And now, Ladies and Gentlemen, this year in the reissues has been a good year from the good people from Esoteric Recordings, Universal, Chrysalis, and Kscope. I hope you have written down some of these on your wish lists for either Christmas or Hanukkah. Here are my top 10 Reissues of 2018.
1. Procol Harum - Still There'll Be More: An Anthology 1967-2017 (Esoteric Recordings)
2. Curved Air - Reissues (Esoteric Recordings)
3. Barclay James Harvest - Barclay James Harvest (Esoteric Recordings)
4. Happy Rhodes - Ectotrophia (Numero Group)
5. Chris Squire - Fish Out of Water (Esoteric Recordings)
6. Jethro Tull - Heavy Horses: New Shoes Edition (Chrysalis)
7. The Kinks - The Kinks are the Village Green Preservation Society (ABKCO/Sanctuary)
8. Bruford - Seems Like a Lifetime Ago: 1977-1980 (Winterfold)
9. The Beatles - The Beatles (White Album) (Universal/Apple)
10. Mansun - Attack of the Grey Lantern: 21st Anniversary Edition (Kscope)
Reviews of Progressive Rock, Jazz Rock, Hard Rock, and Stories from beyond.
Saturday, November 17, 2018
Friday, November 16, 2018
Top 25 Albums of 2018
I know I've been quiet since due to helping out with my family and doing other reviews for Echoes and Dust and The Progressive Aspect. The others I've done reviews was back in 2012 for Progplanet and Progsphere where I did a live review of Rush's Clockwork Angels tour when they came to Toyota Center.
Now does that say I'm giving up on my blogsite? Absolutely not! It's still going to be there and it will be there for another 10 years. But I needed to branch out and see where the doors will lead to me. Now as we are getting close to Thanksgiving and 38 days til Christmas.
So this is an opportunity for me, to go ahead and deliver my Top 25 Albums of 2018 early this year so that you could or might add this to your Christmas or Hanukkah wish list.
So here it is:
Now does that say I'm giving up on my blogsite? Absolutely not! It's still going to be there and it will be there for another 10 years. But I needed to branch out and see where the doors will lead to me. Now as we are getting close to Thanksgiving and 38 days til Christmas.
So this is an opportunity for me, to go ahead and deliver my Top 25 Albums of 2018 early this year so that you could or might add this to your Christmas or Hanukkah wish list.
So here it is:
1. Alec K. Redfearn & The Eyesores – The Opposite
(Cuneiform)
2. Ring Van Mobius – Past the Evening Sun (Apollon Records)
3. Phideaux – Infernal (Bloodfish Media)
4. Yuka & Chronoship – Ship (Cherry Red)
5. The Fierce and the Dead – The Euphoric (Bad Elephant
Music)
6. Sanguine Hum – Now We Have Power (Bad Elephant Music)
7. VAK – Budo (Soleil Zeuhl)
8. Voivod – The Wake (Century Media)
9. Dee Snider – For the Love of Metal (Nuclear Blast)
10. WorldService Project – Serve (RareNoise Records)
11. Mark Wingfield – Tales from the Dreaming City
(MoonJune Records)
12. Soft Machine – Hidden Details (MoonJune Records)
13. Kit Downes – Obsidian (ECM)
14. Argos – Unidentified Flying Objects (Bad Elephant
Music)
15. Homunculus Res – Della Stessa Sostanza Dei Sogni
(Fading Records)
16. Sonar with David Torn – Vortex (RareNoise Records)
17. King Crimson – Meltdown (Pangyeric/DGM/Inner Knot)
18. The Pineapple Thief – Dissolution (Kscope)
19. Gazpacho – Soyuz (Kscope)
20. Elephant9 – Greatest Show on Earth (Rune Grammofon)
21. Gleb Kolyadin – Gleb Kolyadin (Kscope)
22. Kevin Kastning & Balazs Major – Kismaros (Greydisc)
23. David Cross & David Jackson – Another Day (Cherry
Red)
24. Vantomme – Vegir (MoonJune Records)
25. Dialeto – Live with David Cross (Chromatic Music)
Tuesday, November 13, 2018
King Crimson - Meltdown: Live in Mexico
This 3-CD/1 Blu-Ray box set consists of King Crimson’s exuberant
performance in Mexico City over five nights at the Teatro
Metropolitan in July of last year and they also performed at the same location in August of 1996 during the THRAK-era. And not to mention Steven
Wilson, who performed and recorded at the same venue on April 13, 2012 during his Grace
for Drowning tour entitled, Get All
You Deserve.
