Puzzle (1983)
---9/1/10
Puzzle is a well executed all-instrumental psychedelic guitar driven album, released at a time when very little of this style was available on the market. Perhaps only Cincinnati's Ra Can Row could be called out during this era. There are some really sizzling guitar freakouts here. And actually a few well-thought out melodies, which is not something inherent within the genre. But Puzzle has one fatal flaw. And it's the only thing keeping me raving about it: The dreaded drum machine. Had they employed a real drummer, I would enthuse more about it. Naturally enough, the keyboards are all 1980's era synthesizers too, though the guitar fortunately remains the focus. A fine album overall.
---6/11/26
That was the CDRWL entry. I since acquired the LP, heard again, and then filed. So here I am once more (Fish anyone?) to enter into the UMR with a fresh listen.
I first read about this album in one of the many dealer catalogs I received in the 90s. The way it was described, talking up the psychedelic guitars, had me very intrigued. I'm sure they used Heldon as a reference too. No one mentioned the drum machines. Funny how that was a bugaboo for me back then, but today they don't distract me much, if at all. In fact I welcome it - from an historical perspective. For a new album I most certainly would expect a human drummer to participate. But for an album from 1983, I can appreciate the era in which it was released, and the constant looking forward to new technologies. Though it should be mentioned there is real percussion deployed, but the rhythms are primarily carried by a drum machine. And its usage here is pretty sophisticated for the early 80s.
Though a group effort, its nigh impossible to ignore Andre Muller's psychedelic infused guitar all over this. As with LS Bearforce and Ra Can Row (noted above), no one was reaching back into the late 60s and early 70s to achieve that tone. There are only three tracks here, yet Puzzle keeps the music hopping in all sorts of directions. In some ways I'm reminded of Tiemko's Ocean, an album that was to come along about seven years later. And Eric Delaunay had no qualms with throwing in electronic percussion here and there. Overall a really solid album and I enjoyed a +1 listen from this session.
Puzzle is a rather difficult album to categorize. Is it prog, fusion, electronic, space rock? The answer is yes.
This is one of those albums you'd think would be worth a fortune today, but you can still pull this out of France for relative cheap. For my fellow Americans, you'll have to wait for international postal rates to recess back to normal (and they will), then you might want to mail order one. Or fly to Paris and bring it home. Might be cheaper.
No reissues exist as I create this entry on 6/11/26.
Ownership: 1983 private (LP). Acquired in 2013.
9/1/10 (review); 11/27/13; 6/11/26 (update / new entry)

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