Friday 28 November 2014

Gong - I See You, album review

Resonating

Forty years into their musical journey, and Gong is still resonating adventure and impact. Core remaining member Daevid Allen is at 75/76 still leading the line with a psychedelic and jazz baton that flourishes across twelve excellent tracks. It is overall quite melodic although also necessarily loud here and there, and the progrock orchestrations remind often of King Crimson, down to the Fripp-esque guitar work on the stand-out song The Eternal Wheel Spins. There is a spoken word with background jazz saxophone interlude in The Revolution, name-checking and echoing Gill Scott-Heron, reminding us that political preoccupations have not withered over time either: I presume the raucous Occupy – and its hint of VDGG – invokes the demonstrations against global greed. This is a furious track, Ian East ‘Wind’ blowing up a horn-storm.The musical whimsey for which Gong is historically well known [and by those more closely following over that time than me] is supplied on ninth track Pixielation and is a bright and breezy example.

As I begin to think about the best albums of 2014, I'm sure this is going to be near the top of the list.


2 comments:

  1. Good article. The author gives facts without pushing opinions, or falling victim of unresolved first impression and I agree this release is quite good. Estimated 2000 pressings of vinyl LP were not yet exhausted in April 2015, as one shipped to my U.S. address. Here is something funny: The unique packaging of the CD (which is a nice item) will not fit into a standard CD case. Very cool

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    1. Thanks for taking the time to stop by and leave comments too - appreciated.

      Sad about Allen's subsequent passing.

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