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Swedish progressive mellotron drenched Masterpiece.
Genre:
Rock: Progressive Rock
Release Date:
2003
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Epilog
© Copyright-ÄnglagÃ¥rd
Record Label: Krake/Exergy
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In the summer of 1991 Tord Lindman and Johan Högberg were looking for musicians with an interest for the progressive and innovative music of the early seventies. Thomas Johnson and Jonas Engdegård replied to their ads and eventually they met and listened to each others material. They became friends very fast and started writing and arranging songs immediately. In September Mattias Olsson joined the group and influenced the music with his classical training as a drummer. Anna Holmgren joined Änglagård in the spring of 1992 replacing the previously engaged flute player.
With their line-up completed the band played several appreciated concerts in their hometown Stockholm. In April they visited Studio Largen and recorded a demo. The following two months were spent rehearsing and arranging the material for their first album "Hybris". The record was the result of not only four months hard work in the studio but the harvest of a one year struggle of creating music far from the commercial, musical nonsense of today. The progressive rock scene raved about the album and eventually the band was invited to play at the annual Progfest in L.A. in May 1993.
The new track "Gånglåt från Knapptibble" was recorded in August 1993, because the English magazine Ptolemaic Terrascope wanted to release a single to come with the magazine. It was during a period of energetic flow that the song (which is an early version of "Skogsranden" from the "Epilog"-album) grew to something crazy and funny. In December the band toured the U.S. playing their own compositions as well as a couple of cover-versions.
"Epilog" was recorded in the summer of 1994. While "Hybris" featured some moments of somberness, "Epilog" finds this emotion intensified in an all-instrumental setting which is sometimes aggressive, sometimes contemplative and almost always heavy with wistfulness and stoicism. The music sometimes sounds closer to the band's Scandinavian roots than the more overt symphonic progressive of their first album. Flute and mellotron are both given prominent roles in defining the morose nature of the sound here, while electric guitar and organ are often at the forefront of the harder sections.
At this time the band was already falling apart. In November Änglagård headlined the first day of the Progfest in L.A., which would become their last concert. The band stopped rehearsing and writing. A year later they met again to edit the recordings made during the Progfest which were eventually released as "Buried Alive".
THE END
Well, not really. 2002 saw the band rehearsing again, without Tord Lindman, though. "Wether it is an annoying nostalgia thing or an actual effort time will tell", said Mattias Olsson.
After countless rehearsals the band finally returned to the stage in June 2003, playing a highly anticipated headlining show in their hometown Stockholm. Eventually they appeared at the German Freakshow-Festival and at NEARfest in the United States, both a huge success for the band and an unforgettable experience for the audience. After a few more shows in France and Belgium, Änglagård are currently taking a break, focusing on their jobs, families and other musical activities.
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Incredible progressive music
author: TheEndlessEpic
5 stars without a doubt. As a progressive rock fan I thought that this band would be relatively easy to understand and get into. I was wrong, it has taken numerous listens but now I absolutely love this cd. It is incredible, full of awesome bass lines, great mellotron and hammond b-3. The guitar player is fantastic as is the drummer. Anna Holmgren does some beautiful flute, the whole thing just conjures up ideas of Swedish folk-lore.
Awesome music, but difficult to get into, once you do...wow!
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An absolute masterpiece
author: Timothy K
Epilog is the most accomplished recording of the all the 90´s progressive bands. With Hybris Anglagard made the standard that everyone was compared to and with Epilog they broke it and surpassed themselves. Dynamic, progressive rock at it´s best. This album goes from pastoral melancholic almost classical passages into full choas within milliseconds. The playing is superb and if you liked the drum/bass interplay on Hybris you are in for a treat...Högberg and Olsson are on fire on this one. Productionwise it is also more developed that Hybris, more varied and with better instrumentation. The Mellotron is at the forefront here as well as the Hammondorgan and other analog keys...
In short - If you are into progressive rock this is a must.
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author: Domenico (aka Progmonster)
Well, i am lucky enough to have bought the original cd at the time it was published back in 1994. I really consider "Epilog" being by far the most daring progressive experience to come out in the nineties, and nothing best has been published ten years later. The cd being at last repressed in a beautiful digipack package, i ordered it for a friend who still did not have his own copy.
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More emotionaly charged than "Close To The Edge"
author: Clark Ray
Thiis is a stellar piece of work that takes years to fully understand. I was lucky enough to buy this and get it signed by the band at ProgFest '94 and 10 years later I still find new nuances in the music that had elluded me before. There is one song on this album, "Sista Somrar", that is quite possibly the best prog-arranged song I've ever heard. It reminds me of a clasical arrangement. It hints at themes, builds tension, plays out themes and variations, and releases into sweeping emotional moments that by the end will drop you to tears. And they don't let up with it but instead do this over and over again but not with the same themes (i.e. you never have a chance to get tired with any part of the song). I'm glad to hear that this album is available again because it is one of the best progressive releases of all time.
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