Now when you either watch or listen to the concert both on CD and
Blu-Ray, you are now to embark on something more than just your average typical
rock-and-roll show at a big gigantic massive stadium. And this time, King Crimson have got more unexpected ideas that they’ve
unleashed to the audience. Believe me, this here is quite the journey that they and the fans themselves will never, ever forget.
If you think that both of the live albums from Chicago and Vienna were
the real starters, Meltdown is the
final cherry on top of the Red Velvet Cake. From the moment that the band enters onstage with thunderous applause, they are going to deliver more than just the goods
for that evening performance at the Metropolitan.
From the three-headed drumming improvisations of the Devil Dogs of Tessellation Row and The Hell Hounds of Krim, to the lukewarm
beauty of the Interlude between Mel
and Jakko’s flute improvisation followed by Levin’s electric string bass, and
the reigning of the battlefields of the most brutal yet bloodiest wars on Last Skirmish to the dooming aftermath
of hell that laid waste on Prince Rupert’s
Lament as Fripp’s textures fill the halls inside the venue for the Lizard suite.
You can see on the Blu-Ray where Pat Mastelotto is doing some of the
textures as he pays a little nod to Crimson alumni Jamie Muir while Jeremy Stacey
plays the keyboard along with Bill Rieflin follow suit. And for me, I would always
say this, “Mellotron's galore!” as the music in Easy
Money goes into a deeper, darker scenario by sending you into those ominous areas that are filled with greed, corruption, and betrayal.
Listening to the title-track, it’s quite peculiar for Robert
to revisit perhaps one of my favorite era’s which is the Lizard period from 1970. While he has reconciled to the third
release thanks to Wilson’s remix back in 2009, Robert himself is like a magician and
kind of like an expertise on where he wants the tricks to be located at. He and Jakko
along with the three-headed drum beasts and Mel take you into those crystalized
areas inside the caves before the snarling monsters come out of the blue for Radical Action II.
But this where the mysteries and clues keep adding up more and more
by Levin’s Chapman stick and the three-headed drum beasts keep up the search on Indiscipline.
Jakko sings like a beat poet while the playing the melody on his guitar as
the climax reaches more and more before to an abrupt halt as Jakko shouts “Me Gusta!”
Now we have come to Starless from the Blu-ray. It is a must-watch sequence when they performed the song from the Red album. You can feel the band’s mellowing
wonders to the heart of the city with a smoky vision that once was, is now
gone. The band suddenly go into overdrive after the lights suddenly change from
bright yellow, to darker orange-red coloring to increase the tension even more.
It becomes this dangerous high-wiring escape for the
aerialist dancer to embark not just the 90-feet ground and never knowing when
the wires are going to be cut unexpectedly, but it becomes alarming that
knowing he has to make it before time runs out. From the blaring guitars
between Jakko and Robert, to the clashing of the titan drumming, and Mel’s
blaring sax solo, it becomes a free-for-all climax.
The bonus tracks on Disc 3, is where it gets even more
interesting. They revisit another classic from the debut album, In the Court of the Crimson King entitled,
Moonchild. The live version from the
official bootleg bonus tracks, is very much like an extended version of the
song that makes it more beautiful and surreal. You have these Cadenza’s between
Tony Levin’s string bass to Jeremy playing his piano creating this finale of
giving some sort of a mournful end.
Then everything suddenly changes into some sort of an attack mode as
King Crimson goes into the archive of revisiting Robert Fripp’s debut solo
album (Exposure) released 40 years
ago tackling the track, Breathless. It
has sorts of the Red-era with a
brutal twist as Robert delivers more clues to add the pieces inside the Rubik’s
cube with even more challenges.
Meltdown as I’ve
mentioned earlier in my introduction, is the final cherry on top of the Red
Velvet Cake. But this gives King Crimson more real adventures that are mysterious,
nightmarish, surreal, and visionary. And what I hope for when they start their
Winter tour in Japan in late November to the end of December, I hope we can
expect more from them if they get a chance to record the shows in the Land of
the Rising Sun.
