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The John Irvine Band – 2025 – Here Come the Robots!
by Olav Martin Bjørnsen | February 3, 2025 | Reviews | 0 Comments
Winterfylleth: The Imperious Horizon (2024)
by Kev Rowland | January 31, 2025 | Reviews | 0 Comments
Atreyu: The Pronoia Sessions (2024)
by Kev Rowland | January 31, 2025 | Reviews | 0 Comments
Joy Shannon: An Chailleach (2024)
by Kev Rowland | January 31, 2025 | Reviews | 0 Comments
Jack Wood and Nichaud Fitzgibbon: Movie Magic. Great Songs from the Movies (2024)
by Kev Rowland | January 31, 2025 | Reviews | 0 Comments
Gino Amato: Latin Crossroads (2024)
by Kev Rowland | January 31, 2025 | Reviews | 0 Comments
Eric Person: Rhythm Edge [Remastered] (2007)
by Kev Rowland | January 31, 2025 | Reviews | 0 Comments
Doug Ferony: Alright Okay You Win (2024)
by Kev Rowland | January 31, 2025 | Reviews | 0 Comments
Yuka Mito: How Deep Is the Ocean (2024)
by Kev Rowland | January 31, 2025 | Reviews | 0 Comments
Kevin Kastning / Carl Clements / Soheil Peyghambari: Triple Helix (2025)
by Kev Rowland | January 31, 2025 | Reviews | 0 Comments
Randy Weinstein: HarmoniMonk (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Sep 1, 2024 | Reviews
Even before playing this album I was a little bit in love with it, as not only does it feature seven compositions by the mighty Thelonious Monk, but the album cover screams Fifties/Sixties jazz or blues and looks mighty fine. During COVID lockdown harmonica player...
Radam Schwartz: Saxophone Quartet Music (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Sep 1, 2024 | Reviews
Given the title, one might expect Schwartz to be leading a saxophone quartet, and in some ways, one is correct but also very wrong. Schwartz is an organist, as well as a composer and arranger, so here we have an album with his name on the front cover, but he does not...
Pathology: Unholy Descent (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Sep 1, 2024 | Reviews
Pathology are back with their twelfth studio album, and their third with the same line-up of Dave Astor (drums), Daniel Richardson (guitars), Richard Jackson (bass) and Obie Flett (vocals). Astor is the only person who has been there since the beginning and is also...
Immortal Sÿnn: Hellspawn (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 28, 2024 | Reviews
I must confess the reason I picked up this promo was due to the label these guys are signed to. I first came across HMR all the way back in 1981 when I bought “Sweeties” by The Handsome Beasts, soon to be followed by their album (which has one of the most disturbing...
Locusts and Honey: Teach Me To Live That I Dread The Grave As Little As My Bed (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 28, 2024 | Reviews
I have been reviewing music for more than 35 years now, which means I am offered a lot of material to write about, way more than I can ever work through (unless I win the lottery or someone wants to pay me for this), so when I look at an email offering me a band I...
The HU: The HU Live At Glastonbury (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 28, 2024 | Reviews
Over the years there have been a few bands who have seemingly shot out of nowhere with a strong tie-in with their own culture and then mixing that with metal. The first was probably Sepultura and the mighty ‘Roots’ which is still an epic album, and close to my heart...
Korpiklaani: Rankarumpu (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 28, 2024 | Reviews
This is the 12th studio album from Finnish folk metal band Korpiklaani, or the 15th since Jonne Järvelä started on the musical journey which has seen a few name changes and a move from pure folk into folk metal. Given that my love of folk music is probably equal to my...
Kerry King: From Hell I Rise (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 28, 2024 | Reviews
King needs no introduction whatsoever, and with the ending of Slayer there was no way he was just going to sit at home and retire gracefully, but instead he has pulled together some of his mates, recorded an album and soon will be back out on the road. All those...
Jazz at the Ballroom: Flying High (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 28, 2024 | Reviews
Here is another jazz album which caused me to have a smile on my face from beginning to end. My dad was into jazz, and I remember our first family car had an eight-track cartridge player and we would often listen to big band classics whilst out for a drive. This...
Jake Hertzog: Longing to Meet You (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 28, 2024 | Reviews
There are times when one comes across an album which is so perfectly curated and brought together that one feels there is no single leader of the band, and that everyone is truly being given their chance to shine, and that is very much the case here in what is...
Eric Frazier: That Place (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 18, 2024 | Reviews
Here we have the latest release from Brooklyn-based percussionist, drummer, vocalist, composer and bandleader Eric Frazier. His main instrument on this album is congas and while there is a core band of Gene Ghee (tenor, soprano sax), Wayne Jeffrey (guitar), Mamiko...
Downcross: White Tower (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 18, 2024 | Reviews
I get offered multiple albums every day, and the vast number of emails just get filed away, but for some reason I took a second look at this one. I had never heard of this Belarus-based black metal duo prior to the email, but there was something about this which made...
