Shineback - Rise Up Forgotten, Return Destroyed review
Band: | Shineback |
Album: | Rise Up Forgotten, Return Destroyed |
Style: | Electronic |
Release date: | July 01, 2013 |
A review by: | Ivor |
01. May You Live In Interesting Times (Blog 1)
02. Is This The Dream?
03. Under My Feet (Blog 2)
04. Bedlam Days
05. Faultlines
06. Drawn Outside (Blog 3)
07. Here Come The Envoys
08. Crush Culture
09. The Clock Of The Long Now
10. Fears Aren't Toys
11. I Called Him In Vain (Blog 4)
12. Passengers
13. Xo Va Yu
14. The Saint Of Doors
15. Rise Up Forgotten, Return Destroyed
16. As The Rain (Blog 5)
17. One Last Perfect Day
18. Myowndreamland (Final Blog)
Suffice it to say that Tinyfish is not a very conventional prog entity. At least as much as I've heard from their 2010 album The Big Red Spark. Now, Simon Godfrey has gone solo under the Shineback moniker and decided to expand the musical boundaries by throwing together pop, prog and electronica. Still prog? Yes, sort of. Inasmuch as it's a conceptual album, and changing music in nature. The rest? Well, it tests the boundaries all right.
Strictly speaking, abundant inclusion of electronica is a sure way to show me the nearest exit. I rarely take the wholehearted liking to it. However, as always, there are exceptions like Pure Reason Revolution, The Pineapple Thief, Frost* (which, by the way, is the band of Simon's brother Jem), and some others. But naturally I was cautious to pick up Shineback as it seemed quite a big step further from my comfort zone.
However, Shineback seems to have clicked already on the first listen. I think it's the prog foundation that does it, and the electronica is a layering around and on top of it. Rise Up Forgotten, Return Destroyed is truly a complex album as far as sound layering is concerned, the details are intricate and in abundance, layer upon layer not only in the foreground but also in the ambient background. In short, there's lots of stuff waiting to be discovered.
Since I really feel out of my depth with this album, I'll try to keep it short. Rise Up Forgotten, Return Destroyed easily covers an area from prog rock to ambient to dub step, guitars and electronica co-existing in distorted atmosphere in harmony, it mixes effortlessly pop rhythms and guitar solos. And the resulting complex blend is impressive work of art that still feels like a proper prog album, with a twisted story to back it up.
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Written on 02.08.2013 by
I shoot people. Sometimes, I also write about it. And one day I'm going to start a band. We're going to be playing pun-rock. |
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