I'll be traveling for the month of June.
Next FreeForm is July 1.
Progressive Music since 1987 Tuesdays 9-11 pm Alaska Time Streaming Live at http://www.kmxt.org
I'll be traveling for the month of June.
Next FreeForm is July 1.
Be sure to follow KMXT FreeForm Radio on Facebook and Bandcamp and Spotify.
You
can now listen to the livestream of the show through the KMXT app; it's
available through the Mac App Store or Google Play. The stream is also
available at www.kmxt.org
Please support FreeForm Radio and KMXT by going to www.KMXT.org and pledging your support.
The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below)
We urge you to support the musicians you hear on FreeForm Radio.
In later-2021, British guitarist, vocalist and songwriter Amanda Lehmann released a diverse, nine-song album of all-original art and prog/rock music titled Innocence and Illusion. The album – her first official collection under her own name in a 30-plus-year career, but not her first effort – has reached many ears and hearts along the way.
Notably, Innocence has garnered positive reviews and interviews with such publications and blogs as PROG and Now Spinning Magazine. And as we take time to share a few of our own impressions about the still-popular album, we’ve learned from Ms. Lehmann that she’s already developing a yet-to-be-named follow-up. Meanwhile, she also now finds herself quite in-demand for other artists’ projects.
In short, if you’ve heard a charismatic feminine voice on the studio albums and live recordings of British prog-guitar pioneer Steve Hackett over the last 15 years or so, then you’ve already had an informal introduction to Lehmann’s own mystically-leaning musical colors. And thanks to guest spots from Hackett and several of his journeymen from his touring band Genesis Revisited, listeners will find a good number of familiar, proggy touchstones in the emotionally rich musical world of Lehmann’s album. So from the POV of this longtime prog/rock/folk fan who has been following the British rock scene since the late 1960s, I can say it’s a world worth exploring more deeply.
“I like to use music as a story,” Lehmann said in a recent email exchange, explaining her approach to songwriting and performance, and what she hopes to do with her next recording. Listeners will find that the flow of Innocence is much like a story. “So it goes through dramatic, fast sequences, and into delicate, intimate pieces.”
As her time has permitted, Lehmann has been appearing with Hackett in selected shows since he first welcomed her as an album contributor in 2009. With Genesis Revisited’s live shows in particular, she fleshes out the mythical sound of that six-member band with a shimmering layer of guitar and vocal harmony. And her spotlight moment as a solo vocalist on Hackett’s own Medieval-art-rock tour de force “Shadow of the Hierophant” – first recorded with British vocalist Sally Oldfield for his 1976 debut solo album Voyage of the Acolyte – is always an ethereal, soul-stirring moment in those shows.
In early spring 2023, this singer and multi-instrumental musician took time off from her own in-progress next recording project to join on with Genesis Revisited once again for a few special shows in the UK and Europe. Also, in the last several years, she and Hackett have made one-off, small-ensemble appearances together at more intimate venues, such as Trading Boundaries, in Sheffield Green, Sussex, England. These smaller shows have allowed her to showcase her songs from Innocence.
Amanda Lehmann & Steve Hackett | Trading Boundaries | 2019 | Photo by David Clay
Reinforcing the perception that her house is always in motion, videos of newer special projects involving Lehmann have recently emerged on YouTube. For example, a new release by the dark-pop-prog band Random Earth this past March revealed Lehmann providing vocals and guitar on two standout tracks, “Gospel” and “Window”. (Videos for both can be found on YT.) In addition, other artists she has been working with include the Raging Project, the Temple of Switches and – with current Yes bassist Billy Sherwood – a forthcoming project with veteran Chicago-based singer Kurt Michaels.
‘All the musicians [with Random Earth] are a great, very talented bunch,” Lehmann said, noting that she had been invited early on and encouraged to explore different styles of singing. “Although the lyrics were already written, I [had] a lot of freedom vocally with this, and [the tracks] inspired me to try out different vocal styles. For example, [the song] ’Gospel’ required some gospel-style singing, which was both a challenge and a joy. And due to the changing dynamics, the end of that song was a total contrast. I recorded some raunchy, almost grunge-y vocals [for that].”
Free to explore her own songwriting and arrangements on Innocence, Lehmann – who was much more hard-rock leaning in her early career as a guitarist – has proved that she has learned many ‘best practices’ from playing ‘proggy style’ with that recognized master of the form, Mr. Hackett. (In fact, Lehmann also once performed in a Heart tribute band called Reckless Heart around 2015, replicating the role of guitarist/vocalist Nancy Wilson.)
“My learning journey has been a long one,” Lehmann said. “I have countless influences along the way from many excellent – but unknown – musicians. With all this in mind, the years since 2009 (when she and Hackett made their first recording) have also been undoubtedly very important on my musical journey!”
Amanda Lehmann & Lisa Fury in Reckless Heart | 2015 | Photo by Lee Millward
Resolving finally to capture her own musical vision gave Lehmann the focus to develop her vocabulary of evocative lead vocals, layered harmonies, interwoven keyboards, electroacoustic guitar mixes and deftly used dynamics. That combination on Innocence takes listeners on an emotional journey that draws from her own life but also enables them to make new associations and meanings for themselves.
