Derek Sherinian
Molecular Heinosity (Reissue)
Review by Gary Hill
This is part of a new series of reissues of Derek Sherinian albums. It’s got new packaging, but the music is all the same as the original release. I’ve reviewed this one before, so for the sake of consistency, I’ll place that review here. The main message here, this new reissue is great. It’s worth getting for sure. Here’s that original review, which still holds true.
I’ve been a big fan of Derek Sherinian for years and it seems like every album he does is a climb above the one that preceded it. Well, with that sort of track record you had to know that eventually it would end. For my money this is that point. I would consider this a bit of a step down for Sherinian. It’s not that it’s a bad disc – far from it. It’s just that he’s been lifting the bar so high, eventually it would be tough to get over. The disc just seems a bit ordinary and a little too pure metal for the high standards his previous works set. I’d have to say that were it not for it being a Sherinian disc (we tend to put members of prog bands’ releases in progressive rock) I’d probably put this in heavy metal. Sure there’s some fusion and more proggy stuff, but I think that the metal really dominates. This is quite a strong disc, it’s just not Sherinian’s best. I believe that this one is another that has a whose who of guests, but my copy doesn’t give that information.
This review is available in book format (hardcover and paperback) in Music Street Journal: 2014 Volume 2 at lulu.com/strangesound.
|