Triana
Hijos del Agobio


4.5
superb

Review

by MarvinLapsus USER (4 Reviews)
March 17th, 2012 | 10 replies


Release Date: 1977 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Triana's second album was a dark, anguished cry to Spanish youth, standing against tradition and oppression. It sounded quite well, and it sold quite more than their first effort.

The cover art. Jesus, wearing the artifacts of passion, screams loudly, covered in smoke. The gothic-monsterlike authorities torture common people (there's even something that looks like tentacle rape) pushing them into a miserable, smoky pit filled with snakes.

An obscure 80's death metal band? No, they're Triana, the Spanish Prog main forces, going against the mid-70's Spanish situation from the very cover of their second effort, "Hijos del Agobio". Looking at the cover you may think this is going to be harder and darker than "El Patio". And that's right.

Almost three years after having a modest success in Spain with their debut, De la Rosa's guys began to record their second album, this time to find mainstream attention in the post-Franco Spain.
The album features the band moving forward to a more personal sound, losing some of the complexity in the way ("El Patio" featured 3 songs over the four minute mark, while the longest songs here barely last 5 minutes).

The atmosphere here is no longer dreamy, but nightmarish; the anguished cries are no longer for love, but for liberty: a sinister organ sound backing De la Rosa passionate and memorable performance greets us from the very moment when the needle hits the groove: this is "Hijos del Agobio" (which could be translated as "Sons of Suffocation" or "Sons of Angst").

The album also features some lively pieces (the frantic "Rumor") and some tender moments ("Sentimiento de Amor") that anyway fit the overall atmosphere.

Tele's penned "Recuerdos de Triana" (the darkest track in this album) is a short drum solo that brings us to a dark and strange Semana Santa procession.
Side two begins with the two weakest songs of the album: hard rock numbers "¡Ya esta bien!" and "Necesito". While good stand alone tracks, their passion cannot be compared with the rest of this brilliant album.
"Señor Troncoso" is the most melancholic track ever written by Triana, a homage to a boozy old man whose way of life inspired the band to look beyond external appearance (and it's maybe their greatest song, also).

Even in the softest moments the album features a hazy and oppressive sound designed to evoke the gloom and despair of Spanish youth. Triana will repeat this formula on the next album, "Sombra y Luz" (the last of Triana's progressive trilogy), thus becoming their trademark sound for the late seventies before eventually turning to conventional songwriting.

While this album may be weaker than "El Patio" in terms of complexity, it marked a step forward towards the development of a more personal sound. It also featured more lyrical diversity, which was the weakest point of their first album. Also, the presence of "Rumor" and "Señor Troncoso" take this good album one step closer to the greatness of their first one and make us forget about the most boring moments here.

If you liked "El Patio" (or if you like deep and dark political poetry), give this a try.


user ratings (23)
4
excellent


Comments:Add a Comment 
Voivod
Staff Reviewer
March 17th 2012


10734 Comments


Please separate the paragraphs of your text, so that it can be read with ease.

MarvinLapsus
March 17th 2012


136 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Done. Thanks for the tips!

macadoolahicky
March 17th 2012


1834 Comments


I don't think they should necessarily be separated to a sentence per paragraph. Regardless, interesting review. Will be checking this out. Pos'd

SgtPepper
Emeritus
March 18th 2012


4510 Comments


my family is from north San Sebastian in Basque and i love prog-rock. im ashamed that i have never heard these guys. thanks for introducing them to me. have a pos.

MarvinLapsus
March 19th 2012


136 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Thank you all. About us Spanish people not knowing them, I think the main issue was the poor management they had while still active. Anyway, it's never to late to give their albums a spin.

Casavir
January 19th 2019


5644 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

This is awesome so far.

Source
February 11th 2020


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

has its moments

Frost15
October 24th 2021


3007 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

This album is indeed incredible, one of the best bands (if not the best) from my homeland.

parksungjoon
October 24th 2021


47234 Comments


there was an entire scene of this kinda stuff

Frost15
October 24th 2021


3007 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Yes, but they were the best imo. Their fusion of spanish folk (flamenco) and prog was sublime.



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