Thursday, December 31, 2015

The Big Takeover reviews "Isabel II: Abaddon Rising" by 17 Pygmies


17 Pygmies
ISABEL II (ABADDON RISING)
(TRAKWERX)

2015

PHILIP DRUCKER AKA JACKSON DEL REY is nobody's idea of an unambitious slacker. The ex-SAVAGE REPUBLIC guitarist has made artistic 17 Pygmies records since 1983's Hatikva EP, yet he's been most fruitful since 2007's dynamite solo score for SERGEI EISENSTEIN'S 1925 Battleship Potemkin and, starting in 2008, a nine-CD/three-book 17 Pygmies project. This fifth CD of that boundless booty is another beaut, at times their comeliest, coming after Celestina I, II, and III and Isabel I. Drucker's graphic novel, short story, and film script record the trials of futuristic fugitive Isabel and fellow heroine Celestina; augmented by the sensuous singer MEG MARYATT, the group's ongoing soundtrack fits the chronicle: Isabel II is a potpourri of sonorous classical strings (a force), Eno-esque keyboards ("Isabel XV"), acoustic folk guitars, piquant piano, twinkle bells, and methodical drums or electronic dance beats. Wish all artists gave so much.

Your Music Blog reviews 17 Pygmies release "Isabel II: Abaddon Rising"


Blogsite Your Music Blog based in The Netherlands reviews new 17 Pygmies release. 

17 Pygmies
Isabel II: Abaddon Rising
Trakwerx
2015

Actually the picture does not do justice to the packaging of this album. By now I would say “as usual” 17 pygmies spared no expense when it comes to wrapping their albums. Housed in a transparent little envelope comes a 26 page booklet, containing the essay Jackson Del Rey wrote about the story, a wrapper for the CD (beautiful) and a wrapper for the whole of it (pictured left), with the Fibonacci sequence on it (not visible here) if I am not mistaken. All very beautiful and probably costly.
And all that beauty is perhaps needed to match the music. Because beautiful is a word that pops up in my mind on a regular base while listening to this. The 10 tracks are Isabel XII to Isabel XXI, a logical continuation of the previous album. The opening track with the vocals of Meg Maryatt sets the tone. It may be mellow, but the tension building here is really great, very good start of the album and what we are to expect. Some of the songs are instrumental. Sometimes with a beat or percussion guiding the track along. Various instruments are used to help build the atmosphere needed. Especially the acoustic guitars and various violins prove helpful. The music is described as a mix of prog, classical and folk and that is a tag I understand. But for me this is a lovely album that anyone with ears and a heart will enjoy. So please give it a chance!

Textura reviews 17 Pygmies new release "Isabel II: Abaddon Rising"



17 Pygmies: Isabel II: Abaddon Rising
Trakwerx Records
It can, admittedly, be a challenge keeping 17 Pygmies' various stories straight. Between 2008 and 2012, the group, officially in operation since 1982 and spearheaded by Philip Drucker (aka Jackson Del Rey), released its three-part opus Celestina (whilst also making room for 2009's The Outlaw J.D. Ray) and then turned its attention to another multi-part epic, Isabel. They're not wholly distinct projects either, as their respective narratives do overlap in key ways. Adding to the challenge, Isabel II: Abaddon Rising is identified in the accompanying promo text as some kind of follow-up to 1985's Captured in Ice as opposed to 2013's Isabel.
Complications aside, the new release holds up fine, and the listener will derive ample pleasure from it whether the music is approached on its own terms or as part of a larger project. Whereas the text exemplifies a sci-fi character, the forty minutes of music feels more like the soundtrack to a children's fairy tale or even young adult fantasy; generally speaking, the disc's ten parts are highly melodious and harmonious, and the Pygmies' art-pop, especially when the singing's primarily handled by Meg Maryatt, goes down smoothly. In addition to the group's formal members, Del Rey (guitar, synth, bass, vocals), Maryatt (vocals, classical guitar, synth, accordion), guitarist Jeff Brenneman, and drummer Dirk Doucette, guests appear, most conspicuously Jean Sudbury, whose strings and mandolin add much to the album's soundworld.
That Isabel II: Abaddon Rising picks up where Isabel left off becomes evident when “Isabel XII” opens the album with a lilting ballad elevated by Sudbury's luscious strings and Maryatt's serenading voice. A rustic folk feel infuses the song, but elements of prog, pop, and classical are present, too, and Maryatt's lead is appealingly complemented by background singer Lea Reis. Only about half of the tracks include vocals: on the instrumental front, a lightly swinging dance groove powers “Isabel XIII,” its quasi-house pulse augmented by glockenspiel sprinkles and strings; “Isabel XV” presents a multi-hued paradise rich in sumptuous detail; and the entrancing folk laments “Isabel XVII” and “Isabel XIX” evoke the rustic countryside in their blends of strings, accordion, and guitars. On an album marked by sometimes surprising change-ups, the concluding track ventures into dance-funk territory, proving that the group still has a few tricks up its sleeve decades after it first appeared.
Accompanying the CD is a small booklet containing twenty-six pages of text by Del Rey. A nice supplement to the recording, the multi-chapter story recounts the experiences of a number of figures, among them: Isabel, a Centre fugitive newly acting as a raconteur sharing tales with an underground people's children about Captain Mora, His Holiness, and others; Celestina interfacing with Abaddon, a program seemingly intent on promoting rage and hate as productive forces; and William, a soldier fated to come face-to-face with Celestina at the second part's end, and his wife Saro. It's a perfectly engaging narrative, though, typical of middle sections, it feels rather truncated, separated physically as it is from the first and bereft of the resolution that its concluding part presumably will confer. The text would have benefited from a couple of things: a single-paragraph recap of the opening part to re-acquaint the reader, and a more careful proofread to correct the small number of typos that mar the text. Weaknesses aside, the release, another memorable addition to the 17 Pygmies canon, is certainly better with the booklet than without it, and it's also enhanced by a lavish visual presentation that sees the CD cozily housed within two foil-stamped sleeves.
January 2016

