Scritto da Valentino Butti Sabato 06 Dicembre 2008 20:02 Letto : 2797 volte
Dear friends, this review won't be objective: don't ask me to be impartial reviewing this Moth Vellum album!!! In fact, in this album Yes slightly cross Genesis: how could I be balanced and impartial?
I ask your attention: we won't speak about clones... neither The Musical Box (they play covers very well), nor Unifaun (“Genesis album you have never listened...”), nor Glass Hammer.
If it can help you to have some (perhaps inaccurate) indications, Relayer (in their first albums, “A grander vision” of 1994 and “The teething fashion” of 1996) or Madrigal (“On my hands” of 1996), though in a minor way, are the groups most approaching to four californian kids' suggestions.
In my opinion, Moth Vellum proposal, though recognizing some debts to the before named prog superpowers, is to be appreciated and it shines by its own light. The band is almost the classic one, with Tom Lynham to the keyboards, Johannes Luley to the guitars, Ryan Dawne to the bass and the vocals and Matt Swindells to the drums and the vocals, too.
There are only six songs, for sixty minutes full of optimal music. It greatly starts with “Let the race begin”: a moog, a “Steve Howe” guitar, good vocal melodies (“All for free”) as Squire ones, but, though this, a personality, a spontaneity and a innate grace keeping them away from the “masters” can be noticed. Then, we can notice the capability to take their inheritance and reelaborate it in a one and exclusive language, as well as the skill to assimilate the lesson, reproposing it as renewed. It is a fine concept, I know, but it distinguishes “a copy of...” from a “an inspiration to...”.
“Whalehead” lives on a thin keyobards veil and a irregular rhythm, similar to “Wind and wuthering” or “Going for the one”: all very simple, but... wow!!!
Thirteen minutes and a half in “Salvo” (the longest track in the CD) cannot leave us indifferent, for its optimal musicality and a steel guitar that will make start all sensible people.
“Against the suns” is an atmospheric song, whose central part remembers us Rush in “Hemispheres” (not the whole album, but the suffused ending of that song): dreaming, rarefied, with a very moving symphonic ending.
Also “Walk it off” demonstrates us how “history” can be revisited and modernized: a seductive voice (more similar to Horn's one in confront of Anderson's voice), great instrumental capabilities and freshness.
I had written from the beginning I should put away impartiality. I am not regretful: for this time, to hell with “exotic” prog, to hell with fashioned highbrow speculations, to hell with RIO, fusion, jazz-rock, post-rock, avant-gardes! Long live “traditional” progressive!! Long live Moth Vellum!!
Translate by Giuliano Latina
Ryan Downe: Basso, voce
Tom Lynham: Tastiere, concert toms
Johannes Luley: Chitarra, voce
Matt Swindells: Batteria, voce
Anno: 2008
Label: Sonic Temple
Genere: Progressive Rock
Tracklist:
01. Let the Race Begin
02. Whalehead
03. Salvo
04. Against the Suns
05. Walk it Off
06. Against the Suns (Reprise)