Plini - Impulse Voices (2020)Release ID: 24591
Guitar wizard from Australia Plini is back at it again with another beautiful prog-rock/metal journey for you to have a break from the grim reality of the virus. Impulse Voices has light spirit drifting in and out of heavy grounds and emotion. Any instrumental composition can be used for either imagination or meditation, but Plini can have music teleport between the two. Though it's not exactly background music, yet can stun your progressive metal heart!
He has proven himself a master before; take Handmade Cities and Sunhead for example, prolific experiences to revisit every now and then. Impulse Voices continues those experiences while enchanted with new texture ideas. You can immerse yourself in an unpredictable blend of ambient and heavy, all in playfully creative fashion.
Opening the album is "I’ll Tell You Someday" where masterful guitar melody has pleasant repetition. It's the album's first single, and the pace can shroud listeners in a warm embrace. "Papelillo" takes on lighter breeze while in a hefty balance. "Perfume" has strong dark electronics that would fit well on Stranger Things. While the rest of the album stays organic, that track's the most modern/electronic of the bunch.
"Last Call" definitely proves Plini's love for the guitar music of Joe Satriani and Eric Johnson in this jazzy track. Now don't try to calm yourself down too much as change is inevitable. There's nice cloudy synth for Dave Mackay who has recently joined Cynic. Another heavy highlight is the groove-filled title track. The highly significant "Pan" is the absolute pinnacle of the album. This is one of the most incredible songs I've heard, with a bad-a** mix of guitar heaviness and saxophone jazz. The last two minutes give me crying chills and the urge to become a symphony conductor. F***ing amazing, beyond good! The last minute has superb Dream Theater-like soloing.
Then there's the ballad-like track "Ona / 1154" that is practically another Joe Satriani tribute with Peanuts-like piano while standing by Plini's usual sound. There's never any rush, just a smooth journey. Finale "The Glass Bead Game" is a more impressive journey, his longest track at exactly 9 minutes! A gentle mix of guitar, harp, and piano guide you to your home run, much better than the previous album's ending.
Plini continues his emotional music progression with Impulse Voices. He sure knows how to think of inspiration when it strikes and allows him to create. The album has flavorful textures of life and this progressive voyager continues his wild unconventional path. Doesn't get any more beautiful than this. Over and out!
Favorites: "I’ll Tell You Someday", "Impulse Voices", "Pan", "The Glass Bead Game"
Release info
Genres
Progressive Metal |
Sub-Genres
Progressive Metal (conventional) Voted For: 1 | Against: 0 |