The Shadow Behind the
Sun
By
Cu-Sithe
Written by
Steve Sheppard
There is a different style emitting from the New Age genre, I’ve really noticed its
acceleration even more lately, and this mixture of Electronic music and
Progressive rock is creating some very tasty music to be enjoyed by us ever
eager listeners. The Shadow Behind The
Sun may well be an example of this, by creator Cu-Sithe, (pronounced Q She), The
Shadow Behind The Sun is not only an album to watch, but one to dive
headlong into, as it has something for just about everyone.
A smart space styled intro creates our portal into this
collection of great music, and the first glorious offering greets our ears with
the track Through a Sea of Stars, a
truly fluent composition with a segment of layered and textured EM patterns,
and mixed with a little Floyd styled guitar ethic, it really is a treat and a
fantastic place to start.
The shorter arrangement of Coming Down is now upon us and its diminutive stature time wise, is
a complete distraction from the breath taking and powerful resonance piece that
it truly is, one that drives us into one of the most amazingly powerful
offerings on the album in The Eye at the
Heart. Once more the keyboards and electric guitar magic of Cue Sithe work their spell wonderfully,
creating for us a moving opus of colour through music, and the resultant piece
is like mixing Oldfield with Floyd, and that can’t be at all bad.
The addictive nature of this next piece is something I think
I will be visiting many times over in the next few weeks, and is entitled The Depths. The gentle efforts here
actually manifest something vast, yet comforting, the electronic wizardly and
guitar, wend their way through the very depths of a grand musical ocean; if
there happens to be a producer of graphic seascapes reading this, then this
title and track may well be one you might like to look at using, it is most
certainly cinematic in quality.
As we glide into the second half of the album we come across
one of the most dramatic tracks off the release and entitled The Swarm. A sense of movement can be
found within this piece, and the synths manifest a strangely warm atmosphere to
this arrangement. The guitar and pertinent bass line manifest what in my view,
would be a good single to release; a very memorable offering indeed.
The ethereal nature behind Pulsar is fascinating and calming, but distinctive percussion can
also be found here, in a track that seems to hover above and all around us.
Note please, the slow but crafted build and progression of this arrangement, it
is simply a wonderful thing to behold, and at times reminds me of the old style
new age works of Medwyn Goodall.
The energy picks up for the next offering entitled The Birthplace of Stars. The space
ethic is back and in full flow, and a vast array of synths build a piece for us
that has an undeniably empowering soundscape to enjoy, we could easily be
travelling from the heart of a super nova and into a stellar nursery with ease.
Timestream continues the irrepressible pace, and
now the mixture of prog, new age and EM is complete within its musical
construct. This is one amazing offering without doubt, and a really stand out
piece off the release; the symbiotic partnership of electronics, guitar and
keyboards is something to really enjoy here.
Our penultimate track is called The Long Grey Shadow, a really clever creation can be found here,
the musical narrative is strong, the sense of a quickening, a fast movement and
an arrival, can all be found on this highly rated and wonderfully manifested
piece, and as we stand at the portal of completion we have the chance to start
all over again, but please listen to the audio within this track, your own
analysis will make this clearer.
The preceding offering leads us perfectly into the captain’s
chair for this next and final arrangement called First Flight. The energy generated here by a full flowing electric
guitar pushes us onwards and into regions of space as of yet unvisited by
humanity, this is indeed an amazing way to leave the album, but one that is so
good, it may well have opened a rift in space and time for us to perhaps
explore even more.
The Shadow Behind the
Sun by Cu-Sithe has to be the most original
album I have heard this year in any genre without doubt. There is so much to
enjoy and like about this release, the performance and production quality is
perfect, each track artistically creates its narrative from start to finish
without ever being too long or too short, and the whole album itself is a tale
from beginning to end, so much so, that you really will never want to miss a single
second of its brilliance. There is in
fact a story that comes with the offering, so you may want to read that as you
listen for yourself to the whole album.
The Shadow Behind the
Sun by Cu-Sithe is a thoroughly recommended
album indeed.
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