Showing posts with label Progressive Rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Progressive Rock. Show all posts

Friday, December 12, 2025

Jethro Tull - Too Old To Rock 'N' Roll: Too Young To Die! (1976)

Year: 23 April 1976 (CD 1987)
Label: Chrysalis Records (Germany), 252 663
Style: Progressive Rock, Gothic Rock, Folk Rock
Country: Blackpool, Lancashire, England
Time: 42:15
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 263 Mb

Ian Anderson should stick to music, because he most definitely is not a storyteller. This is the muddled story of one Ray Lomas, “the last of the old rockers,” whose long hair and tight jeans mark him as a person whom time has passed by. After a series of events remarkable only for their lack of humor and originality, we leave the “hero” as he is about to become a pop star in his own right.
So what? We can take comfort, though, in knowing that Anderson’s technical prowess as a composer remains undiminished. The album abounds in breathtaking musical passages. The title cut, for one, is a textbook example of the use of dynamics and nuance in a rock song: instruments subtly creep in during the verses, with the slightest of musical nods to let us know they’re there. The music builds with a tension that heightens a desperate theme, then erupts in the chorus. “Quizz Kid” features, in addition to numerous startling changes in texture, several brief but pungent solos by guitarist Martin Barre, whose playing is exemplary throughout.
(rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/too-old-to-rock-n-roll-too-young-to-die-204560/)

Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog. D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).

01. Quizz Kid (05:07)
02. Crazed Institution (04:47)
03. Salamander (02:51)
04. Taxi Grab (03:55)
05. From A Dead Beat To An Old Greaser (04:08)
06. Bad-Eyed and Loveless (02:14)
07. Big Dipper (03:37)
08. Too Old To Rock 'N' Roll: Too Young To Die (05:41)
09. Pied Piper (04:32)
10. The Chequered Flag (Dead or Alive) (05:23)

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Camel - Moonmadness [Japanese Ed. 2CD] (1976)

Year: April 1976 (CD 2009)
Label: Universal Music (Japan), UICY-94134/5
Style: Art Rock, Symphonic Rock, Canterbury Scene
Country: Guildford, Surrey, England
Time: 54:41, 73:52
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 347, 437 Mb

CD1: Moonmadness - original album + 3 bonus tracks. CD2: The London Hammersmith Odeon Concert - 14th April 1976.
Moonmadness is the fourth studio album by English progressive rock band Camel. It was released in April 1976 on Decca and Gama Records and is their last album recorded by the group's original line-up of Andrew Latimer, Peter Bardens, Doug Ferguson, and Andy Ward. After reaching success with their previous album, the all-instrumental The Snow Goose, the band started on a follow-up and incorporated vocals and lyrics to the new music. Moonmadness has a loose concept with one track based on the personality of each band member: "Air Born" for Andrew Latimer, "Chord Change" for Peter Bardens, "Another Night" for Doug Ferguson, and "Lunar Sea" for Andy Ward.
Camel's popularity grew in 1975 with their critically acclaimed instrumental album The Snow Goose, which was followed by the group being voted Britain's Brightest Hope by readers of the nationwide music publication Melody Maker. In late 1975, the band spent three weeks writing new music for a follow-up album, and recorded Moonmadness in January and February 1976. At the time of release, Latimer said he was very pleased with the album despite the need to rush to finish it.
The last track, "Lunar Sea", ends with a minute-long wind-blowing effect. On some LP pressings, the record arm would skip during the end of this part and naturally return to the beginning of the effect, playing it endlessly (the "terminal groove" effect).
In the Q & Mojo Classic Special Edition Pink Floyd & The Story of Prog Rock, the album came number 23 in its list of "40 Cosmic Rock Albums".
It was voted no. 58 in the Top 100 Prog albums of All Time by readers of 'Prog' magazine in 2014 and is ranked 16th greatest prog album on progarchives.com (as of 23-07-2025).
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moonmadness)

01. Aristillus (01:57)
02. Song Within a Song (07:14)
03. Chord Change (06:43)
04. Spirit of the Water (02:07)
05. Another Night (06:54)
06. Airborn (05:02)
07. Lunar Sea (09:12)
08. Another Night (single) (03:24)
09. Spirit of the Water (demo version) (02:14)
10. Lunar Sea (live) (09:50)

