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12

Article: Album Review

Binker & Moses: Journey To The Mountain Of Forever

Read "Journey To The Mountain Of Forever" reviewed by Bruce Lindsay


A double album with a title--Journey To The Mountain Of Forever--straight from the annals of Prog Rock (maybe with a short diversion via the Coltranes' spiritual jazz). A cover design that's a close relation to Led Zeppelin's Houses Of The Holy--a link made more explicit by an inner sleeve illustration that features a character in a ...

61

Article: Extended Analysis

The Man Who Changed Guitar Forever!

Read "The Man Who Changed Guitar Forever!" reviewed by John Kelman


In a time when album sales are a challenge being mitigated, at least to some extent, by the release of deluxe editions and box sets, it's still more necessary than ever to grab potential listeners with imagery and words; the title of a box set can have, especially for those less than intimately familiar with the ...

19

Article: Interview

Tim Bowness: Ghost Lights and Life Sentences

Read "Tim Bowness: Ghost Lights and Life Sentences" reviewed by John Kelman


As much as it's something most would prefer to avoid, when a pair of musicians share a lengthy musical history together it's difficult not to compare and contrast the work they do when apart. Beyond contributing added clarity to their individual work, it helps to articulate what each of them bring to the table when they're ...

12

Article: Extended Analysis

Tim Bowness: Lost in the Ghostlight

Read "Tim Bowness: Lost in the Ghostlight" reviewed by John Kelman


It's a somewhat hidden truth that a sizeable percentage of any musician's fan base believes that the music their favorite artists make is a direct reflection of their tastes. While an artist's music ought, indeed, be a reflection of what moves them, it's another truth that, more often than not, their listening habits run much farther ...

32

Article: Extended Analysis

Chicago II (Steven Wilson Remix)

Read "Chicago II (Steven Wilson Remix)" reviewed by John Kelman


It's rare that an opportunity presents itself to directly compare a high resolution remaster with a high resolution remix, but with last year's Quadio (Rhino) box set containing Blu Ray Audio versions (at 24-bit/192KHz) of its first nine studio recordings (including, curiously, a completely superfluous, early Greatest Hits package) and the recent, single-disc reissue of Chicago ...

37

Article: Rediscovery

Greg Lake & Keith Emerson: Their Best Work Together

Read "Greg Lake & Keith Emerson: Their Best Work Together" reviewed by John Kelman


While it should come as no surprise that musical heroes from across all genres are beginning to die off, some of the highest profile losses are, in particular, in the rock/pop world, where many of its biggest stars are now in their mid-to-late sixties...or older. Few would disagree that one of the years biggest losses happened ...

Album

Tales from Topographic Oceans (Definitive Edition)

Label: Panegyric Recordings
Released: 2016
Track listing: CD1: The Revealing Science Of God (Dance Of The Dawn); The Remembering (High The Memory); The Ancient (Giants Under The Sun). CD2: Ritual (Nous Sommes Du Soleil); Dance of the Dawn (2016 mix); Dance of the Dawn (studio run-through). CD3: High the Memory (studio run-through); Giants Under the Sun (studio run- through); Ritual (live, Zurich, April 1974); The Revealing Science of God (single edit); The Remembering (single edit); The Ancient (single edit); Ritual (single edit I); Ritual (single edit II). Blu-Ray: (New Stereo 24/96 LPCM Mix): The Revealing Science of God; The Remembering; The Ancient; Ritual; Dance of the Dawn (ext. version of The Revealing Science of God. (5.1 Surround 24/96 LPCM & DTS-HD MA): The Revealing Science of God; The Remembering; The Ancient; Ritual; Dance of the Dawn (ext. version of The Revealing Science of God). (Flat Transfer from original master 24/192 LPCM): The Revealing Science of God; The Remembering; The Ancient; Ritual. Blu-ray exclusives: Dance of the Dawn (studio run- through); High the Memory (studio run-through); Giants Under the Sun (studio run- through); Ritual (live, Zurich, April 1974); The Revealing Science of God (single edit); The Remembering (single edit); The Ancient (single edit); Ritual (single edit I); Ritual (single edit II). New Stereo Instrumental Mixes: The Revealing Science of God; The Remembering; The Ancient; Ritual; Dance of the Dawn (ext. version of The Revealing Science of God). Vinyl transfers: The Revealing Science of God (UK needle-drop transfer); The Remembering (UK needle-drop transfer); The Ancient (UK needle-drop transfer); Ritual (UK needle-drop transfer); The Revealing Science of God (US banded promo needle-drop transfer); The Remembering (US banded promo needle-drop transfer); The Ancient (US banded promo needle- drop transfer); Ritual (US banded promo needle-drop transfer).

42

Article: Extended Analysis

Tales from Topographic Oceans (Definitive Edition)

Read "Tales from Topographic Oceans (Definitive Edition)" reviewed by John Kelman


It was the album that, based on challenges during the five months it took to record, should really never have come to pass. It was the album that broke a three studio album/one live recording winning streak of increasing critical acclaim. It was the album, when at least for some critics, suggested the group's seemingly endless ...

26

Article: Extended Analysis

Ultimate Collectors' Edition

Read "Ultimate Collectors' Edition" reviewed by John Kelman


Well, there's certainly been a wait for this one, but for fans of what may be the last high profile progressive rock group to emerge in the 1970s, U.K.'s Ultimate Collectors' Edition proves well worth it. What began as an already sizeable 16-disc box for a group that, during its relatively brief tenure, released just two ...

54

Article: Extended Analysis

Radical Action (To Unseat The Hold of Monkey Mind)

Read "Radical Action (To Unseat The Hold of Monkey Mind)" reviewed by John Kelman


Plenty has already been written about King Crimson's surprise reemergence in 2014 at All About Jazz, beginning when the now 47 year-old progressive/art rock band commenced its first tour since 2008 (and its first extensive one since 2003) with a new, expanded lineup featuring a front-line of three drummers and a back-line of two guitarists (one, ...


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