CD Review: Helion Magister, Vaquero
Published August 06, 2005
"Chick-A-Boom Baby" is driven by gutty bass, clanging guitar, banjo, and smokehouse harmonica (all played by Miner). It's eight minutes long, with the structure of a song - lyrics, verses, and so on - but it fits no genre, nor does it need to. In this song it's possible to forget the long tail, the baggage, the history. It's just pure crazy original fun.
The Tejano-bluesy "Rock And Roll Is" closes out the psychedelic-rock section of the CD with Miner cawing "Rock and roll can still relieve your sorrow," proving his own point. (Hey, it's relieving my sorrow even now!) It sounds like Los Lobos if their instruments got wet and started shorting out but they kept playing.
Then come three songs that comprise a noise-rock sonata full of goofy raps, screeching sounds and funny voices: Spongebob Squarepants meets Captain Beefheart in a bowl of Green Jelly. There's seems to be some kind of story about a highly disturbed married couple running through the three songs, but who cares when the third movement is called "Jello Butt." The CD closes with a slow, entirely unclassifiable nine-minute opus mixing Jacques Brel, flamenco, Steve Hackett and some rather impressive multi-part madrigal singing.
Short but representative clips of all the songs are available at the Helion Magister Web site. If you are a fan of psychedelic music, or stuff that's just "out there," or what Miner curiously refers to as "good old rock and roll" - it's worth a click.
And leave your baggage at home.
- CD Review: Helion Magister, Vaquero
- Published: August 06, 2005
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Progressive Rock, Music: Rock
- Writer: Jon Sobel
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Comments
thanks for the additional sites. and the price IS right.
blogcritics is the wildest battle site i've seen. even the official comment policy is blood-drenched-- and so many hands in the offal! it touches the heart.


Jon Sobel is Blogcritics' theater editor, reviews NYC theater frequently, and writes a regular round-up of independent music releases. He is also a computer professional, musician, and small-time concert promoter in New York City. (His original band, 






Jon, I've moved this to Advance.net, a place affiliated with about 10 newspapers around the country.
One such site is here.
Also please let your contact know, if you had one, that this article, is published at one more place. That helps to show they get two?, three? for the "price" of one.
Thank you.
Temple Stark