PILOTS OF THE DAYDREAMS – „Invented Paradise“ am 6.9.24
Manchmal könnte ich mich kringeln, wenn ich Review-Material von Bands kriege. Manche wissen nicht einmal, wie man EPK schreibt oder was es sein soll und manche glauben verstanden zu haben, was es sein soll – aber keinen Plan, was da rein gehört. Den PILOTS OF THE DAYDREAMS muss man das nicht mehr beibringen…
Danny Frischknecht

Rock zwischen hard und melodic, modern und doch aus der Zeit gefallen, aus der SChweiz und zuhause bei sich selbst.
Release am 6. September 2024
english version below
Fazit
Trackliste und Artwork
english version
Sometimes I cringe when I get review material from bands. Some don’t even know how to write an EPK or what it’s supposed to be and some think they’ve understood what it’s supposed to be – but have no idea what to put in it. You don’t have to teach the PILOTS OF THE DAYDREAMS that any more…
Yes, you grumblers, it has little to do with the music, whether a CD comes along, the press releases are graphically clean, the printed matter on glossy paper flatters the hands. But it leads to me choosing exactly this shit from thirty to forty review requests every day – right?
So stop! Shit doesn’t refer to the Pilots‘ music. So, if it’s also good, that makes my day. Firstly, I’m never neutral, secondly, I know the guys well and thirdly, they have Sicilian roots – all right?
But, I don’t need to bend myself, the album is really good. Yesterday I celebrated ALL FOR METAL – hard-hitting power metal from Germany and today I give the same score to a melodic rock disc with a prog attitude – „demolition“ versus „boredom“?
Not the bean! The Pilots are releasing their second album and it tops the first by far. The disc is just as technically advanced as the first, after all, the guys are experienced and professional – they know their craft. All three have been in the business for decades and have left their mark in different ways. And the traces of their past can also be found in ‘Invented Paradise’. On the one hand, those left behind by their own musical development, and on the other, those influences that are visible here and there.
THE MUSE or U2 were written into the first album by some colleagues – maybe. For the second album, TED NUGENT would definitely have to come to mind. Guys, you definitely borrowed the riffing on ‘Among Wolves And Sheep’ from ‘Stranglehold’ – and then refined it a little, slowed it down a bit and gave it a completely different message. But stolen is still stolen!
However, I’m not going to tell that to the now reactionary guitar hero of my youth – he currently has to make sure that his mate doesn’t fall into the trap. ‘Among Wolves And Sheep’ is definitely my personal favourite.
To put their ten tracks in the right light, the guys made a wise decision and teamed up with their esteemed colleague Frank Kollbrunner from https://www.rockstarphoto.ch/. This collaboration has resulted in a really high-quality video, ‘Butterfly In Your Heart’. Who knows, maybe there’s more to come
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In addition to my favourite track, I have tried to find other tips for playing. But somehow it doesn’t work. It’s not so much the songs that grab me, but what’s in them musically. A bass line and a riffing that has definitely fallen out of time, that could easily be from the nineties – that’s the above-mentioned track „Butterfly In Your Heart“ for the video.
Or „Euphemia“ – pure prog with vocals that make you wonder where you recognise it from, because it sounds familiar. And yet I can’t place it – so it seems to come from the trio.
The voice at the very beginning of ‘Sleeping Karma’ calls out to me from the seventies, but I can’t work out which song by which band is nudging me. But then I can catch something – the guitar on „Everything Has an End“ reminds me of THE POLICE – at least a little.
In contrast to bands that process influences directly and with great closeness or even cover them – PILOTS OF THE DAYDREAMS rather process set pieces of their musical history – and it is already several years old.
Conclusion
For once, „old school“ is more than just an attitude. PILOTS OF THE DAYDREAMS are old school because that is their history. At the same time, they are modern because they haven’t got stuck in history, but have developed along with it.
What I like best about „Invented Paradise“, apart from the points mentioned above, is that the album has stepped up a gear in terms of heaviness, a lot of pressure goes a long way!