“From my [close] observation of these extremely talented chaps, I’ve [learned the value of] precision,” Lehmann said of working with Hackett’s team. She added that she aims to make her recordings finely crafted, yet strives to keep the organic feel of a live performance. “With my guitar playing, I’m focusing [more now] on vibrato. Guitarists like Steve are masters of that – just the right amount at the right time, for the right length of time. For me, it’s not about ‘shredding’. It’s about control and beauty – making the guitar sing and [mastering] that sound in order to express emotion through the instrument.”
Lehmann confirmed with us that her influences run quite widely. On the male side – among many examples of late-‘70s prog and hard-rock artists – she cited Genesis first. (She has noted that their 1977 album Wind and Wuthering was her personal prog ‘gateway’ as a teenager.) But also, in close formation behind that legendary band, she speaks highly of the Alan Parsons Project, Ritchie Blackmore and Pink Floyd.
“I loved Ritchie Blackmore’s playing from his Deep Purple and Rainbow days,” Lehmann said, praising the hard-rock pioneer’s total mastery of the guitar neck and conceptual approach to playing. “I adore [his] cascading style that moves through harmonic minors.”
With her being a female vocalist, Lehmann also gave shoutouts to such stars as Stevie Nicks, Barbara Streisand, Alison Moyet and Joni Mitchell. She also noted that learning piano as a first instrument and studying Classical music formally have also trained her ear for non-rock textures and forms. So there are obvious progressive and classic-rock influences but also symphonic and soul-jazz sounds blended throughout her sound.
In particular, vocal similarities to those of groundbreaking British singer-songwriter Kate Bush and the Wilson sisters in Heart abound – sometimes arty, others rawk-y, and some just plain pop. But many of the piano- and acoustic-guitar-based pieces blow the music strongly in the direction of Medieval and New Age musical themes. So the tonalities of Enya or Clannad might also come to mind.
With a haunting instrumental intro, melancholy lead guitar lines and her own stacked harmonies, Lehmann opens Innocence with the sweeping progressive-slanted track, “Who Are the Heroes?” Her siren-like vocals, the Wishbone Ash-like harmonized lead guitars and the martial drum beat all build toward an art-rock crescendo, conveying a sense of yearning, a call for humanity to lean into loving service to each other. That keening theme raises great expectations for the rest of the album from the start. And, yes, that theme continues, but many surprises and personal revelations await.
Interestingly, Lehmann paces the album with a mix of lighter songs of varied styles between the few straight-on rock tracks. For example, the second song up after that commanding opener is a wistful, romantic ballad called “Tinkerbell”. As the name suggests, this is a song dipped in magic and fantasy, and it carries a wafting fragrance of late-‘70s Renaissance or contemporary Celtic pop-rock music.]
Another early change-up before we get a nice, full chunk of that old-school prog that we know must be on there is a surprise appearance by the Talented Mr. Hackett. (This is the first of his three guest appearances on the album.) Interestingly, on this track, “Only Happy When It Rains”, there’s no trace of Hackett’s stellar guitar playing. Instead, he shines through darkly as an awesome blues harp player. His harmonica lines dart around Lehmann’s torch-y, Joni vocals and Rob Townsend’s alto sax lines over a witchy, jazz-club groove, like a yowling cat in the night.
The first track that plunges the listener into deeper prog waters early in the album – and this writer’s personal favorite – is “The Watcher”. Initially, the bleak, brooding piece unfolds as a cautionary tale about restraints and repression of all kinds but then explodes with a fiery middle section before the final chorus. Unlike her treacly vocals on an earlier ballad, her narrative voice takes on a more weathered and warning tone here, sounding much like the huskier vocals of, say, a latter-day Marianne Faithfull.
Instrumentally, the dynamics on this track also show Lehmann taking cues from such rock guitar luminaries as Mark Knopfler and David Gilmour. The opening has smoky blues fills over a spare arrangement with her astringent vocals. Then, after a brief burst of hot guitar between the verses and choruses, she breaks into a fiery, mid-song Phrygian-modal guitar solo with climactic key modulations before landing like a feather at the quiet beginning of the final verse. And for anyone who has been living under a progressive rock as I have, that kind of dramatic harmonic shifting is always mighty powerful catnip!
Another subdued interval follows with the poignant “Memory Lane,” a lament about the passage of time and the loss of memories. This leads into a full-on, arena rocker – if Lehmann should ever graduate to the arena circuit, this is one would be a no-brainer for the setlist – called “Forever Days”. With a driving, riff-based rhythm and a triumphant melody that calls to mind early ‘80s Pat Benatar and Renaissance (Imagine that!), this track matches Lehmann and Hackett in a grunge-y, guitar duel. And it’s a perfect showcase for both guitarists’ more metallic chops.
From there, the album ends up with a three-song series of wistful-but-hopeful romanticism that include the Peter Gabriel-meets-Kate Bush anthem to the dignity of elephants “We Are One”, the enchantingly bluesy “Childhood Delusions” and the floating outro “Where the Small Things Go.” In particular, the latter piece is a short, Classical-guitar ballad, co-written by Lehmann and Hackett. After reaching some truly soaring, mid-album moments, Lehman’s sweet finish with Hackett’s distinctive nylon-string touch seemingly helps the listener to reorient, as if waking refreshed from a long, active, technicolor dream.
