Saturday, June 25, 2022

Review: Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate – The Confidence Trick

Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate is a duo, sometimes trio, based in London, UK. They merge a number of genres from prog/alt rock to ambient, minimalist, classical to funk and even metal. Malcolm Galloway handles vocals, lead guitar, keyboards/synths and programming. Mark Gatland is on bass, additional and slide guitars, keyboards/synths, Chapman Stick, and backing vocals. Kathryn Thomas joins them on select songs playing the flute and doing background vocals. The Confidence Trick is their sixth album and it’s a collection of songs with an overall theme of cognitive errors and our repeated failure to learn from history. It will be out on July 15th.

I consider myself a progressive rock fan to a degree. While there are some bands that I adore like Pink Floyd and Yes, and I do enjoy some of Genesis’s output, for the large part, I don’t seem to appreciate what fans love so much about this genre of music. The endless instrumental parts common to prog rock sometimes leave me scratching my head as to what is so great about them. For instance, Yes’s Tales from Topographic Oceans is an album that I can only listen to once in a blue moon. And I could never get into Genesis’s The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway. For the record, my fave Yes album is Going for the One, as for Genesis, it’s Selling England by the Pound. And while I love almost everything Pink Floyd has done since Dark Side of the Moon (save for The Final Cut), I’m not too keen on what preceded it. All this to say that while I understand the craftsmanship of prog rock musicians, it isn’t always my cup of tea. A lot of The Confidence Trick falls under that umbrella for me.

“Silence is a Statement” is a great opener and Kathryn Thomas’s flute really enhances its follow-up, “Back Where I Started.” “End of the Line” is a quieter song and definitely one of the highlights of the album. “Perky Pat” is an instrumental and for me, it overstayed its welcome and I found most of its six-minute length to be quite repetitive. “World War Terminus” is a solid tune with a timely commentary on the state of the world. “Pretending to Breathe” is another instrumental, a more minimalist and meditative track that I found used its lengthy runtime much better than the previous one. “Another Plague” is another lengthy piece with a perfect harmony of guitars and piano with great social commentary. Definitely one of my favourite tracks on this record. “Refuge” runs a little over ten minutes and falls more into the classical/orchestral category rather than prog rock and would fit well in a movie. It’s a beauty and doesn’t feel its length. “Interlude” is an aptly-titled instrumental that isn’t bad, but feels like it could’ve been left out of the record. “The Confidence Trick” is the mostly instrumental title track and it’s a terrific composition. “Lava Lamprey” is the last instrumental of the album and to me felt similar to “Perky Pat” in its repetitive structure. “All Empires Fall” is a proggy song with great rhythms and kind of a rap woven into it and I really dug it. “Cygnus” is the 13th and final song and feels like an epilogue to a musical of sorts.

Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate’s The Confidence Trick is an overall pretty solid album. In my opinion, it suffers at times from overly long pieces, but then again, in true prog rock fashion, this is bound to be part of the attraction for prog rock aficionados. In an era of short-attention span, its hour and nine-minute length might feel excessively long to the casual prog dabbler, but will no doubt rejoice hardcore prog/alt rock listeners. In terms of musicianship and songwriting, this band is at the top of their game. The Confidence Trick comes recommended mainly to fans of classic progressive rock and instrumental music enthusiasts in general.

Hats Off Gentlemen on Bandcamp: https://hatsoffgentlemen.bandcamp.com/album/the-confidence-trick 

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