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[prog-rock] (2025) Spock's Beard - The Archaeoptimist [FLAC] [Dar...
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Category:Music Total size: 418.10 MB Added: 2 months ago (2026-01-10 15:08:01)
Share ratio:12 seeders, 0 leechers Info Hash:BEC84500D7972FE5F5CE5B6661C9D7BD9A9619B5 Last updated: 11 hours ago (2026-03-14 23:13:59)
⭐ 7.6/10 (6 votes)
Prog Rock Britannia
Jan 02, 2009 • 1h 29m • Documentary, Music, TV Movie
Overview
Overview of Prog Rock history in the UK: Documentary about progressive music and the generation of bands that were involved, from the international success stories of Yes, Genesis, ELP, King Crimson and Jethro Tull to the trials and tribulations of lesser-known bands such as Caravan and Egg.
Director: Chris Rodley
Cast: Nigel Planer, Robert Wyatt, Mike Oldfield, Pete Sinfield, Rick Wakeman
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Description:
Spock’s Beard – The Archaeoptimist (2025)
Review:
The opening track ‘Invisible’ begins with a dramatic 25-second slice of a cappella, as a cavalcade of voices croon ‘hello out there, can you see me… I hope it’s not right, but I feel that I might be turning invisible’. Cheekily, it’s not actually a taster of what’s to come, although Spock’s Beard will do it again with even more vocal pyrotechnics, on ‘Afourthoughts’. As we ought to know after 33 years and, now, 14 albums, it’s hard to predict what they’re going to do in the next minute, let alone over a whole album. Some of the basics remain on their first album since 2018’s relatively tentative Noise Floor. The Californians are still as complex as Yes – Going for the One era mostly, oddly enough – and they scatter harmonies like Beach Boys-sponsored confetti, all while sounding as crisp as a Walkers ready salted. And if you want prog you’ve got it, mostly on the epic title track, their first song to break the 20-minute barrier since 2000’s The Great Nothing. It begins with guitar pyrotechnics, takes a stentorian turn or seven and dips into AOR. And the remaining 17 minutes are just as intriguing. Yet, there are new worlds to conquer. Spock’s Beard have never sounded quite so urgent, quite so in your face and (somehow) quite as up to date, whether it’s the sizzling Dream Theater-esque guitars of St. Jerome In The Wilderness or the moment Electric Monk brings out their inner REO Speedwagon. More than anything though, as founder member and guitarist Alan Morse’s influence wanes, that of keyboardist Ryo Okumoto waxes. For all that it’s a jamboree of sounds and styles, more than anything The Archaeoptimist is a keyboards album. Okumoto introduces Next Step with a bravura solo display of pure piano, but he’s across almost every track, mostly offering walls of synthesiser sheen somewhere between caped keyboard crusader Rick Wakeman, Tears For Fears and, especially on Invisible after that red herring opening, Nice-period Keith Emerson. Like the best modern prog rock, The Archaeoptimist reveals more and more at every new sitting. And if there were to be a takeaway from this impressive barrel of invention, it’s that complexity need not be inaccessible. After all those albums, all those decades and a Stakhanovite touring schedule, Spock’s Beard ought to know what they’re doing. The joy is that they really do. — loudersound.com
Track List:
01-Invisible
02-Electric Monk
03-Afourthoughts
04-St. Jerome in The Wilderness
05-The Archaeoptimist
06-Next Step
Media Report:
Genre: prog-rock
Origin: Los Angeles, California, USA
Format: FLAC
Format/Info: Free Lossless Audio Codec
Bit rate mode: Variable
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 44.1 KHz
Bit depth: 16 bits
Compression mode: Lossless
Writing library: libFLAC 1.3.0 (UTC 2013-05-26)
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