Download Siena Root Different Realities Rar
If you like to get news my email please write us a note in the contact section. Or visit Siena Root at Facebook. Different Realities, an Album by Siena Root. Released August 29, 2009 on Transubstans (catalog no. Trans043; CD).
'This is Siena Roots conceptual masterpiece, with one foot in the west and one in the east. This album shows diversity and creative song writing and it's certainly much more than average rock.' We (We Are Them) 2. We (In the Desert) 3. We (Over the Mountains) 4. We (As We Return) 5. The Road to Agartha (Bairagi) 6.
The Road to Agartha (Bhairavi) 7. The Road to Agartha (Ahir Bhairav) 8. The Road to Agartha (Bhimpalasi) 9. The Road to Agartha (Shree) 10. The Road to Agartha (Jog) Buy it: Siena Root is: KG West (lead guitar, organ, sitar, Rhodes, Mellotron), Sam Riffer (bass, percussion, vocals, double bass), Love H Forsberg (drums, percussion), Sartez Faraj [Sartez Abdulrahman] (lead vocals, guitar), Sanya (vocals) 'There's a moment in “We Are Them,” the lead track on Siena Root's fourth full-length, Different Realities, where the band effortlessly and expertly channels Rush on the Canadian band's debut. On past releases, Siena Root's shown they've got the skills to pay the retro hippie rock bills, so this new foray into meatier territory was a welcome addition to an already well rounded sound.
What was also noticeable was the singing, in the sense that it didn't sound much like Sartez Faraj, lead crooner on the band's last full-length, Far From the Sun (their website confirms he's no longer with the band, thanks to the usual “creative differences”). Nor did it sound like Sanya, the vocalist on sophomore release Kaleidoscope, or original frontman Oskar Lundstrom. Which means the band once again is sallying forth with a different voice. That sort of line-up inconsistency is never a good thing – something the remaining, core members of Siena Root took to heart, as eight out of ten songs on Different Realities are instrumental (the unnamed singer pops up a second time on “As We Return,” a more-or-less refrain of the opening number). The lack of a vocals doesn't hinder the band musically - in fact, the argument could be made that they could've gone this route a long time ago and been none the worse for it.
“Over the Mountain,” for instance, is an excellent freewheeling 60's acid jam. Side B is predominantly a stab at Eastern influenced music, and while it goes on a little too long, the additional instrumentation was well done (especially the kazoo in “Ahir Bhairav”). Download Arrl International Microwave Handbook. And the band ties that s t y l e back with their more classic rock leanings (including the Rush-like moments) with “Jog,” another lengthy opus that gets where it needs to go without hurry and yet never gets boring.