And this here, is only just the beginning for them.
Tuesday, November 6, 2018
King Crimson - Live in Vienna
This 3-CD set consists of King Crimson’s live performance
they recorded in Vienna two years ago on December 1st. Mixed from
the original multi-tracks, it features the two-set performance from the evening
show. Since I considered the 2-CD Chicago performance as an experimental and
tribal atmosphere, the Vienna performance brings more clues and mysteries for
you to embarking their adventures into their possible universes that are
infinite worlds that you’ve never seen before.
For 50 years, King Crimson despite through various line-up
changes, in the words of Robert Fripp, Crimson has “A way of doing things.” And
that’s how they do throughout their music. They aren’t just a prog band, they
are a band that take these ideas and take them through the levels of intensity,
hidden momentum, and sinister surroundings that would make your skin crawl.
Their live recording at the Musequmsquartier in Halle E, you
can close your eyes and being at that venue and being in awe and supporting the
masters with some volcanic eruptions that is on here. For me Live in Vienna is almost the icing on
the cake. They revisit the classics including, Pictures of a City, The Sailor’s Tale, Epitaph, The Court of the
Crimson King, and 21st
Century Schizoid Man. The seven-piece line-up aren’t taking you through
memory lane, but keeping their spirit and legacy alive.
And they know that this time, it’s going to be both
ferocious and brutal. You have the 13-minute version of Starless. You can imagine both Tony and Robert taking the
temperature levels by making the heat gage as high as it can go by making their
instruments go through some menacing overtones.
But it’s Mel Collins laying down some incredible sax
improvisations throughout the last three minutes as the three-headed drum
beasts of Mastelotto, Harrison, and Stacey reign in the terrors once more
before closing the night out with some Mellotron and dooming bass with a bang.
But what I also love on the Vienna recording is that the three-headed drum
beasts do some tribal workouts.
You can hear some of the aspects between The Hell Hounds of Krim, Devil Dogs of Tessellation Row including a
little help from Tony Levin bowing the electric string bass. They play like the
masters they are by lending a friend, some helping hands to keep the beat
going. Each of the drummers play not like a jazz drummer, but laying down some
swinging vibes by channeling both Buddy Rich and Magma’s own Christian Vander.
But I love the nods towards the THRAK-era that covers even more of the puzzle pieces even more as
Jakko himself sings it out through Suitable
Grounds for the Blues. And also the gentle warmths of Peace and as a master of ceremony for the Cirkus to begin. For me,
whether like him or not Jakko’s voice and guitar playing grows even more and
more to keep the vibration’s going.
Now once you get to Disc 3 which features four tracks
recorded from Cophenagen, Milan, Barcelona, and Antwerp, Robert goes beyond the
textures of Crimson and delving back into the soundscaping visions that he’s
been doing since the mid-‘70s by working with Brian Eno on No Pussyfooting.
You have Levin, Collins, and Fripp going through the opening
doors to reveal something that is minimal, nightmarish, and atonality of both Schoenberg Softened his Hat and Ahriman's Ceasless Corrputions to name a
few. They channel Arnold’s compositions which I can hear from one of his Second String Quartet, Fourth Movement. And
it’s quite the atmosphere that Robert tackles to show Arnold Schoenberg’s
compositions by going beyond the twelve-tone techniques.
On the Cophenagen performance that’s on disc 3, they
revisited Fracture. Now this hasn’t
been performed since 1974 from their album, Starless
& Bible Black. It is really quite a treat for them to go back and
perform it live again. Robert really challenges his fingers on the fretboard as
if he’s finding the escape route before it becomes a gigantic booby-trapped
location.
The last three minutes on Fracture is the band going through this dangerous tightrope to make
it right out of there before time reaches out as Jakko and Robert help through
their guitar exchange as Levin’s fuzztone bass and drums go intensive together
by making it through the exit sign and finally getting out of there in the nick
of time.
Live in Vienna is
King Crimson continuing more and more to surprise both the listener and the
audience themselves. While Chicago as I’ve mentioned is their finest, Vienna is
almost the cherry on top. But this is where the turning point was for Robert
was planning to do for the following year in 2017. And this was only just the
beginning.
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