Tonight’s Sounds That Can Be Made playlist:
Magnum- The Tall Ships (from Rock Art)
Anubis - Silent Wandering Ghosts (from Hitchhiking To Byzantium)
Plini - Wombat Astronaut (Beyond The Burrow)
Paradigm Shift - Reunification (from Becoming Aware)
AudioPlastik - The Sound of Isolation (from In the Head of a Maniac)
TILT- Growing Colder (from Hinterland)
Ray Wilson - Cold Light of Day (from Song For a Friend)
Genesis - Watcher of the Skies (from Foxtrot)
Gazpacho - Know Your Time (from Molok)
Katatonia - Old Heart Falls (from The Fall of Hearts)
The Eighties at 8:
The Michael Schenker Group - Desert Song (from Assault Attack)
Jethro Tull - Beastie (from The Broadsword And The Beast)
Steven Wilson - Year of the Plague (from 4 ½)
RPWL - Bound to Reach the End (from World Through My Eyes)
Echolyn - Messenger of All's Right (from I Heard You Listening)
Showing posts with label Paradigm Shift. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paradigm Shift. Show all posts
18 July 2016
6 June 2016
STCBM045: Barbarian
Tonight’s Sounds That Can Be Made playlist:
The Darkness - Barbarian (from Last of Our Kind)
Napier's Bones - A.D. 1069 : The Harrying of the North (from The Wistman Tales)
Messenger - Oracles of War (from Threnodies)
Anekdoten - Our Days Are Numbered (from Until All the Ghosts Are Gone)
Fractal Mirror - Enemies (from Slow Burn 1)
Paradigm Shift - Masquerade (from Becoming Aware)
British Theatre - Capra (from Mastery)
Hedfuzy - Sing (from Hedfuzy)
Iamthemorning - Lighthouse (from Lighthouse)
Napier's Bones - A.D. 1069 : The Harrying of the North (from The Wistman Tales)
Messenger - Oracles of War (from Threnodies)
Anekdoten - Our Days Are Numbered (from Until All the Ghosts Are Gone)
Fractal Mirror - Enemies (from Slow Burn 1)
Paradigm Shift - Masquerade (from Becoming Aware)
British Theatre - Capra (from Mastery)
Hedfuzy - Sing (from Hedfuzy)
Iamthemorning - Lighthouse (from Lighthouse)
The Eighties at 8:
Yes - Owner of a Lonely Heart (from 90125)
Red Rider - Lunatic Fringe (from As Far As Siam)
Yes - Owner of a Lonely Heart (from 90125)
Red Rider - Lunatic Fringe (from As Far As Siam)
Erudite Stoner- Ride to Nowhere (from Erudite Stoner)
Amplifier - Open Up (from Mystoria)
Konchordat - Save Me From the Rain (from Rise to The Order)
Amplifier - Open Up (from Mystoria)
Konchordat - Save Me From the Rain (from Rise to The Order)
Hope you enjoyed it…
(repeats on Progzilla.com Friday at 1.30pm)
(repeats on Progzilla.com Friday at 1.30pm)
16 May 2016
STCBM042: Live For Today
Tonight’s Sounds That Can Be Made playlist:
Lee Abraham Band - Live For Today (from The Seasons Turn)
Paradigm Shift - An Easy Lie (from Becoming Aware)
Parzivals Eye (PE) - Hiding Out (from Defragments)
Dreamscape - Short Time News (from End of Silence)
Riverside - Discard Your Fear (from Love, Fear and the Time Machine)
Lonely Robot - The Boy in the Radio (from Please Come Home)
Mr. So & So - Apophis (from Truth, Lies & Half Lies)
Spock's Beard - The Good Don’t Last (from The Kindness of Strangers)
The Eighties at 8:
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark - Enola Gay (from Organisation)
Fischer Z - Cruise Missiles (from Red Skies Over Paradise)
Asia - The Day Before the War (from Arena)
Gazpacho Official (the Norwegian band) - Defense Mechanism (from Missa Atropos)
The SKYS - When the Western Wind Blows (from Colors of the Desert)
Hope you enjoyed it…
(repeats on Progzilla.com Friday at 1.30pm)
Next week’s edition of Sounds That Can Be Made on Progzilla.com will feature music by Ninth Moon Black, Amplifier, Kingbathmat, O.S.I., Also Eden, MAGNUM, HAKEN, The Mute Gods and Nine Steps Close with our Eighties at 8 tracks from Jethro Tull and Jon & Vangelis…
Lee Abraham Band - Live For Today (from The Seasons Turn)
Paradigm Shift - An Easy Lie (from Becoming Aware)
Parzivals Eye (PE) - Hiding Out (from Defragments)
Dreamscape - Short Time News (from End of Silence)
