September 02, 2017

Granada ‎– Discografía Básica: Hablo De Una Tierra (1975) España Año 75 (1976) Valle Del Pas (1978) (3 CD Box-Set, Spain)

Tracklist:
1. Granada Es (6:25)
2. Rompiendo La Oscuridad (5:31)
3. Hablo De Una Tierra (6:35)
4. Nada Es Real (5:01)
5. Es El Momento De Oir Un Buen Rock (6:34)
6. Algo Bueno (6:07)

Musicians:
Acoustic Guitar – Antonio Renteria (Tílburi)
Bass – Antonio García Oteyza
Drums, Percussion, Vocals – Juan Bona
Electric Guitar – Michael Vorteflich
Guitar [Spanish] – Manolo Sanlúcar (tracks: A3)
Guitar, Vocals – Javier Huidobro (tracks: A2)
Mandolin – José L. Barceló (Tílburi)
Piano, Mellotron, Electric Piano, Harpsichord, Violin, Flute, Acoustic Guitar [12 String], Percussion, Vocals – Carlos Cárcamo
Vocals – Carlos Tena (tracks: A3)

España Año 75 (1975)
Tracklist:
1. El Calor Que Pasamos Este Verano 
↪ 1a. Por Dónde Andamos (3:52)
↪ 2b. Todo Hubiera Sido Tan Bueno (3:37)
↪ 3c. La Auténtica Canción Del Verano (5:40)
↪ 4d. No Me Digas Bueno, Vale (4:12)
5. Septiembre (8:04)
6. Noviembre Florido (7:06)
7. Ahora Vamos A Ver Que Pasa (7:26)

Musicians:
Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar – Javier Monforte
Bass – Antonio García-Oteyza
Drums – Juan Bona
Piano, Electric Piano, Mellotron, Flute, Violin, Mandolin – Carlos Cárcamo
Saxophone – Jorge Pardo (tracks: A1)

Valle Del Pas (1978)
Tracklist:
1 No Sé Si Debo (5:08)
2 Breve Silueta De Color Carmín (4:11)
3 Noches Oscuras, Ocas Contentas (5:45)
4 Himno Del Sapo (4:00)
5 Valle Del Pas (7:47)
6 Calle Betis (Atardeciendo) (6:47)
7 Ya Llueve (4:43)

Musicians:
Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar – Carlos Basso
Arranged By, Conductor – José Miguel Évora
Bagpipes [Gaita], Bombarde, Performer [Popular Instruments] – Joaquín Blanco
Bass – Julio Blasco
Drums, Percussion – Antonio Rodríguez
Keyboards, Flute – Carlos Cárcamo


Pioneering early-70's Spanish progressive band, GRANADA was the musical project of multi-instrumentalist Carlos Carcamo (flute, violin, acoustic - and electric piano, mellotron, clavicordio, 12-string guitar, percussion and vocals!) and the other musicians Michael Vortreflich (electric guitar), Antonio Garcia Oteyza (bass) and Juan Bona (drums and vocals). GRANADA had a unique style. They remind of the Mexicans ICONOCLASTA, and also other Spanish bands like TRIANA or COTO EN PEL. The British influences come from YES, JETHRO TULL and other Italian bands very present in their sound. The emphasis of GRANADA relies on the keyboards (with profusion of moog and mellotron) and guitar instrumental passages, but with more keys that guitar. They sound like a mix of fusion and symphonic influences. 
GRANADA released three albums: "Hablo De Una Tierra" ('75), "Espana Ano" '75 ('76) and "Valle De Pas" ('78). The debut-album "Hablo De Una Tierra" is their most original album. The six compositions sound very varied (from rock and bluesy to latin and symphonic) with strong Spanish vocals, powerful guitar (some biting solos), pleasant keyboards (many beautiful Mellotron waves) and IAN ANDERSON inspired fluteplay. The title track includes a splendid and very unique duet from the Mellotron and flamenco guitar of guest-musician Manolo Sanlucar, goose bumps! Two of their best albums "Espana Ano 75" and "Valle Del Pas" were reissued on 1 CD. They consist of instrumental, melodic progressive rock with occasionally surprising moments, which include the use of orchestration and bagpipes. They are both two excellent examples of Spanish prog and highly recommended. Definitely check them out!!!

GRANADA ‎– Discografía Básica
With its wiser sonic architecture and a more inspired compositional drive in comparison with the promising debut album, Granada's sophomore effort "España Año 75" installs a proper maturation of Carlos Cárcamo's musical vision. It is from this album onwards that we can properly point out Granada as a major name in Spain's progressive rock for the 70s. Since this album was released in 1976, the title can be interpreted as a humorous allusion to remembrances of a near past time, and the specific title of the suite that fills the album's first half, 'El Calor Que Pasamos Este Verano' ('The Heat We Experienced Last Summer'), enhances this spirit of instant nostalgia for good, funny times that have just passed us by. This suite has 4 sections, with the first one, entitled 'Por Dónde Andamos', providing a magnificent exhibition of symphonic prog with abundant folkloric flourishes and added spacey ornaments. It really starts things on a high note, and so section 2 'Todo Hubiera Sido Tan Bueno' slows down things a little bit and adds certain jazzy nuances to the rhythmic scheme. The soft and well-structured melodic warmth that takes place here is somewhat related to the Mediterranean feel we come to expect also from many Italian symphonic bands. Section 3, entitled 'La Auténtica Canción Del Verano', spices things up in order to state a similar dynamics to that we found in section 1: the cosmic synth solo helps to enhance the most extroverted passages, while the sax solo (guest Jorge Pardo doing an excellent Mel Collins personification) enters during a semi-funky excerpt. The last section 'No Me Digas Bueno, Vale' perpetuates the previous one's dynamics and right away expands on its rockier edge: the opening dual guitar solo is just splendid, while the electric piano flourishes that emerge afterwards provide a moment of Arabic/Flamenco colors. The final jam is catchy enough as to preserve the listener's attention throughout its repetitive cadenza. The album's second half starts with 'Septiembre', a piece with dominantly tranquil moods whose melancholic atmospheres remain a constant elements throughout the motif variations, even in those motifs in which the sonic framework turns a bit livelier. By the way, the final section (that sounds like a mixture of Le Orme and Jethro Tull) is one of the most magical moments in the album? and its weird ending makes it even more special. 'Noviembre Florido' brings a lighter set of moods, mostly based on Northern Spanish folk. After the 3 minute mark, the joy stops for a while and we find a softer passage driven on a ceremonious note: the combination of string synth background and Spanish guitar flourishes is just lovely, I could listen to this musical idea for a full 4 minutes or so, but actually it is quite brief, and things don't take long before they return to the original mood. The 7+ minute long closer 'Ahora Vamos A Ver Qué Pasa (Vámonos Para El Mediterráneo)' is the most folk-centered piece in the album: featuring the mandolin and violin, with a dominant room for up tempo ambiences, it effectively wraps thins up with flying colors. "España Año 75" is, all in all, a big demonstration of the solid colorfulness that prog rock musicians brought out to Spain's musical scene in the 70s: a collector's item to be dearly valued by prog maniacs everywhere. Review by Cesar Inca

1 comment:

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