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The Kindness of Strangers (Special Edition)

Spock's Beard

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Album Review

1998's The Kindness of Strangers sees Spock's Beard returning to the more "suite" oriented format of their debut The Light, issued back in 1995. There, the set kicks off with "The Good Don't Last," a three-part ride that serves as Neal Morse's indictment of popular culture — though his lyrics are pure pop culture tripe. His screed belittles his wonderfully accessible and labyrinthine music; too bad. Things look up on "In the Mouth of Madness," with its Mellotron and heavy guitars complemented beautifully by Nick D'Virgilio's drum thud. The disc also features "June," one of Spock's most popular songs in a live setting, and is easily the most accessible and pleasant thing the overly technical and cerebral Morse ever wrote, with its lilting vocal harmonies and acoustic guitars, which give way to the rollicking metallic prog of "Strange World." The track "Harm's Way" features organist Ryo Okumoto prominently, as well as Al Morse's squealing guitar. The set closes with the three-parter, "The Flow," which is carried by a knotty, guitar-driven assault that is accented by various keyboards and moved forward ever more insistently by D'Virgilio's amazing drumming. This elegy for the end of times is one of Morse's better jobs lyrically. There is real poetry in his tome, and as piano and electric guitar solos and fills weave in and out, it becomes ominous, an elegy, and a dark meditation on the current era. This is a solid date, one that feels focused and true and full of strong songwriting with typically excellent performances, and is well advised for those seeking an introduction to this fine band. The 2004 remastered version contains a whopping five bonus tracks in the form of three radio edits of album cuts and home demos for "June" and "Strange World," as well as overly detailed liner notes by Morse.

Customer Reviews

One of Their Best

This is a very solid album. The Good Don't Last, In the Mouth of Madness, June, Strange World and Flow are the best on the album. I disagree with the iTunes review in that I don't think the lyrics to The Good Don't Last belittle the accessibility of the music. Morse is doing the least commercial thing possible with this album and he's saying that the true musicians and artists are the least recognized. Also, the accessibility of the music comes from Neal Morse's nack for making catchy songs, not from wanting to be a commercial band (because that they are most certainly not), and if the "professional" reviewer here thinks that a catchy, quality band shouldn't be singing negatively about mass culture, that that should be left to some worthless meandering pseudo jazz rock band, then he or she is truly stupid. At any rate, the rest of the review was fine and I recomend this great album to anyone interested in this band.

The Best of The "Beard"

This is by far my most favorite Beard CD. Not a bad cut on it. Fans of Floyd, Yes, Genesis, Crimson. ect. should take note and give it a try. This is very well played prog rock. It's just poppy enough to get you singing along, yet Progressive enough to make the hair on the back of your neck stand up when these guys hit the perfect chord change. And they do it a ton on this album. Neal Morse is one of the best song writers in the world and he is really showing off here.

Not bad, but not a masterpiece

Certainly the weakest of the Neal Morse era, but it's still pretty good. "The Good Don't Last", "June", and "Flow" are definitely the shining moments on the album.

Biography

Formed: 1992 in Los Angeles, CA

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Spock's Beard began in 1992 when brothers Neal (lead vocals) and Al Morse (guitar) teamed up with drummer Nick D'Virgilio. After self-financing their first album, bassist Dave Meros joined, and The Light was recorded in 1994. Consisting of four lengthy songs, this debut album was well received by progressive rock fans, but received little public acclaim. Ryo Okumoto joined in 1995 to play keyboards. In 1996, The Official Bootleg was released, a live performance containing the entire first album plus...
Full Bio
The Kindness of Strangers (Special Edition), Spock's Beard
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