Artists | Issues | CD Reviews | Interviews | Concert Reviews | DVD/Video Reviews | Book Reviews | Who We Are | Staff | Home
 
Progressive Rock CD Reviews

Ape Shifter

Monkey Business

Review by Gary Hill

When I reviewed the previous set from Ape Shifter, given the change from first to second, I wondered what the next one would be like. Well, now I have my answer. This continues a tradition of fully instrumental music. This almost seems to fit somewhere between its predecessors. There is a lot of heavy metal here. However, there are still healthy prog angles. I'm not sure it fits under prog, but I'm landing in there. Whatever you call this, it's a strong release. In fact, I might say that it's the best of the three, but I'm not completely sure if I like this or the first one better.

This review is available in book (paperback and hardcover) form in Music Street Journal: 2023  Volume 2. More information and purchase links can be found at: garyhillauthor.com/Music-Street-Journal-2023.

Track by Track Review
MPU
Fast-paced and riff driven this is a real powerhouse piece. It's absolutely on fire. It's perhaps more guitar hero than prog, but there are some proggy tendencies to it.
Stampede

Coming in very heavy, this shifts out to frantic jamming after that introduction. This is a screamer that reminds me a little of Dream Theater.

Misery

A much more metallic number, this is packed full of so much riff driven magic. It has some interesting twists and turns, too.

Promises of a Progressive Future

There are a number of twists and turns on this driving, powerhouse stomper.

Ahab
Smoking hot riffing is on the menu here. This is a real stomper. It's quite metallic. It has some decidedly proggy moments, too, though. There is a mellower section mid-track that leans toward space rock and definitely brings more of the prog angles to bear. The cut drives outward after that into some more scorching metallic music.
Dregs of Doom
This is another powerhouse. From the title I would have thought that this might be sort of a doom metal take on Dixie Dregs type music. I think that the argument could be made that this sounds rather like what that would be, so perhaps that is the origin of the title. It's a killer number whatever the title means.
Purple
Now, the prog comes fully to bear on this tune. The music is still crunchy and heavy, but there are powerhouse prog rock shifts and timings. This is one of the standouts here. It's as much fusion and progressive rock as it is metallic. The bass playing really stands out, too.
Cure
This is another powerhouse screamer. It still manages some proggy changes.
Gucci, Baby
Just 16 seconds long, this is just a noisy crazed bit of sound seemingly from the middle of something.
Mind Of You
The opening on this has a real mainstream rock vibe to it. The cut drives out from there turning that into more powerhouse, riff driven rocking.
S***kicker
This has some seriously scorching guitar work. It's a real screamer. This is the kind of thing Steve Vai and Joe Satriani are known for. It gets into some spacey jamming that's almost like Pink Floyd meets Hendrix and a jazz band later in the track. It comes back out into the hard rocking before it's done.
Lying In Wait
Space music brings this into being. That holds it for a while bringing the prog angles as it does. Eventually the cut shifts out to some hard rocking zones that make me think of early Rush.

 

 
More CD Reviews
Metal/Prog Metal
Non-Prog
Progressive Rock
 
Google

   Creative Commons License
   This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License.

    © 2024 Music Street Journal                                                                           Site design and programming by Studio Fyra, Inc./Beetcafe.com