Sunday, August 18, 2024

Frank Marino & Mahogany Rush - Eye of the Storm. 2000 Canada-Quebec


In 2005 I wrote:

Whoa! Nice surprise this one is. I was expecting at best an attempt at his patented driving hard rock / Hendrix styled rock. What I didn’t foresee is a more progressive styled album. Eye of the Storm features some looooong space rock jams using Arabic scales – just like the old Krautrockers would do! You can hear this on the lengthy ten minute title track and even more so on the slightly longer ‘He’s Calling’. It isn’t until the 4th track, ‘Learned My Lesson Well’, that the What’s Next era Marino shows up. And that’s great too! This is followed by the 11 ½ minute ‘Heat of the Moment’ which recalls ‘Poppy’, my personal favorite Marino composition. Next is 'Windows to the World' which reminds me of ‘The Answer’ from Mahogany Rush IV (nice to see Frank reaching this far back into his repertoire). Another long cut, ‘Avalon’, also brings to mind the highly melodic ‘Poppy’ in addition to the jazzy instrumental ‘Tales of the Unexpected’ era. Believe it or not, I not only think this is a great album, but I think could very well be his best studio effort! Totally amazed by that.

---in 2014, I wrote another one (likely I had forgotten my prior review)

This really was a magnificent comeback for Frank Marino. Eye of the Storm arrived in 2000, 18 years after his last significant studio album Juggernaut (there were a couple of obscure efforts in between and one excellent live album). Perhaps what's most amazing about Eye of the Storm is that the album isn't a continuation of his more known hard rock style, but rather a further look back into his psychedelic past of the very early days of his career. Many of the tracks are quite lengthy: Four of them near or over the 10 minute mark with two more pushing eight each. The music at times goes off into a space rock direction, filled to the brim with Marino's amazing solo guitar talent. If you're familiar with the excellent 'Poppy' track from his live albums, then there's quite a bit of that style here. Only the straightforward, yet still excellent rocker 'Learned My Lesson Well' will recall the Marino of the 'What's Next' era.

As I write this review, we have yet to get a new album from Frank. If this is indeed his swan song, then he definitely went out on a high. Though possibly even better than this studio effort, is the 2004 ReaLLive album that just lays the concert hall to waste.

It's really too bad this album has fallen through the cracks, and few seem to have noticed. As I write this, it's #889 for 2001. Wow - that's really sad for an artist who has a legacy like Frank Marino - and this is one of his best albums ever! I do think its rediscovery is eventual - it's only a matter of time.

---2024

For that last sentence, I said similar on my recent review of Tales of the Unexpected. And the album is now #1,606 for 2001, having lost half its ground. Over time, quality music transcends the trends of an era. Like evaluating a president, history will be the judge based on data, not emotion. I predict Frank Marino will be near the top when it's all said and done. I enjoyed another +1 listen, and it now resides in the highest tier of my world.


Ownership: CD: 2001 Just A Minute. Jewel case. Lyric booklet.

2//05 (first listen/review); 9/28/14 (second review); 8/18/24 (update/new entry)

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