Monday, 18 December 2023

CD's: My Top 23 of 2023


2023 turned out to be a good year for new music. When going through my favoirtes I noticed that this is mainly because of the large amount of new discoveries for me. On big band releases maybe not that strong, but overall a fine year for music. It was hard to reduce to 23 and herewith some that on any other day might have made the cut. On the extreme metal department, some need a mood to fit for me. If so they are great (DHG, Till the Dirt and Bell Witch) Other favorite bands released a decent album, but maybe not as good as I hoped for (Scar Symmetry, Haken and Demoniac). Progrock had major albums missed or too late (Galahad, Pallas, Moongarden) Tritop came close and the best progrock discovery were EBB, but that was a 22 release. Rob Lamothe's Cross Country Drivver is too calm overal, while industrial going George Lynch was interesting but...Thrash metal is missing too even though Aftermath came close. Sadus I missed so far and Metallica I was not bothered. Cynic was a refocus, so not counting and than there were 23. Since I still don't do Spotify or the likes I do miss albums that for sure would be appreciated, but you can't buy them all. Final observation: I do seem to like wind instruments after all in my metal, given some high scorers. So let the countdown begin.

23. Martin Miller - Maze of my Mind
A very proggy cover, but lots of classic rock in here too. A tip by Matt made me check out mr Miller and what a good album this is. Five long songs build upon his great guitar. His voice turned out surprisingly well too. Came to The Netherlands twice this year, in order to play rock covers. Pity with such a strong own album

22 . Jag Panzer - The Hallowed
Saw them twice this year. One old skool set and one set build around this album which I bought on the day. This is just solid US Metal as I love to hear it for 40 years now. Hope a next album does not take six years again.

21. Damnation Plan - The New Horizon
A very nice progmetal discovery from Finland. Album number three in ten years, but new to me. If this would have lasted more that the 33 minutes we get now, even chances for a higher place.

20. Electric Mob - 2 Make U Cry & Dance
Somehow I was not expecting this from Brazil, where Power Metal and underground extreme metal rule. Sleazy hardrock with very strong vocals. This band grooves and makes me laugh & dance no matter the title. If I need uplifting music, thsi is a good place to go.

19. Apotheus - Ergo Atlas
Not all that long with me yet, but too good to skip. Portugal's hope for Progmetal Days. A very nice surprise with great performances and songs. Also album number three here, but for me a new band. PPE anyone?

18. Wayfarer - American Gothic
Similar to Apotheus very short with me, but I hear the class again. Black Metal blended with Spaghetti Westerns and what an original outcome that gives.Not all that often you meet bands who create their own style. Wayfarer are one of them.

17. Redemption - I Am the Storm
Redemption fight a bit against their own bar set crazy high during their frst albums. Further for me Ray Alder beats Tom Englund on the vocal front. Still this remains a Redempton album so nowhere near bad.  Just the impact they had until some ten years ago, diminished over time.

16. Ashen Horde - Antimony
The extreme metal surprise of the year. Starting as a one man project ten years ago, now with album four a full band and new to me. A concept album on the unsolved murder of  Charles Bravo 150 years ago. Black/Death/Prog/Doom it is all there. This is a very intense album, so not for playing on the background. I loved it when digging in and got the shorts along wth the CD.

15. Trespass - Wolf at the Door
Every year at least one band should wave the flag for NWOBHM. This year it is up to my friends of Trespass to do so. I love this album which gets you nostalgic by the melodic NWOBHM style, while sounding up to date for 2023. Nice to feel the music that helped me loving metal ever since.

14. Insomnium - Anno 1696
Insomnium gives us art in many forms. Their last albums come with books. Last time pictures now some nice drawings and a short story which helps understanding the concept album. Later in the year the bonus EP Songs of the Dusk was released independent as well. If I would have been around for their show, probably a top ten place. Melodic Death Metal at it's best.

13. The Enigma Division - The Enigma Division
The first huge positive surprise of the year. They stuck at number 13 of bad luck, since I never saw a CD being released. As a result I played it much less. Still I broke my rule and bought it digital at Bandcamp. Curious to see where they go from here as this is one hell of a debut album by these Irish progmetallers.

12. Ice Age - Waves of Loss and Power
Comeback surprise of the year: Ice Age. After going on ice for 22 years, they came back with this CD. With songs Perpetual Child Part II and To Say Goodbye Part IV and V strongly linking to their own past. Still love these bastard sons of Styx and Dream Theater. We need more surprises like these.

11 Ray Alder - II
Ray Alder remains my favorite vocalist. Yet you can't release favorites every year. I thought A-Z and Figure of Speechless last year a notch stronger on the songs. Still one of the albums I went back to most as this is just very good for my mood.

10. Angel - Once Upon a Time
After decades of absence Angel were back with a European show in Liee and a new album in 2019. This opened their appetite as this is one long CD a few years later already. It took some effort to get the CD, but was it worth the wait. Some said too long, for me a return to form with opener The Torch among their classic hits. Last year my favorite show of the year, this year a very solid new album, love these rockers in white.

9. Finality - Technocracy
When I heard the  two songs released before this debut I felt we had a potential album of the year. And yes it is very good indeed. It would be higher on my list if the ten songs would add more variation between them and if I would have seen Finality live on stage.Still anyone into techmetal with thrash leanings should check this out now.

8. Hellripper - Warlocks Grim & Withered Hags
Probably the band that created most waves at underground live festivals this year. What a joy to see this band killing it on stage. I did correct big part of missing them so far and believe this is their best sounding album. Blackened Speedmetal that can go epic as the title track of over 7 minutes proves. One band to enjoy for the next decades.

7. Sorcerer - Reign of the Reaper
Those who like their doom metal to sound Scandinavian or like eighties Black Sabbath will know Sorcerer. They have been setting the benchmark in the genre for me and this album is not different. Royal Epic Doom said their T-shirt and that is what you get.

