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Jason Blake

A Confusion Sequence

Review by Gary Hill

Here is a truism for you: You just can’t go wrong with a Jason Blake album. This newest release is another example proving that rule. The music here is all strictly instrumental. It’s also performed by two people, Blake on Warr Guitar and Marco Minnemann on drums. The music has leanings toward things like king Crimson and more. It’s dynamic and diverse. Yet it is also cohesive. I like everything here, but some tracks do stand taller than others.

This review is available in book (paperback and hardcover) form in Music Street Journal: 2025  Volume 2. More information and purchase links can be found at: garyhillauthor.com/Music-Street-Journal-2025.

Track by Track Review
Awakening to Questions

This starts ambient. It quickly turns heavier. It eventually works out to a cool groove with great driving percussion and some inspired musical concepts. This thing is just so strong. It takes us through a number of twists and turns along the road.

Memory Variations

Coming in edgy and harder rocking, this has prominent percussion and killer Warr guitar work at play. In some ways this makes me think of what you might get if Rush teamed up with 1990s King Crimson. While this is definitely a strong track, it’s not quite at the level of the first one. That said, some of the harder rocking stuff later is very strong.

Pretending to Breathe

While not a big change, this really ups the ante somehow. It is quite involved and really gets into some driving territory. It’s a powerhouse that’s among the best things here.

Dormant Visions

Driving, hard rocking and quite cool, I really dig this one a lot. There is definitely a King Crimson angle to it, but there are plenty of other things going on, too. I’d say that this is another standout on the disc, although in a lot of ways it’s not a big change from the rest.

Lucent Eyes

The prog elements on this are so strong. This makes me think of Dream Theater to a large degree. It comes in driving and hard edged, but further down the road it does drop back a bit. This is a screaming hot number that might be my favorite piece here. It just manages to work so well. It also stretches the concepts more than anything else here does.

A Prophecy of Recollections

This gets into more mainstream prog territory, too. At nearly ten-minutes long, this is the epic of the set, and that time gets good usage. This is arguably the most dynamic thing here with a lot of changes and different sections. It reflects a lot of the leanings from elsewhere on the album, but it all gets rearranged in fresh ways. This is an intriguing number and a great choice for disc closer.

 
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