Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Carving Desert Canyons

0.0

販売価格

¥
2,409
税込
還元ポイント

在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2009年03月23日
国内/輸入 輸入(アメリカ盤)
レーベルProsthetic
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 65619100702
SKU 656191007023

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:39:51
Instrumental music has made quite the comeback -- at least in indie rock circles -- during the third millennium's first decade; but while most of the bands responsible for lighting its torch arose from thoroughly post-Y2K (i.e. post-rock, post-metal, post-everything) musical aesthetics, Houston's Scale the Summit draw the bulk of their wordless sound endeavors from the good ol' 20th century. Just seconds into their 2009 sophomore effort, Carving Desert Canyons, the unashamed virtuosity and evocative lyricism of opener "Bloom" already harks back to the heyday of instrumental guitar heroes like Satriani and Vai, unearthing a pre-grunge production clarity that few listeners probably ever dreamt they'd hear again. Yet, here they are, and repeat samples proliferate throughout ensuing, fleet-fingered, mood-metal explorations like "Giants" and "The Great Plains" the latter also boasting a command bass guitar performance from Jordan Eberhardt. Other tracks like "Sargasso Sea," "Age of Tides," and "Glacial Planet" may initially seem to be cut from the same cloth, but quickly reveal entirely different inspirational touchstones ranging from progressive metal overlords Dream Theater to avant-death legends Cynic, through Dutch art-metallers Kong. All this being said, the long-term effects of doing without the convenient handholds normally afforded by lyrics and vocals may gradually begin to exhaust less technically oriented listeners, in whose defense it could be said that less imaginative cuts like "Dunes" and "City in the Sky" do start sounding like endlessly spinning, mathematical scales and finger exercises after a while. Still these are minor issues compared with the surprisingly fresh, sound-out-of-time experience that Scale the Summit have achieved on Carving Desert Canyons, as a whole, and it's sure to make this one of the year's most distinctive heavy metal releases -- with and without vocals. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Bloom
    2. 2.
      Sargasso sea
    3. 3.
      The Great Plains
    4. 4.
      Dunes
    5. 5.
      Age Of The Tide
    6. 6.
      Glacial Planet
    7. 7.
      City In The Sky
    8. 8.
      Giants

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Scale The Summit

商品の紹介

Battlesのブレイクによって俄然注目を集めるMath Rock界に新たなる若きバンド出現!メンバー平均年齢22歳!驚異のプログレッシヴ・インスト・メタル・ユニット、Scale The Summit。インテリジェンスあふれるテクニカルなサウンドを追求しつつもメロディックで聴きやすい、インストゥルメンタル音楽の新地平を切り拓く1枚!そのソリッドなライヴ・パフォーマンスで確実にファンを増やしつつある彼らが、本国のみならず世界へ活動を広げるべくProstheticレーベルから放つ自信作!
タワーレコード(2009/04/08)

Alternative Press - 4 stars out of 5 -- "This is instrumental hard rock that spares the listener Pelican-esque tedium, instead offering all the technical brilliance of Rush or Coheed..." Kerrang - "CARVING DESERT CANYONS is every bit as elemental and forceful as it sets out to be, with its creators deliberately pitching themselves somewhere between prog rock and the more leftfield end of the '90s post-hardcore spectrum."
Rovi

Instrumental music has made quite the comeback -- at least in indie rock circles -- during the third millennium's first decade; but while most of the bands responsible for lighting its torch arose from thoroughly post-Y2K (i.e. post-rock, post-metal, post-everything) musical aesthetics, Houston's Scale the Summit draw the bulk of their wordless sound endeavors from the good ol' 20th century. Just seconds into their 2009 sophomore effort, Carving Desert Canyons, the unashamed virtuosity and evocative lyricism of opener "Bloom" already harks back to the heyday of instrumental guitar heroes like Satriani and Vai, unearthing a pre-grunge production clarity that few listeners probably ever dreamt they'd hear again. Yet, here they are, and repeat samples proliferate throughout ensuing, fleet-fingered, mood-metal explorations like "Giants" and "The Great Plains" the latter also boasting a command bass guitar performance from Jordan Eberhardt. Other tracks like "Sargasso Sea," "Age of Tides," and "Glacial Planet" may initially seem to be cut from the same cloth, but quickly reveal entirely different inspirational touchstones ranging from progressive metal overlords Dream Theater to avant-death legends Cynic, through Dutch art-metallers Kong. All this being said, the long-term effects of doing without the convenient handholds normally afforded by lyrics and vocals may gradually begin to exhaust less technically oriented listeners, in whose defense it could be said that less imaginative cuts like "Dunes" and "City in the Sky" do start sounding like endlessly spinning, mathematical scales and finger exercises after a while. Still these are minor issues compared with the surprisingly fresh, sound-out-of-time experience that Scale the Summit have achieved on Carving Desert Canyons, as a whole, and it's sure to make this one of the year's most distinctive heavy metal releases -- with and without vocals. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia|
Rovi

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