Although Hackett and his keyboardist Roger King and sax/clarinet/flute man Rob Townsend all play prominent roles throughout the album, it seems that Lehmann has another secret weapon on board. And that would be Nick Magnus, a longtime Hackett collaborator from the guitarist’s earliest solo albums in the late-1970s.
Primarily a keyboardist, arranger and engineer, but also an artist with his own track record of releases, Magnus worked with Lehmann to develop several of her Innocence tracks from working demos that she recorded in her home studio, she explained. And he provided some supplemental keyboards – including Mellotron, which is all over the album – to her primary piano parts. He also built up all of the rhythm tracks from electronic drum samples and scored the full orchestral arrangements. This resulted in many of the ballads having a lush, cinematic feeling.
Amanda Lehmann in her home studio | Photo courtesy of Amanda Lehmann
Magnus’ agility with the drum programming is most impressive. Obviously, in the hands of a lesser technician, such full-band songs as “The Watcher” and “Forever Days” would lack the critical feel and reactions of a live drummer in the room. The really amazing part is that if the credits didn’t tell us, we’d never know otherwise from the in-the-pocket performances of all the musicians!
In keeping with Lehmann’s own descriptions of them, the songs of I&I clearly reflect a person’s journey through life, with joys and disappointments, misunderstandings and clarifications, conflicts and resolution. The songs themselves, she has noted, were not written all in one batch but over a wider range of time, and the emotional shifts in the songs convey some changing points of view that come with experience and maturity. And perhaps looking at the album as a kind of diary of Lehmann’s life helps to bring it all into focus: Older and wiser but still in love with life and very much believing in magic.
As Lehmann has explained elsewhere, she had written some songs – such as “The Watcher” – even much farther back in time but revised them in more recent years. Also, she and Magnus started assembling the tracks in 2019, and the project quickly gathered steam. Unfortunately, the Covid lockdown came along the next year and put a chill – but, luckily, not a complete freeze – on the recording process. A second burst of post-lockdown activity followed, however, with Lehmann and Magnus working remotely from each other and exchanging digital files for the final arrangements and mix. And then Lehmann finally delivered the lovingly polished gem in August 2021.
Amanda Lehmann Live | with "Red" | Photo by Mick Bannister
Having gone back to Innocence and Illusion many times now, I always find myself marveling at how much more centered and in focus I feel after listening to it. My perception is that Lehmann offers the world a hopeful, uplifting outlook and the healing power of music at a time when the world needs that most.
Looking ahead to her next recording, Lehmann confirmed it is shaping up and that listeners can expect a similar mix of extended epics and reflective pieces.
“Creating the ‘follow-up’ is always a challenge,” she said, noting that she sees it as a chance to try some new ideas. “As with I&I, [her next] album won’t exactly be a concept album but it will have a theme. Also, different musical genres – whatever suits the songs the best. And, as always, I’ll indulge in multi-layered vocals, guitars and some piano as well.”
In light of all this, it will be very interesting to hear what Lehmann paints for us with her colorful musical palette next time around. In the mean time, my very best advice is to make time to allow yourself to submerge fully as you listen to I&I, to go with the flow of Lehmann’s dream, and then to make up your own mind about what is real and what is an Illusion.
Website: www.amandalehmann.co.uk/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AmandaLehmannMusic
Twitter: @amandalehmann25
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amandalehmannmusic/
VIDEO LINKS:
Additional Innocence & Illusion Single:
Memory Lane
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Je6M8ncIBJ4
Collaborations/Features:
Random Earth Project: Window (Feat. Lehmann lead vocals, guitar solo)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7rX8Q7TnaRc
The Raging Project: Procession [Excerpt] (Feat. Lehmann guitar solo)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m1jPWcl2lmo
Temple Of Switches: The Wind (Feat. Lehmann lead vocals)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gW77Wrb_vXE
Kurt Michaels: Relax… Nothing’s Under Control (Feat. Lehmann lead & backing vocals)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpmgBHQJZ4o
Steve Hackett & Genesis Revisited videos (a selection):
Shadow Of The Hierophant (Live Hackett solo song)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vKVTYiCx5w
Fifty Miles from the North Pole (Hackett solo song from 2019)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjW6JLXu7wQ
Entangled (Genesis cover, Feat. Lehmann lead vocal)
It’s tempting to call Steve Hackett’s latest release, “Live Magic at Trading Boundaries” an “unplugged” album. But that’s not quite correct. Yes, Hackett & Co. are largely playing acoustic instruments, in stripped-down makeovers that cut the original full-band arrangements to the core. But, in fact, “Live Magic” would be better described as Hackett “unbound,” with nearly all of the 19 live tracks on the album untethered from their original plugged-in versions and reworked to include newly written material.
Before delving into the particulars of this stellar addition to the Hackett canon, a little background is in order.
Hackett has been playing annual winter acoustic concerts at Trading Boundaries in Sussex, U.K., for years. These intimate shows allows the ex-Genesis guitarist to deliver uniquely reimagined highlights from his 50-year-plus career, while also showcasing his classical side. “It’s always a joy for me to play at Trading Boundaries, a magical intimate place full of beautiful lights and exotic imagery, illuminating the darkest time of year over Christmas and New Year,” he says. “It’s the perfect location for my acoustic set.”