6. 66 Crusher - Limbo
Album number four by these progressive thrashing Norwegians. Well I hear more progmetal than thrash, but why did I miss them so far? Excellent album with seven great songs over 51 minutes. They posted their spotify numbers and many people don't seem to know them. Correct that and bring them to Baarlo. Brilliant stuff this.

5. Fifth Angel - When Angels Kill
The best US Metal always came out of Seattle. So does Fifth Angel and this long (69 minutes) album impresses yet again. No need to worry about a new vocalist as he nails it. The fact that we now have two Flotsam members in the band might explain the strong sound.  They cancelled 2023 European visists, so hoping for 2024 now.

4. The Anchoret - It All Began With Loneliness
Another new progmetal surprise from Canada Written by bassist Eduard Levitsky I did know vocalist Sylvain Auclair (Heaven's Cry) and keyboardist Andy Tillison (The Tangent) much better. What a beautiful album this turned out to be and how come I do not oppose the inclusion of alto saxophone, flute an dclarinet here? Because the songs are awesome that's why. A must hear album and debut of the year.

3. Uriah Heep - Chaos & Colour
With so many new discoveries in my list it is good that Heep are still standing proudly amongst them all. How is it possible that over 50 (!) years in their career they keep on releasing albums as strong as this one? Fast rockers, epic and proggy sounds, Heep organs and a ballad. It is all there on the album I kept on playing from January till December. Next year back on stage here please.

2. Crown Lands - Fearless
So this is only a duo? and I missed their 2020 self titled debut album. Well Fearless put them on the map for me and how. So they sound like seventies Rush? yes they do and I love it. Opener Starlifter : Fearless Pt. II sounds like one of those album lasting songs by Rush of the seventies. The rest of the album is also filled with highlights and I keep on wondering how do they do that with two people only? Must see them one day live as that must be impressive, even if probably pretty static. 

1. Lunar - The Illusionist
With so many new discoveries and great albums it is strange that picking my album of the year was not that hard. Ever since hearing first songs of this album I was hooked. Lunar play progmetal, but there is so much more from prog rock to tech metal and even some grunts throughout the album. Like The Anchoret the adding of Saxophone, flute and clarinet surprisingly only add to the fun. With Juggling Chainsaws they also wrote a candidate for best song of the year. Spotify numbers published show again a terrible under the radar flying worldwide. This is classy stuff from start to finish. Coincdentally yesterday Esther and Michel messaged me that they were playing  and highly enjoying The Illusionist after receiving same finally. More people should hear this as I guess many will be impressed and instant fan like me.

Sunday, 17 December 2023

Moongarden - Pallas - Rages of Sin

I am almost done ranking my favorite 2023 albums. These three won't make the cut, because I so far only have them on computer and physical copies still on their way. Too little time to get a history with them, these albums desserve your immediate attention as they sound pretty damn fine after very little time spent with them.


Moongarden - Christmas Night 2066
My favorite Italians are back with a concept album. Christmas night means I probably will pick it up around all christmasses from now on. Moongarden play prog rock, with beautiful keys and guitar solos that sing around. This is one fine album and the bonus disk brings covers with a highlight in Hairless Heart (Genesis/Lamb) Waiting for the CD booklet and a return to de Boerderij.






Pallas - The Messenger
No I did not see that coming. A new Pallas album after nine years with the return of Alan Reed on vocals. I saw Alan Reed solo at The Peel in Kingston shortly after his split from Pallas and he was not amused to put it mildly. Now the Messenger brings us six (long) songs and one spin made me curious. The nice cover also raises hopes for the looks of the booklet I ordered. Maybe they should hook up with Moongarden for a Boerderij show. A ranking of their discography is in the plans for 2024.




Rages of Sin - Saligia 2.1
This album shall be released coming Friday 22/12. To celebrate a gig has been organized with The Hague's best OSDM band (Melting Eyes) and thrash metal band (Defazer). Rages of Sin are a bit unboxable. Definitely some tech death in the mix, but they like to go all over the place at times. Their last excelllent album (Divergence) got lost in Covid gig less years a bit, but this is another monster. From what I heard so far a true high in extreme metal again. So Friday Fluminense might be playing the Worldcup finals when gig year 23 is closed in style in Popradar (free entrance even, so not showing up is just plain stupid on all fronts). I think I have to follow my rule of thumb: music beats football. In this case as Libertadores did cost me Extol and Worldcup does not really matter anyway, plus boycot Fifa selling out to Saudi.  

Saturday, 16 December 2023

Live concerts: My top 23 of 2023



Nothng beats live music and 2023 gave us plenty to enjoy. Now that I stopped travelling back and fourth to PortugalI I also missed less gigs throughout the year. Still going to Brazil in November meant missing Insomnium, In Mourning, Ard, Baphomet, Agent Steel, After All to name just a few candidates for my end of year list. My concert year 2022 is not completely done yet, as Friday 22 the best in metal of The Hague plays Radarcafe with Rages of Sin / Defazer and Melting Eyes. Still going back through the year I saw many highlights really. My favorite 23 shows counting down to the best of the year are as follows:

23. Tribulation - Patronaat Haarlem 25/2
Complexity surprised positively. On forehand not lots to love, in reality a great day in Haarlem again. Crown Compass opened in style and Tribulation closed my festival. Strange enough most of the audience did not seem to know them and I was catching my train home. Still what I saw was great again.

22. Crown Compass - Werfpop Leiden 8/7
So I saw them at Complexity, but I knew their songs better in July. A burning sun, made this the hottest show of the year. The only great metal band playing the free summer festivals around The Hague this year (Sneeuwpop had Melting Eyes, but that was in January the coldest show of the year)

21. Vandenberg - Boerderij Zoetermeer 25/8
A comeback with a better vocalist made this a nice trip back to te eighties, even if many songs were of their last two recent albums. Next year Paard, hope Adje switches Different Worlds for a fast rocker.

