Odds & Ends: August 4, 2025

Band: Alburnus | Album: Alburnus III | Genre: Progressive rock, Psychedelic rock | Bandcamp

This Finnish band’s latest album is a groovy, retro-influenced slab of prog and psych. The instrumental passages are peppy, surprisingly catchy, and thoroughly enjoyable. The band shows a knack for melody and hooks, and their playing is flashy without being excessively technical. It’s nothing groundbreaking, but it’s fun.

Score: 72/100

Band: Echolyn | Album: TimeSilentRadio II | Genre: Progressive rock | Bandcamp

Echolyn put out two albums this March, and this is the stronger of the two. Consisting of just two massive tracks, TSRII sees the band utilize their usual sound in an effective manner. ‘90s prog is not my favorite flavor of the genre, but Echolyn pulls it off pretty well. It’s often sunny and relatively accessible, but the underlying songwriting is complex and intelligent. Some parts can be a bit on the cheesy side for me, but overall, their blend of classic prog, pop-rock, and jazzy flourishes works very well. The 29-minute “Water in Our Hands” is especially memorable.

Score: 80/100 

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Album Review: Saint Vayu – Eternal Returns

Band: Saint Vayu | Album: Eternal Returns | Genre: Progressive rock, Neo-prog | Year: 2025

From: Los Angeles, USA | Label: Wave Racers Collective

For fans of: Spock’s Beard, Wobbler, Marillion

Bandcamp

I’ve dipped my toes into electronica a handful of times on this site. I often feel somewhat out of my depth, but there is the occasional act which crosses into my wheelhouse. One of the first electronic acts I covered was Vayu and their 2021 album, Wrath. That was solidly an electronic album with prog-rock influences, and the vocals were performed with a Vocaloid synthesizer. I liked it overall, and obviously, so did Pope Francis, hence the canonization and name change.

(Note: I started writing this review before Pope Francis died.)

(Second note: Francis contributed to a progressive rock album in 2015, which is fucking wild. Wake Up! is actually an alright record. Not amazing, but alright.)

In the four years since Wrath, more has changed in the band than just the name. Where Wrath was primarily electronic, Eternal Returns is unquestionably a rock album. Vocaloid has been eschewed, as well, with the sole member of this band contributing his own vocals.

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Album Review: Retreat from Moscow – Life as We Knew It

Band: Retreat from Moscow | Album:Life as We Knew It | Genre: Progressive rock | Year: 2022

From: Cardiff, UK | Label: Independent

For fans of: Rush, Genesis, Marillion, The Flower Kings

Bandcamp

This Welsh quartet has a unique history. Originally formed in the late 1970s, they played live shows for several years but never released anything. After disbanding in 1981, Retreat from Moscow entered a (nearly) 40-year period of hibernation. In 2019, the band’s core reformed and started to record both old and new material. The result of those sessions is Life as We Knew It.

This band’s debut, four decades in the making, is a fun, punchy bunch of prog rock cuts. Many of the compositions certainly feel rooted in late-70s prog, with no shortage of flashy instrumental passages and arena-rock grandiosity; but the production is quite modern-sounding, and certain riffs border on metallic.

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