Reviews:
Quadra comprise four of the musicians who appeared on the
'Hampshire Jam 'Jam' 2006' album featured elsewhere in this
magazine. They are Brendan Pollard and friends he invited to
his studio: Steve Humphries, John Sherwood and Jez Creek. Deep
reverberating drones and a bass throb provide a very
atmospheric introduction for 'Convergence'. Little melodies
shimmer over the top accompanied by soothing mellotron. A
rapid sequence nestles perfectly amongst the other
instrumentation. A second comes to join it and we are soon
motoring along in energetic, head nodding, fashion. In the
eleventh minute things wind down to soft tron. A little melody
shines above it all, echoed by the mellotron. Soft meandering
tinkling piano adds to the gentle atmos still further. The
track then seems to spend the next few minutes searching for
direction. A sequence can be heard low in the mix but that is
where it stays whilst various lead flourishes come and go but
without really making their mark. In the twenty first minute a
more substantial sequence surges forward, mutating this way
and that only to subside back to tron and piano a couple of
minutes later.
We then get a section of
pleasant atmospherics which gradually becomes more metallicly
percussive and sparse sounding. Images of dank rat infested
dungeons come to mind. A heartbeat sound can be heard, soft
drones lightening the mood which becomes brighter still as
wordless vocal pads give an ethereal presence. The heartbeat
fades away and is replaced by a tinkling sequence, slow rhythm
then more sequences as things surge forward nicely once more.
In my opinion this track was good for two thirds of its over
forty minute duration, it just had a bit of a dodgy middle
section where things became a little aimless. Initially 'Pastorale'
is wonderfully soothing, with gentle tron and flutey synth
combining beautifully. A tinkling sequence emerges in the
second minute, then a rhythm starts up skipping along nicely.
Flute sounds are particularly effective but the other leads
aren't bad either. Sequences become more prominent as things
get increasingly energetic. 'Starbirth' acts as something of a
fest for mellotron and string pads. A faint beat low in the
mix gives a hint of structure rather than any driving force,
which in the context of the track is a good thing but I
thought the track lost its way for the last three minutes as
layers of percussion etc were added that weren't really
necessary and only resulted in the track losing its focus.
'Heritage' starts in a similar tranquil way to the previous
track, dreamy vocal samples adding a little detail whilst a
slow strangely comforting throb can just be heard low in the
mix. A gorgeous way to finish the first disc.
The second CD starts with
'Emergence'. The first few minute or so are a little like
'Epsilon in Malaysian Pale' but then we get lots of twittering
effects. A slow bass sequence starts up and I found my head
gently nodding to it. We descend to electronic twitters once
more in the eighth minute. Whining drones go up and down the
sonic spectrum like an alien craft swooping high into the air
then plunging Earthward. In the thirteenth minute a brace of
sequences pick up the pace. They bounce off each other nicely,
various 'melodies' coming and going over the ever-present tron.
The sequences mutate beautifully but the lead lines were maybe
a little over done. This stage of the track finishes at about
the twenty-minute mark. Mournful plucked strings lead to a
slow sequence (backed by more mellotron of course) then
restrained drums and yet another sequence. Things quickly
build to quite a head of steam before just as suddenly
subsiding, allowing the musicians to regroup for the next
sequencer based section. The swirling pulsations work well
enough but the leads seemed a bit directionless to me. 'Astral
Plane' is a slow dreamy track, the atmospherics working
wonderfully along with a subtle bass line. From around the
six-minute mark the pulsations become more prominent and
things chug along very nicely.
'Callisto' is a lovely track
featuring soft tones over fizzling pads. There's something
rather melancholy, even spooky about it all. 'Take-Off'
creates tension with the use of choral pads. The sequences
slowly start to build developing into a strange sort of manic
groove. It's like listening to some bizarre satanic ceremony!
This was a rather frustrating release to review as if the best
bits had been edited down to a single CD it would have sounded
superb but to my ears too much material was left in where they
were experimenting in finding the right combinations. If they
had just included the bits where they were really tuned into
each other it would have worked much better. However, at the
time of writing this, it is retailing at a single CD price so
ain't bad value.
Review by Dave Law of Synthmusicdirect
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