AUTOR

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Porcupine Tree-In Absentia (2002)

With Porcupine Tree's seventh album, "In Absentia," the band led by Steven Wilson not only achieved their best work but also the pinnacle of the brilliant composer, singer, and guitarist's creativity undoubtedly one of the most brilliant musicians of the last two decades. While throughout much of the nineties the band built a strong reputation within the progressive rock community with such monumental albums as "The Sky Moves Sideways", "Signify", and "Stupid Dreams", in which they maintained their characteristic progressive sound but fused it with different nuances and more commercial sounds, in "In Absentia" they rationally managed to fuse psychedelic and prog elements with the power of heavy metal, as demonstrated in the opening track, "Blackest Eyes". The rest of the album moves eclectically through various styles, with complex compositions alongside simpler but incredibly addictive ones, as demonstrated in tracks like “Trains”, “Prodigal”, and “Strip The Soul”. Meanwhile, the progressive hard rock vein is very much present in cuts like “Gravity Eyelids” and “Weeding Nails”, in dark and powerful exercises like “The Creator Has A Mastertape”, and in exquisite pieces like “Heartattack In A Layby” and “Collapse The Light Into Earth”. “In Absentia” has become one of the essential works of the new century, not only for its memorable compositions but also for the superb instrumental performance of each band member, as well as the impeccable production by Steven Wilson himself.