The World Became The World

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (23 ratings)
The World Became The World album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 52:07

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5 Stars for 7 tracks

permafrost154

I worship tracks 1 to 7 - classic 70s Prog.

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PFM - A blast from the past

thorpark

I bought this album in the 70's on a whim and loved it. Years later it was no longer playable, but emusic now allows me to rediscover it. IMO this album helped set the stage for bands like Genesis to mix in more genres of music (e.g. pop/rock) into their releases. This release has a little something for everyone.

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Simply Their Best

MusicLab

High water mark for a great 1970's prog rock band. I looked everywhere for this album and it finally shows up here on e-music. I still haven't seen the english version on i-tunes.

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They Say All Music Guide

PFM were never a group prone to stand still, or repeat themselves from one project to another. Their second international album release, The World Became the World, was a case in point — rather than continuing in the same precise direction as its predecessor, Photos of Ghosts (1973), it presented a serious challenge to their existing fans even as it pushed the envelope of their sound. There were still places where the band’s lyrical side, strongly in evidence throughout Photos of Ghosts, came through, especially on the softer tunes such as “Just Look Away.” But the real emphasis of the group’s work, as demonstrated on the opener, “The Mountain,” the main body of the title track, and the basic content of the crowd-pleaser “Four Holes in the Ground,” lay in a much harder, more aggressive brand of progressive rock and a bolder approach to playing — they’re much more of a hard rock band on this album, which didn’t hurt them in finding an audience in the United States on the tour that followed. A membership shift, with French bassist Patrick Djivas replacing Giorgio Piazza, also helped this process along — Djivas not only brought more of a jazz approach to his instrument, but a louder, harder sound that, in turn, toughens up the contribution of drummer Franz di Cioccio. And everybody — especially Flavio Premoli on the multiple synthesizers and other keyboards, and Franco Mussida’s guitars — followed in turn.
What’s more, the group succeeds in creating the illusion of a live performance throughout this record; there were obviously multiple overdubs, but one does feel like these guys are playing as hard and loud as they did on-stage, which was a rare achievement for a lot of prog rock bands of the period. Peter Sinfield’s English-language lyrics have an eerie capacity to haunt the listener, especially given the group’s phonetic pronunciations — “Is My Face on Straight?” may not make much sense lyrically without a lot more analysis than most listeners would give, but it is one great progressive rock showcase and it does stay with you, even decades later. The original album finished with the instrumental “Have Your Cake and Beat It,” which allowed all of the members a chance to explore the jazzier sides of their playing and overall sound, and cross over into what, at the time, would have been considered Focus and King Crimson territory. The piece grows on the listener without overstaying its welcome, at a comparatively economical (for this sort of track) seven minutes and change. [The bonus tracks on the 2010 edition include a fine fine six-minute live track that shows off how good this group could sound in concert, a previously unissued single edit of "Four Holes in the Ground" that's a lot of fun, and a never-released single edit of "Celebration" off of Photos of Ghosts. None of it is exactly essential, but anyone who likes this band will love all three of these tracks, and the sound throughout is killer.] – Bruce Eder

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