This 5-CD set consists of Stick Men’s live recording that
the band did last year between August and September of last year during their
Latin American tour in ten countries from Guatemala, Mexico, Costa Rico,
Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, and Brazil to name a few. And to allow to bring King
Crimson alumni David Cross who appears on this set along with the Roppongi release back four years ago, it
shows that David is still lending a helping hand once more.
Listening to this incredible set, you can just close your
eyes and imagine yourself being at those performances that they did in Latin
America last year. Tony, David, Markus, and Pat give the audiences a gig
they’ll never forget. And from those recordings, it will keep their memories
going on forever and ever.
The sets include improvisations, soundscapes, suites, and
their full-length gig in Costa Rica. There are so many highlighted moments
throughout this incredible set that Iapetus and MoonJune have unleashed this
year to get your Crimson blood pumping out.
Hide the Trees has
this moment where you can feel the heat gauge growing higher and higher as the
band goes into the flaming fires that have grown bigger and deeper than ever
before as the tackle through the danger that awaits them. I can imagine the audience
are mesmerized between Reuter, Cross, and Mastelotto entering this intensive
dungeon that can be very challenging.
David’s Improv
gives Cross a chance to come to do these incredible arrangements on his violin
while Levin’s chapman walks into the jungle by walking on a big gigantic scale.
And Cross is glowing brighter and brighter by the second as the scenery becomes
this huge puzzle piece as the plot thickens unexpectedly while the Montevideo Suite sees Stick Men’s
atmospheric voyages that walk into a journey that awaits for our bandmates to
enter.
It’s almost as if they’re walking on this tightrope that can
be unexpectedly dangerous and never knowing who is going to cut the rope or
not. But at times it can be sinister, electronica, jazz grooves, and very
Lynch-ian. Now when I say “Lynch-ian”, I mean the nod to the filmmaker himself
as if he gave Stick Men some creative ideas for the mystery and disappearance
of Philip Jefferies from the Twin Peaks series.
The next section becomes this Chapman improvisation as Tony
and Markus do this dueling nightmare to see both instruments collide in a
thunderous hay-wiring effect that can go into some insane bat-shit modules
while Pat’s drumming pounds like a powder keg that is waiting to explode with
some extreme measures. Now onto the soundscapes on Disc 5.
For me, it’s one my favorite moments from the Panamerica set. It gives both Markus and
David to move away from their incredible compositions with Tony and Pat by
honoring the legacy between the classic Tangerine Dream line-up of Edgar
Froese, Peter Baumann, and Christopher Franke and the Red-era of King Crimson.
The compositions on the fifth disc are very mysterious,
surreal, and experimental. But for Markus, there’s a lot of those
improvisations by honoring the genre from the realms of Popol Vuh, Klaus
Schulze, and Cluster. It shows that Reuter himself is keeping that spirit alive
by making his own alternate soundtrack scores between two film classics by
Werner Herzog, Fitzcarraldo and Aguirre: The Wrath of God.
But as I’ve mentioned before of the nods towards King
Crimson, they have to make sure they haven’t forgotten their roots of where
they started between Tony, David and Pat. From the pieces including Red, Larks’ Tongues in Aspic Part II, Level
Five, The Talking Drum, and an incredible performance from the Costa Rica set
of a soundwaving version on Shades
of Starless.
They’ve also performed three tracks from the Prog Noir album including the
title-track, Mantra, and the
mysterious twist of Plutonium by
honoring the masters of Carl Orr, Yes, and Tchaikovsky. Not only that, but they
have a surreal sense of humor throughout those tracks they performed in Costa
Rica.
Panamerica is one
of their best recordings that Stick Men has unleashed this year. If you think
that Roppongi was the best, this one
takes the cake. And while it’s been three years since they released another
studio album after the release of Prog
Noir, let’s hope that in 2020, Stick Men releases another follow-up. But Panamerica is quite a journey throughout
another roller-coaster ride with them.
No comments:
Post a Comment