New soloalbum from drummer Erland Dahlen, Racoons, will be released in October on Is It Jazz? Records. On Bandcamp you can hear one track now:
https://erlanddahlen.bandcamp.com/album/racoons
New soloalbum from drummer Erland Dahlen, Racoons, will be released in October on Is It Jazz? Records. On Bandcamp you can hear one track now:
https://erlanddahlen.bandcamp.com/album/racoons
I believe I got as far as to mention name/band in the recent Needlepoint thread; Kosmodome.
They have an ace debut out on Karisma, the -other- excellent and productive record label for progressive and psychedelic rock of allsorts set in Bergen. Their counterpart being Apollon Records.
Kosmodome adhere to somewhat equal acres as Shaman Elephant, Brimstone (Solar Radiation) and several more acts emerging in Norway these past two decades in the wake of Motorpsycho's sanctioning of "old" as "good", further recessitated by Dungen et al. These combos merge post-psych sensibilities, certain traits of progressive as known (typically of "vintage" capacity, meaning '69-71) plus oddball logics of independent/alternative songwriting and at times even rootsy reference. I suppose international bands of fair renown like Black Mountain and Crippled Black Phoenix attempted this/similar, but these Norwegian groups are way and far ahead. Brimstone, for instance, is one of the greatest live bands I ever saw here.
In terms of influence; Grateful Dead (Anthem of the Sun plus), PFloyd ('67-71), some early Tull, lite KCrimson etc.
One of the finest things seen or heard in this entire report is the 2012 EP Sleep by Wind, a trio from Lillestrøm and Tønsberg (IIRC?). Not since Sun Dial's Other Way Out did I hear as successful a meld of authenticity and creativity within its own parameter. Sadly they folded a couple of years after.
"Improvisation is not an excuse for musical laziness" - Fred Frith
"[...] things that we never dreamed of doing in Crimson or in any band that I've been in," - Tony Levin speaking of SGM
My copy of the first The Chronicles of Father Robin CD. I'm really enjoying the music. The CD booklet & insert are a little confusing to me, with all the subtitles, etc., and without seeing the titles of the other albums in the series. Also, The Chronicles of Father Robin sounds more like the title of an album, not the name of a band. And The Tale of Father Robin appears in there somewhere too, which is confusing. Also, the first track, which is only a minute or so long and consists only of wind or feet shuffling or something, and isn't included in the list of tracks. And a lot of the type on/in the booklet is WAY too tiny.
BUT, the music is what's important, and that is very good. The album is pretty short, but that just makes me look forward to the future albums. There are parts that remind me of Anglagard, which is a very good thing.
How do people like the album so far?
I've spun it once and enjoyed the first listen. To get the criticisms out of the way, the first two short tracks seem silly. One is, as you say a short wind/footsteps thing, whatever and adds nothing. The second is a short spoken word, proggy-prog thing that I could do without.
But overall, the rest of the longer tracks have that comfortable feel of good retro and I think that the compositions are strong and interesting. The mix is good, it has that vintage instrument feel, but with a modern sheen and it's a welcome addition to a very, very strong year of music.
Neil
^ I'm confused about the release schedule for the CDs, because it SEEMS like all three vinyl albums are available. At least there are reviews coming out of all three albums. But when do CDs 2&3 come out? Anyone know?
Closest I could find was a comment from Andreas on Facebook when someone asked the same question:
They also commented on this on the Father Robin FB page:KARISMA RECORDS has the masterplan, but I reckon they’ll be out sometime during autumn/winter.
The special edition vinyl box has been out since June and the first book released on streaming services, CD and black vinyl two days ago. That's why there are reviews for all three books, which currently aren't available on CD and streaming services.Frank, KARISMA RECORDS will release it all on black vinyl and CD. Starting with Book I the 15th of September!
^ It does seem like they should release the other two disks fairly soon while there’s enthusiasm for them.
My pre-order of the three Arabs in Aspic reissues/reworkings showed up today from Norway to Canada in 8 days... that's not bad for this time of year! Diving in now. Stereo is cranked!
The Pictures in a Dream CD has a misprint on one of the spines that says it is Strange Frame of Mind.
Interviewer of reprobate ne'er-do-well musicians of the long-haired rock n' roll persuasion at: www.velvetthunder.co.uk and former scribe at Classic Rock Society. Only vaguely aware of anything other than music.
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Have you heard about Cobra Kraft? Me neither. Here are two clips from their debut album called "The Baptism of Pedro del Zorro":
Interviewer of reprobate ne'er-do-well musicians of the long-haired rock n' roll persuasion at: www.velvetthunder.co.uk and former scribe at Classic Rock Society. Only vaguely aware of anything other than music.
*** Join me in the Garden of Delights for 4 hours of tune-spinning... every Saturday at 5pm EST on Deep Nuggets radio! www.deepnuggets.com ***
^ I was just looking at that - very cool! PE'er Jacob Holm-Lupo's White Willow is the first band listed. They definitely cover some of our favorites in this.
Here's a review of the album by some guy:
https://ukvibe.org/album_reviews/cobra-kraft/
I like the Cobra Kraft. I hope they release a CD.
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