01. Song Within a Song (07:38)
02. Excerpts From the Snow Goose (11:03)
03. Air Born (05:12)
04. Chord Change (06:58)
05. The White Rider (09:10)
06. Preparation / Dunkirk (10:17)
07. Another Night (07:25)
08. Lady Fantasy (16:05)

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Thursday, December 11, 2025

Darryl Way's Wolf (Curved Air) - Saturation Point [Japanese Ed. SHM-CD] (1973)

Year: 1973 (CD Nov 26, 2008)
Label: Universal Music (Japan), UICY-93827
Style: Progressive Rock, Symphonic Rock, Instrumental
Country: Taunton, Somerset, England
Time: 47:30
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 335 Mb

WOW! When a progressive rock band has violin and guitars in his music, usually they are not played at the same time. In fact, they are simultaneously played here, and this really contributes to give Wolf a very personal trademark. This not very well known prog band gives us here a wonderful album, full of impressive violin, electric + acoustic guitars and dynamic & punchy bass! No one else than Ian Mosley himself(Marillion)plays the drums here: they are very well played and quite complex. Everything is very well synchronized, like Gentle Giant. It sounds a bit like Curved air, Caravan, Happy the man, Gentle Giant and Frank Zappa, but this album has really its own sound, and this makes the band very interesting. The record is mainly instrumental, and the keyboards are surprisingly rare, simple and discreet: they mainly consist in electric piano. This record is heavier and more symphonic and straightforward than "Canis Lupus": there are some very seriously loaded parts, very progressive, and the violin is more omnipresent.
(rateyourmusic.com/music-review/greenback/darryl-ways-wolf/saturation-point/216103)

01. The Ache (04:51)
02. Two Sisters (04:21)
03. Slow Rag (05:18)
04. Market Overture (03:38)
05. Game Of X (05:48)
06. Saturation Point (06:46)
07. Toy Symphony (07:14)
08. A Bunch Of Fives (03:30)
09. Five In The Morning (02:40)
10. Two Sisters (Single Version) (03:19)

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Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Jon Lord (Deep Purple) - Sarabande (1976)

Year: October 1976 (CD 1987)
Label: Line Records (Germany), LICD 9.00124 O
Style: Modern Classical, Progressive Rock
Country: Leicester, England (9 June 1941 - 16 July 2012)
Time: 50:06
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 265 Mb

Typically, when an artist branches out from their current band for a solo outing, it is to “prove” something. Wishing to be seen as more than just “one of the guys in the band,” they want to take an excursion into the studio, hoping to demonstrate to the loyal legion of fans that they have something different to offer. This is especially true when they are not the main songwriter in said group. Jon Lord, a founding member and former member of Deep Purple, successfully found a way of sounding relevant with Sarabande, his second solo outing, without losing the respect of Purple’s fan base.
Anyone expecting a Deep Purple-sounding album will be disappointed. In this case, that may be a good thing. If you have an appreciation for majestic, brain-jarring compositions of pure musicianship, Sarabande may be the album for you. With the Hungarian Philharmonic as his accompaniment, in addition to an array of other studio musicians, including a pre-Police guitarist Andy Summers, Lord offers up eight songs of pure musical, majestic bliss. To some, it may appear Lord is just being pretentious; but to those with open ears, he is merely demonstrating that his talents reach beyond his years with Deep Purple.
In a way, Sarabande almost resembles the soundtrack, to one of Hollywood’s old-time classics, ala Lawrence of Arabia or Ben-Hur. That’s what I love about it. It is truly grand on all levels. With the musicianship and the swooping, epic-like execution of each track, there is not a moment on this mesmerizing album where the listener will fail to be impressed. Combining classical music with jazz, blues, and straight forward rock, it is an ambitious piece of work that, for the most part, succeeds, thanks to the genius of Lord’s capabilities.
(full version: https://vintagerock.com/jon-lord-sarabande/)

Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog. D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).

