A Valid Path – Duke Egbert

A Valid Path
Artemis Records, 2004
Reviewed by Duke Egbert
Published on Aug 24, 2004

There’s a lot of pithy comparisons I could make about the new CD
from Alan Parsons,
A Valid Path. Comparisons to Yes’
90215 come to mind; both times an artist with a loyal,
opinionated fanbase radically changed their sound, and I suspect
much like Yes, Parsons is going to be raked over some metaphorical
coals. This is not, in any way, shape, or form, the Alan Parsons
Project. This is something else — something that longtime fans
will either find cool or execrable.

I’m not going to keep you in suspense any longer; I’m going to
come down on the side of cool. Different, but very very cool.

First change; this is not progressive rock. This is electronica;

A Valid Path is mostly instrumentals, with only three vocal
tracks. Second change: there are parts of this album that are
downright danceable. Funky, even. If
Vulture Culture is what Alan produced under pressure to be a
chart-topping artist,
A Valid Path is what Alan produced when he wanted to just go
have some fun. And it works. I think it works really well.

The album’s guest appearance list reads like a who’s who of
modern electronica. At various times, The Crystal Method, Shpongle,
Nortec Collective, and many others make appearances. David Gilmour
shows up on the opening track, “Return To Tunguska,” to link back
to the days when Parsons produced Pink Floyd. Parsons’ son, Jeremy,
helped write a track. John Cleese and Orson Welles even show up for
a bit of vocal work. The production and engineering is without
peer, as always.

The meat of the matter, though, are the songs. Out of nine
tracks on the CD, I can without reservation recommend eight, and
that’s quite an average. “More Lost Without You” — which I already
know is a somewhat controversial track among Parsons cognoscenti —
is a straight-ahead pop song with an electronica sheen on it. Two
tracks (“Mammagamma ’04” and “A Recurring Dream Within A Dream”)
are retakes on Project classics, and they both work very very well.
The drum groove and haunting vocals on “We Play The Game” are some
of my favorite moments on the CD. My favorite, however, is the
triumphant and tribal “Chomolungma,” the CD’s close, a powerful,
percussion-laden work of art. Only “Tijuaniac” does very little for
me, and that stems from a personal dislike of works that venture
towards atonal or twelve-tone. (I do wonder if it will grow on me.
It may.)

A Valid Path is, indeed, a different path for Parsons. But
it’s a path where his peers seem to respect him, he seems to be
having fun, and he produces some intriguing, groovy work. More
power to him; I hope there’s more forthcoming.

Rating: A

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