Disen Gage - The Big Adventure (2019)
https://disengage.bandcamp.com/album/the-big-adventure
Their label: https://noname666.bandcamp.com/
Their labels youtube page: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCY0sJ_uy-bjpkQ1Re7Vk5MA/videos
00:00 - 02:31 01 Shiroyama
02:31 - 07:51 02 Adventurers
07:51 - 14:51 03 Chaos Point
14:51 - 19:30 04 Enough
19:30 - 24:54 05 All the Truths' Meeting
24:54 - 32:23 06 Selfish Tango
32:23 - 41:20 07 Carnival Escape
41:20 - 46:17 08 Fin
Disen Gage bio: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1VdvUXBs2mybMnEkiw_Jkj_KA2NFv_SygmbyK-K4QLZU/edit
released February 14, 2019
Disen Gage:
Konstantin Mochalov — guitar & sound engineering
Eugeny Kudryashov — drums
Nikolai Syrtsev — bass
Sergei Bagin — guitar & synth
Guests:
Igor Bukaev — accordion/button accordion in 2
Ekaterina Morozova — piano in 3 & 8
Vasily Tsirin — cello in 4
Vadim Sorokin — mixing all tracks, synth in 6 & bass in 8
Audio mastering — Eugeny Gapeev
Produced and recorded by Disen Gage
Design by Alexander Medvedev
This release brings you the 20 years trip of Disen Gage in music!
Kev Rowland: "The latest release, ‘The Big Adventure’ is now available through Addicted Label and shows Disen Gage yet again refusing to compromise or regress in any way. They are again a full band, along with guests to assist them in continuing a musical progressive journey like no other. Disen Gage produce polished progressive rock in its truest sense, not looking to others for inspiration, and not following where so many others have travelled."
disagreement.net review by Pascal Thiel:
"I have had the pleasure to know Disen Gage’s music since the very beginning, in 2004, when the Russian instrumental progressive rock band released their debut album The Screw-Loose Entertainment. From there, the band became more and more experimental, with their albums from 2017 (Hybrid State) and 2018 (Nature) offering purely improvised sounds respectively field recordings. As interesting as these later recordings were and still are, I was nonetheless pleased to learn that in order to celebrate their twentieth anniversary as a band, they would release a more song-based album, the way they did in their early days.