01. Fantasia (03:32)
02. Sarabande (07:25)
03. Aria (03:48)
04. Gigue (11:10)
05. Bouree (11:07)
06. Pavane (07:45)
07. Caprice (03:13)
08. Finale (02:04)

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Sunday, December 7, 2025

Trapeze (Glenn Hughes) - Trapeze (1970)

Year: May 1970 (CD 1994)
Label: Polygram Records (US), 820 954-2
Style: Progressive Rock, Pop Rock
Country: Cannock, England
Time: 40:37
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 197 Mb

Trapeze is the debut studio album by British rock band Trapeze. Recorded in 1969 at Morgan Studios and Decca Studios, it was produced by the Moody Blues bassist John Lodge and released in May 1970 as the second album on Threshold Records, a record label founded by Lodge's band. Trapeze is the band's only album to feature founding member John Jones (vocals, trumpet); both he and Terry Rowley (organ, piano, flute) left shortly after its release. (Rowley rejoined in 1974.)
Unlike the band's later material, which was primarily categorised as blues and hard rock, Trapeze has been described by commentators as a progressive or psychedelic rock album, owing partly to the presence of brass instruments and keyboards on the album. Songwriting was typically led by Jones, Galley and Hughes, with Rowley also co-writing two tracks. "Send Me No More Letters" was released as the only single from the album in 1969, backed with fellow album track "Another Day".
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trapeze_(1970_album))

01. It's Only A Dream (00:44)
02. The Giant's Dead Hoorah! (03:33)
03. Over (03:38)
04. Nancy Gray (02:47)
05. Fairytale - Verily Verily - Fairytale (07:41)
06. It's My Life (02:50)
07. Ami (03:08)
08. Suicide (04:51)
09. Wings (03:30)
10. Another Day (02:37)
11. Send Me No More Letters (04:35)
12. It's Only A Dream - Reprise (00:40)

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Friday, December 5, 2025

Curved Air - Second Album [Japanese Ed. SHM-CD] (1971)

Year: September 1971 (CD Apr 8, 2015)
Label: Warner Music (Japan), WPCR 16300
Style: Progressive Rock, New Age
Country: London, England
Time: 42:27
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 285 Mb

The aptly titled “Second Album” catches Curved Air at the peak of their popularity following the success of the single “Back Street Luv” which remains one of their best known tracks. However in line with the high turnover that was to characterise the band’s line-up, seeds of discord were growing between guitarist Francis Monkman and multi-instrumentalist Darryl Way which led to one side being dedicated to tracks penned by Way and other members of the band while the other saw all the Monkman compositions lumped together.
The second album is always a tricky step for a band who achieve success with their first LP. Usually recorded in the gaps of a busy touring schedule, with little time to come up with new material, it can be a band’s undoing. However “Second Album” is a good effort which opens with not one but two bangs, the excellent “Young Mother” that includes an excellent instrumental break in its midst and the already mentioned “Back Street Luv”. “Jumbo” shows a band stretching its wings with the use of a string section. “You Know” is another good rocker that clearly displays the influences of american band Spirit described by Darryl Way in the liner notes, the excellent hook played in unison by the keyboard and the guitar works a treat.”Puppets” meanders a little and might be the only real filler track here but things pick up instantly with “Everdance” where Curved Air’s trademark violin and an almost chidlike-nursery rhyme lyric make it instantly memorable. Monkman’s inventivity shines through on “Bright Summer’s Day 1968” with its unusual melodies and time signature changes. Closing off the second side is the ambitious “Piece of Mind”, again a track where Monkman’s singular music vision is well displayed. This carefully constructed music suite manages to stay interesting for the whole course of its thirteen minutes.
(louderthanwar.com/curved-air-second-album-album-review/)

01. Young Mother (05:58)
02. Back Street Luv (03:41)
03. Jumbo (04:10)
04. You Know (04:11)
05. Puppets (05:29)
06. Everdance (03:08)
07. Bright Summer's Day '68 (02:54)
08. Piece Of Mind (12:53)

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Camel - The Snow Goose (1975)

Year: May 1975 (CD March 1983)
Label: Deram Records (Germany), 800 080-2
Style: Art Rock, Symphonic Rock, Instrumental
Country: Guildford, Surrey, England
Time: 43:29
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 230 Mb

