
Space, the final frontier. Having chosen a name such as Pulsar, these French lads clearly
defined their mission to create music that boldly goes beyond the normal perimeters and shoots into
that zone beyond. The follow up to their enticing debut Pollen (a favorite of Peter Hammill,
according to the liner notes), which set the dreamy and romantic tone for their crafty style, is this
brilliant (like a supernova) recording with the evocative title The Strands of the Future. Blasting off
with the 22 minute title cut also clearly lays down the obvious that this is no pop album! This massive
piece slowly weaves in the trademark Pulsar elements: Gilbert Gandils pastoral acoustic guitar playing
combining with waves of Moog, Organ, Mellotron and the Solina (a distinct sounding made in France
keyboard with a distinctive tone), rippling drumming from the busy Victor Bosch and Rolland Richards
tremulous flute. When Gandil lets one of his immediately recognizable electric solos fly, the heavens
gates are unbolted and a torrent of heady pleasures greets the avid ear. The Floydian allusions are
only in structure, as the individual members have an all-together divergent approach, Gandil being
closer to Hackett than Gilmour (even looking like Steve circa 1974!), Bosch way jazzier, almost like
Michael Giles of KC rather than the sedate Nick Mason and the heavy use of flute and Mellotron (used
very sparingly by the Meddlers). Also Pulsar proffers a more instrumental medium with only
intermittent vocals. The last two minutes float in fluted serenity, peace at last. Flight is a short two
and a half minute stunning piece of genius, so typical of French prog with an ornately romantic hummed
theme supported by a synth-tron combo to die for. Windows is the third chapter, with a mournful flute
and a sad English vocal with plenty of choir backing, itself underpinned by the trusty Mellotron, all
setting the table for a restrained Gandil showcase. The arrangement is very gentle, almost pastoral, a
close cousin of KCs I Talk to the Wind (hint) with absolute tremendous flute playing by Rolland
Richard and a subtle synthesizer outro. Fools Failure is the 10 minute closer, another Great
White Tron infested track, massive walls of sound, whistling Moog flights, a slightly harder edge to
both the snarling vocals, the oddball backing voices and the grittier guitar smears. When Gandil
unleashes a huge creepy solo, the choir decides to wail insanely, giving this an almost Ange-like feel,
circa Le Cimetière des Arlequins. The magic flute dances again with frivolity, enticed by the string
metal tapes that lead to weird noises: typewriter, pages crunched and tossed and assorted other
oddities until the main theme comes and goes, just like a
.. Pulsar.
A must have for fans of symphonic space rock, particularly those who enjoy LEcole Progressive
Française. Hey, like Finn and his fantastique forest 4.5 etoiles
by tszirmay
PULSAR Music Online:
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