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Tuesday, May 10, 2022

Premiata Forneria Marconi-Jet Lag (1977)

With their eighth album, "Jet Lag", the Italian band Premiata Forneria Marconi forged a new musical path, abandoning their poetic lyrics and singing in English without the involvement of lyricist Peter Sinfield, who had translated the albums "Per Un Amico" (released as "Photos of Ghosts") and "L'Isola Di Niente" (released as "The World Became the World"), both for the English-speaking market. This time, the band focused primarily on the ambitious North American market, producing a work closer to the jazz fusion/rock style so popular in the late seventies. The interplay of the rhythm section, composed of Franz Di Cioccio and bassist Jan Patrick Djivas, is truly electrifying and complex, while the absence of the usual horn section, due to Mauro Pagani's departure, is compensated for by Gregory Bloch's excellent violin. Special mention must be made of Franco Mussida's guitar, displaying an unusual intensity with dizzying riffs reminiscent of hard rock. From the incredible title track, a superb progressive jazz-rock composition, to the pastoral and instrumental "Peninsula", the Italian band delves into and finds an unclassifiable sound within progressive rock, always remaining true to the essential Italian progressive approach. The vocals perfectly complement the overall musical philosophy, and while they don't quite reach the eloquence of their emblematic works, they still retain moments of grandeur. The rest of the repertoire consists of pieces that navigate between pure progressive rock ("Traveler"), highly talented instrumental exercises ("Meridiani"), and avant-garde explorations like the energetic "Left-Handed Theory". Without a doubt, "Jet Lag" is another essential work from Premiata Forneria Marconi, despite the substantial stylistic shift from their initial sound.

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