Looking back the history, this album should be read as Camel music inspired by "The Snow Goose". Why? This concept album was composed with a reference to Paul Gallico’s Snow Goose. Right after the success of "Mirage" which stayed at Billboard’s Top 200 for a creditable 13 weeks peaked at 149, the band brainstormed the idea of making an acclaimed literary piece concept album. Peter Bardens voted for Steppen Wolf’s but Ferguson and Latimer proposed Paul Gallico’s. So the band created the music that revolved around The Snow Goose. Unfortunately, their record label failed to sign a deal with Gallico’s publishers in the hope of obtaining official blessing for the project, ideally having the author pen a sleeve note and possibly arrange a tie-in between album and tome. That’s why this tribute to our feathered friends had its title prefaced "Music Inspired By" and remained wholy wordless. [sleeve note].
Nevertheless, the streams of music featured in this album is a good one to enjoy and you may have a rewarding experience throughout some tracks. It starts off with an ambient "The Great Marsh" (2:02) which to me personally sounds like an opener for the whole atmosphere of the album. No one would argue that "Rhayader" (3:01) is an excellent track which has powerful melody combining flute, guitar and organ performed in classical influence music with medium tempo. This song has characterized the seventies music altogether with other common songs from Genesis or Yes or ELP or Pink Floyd. I used to associate this song with "Bouree" by Jethro Tull at that time because both of them are flute-based music. "Rhayader Goes To Town" (5:20) is a logical follow- up to Rhayader as it brings the music into faster tempo with great combination of guitar and organ solo with energetic beats. These two songs must be enjoyed in its entirety.
"Sanctuary" (1:05) and "Fritha" (1:19) are songs that I consider as bridges that connect to title track "The Snow Goose" (3:12) which contains guitar solo augmented with long sustain organ in the vein of Jan Akermann of Focus. Cool guitar-based instrumental. "Friendship" (1:44) is a bit boring exploration of keyboard / organ whicch may have more meaning if we can associate with certain part of the story - say our goose was running away or swimming quickly . things like that. Otherwise, it’s a meaningless bridge. "Migration" (2:01) brings the music into up-beat style followed nicely with a cool quiet passage "Rhayader Alone" (1:50). "Flight Of The Snow Goose" (2:40) explores Bardens’ keyboard virtuosity followed with good guitar fills that bring the melody of the music combined with a bit spacey keyboard work.
"Preparation" (3:58) is to me like a theme song that brings the introduction to the next track "Dunkirk" (5:19) with the use of Hammond organ as basic rhythm section plus some howling guitar work followed with guitar solo. The song is dominated with keyboard work even though guitar fills some parts and serves as melody in some other parts. It’s a good track. "Epitaph" (2:07) and "Fritha Alone" (1:40) are bridges to upbeat music with keyboard solo in "La Princesse Perdue" (4:44). Again, I can smell a similarity with Focus music, especially the guitar part. "The Great Marsh" (1:20) concludes the album with an exploration of nature sounds .
Overall, through this album the band has demonstrated their capability to maintain their creation on par excellent with their previous album "Mirage". The album offers good combined work between organ and guitar performed in various styles. The music is cohesive to support a concept album. I think this album should be "in" any prog collection as it was one of the icons in the seventies that anyone should not miss. Recommended.
(classicrockreview.wordpress.com/category/camel-the-snow-goose/)

01. The Great Marsh (02:02)
02. Rhayader (03:01)
03. Rhayader Goes To Town (05:20)
04. Sanctuary (01:05)
05. Fritha (01:19)
06. The Snow Goose (03:12)
07. Friendship (01:44)
08. Migration (02:01)
09. Rhayader Alone (01:50)
10. Flight Of The Snow Goose (02:40)
11. Preparation (03:58)
12. Dunkirk (05:19)
13. Epitaph (02:07)
14. Fritha Alone (01:40)
15. La Princesse Perdue (04:44)
16. The Great Marsh (01:20)

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Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Kansas - Leftoverture [Japanese Ed. Blu-Spec CD] (1976)

Year: October 21, 1976 (CD Aug 24, 2011)
Label: Epic Records (Japan), EICP 20074
Style: Progressive Rock, Soft Rock
Country: Topeka, Kansas, U.S.
Time: 58:50
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 433 Mb

Steve Walsh began to experience writer's block prior to the recording, and his contribution to the album would ultimately be limited to co-authoring three songs; it fell on Kerry Livgren to fill the void. The new compositions retained much of the classically inspired complexity of Livgren's previous work. As with their previous album, Masque, Kansas recorded Leftoverture at Studio in the Country in Bogalusa, Louisiana. The Studio in the Country was so named because, as Livgren described on In the Studio with Redbeard radio show in the episode spotlighting Leftoverture, "it was in the middle of a swamp. We'd walk out of the studio and there would be gators in front of the studio, mosquitos the size of B-52s and at times armadillos would run into the control room."
Leftoverture opens with the song "Carry On Wayward Son", which Livgren wrote as a sequel to "The Pinnacle", the final song from the previous album Masque (1975). The album's title, Leftoverture, is a portmanteau of leftover and overture.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leftoverture)

