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Pilot - Second Flight (1975).
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The New Hall of the Wendigo :: Arts and Entertainment :: StevieBachyButtonBaby's World of Music :: The Waiting Room of Doom
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Re: Pilot - Second Flight (1975).
Ambitious this.
Partially, mostly successful.
Partially, mostly successful.
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Re: Pilot - Second Flight (1975).
It is over.
That was an album that, apart from the famous track, never got going. Everything was in order, technically, but it failed to engage the listener.
Now to look back at the thread and see what everybody else made of it.
That was an album that, apart from the famous track, never got going. Everything was in order, technically, but it failed to engage the listener.
Now to look back at the thread and see what everybody else made of it.
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Re: Pilot - Second Flight (1975).
Well, that wasn't bad.
Despite my various reservations - a fair few in truth - it was a strongly coherent album, with an equally strong sense of post-Beatles 'identity' that was distinct and musically/thematically different from so many other British '70 rock/pop bands (ELO for example).
Of course they fall well short well short of that unique and deft ELO/Jeff Lynne brilliance and accompanying production ambition, pomposity and sheer gall and the songs chop and change melodically as the singer and band seem to be duelling fruitlessly back and forth, trying to wrest the song into their respective control(s), meaning the songs regularly lose their focus and impetus, slipping back into a kind of melodic entropy as a result.
The songs are probably, inevitably dissipating into a universe constantly, inexorably moving apart on an infinite level into a vapid blackness as we speak.
As are these words.
And the machine and person used to type them.
Horrible thought, innit.
Still...
Despite my various reservations - a fair few in truth - it was a strongly coherent album, with an equally strong sense of post-Beatles 'identity' that was distinct and musically/thematically different from so many other British '70 rock/pop bands (ELO for example).
Of course they fall well short well short of that unique and deft ELO/Jeff Lynne brilliance and accompanying production ambition, pomposity and sheer gall and the songs chop and change melodically as the singer and band seem to be duelling fruitlessly back and forth, trying to wrest the song into their respective control(s), meaning the songs regularly lose their focus and impetus, slipping back into a kind of melodic entropy as a result.
The songs are probably, inevitably dissipating into a universe constantly, inexorably moving apart on an infinite level into a vapid blackness as we speak.
As are these words.
And the machine and person used to type them.
Horrible thought, innit.
Still...
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Disprove the return of a potato (5)
Nightjar- Posts : 116728
Karma : 960
Join date : 2018-05-05
Re: Pilot - Second Flight (1975).
Three Wendi-b*mholes.
_________________
Disprove the return of a potato (5)
Nightjar- Posts : 116728
Karma : 960
Join date : 2018-05-05
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The New Hall of the Wendigo :: Arts and Entertainment :: StevieBachyButtonBaby's World of Music :: The Waiting Room of Doom
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