Cover of New Trolls FS
Kism

• Rating:

For fans of new trolls, lovers of progressive rock and classic 80s rock, and listeners interested in concept albums with narrative themes.
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THE REVIEW

I'm making my debut as a reviewer with this 1981 album by New Trolls.

In my opinion, it is the best album of the '80s by the Genoese group, in a united four-member lineup (Belleno, Belloni, De Scalzi, and Di Palo).

Giorgio Usai and especially Giorgio D'Adamo had left the group the previous year, the bassist would not be replaced; in the studio, Nico Di Palo and Ricky Belloni play in his place.

It's a concept album, with the central theme being represented by the train, the characters encountered, and the telling of their stories.

Musically, it's a truly valid album, and it couldn't be otherwise. Compared to the immediately preceding albums, it is more inspired, less song-focused with a decidedly more rock and progressive character.

The album starts with "Il Treno" sung by De Scalzi, which is certainly the most progressive moment of the album, featuring a guitar solo that explodes in its central part.

It continues with "La Signora senza anelli," with a riff that not so vaguely resembles "Satisfaction" by the Rolling Stones, the song seems to be sung in chorus by the group even though the voices that stand out the most are those of De Scalzi and Belloni.

The third track is Nico's moment, featuring one of his vocal performances and a guitar solo that brings "Dazed and Confused" by Led Zeppelin to mind.

The fourth track "Stelle nelle tue mani," again masterfully sung by Nico, is introduced by a splendid guitar arpeggio. At the chorus moment, it features a guitar solo that this time reminds one of Brian May's guitar.

"Gilda 1929," one of the most beautiful moments with Nico and Ricky Belloni on vocals, is also characterized by a splendid guitar solo (I believe by Belloni), perhaps the most evocative and nostalgic moment of the album.

"Quella luna dolce" is also nice, introduced by the sound of tracks and sung by De Scalzi and Belloni.

"Il Serpenta," sung by De Scalzi, was at the time the 45 of the album; I remember hearing it on Discoring, and it is probably the most immediate track.

After "La mia canzone" with filtered voice, perhaps the least interesting episode of the album, followed by the melancholic "Strano vagabondo" sung by Belleno in falsetto.

It's an album that should be listened to in its entirety and represents the group's best moment in the challenging '80s and definitely deserves a revival and a review on Debaser.it.

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Summary by Bot

This review highlights New Trolls' 1981 album 'FS' as their best work of the 1980s. A concept album featuring a train and its stories, it embraces a stronger progressive rock style with compelling guitar solos and vocal performances. The review emphasizes standout tracks and praises the band's united four-member lineup. Overall, it calls for the album's revival and recognition.

Tracklist

01   Il treno (Tigre-E633-1979) (06:16)

02   La signora senza anelli (04:25)

03   L'uomo in blu (06:59)

04   Stelle nelle tue mani (04:07)

05   Gilda 1929 (04:56)

06   Quella luna dolce (05:09)

07   Il serpente (03:37)

08   La mia canzone (03:27)

09   Strano vagabondo (04:47)

New Trolls

New Trolls are a Genoese Italian rock band often associated with Italian progressive rock, noted for their early-1970s blend of rock instrumentation with classical/orchestral writing (especially the “Concerto Grosso” works with composer Luis Enriquez Bacalov), and for a long, turbulent history of lineup changes and stylistic shifts.
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