Showing posts with label The Hallucinant Telepherique. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Hallucinant Telepherique. Show all posts

Thursday, March 17, 2022

Progressive Instrumental Vinyl Review: The Hallucinant Telepherique-Call of The Resonant Star

Release Date: April 1, 2022

Label:  Erratic Music

Website

That fantastic and versatile sibling team of Gino Montoya (Guitars) Sergio Montoya (Drums, Bass, Keyboards, Guitars) are back on the progressive music radar with their third embodiment of The Hallucinant Telepherique. I know that is quite a mouthful but a genius name for a group. The latest effort is titled Call of The Resonant Star. It keeps them on track for their sci-fi storylines and more esoteric subjects.

They always release a limited number of copies (500) of the recordings on vinyl. And it sounds incredible. You all knew I was going to say that, didn't you? Well, it is true; most music does sound better on vinyl. When it's all progressive instrumental, it is a party of assorted ear candy.

Side one starts with "No Third." It begins with a layer of keyboards that follow the pace and changes that the guitar offers. They go from fast and furious to quirky and complex. That is their template for this band, and it never fails to entertain. The keys are a nice touch and give some space and order to the otherwise extreme changes. It is a classic prog instrumental track and a great way to open the curtain to more.

The title track "Call of The Resonant Star" is the magnum opus clocking in at 12:02. What you hear is everything that they can produce in one track. A nice acoustic guitar starts with a gentle keyboard passage, and then they are blasting off the launching pad into a more aggressive-driven style. Jazz flavored guitar lines enter the mix with more keys and more muscular guitar work. I was reminded of Al DiMeola's electric phase (Electric Rendezvous is my favorite). A multitude of changes is the goal here and a different kind of segue into heavy bass and more of the jazz-prog keys. What an amazing slice of music!

"Spider" is a shorter track at 5 minutes, but in the realm of prog, that is the norm for one that is not extended, such as the previous track. It closes out side one with a light and airy atmosphere, some great bass, and some nice blended guitars. Keys are in the spotlight, and I couldn't help myself; Chick Corea came to mind more than once. The keys that drank too much energy drink imitates a spider on the move going in for the kill.

Side two opens with "The Unread Letter" (4:54). It sounds like a soundtrack to conflicting emotions reaching an apex. Then it all stops and changes course with the entrance of a bass line to drive it all along further. It is like a dream state of pensiveness, then back to a more energetic path of swirling emotions and all the color they hold and ever-changing, then to the finale of musical fireworks. It is instrumental genius from where I sit.

"Turn" offers some lovely Latin flavored picking to start some nice rhythms between several different musical passages of joy and excellent instrumentation. At times it is intense and complex to a lighter instrumental road with some of those melting synth sounds for that sci-fi effect. I could liken it to a classic sci-fi movie like the original The Day the Earth Stood Still. That came to mind and this music ignites those kinds of images in your mind.

"Penumbra" (4:17) has a very mellow start with the soft guitar sounding very Yes like. 70s prog but reinvented with some jazz-infused guitar to follow it up. That distinct synth with the prog-rock flavor adds more ingredients to the classic sound. Things change to the more aggressive side of the coin towards the end, with sharp guitar licks shredding the air you breathe and cascading to the finish line.

Relearn (3:38) closes the curtain on this magnificent display of musical prowess. It is under 4 minutes; can you imagine that? The drive-it-home bass line enters the mix, and some fast keys and guitars get hard at work. A very compact moving composition that is all organized to close out the proceedings.

Call of The Resonant Star
is a masterful collection of musical diversity that should not be missed.

Keith “MuzikMan” Hannaleck-Progressive Music Reviews Founder


March 15, 2022


Side One:
01. No Third (4:21)
02. Call Of The Resonant Star (12:02)
03. Spider (5:00)


Side Two:
04. The Unread Letter (4:54)
05. Turn (6:48)
06. Penumbra (4:17)
07. Relearn (3:38)

Friday, June 14, 2019

THE FINAL ON VINYL REVIEW: The Hallucinant Telepherique-Comes to Mind

The brothers Montoya are back with their sophomore release Comes To Mind. After the successful debut Absorbed By The Forest, which was a dynamic release, they are back stronger than ever with another prog instrumental gem. Once again, I get the vinyl platter to spin for the ultimate listening experience.

READ THE ENTIRE REVIEW NOW

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Monday, March 25, 2019

Progressive Rock LP Review: The Hallucinant Telepherique-Absorbed By The Forest

Release Date: January 4, 2015
Label: erRRatic Records

The Montoya Brothers, Sergio and Gino, are The  Hallucinant Telepherique. In other words, they are saying they are a hallucinate cable car or cableway. Their 2015 debut is titled Absorbed By The Forest, a nine-track instrumental progressive voyage. They are originally from Peru and reside in Texas.

What happened with the LP they sent me, well, it was absorbed by my music collection, it got lost in the shuffle as they say. At times this can happen in the world of a reviewer. 

I am so glad I found the LP and my apologies go out the brothers. The artwork is eye-catching and bizarre, actually perfect for a prog album. It is time the prog community started paying more attention to this music. This is one album that has flown under the wire, unfortunately.

Sergio is the main driving force of the band contributing guitar, bass, keyboards and vocals, an entire band worth of instruments so essentially a one-man-show.  Brother Gino played lead guitar on the track “Sanctuary.”  All the music with the exception of “Sanctuary” was written and produced Sergio. I would say that is a lot of talent to possess for one artist and then have the intestinal fortitude to record the first album without any help says a lot about the man. 

I really enjoyed Absorbed By The Forest quite a lot and I mean from beginning to end. There are no throwaway tracks on the album. Sergio works from strength to strength, which obviously is everything! I am always so impressed by that kind of drive and passion and you can hear it in the music.

The music ranges from keyboard driven rock to jazz-rock fusion influenced passages. The diversity of selection is the modus operandi here. Because the music is instrumental it has to be interesting consistently. Most popular prog music includes tracks with lyrics and long instrumental runs so I think there is enough here for most prog lovers to find interesting and entertaining. On their Facebook page, they say “Absorbed by the Forest is a collection of instrumental tracks that flow through dynamic moods echoing the sounds of classics prog giants like Camel, Pink Floyd, Genesis, and King Crimson.” Ok, I can go with that assessment as all three of those bands put out some very intense eclectic music over their careers. I would add that they do “echo” it rather than trying to duplicate or emulate it. They need to mature quite a bit more to reach that esteemed level.

Absorbed By The Forest may be 4 years old now but I think we all need to get caught up to this marvelous music and inspire the creator to get back into the studio to continue on. This a solid debut that deserves much more attention than it has received.

Keith “MuzikMan” Hannaleck-ProgRockMusicTalk Founder
March 25, 2019
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Review Provided By ProgRockMusicTalk
 
Side One
:

1. The Main Hall 5:51   
2. Sanctuary 7:45   
3. Inciter 6:22   
4. Unobserved, Pt. I 1:18     

   
Side Two:
 
5. Unobserved, Pt. II 3:35   
6. What You See as the End 3:20   
7. Pishtaku 5:57   
8. The Evil Clergyman 4:37   
9. Timing Is Nothing 4:24