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	| Track by Track Review |  |  |  | Black Moon There is a dark sort of element at the start of this thing. The cut powers out into a killer hard rocking sound from there. It’s trademark Lucifer’s Friend, but it occupies the same kind of ground you might expect from Deep Purple at times. This has some serious prog rock shifts in the instrumental sections. The horns bring some jazz to the table. There are some powerhouse sections to this thing.
 |  |  |  | Passengers More subdued, but not by much, this again  makes me think of Deep Purple a bit. As the track works out there are  some definite metal elements at play. As it drops down to the verse,  this feels very much like Uriah Heep. This has a cool balance between  the mellower and more rocking. It’s a classy cut that works quite well.  There is a cool shift toward neo-classical mid-track that really brings  the prog home. It blasts out with a cool guitar solo from there.
 |  |  |  | Rolling the Stone A faster paced jam, this is smoking hot with plenty of classic rock, prog and more in the mix. It’s high energy and so cool.
 |  |  |  | Behind the Smile Dramatic  and a bit theatric, this rocker works well. It’s a mellower, more AOR  power-ballad styled than the previous tracks were.
 |  |  |  | Palace of Fools Another  powerhouse rocking tune, the prog elements here are more AOR. This is a  cut that could land along the lines metal in some ways. This works out  to more pure prog in a later movement that works through some intriguing  changes. This is a killer rocker.
 |  |  |  | Call the Captain A  metallic guitar riffing movement opens this track. The powers out from  there with a lot of style. There are definitely more proggy elements  later in the run, and even some neo-classical-type stuff.
 |  |  |  | Little Man A  slower, mellower cut, this is a bluesy track that’s much more stripped  back early. It gets a bit of a jazz rock sort of element as the  arrangement builds out going into the second verse. It gets more into  rocking zones at times. There is a bit of a fusion jam at one point,  too. There are a lot of different flavors and movements built into this  thing.
 |  |  |  | Freedom Coming in screaming hot with a hard-edged  jam that’s part prog, part metal and part arena rock, this is another  killer. This is very dramatic, and one of the catchiest tunes of the  set.
 |  |  |  | Taking It to the Edge Coming in decidedly  progressive rock oriented, this has an AOR vibe. It’s a classy tune  that’s sort of mid-line in terms of rocking and mellow zones. It’s  another with some great hooks.
 |  |  |  | Glory Days Another AOR  styled rocker, this is solid stuff. It’s not one of my favorites here,  but it has some cool riffs and a great tone. It’s just that some of the  other music here is so strong, making this a bit of an “also ran.”  Still, it has some good hooks and works well. There are some proggy  breaks later in the track.
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