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Posts tagged Neuschwanstein
Neuschwanstein – Battlement (1978) (@256)
20 Oct 2009
(Review from progarchives.com, progressiveworld.net)
From 1974 to 1978 the band would make a name for themselves in the Saarland region of Germany and France, opening many shows for the likes of Novalis and Lucifer’s Friend. By 1978 the band booked themselves into Scorpions producer Dieter Dierks studio, one of the finest in Germany to record the album which would become “Battlement”.
“Battlement” is a rather well-known album among progressive fans due to its striking similarities with early Genesis and the sublime spirit of Camel (heavy doses of wondrous flute). Singer Frederic Joos is an absolute dead-ringer for Peter Gabriel. In fact, most of the album sounds like music Genesis could have released in the late 70s if Peter Gabriel and Steve Hackett both had stayed in the band. Compared to early Genesis, Neuschwanstein’s instrumentation and recording capabilities were considerably higher, yet this German band got rather close to writing music that was equally as good as those early Genesis classics.
The seven very melodic and harmonic compositions on the album feature a warm sound, pleasant shifting moods, some sensational breaks and lush keyboards (piano, string-ensemble, Mellotron, Fender Rhodes electric piano, synthesizers and organ), beautiful flute, sensitive electric guitar, twanging acoustic guitar, a decent rhythm-section and good English vocals (including a charming German accent).
Line-up:
- Frederic Joos / vocals, acoustic guitars
- Thomas Neuroth / keyboards
- Klaus Mayer / flutes, synthesizers
- Roger Weiler / guitars
- Rainer Zimmer / bass, vocals
- Hans-Peter Schwarz / drums
Track List:
01. Loafer Jack – 4:48
02. Ice With Dwale – 6:26
03. Intruders And The Punishment – 7:39
04. Beyond The Bugle – 7:36
05. Battlement – 7:12
06. Midsummer Day (Bonus) – 7:45
07. Zartlicher Abschied – 6:16
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Neuschwanstein – Alice In Wonderland (1974) (@256)
19 Oct 2009
(Review from progarchives.com, progressiveworld.net)
Neuschwanstein was a German band, the embryonic form of the band originally making their mark in a musical competition in Saarbrucken. The band won the competition with a progressive rock adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s Alice In Wonderland in 1974.
The opener is literally an intro that comprises brief atmospheres based on floating piano washes and eerie cymbals, until the instrumentation settles in for ‘The Gate to Wonderland’, lyrically structured across a prominent presence of bucolic ambiences provided by the playful flute lines and the elegant interventions on synth (orchestration and solo). It is mostly a second intro, and a “third intro” arrives with the slightly more mysterious ‘Pond of Tears’, which is where the synth layers become more relevant, and also there is a more noticeable presence of the guitar phrases alongside the ever haunting flute lines. The melodic display is definitely more ambitious than on the preceding track, but it still feels like a sequence of amalgamated snippets than a track with a power of its own.
Track 4 is the first piece in this concept that benefits from a proper development – it starts very lyrical, like a symphonic journey with heavily pastoral accents, but soon the piece reveals a colorful imagery of sound that alternates density and lightheartedness in an ultimately symphonic fashion. Influences from Camel, Novalis, Eloy and Focus’ introspective side seem to be very transparent here, with some touches of early 70s Jethro Tull. Regarding the sense of magic delivered through the global instrumentation, you can also tell that there are also coincidences with what Happy the Man were doing at the time on the other side of the Atlantic for their “Death’s Crown” project – it is no wonder, since this album’s tracklist and that Happy the Man project were both conceived as musical bases for visuals and theatrical deliveries.
‘Five O’Clock-Tea’ is segued to the last notes of the preceding track’s enthusiastic closing portion, bringing back a ceremonious note that works really well due to the clever architecture that ordains the various moods and motifs. This is the sort of grandeur that I wished earlier for tracks 2 and 3 – at this point, the musical ideas are becoming gradually more robust. After a brief sung section, the track shifts toward a sense of sheer, dramatic intensity without losing its melodic drive. The last section is a joyful imitation of cabaret-oriented jazz, which makes an efficient contrast against the solemn note that signals the start of the following track ‘The Marching of the Queen – Palace of Wonderland’. The band’s ability to create beautifully crafted melodic developments of motifs and the easily flowing transitions comes to its full fruition on this one – even though you won’t find as many dramatic shifts than on previous tracks, this one never gets boring or monotonous. The portions where the band gets to Celtic and Renaissance territories, the sonic beauty becomes irresistibly sublime.
‘The Court of the Animals’ starts with the mandatory narration over a piano sequence (electric and grand, simultaneously): some more amazingly beautiful melodies and textures get in, and then some exciting interludes bring warm Tullian airs. The closer ‘Alice’s Return’ wraps up the concept with a reprised motif.
Line-up:
- Thomas Neuroth / keyboards
- Klaus Mayer / flute, synthesizer
- Roger Weiler / guitars
- Frederic Joos / lead vocals, acoustic guitar
- Rainer Zimmer / bass, vocal
- Hans-Peter Schwarz / drums
- Hermann Rarebell / drums
Track List:
01. White Rabbit – 1:17
02. Gate to Wonderland – 2:13
03. Pond of Tears – 2:45
04. Old Father’s Song – 8:31
05. Five-O’Clock-Tea – 6:49
06. Palace of Wonderland – 12:05
07. The Court of the Animals – 5:01
08. Alice’s Return – 2:05
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