20. Raven/Vicious Rumors - Musicon The Hague 1/5
Both bands been touring around a lot the last years. Together they made up for one fine evening in Musicon yet again. 

19. O.R,k, - Boerderij Zoetermeer 6/5
I missed them half at Prognosis, but the same tour ended in de Boerderij. One of the best progrock bands around at the moment and live enough of a bite to make Hans also really enjoy them.

18. Space Vacation - Little Devil  Tilburg 22/7
Never heard of them before, but the event text got us interested. Great Heavy Metal set they gave us and a big surprise they were. Warming up by Hidden Intent and Thorium was not bad either.

17. Katatonia - Baroeg Open Air Rotterdam 9/9
Even with two powercuts trying to kill their set, this was a highly enjoyable show by these masters of moody metal.

16. Jag Panzer - Baroeg Rotterdam - 22/1
A day of eighties Heavy Metal opened by Martyr and Killer was finished off by Jag Panzer. I saw them twice this year, but here the setlist was more a best of old, which I loved.

15. Mick Pointer Band - Boerderij Zoetermeer 11/3
Not a huge fan of coverbands, but here Mick Pointer plays the Marillion album he did play on. Script live in full, with the Market Square Heroes EP and thus Grendel as well. Top band, so what an evening. This was the last time they promised and that might just be enough indeed.

14. Voivod - Effenaar Eindhoven 16/4
Day two of Prognosis for me had a clear winner with Voivod. A career spanning setlist in a hall that was getting empty over time as Voivod is not for all at a prog festival. 

13. Persefone - Nobel Leiden 20/5
Ne Obliviscaris were headliners of this day, but Persefone picked the price for best act. Without realizing they had a substitute vocalist I found the voice great this evening. Now he is fulltime with the band and in March with Cynic in Effenaar a show not to miss.

12. Exciter - Musicon The Hague 23/5
Even better than the year before Exciter rocked Musicon in great style. What a beast Dan Beehler is taking care of drums and vocals.Due to my confusion I missed half of Blood Star their set. Luckily hosting them spontaneously made up for that, what a sympathetic band they are.

11.Wilderun - L.A.V. Lisboa 15/2
I did see them play a longer set at Progpower, but this was the first time live for me and due to the heavy package a heavier short set. One fine evening in Lisbon, which  was also due to Kataklysm and Soilwork. 

10. White Spirit - GARF Liege 1/10
White Spirit making their return to the stage after 40 years and I was there. Great set focussed on the new album. They are now asking which songs of their debut should be toured next year. That is a classic, so full album please. Best festival band T-shirt in years.

9. Threshold - Boerderij Zoetermeer 21/4
To me Glynn Morgan seems to be more at ease all the time. While Ton and I commented how good it all sounded I later read people being pissed of by poor sound on the right end of the hall. Weird as Boerderij is not for wild audiences, but good sound they always offer.

8. Ross the Boss - Baroeg Rotterdam 9 May
When Manowar brings along a risk of endless speeches and lots of newer songs, Ross the Boss gives us the good old classics. One evening of fine old Manowar, with Marc Lopes taking care of the difficult vocal duties in style. Love old Manowar

7. Darkwater - Sjiwa Baarlo 8/10
On forehand I did not expect Darkwater to become the best band of ProgPowere 2023. Yet they were as a perfect sound, great songs, good performers and live played keyboards (not a given nowadays at prog festivals) made this a highly enjoyable show.

6. Hellripper - Roosendaal Open Air 2/9
First this festival was one of the great discoveries of the year. Nice small sized, well organized and fair food and drink prices. Musical style extreme metal mostly and Hellripper were for me the highlight of the day. Saw them five weeks before and this is an up and coming band for the decades to come. Blackened speedmetal which is a party live.Next January opening for Abbath, might have to go there.

5. Sorcerer - Ragnarok Bree 25/3
Mario co-organizes several shows in Bree nowadays. Ragnarok is a nice place, but a pretty long drive. If the best doom metal band of the moment comes over though Hans and I felt like a roadtrip. Such a strong band also proven by their new album. Top class performance which should please anyone with a mild interest in Heavy Metal.

4. Obsidious - Effenaar Eindhoven 15 April
Obsidious released a crazy good debut album. Still Prognosis found it smart to let them open their festival. As a result noone could top them the whole weekend, even if Disillusion and Voivod came close. Top class techdeath was brought live in such good form. Hope they start touring more.

3. Flotsam and Jetsam - Musicon The Hague 2 October
I don't care if they tour every year, you can't get enough Flotz till Death. Eric A.K. seems to be getting better by voice all the time and the band is so tight. This was their first show after a year and it all sounded perfect to me. One of the best live bands around nowadays.

2. Legs Diamond - GARF Liege 1/10
This show was one lesson in Classic Rock. What a band they are live on stage and what a great trip through their discography we got. This band never was big in Europe and seeing them for the first time made me ask WHY??? This show deserved a greater crowd shouting along with Woman, but still what a highlight in the year.

1. Riot City - Junkyard Dortmund 
Last year I had all organized for Riot City in Antwerp and than Covid got the better of me. This year there was no holding me back from driving over to Dortmind for these masters of Speed Metal. Ton loved the idea too and what a day we got. Junkyard a venue to definitely return to, with the Biergarten and foodtruck outside. Hellripper opened and Jag Panzer closed this fine package, but Riot City was so good. All the high screams you can ask for over a solid base of speedmetal. Killer set, performance and atmosphere. Only question remaining is how come they never played The Netherlands? For all speedmetal lovers and Heavy Metal fans fond of high screams throughout their metal. 


 

Tuesday, 12 December 2023

Apotheus - Sorcerer - Wayfarer


Being out most of November I am rather late with some words on the below three albums. Since all of them run the risk of making it into my top 23 of 2023 I had to write some words and recommned these though.


