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Artist: Jim Steele
Album: Neptune Rising
Label: Morpheus Music Archive
Website: http://www.jimsteelemusic.com
Reviewer: Bill Knispel
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Track List:
1. Moonshot
2. Neptune Rising
3. Hallucination 106
4. Blue Ice Injection
5. Ancestral Wind
6. Wraiths Of The Wood/Cobblestone Rationale
Coming out of Fort Wayne, Indiana (never known as a particularly strong hotbed of progressive/space/jazz rock), Jim Steele’s debut release
Neptune Rising is a refreshing 42-minute long album of simmering jazzy space rock instrumentals with loads of vintage keyboards and
a pleasing retro vibe.
Steele’s compositions do not explode with instrumental pyrotechnics or intricate intensity. Instead, he is more than willing to allow his
heady mix of ingredients (tight, groove riding rhythms and a broad pallate of keyboard sounds) to simmer along, building moody, mellow
instrumental soundscapes that sound as if they’d fallen though some time tunnel from the 1970’s. Fans of Tangerine Dream or mid-1970’s
Pink Floyd will find themselves on very familiar ground here.
Steele’s decision to use non-synthesized versions of tones usually voiced through digital samplers and synths adds a truer, more organic
feel to his compositions. Tim Beeler and Kent Klee (bass and drums respectively) are not a flashy rhythm section, but they are the heart
that drives the songs, and their pulsing beats bring the songs to life.
Each of the tracks offers highlights in differing way. Swirling, slightly distorted analogue synth tones and piano are showcased on
"Ancestral Wind," while the lead tones opening “Blue Ice Injection” offer tonal similarities to Robert Fripp’s 1980’s Frippertronics
pieces. Album opener “Moonshot” presents a mix of ambient soundscapes and warm organ tones, with Klee’s splash cymbals counting out time
and a cool fusion-y groove. “Neptune Rising,” the album’s title track, is built around multiple Hammond organ voicings, sounding
simultaneously fresh and endearingly retro. There’s plenty of variety and texture here to be explored, and it’s likely the listener will
have as much fun exploring these soundscapes as much as the musicians had in creating them.
Neptune Rising is really an incredibly pleasing album. The material is incredibly easy to listen to, rewarding repeated listens
with an experience that never grows old. Jim Steele is an excellent keyboardist; had this album been released 30 years ago, he may well be
mentioned today in the same breath with players like Klaus Schulze or Jan Hammer or George Duke. It’s an incredibly appealing release,
worthy of far wider acclaim and attention.
Band:
Jim Steele: Keyboards (piano, Fender Rhodes electric piano, Hammond organ, Hohner clavinet, Oberheim Matrix-6, DSI Evolver, e-mu classic keys)
Tim Beeler: Bass
Kent Klee: Drums
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