Consisting of four epic length tracks, “Breathing Space” showcases Hackberry inventively infusing their sophomore album with a dense patina of heavy prog movement. This virtuosic instrumental quintet created mammoth of a record that nimbly integrates heavier elements with intricate classic prog. “Breathing Space” may have been even better served by a bit more thematic unity and compositional structure, but the album remains a thrilling and pulse-racing heavy prog cosmic sojourn.
Read moreUpcoming Tracks: “Eleision Forest” – The Chronicles of Father Robin (2023)
We take a look at “Eleision Forest”, the advance track from Norwegian supergroup The Chronicles of Father Robin and their upcoming three-album project The Songs & Tales of Airoea.
Read moreAVKRVST: “The Approbation” (2023) – Album Review
“The Approbation” is a stellar debut for AVKRVST, who have delivered a powerful opening album statement for progressive music fans to stand up and take notice. Delving deep into dark and moribund subject matter with strong progressive rock and metal elements, AVRKVST don’t dilute the emotional impact of their themes in an impenetrable shroud of doom; their compelling musical content renders them more immediate, accessible, and impressive.
Read moreKing Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard: “PetroDragonic Apocalypse…” (2023) – Album Review
“PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: An Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation Music” is an early contender for my favorite album of 2023, thus far. King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard brought their talents for inventive, evocative compositional prowess to bear, with electrifying thrash metal results. The album forges the King Gizz ethos ahead into pure genre territory, catalyzing its evolution with shredding metal intensity.
Read moreLars Fredrik Frøislie: “Fire Fortellinger” (2023) – Album Review
“Fire Foretellinger”, the debut solo album from Wobbler keyboardist Lars Fredrik Frøislie, is a captivating and deeply impressive release, imbuing Norse/Norwegian folk tales with a thrilling display of symphonic prog virtuosity. The end result is easily accessible (and enjoyable) for fans of Wobbler, retro prog, or classic 70s prog.
Read moreThey Watch Us From The Moon: “Cosmic Chronicles, Act I: The Ascension” (2023) – Album Review
“Cosmic Chronicles, Act I: The Ascension” from They Watch Us From The Moonis a doom metal-infused Laser Floyd for the mind’s eye, a disarmingly melodic and riff-driven take on heavy psychedelia that blasts off into a wholly-other sonic cosmos.
Read moreHaken: “Fauna” (2023) – Album Review
“Fauna” is Haken’s best work since Affinity, perhaps even since The Mountain. Evoking the animal kingdom as thematic ruminations on the human condition, the band has crafted an engaging series of musically-rich tableaux, with content often both puzzling and precipitating, but always entirely compelling. “Fauna” is a fantastic record that bridges many of the band’s eras whilst forging ahead along their unique evolutionary trajectory.
Read moreArjen Lucassen’s Supersonic Revolution: “Golden Age Of Music” (2023) – Album Review
A love letter to the classic innovative rock of the early/mid 1970s, “Golden Age of Music” pays tribute to acts like Sweet, Uriah Heep, Deep Purple, Bowie, T. Rex, Budgie, Rainbow, Queen, and Black Sabbath. Arjen Lucassen and Supersonic Revolution deliver big, loud, larger-than-life epic hard rock that engagingly evokes the highlights of the band’s 1970s rock influences, without giving in to the temptation of directly recreating them.
Read moreIron Maiden: “Piece of Mind” (1983) – Classic Album Review
In honor of the 40th (!) anniversary of Iron Maiden’s classic 1983 album Piece of Mind — a landmark New Wave of British Heavy Metal record (and that of heavy metal in general) — I’m reprinting a review I wrote at Hokeyblog about ten-and-a-half years ago. This album meant the world to me at age 12. Forty years later? Hasn’t missed a freakin’ piece.
Read moreBrass Camel: “Brass” (2022) – Album Review
“Brass” is an infectious and often surprising transmogrification of blues, funk, and prog elements into a satisfying whole. Brass Camel delivers a wondrous slab of sonic wizardry, channeling fireballs of rock’s epic past but weaving them into an eccentric yet intoxicating new vision.
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