Apotheus - Ergo Atlas
Portugal is a blind spot in the history overview of ProgPower Europe. In the past I recommended Hourswill several times, but they might be too Heavy Metal along their prog. Now we have Apotheus and I will be very surprised if these four northern Portuguese lads won't be playing Baarlo any year soon. Why? first because when istening to this album I am at times reminded of PPE houseband Wolverine. We get mainly calm and atmospheric songs, with an occassional outburts. Further the songs are all well composed and the overall storyline of the album runs smooth. This is just very enjoyable progmetal of the lighter kind. Also Kingcrow at times comes to mind. Does the fact that the drummer is  a friend of a Portuguese friend of Josie has any influence on me liking this band? No as I am not bribeable, this is just a good album by a band that soon plays Sjiwa.


Sorcerer - Reign of the Reaper
Anyone who is into good old Heavy Metal of the doomy kind will know Sorcerer by now. Starting with demo's in 89 and 92, they made their first real impact in 2015 with the album In the Shadow of the Inverted Cross. This is album number 4 and again they play the champions league of Epic Heavy Metal of the doomy kind. If you like Candlemass, Abstrakt Algebra or Krux, you will love this. If you are into eighties Black Sabbath and Rainbow (both covered on the bonus disc) you will also like them a lot. It is not for nothing that Hans and I earlier this year made a roadtrip to Bree (Belgium) to see this band. On Reign of the Reaper they do it again. Releasing a classic Heavy Metal albums full of variation, top class vocals and great guitars. Heavy Metal as it was played during our early days. Must buy in my ears.


Wayfarer - American Gothic
In 2020 Wayfarer blew me away with their Spaghetti Western Black Metal on A Romance with Violence. On American Gothic they seem to have further perfected their style and release a highly original album telling a part of America's history. I am not the biggest expert in Black Metal, but as soon as it blends into an original sound I am all on board (DHG are another good example this year) The lyric sheet in the form of an old Western Newspaper already brings you into the mood and the steel guitar brings the great movies of the sixties and seventies to mind. On this album the songs range from pretty heavy Black Metal until calmer pieces with clean vocals only. Next year they come supporting Enslaved and I hope to be there (even if that week holds fierce competition by Cynic and Atheist tours). The most Gothic you get on the bonus track Night Shift, which is a cover of a Siouxie and the Banshees song. Try this out.

Monday, 6 November 2023

Danava & Wedge - Little Devil Tilburg, 5 November 2023


Sometimes plans are bigger on paper than in reality. So we thought about the double in Tilburg. Afternoon Little Devil for Danava and Wedge. Than after a quick bite in the evening 013 for The Winery Dogs and Dave Cureton. Turns out that when leaving Little Devil we did not feel all that much like going to a large venue for a much slicker affair. We is Hans and I as Rene from the start said he woull join the afternoon only. It turned out that the double was not for us. If we would have been in Eindhoven for Elegy or Baroeg for Ducth Doom Days the second show would feel much more a logical continuation. Still the afternoon was good and Little Devil is always nice.


The afternoon was opened by Wedge from Berlin. I knew nothing of this band and they sounded rock and roll and stoner at the same time. This trio managed to surpise all three of us positively. The pace was kept at the right speed and the bassist swapping to organ made it sound seventies enough. Their hour flew by and this kind of music always works well in live setting. Most interesting stage appearance was the bassist with no face, only hair.  Good band, good start, so why not get another beer?


Headlining the afternoon were Danava from the USA. They exist 20 years this year, but their looks and music brought us back 40 years in time. Nice old skool heavy metal they played. They came by five, as they brought a vocalist along who did not sing on their 2023 album Nothing but Nothing. BTW don't you hate it nowadays when bands bring Vinyl and no CD's? So no shopping for me as their Tees were too smal as well. Still their show was great, even if there was a certain Spinal Tap element to it all. Especially when they left and came back for an encore, without much reaction. The inbetween song banters were hard to understand due to speed and accent of talking. I did understand that guitarist Gregory Meleney is the band leader, but wondered why he sung many parts, while their new vocalist to me has a better voice. Anyway this was a nice trip back in time and a good messy underground afternoon. For us the reason to let it follow by a nice Indonesan meal and no Winery Dogs. Still a good day was had and home at a more decent time, than in the middle of the night as National Rail always tries to hinder your gig-life.


Monday, 9 October 2023

ProgPower Europe - Sjiwa Baarlo, 6-8 October 2023

 


Progpower for us always starts at campsite De Berckt on Friday afternoon. This year the Pre-party had with Novena a very promising name. Unfortunately only a trio and playing an acoustic set. So I did not go out of my way to find a sleeping spot for the Thursday and attend. Arriving slowly, bockbier and preparing your trailers for the weekend. Us this year meant 13.5 as Ton made his PPE debut only joining the Saturday (we all know what that means for 2024) and Peter sadly had to cancel after a fall and two broken ribs this very week. Due to several reasons (work, holidays or not impressed by the line-up) we missed four more faces, but Peter and Marga brought with Amii and Sven plus Leah the next generation next to Gwenda who did join already some 17 years ago for the first time bringing Peter making a debut. So the mood was set and good, but how about the program? Well this year PPE was different as they did not book any headliners of fame. Before people read this negative, some explanations. This year no bands of the Progmetal Champions League were booked. This only in name and fame. For me that did not matter much, as often I love the bands playing around the dinner break the most. OK when some of my favorite bands headline like Fates Warning, Psychotic Waltz, Redemption, Threshold or Shadow Gallery I am very very pleased. Still sometimes you have bands who made their name in Progmetal (no need to list names here), but lost me along the way and I might well prefer a more unknown band making their debut in style. Another positive point was that this year no band was booked, which made me raise an eyebrow in advance for being far too soft for the festival. Still I did not know many bands in advance so surprises both positive and negative could happen.