Riverside - Discard Your Fear (from Love, Fear and the Time Machine)
Lonely Robot - The Boy in the Radio (from Please Come Home)
Mr. So & So - Apophis (from Truth, Lies & Half Lies)
Spock's Beard - The Good Don’t Last (from The Kindness of Strangers)
The Eighties at 8:
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark - Enola Gay (from Organisation)
Fischer Z - Cruise Missiles (from Red Skies Over Paradise)
Asia - The Day Before the War (from Arena)
Gazpacho Official (the Norwegian band) - Defense Mechanism (from Missa Atropos)
The SKYS - When the Western Wind Blows (from Colors of the Desert)
Hope you enjoyed it…
(repeats on Progzilla.com Friday at 1.30pm)
Next week’s edition of Sounds That Can Be Made on Progzilla.com will feature music by Ninth Moon Black, Amplifier, Kingbathmat, O.S.I., Also Eden, MAGNUM, HAKEN, The Mute Gods and Nine Steps Close with our Eighties at 8 tracks from Jethro Tull and Jon & Vangelis…
7 May 2016
Be Aware!
I must confess I know nothing about Paradigm Shift, other than they are signed to Bad Elephant and their debut album, Becoming Aware, is released in June. As to what they sounded like I hadn't a clue so I had absolutely no expectations when BEM sent me a pre-release copy to play tracks from on STCBM especially give the eclectic and varied nature of Bad Elephant's releases...
The album opens with the nearly fifteen minute long track; A Revolutionary Cure (yep, it's prog!) with news soundbites over synths before a wonderfully heavy guitar kicks in. I'm hooked. This rocks!
With the addition of news and documentary soundbites it put me in mind of Galahad's excellent Empires Never Last, though maybe recorded by HeKz! :-) In parts the album is very heavy and may have veered into prog metal territory with a more traditional metal drum sound, instead the percussion borders on being slightly funky, maybe even a little jazzy. Whatever it works and Paradigm Shift have produced a wonderful debut album with lots to recommend it. My only criticism is maybe the vocal could do with a little more oomph in a traditional rock style.
It's a hard album to label. It's definitely prog, but although the guitar wigs out and has some great chunky riffs it is not metal. Whilst I made reference to Galahad, it isn't neo-prog either (not that Galahad are really that anymore). It's modern prog, with a seventies classic rock vibe, some wonderful musicianship (there is some lovely piano throughout) and well written songs that have something to say.
Overall this was a big surprise and both and album and a band that deserve attention.
The album opens with the nearly fifteen minute long track; A Revolutionary Cure (yep, it's prog!) with news soundbites over synths before a wonderfully heavy guitar kicks in. I'm hooked. This rocks!
With the addition of news and documentary soundbites it put me in mind of Galahad's excellent Empires Never Last, though maybe recorded by HeKz! :-) In parts the album is very heavy and may have veered into prog metal territory with a more traditional metal drum sound, instead the percussion borders on being slightly funky, maybe even a little jazzy. Whatever it works and Paradigm Shift have produced a wonderful debut album with lots to recommend it. My only criticism is maybe the vocal could do with a little more oomph in a traditional rock style.
It's a hard album to label. It's definitely prog, but although the guitar wigs out and has some great chunky riffs it is not metal. Whilst I made reference to Galahad, it isn't neo-prog either (not that Galahad are really that anymore). It's modern prog, with a seventies classic rock vibe, some wonderful musicianship (there is some lovely piano throughout) and well written songs that have something to say.
Overall this was a big surprise and both and album and a band that deserve attention.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)