Every few years we hear from the Czech Republic's finest prog band Hokr, and here we have a very interesting mix of archival and new material. I'll discuss that further below, but let's tackle the music first. Which I did over five listens on subsequent nights. Hokr has never been an easy listen, and this album is no different.
For their last album I wrote: "...is a dense Van der Graaf Generator styled prog with the addition of sax and anguished vocals (in their native Czech). ...There are 8 tracks totaling 48 minutes, and everyone of them is challenging and complex. Yet easy on the ears with a certain melodicism. This is not the cold and calculating avant prog classroom exercise. No, this points to the early 70s masters of the style. I listened three times straight last night, and each listen revealed many new twists. Hokr are a full sounding five piece group, whose music will easily transcend time."
I think that covers this as well. That thick organ, tenor sax, complex charting, and impassioned vocals immediately recall the best of VDGG. Just the sound alone is very enticing. It's a varied album, which makes sense when you know how it was compiled, but it still comes across as a cohesive whole. Despite terms like "difficult" and "complex", the album actually flows nicely and is pleasurable throughout. That's a testament to the group's experience.
So what is this album anyway? The title means Old Hokr Vol. 2. Petr Cermak (friend and drummer of the band) tells me this was music they used to play from 1979 to 1985 (newly recorded though). OK, tell me more. Thank goodness for Achim, my long time friend and colleague from Germany, as he saved me time here. He dived deeper and offers this (translated by Google):
"An email exchange with Petr and Pavel Cermak helped a lot to clear things up, and also helped clarify the band name. 'Hokr' was the band's neighbor's last name, i.e. the neighbor of the Cermak family, in whose house the group had started rehearsing in the fall of 1979. Since he was a bit strange (the neighbor), says Petr Cermak, and the band's music too, they named themselves after him. Back to "Starej Hokr Vol. 2". Starje is called old, so the album is roughly called 'The Old Hokr Part 2'. Here you can find music that Hokr composed, rehearsed and performed at secret concerts back then, especially in the first half of the 80s (they did not have an official performance permit from the Czechoslovak authorities). "Starej Hokr" is the sister album to "Hokrova Vila", which also contains such historical material from the band, but newly recorded in 2003-2004. “Starej Hokr” took a little longer, as the pieces were recorded between 2005 and 2023. This was probably also because Petr Cermak lived in the USA in 1986, while Pavel was active in the Czech Republic with Hokr, with a new drummer. Of course, original drummer Petr Cermak wanted to work on the skins for “Hokrova Vila” and “Starej Hokr”. ...Petr Cermak names Blue Effect (Modrý Efekt), Collegium Musicum, The Plastic People of the Universe, DG 307, Mikoláš Chadimas Extempore (later known as MCH Band), Vladimír Mišíks Etc…, SBB, Budka Suflera, Ossian and Omega as influencers at the time . The group's favorite band was probably King Crimson. From these sources of inspiration and a lot of their own, Hokr then formed their very own style, keyboard-heavy, a bit jazzy, slightly chamber rock and always nice and creaky, with very unique singing in the local language. Aku-Aku's colleagues, Dunaj, Domácí Kapela and Narajama later made similar music."
Thank you, Achim. Had no idea it was their neighbor's last name! And I also need to follow up on some of those reference groups. I know many and have written about them here, but there are some new names to me too.
Ownership: 2023 private (CD). Thick digipak with stapled booklet.
4/7/24 (review)
One of the better progressive rock discoveries of the last decade was Hokr, a band from Prague who released two albums of great invention. I have notes on each somewhere in this blog, for reference. So when I received notice that a 3rd album had just come out, I was ready to pull the trigger immediately. Ummm... one small problem. No one had it for sale. I mean no one. I put on the Discogs want list immediately, along with an ebay search. And waited. And waited. And waited. And finally that day arrived. Hokr managed to be for sale, even here in the United States. Hooray.
Now that I have secured the CD, which Hokr can I expect? The reality is that their two albums are very different from each other, but both great. The 2004 debut is a keyboard based progressive similar to Collegium Musicum but updated Elephant9 style. The other (Zahřáté Brzdy Optimismu from 2012) is a dense Van der Graaf Generator styled prog with the addition of sax and anguished vocals (in their native Czech). And the answer is? Klid v Bezčasí is very much like the latter. There are eight tracks totaling 48 minutes, and everyone of them is challenging and complex. Yet easy on the ears with a certain melodicism. This is not the cold and calculating avant prog classroom exercise. No, this points to the early 70s masters of the style. I listened three times straight last night, and each listen revealed many new twists. Hokr are a full sounding five piece group, whose music will easily transcend time. They are 3 for 3 in my book. Well worth seeking out.
Ownership: 2017 private (CD). Tri-fold thick digi-pak, with a booklet attached containing lyrics and original photography.Ownership: 2012 Ears & Wind (CD)
5/18/13 (review)
Ownership: 2011 private (CD)
4/28/11 (review)
4/28/11 (new entry)
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