Finally there is the competition in gig land. Not only in general metal shows, but even in progmetal itself there are other alternatives. Some bands who first broke through on PPE, played last year during the same weekend two shows in Holland and are now filed under Traitors of their original fans. Yes, shame on you Vola and Soen. Than de Boerderij seems to be turning it into a sport to book prog (metalish) bands during PPE weekend. This year Arena and the Aristocrats played on Friday and Sunday. Both also having one other Dutch show over the weekend. The Manofmuchmetal (missed for a chat) put me on the trail of Martin Miller earlier this year. He played Tilburg this weekend, but luckily a covers only set, so no big loss. My home venue Musicon in The Hague would normally see me both on Saturday and Sunday this year. Saturday Loud & Heavy Fest with Neverus and Martyr (with PPE veteran Vinnie on bass). On Sunday they had Brazilian Semblant with Romanian White Walls (ex PPE) as one of the supports. Still all without a chance, but one festival over the same weekend did hurt me (and some others) more than a bit. If in 1990 anyone would have told me that a festival within driving distance would take place with from my record collection Flotsam and Jetsam, Q5, Metal Church, Brian Downey, Dirkschneider and young strong metal bands like Ambush, Phantom Spell, Tailgunner, Evil Invaders., I would definitely be there. To make matters really hurt they even had Watchtower on the bill, a band I have been asking for on the PPE feedback form since 2000. In the end ProgPower stands above all others for the whole experience. Further those who are not just looking for the big names (and aren’t we all?) would agree that 2023 on forehand offered a very diverse and strong line-up with something for almost anyone.

 Anyway, back in Baarlo is a shere joy and after a fine meal prepared by Mary (thanks) it was off to Sjiwa, where I would bump into countless more Progpower friends. Unfortunately not all could make it this year and some were dearly missed. Biggest loss might have been Pois Chic. On their farewell tour of foodtrucks, Baarlo did not fit in the schedule during last weeks. So no very tasty food from Andy and Debbie and even worse, no always pleasant catching up with both. So after parking our bicycles at the new designated spot in front of Centraal the festival could start.



Earthside
Before commenting anything on opening band Earthside let me first get the pink elephant out of the room. Lead vocals coming from a box are one of the eight deadly sins. I read about this sin in a deadly oneliner review of their show last week at Euroblast, so I was more than a bit sceptical in advance. When the band started playing it turned out that the music was really good. It always is strange to hear a voice while not seeing same. Still I pretty much liked the music. I also rememered that I saw them before some years ago in Duijcker. What I realized during the show was that maybe they are better on CD than live without the vocal confusion. My final verdict was positive though, but one person needs to be named still. The keyboard keytar player was running around wildly most of the time. When he announced that his dad was in the hall who was 66, he made it sound if that age is really ancient and life is nearly over. Well we have two 60+ granddads in our group too and several people including me pushing 60, so an unnecessary insult during an OK show. At the same time they made a national Dutch newspaper with their family trip together to Baarlo.


Wheel
Headliner on the Friday were Wheel from Finland. Their pink elephant is called Tool, but I do like the debut CD I have by them. Live it turned out to be another nice band who I appreciate, but did not shock my world. After a while not knowing all, the songs started to sounded a bit samy to me. But the performance was good and the audience seemed to like them.  People knowing their full discography told me that towards the end the best and old came as the songs got heavier. A nice first evening closed by a quick stop in the basement and at the campsite another tradition Knackies with a final beer.

 

Hackberry
Saturday always has the problem of the too fast and to much drinking on opening Friday. So arriving semi hung over to find a band playing instrumentals only. Than they are Dutch as well, so I might see them again anytime soon. What I did see sounded pretty nice actually, but sitting in the basement was a nice alternative kicking of slowly and regaining powers.


Chaosbay
Next band were Chaosbay from Berlin. I knew nothing about them and they showed what is so nice about this festival, they surprised very positively. Their style is more of the djenty metalcore with breaks in it, but lots of energy coming of the stage and back to them again from a very appreciative audience. Chaosbay showed that every line-up deserves one or two bands from this genre, just to entertain and energize us all. At the same time Chaosbay are not the first German band whose vocalist shows some Bono behaviour telling us how to make it a better world. Preaching to the converted in Baarlo really where you can start a nice conversation with basically anyone you meet. So as a rule of thumb. Mentioning your ideals once is appreciated and ok. Doing so three times in a row is not needed. Still teh most heard phrase over teh weekend hereafter "to my surprise I really liked this metalcore band".


Hei’An
A band with a complicated name, coming from Slovenia. Another one I entered blank and I had problems pinpointing them. The Caped and hooded Jon Oliva lookalike brought the heavy voice inbetween his struggles with his outfit. The clean vocals came from the blue haired guitarist, who was not always hitting it rightl. Musically I was as confused. Bits and pieces were really great and the blend of styles worked. This to get me off track again soon, with some non-cohesive work. In the end their set did not grab me and I went to eat something as the evening promised to be the highlight of the weekend for me.


Dordeduh
Dordeduh are from Roumania and I knew I would like their set as I saw them before. I suppose not all of you speak Roumanian, so some help first. Dordeduh means Through The Door, if you are from The Hague that is. Last time I saw them they were on tour by van. So what? You might think, well what a lot as they brought all kinds of different instruments at the time. I remember some huge horns, and a sort of guillotine which they hammered on. So now several sounds came from tape. That did not matter at all to me as this was one hell of a show. This band showed they have lots of mileage on stage (ex Negura Bunget) and that came back in confident performance and playing. To add tot he fun they also brough a painter, who live painted a painting, shown on the big screen behind them. A first asolute high of the festival to me.


