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Carvin Guitars For over 60 years, Carvin has been building high-quality guitars, basses, amps and audio gear for pro and hobbyist musicians alike.
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"The Moon Is Falling" Review Featured In Aural Innovations, September, 2003
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Joel Hoekstra
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Review of "The Moon Is Falling"
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By: Jerry Kranitz
oel Hoekstra is back and his band once again includes the winning rhythm section of
Virgil Donati on drums and Ric Fierabracci on bass, and we also have Chris Grove on
keyboards. The band come roaring out of the starting gate with the title track,
which is a Country-Funk-Metal blend with a fusiony Eddie Van Halen shred solo that
announces loudly and proudly that this follow-up to Hoekstra's Undefined CD from
2000 is going to be another monstrous and lusciously varied slab of instrumental
guitar heaven.
Among the highlights is "Fire Island", which begins as an easy-paced jazz tune, but
includes moments of roadburning rock and mind blowing guitar. Hoekstra excels at
incorporating an array of styles and themes into individual tracks in a way that
flows seamlessly and comes off like a multi-themed progressive rock suite... all
compacted within a 3-4 minute construction. Only 2 of the CD's 14 tracks break the 5
minute mark. Yet Hoekstra manages to make highly sophisticated and totally kick ass
statements within a framework that, for him, is clearly not a limitation. "9/11" is
a frantic and quirky rocker that includes calmer moments of jazz fusion and much
more. And it's interesting that a song called "9/11" would be followed by one with
samples of Michael Rennie's statement to the world in The Day The Earth Stood Still
for mankind to abandon his war-like ways and join the advanced races' "system that
works". Food for thought. And it's a killer tune with the usual Hoekstra variety and
includes moments of pounding King Crimson styled power. "The Great Og" is a crunchy
rocker with a metallic edge, fiery shred guitar and some cool little spacey bits.
"Antonia" and "Confessions" are among the more sedate songs on the CD, and appearing
back-to-back in the playlist serve as peaceful breathers in the midst of the storm.
"Maybe Just At Parties" is an excellent funky jazz-in-space tune I enjoyed. At
nearly 7 minutes "Kaleidoscope" is the longest track of the set and is a roller
coaster ride of progressive rock, jazz fusion and metal. And the closing track, the
aptly titled "Lull", is an acoustic guitar piece given a freaky edge by barely
audible UFO electronics swirling around in the background.
In summary, I give this CD a big thumbs up to guitar fans of all stripes, and the
prog rock crowd will find much to enjoy too. Hoekstra is full of flash, but keeps
the discerning listener interested and at full attention throughout the album with
his skillful and imaginative blend of styles and turn-on-a-dime thematic twists and
turns. Check it out.
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©
Jerry Kranitz / Aural Innovations
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