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Reviews
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Pete Pardo @ Sea
of tranquility writes:
Helmet of Gnats: Helmet of Gnats
Helmet of Gnats is the brainchild of guitarist Chris Fox and keyboard
player Matt Bocchino, who along with drummer Mark Conese and bassist
Wayne Zito, have created a smoldering pot of hot and bubbly fusion
on their latest CD. Not that Helmet of Gnats are a new band mind
you, as Fox & Bocchino have been toiling around as a cover band
for close to 20 years with various members. Now with a solidified
line-up and solid original songs, they are ready to make their mark
in the progressive fusion scene, and believe me with this one they
are headed in the right direction. The sound quality is outstanding,
and if you have a SACD player all this hot fusion I'm sure will
sound that much better.
The first thing you notice on cuts like "Almost Babylon"
and "Chinese Leftovers" is the swirling yet aggressive
Hammond organ work of Bocchino, whose playing will remind you of
ELP's Keith Emerson as well as John Novello from Niacin. His tasty
tone works well with the biting attack of Fox's sinewy guitar leads.
On the bouncy "Yesterday's Brain", the group goes for
a 70's fusion vibe ala Brand X or Return to Forever, complete with
some screaming guitar solos and neat synth runs that reminded me
a little of Chick Corea at times. Fox dips into his Tommy Bolin
and Jeff Beck bag on the slightly bluesy & passionate "Crumbs",
while "Lesser Beings" is a short little spacey ambient
piece that has a creepy vibe. This seques into the raging "Misfit
Toys", a song with a hot groove courtesy of Conese & Zito,
and searing synth & guitar duels from Bocchino and Fox. Zito
even turns in a melodic fretless solo on this one that brought to
mind veteran Mark Egan.
Of course, the best is saved for last, with the epic, 13-minute
"Chimps in Space", a smoldering tribute to Chick Corea's
Return to Forever & The Electrik Band, with Fox laying down
some blazing Latin tinged leads like a young Al DiMeola, while Bocchino's
electric & acoustic piano work, coupled with his melodic synth
passages, reminded me of classic Corea. Conese turns in a thunderous
performance on this track, and Zito's sinewy bass work rips alongside
Fox's guitar parts. Jazz fans will simply adore this piece.
The plain and simple truth-this is a winner of a CD, and a band
that in my view hasn't even hit their stride yet. Look for big things
from Helmet of Gnats in the future.
Added: November 28th 2004
Reviewer: Pete Pardo
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