An Abstract Illusion
Talking about highs, if I was looking forward to one show this weekend it must have been An Abstract Illusion. Anyone who loves their prog blended with extreme metal agrees that last year’s Woe is a masterpiece. So the question was how much would they blow me away. Well to start with, they started late. Sound issues and some confusion on stage. When they did start the sound issues had not disappeared. Bass and backing vocals very loud, while guitars and main vocals were low in the blend. If you than add a zooming monitor at times, this became no feast tot eh ears. So where I expected a guaranteed high, we did not get same, due to poor sound. At times you could see and hear that the band should be able to bring us wonderfull things on stage, but it was not what I hoped for and outside many lovers of the band stood as disillusioned.


Wilderun
So it was up to Wilderun to close the evening in style again. Earlier this year they toured with Soilwork and Kataklysm and I saw them in Lisbon. For that tour they went to their heavier material given the package they were touring with. Tonight they played a long set and their full discography was visited. As I don’t own their first two albums I did not know all. What I did hear was lots of calm and folky intermezzos. Luckily the class of teh band shown through during the full set. So I liked what I saw, but they kept their best for the last 40 minutes or so. Also did the vocalist try to set a new record in number of times you can tune your guitar. When they did finish around 23:30 I was somewhat disappointed they did not play their best song Far From Where Dreams Unfurl. Luckily Wayne showed an arm and a leg as a sign they would return.The encore corrected that miss. In the end a great show by them again, even if form my taste they could have gone for more of the heavier work over folky bits.


And then it was down to the basement for the afterparty. On Saturday this means karaoke. This year I thought about giving the younger part of the audience a history lesson by singing Holocaust’s classic song Heavy Metal Mania for which I don't need to read along with the lyrics.. Unfortunately not in the database of the system, so a fast improvisation needed for a new song. I do think I nailed it again. I believe it always good fun to see people sing, but was under the impression that not everyone is as enthusiastic as the first year anymore. So maybe  next year, we should have the return of the Classic Heavy Metal disco. No matter what the program, at least one afterparty makes part of the weekend experience.



Omnerod
The bands on Sunday always face the disadvantage of fatigue starting to appear. So I was very pleased to see that Omnerod came up, introduced their set shortly and fired away. A great mix, where death metal was mixed with more atmospheric prog. It was the first band, where after the show I headed for the merch stand and get their CD. This as I want to know how they sound on CD. Live the hour flew by for me and I loved their show. Of course the one thing that was hard to understand was the social distancing on stage as if Covid was still very much  reality in Baarlo. Why was the grunting guitarist hidden so far to the back? Invisible by a mix of darkness and smoke. Maybe stagefright? But that was Legs Diamond last weekend. A very fine start of the day for me they were.


Obsidian Tide
Obsidian Tide are from Israel, so I think that in advance everyone wondered what was going on in their heads given the situation at home. They did give us after some technical issues a fine set where the clean vocals could use some more power for me. So while I pretty much liked their music, I did not stay the full hour. This was also a band where maybe getting to know their music a bit in advance would have helped.


Ihlo
Ihlo were representing the UK on stage this year. They are not listed at Metal Archives which means they play either metalcore/djent or are considered a bit too light. Listening tot hem I gues it was the second reason. Again I appreciated the band and their playing, but some more power would help to make me run to the merch stand. They looked lively and sympathetic enough on stage, where people from the UK have the mother tongue advantage making their inbetween song banters more at ease. Again a half show was good enough for me, but if playing in the area I would go see them again.


Maraton
After the diner break, where I did not eat Maraton from Norway came up. By not checking them out in advance I did not know we had such a light band on the program after all. Their music sounded to me very eighties and Tears for Fears came to mind. It actually sounded pretty fine, but we left for a small meal, as more traditional progmetal was on the way. So not seeing enough to give a fair ordeal they were the light band on the menu, but fairly popular even so I understood.


Darkwater
Darkwater are no strangers to PPE veterans as they also played the 2010 edition. That was on a day opened by Haken and closed by Shadow Gallery, so one of the more legendary days in PPE history. I saw them a few years back returning on stage at Brainstorm. At the time I bought their CD after the show and soon after they had started I realized why. Darkwater was this weekend the band that would have best fitted the first Progpower line-up in 1999. In those days no extreme /djent /prog or postrock explorations. Just proper progmetal bands playing the style that made the genre popular in the nineties. During their set I was reminded of Enchant at times, or a band like Tiles. I loved every minute of their set and they convinced again, even if not the most active live band in history. For me this is the style that started it all. A great voice over a solid rhythm section with good guitars and keyboards played on stage not from tape. Call me old fashioned, but for me every Progpower needs bands like this. I saw they were pretty popular among the crowd, where I also noted that most people I saw first in Baarlo in 2000 stayed in the hall and loved the band. Is an age division happening in preferences? Probably the highlight of the weekend for me and no need to discuss the progresiveness of bands like this. Just great music.


Teramaze
And than it was up to Teramaze to close the weekend. They were here before only four years ago, but released since then 4 (four!) new full lenghts. I did remember that in 2019 I found them OK, but not the high I hoped for looking at their style of progmetal. Basically they play not all that different from Darkwater, may be a notch heavier at times. Keyboards also from tape again, but this also as not all songs do have them. Again I saw a division happening as during the set many people left the building. This happens every Sunday night closing set, by te way. I did love their set and was positively surprised. Maybe expectations were lower than in 2019 or they played better but for me it was a great closer of one fine festival again.


So than we had coins left. So the basement was calling. Some nice final drinks until two barbie girls chased us out. So I guess now it is time to say a huge thanks to organization and all volunteers. What a party did they put together for us again. Since we were with a big group in changing line-ups ourselves I did not get to speak to as many people as I would have liked, but I did meet some new people who next year shall receive the friendly nod of the head or talk as well. So 2023 did not bring the great names of the past maybe, for me the diversity in program made it a good one again. So see you all next year in Baarlo.





