Saturday, 25 April 2026

Post-Osanna band Uno with their one-off from 1974

 




UNO:

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!




Thursday, 23 April 2026

Barry Coates and the Hats: Because I love you, 1983, and Move Like a Dancer, 1989

 







I noticed Barry played guitars on the previous masterpiece prog-fusion album.  (I'd known him from before, thanks to the great Move like a Dancer fusion album.)  His own databased page is here.

In the 80s he played with the smooth fusion band called Barry Coates and the Hats, and they put out 2 albums in that decade, the 2nd a bit better than the first, privately pressed.  From that first 1983 one, the closer called At Last:



While from the follow up LP/CD Dancer, 1989, there are quite a few beautiful compositions, augmented by a bit of a new age feel which is not altogether unpleasant in this circumstance or environment.  Consider the crystal-clear acoustic guitar on Hover Craft:


Probably we can agree the usual standard simplistic new age chord progressions are missing here.

Some nice thoughts and really fine ideas in there though, worth hearing a few times.


Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Tom Baker in Magic Language, from 1981, strongly recommended [limited time FLAC

 



Here's another stunning find, at least as good as the recent Petit - Best of all Possible Worlds, but in a different style, this is more along the lines of classic prog-fusion like (US) Mosaic.

Hard to believe, again, these brilliant progressive LPs still exist out there, unknown, unheard, neglected.

Information here.  Little to no info on the man:

Engineer, arranger and bassist. Worked with gospel artists in Cincinnati, Ohio area.

To my amazement I saw keyboard duties are by Peter Wolf, who we've seen before here. (His progressive masterpiece from 1980 was called Tutti.) 

Arrangements, compositions, and vocals are all from Tom Baker though.

The opener to the album says it all, Alpha-Theta-Omega:


And this is followed by the equally stunning Rainbow to Rainbow:


The album closes out with a really really shockingly beautiful tender song with harmony vocals and highly intriguing harmonies plus dissonances, it's called Love that has been Lost and it kind of reminds me of the intensely original songwriting of Brandes Ward MacLean:


Note the dissonant harmony vocal chord of the ending.  Like, wow.

It seems insane to me that someone could be so unknown yet write this most amazingly creative, original and progressive music, then disappear again.  There is not one bit of trite, simplistic 'by-the-numbers' type composition in here at all.  Every track is great in its own way, like a beautiful, talented family.

A note at the end:

“The greatest and unceasing thanks is reserved always for the Savior.”

Thanks indeed!
And in turn, many thanks to the readers / followers / commenters who contribute these suggestions / finds, from the bottom of my heart.


Monday, 20 April 2026

Little known lost Italian band Luna, with ex-Osanna, from 1978 to 1981









Very sweet music, similar to ssw materials presented here in the past from Ullu, Ping Pong (but less progressive), Gino D'Eliso, etc. I was very happy to find this album I'd never heard before, since I have such a weakness for that soft diatonic seventies sound (think legendary bands America, Bread).  

Starting with precursor Osanna which everyone here knows, you can see how complicated the story got after their 4th album Landscape of Life (1974):

Unfortunately things didn't go well between the group's members and the band came to a split during the Landscape of Life recording sessions, producing a sparse album...  

Danilo Rustici and Elio D'Anna, with drummer Enzo Vallicelli, went to England to form Uno, while remaining members Lino Vairetti and Massimo Guarino gave a new life to their old band Città Frontale, this time with new musicians and recorded an album in 1975 called El Tor.

Things were not so good for both the newly formed bands and Osanna reunited in 1977 with new members Enzo Petrone (that had played with Lino Vairetti in I Volti di Pietra and later with Moby Dick) and Fabrizio D'Angelo, but their album Suddance is very far from their best days. After the last split Danilo Rustici formed Luna.

I must admit I never listened to that Suddance one out of fear of disappointment.  So after that I gave up on the whole lot of them, which I shouldn't have.  Danilo Rustici was their guitarist, who died during covid sadly, and he founded Luna with 3 other guys not related to the others mentioned earlier.  The genre described is space rock, prog rock, but there is little of either, just a smidgen of progressiveness and mostly sweet late seventies uptempo pop sounds with the lush harmony vocals, deep arrangements, naive lyrics, etc.  Consider this one which is so hummable I just wanted to swirl around my dining room to my wife's shocked amusement, called Lou Jean:



The same band which was called Tunnel earlier in 1978 released a single, while Luna made 2 in the roughly the same time period.  All of these I included in the package for the band down below, they're worth hearing too though there is quite of disco that crept in for these.

Tunnel Lights has a lovely chorus:



Siliah Era Diversa from 1977:



Friday, 17 April 2026

David Spinozza: ST 1978 and Here's That Rainy Day, 1983

 



Discogged here.
American guitarist and producer, born August 8, 1949 in Port Chester, New York.

Basically this is late 70s American fusion just as you'd expect it to be. Smooth, light, and a little bit progressive.  The Prelude to Ballerina is a wonderfully composed orchestral suite:


The standout from a fusion standpoint is vibraphonist Mike Mainieri's Edge of the Sword, which I hadn't heard before despite exhaustively (I thought) going through all his stuff once, with Bernhardt, and also with Steps and Steps Ahead, the furious riff sounds like it should've appeared on Return to Forever's Romantic Warrior masterpiece:



Next LP Here's That Rainy Day moves further into the smooth fusion direction, along with surprisingly cover versions, as if he ran out of compositions to showcase, from that one,