Alternative
Press review of Pyroclastics
by Michael
C. Mahan
Boston's
proud contribution to the world of true progressive music present
their sixth, and possible their strongest, album to date. Originally
intended as a side project for Mission
of Burma guitarists Roger
Miller and Martin Swope, the Birdsongs have continued long
after the Mission collapsed.
Miller
left the band in 1988, and this record showcases Swope's last
contribution, but keyboard/percussionists Erik
Lindgren and Rick Scott, complemented
by saxophonist Ken Field, remain. The results
are staggering.
The
Birdsongs have always exhibited a mesmerizingly complex use of
keys and guitar, perpetually changing with a blend of Rock-in-Opposition
precision and joyful abandon. Field's sax
adds emotion to the mix. His work is reminiscent of the heartfelt
wailing of Roxy's Andy Mackay as well as the fusion-laced playfulness
of Piirpauke's Sakari Kukko.
This
record features three covers. There is a faithful rendering of
Eno's "Sombre Reptiles", a hymn-like interpretation
of Brian Wilson's "Our Prayer," and a downright silly
serving of Dan Elfman's TV theme for The Simpsons.
Of
the two stand-out originals, one is itself a derivation. Lindgren's
"Tomorrow Never Came" contains the same melodic flow
of the Beatles' "Tomorrow Never Knows", but is played
with the same wondeful jazz abandon that characterizes the Scandanavian
fusion sound. The other stand-out is "Why Not Circulate",
Field's playful bossa-nova, featuring a
delightful mix of heavy-metal guitar, folk fusion lead sax, and
Latin-flavored piano/percussion rhythms. This record is a pure
delight.