jarre, Mike Oldfield, Steve Vai, Vangelis, and Tangerine Dream. With eight
instrumental compositions, Corciolli brings layers and textures of the
arrangements by a little help with drummer Ramon Montagner and bassist Mauricio
Oliveira and the guitar sampled keyboards by Corciolli himself setting the
atmospheres that what is about to happen in the five centerpieces on the new
album.
You can close your eyes and imagine a Movie inside your
head. Distant Living Memories has
this sci-fi film noir featuring dystopian landscapes as you go towards the
ghost-town deserted city that what once was, is in dust all of it. You can
imagine the memories of the glorious city that was in which there was a time
that was so beautiful, turned horrible.
The Man Who
Disappeared in the Painting features an introduction between the synth and
classical guitar introduction and it has this nod between the New Wave/Atmospheric
mysterious arrangement between Acqua Fragile’s Mass Media-Stars, the Halo franchise,
and late ‘70s Genesis coming to mind with the Fugazi-era of Marillion as Secrets
of the Invisible is a haunting composition.
It feels like this early ‘80s film score as if both Mike
Oldfield and Tangerine Dream did the score to the 1985 film, The Emerald Forest as the action
sequences start on to attack before the piano and heavy guitar lines knows that
the danger ahead of the outskirts as if something terrible is about to happen
with some dramatic string sections.
The nod to both the movie, TV series, and the book with Light Spheres in a Stephen King Mist imagines
yourself as if you were trapped inside with an un-natural mist of these
monsters waiting for the prey to come with some intensive danger outside of the
heavy clouds along with alarming jazzy background from the piano and an eerie
ending of a nightmarish lullaby. The Hans Zimmer and Vangelis approach has an
epic approach for Midnight of the World at
the End of Time.
You can imagine the two of them writing the score for the continuation
of Blade Runner as if they wanted
make a conceptual piece of the mystery surrounding of the disappearance of Rick
Deckard as it has this futuristic setting for the end credits. I have to admit,
I’m not crazy about this album, but it is a very interesting release that
Corciolli has released and it may or may not appear on my top 30 albums of
2017, but he’s got something special with this.
Colosseum - Those Who Are About To Die Salute You
Originally released in the spring of 1969, Colosseum’s debut
album entitled, Those Who Are About to Die Salute
You which was originally released on the Fontana label and reissued this
year by Esoteric Recordings, is an eruptive debut that came out of the same
year King Crimson released In The Court
of the Crimson King, Captain Beefheart’s Trout Mask Replica, The Who’s rock opera Tommy, and Miles Davis’ controversial classic, Bitches Brew.
Colosseum was different. They mixed Jazz, Blues, and Soul
into a giant blender and creating these textures that were both Progressive and
Hard Rock into one. Formed 49 years ago by drummer Jon Hiseman and saxophonist
Dick Heckstall-Smith in which they were a part of the Graham Bond Organization,
Hiseman replaced Baker as both of them appeared on John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers
album, Bare Wires released in the
summer of that same year.
I’ve first heard Colosseum’s music when I bought the 3-CD
compilation which was released in 2005 entitled Time Machine: A Vertigo Retrospective after hearing their explosive
heavy riff powder-keg rocker, The Kettle.
And I was hooked. It was like unleashing the beast right from the get-go.
They brought along Dave Greenslade on Organ, Bassist Tony Reeves, and James
Litherland on Lead Vocals and Guitar.
Not to mention guest musician trumpeter Henry Lowther who
appears on the album. He appears on the opening track with a walking blues/jazz
shuffle down the highway entitled, Walking
in the Park. It’s one of Graham’s composition as you can imagine it being
blared inside the train for the band to have an amazing time. Litherland can
really sing his heart out and doing some killer guitar work.
Even though Henry appears on the album as a guest musician,
he nails those trumpet parts down for that intro section in the beginning. He
and Dick Heckstall-Smith work like a team blaring those moments bringing the
roofs down on both Trumpet and Sax. Mandarin
which is based on the Japanese soft scale, Tony’s arrangement on the Bass,
sends chills down on my spine.
His bass playing shines well as it resembles between Jimmy
Garrison and East of Eden’s Steve York with some fuzz and wah-wah moments
between going from one to the other while the blues standard Backwater Blues he plays some of the
amazing bass lines and comes into the forefront which shows his talent and
power. Not to mention Dick’s blaring sax and Greenslade channeling Graham Bond’s
organ work.
The Road She Walked
Before features some of this Ray Charles-sque arrangement by
Heckstall-Smith. The vocalization between Litherland’s vocals, Smith’s sax, and
Greenslade’s organ and piano, delves into this Brazilian samba jazz groove into
the sunset as the title-track is a nod to The Nice, James Brown, and George
Gershwin. Greenslade plays a mean organ in the 12-bar blues and featuring the militant
section for the Climatic battlefield in the Rome Amphitheatre.
Beware the Ides of
March is essence to Procol Harum’s A
Whiter Shade of Pale which is also inspired by Bach, Heckstall-Smith’s sax
blares into night sky channeling both Classical Music and Jazz along with Dave’s
Wah-Wah Organ which almost has this Canterbury psychedelic feel and a soulful
crunch to it. It then suddenly delves deep into the darker tunnels of the
ominous piano, galloping drums, intense bass work, organ and sax improve before
coming back to the warmth sun rising end.
The three bonus tracks which the band recorded at PYE
studios in November of 1968 containing a demo version of the title track, a
rockin’ composition of I Can’t Live
Without You with some killer wah-wah guitar work and bass sharing a duel
between each other and it feels like it was something straight out of the
sessions between The Beatles White Album and
Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland.
Their take of Quincy Jones’ In The Heat of the Night which was sung by Ray Charles, is a strong
take from the classic opening of the 1967 film. You can close your eyes being
on the train close to dawn heading to the station with Mister Tibbs to start
the next case following after the events of the first film and knowing that the
next case, will be intense situation that the danger comes around.
The name of the title comes from a Latin phrase which is
well known as Ave Caesar, Morituri te
Salutant. Which means Hail Emperor,
Those About to Die Salute You. Which the gladiators greeted Vitellius and it’s
a well-known quote. Esoteric Recordings have never disappointed me and when
they announced some of the reissues of the Colosseum catalog on their website from Cherry Red Records, I knew it was going to be on
my wish list.
It contains the original and new sleeve notes and interviews
with Jon Hiseman about the origins of the band’s formation. The album reached
number 15 in the UK charts and gave Colosseum word-of-mouth including a
performance promo which is in the booklet, they did on March 20th at
Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Club. Worth checking out? Absolutely!
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