I would have liked to review an album by Dream Theater to amuse myself reading the entertaining comments that the American band provokes, however I chose to maintain my (semi) seriousness as a de-user by drawing your kind attention to this debut-ultimate album by Indian Summer, a group from Coventry that I discovered while tinkering on the internet in search of interesting musicians in lesser-known prog.

The members of the band are: Bob Jackson on vocals and keyboards, Colin Williams on guitar, Malcolm Harker on bass, and Paul Hooper on drums.

Our heroes offer us hard-prog with often dark hues, and I must say that within this little gem from 1971, there truly is excellent merchandise: Jackson's Ian Gillan-like high notes in "God is the Dog" (a title that has a hint of blasphemy), the long guitar solos by Williams in "Emotion of Man" and "Another Tree Will Glow", the acoustic-mystical beginning of "Half Changed Again" and its Iron Maiden-like ending (80% of the Irons' songs have a piece similar to this), the captivating "Glimpse" and the dreamy "Secrets Reflected".

A very enjoyable album that can be listened to peacefully even by those who do not love progressive: quite melodic songs and virtuosity that is not taken to extremes.

It's a pity it didn't have a follow-up.

Tracklist and Videos

01   God Is the Dog (06:38)

02   Emotions of Man (05:44)

03   Glimpse (06:44)

04   Half Changed Again (06:26)

05   Black Sunshine (05:25)

06   From the Film of the Same Name (05:52)

07   Secrets Reflected (06:49)

08   Another Tree Will Grow (06:05)

Loading comments  slowly