Hybris (album) explained

Hybris
Type:Album
Artist:Änglagård
Cover:Hybris Cover.gif
Released:1992
Recorded:July–September 1992
Genre:Progressive rock, symphonic rock
Length:51:39
Label:Mellotronen, Alvarsdotter
Producer:Änglagård, Roger Skogh
Next Title:Epilog
Next Year:1994

Hybris (Swedish: 'hubris') is the first studio album by Swedish progressive rock group Änglagård.

Released in late 1992, it would become one of the most influential albums of the new wave of progressive rock in the 1990s. It begins with "" (which means 'earth-smoke'), the only fully instrumental piece on the album.

The music is quite similar to 1970s progressive rock groups such as Yes and King Crimson, but Änglagård has also created their own style, thanks to Holmgren's folklore-sounding flute playing and Olsson's highly distinctive drumming (he was only 17 in 1992). There are also obvious similarities to the obscure 1970s band Cathedral's one-shot album Stained Glass Stories. Keyboardist Pär Lindh makes an uncredited guest appearance on the album.

The remastered CD version of the album contains a bonus track called "", which seems to be a demo of the song "" from their second album, Epilog. The song was originally included on the Ptolemac Terrascope Number 5 CD sampler. The song also appears on the Hurricane Katrina benefit album After the Storm (NEARfest Records, 2005).

Track listing

  1. "" ('Earth Smoke') – 11:10
  2. "" ('Wanderings in Confusion') – 11:56
  3. "" ('From Clarity to Clarity') – 8:08
  4. "" ('King Winter') – 13:04
  5. "" ('Marching Tune from Knapptibble') (bonus track) – 7:19

Personnel

Production

Reception

In February 2018, Hybris was ranked twentieth on the Prog Archives Top Studio Albums of All-Time.[1] It is additionally the highest-ranked album of the entire 1990s on this list and the third-highest album released after the 1970s (after Wobbler's From Silence to Somewhere [2017], at #15 overall, and Rush's Moving Pictures [1981], at #16).

Notes and References

  1. http://www.progarchives.com/top-prog-albums.asp?salbumtypes=1#list Progressive Rock Ultimate Discography. Retrieved on 2018-02-18.