Mike Drazka - Songs from the Asylum |self-released, 2012| 4/4
01.
The Awakening , 02. Angels Of War, 03. The Nightmare, 04. Black River,
05. Sucker Punch, 06. Crown Of Thorns, 07. Path of Destruction
Mike
Drazka is an American songwriter and self taught multi-instrumentalist
who has already placed his music into various forms of visual media such
as TV, radio and internet multimedia sources including Oxygen Network,
News12 Networks, MSG Networks and The Motion Picture Association of
America with the award winning documentary Flight 587. His Songs from the Asylum album brings seven instrumental tracks that could be easily utilized in action video games as well as movies.
The
album begins with "The Awakening" which brings orchestrated rock sounds
spiced up with electronica. It would be perfect if Mike hired a metal
genre female singer to add vocals to it. The compositional aspects of
the song are built on verses and choruses with cumulative moments and
spots where a listener's brain can relax as well. Arrangements which
have been written for guitars, bass, drums and keyboards have resulted
in a cool rock track that has a chance for hit potential despite missing
vocals.
"Angels of War" is a heavy track due to its looped
guitar riffs and sampling. Atmospheric parts in the background based on
angel-esque voices and violins are interlaced with the main theme.
On
the other hand, "The Nightmare" has an intro that consist of brooding
metal bass lines and drums which are joined by noisy guitars and cut
with a synthesizer sometimes too. This would be also a perfect song to
have male rock vocals added that could intensify the track and add a
remarkable aspect. Overall, the dark and heavy moods sound as if they
smuggled a nightmare into an asylum.
Creative noise opens the
fourth song on the tracklist called "Black River", which I personally
find one of the best compositions on this album along with "Crown of
Thorns" and "Sucker Punch".
"Black River" sounds powerful due to
chunky guitars joined by keyboards while the drum beat builds the
structure of the song. An unforgettable and ear-friendly guitar motif
that appears in segments of the song may also steal your heart.
Moreover, the guitar tracks act as a surrogate to vocal parts which
makes a listener take no notice that the song is missing a vocalist. The
composition flows quite stable and the arrangements match one another
well. "Black River" is as full of dynamics as it is memorable, this is
thanks to Mike's great songwriting and sound design skills.
Mike
Drazka wrote and played each instrument on every song except for two.
You can hear very heavy metal, yet distorted riffs played by American
guitarist Frank Guertin as well as the drum beats by Russ Miller in
"Sucker Punch" and "Crown of Thorns".
The first of the two, “Sucker
Punch”, is a track where heavy metal collides with electronica. Hardcore
riffs lead the song over backgrounds which feature drums, bass and
rhythm guitars, but electronic effects and sampling appear in some spots
too. This track would be a great fit to an action movie trailer since
it can underline specific scenes and moods very well.
"Crown of
Thorns" turns out quite short (less than 3 minutes), though it is fully
dominated by deep tribal drum beats. The initial mixture of Mike's
concept of synths and silence gave me a flashback of Harold
Faltermeyer's compositions. The intro may be a bit too long, but the
track continuously evolves. However, if the purpose of the song was to
be background music for a presentation or a video game with a few images
slid into the beginning, the length of the intro would make a perfect
sense.
"Path of Destruction" finishes the Songs from the Asylum
album. It seems to utilize the same ideas as are found in "Crown of
Thorns" (the length of intro) in the beginning, but the overall vibe is
more electronic and noisy than in the previous songs. There are some
guitar riffs involved, although it seems like they were processed
through a digital sequencer.
Well designed music doubles the joy
of playing video games as well as watching movies. Images and motion do
speak directly, yet they become harsh without matching music. Some game
designers and movie directors have awesome works in progress, but they
are missing music that can emphasize their work to a maximum dynamic
effect. Mike has an excellent set of songs which would match any type of
'action' motion picture or video game due to their climactic guitar
driven instrumental themes. It would be great if Mike had a chance to
collaborate with such professionals as mentioned above to utilize his
music in their productions and allow for visually stunning multimedia.
Hopefully some professionals who are in the gaming and film industries
may find Mike Drazka thanks to this review and begin a creative and
successful collaboration together.
(Katarzyna 'NINa' Górnisiewicz, Fabryka Magazine, June 11th, 2012)
http://www.mikedrazkamusic.com | http://www.facebook.com/drazka
Buy this album on http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/mikedrazka/from/fabryka
as well as iTunes, Deezer, Myspace Music, eMusic, Nokia, Last.fm, Simfy, Google Music Store and MediaNet.
Reviewed by Google+ Music Reviews