Review by ZetschoSep 01, 2007(edited over 4 years ago)
I saw Bilbo live on stage twice and I find him being one of the most likable guys on stage since he was dancing and laughing as much as most of the dancefloor. Furthermore he belongs to those artists with whom I started to get into the trance virus and I share lots of intense memories with his music, so it is a bit hard for me to admit that I have mixed feelings about this one.
First of all, the good things: He really remains true to himself. He neither jumps on that cheesy fullon bandwaggon nor on that frugal clubby progressive one. He is one of the few who produce pure psychedelic trance with a warm feeling around it and I like that very much.
But, there is a big but(t): I can hardly hear any significant musical or technical development in his music over all these years. He still uses the same sounds and structures for years and therefore this album seems a bit pointless to me. In fact, that is a generell problem with many psy productions, but compared to other veterans from the early days who have advanced their skills a lot (like Dick Trevor for instance), Cosmosis seems to settle for much less than he could actually achieve.
Well, maybe it's just my pretentious point-of-view, but I was a bit disappointed. It's still a very nice album to listen to and I wouldn't miss this guy at a festival but it doesn't catch me by suprise once or blows my mind twice either. So, it gets a 3 outta 5.
First of all, the good things: He really remains true to himself. He neither jumps on that cheesy fullon bandwaggon nor on that frugal clubby progressive one. He is one of the few who produce pure psychedelic trance with a warm feeling around it and I like that very much.
But, there is a big but(t): I can hardly hear any significant musical or technical development in his music over all these years. He still uses the same sounds and structures for years and therefore this album seems a bit pointless to me. In fact, that is a generell problem with many psy productions, but compared to other veterans from the early days who have advanced their skills a lot (like Dick Trevor for instance), Cosmosis seems to settle for much less than he could actually achieve.
Well, maybe it's just my pretentious point-of-view, but I was a bit disappointed. It's still a very nice album to listen to and I wouldn't miss this guy at a festival but it doesn't catch me by suprise once or blows my mind twice either. So, it gets a 3 outta 5.