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TRIAL&IN ART ...Fairy Tales Full Album....

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TRIAL&IN ART ...Fairy Tales Full Album....oblik:
Ploča, LP, Album
zemlja: Njemačka
oslobođen: 1983
žanr: Jazz, Rock, Folk, World, & Country
stil: Prog Stijena.......Pôpis pjesama.............A1 Rashmarapandan 5:41
A2 Šaputave livade 4:00
A3 Drop In 3:08
A4 Krastavac-Allee 4:44
B1 Aufruhr Im Schlaraffenland 4:06
B2 Pepeljuga 3:35
B3 Uzmite de-light 6:03
B4 Wald 4:47
.............Flauta – Martin Schluchtmann
Gitara – Rudiger Hasse......."Fairy tales" is the name of this album - and there's something about it. At the trial in art were guitarist Rüdiger Hasse and flutist Martin Schluchtmann (today apparently called Buchinger, if I investigated it correctly). The two were a duo who, in the mid-1980s dominated by a synthetic alliance, had the courage to release an album of instrumental, acoustic prog. Who don't beat their hands over the head.

And of course, no one wanted to hear it at the time. The two released their only album "Fairy Tales" privately - probably no record label wanted anything to do with "so stuff." Consequently, Trial In Art disappeared from the scene afterwards, so completely that even the Discogs don't know where they are today.

And this is bad in almost every way. First, for Hasse and Schluchtmann, who surely wish they had had more success with their music and - not only at the time - they should be much better known. Second, for all the record companies that haven't released this album - and if I counted correctly, that's all. That doesn't make a good impression. And third, for those of us who don't know and/or have this album. We're missing something.

I recently reviewed the beautiful/unknown folk prog album "Winterserenade" by Hummingbirds, also an internal production that should be much more famous. If you were curious and liked this album, you might also be interested in Trial In Art: Both's "Fairy Tales" going in the same direction. "Fairy tales" offer rarely cast, acoustic prog, which is not necessarily ethereal-atmospheric. Rüdiger Hasse really reaches through, or into the wires, and from flutist Martin Schluchtmann we get a real kick. Anyone who imagines this music electrified will probably immediately think of Jethro Tull - so their fans are warmly invited to listen to "Fairy Tales." There's a rock in there!

And yet, this music is not inappropriately titled with the word "Fairy tales". Hasse and Schluchtmann make music far enough outside the conventions of folk or rock music that you can hear the fairy tale of this music throughout. "Fairy tales" is beautiful - yes, you can even say, a beautiful album. It's wonderful how Martin Schluchtmann spins his flute lines around Rüdiger Hasse's guitar primer, how the two play two-part melodies, and in between they really swing often enough.

"Fairy-Tales" is a great album, which at least now on CD should be republished by the label with prog honor in the flesh. The audience would have it, I'm sure.ladislav&zivanovic.............