Kompendium
Beneath the Waves
Review by Alison Reijman
Kompendium is a huge musical project masterminded by Rob Reed, main-man of the very classy British prog band Magenta. Reed’s musical dream has been to create an album on the scale of something like Jeff Wayne’s Music Version of War of the Worlds with the prog sensibilities of someone like his hero Mike Oldfield. Then, when this was all in place, engineer and mix it in such a way that it is best heard on headphones in a darkened room.
Just a quick word needs to be said first about the beautiful album cover and accompanying which has been designed by the aforementioned War of the Worlds artist Geoff Taylor, who this time has evoked the album’s theme, a story about love, loss and redemption. The booklet also highlights the stellar cast of musicians which Reed has drawn together, not just from prog but also from the classical worlds. They include Steve Hackett, Nick Beggs, Nick Barrett (Pendragon), John Mitchell and Francis Dunnery (It Bites), Troy Donockley (Iona), Jakko Jakszyk and Mel Collins (King Crimson), Gavin Harrison (Porcupine Tree) and B J Cole. Helping with the string arrangements is Dave Stewart, best known for his work with bands such as Egg and Hatfield and the North. The masterstroke here was to bring in Steve Balsamo, who once played the title role in Jesus Christ Superstar, as the male lead and teaming him with Angharad Brinn, a Welsh schoolteacher, who has a voice of stunning purity. Together, they cast their musical spells over a collection of twelve songs, which fuse prog, folk, classic rock, Celtic and classical with great intricacy and magic.
Beneath the Waves is a terrific achievement and very much a labour of love for Reed. The beauty of this album is that it has the potential to be heard and enjoyed by those outside the prog community.
This review is available in book format (hardcover and paperback) in Music Street Journal: 2013 Volume 1 at lulu.com/strangesound.
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