01. Carry On Wayward Son (05:25)
02. The Wall (04:51)
03. What's On My Mind (03:28)
04. Miracles Out Of Nowhere (06:29)
05. Opus Insert (04:28)
06. Questions Of My Childhood (03:40)
07. Cheyenne Anthem (06:55)
08. Magnus Opus (08:35)
09. Carry On Wayward Son (Live) (04:44)
10. Cheyenne Anthem (Live) (06:43)
11. Carry On Wayward Son (Single Version) (03:26)

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Sunday, November 30, 2025

Jon Lord (Deep Purple) - Gemini Suite (1971)

Year: October 1971 (CD 1987)
Label: Line Records (Germany), LICD 9.00122 O
Style: Modern Classical, Progressive Rock
Country: Leicester, England (9 June 1941 - 16 July 2012)
Time: 47:24
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 208 Mb

After the 1969 classical / rock fusion Concerto for Group and Orchestra, Jon Lord was commissioned to write a follow-up. This was Gemini Suite, five long movements inspired by the members of Deep Purple, and performed live in September 1970 at the Royal Festival Hall with The Light Music Society Orchestra (the album of the concert was issued in 1993 as Gemini Suite Live). Jon Lord then recorded it in the studio as his first solo project in 1971, with the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Malcolm Arnold and soloists drawn from the rock world. Gemini Suite was an important step for Lord and led to albums such as Windows (1974) and Sarabande (1976).
The album was originally released in Europe and America in 1971 with different cover artwork. The 1973 US reissue featured a third version of the cover artwork. In 1983 the album was re-released on LP in Germany and four years later also for the first time on CD.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gemini_Suite)

Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog. D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).

01. Guitar (09:00)
02. Piano (08:07)
03. Drums (07:22)
04. Vocals (05:51)
05. Bass-Guitar (05:04)
06. Organ (12:00)

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Thursday, November 27, 2025

Camel - Mirage [Japanese Ed. 4 bonus tracks + Germany Ed. AAD] (1974)

Year: 1 March 1974 (CD May 27, 2009. 1989)
Label: Universal Music / Deram Records (Japan/Germany), UICY-94131/820 613-2
Style: Art Rock, Symphonic Rock, Canterbury Scene, Progressive Rock
Country: Guildford, Surrey, England
Time: 68:08, 38:03
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 426, 267 Mb

Camel’s Mirage (1974), with its iconic, cigarette-brand-referencing cover art, was a record that seemed to materialise, fully formed, from the patchouli-scented smoke of the era.
While the previous year's self-titled debut promised much, Mirage was where the band truly found their voice: a clever mix of symphonic sweep, jazz fusion and melodic subtlety that set them apart from the prog giants of the day, even if it didn't reach the same levels of success.
Built around extended suites like Lady Fantasy and Nimrodel, the album blended pastoral English whimsy with intricate musicianship, led by Andy Latimer’s lyrical guitar and Peter Bardens’ swirling keys.
Though Mirage didn’t trouble the charts on release, its reputation has only grown, even if some still confuse the group with Peter Frampton's band of the same name.
(loudersound.com/music/albums/camel-mirage)

Germany Ed. - Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog. D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).

Japanese Ed. 4 bonus tracks:

01. Freefall (05:53)
02. Supertwister (03:19)
03. Nimrodel / The Procession / The White Rider (09:17)
04. Earthrise (06:42)
05. Lady Fantasy: Encounter / Smiles for You / Lady Fantasy (12:45)
06. Supertwister (live) (03:15)
07. Mystic Queen (live) (06:07)
08. Arubaluba (live) (07:47)
09. Lady Fantasy: Encounter / Smiles for You / Lady Fantasy (original Basing Street Studios mix) (12:59)

Germany Ed. AAD:

01. Freefall (05:54)
02. Supertwister (03:23)
03. Nimrodel - The Procession - The White Rider (09:18)
04. Earthrise (06:41)
05. Lady Fantasy (12:45)

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Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Jethro Tull - War Child (1974)

Year: 14 October 1974 (CD 1990)
Label: Chrysalis Records (US), F2 21067
Style: Progressive Rock, Gothic Rock, Folk Rock
Country: Blackpool, Lancashire, England
Time: 39:07
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 262 Mb