The new album is a compilation of high points from his winter acoustic shows. It features regular Hackett collaborators Roger King on keys, Rob Townsend on flute and saxophone, brother John Hackett on flute and sister-in-law Amanda Lehmann on guitar and vocals. But the album is so well paced and constructed it plays like a single concert, anchored and driven by Hackett’s widely varying catalogue and virtuosic fretwork.
Over the course of an hour, Steve performs a series of dazzling nylon-string solo guitar pieces and leads his supremely talented co-conspirators through a dizzying trek through his kaleidoscopic musical portfolio. Along the way, the crew also tackles a few classical music pieces and ladles in a few other surprises. As always, Hackett manages to pick some of the best compositions from his with Genesis days and since leaving the band to go solo in 1977. And, the truth is, some of these new acoustic arrangements rival the original full-band performances.
The album opens with Hackett delivering five solo acoustic pieces on nylon-string classical guitar that collectively hold together like a five-part mini concerto. The first piece is an introductory improvisation that showcases Hackett’s fiery fingering technique — a marriage of mathematical precision, songcraft, bone-deep soul and fluidity. Next up is the acoustic introduction to “Blood on the Rooftops,” from the 1976 Genesis classic “A Trick of the Tail,” capped by a glorious newly written outro that replaces the vocal/band performance that followed the intro on the original. Hackett follows it up with “The Barren Land” and “Blacklight” —two haunting beauties from his 1983 classical guitar album “Bay of Kings” — and “Horizons,” the familiar Bach-like etude from the 1972 Genesis album, “Foxtrot.”
After this lovely five-part overture, the band joins Hackett to play the effervescent “Jacuzzi,” from Hackett’s 1980 “Defector” album, incorporating a new flamenco guitar-driven interval. A mini-Genesis suite follows. It opens with the pastoral flute-guitar interlude from “Supper’s Ready” that precedes the cacophonous “Apocalypse in 9/8” break. Next, the band reprises “After the Ordeal,” the lone instrumental from 1973’s “Selling England by the Pound” and the guitar-piano duet from “Hairless Heart” (a highpoint of 1974’s “The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway”), which showcases yet another newly improvised section that takes the piece in an entirely novel direction.
Hackett then shifts gears and leads the band through the Latin-flavored “Jazz on a Summer’s Night,” from 2017’s “The Night Siren,” before dueting with brother John on “Gnossiene No. 1,” the jaunty flute-guitar duet that graces the Hackett brothers’ 2000 “Sketches of Satie” album, a tribute to French minimalist composer Erik Satie. “Walking Away From Rainbows,” from 1993’s “Guitar Noir,” follows before Hackett and friends launch into a striking excerpt from Francis Poulenc’s 1938 “Organ Concerto” (merging gothic churchy organ soundscapes with free-form jazz improvisations) and “The Red Flower of Tachai Blooms Everywhere,” the Asian-influenced mood piece from “Spectral Mornings.”
What comes next is the high-water mark of the album and perhaps Hackett’s entire solo career — “Hands of the Priestess,” from Hackett’s first solo album, 1975’s “Voyage of the Acolyte,” released while he was still on the Genesis payroll. In a satisfying reworking of the piece, Hackett has condensed the three-part suite to just two sections — merging the opening and closing acoustic segments into a single all-of-a-piece track and resecting the discordant electric middle interval that divided them on the original triptych. With only a few additional bars of new orchestral music stitching it all together, the new “Hands of the Priestess” is as strong and arresting a musical statement as the original, if not more so. Flute, sax, guitar and synthesizer lines merge, twist and join together like four rippling streams flowing into a moonlit lake.
Two surprises follow: A couple tracks from Lehman’s excellent 2021 solo album, “Innocence and Illusion,” which features Hackett, King and Townsend. “Memory Lane” is a poignant lament about her mother’s dementia, helmed by her enchanting voice. “Only Happy When It Rains” is a cabaret-style torch song, with Lehman delivering a sultry, late-night-jazz vocal and Hackett playing a funkified swamp-blues harmonica intro.
Another highlight of the album is next: “Ace of Wands,” from “Acolyte,” reworked so magnificently as a chamber-rock orchestral piece that it rivals the rockier original. The album then closes out with “The Journey,” the atmospheric classical-guitar etude from “Bay of Kings.” The upbeat piece ends the album on a high note, bringing the proceedings full circle with a satisfying conclusion that echoes the five-part nylon-string series that opened the record.
With such a wide variety of boundary-blurring musical styles — folk, prog, jazz, classical, cabaret and even world beat music — it would be difficult to imagine a more aptly named venue for the performances collected here. Also worth noting: Several pieces on “Live Magic” sound more like brief snippets or transitional interludes than fully realized works. But most tracks include newly written sections that elevate them and let them stand on their own. A handful even surpass the originals.
The result: “Live Magic” is a satisfying retrospective of Hackett’s long and distinguished career, with these new acoustic retreads sounding fresh and new, collected like a musical jewelry box of rare gems.
Be sure to follow KMXT FreeForm Radio on Facebook and Bandcamp and Spotify.
You
can now listen to the livestream of the show through the KMXT app; it's
available through the Mac App Store or Google Play. The stream is also
available at www.kmxt.org
Please support FreeForm Radio and KMXT by going to www.KMXT.org and pledging your support.
