August 06, 2017

Anglagard - Live: Made in Norway (2015, Blu-Ray)


Anglagard – Live: Made in Norway (2015)
Blu-ray 1080i AVC DTS-HD 5.1
Release Date: 2017
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Tracklist:
1 Introvertus Fugu Part I
2 Höstsejd
3 Längtans Klocka
4 Jordrök
5 Sorgmantel
6 Vandringar I Vilsenhet
7 El Ímpetu Del Bosque (Drum Solo)
8 Kung Bore
9 Sista Somrar
Duration: 02:01:13
Band:
Linus Kåse: Hammond B3, Piano, Rhodes, Mini Moog, Mellotron, Soprano Saxophone and Vocals
Eric Hammarström: Drums, Vibraphone, Glockenspiel, Gran Casa and Percussion
Jonas Engdegård: Electric Guitar and Acoustic Guitar
Anna Holmgren: Flute, Tenor Saxophone, Mellotron, Melodica, Recorder, Percussion and Balloons Tord Lindman: Electric Guitar, Vocals, Gong and Percussion
Johan Brand: Bass Guitar, Moog Minitaur and Bass Pedals
Production/Label: Änglagård Records
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Quality: Blu-ray
Container: BDMV
Video codec: AVC
Audio codec: DTS, AC-3, PCM
Video: MPEG-4 AVC 16011 kbps/1920*1080i/25 fps/16:9/High Profile 4.1
Audio#1: Eng DTS-HD MA 5.1/48 kHz/4243 kbps/24-bit (DTS Core: 5.1/48 kHz/768 kbps/24-bit)
Audio#2: Eng Dolby Digital 5.1/48 kHz/640 kbps
Audio#3: Eng LPCM 2.0/48 kHz/1536 kbps/16-bit
Size: 21.76 GB

Legendary Swedish symphonic progressive rock band ÄNGLAGÅRD is proud to present their first ever professionally filmed concert, set to be released worldwide on February 10th, 2017. “Live: Made in Norway” was captured at Musikkflekken, Sandvika, Norway on February 21st, 2015, marking the band’s return to Norway stages after an absence of 23 years. Edited by Martin Gustafsson, with audio production and mixing by world renowned audio engineer Alar Suurna, and art design and production supervision by band’s long-time collaborator Joel Barrios, the two-hour performance is a stellar capturing of live art through and through; a perfect testimony of Änglagård’s unique take on progressive rock, showcasing their swirling, angular crescendos along with frenetic rhythms and howling mellotron, blended with truly emotional sudden softer passages. A sonic rollercoaster of aggressive music in odd meter, subtle parts and melancholic beauty, building suspense and abrupt stops, with a wondrous interplay of sounds, this visual presentation is definitely not for the faint-hearted. Änglagård’s extreme level of delicacy in phrasing and dynamic is a tough match to beat in progressive music and should hold up even in the face of the snootiest of music connoisseurs.

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