For an album splotched together from a failed recording project, a failed movie project, a concept involving anthropomorphism and one song from the Aqualung sessions, War Child turned out reasonably well. It would have turned out even better had they locked David Palmer in the basement during the recording process.
Palmer’s string arrangements on War Child are consistently overdone and too loud in many of the mixes. They appear in many tracks that would have been better off without them. More Martin, less David would have been nice. On the plus side, Ian Anderson’s vocals are quite energetic and the song mix displays Tull’s versatility exceptionally well. When they’re not buried by the string section, the band sounds Tull-tight.
The original War Child concept had to do with the story of a teenage girl in the afterlife meeting up with God, Lucifer and St. Peter. I’m glad they didn’t go there, as there is such a thing as spending too much time on religion. The more interesting theme-a perceptible thread that runs through “War Child” and “Queen and Country”-is the idea that all of us who live in modern society are war children who live off the fruits of conquest, whether that conquest involves shooting wars or capitalist competitiveness. While we enjoy ourselves in “the bright city mile” or while the ministers enjoy their “social whirls,” we forget that all of our fun is made possible to some extent by war and its cousins. Now that would have made for a very intriguing concept album, particularly since Al Qaeda later justified the 9/11 attacks on innocent civilians with the response, “They pay taxes, don’t they?” If we benefit from the spoils of war, are we still responsible for the war even if we don’t fire a shot?
As it is, the title track opener is an interesting and unusual piece of music. Ian was still in love with the soprano saxophone during this period, so that’s what we hear as the music fades in following the breakfast-and-battle sequence. The chord sequence is deceptive, particularly in the chorus, where a key shift takes us to A but the chorus resolves on Bb before taking us back to the incongruous E root of the verse. Ian Anderson was by this time pretty nimble with unusual chord sequences, but this one’s particularly sweet and almost Charlie Parkerish in the use of the flattened sixth. The rhythmic changes are pretty zippy, too, especially when they speed up the tempo for Ian’s sax solo. The lyrics work if you can imagine them as the start of a longer narrative; by themselves they feel like orphans. All in all, an intriguing opening if you tune out David Palmer’s string barrage.
(full version: altrockchick.com/2014/03/07/classic-music-review-war-child-by-jethro-tull/)

01. WarChild (04:34)
02. Queen and Country (03:01)
03. Ladies (03:19)
04. Back-Door Angels (05:29)
05. SeaLion (03:37)
06. Skating Away on the Thin Ice of the New Day (03:58)
07. Bungle in the Jungle (03:37)
08. Only Solitaire (01:29)
09. The Third Hoorah (04:51)
10. Two Fingers (05:09)

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Darryl Way's Wolf (Curved Air) - Canis Lupus [Japanese Ed. SHM-CD] (1973)

Year:  (CD Nov 26, 2008)
Label: Decca Records (Japan), UICY-93826
Style: Progressive Rock, Acid Rock
Country: Taunton, Somerset, England
Time: 44:14
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 327 Mb

Despite releasing three albums of well-crafted songs and exceptional performances over just two years via Decca’s Deram imprint, Darryl Way’s Wolf remain largely ignored in most histories of progressive rock’s 70s heyday.
At the time, they enjoyed enthusiastic reviews and live popularity, but failed to break into the charts – a fact that may have contributed to their subsequent invisibility.
Their formidable 1973 debut, Canis Lupus, features the ex-Curved Air maestro Way’s masterly use of violin and keyboards, alongside John Etheridge’s frenzied legato-style guitar, Dek Messecar’s supple bass and Ian Mosley’s whip-cracking drumming. A nuanced production from King Crimson co-founder Ian McDonald refines the music’s subtler points.
(loudersound.com/music/albums/darryl-way-s-wolf-cadenza-box-set)

01. The Void (04:36)
02. Isolation Waltz (04:40)
03. Go Down (04:44)
04. Wolf (04:10)
05. Cadenza (04:51)
06. Chanson Sans Paroles (06:29)
07. McDonalds Lament (07:10)
08. Spring Fever (03:30)
09. Wolf (Single Version) (04:01)

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Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Curved Air - Air Conditioning [Japanese Ed. SHM-CD] (1970)

Year: November 1970 (CD Apr 8, 2015)
Label: Warner Music (Japan), WPCR 16299
Style: Progressive Rock, New Age
Country: London, England
Time: 45:19
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 290 Mb

