supported by 7 fans who also own “Foucault's Pendulum (3rd movement)”
well what can I say. The rhythm section on this live performance is the best playing since I saw Yes play with Bruford and Squire in the early 70s.
I dont know whether Dave gregory is in the band for this performance but the songs are his legacy if hes not.
Favourite track is Hedgerow mainly due to the wonderful violin solo. 9 out of 10 for me. digger60
supported by 6 fans who also own “Foucault's Pendulum (3rd movement)”
The album takes off nicely with David Longdon's "The Strangest Times", but then gets into immediate free fall and deeply underwater for the next few tracks, quite unexpectedly. Fortunately, it recovers with Nick D'Virgilio's "Apollo" (hey, this guy CAN write good music, although he hides this ability most of the time) and the remaining three tracks, one of which is another Longdon masterpiece. So in the end the final impression is somewhat in the positive range. Sven B. Schreiber (sbs)
Throwing mathcore, emo, and ambient into the mix, Estonia's Kaschalot push progressive rock's multitasking approach to its limits. Bandcamp New & Notable Mar 10, 2021
Anyone homesick for the classic sound of ’90s math rock will fall in love with the jagged guitars & tricky tempos on “LLC.” Bandcamp New & Notable Feb 6, 2023
supported by 6 fans who also own “Foucault's Pendulum (3rd movement)”
While 'You Are Alone' may be the track that initially snagged me, 'If Tomorrow Never comes' is the perfect slice of English Melancholia that will keep me around as a fan.
Perfect album fellas. I'm glad I found you! Charlie Silvestri