Band
Members: |
Scott Albright / lead vocals, acoustic
guitar |
Kurdt Vanderhoof / guitars, mellotron,
Chamberlin, organ, bass pedals, synthesizers, electric pianos
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There has been quite a bit of buzz on the street about
the new Presto Ballet releaseThe Lost Art of Time Travel.
Why even the guy who runs the largest new and used record
store here in Victoria knew the band was getting great reviews.
If you are a fan of that late seventies styled pomp rock produced
by bands such as Styx or perhaps Kansas, this release will
have you drooling in your cereal. This is classic seventies
styled prog that relies on analog synth sounds and yet feels
every bit up-to-date. Presto Ballet is the brainchild of Metal
Church’s Kurdt Vanderhoof (guitar) and he’s surrounded himself
with Bill Raymond (drums), Izzy Rehaume (bass), Ryan McPherson
(keyboards) and Scott Albright (vocals).***
The Lost Art of Time Travel consists of seven tracks,
a couple over six-minutes, a couple over nine and two over
ten. As already stated the music created by Presto Ballet
hearkens back to the mid-seventies in all the good ways…and
when you add the Albright’s vocal range and tone, this stuff
sounds like the best stuff Styx ever created, only Styx never
sounded this good. The compositions, feature tons of dynamic
musical guitar or keyboard accents, the songs start and stop,
change time and tempo and, oh yeah they also rock. Without
ever drifting into the prog-metal area, the guitar crunch
is balanced by the ever present Mellotrons, Hammonds, synths
and pianos. On the longer songs the music starts out in dramatic
fashion building in intensity before morphing into the song’s
core melodies. And there are plenty of wonderful parts to
sing along to, an important aspect to Vanderhoof’s writing
style. There’s even plenty of acoustic guitar that shows up
from time to time. It’s really on display on “You’re Alive”
(4:25) the shortest song of the bunch, which features a bit
of a Yes influence with all the ringing guitars and layers
of cathedral-styled strings. The standout songs for me naturally
are the epics “The Mind Machine” (10:51) and “One Tragedy
at a Time” (14:01) although the hook line from “Thieves” (9:05)
was mighty catchy. Truth is there is catchy part in EVERY
track. After a dozen plays I found myself saying “that’s my
favorite track” only to have the next one start and I’d remember
the good musical bit’s that were just around the corner.***
The sound crafted by Presto Ballet is classic! The guitars
come in at just the right time with just the right sound and
that plays off the analog keyboards perfectly. I’ll say this
again…imagine your favorite or most progressive Styx track,
and then imagine it ‘out-there’ in terms of complexity and
arrangement by a factor of four and you’ll get an idea of
what to expect with The Lost Art of Time Travel. Put this
disc onto my stack labeled, Favorites of 2008!***
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