Bitrate: 320K/s
Year: 2010
Time: 47:42
Size: 112,5 MB
Label: Self Released
Styles: Progressive rock/Canterbury
Art: Full
Tracks Listing:
1. City Of Band - 7:26
2. Magic Bus - 4:51
3. Gods Of The Mountain - 7:08
4. Tucan Pyramid - 5:17
5. Holy Road - 4:59
6. Milky Way - 7:06
7. Back To The Garden - 10:53
Musicians:
Paul Evans — vocals, rhythm guitar, tambourine, cymbals
Terence Waldstädt — lead/rhythm guitars, ukelele, backing vocals
Benny Brooke — bass, backing vocals
Jay Darlington — keyboards, piano, autoharp
Rowan Day — flute, whistle, backing vocals
Dan Truen — drums, tabla, bells
Magic Bus' debut album is an absolutely delightful excursion into mildly Canterbury-flavoured hippie prog. Take Caravan at around the time of In the Land of Grey and Pink and imagine where they would have gone if, instead of taking their sound in a jazzier direction as on Waterloo Lily, they had instead looked back to their psychedelic roots and injected the fairytale tone of Grey and Pink with a bit of West Coast sunshine and maybe a slice of early Steve Hillage; the place you end up may well be along the Magic Bus's route.
This debut album is a charming excursion into a realm of warm, comfy, psychedelic Canterbury-flavoured prog whose benign nature conceals some really neat instrumental chops. It's fantastic to hear some new musicians taking up the baton of this side of prog, and I can only hope there are many more stops for the Magic Bus along its journey.
Magic Bus
Year: 2010
Time: 47:42
Size: 112,5 MB
Label: Self Released
Styles: Progressive rock/Canterbury
Art: Full
Tracks Listing:
1. City Of Band - 7:26
2. Magic Bus - 4:51
3. Gods Of The Mountain - 7:08
4. Tucan Pyramid - 5:17
5. Holy Road - 4:59
6. Milky Way - 7:06
7. Back To The Garden - 10:53
Musicians:
Paul Evans — vocals, rhythm guitar, tambourine, cymbals
Terence Waldstädt — lead/rhythm guitars, ukelele, backing vocals
Benny Brooke — bass, backing vocals
Jay Darlington — keyboards, piano, autoharp
Rowan Day — flute, whistle, backing vocals
Dan Truen — drums, tabla, bells
Magic Bus' debut album is an absolutely delightful excursion into mildly Canterbury-flavoured hippie prog. Take Caravan at around the time of In the Land of Grey and Pink and imagine where they would have gone if, instead of taking their sound in a jazzier direction as on Waterloo Lily, they had instead looked back to their psychedelic roots and injected the fairytale tone of Grey and Pink with a bit of West Coast sunshine and maybe a slice of early Steve Hillage; the place you end up may well be along the Magic Bus's route.
This debut album is a charming excursion into a realm of warm, comfy, psychedelic Canterbury-flavoured prog whose benign nature conceals some really neat instrumental chops. It's fantastic to hear some new musicians taking up the baton of this side of prog, and I can only hope there are many more stops for the Magic Bus along its journey.
Magic Bus
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