ProgRock

DeRank : 7,28
DeAge™ : 6815 days • Here since 13 october 2007
Steven Wilson Grace For Drowning
Voto:
Passionate review, keep it up, with the albums recommended by JDV, but also with the great Steven Wilson.
Motorpsycho And Stale Storlokken The Death Defying Unicorn
Voto:
Two entirely delightful, epic, and poetic albums, just as Motorpsycho have always been (IMHO).
Spelljammer Vol II
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Yes, a bit of unnecessary revival of beautiful things is always what we need. Listening from the link (practically the entire EP), it seems they want to resonate "Boris" by the Melvins, creating a differently worse copy of the other, which is quite right.
Polvo Exploded Drawing
Voto:
Superb Group.
Motorpsycho feat. Ståle Størlokken The Death Defying Unicorn
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Much better this way, from "Little Lucid Moments" to today, this album is their artistic peak, definitely superior even to the splendid Timothy and Blissard. There you go.
Refugee Refugee
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Nice album indeed, but it’s worth noting that the release year is 1974. Strangely, the cover choice of a Prog Band is that of a group photo rather than some stunning imaginative artwork. The same choice was made that year by King Crimson with "Red," further confirming that they had superior taste in everything compared to their peers. I wonder what Fripp thought about the choice of the guy's shirt in the middle.
Steve Hogarth & Richard Barbieri The Weapon But The Hand
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A perfect combination: Hogarth's voice with Barbieri's keyboards.
Anathema A Natural Disaster
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A banal album, with pathetic and repetitive melodies, lacking in originality, so emotionally charged that it leaves an indelible mark in the mind of every single second of its duration. A masterpiece.
L7 L7
L7 L7
1 mar 12
Voto:
I haven't listened to these yet, but they should be as gentle as the Babes in Toyland.
Rome Die Aesthetik Der Herrschafts-freiheit
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"Flowers From Exile" and this latest ambitious and successful triple work represent for me the pinnacle of the Rome project, a sun that rises and melts all the mountains, making the entire landscape bloom again, the liberation narrated in music in a discography, from the martial terror that freezes the mind of the early albums to tracks like "We Who Fell In Love With The Sea" (https://www.debaser.it/main/Video.aspx?y=W1Rh7aY3cII) where the waves of the sea contemplate the ruins of Europe, a theme very dear to the Luxembourger Jerome. "Seeds of Liberation" needs no introduction.