Distorsioni Reviews new 17 Pygmies Release "ISABEL II: ABADDON RISING"

DISTORSIONI, An Italian Music Magazine reviews "Isabel II: Abaddon Rising" (17 Pygmies)

Distorsioni

Rough English Translation:
17 pygmies Cover Album Quanto are far the distressing palpitations post-punk of early eighties for the column of experimental and obsessive Republic Savage, Philip Drucker alias Jackson Del Rey; thirty-two years to the outside out of the band of "Tragic figures" the prolific Californian guitarist is still on the scene thanks to yet another ambitious work of his 17 Pygmies, the project gave birth with the help of his friend keyboardist Robert Loveless, in the aftermath of Licher and away from shareholders.

Dark plots by new wave and alternative work at an initial complex and intricate crossover infused with folk, prog symphonic and space rock; synthesizing the artistic evolution of the 17 Pygmies passes across from here. Active from 1983 to 1991, during which time he had become architect of the construction of four significant works of study, the ensemble ritrovatosi US in 2007 has experienced a second youth artistic flourishing of compositions daughters of a striking metamorphosis expressive music.

17 pygmies Cover Booklet gave rise to the trilogy dedicated to the ship Celestina and his travels deep into the cosmos; 2008-2012 Del Rey & C., inspired by an ancient text of Fernando de Rojas in 1449, spared no effort in making real music for images cloaked black holes and peaceful robots that animated their futuristic stories.

Among the protagonists of these fantastic events the character of Dr. Isabel has carved a prominent role, so that in January 2013, the 17 Pygmies have well thought of giving a sequel to the novel starting dedicating a specially heroin disk space. The new "Isabel II: Abaddon Rising" resumes with its ten movements (ordered from the twelfth to the twenty-first) the continuation of the previous album. The fight against evil Abaddon project and the risk of human transformation into insensitive killing machines is the leitmotif of the new chapter of the saga created by Del Rey. Ten tracks that emerge all the talent and skill of sensual vocalist Meg Maryatt (adept at dispensing peaceful and distended sensations through the rarefied tones) and superfine melodies of violins and synthesizers intersected in the appendices aftertaste krautrock and new age.

It is in this context constantly hovering between neo-prog and electronic, in its center (moving from the seventeenth to the twentieth), found its way even fascinating evidence traits bucolic folk confirming a drawing shades wide and hard to categorize a genre defined. In the current line-up alongside the factotum Del Rey and the 17 Pygmies are Maryatt, percussionist Dirk Doucette and guitarist Jeff Brenneman; appear in the role of special guests Julien Imstepf on bass, Lea Reis choirs and Jean Sudbury violin. As usual, even for Isabel II: Abaddon Rising 17 Pygmies have not spared in the packaging of wrappers and special enclosures for their sound recordings.

For the occasion, the compact is accompanied by a booklet of twenty-six pages printed on high-quality paper and bound by an elegant silver ribbon containing the narrative threads of the concept. All set in a refined sugar-colored envelope paper marked by shining engravings. Fine and shiny as the artistic ambitions of this unique idea made in California.
Voto: 7.5/10
Alessandro Freschi