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Jane Getter Premonition

Division World

Review by Gary Hill

I enjoy Jane Getter's guitar playing and her music. I previously reviewed one of her albums, and it really worked well. This disc is great, too, but I don't think it's as strong as that one was. Like that album, it's the instrumental stuff that really shines. Unlike that one, this focuses on tracks with vocals. I think the music tends to turn a little more generic in order to achieve that. It's not that the vocals are bad. It's just that the songwriting and instrumental work has to take a back seat to accommodate them.

All that said, the blend of hard rock with fusion and prog here works really well. It's just when you compare it to her earlier work that it feels a little deficient. She just set the bar so high. Notable musicians on this disc, other than Getter include Randy McStine and Alex Skolnick

This review is available in book (paperback and hardcover) form in Music Street Journal: 2024  Volume 3 More information and purchase links can be found at: garyhillauthor.com/Music-Street-Journal-2024.

Track by Track Review
Division World
An exploratory bass dominated arrangement gets us going here. The track builds out from there to a dramatic arrangement packed with style and charm. This has some amazing shifts and turns. It drives along with style and there are some killer instrumental passages.
Dissipate

Harder rocking and edgy, this has some scorching hot guitar soloing. It leans toward technical metal at times, but there are also fusion vibes and plenty of prog. As strong as the opener was, this really elevates things. It's adventurous and so strong.

The Spark
I like the drama at play on this track. The number is a little less intense than the first two numbers, focusing more on a melodic arrangement that combines hard rock, prog and fusion. It's another killer track.
Compass

The bass groove on the rocking introduction here is so cool. This number makes great use of the contrast between mellower and more rocking stuff. It's a smoking hot number with plenty of fusion at play. This instrumental piece gets really fierce with some scorching guitar soloing later. That section has a driving, nearly metal, prog jam at its core.

End The Blame

I really dig the synthesizer on the mellower opening of this track. The number works out to more of a melodic prog groove as it continues. This becomes quite a ride with a steadily growing and evolving arrangement at its core. It's a killer track that works so well.

Layers
Another intriguing prog arrangement is at the heart of this thing .It's got plenty of fusion in the mix. It's also built on some mainstream rock.
Devolution

I really like the melodic building on this track. This has a somewhat mellower vibe, and it works well. That said, it explodes out into some powerhouse nearly metal jamming for some scorching guitar soloing later.

Another Way
I love the edgy, dark groove on this song. It's proggy, but in a decidedly modern and moody way. The guitar solo on this is a bit more in a blues rocking vein at times, but it also gets experimental and driving.
Mixed Up

There is something about this track that just really speaks to me. It's a killer number that works so well. It has some great guitar work, too.

Rewind Again
More on the mellow side, this track works really well. It has a lot of magic and style built into it. It gets intense with a killer instrumental section later, though.
Waiting for the Light

This mellower number features classical strings and some intriguing melodies. The number is definitely the most pedestrian thing here. Still, this song works reasonably well to ground the album as a closer, but I wonder if something a little more typical for the album might have worked better in this slot. I'd also say that this is the weakest track on the whole disc, so that makes the position even more of a mistake to me.

 
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