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Intensity Ghost
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Barnes and Noble
Intensity Ghost
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
Intensity Ghost
Current price: $15.99
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Guitarist
assembled a studio to record the four-part
suite, issued on
in 2013. That offering is a sprawling meditation on the evolution of the rock & roll electric guitar from the psychedelia of the
and the spiraling blues-rock of the
to the rhythmic, interlocking, melodic grooves of
and the multi-tonal experiments of
and
. After its release and a tour, the individuals felt so good about it they decided to form a band. Bassist
and keyboardist
return, with new drummer
and additional guitarist
.
is not part two of
. Instead, it's comprised of five focused, more economical songs that collectively cover plenty of ground. Who would have thought there was room left to explore the basic blues boogie form in the 21st century? Check the pyrotechnic call-and-response slide guitars, swirling keyboards, and fat bassline in "Yellow Square" for an answer. "The Ballad of Freer Hollow" employs the ringing twin tonalities of
's live two-guitar attack as a way of extracting melodic minutiae from crescendo-driven rock; the end result is nearly cinematic in scope. The swelling organs, drop snares, and droning bassline offer not only rhythmic support but color, dimension, and breadth. "I Ain't Waiting," the briefest cut here, commences from a skeletal root of reverb-laden modal query into a fully lyric midtempo ballad with wide-open emotional expression. Its intricate bassline engages the repetitive vamp of cascading six-strings in a wonderful dialogue. "Intensity Ghost" begins as a driving, clattering, vamping, hard rock strut. It unfolds with lusher yet knottier breaks, and every one of his influences -- among them
-- can be heard before erupting into a
-esque glam jam. Closer "Paris Song" is constructed out of ringing harmonics, organ drones, whole-tone single notes, and washed-out open chords. They open onto a silvery, liquid, textural meditation on
's "1983...A Merman I Should Turn to Be" and the open-ended questions in the heart of the
's "Dark Star." The rumbling tom-toms provide the only drama until the closing minute, when blissed-out guitar and organ chords commingle.
is more a companion to
than a continuation. It gels because it's the sound of a band playing to its collective strength. The music focuses so intently on its inspirations, it creates something new and powerful from them. ~ Thom Jurek