The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below)
We urge you to support the musicians you hear on FreeForm Radio.
Release date 16th May 2025
Limited to 500 copies Digipak CD
Bar Code 5028423250920
FreeForm Radio thanks Ian Boddy for a promo copy of this release.
Norwegian ambient guitarist Erik Wøllo has become a familiar name to followers of the DiN label as he has previously collaborated with label boss Ian Boddy on three studio albums as well as a couple of releases with Bernhard Wöstheinrich. His other live release with Boddy was from their only concert together so far, “EC12” (DiNDDL16), from their performance at the Electronic Circus in Germany in 2012. That is, until April 2024, when the Capstone Theatre in Liverpool invited Wøllo to perform alongside Boddy at what would be his UK debut.
During the evening at the Capstone each musician played solo sets and then combined on stage to play an electrifying hour long performance mining tracks from their previous two albums “Meridian” (DiN54) and “Revolve” (DiN73). It is this joint concert that forms their new release, “Transmissions” (DiN92). Taking the original pieces as their starting point the duo played reworked and extended versions of these tracks with Wøllo getting the chance to play some wonderful guitar solos that take the music to a whole new level. Meanwhile Boddy used his Eurorack modular system to sculpt and mould the rhythmic sequencers and drums around Erik’s playing, as well as adding his distinctive French Connection Ondes style voicings. The main set was a continuous sonic journey through mystical soundscapes and rhythmic slices of Berlin School sequencing. The final encore track was a rendition of the track “Apogee” from the duos 2022 album “Revolve” (DiN73) with Wøllo playing a blistering guitar solo over Boddy’s heavy, sequenced grooves.
This is a real treat for DiN aficionados and a perfect example of how two experienced musicians can take existing material and take it to new emotional heights in a live setting.
Track listing:
01 Uncharted 03:57
02 Abeona 10:54
03 Colony 08:11
04 Ice Station 05:24
05 Revolve 09:01
06 Salvage 08:52
07 Terra Sirenum 05:38
08 Apogee 07:54
Total Time : 59:53
Demo Mix for DiN92 https://tinyurl.com/3nkh9h3u
Be sure to follow KMXT FreeForm Radio on Facebook and Bandcamp and Spotify.
You
can now listen to the livestream of the show through the KMXT app; it's
available through the Mac App Store or Google Play. The stream is also
available at www.kmxt.org
Please support FreeForm Radio and KMXT by going to www.KMXT.org and pledging your support.
The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below)
We urge you to support the musicians you hear on FreeForm Radio.
I'll also be hosting Rural Electric right after the Island Messenger at 7 pm until 9 pm.
This week's Rural Electric spotlights country songs about cheatin' and lyin'
Curved Air are an English progressive rock group formed in 1970 by musicians from mixed artistic backgrounds, including classical, folk and electronic sound. The resulting sound of the band is a mixture of progressive rock, folk rock, and fusion with classical elements. Curved Air released eight studio albums, the first three of which broke into the Top 20 in the UK Albums Chart, and had a hit single with "Back Street Luv" (1971) which reached number 4 in the UK Singles Chart.[1
Phantasmagoria is the third studio album by Curved Air. Released in 1972, it reached No. 20 in the UK Charts[2] and is notable for its early use of the EMS Synthi 100 synthesizer to process lead singer Sonja Kristina's voice on the second side. Unavailable for many years, the album was reissued on CD in April 2007.
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Allmusic called Phantasmagoria "the culmination of all that Curved Air promised over the course of its predecessors" and "the band's grandest hour by far". Their review praised the vast majority of the individual tracks, especially complimenting the blending of musical styles and absence of pretentiousness.[1]
Review by
Trotsky
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
Of course, the bloodthirsty, (ahem) majestic Marie Antoinette is one of those essential art-rock songs, with rollicking piano, chants, fuzz guitar from Francis Monkman and eerie synths from Darryl Way, and Sonja Kristina presiding over it all. The beautiful folk ballad Melinda (More Or Less) is also unforgettable. With Kristina on acoustic guitar (let's not forget that this former folkie initially replaced Sandy Denny in The Strawbs!), Way's violin, Monkman's harpsichord, Mike Wedgwood's understated bas and a notable guest flute appearance from one Annie Stewart, also succeed in transporting listeners back a couple of centuries.
As great as both songs are, neither is the album-defining classic, an honour that belongs to Monkman's classic Over And Above. Oustanding moments abound in this song that resembles some of the work that Annie Haslam and Renaissance would craft in subsequent years. A swirling, multi-dimensional mini-epic, it's fuelled by astounding guest performances from vibraphonists/xylophonists Crispian Steel-Perkins, Paul Cosh and Jim Watson and also features stellar contributions from Way and Monkman, both with an otherworldly synth solo and some earthier wah-wah guitar (which is largely absent on this record) to close off the piece. With symhonic dashes, jazzy runs and even the yet-to-be-sacred tubular bells, it is arguably the most progressive song Curved Air ever recorded.
