Painted Rock

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (5 ratings)
Painted Rock album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 64:12

Write a Review 1 Member Review

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

It's Brand X all over again!

zoot_the_muppet

Formed in 1993 by Percy Jones (ex-Brand X bassist), Frank Katz (ex-Brand X drummer), Marc Wagnon (midi vibes), and Van Manakas (guitar). Sadly to say, but I think Tunnels is really a better-sounding off-shoot Brand X band than the post-Phil Collins Brand X band. I'm not going to write a review for each of the albums here because I would just be repeating myself. You cannot go wrong with any of these albums. They are all very tight, rhythmically fun, compositions. If you loved Brand X and Jack Lancaster/Robin Lumley's "Marscape," this is just a further extension into the "What are these guys up to now?!?" category. Download them all and enjoy the ride.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Brand X electric bass guitar icon Percy Jones is the biggest name in this colorful quartet, but the least obvious leader. More upfront guitarist Van Manakas with midi vibist Marc Wagnon and drummer Frank Katz comprise Tunnels. There’s no synthesizer player credited, so it’s evident that either Manakas or more likely Wagnon is triggering various hued electronic washings. The music is definitly early fusion oriented and cleverly conceived for a post-’70s Y2K era. Tunnels depend on funk rhythms for the most part: cool on the title track, the same under serene and interactive multi-melodic musings from the frontmen and Jones on “Quai des Brumes,” easy and rockier with choppy vibes and spacy, snarly guitar in the context of “Land of the Hazmats,” or heavier and dramatic with way-out to plunky synth incursions and oohing vocals from Sarah Pillow during “House of Marc.” They use a hard-edged 5/4 start-stop line with the lead heavy, juggernaut signature sound of Jones most prevalent on “Black Light” while relying on 6/8 lilt to 4/4 merengue funk on the unison vibes/guitar charting of “Lilly’s Dolphin.” The roiling to quirky, multi-dimensional drum streams of Katz set up the pounding bass, quietly screaming or fleet, stinging guitar and scurrying vibes on “Neuro-Transmitter,” and Katz also offers a fresh and funky drum solo on “Unity Gain.” The two anomalous selections are the highlights, a near 11-minute jazz like jam/swinger “Bad American Dream 2001″ sports chiming bells, wack goofy synths, and an extended thematic progression reminiscent of “In a Silent Way,” while the ethnocentric “Boyz in the Ud” (cute title!) has Manakas showcased on a stringed instrument sounding like an oud or saz. There’s an Arabic feel to the piece, gong cued in a Middle Eastern workout replete with finger cymbals, hand percussion, and flute synthesizers wafting over the wind of the desert sands. Modern and classic jazz-rock fusion ideals congeal to offer a new music that has a stance standing solidly in both idioms with the powerful, clearly identifiable bass of Jones plopped squarely in the middle. Recommended, especially for devotees. – Michael G. Nastos

more »