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Dracula Opera Rock
Pfm
Dracula Opera Rock
Genres: International Music, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

An extraordinary rock opera produced by David Zard. The music is written and performed by PFM (Franco Mussida, Franz Di Cioccio, Flavio Premoli and Patrick Djivas). The opera debuts Spring 2006 in Rome. The work contains a...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Pfm
Title: Dracula Opera Rock
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Sony/Bmg Italy
Release Date: 12/26/2005
Album Type: Import
Genres: International Music, Pop, Rock
Styles: Europe, Continental Europe, Progressive, Progressive Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 828767230627

Synopsis

Album Description
An extraordinary rock opera produced by David Zard. The music is written and performed by PFM (Franco Mussida, Franz Di Cioccio, Flavio Premoli and Patrick Djivas). The opera debuts Spring 2006 in Rome. The work contains a song featuring Italian pop singer Dolcenera. BGM. 2005.
 

CD Reviews

An okay album for PFM fans, fans of musicals may like it mor
woburnmusicfan | Woburn, MA United States | 02/07/2006
(3 out of 5 stars)

"The Amazon reviews have long made it clear that I'm one of the only people who enjoys recent PFM albums like 1998's live "www-pfmpfm-it" and 2000's "Serendipity" as much as the '70s classics like "The World Became the World" and "Photos of Ghosts". But I do, so I was eagerly awaiting this CD, PFM's first studio album since "Serendipity". While it's got some definite pleasures, this is not the album I had my hopes up for.



"Dracula Opera Rock" is the music for a rock opera version of the "Dracula" story to be staged in Rome in 2006. The music is designed for theater rather than a rock concert presentation, so it sounds different than a rock album. There's orchestration on several tracks, a theatrical chorus shows up on a few, and the arrangements are gaudier and glossier than a normal PFM album. The end result is somewhat overblown, at a level somewhere between a Meat Loaf album and Andrew Lloyd Webber. The band is made up of four of the five PFM members from the '70s: Guitarist Franco Mussida, keyboardist Flavio Premoli, drummer Franz Di Cioccio, and bassist Patrick Djivas. The first three split the lead vocal duties.



After a half dozen listens, there aren't any melodies I can remember after the CD ends. (By comparison, several "Serendipity" songs were stuck in my head at this point.) The melodies of half of the songs are pretty weak by PFM standards. But weak melodies are standard for musicals these days. There is a lot of solid playing by the band. And while I can't remember them afterward, I enjoy "Terra Madre", "Il Castello dei Perche", and "Non Guardarmi" every time I hear them. On stage, "Un Destino di Rondine" may make for a rousing climax. There's an unlisted finale number that's banded on the CD as being part of "Un Destino di Rondine". I don't speak Italian, so I don't know how good the lyrics by Vincenzo Incenzo are. There's plenty of discussion of "Il Bene e il Male", which I think means "Good and Evil".



It's hard to know who to recommend this album to. American fans of musical theater aren't likely to ever hear of the album in the first place. Most old-time PFM fans don't like any of their new stuff, and this is the least accessible of their recent albums for rock fans. The most receptive audience for the album may be fans of progressive rock bands that have a theatrical side, such as Glass Hammer. Some moments, like the opening of "Non Guardarmi", would fit right in on Disk 2 of GH's "The Inconsolable Secret". This is a 3 and a half star album. I'm enough of a PFM diehard that it's growing on me -- your mileage may vary.



(1=poor 2=mediocre 3=pretty good 4=very good 5=phenomenal)

"
A good piece of work
G. Poulin | Canada | 03/19/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Take the best moments of both Ulisse and Serendipity, add up some fantastic playing skills (Mussida for one never ceases to impress me), give it an accent of 70s prog, pack it up in an opera rock "format", with Italian lyrics, great chorus and strings, and you more or less get Dracula.



An album that I truly enjoy, even though it's not recorded as well as it could, which unfortunately is pretty common with PFM. Dracula in my opinion is not recorded or mixed as good as the (great) content would deserve.



Sure, this is not the very elaborate prog of the seventies, with long tracks and unexpected shifts and everything, but the whole thing is pretty darn well done and the inspiration that seemed to lack in some previous works, is right back. These guys have fun playing together and exploring new avenues (they're working on another funny project as we speak), and it can be felt at every turn.



Premoli's influence is evident, definitely moreso than in the last recordings. He also sings a lot more than what we were accustomed to, and he does sings well, so his singing is a good thing. Di Cioccio is the other "main" singer on this album, and Mussida does the rest.



Quite possibly PFM's best work since Chocolate Kings, as one poster has already mentioned. Just like Serendipity, it's on the rock side of things, more electric than acoustic, but some complex and very refined rock, brilliant and ecstatic at times, just as these guys can do. (This opus is far better than Serendipity though IMO.)



Oh and by the way, I have had the chance to see PFM live 2 times last summer, and boy are they still good. Absolutely fantastic.



Dracula would deserve 4.5 or even 5 stars if the sound was better.



"
THE ONE WE'VE WAITED FOR!!!
S. W. Brown | LaGrange, GA, USA | 03/03/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Without any hesitation, this release receives my highest recommendation. PFM has a history with me that goes all the way back to my high school years. Believe me, the band has had little to offer until today. This is, by far, the best release from the band since "Chocolate Kings", nearly 30 years ago. The orchestration and choral pieces mesh magnificently with the band's perfect execution. Not to be missed. Powerful classical prog-rock with none of the neo-prog tinge. This is the real deal: 1970's prog flawlessly updated and performed in the 21st century by skilled and talented musicians."