It’s Over • we’ve burned a bridge or two • it really doesn’t change your mind • the reason we don’t touch • don’t need to worry • I think of better days • as tears roll slowly down my face • I wonder if I’ll feel that way again • but I did everything for you • and you were never there • don’t need to worry • now it’s over • but I’m always here for you • try to understand • why you’ve said those things you did • I wonder if it all is just a dream • you look at me • you’re scared • for once you don’t have the answer • just hold you in my arms and say no more • oh we’ve burned a bridge or two • it really doesn’t change your mind • we’ve burned a bridge or two • it really doesn’t change your mind • the reason we don’t touch • don’t need to worry
With its debut album, this young band from Vienna follows the footsteps of honorable Austrian prog masters like "Matter Of Taste". The music on this concept album is not of the kind I'd call particularly innovative - it travels pretty much on well known roads paved by many others long ago. However, these youngsters do it in a highly pleasant way, skillfully avoiding the pitfalls of pseudo-progressive phrase rehashing most of the time - certainly more successfully so than several of their experienced grand paragons of prog. Sven B. Schreiber (sbs)
Highly productive cooperation of two Italian avantgarde masters: Paolo "Ske" Botta ("Ske") and Francesco Zago ("Yūgen", "Empty Days", "The Night Watch"). Also on board are Gabriele Guidi Colombi (bass) and Alessio Calandriello (vocals), both of them regular members of "La coscienza di Zeno", as well as Martino Malacrida, who contributed the drums on "Eros & Thanatos" by "Syndone". So this is kind of a "supergroup", which is usually not a good sign... but it's an excellent supergroup this time. A dense and dark atmosphere covers the songs on this debut album, which provide plenty of ingenious counterpoints, and sometimes get quite close to avantgarde fields. Sven B. Schreiber (sbs)
Well, I wouldn't say that the music of "Section IV" defies genres... in my opionion, it belongs to the neo-prog genre without any doubt. But on the other hand, there's nothing wrong with that. The important thing is that the band contributes great new work to the genre, helping to keep it alive. Sven B. Schreiber (sbs)