Album Review: Moon Letters – This Dark Earth

Band: Moon Letters | Album: This Dark Earth | Genre: Progressive rock | Year: 2025

From: Seattle, USA | Label: Independent

For fans of: Genesis, Yes, Marillion

Bandcamp

Three years after their last release, 2022’s excellent Thank You from the Future, Moon Letters have returned with their third full-length album. I’ve mentioned a few times that they’re one of my favorite local acts, and if you follow me on Facebook, you will occasionally see photos of their rather theatrical live shows. If you get a chance to see them perform, I highly recommend it.

My first experience hearing this album was at one of those performances. It was their album release show, and they played This Dark Earth in its entirety. That performance was part of a larger musical festival called Cascadence, formerly Seaprog. Occurring most Junes (there have been a few years it did not occur), it’s a fantastic highlight of mostly-local progressive music acts.

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Album Review: Chercán – Chercán

Band: Chercán | Album: Chercán | Genre: Progressive rock | Year: 2025

From: Valdivia, Chile | Label: Independent

For fans of: Tool, The Mars Volta

Bandcamp

Chercán is a Chilean quintet that plays a lush, complex, and engaging variety of progressive rock. Things are densely layered and smartly composed, and the band incorporates jazz and sounds from their homeland. Everything about this record really impresses me.

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Album Review: Firmament – A New World If You Can Take It

Band: Firmament | Album: A New World If You Can Take It | Genre: Progressive metal | Year: 2025

From: Canton (OH), USA | Label: Independent

For fans of: Haken, Thank You Scientist, Between the Buried and Me

Bandcamp

I don’t claim to like everything. I know there are just certain styles of music which don’t resonate with me for one reason or another. I can articulate why I don’t like some genres (for example, most singer-songwriter stuff), while I struggle to find the words to describe my distaste for other genres (like reggae or ska or calypso; the Caribbean is just not my musical realm). Metalcore and post-hardcore are two styles of music that fall somewhere in between for me. I don’t really like the vocals common to them (and many other “-core” genres), but there’s also something else I can’t quite put my finger on. Despite this, every now and then I find a band that I like that incorporates these elements into their music.

Firmament is an Ohio-based duo that plays an energetic and emotive brand of post-hardcore-influenced progressive metal. Yes, there are elements on this record which don’t tickle me, but there’s still plenty here that I like. And when you handicap this album for my built-in biases, A New World If You Can Take It is quite strong. This review is going to sound more negative than I intend it, but rest assured, I strongly recommend this release.

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Odds & Ends: June 2, 2025

Band: Ancient Death | Album: Ego Dissolution | Genre: Progressive metal, Death metal | Bandcamp

Ego Dissolution is an exciting record that deftly weaves progressive and cosmic elements into a solid death metal base. This album is somewhat comparable to Blood Incantation’s recent work, minus the overt Floydianisms. There are pummeling, stormy riffs and gut-rattling bass and drums, but the occasional pared-back moment (like on “Breathe”) really helps this album shine.

Score: 83/100

Band: Cosmic Cathedral | Album: Deep Water | Genre: Progressive rock | Bandcamp

The latest Neal Morse project certainly sounds like a Neal Morse project. And as usual, where Neal is the creative lead on a project, he has one question for you: “Do you have a moment to talk about our Lord and Savior: Jesus Christ?”

The music is fine. Do you like early Spock’s Beard? Do you like Transatlantic? Do you have enough lactase in your system to handle the staggering amount of cheese here? Then you’re probably going to enjoy this, especially if you like (or at least don’t mind) the overt religiosity. There are some genuinely fun passages, and for all my quibbles, Morse is a very talented arranger. He’s got his signature sound, and he’s good at varying it enough between releases to (mostly) stay interesting on a musical level.

That said, this does suffer from some ills endemic to his other works. First and foremost is the album’s length. Deep Water is 71 minutes long, and it is absolutely not deserving of that length. The most obvious culprits here are the 13-minute opener and the 9-part, 38-minute title track. There’s simply an immense amount of bloat and music that doesn’t really lead to or add anything. 

Secondly, it’s Jesus. Like, I get it, Neal. You found God. Now find something else to write about. Or at least be less obvious about it. If I, an avowed lyric-zone-outer, am noticing how thoroughly you’re beating a dead horse, try shifting topics. Or at least pick some obscure Bible stories. There’s a lot of material there.

Score: 70/100

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Album Review: Edensong – Our Road to Dust

Band: Edensong | Album: Our Road to Dust | Genre: Progressive rock, Progressive metal | Year: 2025

From: Middletown, USA | Label: The Laser’s Edge

For fans of: The Dear Hunter, Phideaux, Dream Theater, Jethro Tull

Bandcamp

Edensong is not a band I was familiar with before writing this review. They play a brand of semi-metallic progressive rock with significant folk influences. The band also has a dedicated flutist, so the comparisons to Jethro Tull are pretty easy. Those comparisons are also pretty apt, as Tull’s influence can be heard throughout this record.

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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: Kuunatic – Wheels of Ömon

Band: Kuunatic | Album: Wheels of Ömon | Genre: Avant-garde psychedelic tribal folk zeuhl? | Year: 2025

From: Tokyo, Japan | Label: Glitterbeat

For fans of: Kikagaku Moyo, Magma, Osamu Kitajima

Bandcamp

Kuunatic’s sound is pretty difficult to describe, and that’s a big part of why I love them. I lumped all those genre descriptors above into a big chimera rather than split them up more granularly for a reason. The elements are noticeable but impossible to truly pick apart or isolate. At its base, this is a drums-bass-keys trio where all three members sing, but they also include a multitude of traditional Japanese folk instruments, including the sho, sasara, and ryuteki.

Much as Magma’s music is largely about and set on Kobaïa, Kuunatic’s is about their own mythic world, Kuurandia. (They go into great detail about the story of both this album and their 2021 debut, Gate of Klüna, in this article, as well as on the Bandcamp page for this release.) The music is fittingly odd, experimental, and ritualistic for such heady concepts.

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Album Review: Fulguromatic – Fulguromatic

Band: Fulguromatic | Album: Fulguromatic | Genre: Progressive rock | Year: 2025

From: Rennes, France | Label: áMARXE

For fans of: Zopp, Frank Zappa, Gong

Bandcamp

Fulguromatic is a French duo, about which there is relatively little information online. Their self-titled debut album is a fascinating blend of styles. “Progressive rock” is certainly a safe label for this act, but they incorporate a lot of jazz into their sound, as well as weirder, more experimental and improvisational elements. Fulguromatic has a rich and enthralling sound, and each song is impressively inventive.

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