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Time of Legends (album)

by Synth replicants

supported by
ToXyGeNeDK
ToXyGeNeDK thumbnail
ToXyGeNeDK You both did a very reat job on this album with nice and relaxing music.
My fav. track is Home
Robert Kalyos
Robert Kalyos thumbnail
Robert Kalyos Excellent work by Per, who with this new album reconfirms his mastery, to make us more and more excited with his music.
Then with Steve's hand, he adds the icing on a cake, already exquisite in itself.
Congratulations "guys" Favorite track: A Hymn for the Pioneers.
Frans Lemaire - MICADO
Frans Lemaire - MICADO thumbnail
Frans Lemaire - MICADO What a great music again. I love this because it reminds me to other great electronic synth music and at the same time , it gives me inspiration for , and examples of " my favorite synth music " . Bravo to Steve for this Guitar Symbiosis. Favorite track: Home (Dedicated to Vangelis).
Paul Asbury Seaman
Paul Asbury Seaman thumbnail
Paul Asbury Seaman A thrilling new-artist discovery that leaves the pack of other T’Dream wannabees in the dust. With the addition of American guitarist Steve Labrecque, Synth Replicants takes its legacy inspiration to a whole new level, combining the soaring guitar licks of 70s prog rock with the sensibilities of today’s EM. What makes the guitar solos (already too rare in ambient music) so fabulous here is that they are not just improvised fill, but used to create actual melodies. Favorite track: A Hymn for the Pioneers.
Flemming Pedersen
Flemming Pedersen thumbnail
Flemming Pedersen Excellent new album by Synth Replicants. The new constellation with Per Thomhav and Steve Labrecque is a real pleasure to listen to. The album is highly recommended and it is very difficult to find a favorite as the whole album is a true musical experience, with lots of synthesizers and guitars, all wrapped up in a fantastic sound package. Good job by Synth Replicants. Favorite track: Home (Dedicated to Vangelis).
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  • Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

    The CD is presented in a 4-panel Digipak, gloss UV Coating. The music is stored onto CD-R discs, on the market´s best CD media, Full colour offset/digital printing.

    Includes unlimited streaming of Time of Legends (album) via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
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  • Full Digital Discography

    Get all 55 Synth replicants releases available on Bandcamp and save 75%.

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality downloads of Band Aid for Ukraini 2.0 (album), Time of Legends (album), Sunset Fantasy (single), A Hymn for the Pioneers (single), Moondance (single), cyclus TWO (album), Band Aid for Ukraini (album), elements for x-mas - the tangerine mission (album), and 47 more. , and , .

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about

The album "Time of Legends" is the first in a new constellation of Synth replicants joining founder Per Thomhav (Denmark) with new member Steve Labrecque (America).

"Time of Legends" is inspired by and dedicated to the legacy of Tangerine Dream.
The songs on the album are a tribute to the legends who shaped Tangerine Dream - Edgar and Jerome Froese, Klaus Schulze, Thorsten Quaeschning and members like the fantastic Iris Camaa on drums / percussion and many more...

The song "Home" is dedicated to Vangelis.


Hardware synths.:
Moog Grandmother,
Roland System1, Roland Gaia, Roland SH01A, Roland SH02, Roland JX8P, Roland SH09, Roland VP-03 Vocoder, Roland Organ String 09, Roland TR-8S,
Novation Mininova, Novation Ultranova,
Arturia MatrixBrute, Arturia MicroBrute, Arturia Spark LE. Korg MS20.

Guitars:
Schecter Sun Valley Super Shredder FR-S (Diamond Series), Rupert Neve Designs RNDI, UAD apollo X8, Neural DSP

Additional programs
Arturia V Collection 8. UVI Vintage Vault 4.
Everything goes through Reason12 and mastering is done in Studio One 6.

credits

released September 22, 2023

All music is written and performed by Per Thomhav and Steve Labrecque.
Per Thomhav - Synths and VST´s
Steve Labrecque - Guitar

@cover photo,"The Umbrella man" credit to Evgeni Tcherkasski - EvgeniT

REVIEW by Canadian Electronic Music Blog SYNTHSEQUENCES

Synth Replicants Time of Legends (2023)

“A cocktail that makes listening very pleasant with a title that is worth the price of downloading”

(CD/DDL 66:29) (V.F.)

(E-Rock Berlin School)

I've always believed in it! Electric guitar and synthesizers make a great combination. All it takes is for the two musicians to combine their passions to create an explosive cocktail of emotions.
TIME OF LEGENDS is an album of electronic hard rock, where Per Thomhav combines the harmonies of his keyboards, the rhythms of his sequencer and of his electronic percussion textures with the guitar of Steve Labrecque, a six-string virtuoso from Connecticut, in the United States. His riffs are heart-tearing and incisive. Put it together with his solos, it brings another dimension to electronic music (EM) as defined by Edgar Froese in Underwater Sunlight.

The album's title is precisely a tribute to Tangerine Dream in its post-Chris Franke years. Except that the sequencer and its rhythmic tricks remain anchored in this album. The percussion textures, especially the bongos and other hand-clapped percussions, are a constant reminder of Iris Camaa's work in the Miramar years. And why is it so good here, when TD's electronic rock at the time left me cold? Well, the guitar is essentially the heart of TIME OF LEGENDS. There are none of the insipid backing vocals or mushy arrangements that sanitized the music of Froese, father and son. Thomhav and Labrecque's complicity is palpable, resulting in inspired and inspiring music with deep guitar solos and rhythms knotted around good percussion textures and a restrained but well-controlled sequencer.
All in all, an excellent Synth Replicants album that continues where Cyclus TWO left off a few months earlier.

