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Album
While her previous band, Ipso Facto, always had a sense of drama about them, Rosalie Cunningham moved into an even more theatrical direction with the formation of Purson. Exploring the world of proto-metal, the band weaves together influences like Cream, Deep Purple, and Jethro Tull into a quasi-mystical pastiche of psychedelic wonder made up of fuzzed-out guitars and Wurlitzer organs. Purson's full-length debut, The Circle and the Blue Door, arrived on Metal Blade in 2013. Imbued with a sense of mystical darkness, Purson conduct a psychedelic exploration of proto-metal with their first album, The Circle and the Blue Door. On her first album since the split of her last band, Ipso Facto, Rosalie Cunningham continues to bring a certain flair for the melodramatic to her songwriting that isn't quite goth, but definitely has a theatrical feeling about it. Given the over the top nature of the music, which combines some of the best parts of bands like Deep Purple, Cream, and Jethro Tull, her ability to throw herself whole-heartedly into a song isn't just welcome, it's essential. No matter how well you nail the right blend of swirling Wurlitzer organs and bluesy guitar riffs, it's total commitment that that can make or break a song like "Sapphire Ward." Fortunately, Cunningham and company deliver a performance that's more than capable of controlling the sorts of musical black magic that The Circle and the Blue Door is attempting to conjure. Though other bands are out there digging i
Wake Up Sleepy Head
Purson
The Contract
Purson
Spiderwood Farm
Purson
Sailor's Wife's Lament
Purson
Leaning on a Bear
Purson
Tempest and the Tide
Purson
Mavericks and Mystics
Purson
Well Spoiled Machine
Purson
Sapphire Ward
Purson
Rocking Horse
Purson
Tragic Catastrophe
Purson