Prog

PERFECT BEINGS

LA proggers’ four-track third album in reduced circumstan­ces.

- Johnny ShaRP

The difficult second album is a cliché, but you suspect this California­n quartet’s third outing made their two previous, widely appreciate­d long players seem like a stroll in the park in comparison to the departure of both their original drummer and bassist in early 2016. But the creative core of singer Ryan Hurtgen and producer/guitarist Johannes Luley have overcome that setback with a new lineup to make their most adventurou­s record to date.

MELODIC STRANDS FUSE

TOGETHER AND YOU REALLY ENJOY THE RIDE.

The sleeve’s 3D graph image, and the Germanic, Krautrocki­sh title immediatel­y suggest we’re in for some serious math prog schooling. That’s not Perfect Beings’ style at all, but they dabble in a pretty heaped handful of other genres over four (hence the title) 16-18 minute suites.

They’re not afraid of traditiona­l musical tropes, though. Such as vocal harmonies, a chattering, multi-part variety of which open the record on A New Pyramid. Once joined by obtuse woodwind notes and a rhythm resembling a drum kit falling down a flight of stairs, there’s the hint of jazz exploratio­ns being kept tightly on a leash. But then that passage ends with a snatch of the album’s linchpin chorus from Enter The Center, and the mention of ‘freedom when you call me’ heralds a more inviting musical landscape.

Things then become notably more ethereal for a while. The Persimmon Tree’s sweetly mournful descending piano loop, skittering flute accompanim­ent and rattling timpani sound like the introducti­on to a ballet, before more jarring, anxious notes chime in to darken the mood and thrust us into a chapter from a psychologi­cal thriller. No single mood lasts for long here, though, and Patience throws the shutters open on sunny keyboards and an invitation, paraphrasi­ng Leonard Cohen, to ‘Dance to me your beauty with a burning violin.’

Later, a whole diaspora of influences is at play: the austere futurescap­es of Berlin-era Bowie; Philip Glass’s elegant avantclass­ical flourishes; then there are echoes of Air on The

System And Beyond and touches of Nick Drake on Everything’s Falling Apart. But in-between times we’re regularly hit with perfectly progtastic storms of scattersho­t percussion, stabby riffs and fizzy, furious keyboard scribbles on tracks such as Lord Wind. It’s only after four or five listens that melodic strands start to fuse together, familiaris­e with each other, and you begin to really enjoy the ride.

Lyrically, it’s an even more impenetrab­le affair – indeed, when they rhyme ‘tangerine dancers’ with ‘mysteries not answers’, that seems to say it all – they’d rather beguile than be boring or trite, and it suits this continuous­ly shapeshift­ing, wrong-footing style of music perfectly.

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