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High Treason
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High Treason
Current price: $16.99
Barnes and Noble
High Treason
Current price: $16.99
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Despite the lip-service paid to
and
-- particularly the playing of legends such as
-- by the late-'60s countercultural scene, few of its
bands actually attempted to translate the interest into music. The sole album from
, however, was steeped in the genre, thanks in large part to leader and schooled keyboard whiz (check the
-like Baroque progressions of
)
.
marries extensive
interplay with a darkly atmospheric type of
that took its cues, right down to the shared coed vocals, from
. The music ultimately isn't as accomplished as anything in that band's catalog, but it is for want of distinctive songwriting, not because
lacked the chops or ideas to compete with the top-flight artists of the day.
has musicianship to spare, a profusion of adventuresome moments. But at just six numbers, it is very much an album that puts musical skills before songs. Vocalists
sound much more at ease on the funky
of
the finest actual song on the album, than they do on the
material (the embarrassing scat interpretation of
for instance).
, in particular, tends to over-sing at times, presumably in an effort to sound more like
. The instrumentalists suffer no such problem. On the final two cuts,
the band delves all the way into straight
during extended instrumental passages with electric results. But both also highlight the problematic nature of the album. As wonderful as the music can be -- and each song has scintillating flashes -- there simply is nothing to take away except the memory of the outstanding playing. ~ Stanton Swihart