HDRSF-1
Hidria Spacefolk
- Style
- Psychedelic Jam Rock
- Label
- Self released
- Year
- 2001
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: Amos Ame, Kafar-I, Sindran Rastafan
As I’ve been listening to a lot of jam bands lately, I thought that it’d
only be appropriate to introduce one of my favourite Finnish representatives of
the scene. Hidria Spacefolk was founded in 1999 by jam-happy
members of a Finnish hippie community and HDRSF-1 was their debut release,
first as a mini-LP in 2001 and later on CD in 2006. A fully instrumental band,
they define themselves as an astrobeat band, but with more detail, I’d describe
Hidria as a disciple of Ozric Tentacles who
mixes in generous helpings of Pink Floyd (especially in the mellow
moments) and some Jimi Hendrix when things turn up a few notches.
Amos Ame opens the record with some hypnotic, circling melodies churned
by the guitar and bass as keyboards and later on flute take over the soloing
duties. While prog-fans like me might be disappointed that it’s not full-on
flute ownage á la Jethro Tull’s Ian Anderson,
the more restrained lines are very catchy throughout. Talking about restrained,
the drum beat is interesting as it holds the backbone together with a similar
pattern and fills, but said patterns and fills are constantly bordering on a
virtuosic feeling that the drummer wants to go all Keith Moon on his kit, but
keeps playing for the song instead of flash. A short medieval guitar-twiddle
and some reggae-interludes bring some good breaks to the hypnosis.
Kafar-I, my favourite on the record, brings in the aforementioned
spirit of Hendrix into the mix with some impressive guitar lines and a funky,
groovy rock vibe especially reminiscent of Jimi’s Band Of Gypsys-period.
Sindran Rastafan makes you anticipate something reggae/ska-based with
the first chords, but soon starts to build a delay-drenched spacey jam that
really brings out the Tentacles in Hidria.
Some heavier guitar work makes the mood darker in the middle as the melodies
bring in a decidedly eastern flavour and resume to take the tune further out
into the universe.
Gnomen is an intro-like piece, working primarily with subtly tribal
hand percussions, jewharp and slightly distorted, futuristic keyboards. It leads
into the album-closing Marastronaut, a somewhat low-key space jam with
adequately rocking parts, which is a bit of an odd choice to end the album as
it doesn’t hold up to the greatness of say, Kafar or Sindran.
While not metallic by any stretch of the imagination, Hidria Spacefolk
is the perfect music for rock fans to meditate, dance (hey, it could happen)
or gaze at the vast reaches of the sky to. For a debut release within two years
of the band’s formation, HDRSF-1 is some good, good stuff. Check
out the jukebox and live downloads on the band’s website for a quick fix.