Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Advent Horizon "Falling Together" ALBUM REVIEW [Prog Metal/Progressive Rock]





by Dean Wolfe, Prog dog media      (Advent Horizon's 4th Album, released 2026)

Ambitious and inspiring, “Falling Together” is Advent Horizon's fourth album.  It leaves a strong and lingering impression beginning with In a Lone and Dreary World, the mere 19 minute 'opener' that establishes the album's adrenaline-fueled energy. The musical foundation is its monolithic sonically fine-tuned prog-metal guitar tones and dangerous and gut-punching bass and drum rhythm section. It's all dressed up with plenty of synths and amazing vocal harmonies. 

But despite all the explosive instrumental dynamite, the glue that makes the album cohesive as a whole for me is the vocals and also, surprisingly, the acoustic guitar that is revisited throughout and gives the album a more unique signature. Keyboards also play an essential role in the band, keeping it firmly in progressive rock territory, nicely rounding out this super-tight and at times djent-y band. 

Rylee McDonald is gifted and super-capable singer and reminds me a bit of Dennis deYoung of Styx. He shares the lead vocal on some tracks with Kristen McDonald, whose voice is absolutely sublime (and that can't be understated). She seems to have the female energy that brings balance to the universe and to this band, though she doesn't appear to be a permanent member per se (but she is married to Rylee I believe). 

A quick aside: This newer generation of prog-makers are helping the genre expand from its late ’60s and ’70s origins, delivering modern interpretations and fresh iterations. It used to be a relatively small circle in the 70s— Yes, Rush, Genesis, King Crimson, E.L.P., Renaissance, Gentle Giant, Camel etc. Nowadays the offerings are growing broader each year. It’s not a couple handful of acts creating great music: it’s a boatload. Truly this is thanks in part to much more affordable recording technology and also due to the instant and all encompassing internet distribution. An album that cost tens of thousands in the 70s can be arguably rivalled on a laptop computer with a digital interface and a few decent microphones. But there are no shortcuts in the art of songwriting, musical instrument mastery, and having an ear for properly produced music and arrangements.

So here's a band regularly reaching for those ‘hairs-standing-up-on-the-back-of-your-neck’ moments. The production is beautiful, the songwriting stays interesting and engaging, and not overly hooky.  My two word review of Falling Together is: (drum roll...) "Ridiculously good." My score is 4.5 prog dog bones out 5.  



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