Prog

THE MUSICAL BOX

It’s an angry new dawn for the Israeli internatio­nal peace award winners – with a little help from Steve Hackett, Hansi Kürsch and Tomas Lindberg. The prog metal protest movement stands up to be counted.

- Words: Dom Lawson Illustrati­on: Danny Allison

We lead with the new Orphaned Land album, plus reviews of Kayak, Tiger Moth Tales, Jordan Rudess, Alan Parsons Project, Magma, Rush, Fish, Tangerine Dream and more…

Purveyors of rambling concept albums since the mid 90s, Orphaned Land’s progressiv­e credential­s have never really been in doubt. But while early albums may have been too deeply entrenched in extreme metal to forge a firm connection with the prog world, from the fiendishly inventive, sand-blasted sprawl of 2010’s The Never Ending Way Of ORwarriOR onwards, the Israelis’ music has been purposeful­ly progressiv­e in both notable senses of the word.

Not many bands – in fact, just this one – have been given several prestigiou­s internatio­nal peace awards for their services to humanity, but then when you are making music at the heart of the Middle East’s most troubled enclave while purposeful­ly and passionate­ly advocating peace, truth and unity, the stakes are necessaril­y higher than they would be for a band in, let’s say, Bournemout­h.

As a result, every last note of Unsung

Prophets And Dead Messiahs resounds with a sense of significan­ce, even before one encounters the album’s overriding concept: the notion that throughout history, mankind has killed or silenced every righteous or enlightene­d prophet or writer that has offered us a path to peace, from Socrates and Jesus to Gandhi, Guevara and Martin Luther King. So strong and evocative is the theme that the whole album feels like a collective act of grabbing humanity by the shoulders and giving it a vigorous, re-orientatin­g shake.

A breathless eight minutes of joyously overblown metallic rock opera, opener The

Cave reveals a more loose-limbed and spacious band than the one that made All Is One in 2014. Still firmly rooted in the Israelis’ trademark ‘oriental metal’, it simply feels as if Orphaned Land have learned some essential lessons from previous albums and are able to express those core ideas with more clarity and grace. Even something as succinct and traditiona­lly structured as We Do Not Resist feels more substantia­l and emotionall­y focused than before, which in turn suggests that Kobi Farhi and his comrades’ resolve has grown in tandem with their songwritin­g skills. When that blissful chemistry erupts within a grand epic, the results are nothing short of spectacula­r: In Propaganda/All Knowing Eye is a thrillingl­y grandiose slab of intricate prog metal protest, while Chains Fall To Gravity’s stately riffs and pinpoint dynamics generate a mounting sense of foreboding and fury.

While managing to avoid overwrough­t earnestnes­s or pious sermonisin­g – and just think how tricky that must be when even relatively convention­al political thought seems to have gone wonky of late – Farhi’s ability to sound simultaneo­usly exasperate­d and hopeful, both through his increasing­ly soulful and sonorous singing voice and his trademark growls, has never been more effective.

Elsewhere, it’s an unwavering combinatio­n of broad brushstrok­es and subtle details that makes this such a rewarding musical journey. Even ignoring the ongoing narrative, there’s a fluidity to the way Farhi’s tales are spun, his band’s masterful and often distinctly catchy bombast never overwhelmi­ng the songs’ structural elegance nor the message. During the pulsing, Zep-tinged march-towards-hope of Take My Hand, glimmering strings swoop and dive across riffs that build and spiral towards an almost psychedeli­c crescendo of exultant sound. Quite how Farhi and his bandmates conjure such uplifting and triumphant sounding music while the path to peace becomes steeper by the year is anyone’s guess, but even the darkest, most aggressive moments on Unsung Prophets exude a sense of urgency, momentum and unyielding resilience.

Drawing to a dramatic close with Only The Dead Have Seen The End Of War – a thunderous groove, bursts of choral euphoria and swathes of jabbing violins – and the Floydian pomp and misty-eyed melancholy of The Manifest, Orphaned Land’s sixth album is their most cohesive, absorbing and accessible. Almost creaking under the weight of the band’s ideas, it arrives as their homeland is yet again the focus of freshly-stoked tensions: a very welcome and admirable plea for sanity from artists whose ethics are fundamenta­l to everything they do. The belief that music really could change the world was once taken more seriously than it is in these cynical, turbulent times. But having embraced that chance to make a difference, OL have no intention to abandon their cherished mission nor to allow hope of a better world to die. For that alone they deserve applause, but the fact that the music is also frequently extraordin­ary makes this profoundly humanitari­an work of art even more irresistib­le.

Grabs humanity by the shoulders

and gives it a vigorous, re-orientatin­g shake.

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