Sunday, 3 May 2026
This is Boston Not LA, 1979 [protopunk] [FLACs]
Friday, 1 May 2026
Summers - Fripp 3 [I Advance Masked 1982, Bewitched 1984, Mother Hold the Candle Steady unreleased] FLAC limited time only
I was astonished to see that Andy Summers (The Police) had played together with the great Fripp, and for three releases no less. These are unabashedly progressive instrumental music too, which is what you'd expect with the involvement of the latter, who was totally uncompromising in his career. And this was in the early 1980s-- the era of Duran Duran, remember! I am not sure MTV ever played prog rock in those days. Maybe there was a program at 3 AM? I doubt it. I am also unsure as to whether he made more progressive or fusion, because the connection with Police is a bit of a dissuader. Having said that I think these 3 all are worth hearing, with the third one being unreleased material derived from the same time period. Everywhere there is the Frippian dissonant angular riffing.
Brainstorm, from Mother etc. gives you an idea:
Then I listened to this compilation of material just from Andy, which is new agey but pleasantly progressive, inventive, and interesting. For ex., A Piece of Time from the Windham Retrospective:
Wednesday, 29 April 2026
First from Last Exit... 1975 [FLAC limited time only]
Monday, 27 April 2026
Akropolis - Half a million hours symphony, 1979
Saturday, 25 April 2026
Post-Osanna band Uno with their one-off from 1974
Formed from the ashes of Osanna when the band split in 1974 by Elio D'Anna and Danilo Rustici along with drummer Enzo Vallicelli (from Hellza Poppin, who had played with Osage Tribe and Claudio Rocchi), Uno was a much-hyped band that went to England to record their first and only album with help from lyricist N.J.Sedwick and singer Liza Strike (of The dark side of the moon fame).
The album is not far from late Osanna style (Landscape of life-era), with four English-sung tracks and three in Italian, with songs like I cani e la volpe in evidence, but didn't reach the success the band hoped.
An English sung version of the album was released abroad, with a nice surreal cover designed by Hipgnosis (again a link with Pink Floyd), but didn't attract much interest.
The three-piece band worked well in studio but couldn't get satisfying results when playing live, so the help from Danilo Rustici's brother Corrado Rustici (from Cervello) on guitar and bass was requested for live appearances. From this expanded line-up came the inspiration for a new band, called Nova.
Enzo Vallicelli has kept playing (and still does it now, under his surname of Vince Vallicelli) as an appreciated blues drummer.
Hopefully everyone is familiar with ultrahigh-energy Italian Mahavishnu-like fusion band Nova too, which is just brilliant, especially 1975's Blink but also 1977's Wings of Love.
Interesting they mention Dark Side of the Moon, because I always though Goodbye Friend is a little bit too much of a homage or less gratuitously a copycat of The Great Gig in the Sky:
The most progressive track is 11 minutes long and called Uno Nel Tutti, it doesn't rise to the level of Il Baricentro or Banco or Gramigna, but it's still great, reminds me a lot of famed French proggers Pulsar, with the strong aforementioned Pink Floyd spacey influence:
Amazing cover graphics too!