 

 

 





Tuesday, 3 October 2023

Flotsam and Jetsam & Hallowed Fire - Musicon The Hague, 2 October 2023


SOLD OUT!! What a joy to see that announcement on a Monday evening. Comments have been made on the many bands of larger scale playing the Monday evening in Musicon. Tonight it was as far as I know the first sold out show, proving that metal bangs seven days a week indeed. This was great news for Musicon, but also very welcome for Flotsam and Jetsam. Recently they had to cancel a US tour, due to low ticket sales versus huge costs. This week before playing Keep it True Rising they put a small club tour together through The Netherlands and Belgium, with three out of four shows already sold out. Flotsam and Jetsam have been playing Europe a lot over the years and that gained them a stable fanbase. I also repeated with Alex, who goes by the name Thrasher so he should know, that Flotsam and Jetsam still release relevant albums. So you are not waiting for the old songs only. On forehand I had the intention to go slow on the beeers on this Monday night. Well, let's say the intention was there.


The evening was opened Dutch though by Hallowed Fire. They played Musicon before as many venues in the area. A fine young thrash metal band with a sympathetic expression on stage. Sold out or not it still took a few songs before the space in front of the stage was filled. I don't own their EP's, so can't quote many songtitles. What I heard and saw was good again and they managed to warm up most of us in proper thrashing style. 


During the break it was time to catch up with many and more. Rebuilding the stage went fast and than I had to pinch myself again if this really was Flotsam and Jetsam opening with Hammerhead on a Monday night in my home venue. Yes they were and in great form too. It was over a year since they played last and no rust appeared to my ears. Flotsam and Jetsam did what they do best they Flotzed us till death. A high energy set, where I did not take notes, so no clue what was all played until Doomsday closed the evening. Well I had some Dreams of Death later that night, so that's one.
Flotsam were in good shape so I would say go and see them if you can. With most shows already sold out a bit of a pointless advice, but today in Fluor there are still tickets left.


Both Flotsam and Jetsam and Hallowed Fire gave us a perfect Monday night out. Coming weekend Musicon has a nice package again, with Loud & Heavy festival on Saturday and Semblant plus White Walls on Sunday with more. Pity I need to be at Progpower, but let's hope many people will find their way back to Musicon supporting your local venue and scene. I came this night by bicycle which is nothing special. Last year I also went by bicycle, but then they played bloody Helmond their last non-festival show before this tour. So a good excuse to repeat the picture I took when upon arrival finding the band lunching in front of the hotel I stayed in that night. 





Monday, 2 October 2023

Golden Age Rock Festival - Centre Cultural de Chenee Liege, 1 October


Golden Age Rock Festival had it's third edition. I can't call this a review of the festival as I only saw 4 of the 14 bands playing. I picked the Sunday because of two bands White Spirit and Legs Diamond. Two bands I loved over 40 years ago, but never saw playing live. With Progpower Weekend coming up, I decided to drive up and down on the day, which made it a hefty 550 km. Luckily enough both bands made it worth every kilometer.


I attended the first edition of GARF as well. Than also one day only, but with a stay in Liege overnight. The first edition had three days and I attended the Sunday to see Angel, Heavy Pettin', Dee Snider, 220 Volt and a local drummer who played with the Scorpions early seventies , so we got some Scorpions as well. Last year the lineup was good again, but Dynamo had a great Saturday program as well and on Sunday I attended the best band of the festival Angel in Baroeg. Also Alcatrazz and Girlschool would play Musicon a week later. So the set-up of the festival is bands from roughly 1968-1985 that rarely play Europe. Since attendance is relatively small, there must e some heavy sponsoring going on. Maybe as a result the guy introducing bands takes his time to tell a story on each band. He does so in French, so half the audience coming from Germany, Holland, England or further away had to pick their schoolboy French to get the point.  This year the event moved to the cultural centre, which was nice and small to fit the crowd perfectly. You could sit at the back, which came in handy if a certain band was not of your interest. Local brewery BestiAle had three beers on tap, and as I was my own designated driver I only tried the blond and the IPA in the afternoon, both approved. I drove alone, but knew I would bump into some people here. So basically time flew by in sunny Liege.


Since Liege is further away than hoped, Dutch highways only allow you driving 100 km/hour and I had a snack stop at a gasstation I missed the tribute to local guitarist Miche LeClercq. Ron told me that this sounded fine. My opening band were Highway Chile/Helloise. So I probably drove some 2 a 3 hours behind them on similar roads to Liege. I saw them in the eighties both Highway Chile and Helloise, so I knew most songs. Well they played two new songs noone knew obviously. I have a slight favor towards the Highway Chile songs and Jesse James plus Carol hit home. Actually For a Moment and Gates of Heaven sounded fine too. The bands looks solid and if you want to relive the eighties in Dutch hardrock they are the go-to band. 


Satan Jokers from France came on next. The only thing I knew about this band is the article in De Nieuwe Aardschok 5 (?) on French Metal. Satan Jokers actually played hardrock with a strong guitarist. The bottleneck for me came with the language. I did not know any of the songs, but the mix with French lyrics did no wonders. A bigger problem was the vocalists feeling the need to keep bantering on in French inbetween songs. It took the speed out of their set and was pointless for those not mastering French. When they played covers it became clear that English was no option either. Highway Star and Whole Lotta Love arenot the most original covers. When the last turns into some hoelattaheloe it becomes almost funny, which can never be the point. So I left before they finished finding an empty food stand to experiment one of the burgers on offer. Well Roosendaal Open Air did set the standard very high, but this one was pretty OK too.


