Label: Camel Productions (US), CP-002CD
Style: Symphonic Rock, Canterbury Scene, Progressive Rock
Country: Guildford, Surrey, England
Time: 39:23
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 260 Mb
Elsewhere,
Andy shows that, apart from Blackmore, he has been attentively
listening to Robert Fripp - some of the passages in 'Six Ate' are based
on the fast, mathematically precise riffage of '21st Century Schizoid
Man' - and maybe even Santana (the album opener, 'Going Down Slow', with
its calm, steady Latin groove that suddenly turns into a wall-rattling
temperamental solo midway through); pure jazz guitar chops are heard on
the proto-National Health 'Curiosity'. Without a doubt, the guitar solos
throughout are the best parts of the songs, and one major thing they
have over subsequent instrumental passages on later records is dynamics;
there's much more youthful aggressiveness in the playing than there
would be on those records where the songwriting was to finally catch up
with the playing and then eventually overshadow it. By contrast, Bardens
lets his organ mostly stay in the background, being an essential part
of the sound.
Oh yes, there's also the singing question - at least
three band members take turns providing lead vocal parts, but not one of
them is able to make any impression, and apparently they know it, so
the vocals are kept to a minimum (and two out of seven songs have none
at all). Incidentally, it's pretty damn hard to tell one guy from
another; they all sound like slightly dusty clones of Pye Hastings. In
fact, if there is one thing that's more or less common for all of
"Canterbury rock", it's the vocals - quiet, high-pitched, and very weak
voices, suggesting that Canterbury singers obviously do not drink,
smoke, swear, date, eat non-kosher, or watch anime.
(full version: starlingdb.org/music/camel.htm)
01. Slow Yourself Down (04:47)
02. Mystic Queen (05:40)
03. Six Ate (06:06)
04. Separation (03:57)
05. Never Let Go (06:26)
06. Curiosity (05:55)
07. Arubaluba (06:29)

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