Flying Colors - Discography -2012-2020- -eac-flac- |work| File
The (the sharp hit of Portnoy's snare) remain crisp and punchy.
: The collection highlights the band's ability to replicate complex four-part vocal harmonies live without pitch-correction tracks. FLYING COLORS discography and reviews - Prog Archives
Recorded at the Shepherd's Bush Empire in London, this release captures the Third Degree tour. The setlist beautifully weaves through their entire decade of output, blending pop, prog, and hard rock seamlessly.
Once the audio is extracted as a WAV file, it is encoded into . FLAC is an open-source format that compresses digital audio without losing any information. On average, FLAC files are 50-70% the size of an original CD track, yet they decompress to a bit-for-bit identical copy of the source. This provides the "best of both worlds": archive-quality sound for high-fidelity listening and efficient file sizes for storage and playback. Flying Colors - Discography -2012-2020- -EAC-FLAC-
(Lead Guitar) – The legendary guitarist of Deep Purple and Dixie Dregs, providing fusion-laced leads and heavy riffs.
Steve Morse’s swift guitar lines and Dave LaRue’s complex, punchy bass runs can easily become muddy in lossy formats.
The band's studio output follows a deliberate pattern of blending virtuoso performances with "hook-laden" choruses . The (the sharp hit of Portnoy's snare) remain
Flying Colors - Discography -2012-2020- -EAC-FLAC-: A Journey of Progressive Art-Rock
Their self-titled debut introduced the world to their eclectic style, featuring the fan-favorite epic "Infinite Fire" and the melodic single "Kayla".
The 2020 release, Third Degree , is a concept album about a man’s descent into mental illness. Musically, it is darker, more aggressive, and sonically the most complex of the three. The setlist beautifully weaves through their entire decade
Between 2012 and 2020, Flying Colors released three main studio albums, each expanding their signature "prog-pop" sound:
Recorded in Tilburg, Netherlands, during their first tour. It captures the raw energy of a new band proving themselves on stage, featuring covers of the members' other projects (like Alpha Rev’s "Colder Months" and Spock's Beard's "June").
The 12-minute epic "Infinite Fire" showcases classic prog-rock shifts handled with pristine, modern clarity. Second Nature (2014)