Air Conditioning, the debut album from Gloucestershire band Curved Air, is widely considered to be one of the pioneering albums of the progressive rock genre. Recorded in July 1970 and released to an unsuspecting public just four months later, this was unlike much of what had been heard previously. Many of the bands that are remembered today as some of the greatest prog bands of all time were yet to unleash something quite as different and out there as Air Conditioning. Genesis' debut had been firmly routed in the 60's pop genre, Pink Floyd were yet to release anything truly incredible and Rush were many years away from releasing their debut. Of all the classic prog albums, only King Crimson had released one yet, in the form of In The Court Of The Crimson King, which would go on to influence Air Conditioning. However, this was a different form of prog rock. Whereas bands like King Crimson focused on shifting their sound up every thirty seconds, Curved Air were more geared towards showing off the significant talent of vocalist Sonja Kristina and were also one of the first rock bands to use a violin which makes for one interesting listen.
(full version: sputnikmusic.com/review/53985/Curved-Air-Air-Conditioning/)

01. It Happened Today (05:02)
02. Stretch (04:06)
03. Screw (04:02)
04. Blind Man (03:35)
05. Vivaldi (07:33)
06. Hide And Seek (06:19)
07. Propositions (03:09)
08. Rob One (03:27)
09. Situations (06:24)
10. Vivaldi With Cannons (01:37)

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Monday, November 24, 2025

Daevid Allen (Gong, Soft Machine) - Banana Moon (1971)

Year: July 1971 (CD 1995)
Label: Spalax Music (France), 14945
Style: Progressive Rock, Garage Rock
Country: Melbourne, Australia (13 January 1938 - 13 March 2015)
Time: 38:32
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 258 Mb

When he's eventually popped his clogs (for the man turns 76 in a few days from now), Daevid Allen may only ever be remembered for his long-running input into arguably one of the most influential bands of the psychedelic rock genre, Gong. However, long before such a band existed the man was running around the world, meeting up with musical poets, disgruntling government authorities due to his visa running out and generally cooking up some of the most otherworldly stories known to man (and it's not just the pot-head pixies I'm referring to either). After having had the time of his life producing the strangest music of the late 60s under the Soft Machine and Gong banners, Allen decided to go on a more personal venture into the world of music, thus creating his first solo album, Bananamoon.
Bananamoon is a completely different kettle of fish to Allen's work with Gong and Soft Machine, though still very much drug-addled and otherworldly all the same. For his debut solo album, Allen still used numerous musicians as he did with his previous two bands on various songs. Therefore, what we have in Bananamoon is not just one musician's input, but a rather large handful of musicians all contributing their respective talents to each and every song. As a result, every song here is different in its own way, though there are times when a song can lose itself amidst psychedelic music.
(full version: sputnikmusic.com/review/60482/Daevid-Allen-Bananamoon/) Review by Robert Davis. January 10th, 2014

01. Time Of Your Life (03:27)
02. Memories (03:37)
03. All I Want Is Out Of Here (04:51)
04. Fred The Fish (02:31)
05. White Neck Blooze (05:50)
06. Stones Innocent Frankenstein (03:22)
07. & His Adventures In The Land Of Flip (12:03)
08. I Am A Bowl (02:47)

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Sunday, November 23, 2025

Trapeze (Glenn Hughes) - Trapeze (1970)

Year: May 1970 (CD 2015)
Label: Rock Candy Records (UK), CANDY265
Style: Progressive Rock, Hard Rock
Country: Cannock, England
Time: 34:25
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 268 Mb

While a far cry from what was to come in later years, the first Trapeze album has a special kind of charm to it- even if it’s scattered at times. Musically, the band were a prog rock outfit in the vein of Jethro Tull and the Moody Blues- while maintaining some of the psychedelic vibes of the late 60s California bands. While this sounds good on paper, the album isn’t necessarily great. Some of the songs drag out while others don’t go anywhere. Still, there’s some solid prog rock tunes here- most of which can be found on the first half of the album. At best, this is a decent album.
(popculturebeast.com/album-review-trapeze-discography-1970-72/)

01. Star Breaker (03:32)
02. It's Alright (04:12)
03. Chances (02:30)
04. The Raid (02:46)
05. Sunny Side Of The Street (02:42)
06. Gimmie Good Love (03:07)
07. Monkey (03:40)
08. I Need You (04:25)
09. Soul Stealer (03:27)
10. Nothing For Nothing (04:00)

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