The rest of the album is not quite in the same league as this masterpiece, but is generally very strong. Not Quite The Same begins with medieval brassy sounds before evolving into a bouncy folk-jazz with a melancholic chorus, and an unusual Canterbury- influenced synth solo (both Way and Monkman play synth on this one). Cheetah is an upbeat Darryl Way instrumental sees him starring on violin, with just enough unpredictable changes to keep the piece fresh. The title track is another one of those eerie, theatrical Curved Air cuts, although I don't really like the chorus.
The one real downer is Ultra-Vivaldi, a sped up sequenced version of a song that has already been performed twice before by the group on Air Conditioning). The sequencer idea may have seemed worthwhile back in 1972, but it really stinks now. Of the three Curved Air Vivaldi pieces (Vivaldi, Vivaldi With Cannons and Ultra-Vivaldi) the original Vivaldi track is the only one I consider worth listening to. Luckily the damage is over in just 1:24! Whose Shoulder Are You Looking Over Anyway? is another experiment that sounds cool but ain't entirely convincing. The track consists of Kristina vocal tracks fed through a "PDP8/L computer and a Synthi 100 Synthesizer", and it's all edited to create a ghostly atmosphere. It's not as tacky as Ultra-Vivaldi, but does go some way towards making the album feel dated.
The totally wild, unpredictable feel of the album is emphasized by the concluding track Once A Ghost, Always A Ghost, a strange brassy cabaret song that isn't a personal favourite, but does end the album on an offbeat, yet stimulating note, thanks in part to another incredible vibraphone solo. You have to give this album and its creators marks for not resting on the laurels of the previous year's hit single, and going on to craft a daring album despite the increasing friction that developed between the group's two main songwriters.
Unfortunately, the band imploded after this excellent album, losing both Way and Monkman ... and things were never the same. But should you ever need to convince anyone of Curved Air's greatness, kindly direct them here. This is something else. ... 85% on the MPV scale
Astrolabio is the second album by the Italian progressive rock band Garybaldi. It was produced by Maurizio Salvadori and published in 1973 by Fonit. 1]]
There are only two songs, one on each side of the disc. It is a Long Playing much appreciated by fans of the genre, present in the selection of the book "The 100 best records of the Progressive Italiano", of 2014, written by the critic Mox Cristadoro.
Review by
Sean Trane
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Prog Folk
Mother Of Lost Causes starts off as a very spacey-sounding exploration, but soon develops superbly what they had promised with the Moretto Da Brescia pinnacle of Nuda. Simply superb double-tracked guitar wailing somehow reminding more of Robin Trower (another Hendrix-ey connection) and very abruptly ended by an almost sonar- echoed repeating key that is reminiscent of a great Argent track. Astounding stuff, you proheads!!! In Italy only Flea (with their Topi O Uomini album) approaches such a complete feast of guitars at the time.
The second track is recorded live and is kick-arse rock'n roll (sometimes sounding a bit like Hendrix's Voodoo Chile played by Trower) and some wild KB-guitars (Purple-like) call and response. This track is not quite as proggy as the previous one, but shows another facet (improvising) of the group. Pity these guys stopped so soon, even if Fossatti will make further records.
Easily their better album, this lengthy solo feast is never over-indulgent or gratuitous heroics and in its genre is a textbook example of its own.
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You
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The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below)
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Tonight I'll also be hosting Rural Electric right after the Island Messenger at 7 pm until 9 pm.
This week's Rural Electric spotlights the best of Canadian country music.
Tonight's FreeForm albums feature the music of Modest Mussorgsky.
Fireballet biography
Review by
loserboy
PROG REVIEWER
Night on Bald Mountain (Russian: Ночь на лысой горе, romanized: Noch′ na lysoy gore), also known as Night on the Bare Mountain, is a series of compositions by Modest Mussorgsky (1839–1881). Inspired by Russian literary works and legend, Mussorgsky composed a "musical picture", St. John's Eve on Bald Mountain (Russian: Иванова ночь на лысой горе, romanized: Ivanova noch′ na lysoy gore) on the theme of a Witches' Sabbath occurring at Bald Mountain on St. John's Eve, which he completed on that very night, 23 June 1867. Together with Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's Sadko (1867), it is one of the first tone poems by a Russian composer.[1
Pictures at an Exhibition is a live album by English progressive rock band Emerson, Lake & Palmer, released in November 1971 on Island Records. It features the group's rock adaptation of Pictures at an Exhibition, the piano suite by Modest Mussorgsky, performed at Newcastle City Hall on 26 March 1971.
The band had performed the Mussorgsky piece since their live debut in August 1970, after keyboardist Keith Emerson had attended an orchestral performance of the piece several years before and pitched the idea to guitarist and frontman Greg Lake and drummer Carl Palmer, who agreed to adapt it while contributing sections to the arrangement. The album concludes with the concert's encore, "Nut Rocker", a rock adaptation of The Nutcracker originally arranged by Kim Fowley and recorded by B. Bumble and the Stingers in 1962.
Pictures at an Exhibition went to number 3 on the UK Albums Chart and number 10 on the US Billboard 200. In 2001, it was reissued as a remastered edition that included a studio version of the piece recorded in 1993.
The band's arrangement of the suite uses only four of the ten parts in Mussorgsky's suite, along with the linking "Promenade" sections. The suite was performed live as one continuous piece, with new, group-written sections linking Mussorgsky's original themes.
