KARDA Estra is like a box of chocolates. Okay – like a box of chocolates that has been through a blender and then served up on a plate whose colour, texture and even dimensions seem to mutate even as you eat from it.
The point being that every time you press play on a Karda Estra record, you really don’t know what you are going to get.
Past offerings have veered from symphonic Prog epics to pastoral dreamscape pop, from gothic film score to experimental jazz, often within the same album.
From a review point of view I found this their most challenging to put into words.
Reflections of composer Richard Wileman’s journeys into realms of classical grandeur or ambient drifts through space opera soundtracks are still noticeable but like 2007’s Last of The Libertine; here there are slower, free jazz vibes, tangential modern classical meanderings and avant-garde cinematic structures.
But for all its lack of generic conformity, or its creation of whole new ones, the composition is powerful, hypnotic and eminently listenable and should be experienced the way all such mercurial creations should, with a totally open mind.
It is baffling and beautifully, musically poignant yet a wonderfully open canvas of sounds and above all it is uniquely Karda, or maybe just Karda Esoteric. - Dave Franklin
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