This Way (1980)
---Dec 2004
For the late date, this has a remarkably sophisticated sound – similar more to the classic early 1970s Italian prog scene, than anything typically associated with German rock. Complete with choir mellotron, organ, bells, speedy guitar solos, flute, sax and complex meters. When the vocals kick in, I'm reminded of Grobschnitt's Rockpommel's Land era.
---6/11/26
Since that first review, taken from a cassette dub sent to me in the 90s, I'd acquired the LP and squeezed in a couple of listens. A mainstay of the CDRWL (reissued only a couple of years ago), it now makes its debut on UMR.
A2 has a few incongruous Italian styled breaks, with ripping guitar, which comes as a surprise to the listener, as the lengthy A1 is mostly subdued melodic prog with sax. Same with the second half of A2.
B1 and B2 have been mislabeled for years apparently, as no one took the time to look at the record (or listen to the music). The flute solo is clearly on the opening of the flip, and is noted as such on the label itself. The back cover has it listed incorrectly. No idea if the reissues fixed the placement of tracks. To add, B1 is a great jazz fusion number with plenty of twists and turns. B2 has acoustic guitars and Mini-Moog in the spirit of classic Yes. Lots of sophisticated rhythms here. And yea, the vocals have more in common with Grobschnitt than Jon Anderson.
The title track seemingly gets us back to the laid back opener. But then the mellotron and woody bass enters, while the rhythms go oft kilter. The closer is more Genesis than Yes, with melancholic acoustic guitars and a heavy dose of mellotron. Features a fine guitar solo, though he's more in line with a hard rocker than Steve Hackett.
Overall a fine progressive rock album, not at the highest level, but certainly a solid effort worthy of your time.
Ownership: 1980 Peak (LP). B1 and B2 are reversed on the back cover. Acquired in 2015.
1997; 12//04; 2008; 3/1/15; 6/11/26 (update / new entry)

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