Next band were White Spirit from England, which turned out to be partially France and Germany today. In 1980 they released their self titled debut album, which Gerrie and I agreed is an absolute Classic from the NWOBHM era. Their second album was released last year, only 42 years later. Right or Wrong was dedicated to Brian Howe who passed away in 2020. He sung on the songs of this album, but when the tapes were found a re-recording was needed. This year a new version was released and the band already announced they were going to play that album during this day. For those not knowing this in advance their T-shirt told the story. Rarely do you see a band who prints T-shirts for one show and does such a great job. The back had the festival and band logo, date and album to be played. So I secured my XXL version fast before they sold out. The gig itself than? Well for a band who had not played for 4 (four!) decades I thought they sounded pretty tight. From the debut album line-up only Keyboardist Malcolm Pearson is still present. Further guitarist Mick Turner was in the band in 1981 already. On drums they had Russell from Uriah Heep, on Bass someone from Nottingham whose name I forgot sorry (was it Wayne?) and on vocals Alexx Stahl from Germany. As from Right or Wrong this band sounded fine and maybe nervous at the start they sounded better by each song. Was it during Don't Say No, that the keyboard/guitar double solo was a highlight? Better Watch Out also live sounded like their tribute to Joe Lynn Turner era Rainbow. For those who waited for songs from the debut , the new version of Right or Wrong holds a re-recorded version of Midnight Chaser. I believe that the audience reaction went even a notch up after this one. Than Rock and Roll (Is Good For You) closed the set. Only to find out they had time for one more song, but not rehearsed any So we got Midnight Chaser again to loud approval of the fans. They promised to tour more from now on, so the obvious request is adding some more from the debut album, or Cheetah from compilations. If they come in the area I shall be back. A great melodic hard rock set they gave us.  I might have been considering inviting them to play Musicon one day, but as I host bands in such a cse and they brought a whole army I guess that will be hard. Glad they are back 42 years later though.


As if one first time live in a lifetime was not enough, Legs Diamond would be on next. Last week I played all their albums and ranked same. Thsi was good as I now recognized all teh songs a bit faster. Legs Diamond come with three original members who were in the band since their debut album. Roger Romeo on guitars, Michael Prince on keyboards and guitar and Jeff Poole on drums. The latter having amounts of long hair at his age, that are an insult/slap in the face to all bolding men in the audience. Bassist Adam Kury (since 1992) and I guess this was Keith England on vocals completed the band. If we take the sound issues and techical problems aside Legs Diamond gave us a Masterclass in Classic Hard Rock. While watching the more I saw the more I wondered why they arenot a huge band headlining rock and general festivals worldwide. It can't be the songs, nor the playing as both are top notch. The setlist was a real trip through their discography 1976-1990. I loved every minute of their set, even if the balance between guitars and rest of the band was at times a bit too heavy on the guitar end. I almost started to think they would ignore their sophomore album A Diamond is a Hard Rock. Well they not when at the end of the show I Think I Got It came to us. And of course they could not skip Woman. Their ballad of the Uber category (think Y&T I Believe in You) If we thought ending on this high Rat Race from the debut was still to come. A missing microphone on stage, a broken drumset, bass issues and loud guitars could not stop this from being the second memorable show of the evening for me. 

And then it was time to drive home. I probably would appreciate seeing Arthur Browne once, but the drive was long and today I have to be fit for Flotsam and Jetsam in Musicon. Also experience tells me, attending an unknown festival show after two absolute highs does not work for me. So a big thanks goes out to organizers. What a great festival they have put together and I guess this venue stays now. Not sure if I can put is some requests for next year. On the melodic NWOBHM corner I can always see a Stampede show again, or get Shiva together again. From the USA Lillian Axe are always welcome and a band like Drive She Said might be suiting just fine as well. Who knows what GARF will bring, but if timing suits I shall be back, even if it is for 4 out of 14 bands again.



Wednesday, 20 September 2023

Damnation Plan - Demoniac - Tritop


This time three pretty different albums, all worthwhile of your time though.


Damnation Plan - The New Horizon
Questions: is this a full album or an EP? Same goes for the musical style. Metal Archives calls them Melodic Death Metal. I saw reviews talking about Progmetal, while I would say that people who like doomy Swedish Heavy Metal like Sorcerer should check these Fins out as well. I believe this band found me through adverts on Facebook. Interesting as 99% of the adverts having nothing to do with me or my interest. But The New Horizon than? well it gives us five songs totalling almost 33 minutes. Long epic songs, with dark and moody atmospheres are presented. If you add good vocals and strong songwriting this is yet another band I discovered this year, while their first album is from ten years ago. I can imagine that in the great flood of releases this one goes missing, but basically anyone liking any of the three styles mentioned above should check them out. If like me you like all three styles, you will love this album.


Demoniac - Nube Negra 
My favorite Chileans are back. In 2020 they gave us So It Goes. That was an album in both English and Spanish and had a title track of almost 20 minutes covering one side. A bit of a Blackened Thrash Rush therefore. This time English has left the album, leaving us only with Spanish lyrics and two instrumentals. No epic either, but still lots of variation as clarinet and accordeon are still present. No worries though as these won't disturb the overall heaviness of this album. I believe that over the last three years Demoniac got a notch heavier in general. I still need a few more spins before catching all that is presented to us. But I like what I hear so far and for me Spanish lyrics are a bonus and a refreshing crash course. So they did it again, but how long is it flying from Valparaiso to Europe?


Tritop - Rise of Kassandra
And now for somethig completely calmer. Italian progressive rock presented by Tritop. The album is already half a year old, but I found Tritop by a DPRP review, who are always late with their reviews. Tritop are Italian, but there is definitely also something American in their prog rock. As this is their debut holding four songs with an opener of 13:00 and a closer of 23:46 you might think of Spock's Beard and their debut. Musically they are also not miles apart. Prog rock with enough heavy bits and pieces, to potentially win over the progmetal fan as well. Italy was known for their prog rock in the seventies. I do like this century as well, with bands like Moongarden, O.R.k. and now Tritop. Recommended even if slightly late.