Note that Mussorgsky's original compositions are listed in bold:
Pictures at an Exhibition[a] is a piano suite in ten movements, plus a recurring and varied Promenade theme, written in 1874 by Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky. It is a musical depiction of a tour of an exhibition of works by architect and painter Viktor Hartmann put on at the Imperial Academy of Arts in Saint Petersburg, following his sudden death in the previous year. Each movement of the suite is based on an individual work, some of which are lost.
The composition has become a showpiece for virtuoso pianists, and became widely known from orchestrations and arrangements produced by other composers and contemporary musicians, with Maurice Ravel's 1922 adaptation for orchestra being the most recorded and performed. The suite, particularly the final movement, "The Bogatyr Gates", is widely considered one of Mussorgsky's greatest works.
Be sure to follow KMXT FreeForm Radio on Facebook and Bandcamp and Spotify.
You
can now listen to the livestream of the show through the KMXT app; it's
available through the Mac App Store or Google Play. The stream is also
available at www.kmxt.org
Please support FreeForm Radio and KMXT by going to www.KMXT.org and pledging your support.
The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below)
We urge you to support the musicians you hear on FreeForm Radio.
Out Of Focus biography
This awesome band came from Munich and made three extraordinary albums
on the super-collectable Kuckuk label plus another that never got
released until recently. Hennes Herring on KB (mainly Hammond organ),
Remi Dreschler on guitars, Moran Neumuller on vocals and winds, Klaus
Spöri and Stefan Wisheu on drums and bass respectively made an
incredibly tight unit although they were prone to a lot of improvisation
moments also. Their music is somewhat similar to early British prog but
will gradually evolve to a certain jazz-rock while staying very
politically and socially conscious (in the typical German style of those
years) although the singing does not hold a big place in their music,
their third release (a double) being mostly instrumental. They released
three albums on the legendary Kuckuk label, the same one that also
reissued them in Cd format.
After their third album, OOF suffered
their first major line-up change with keyboardist Hennes Herring
leaving the band to join SAHARA (another excellent group that will
release two very solid albums), and he was replaced by yet another
guitarist Wolfgang Gohringer (that made double guitar and double horn
attack), but if it affected the group's sound a bit, it was nothing
drastic either. A fourth (excellent) album was recorded in the spring of
74, but for some reasons it was never released - until Ultima
Thule/Cosmic Egg would in 99. Sadly these events lead towards a slow
decline of the group who would gradually slow down activities, recording
just one more single and playing their last concerts in 78.
The
musicians went their way, but in the mid-80's, three of them met and
participated to Kontrast and recorded one of the best Krautrock album of
that decade, according to the experts. This album and its intended
suite just got a second life by getting a reissue, again on the Cosmic
Egg label. Among the other posthumous releases is the left-overs from
FLMA albums (Rat Roads) and a Live in Palerme 72, both excellent records
appearing on the great Garden Of Delight Label.
Let me quote D-E
Asbjornssen in Cosmic Dreams At Play and use his final comment about
OOF: "what an awesome band they were" and I fully adhere to that
opinion.
: : : Hugues Chantraine, BELGIUM : : :
Highly
recommended by Dag-Erik Asbjornsen in his great book Cosmic Dreams At
Play, and by myself to every progheads infatuated with the early 70's
way of making music. Simply awesome!
Four Letter Monday Afternoon Review by
BrufordFreak
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator
LP 1 (46:07): 1. "L.S.B." (17:37) very much like some evolved Big Band jazz--taking Don Ellis a bit further in terms of incorporating elements of avant/free jazz and electronics, but also quite a bit more reigned in in terms of the use of odd time signatures. Still, the song is quite entertaining for its multiple sax-connected multiple motifs covering a range of styles and tempos. There are a lot of elements of blues-rock at the core of a lot of this music (one can still hear the band that did Wake Up! just two years before). I really like the KINGSTON WALL-like vocal motif in the last third of the song. (31.75/35)
2. "When I'm Sleeping" (4:04) sounds like THE ROLLING STONES if they tried covering PETER HAMMILL song as well as a smooth Motown tune for the chorus and instrumental section. Hennse Hering's old-time saloon-like piano play in the background is a delight, as is Stephen Wishen's bass JAMES JAMERSON-like play and the sax work. I don't know why, but the recording of the drums is rather poor. This may be my favorite vocal performance from Moran. (9/10)
3. "Tsajama" (9:23) a great guitar and flute intro leads into an awesome motif with heavy organ and low bass notes weighing things down beneath the flute, guitars, and smoothly-drawn lines coming from the full horn section. Awesome in a Brian Auger/Eumir Deodato kind of way. Remigius Drechsler leads the way with his searing guitar play in the second and third minutes before Hennse's Hammond and the orgasmically-smooth horn section join in to double and back him. Such a great groove! In the second half of the sixth minute the horns, Hammond, and guitars back off and Moran enters in a singing capacity, using Japanese as his language. Interesting. Then he runs off into some poorly-synched scatting in the seventh minute before returning to leading the smoother, multi-channel melody in Japanese in the eighth. But then the band ramps up the pace and breadth of sound dynamics with a return of the horn section, inspiring Moran to gallop off with some more interesting horse-like vocalese scatting(?). (19/20)
4. "Black Cards" (9:38) a gentle weave of organ and electric guitar arpeggi opens this before flute, hand drums, and a second guitar join in. At the one-minute mark the bass jumps on board, ushering the band into a full blues-rock sound palette over which Moran turns back to his Mick Jagger voice for another vocal performance that reminds me of Mick singing his Slow Horses theme song. A return to the opening theme at the end of the third minute allows for a kind of 30-second reset from which they emerge with a VAN MORRISON "Moondance"-like motif over which Hennse solos on his Wurlitzer-sounding organ. This is a great, extended instrumental section with some gorgeous and dynamic flute soloing throughout. At the end we return to the blues swing theme for Moran to finish things off with his Moves Like Jagger. (18/20)
5. "Where Have You Been" (5:35) a gorgeous folk-rock song with one of Moran's most moving and melodic vocal performances. Powerful. Incredible flute solo in the "C" part: heart-wrenching. I know that Moran (and maybe his bandmates) had a very strong moral compass. We are so blessed to have the legacy of their passion and courage. (9.5/10)
Disc One earns itself a five star rating.
