Sold Date:
March 18, 2015
Start Date:
December 17, 2013
Final Price:
€19.99
(EUR)
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LP IL CERCHIO D'ORO
Dedalo E Lcaro
Country of release: Italy, 2013
Label: Black Widow Records
Catalogue number BWR 150
Barcode: -
Klappcover/Gatefold Sleeve: Ja/Yes
Condition Record: Mint
Condition Cover: Mint
LP ist noch verschweißt / LP IS STILL SEALED
!!!
(Photo von meiner eigenen LP / Photo taken from my own copy)
Tracks Side 1:
1.Il Mio Nome E' Dedalo
(4:53)
2.Labirinto (7:13)
3.La Promessa (9:03)
4.L'Arma
Vincente (4:13)
Tracks Side 2:
1.Una Nuova Realta'
(7:37)
2.Oggi Volero' (4:22)
3.Il Sogno Spezzato
(5:59)
4.Ora Che Son Qui (Icaro ... La Fine)
(5:07)
Listen At
YouTube:
A very welcome comeback from the lost classic age
of the vintage 70's Italian progressive scene, Il Cerchio D'Oro return with only
their second proper album in an almost 40 year career! We had to wait until 2008
for their proper debut, the band never having had the opportunity to record
anything other than a handful of singles in the second half of the 70's, and
curious fans have only had two inconsistent compilations to offer them a glimpse
of what potential the band had. That all changed with their official studio
debut `Il Viaggio di Colombo' nearly six years ago, and they now follow it up
with the lush and joyous `Dedalo e Icaro', a concept album based around the
mythological legend of Dedalus and Icarus, with the help of some Italian prog
notables such as Pino Sinnone (The Trip), Giorgio 'Fico' Piazza (PFM), Ettore
Vigo and Martin Grice (Delirium)!
Where the `Colombo' album saw the band
finding their feet (yet still delivering the goods, it was generally considered
a winning album by Italian prog fans, and was something of a personal favourite
of mine), `Dedalo...' sees the band in a more relaxed, warm and excited mood.
Their skills have been honed by practice and a return to live shows, the rust
worked out of their system from the uncertainty of their debut album, and they
deliver grand, melodic and charming Italian progressive rock that will surely
please fans of the RPI genre.
Opener `Io Mio Nome e Dedalo' makes for a
lovely introduction, an upbeat and stylish pop/rocker with a catchy chorus, warm
vocals and nice use of mandolin by special guest Athos Enrile. But the album
truly starts with the second piece `Labirinto'. Beginning with a regal, faraway
triumphant synth refrain that calls from the distance, electric guitars come
roaring in with a real driving Pink Floyd sound behind a sprightly foot-tapping
electric piano melody, humming Hammond organ and murmuring bass. This up-tempo
and infectious instrumental also finds time for a touching solo piano spot in
the middle and a spiraling darting flute solo from Delirium's Martin Grice
during a reprise of the main theme in the outro with some peppy drumwork. This
one ticks a lot of essential RPI boxes, not exactly challenging, but impossibly
pleasing and very hard not to like.
Don't be fooled by the first two minutes
of `La Promessa' into thinking it's just a lovely power ballad! Lead vocalist
Piuccio Pradal still has that scratchy, lived-in voice full of wistful heartfelt
passion, and despite sublime group harmonies and a very stirring electric guitar
melody that is repeated at many points throughout the song - just try getting it
out of your head - the track has a very dirty and blustery middle section and
lots of extended soloing in the later sections. Wailing guitar solos that sound
very similar to the rougher style of their previous album, a loopy synth solo in
the finale, and drummer Gino Terribile gets to show a little fire right near the
end with some rapid-fire bashing fills. `L'Arma Vincentre' that follows is a
reflective and thoughtful ballad, with a lovely grand classical backing. Listen
out for the whirring moog soloing and extended guitar solo in the second
half.
`Una Nuova Realta' moves through bombastic, punchy rock bluster that
sees the band in perfect unison with eachother. Lots of quick snappy runs,
somber and thoughtful piano passages, ghostly veils of Mellotron wisps,
emotional guitar soloing and lovingly weathered vocals from Piuccio. I love the
uptempo final moments in the last minute and a half that sees the band racing to
the finish line with as many quick little musical fills as possible. A moving,
exciting and unpredictable track full of energy!
`Oggi Volero' is a short
gutsy bluesy guitar number over dreamy Mellotron and Hammond washes with more of
those winning group harmonies.
The dramatic and frantic `Io Sogno Spezzato'
is tinged with darkness, as it details Icarus' epic flight and tragic fall to
back to Earth. Classical piano tension, snarling guitar runs, snapping Hammond
stabs, punchy bass and gothic classical organ soundtrack this climactic finale.
Italian prog at it's most dazzling and sophisticated best.
The lazy
atmosphere of `Ora Che Son Qui' wraps the album in a very sobering manner. A
shimmering other-worldy treated vocal from Piuccio over warm acoustic guitar
strums, pulsing Hammond washes and layered group harmonies remind very much of
Seventies Pink Floyd, perfectly suited to the lyrics filled with regret and
stream-of-consciousness ponderings. The final two minutes features a brief but
commanding sax solo again from Martin Grice that is both sad and triumphant at
the same time.
Available on both LP and CD versions from Black Widow Records,
you may wish to purchase the vinyl for an exquisite larger-format gatefold
recreation of the stunning cover painting by Stefano Scagni, but the CD version
comes with three video live performances from 2009-2012. The lyrics are
displayed in both Italian and English along with photos of the band and special
guests.
2013 has already seen a number of outstanding quality releases from
Italy, and the second proper album from Il Cerchio D'Oro is no exception. So it
may not have the same reckless energy, rough around the edges charm that a lot
of the vintage defining releases had back in the 70's, but there is no denying
it is a high quality album, full of strong melodies and terrific playing. It's
also nice to hear something so upbeat and full of life, from a band that is
really excited and humbled at still having an audience craving quality Italian
progressive music. Definitely one for fans of the first album after a more
sedate pleasing listen, and deeply romantic Italian progressive bands like
Locanda Delle Fate. (Aussie-Byrd-Brother/progarchives.com)
Franco
Piccolini - Keyboards
Giuseppe Terribile - Bass, Acoustic Guitar,
Vocals
Gino Terribile - Drums, Gong, Vocals
Piuccio Pradal - Twelve-String
Guitar, Vocals
Roberto Giordana - Electric Guitar, Acoustic Guitar
Bruno
Govone - Electric Guitar
&
Pino Sinnone - Drums – (Track 1)
Giorgio
"Fico" Piazza - Bass (Track 4)
Martin Grice - Flute (Track 2), Saxophone
(Tracks 4)
Ettore Vigo - Piano (Track 4)
Daniele Ferro - Electric Guitar
(Track 1)
Athos Enrile - Mandolin (Tracks
1)
Versand innerhalb Deutschland (versichert mit GLS - generell innerhalb von 24 Stunden) 5,00 Euro
Egal wieviele LPs gekauft werden, Versand immer 5,00 Euro. Keine weiteren Versandkosten ab der zweiten LP!!
Shipping within EEC & Oversea (AIRMAIL) 8,50 Euro
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