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Exposé Online

Not just outside the box, but denying the existence of boxes.
Covering music from the fringes since 1993.

Available online from Issue 6

March 1995

56 Pages

Progfest '94, Progscape, Vinyl Magic part 1, Miriodor, Mastermind, Minimum Vital, Anekdoten, Echolyn

Showing items 101 to 119 of 119

Sigmund Snopek III - Virginia Woolf

Cover art Well, leave it to Peter Wustmann of WMMS to unearth something so totally obscure and unclassifiable that time had nearly forgotten about it. Sigmund Snopek III and the Bloomsbury People existed in the...  » Read more
(Posted by Peter Thelen 1995-03-01)

Steve Roach - Artifacts

Cover art The ever prolific Steve Roach has released his newest Fortuna release Artifacts, another 70 minutes of his patented electronic music. Although Exposé only barely touches the electronic...  » Read more
(Posted by Mike McLatchey 1995-03-01)

The Keith Tippett Group - Dedicated to You, but You Weren't Listening

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By the time Keith Tippett released Dedicated to You, but You Weren't Listening, his second album, in 1971, he had already garnered a rather formidable reputation as a creative and...

 » Read more
(Posted by Rob Walker 1995-03-01)

The New St. George - High Tea

Cover art The New St. George is a five-piece folk rock outfit from the Washington, DC area who sport a strong British/Celtic personality and two excellent vocalists. Their music may remind of the likes of...  » Read more
(Posted by Peter Thelen 1995-03-01)

The Trip - Time of Change

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Another one from the Trident label. In the early 70s The Trip produced three fairly unremarkable albums as a four-piece led by guitarist / singer Billy Gray. After the 1972 album...

 » Read more
(Posted by Peter Thelen 1995-03-01)

Tibet - Tibet

Cover art Musea seem to have an affinity for the late-70s/early-80s German symphonic genre — the type of music that started with Eloy and Grobschnitt and ended with a million one or two shots — you know...  » Read more
(Posted by Mike McLatchey 1995-03-01)

Tibet - Tibet

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Tibet is another one of Musea’s reissues of obscure 70s bands. Unfortunately for Musea, the master tapes were lost over the past 15 years. They had to remaster the CD from a vinyl copy using...

 » Read more
(Posted by Henry Schneider 1995-03-01)

Tim Song Jones - The Plural of Hear

Cover art Could this be the musical interpretation of fractals, recursion, and random number generation ? This is highly original music, created using mostly DX-7 and Wavestation, E-Bow guitar, digital drums,...  » Read more
(Posted by Peter Thelen 1995-03-01)

Trettioåriga Kriget - War Memories

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I really don't know how fair it is for me to review this. After all, being an album comprised of previously unreleased tracks, it's obviously intended for established fans of the band. I...

 » Read more
(Posted by Mike Ohman 1995-03-01)

Twenty Sixty Six and Then - Reflections!

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Twenty Sixty Six and Then's Reflections on the Future remains one of the most legendary German prog LPs. As the master tapes were lost long ago, a reissue didn't seem likely,...

 » Read more
(Posted by Mike Ohman 1995-03-01)

Various Artists - Mannerisms - A Celebration of the Music of Geoff Mann

Cover art Priest and painter, Geoff Mann was also once the lyricist and vocalist for the English progressive band Twelfth Night. He died of cancer in February of 1993. To memorialize his life, musicians who...  » Read more
(Posted by Anatole Gordon 1995-03-01)

Verdaguer - Humahuaca

Cover art With the recent reissues of the Mia catalog, Aquelarre, Crucis, and others, it seems that a lot of the best Argentinean music from the 70s is coming to light. Willy Verdaguer, while Argentinean by...  » Read more
(Posted by Peter Thelen 1995-03-01)

Visitors - Visitors

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The brainchild of producer Jean-Pierre Massiera, Visitors was his project "band," intended to be a one-shot affair and go no further. Massiera utilized an expanded lineup featuring...

 » Read more
(Posted by Peter Thelen 1995-03-01)

Wind - Seasons

Cover art Wind were one of those early 70s German underground bands who were influenced by hard-rock bands like Deep Purple on one hand, but also have an Emersonian classically-influenced keyboard presence on...  » Read more
(Posted by Mike Ohman 1995-03-01)

Zao - Akhenaton

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Zao should need no introduction for progressive fusion fans, as they were one of France's best groups of the 70s, releasing five albums, four of them essential listens. While Zao has reformed...

 » Read more
(Posted by Mike McLatchey 1995-03-01)

Zao - Akhenaton

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Zao was a fantastic French fusion band that released a half dozen albums in the 70s. Formed by saxophonist Yochk'o Seffer and keyboardist Francois Cahen after leaving an early incarnation of...

 » Read more
(Posted by Rob Walker 1995-03-01)

Zao - Akhenaton

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After a decade and a half, the zeuhl-fusion ensemble Zao are back with a release that is a real treat. While the lineup has changed from the classic formation which included Didier Lockwood on...

 » Read more
(Posted by Dan Casey 1995-03-01)

Zauber - Il Sogno (AKA Zauber)

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Here is another rarity from the vaults. Zauber was a five-piece that produced only this single album in the late 70s, until their recent reformation (see Mike's New Italian article in issue #4)...

 » Read more
(Posted by Peter Thelen 1995-03-01)

Zzaj / Kissinger / Kramtones - Critical Mass & Emotional Circus

Cover art Rotcod Zzaj is a do-it-yourself musician who produces his own cassettes, right down to the home-made packaging and the handwriting on the labels. Working in collaboration with other musicians, he...  » Read more
(Posted by Peter Thelen 1995-03-01)
 

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