#230
1983 Housekeeping
Planet P
Planet P Project
3.5 out of 5
Highlights:
Armageddon
Why Me?
Armageddon
Why Me?
If Asia and Pink Floyd had a baby and they forced that baby to listen to Michael Schenker or Rainbow everyday until adolescence and then they slathered that baby in synthesizer cream it would sound like this record.
This record is ambitious, yes. But also sort of dull and lacks much to hold on to. It feels...hollow.
Like Styx before them, Planet P is imagining a dystopian future and thinks it will be soundtracked with lush overlaid keys and epic, soaring harmonies and crunchy, dreamy guitars.
They are wrong. We all know the soundtrack to the dystopian future is Hootie & the Blowfish.
This record is ambitious, yes. But also sort of dull and lacks much to hold on to. It feels...hollow.
Like Styx before them, Planet P is imagining a dystopian future and thinks it will be soundtracked with lush overlaid keys and epic, soaring harmonies and crunchy, dreamy guitars.
They are wrong. We all know the soundtrack to the dystopian future is Hootie & the Blowfish.
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