Wind and clashing rail effects. Mechanical ululations and a layer of fog hovering over a bed of orchestrations. These orchestrations waltz more than they glide, endorsing a distant melody that can be hummed, as well as whistled, with ease. These elements carry the atmospheric, musical opening of "A Hymn for the Pioneers" over a distance of 2 minutes and counting. It's pure EM until Steve Labrecque's electric six-string chops up the opening. It's heavy and incisive. It slices through the electronic effects like a scalpel through a spider's nest. Sequences and electronic percussions suffer under its weight, while voices - yes, there are voices - try to dominate it, if not tame it. But nothing works! Its plaintive solos, brimming with sharp riffs, shine over this static electronic rock, kicking off an album that is quite musical, even melodic, for its heaviness and fury.

"Drive by Berlin" follows with a very Berliner electronic rhythm. The sequencer vividly alternates its bouncy chords, tracing Berlin School-like rotary axes. Already, the rhythm is lively under a layer of fluty mist. The structure becomes ascending, like a hiccupping spiral, before crashing down to a classic rock phase. The percussions restructure this rhythm, while the sequencer unravels its jerks with subtle ratchet effects, now surrounded by long guitar riffs. The explosion arrives around the 3-minute mark, with the guitar developing ferocious looping solos with sharper and deeper phases, flirting with the basics of heavy metal. A small moment of serenity, classic in EM, where the percussions flicker before Drive by Berlin re-explodes in a finale that reminds me of Harald Nies' techno rock. Sunset Fantasy attacks our ears with a dramatic opening from which a synth line is rippling a melody over lapping water. Orchestral haze covers this opening, as does a more pensive guitar that guides the structure towards an increasingly sustained rock. Efficient rock that's ideal for guitar, even if the sequencer here and there lets off some good jumping-key dribble effects.

Speaking of Harald Nies, his style is also well felt in the solid blues rock that is "Dragons March". A good cosmic slow that fills us with sensuality.

The title track is the highlight of "TIME OF LEGENDS". It's a heavy, a melodious rock, chopped up by powerful harmonic guitar riffs. The solos are powerful, and the guitar weaves a superb, poignant melody that digs an earworm in the deep of our ears that will haunt us for hours afterwards. This is the track that comes closest to Jerome Froese's Guitartronica repertoire. In addition to the splendid guitar, there's a wonderful combination of electronic percussions - you can hear the bongos as in the days of Iris Camaa with TD - and the sequencer, which structures a lively, driving rhythm.

"Artificial Love" is big, pastiche 80's rock. The rhythm relies on percussions struck with a jerky heaviness and a sequencer that uses the ratchet technique. The sequencer's flow hops and rolls with fluidity, structuring the foundations of a solid electronic rock that recalls the Melrose years of Edgar's gang. The guitar is as harmonious as always. And Steve Labrecque makes the most of the vibrato effect, cutting out screaming and sometimes poignant solos. Over a bolo sequencer structure,

"Red Summer Rain" follows with a energetic static rhythm that gives the guitar plenty of room to expel passionate solos.

After an opening that flirts with the candy-pink rock of the TDI years, "Moon Dance" adjusts its aim by offering a ballad drawn from EM's rather esoteric approach. The rhythm is sober, with a good mesh between percussions and sequencer, but nothing more. It is surrounded by electronic arrangements, with azure blue layers filtering through discreet, seraphic voice effects. The guitar, also more sober here than elsewhere on the album, adds a more rock vision to the track.

"In the Fading Starlight", with its less rock-oriented structure and more electronic ballad mode, takes us to another level. That of Synth Replicants, which doesn't go for the TD of the post-Jive years influences here. Of course, the essence of the Dream remains the main element of this ballad, which combines the magic of EM with a more commercial vision made possible by powerful guitar solos.

These last, rather quiet tracks are like a long prelude to the ultimate ballad on this latest Synth Replicants album, "Home" (Dedicated to Vangelis). Thoughtful, the arpeggios - they have that unmistakable Vangelis tone - are like tears that refuse to leave the eyes. The setting is one of intriguing shadows, as if depicting a dystopian universe at the crossroads of Blade Runner and Antartica. The texture of the ambiences structures an atmospheric track very close to lunar ballads, with layers of orchestral mist and filaments whistling in the echo of the Cosmos. Steve Labrecque cuts out nostalgia-filled solos whose echoes are lost in orchestrations filled with humming angels and tears that still refuse to roll down our cheeks. Tender and nostalgic, just like Vangelis!

"TIME OF LEGENDS" is the talk of social networks, and rightly so!
It's a powerful album that Steve Labrecque's guitar takes to a particularly intense emotional level. The music draws a lot of inspiration from Tangerine Dream, Synth Replicants' main influence, with rhythm structures that are better exploited, moving from pure rock to a more danceable version for both feet and neurons.
There are beautiful lunar melodies that latch onto the earlobes and a sultry cosmic blues to send us waltzing into the stars. In short, it's a cocktail that always makes for enjoyable listening and to listen again. And the title track alone is worth the price of the download!

Sylvain Lupari (October 29th, 2023) ****½*

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Synth replicants Denmark

Per Thomhav (2019 - Current):
Keyboards, synthesizers, sequencers, programming, composer, producer whose music is influenced by Tangerine Dream, Jean-Michel Jarre, Vangelis...

Steve Labrecque (2023 - Current):
Guitars, composer, whose style is influenced primarily by 70’s progressive and hard rock with a love for the music of Tangerine Dream and Klaus Schulze
... more

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