The Worm Ouroboros proudly presents their new album "Endless Way From You", as a natural follow-up to their first "Of Things That Never Were", which incorporates styles from symphonic prog and Canterbury tradition right down to the bleak and sinister zeuhl territories. It's a whole-range visions of dreams and nightmares, leading you through wordless skies and deserted seashores; mainly instrumental with intense and complex arrangements with flute, guitar and vintage keyboards. Like the first one, new album features guest musicians from Five-Storey Ensemble.
The band emerged in 2006 in the depths of eastern-european marshlands of Belarus when Sergey Gvozdyukevich and Vladimir Sobolevsky who were inspired by 70's progressive rock, decided to put forward their musical vision to the public. Through the different line-up changes and performances at festivals, demo-records in 2009 and 2011, The Worm Ouroboros' style eventually took its shape, having absorbed a lot of influences from the 70's prog scene, from Genesis to Magma, and as a result the band recorded and produced their first album 'Of Things That Never Were' in 2013 on Italian AltrOck/Fading label, which received highly positive feedback. And now, years after, The Worm Ouroboros delivered their second creation 'Endless Way From You'. Music of the band is the diverse blend of styles and moods, from inconsolable lugubriousness to bright tunefulness (though mainly the former), with immutable density of arrangments, with strong zeuhl and canterbury influences. Sound is organ- and guitar-based with a notable use of monotonous whine of flutes and other woodwinds as well as (obviously) the maddening beating of vile drums. By the way, is it lugubriousness, lugubriescence or lugubriosity?