LP 2 (48:09): 6. "A Huchen 55" (9:19) opens with mutliple flutes winding and wending their way through a rondo weave for two minutes before giving way to a faded in psychedelic blues-rock jam (that was already in progress). Hammond organ takes the first solo over the bass, drums, and guitar support. At the three-minute mark, a panoply of horns join in, each playing their own melody line but securing their comraderie through mutually-respective pauses and breaks. The music coming from the rhythm section beneath kind of hits a "I'm a Man" pulse-and-let-off pattern as the horns continue their fascinating and almost humorous interplay. In the seventh minute, electric guitar and Hammond start to inject their own flourishes and melodic ideas. By the eighth minute the horn players are starting to tire--and eventually peter out for a full minute or more while the Hammond and sassy electric guitar share a quirky little conversation of quips and epithets. At the end of the ninth minute, then, the bluesy jazz music is fadeout (the same way it came in) replaced by the flute weave that opened the song. (18/20)
7. "Huchen 55, B" (14:32) opening with the flute weave from the previous song bleeding over, a new already-in- progress R&B jam is faded in. The James Jamerson-like bass play that drives the music is once again emitting waves of groovy Motown sound, but this soon fades out to be replaced by Moran's solo flute play. He sounds so much as if he's trying to imitate the breathy play of maestro Jean-Pierre Rampal. Jazz guitars, trumpet, Hammond, each take their turn joining in beneath Moran's increasingly-avat garde flute stylings. In the seventh minute trumpeter Jimmy Polivka tries usurping the lead from Moran, but it is not that easy: Moran is riding along on pure inspiration. So Jimmy gives up. Hennse and Remigius each take their own turns, trying to nudge Moran out, but Herr Hering only seems to get stronger--until the 9:00 mark: then he gives way, sits back and lets the music unfold without him. The band seem to rise to the occasion with a JEFFERSON AIRPLANE-like creativity: slowly, carefully, deliberately. Hennse's excited Hammond is kept at bay via repressed volume, which allows the horns to have their time. In the twelfth minute Remigius steps to the fore and lays out one awesome blues-rock solo. The band is really into the jam here: fully entrained with everyone clicking--expelling their full creative juices. Awesome! Despite its looseness and lack of plan or developmental structure, this song plays out with some infectious power. Moran's multi-flute weave is once again used to bridge this song with the next one. (27/30)
8. "Huchen 55, C" (24:18) What a jam! Wild and crazy: from Moran's lyrics and vocal performance (sounding like a reckless/uninhibited Mick Jagger channeling PETER HAMMILL through DAMO SUZUKI) to the reckless abandon with which everyone blasts and grooves out their passion. I mean, it feels as if everyone, all at once, is given the total green light to play whatever they feel inspired to play. This makes for some very creative and memorable solos--especially from the horn players (the multitude of saxes are of special note), percussionist, and Hennse's Hammond organ. Definitely Krautrock. Definitely hypnotic in a "Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys"-kind of way--a sound that would also seem to indicate the use of mind altering substances. The song's final three minutes are particularly entertaining for the frenetic yet-respectful free-for-all that gradually peters out, making way for yet another reprise of Moran's multi-flute weave. (45.5/50)
Disc Two earns itself a 4.5/5 star rating.
Total Time: 94:16
A-/five stars; a minor masterpiece of wonderfully-creative First Wave Jazz-Rock Fusion. One can definitely trace the influences and inspirations for each song on several levels but in the end the boys have achieved a mastery of their instruments and goals, enabling them to merge admirably their Krautrock influences with the Blues-Rock and Jazz- Rock Fusion trends they've been hearing. As with every other reviewer I've read, it's too bad this band didn't stay together.
With regards to the controversy of whether or not this album (or band) deserves to belong to the Jazz-Rock Fusion sub-genre, I will only say that over the course of the band's three album evolution it has definitely flowed toward Jazz-Rock (though it has also picked up a strong Krautrock foundation as well). This is 1972! Jazz-Rock Fusion was still in it's childhood! The dominant styles and sounds were still as-yet undecided. Herbie Hancock and Mahavishnu John McLaughlin were still evolving! Rapidly! Many bands like Out Of Focus were offering up a wide range of their own personal interpretations--which is one of the most exciting and refreshing aspects of J-R F's "First Wave."