Darkthrone: It Beckons Us All (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 18, 2024 | Reviews
There is no doubt in anyone’s mind that Darkthrone are one of the most important bands to ever come out of the black metal scene, and their early albums are triumphs from beginning to end. Fenriz and Nocturno Culto have followed their own path for many years now,...
Carl Clements: A Different Light (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 18, 2024 | Reviews
I have reviewed many albums released by Greydisc over the years but am sure this is the first one I have ever been asked to write about which does not involve Kevin Kastning. Mind you, I have previously reviewed some of Carl’s collaborations with him but this time...
The Bruce Lofgren Group: Earthly and Cosmic Tales (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 18, 2024 | Reviews
’Earthly and Cosmic Tales’ is a program of eight Bruce Lofgren originals and two covers. This album represents a point of departure from previous Lofgren (large ensemble) releases in that this collection of musicians is smaller than normal, and while it has been...
Anette Olzon: Rapture (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 18, 2024 | Reviews
In some ways I have always felt a little sorry for Olzon, as she was the filler in the sandwich between Tarja Turunen and Floor Jansen, and people tend to forget that her two albums with Nightwish, ‘Dark Passion Play’ and ‘Imaginaerum’, are very fine indeed. But since...
Stray: About Time (2023)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 18, 2024 | Reviews
I was more than a little surprised when I came across this release, as I remember Stray from years ago and had not realised they were still going. I did wonder if Del Bromham was still at the helm given he originally formed the band all the way back in 1966, but he is...
Pestilence: Levels of Perception (2024)
by Kev Rowland | Aug 18, 2024 | Reviews
I must confess to have never seen an album so universally slammed as this one, and while I do understand where the reviewers are coming from, I do believe it has been somewhat over the top. Encyclopaedia Metallum has had 11 reviews for this album, average rating 0%. I...
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WHAT”S GOIN’ ON
- Temple Of Prog Festivalby Darren Walker on February 2, 2025 at 6:00 pm
The Brickyard, Carlisle Friday, 24th January 2024 When the Temple of Prog calls the other deities get jealous and do all they can to stop the devout votaries from worshipping. They send a vicious storm with a name that none…
- Steve Hackett – Live Magic At Trading Boundariesby Colin Smoult on February 1, 2025 at 6:00 pm
Yet another Steve Hackett live album? A question you may be asking yourselves when reading about this latest release. And that would be a fair comment when for over the last decade or so, every new tour has had an…
- Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe – An Evening Of Yes Music Plus (2CD/2DVD Boxset)by Mel Allen on January 31, 2025 at 6:00 pm
Towards the end of the Eighties the four above mentioned former members of Yes had reunited to record some new music and then undergo a tour to support it. Now as Yes fans will know this was a turbulent time…
- Storm Corrosion – Storm Corrosion (2024 Re-issue)by Basil Francis on January 30, 2025 at 6:00 pm
In 2012, one of the most hotly anticipated collaboration projects in the progressive sphere came to fruition (no, I am not talking about Squackett). Steven Wilson and Mikael Åkerfeldt had been working together for a decade and Opeth had plunged…
- Pattern-Seeking Animals – Friend Of All Creaturesby John Giordano on January 27, 2025 at 6:00 pm
Pattern-Seeking Animals have been a rather prolific band. Having released their debut album in 2019, these Spock’s Beard-aligned musicians have developed a sound that is all their own in the ensuing years. Friend Of All Creatures sets out to prove…
- Magnumby Peter Hilton on January 25, 2025 at 6:00 pm
Manchester Academy Wednesday, 22nd January 2025 It was a truly special night in Manchester as Magnum took to the stage, this time without the commanding presence of Tony Clarkin on lead guitar, who sadly passed away last year. The band,…
- The War Yaks – Bifurcateby Graham Thomas on January 24, 2025 at 6:00 pm
The War Yaks, an odd name for a band, but perhaps suits their idiosyncratic musical personality. They are headed by Nat Rusciani, who sings, plays keyboards and writes the songs, closely aided by saxophonist Anthony Warga. Much of the music…
- Mahavishnu – Mahavishnuby Bob Mulvey on January 23, 2025 at 6:00 pm
I thought it might be nice to mark the 40th anniversary of John McLaughlin’s eponymous Mahavishnu album released in 1984, unfortunately time constraints during the latter part of 2024 means it is now in its 41st year. A Personal Intro…
- Riverside – Live ID.by Leo Trimming on January 22, 2025 at 6:00 pm
On June 1st 2024 the Polish melodic progressive rock maestros Riverside played a triumphant homecoming gig at COS Torwar in Warsaw, marking the pinnacle of touring for their ID. Entity album. Over the last 20-odd years Riverside have become a…
- Maaike Siegerist – Long Earthby Darren Walker on January 20, 2025 at 6:00 pm
Looking at many bands, prog included, the change of lead singers often requires metaphorical big feet, to fill the previous incumbent’s shoes and there can be long debates as to who was the most suited. I am sure that, in…