This was
Heldon's last studio release, although the reissued
Rhizosphere CD includes a 1982
Heldon concert recording with slightly different personnel.
Stand By features the classic trio lineup of the brilliant Francois Auger on percussion,
Patrick Gauthier on keyboards and
Pinhas on guitars, keyboards and electronics, with some additional assistance from Didier Batard on bass, Didier Badez on sequencers and
Klaus Blasquiz doing voices. The two long pieces on the CD are an interesting contrast. The title piece starts with some nasty distorted fuzz guitar from
Pinhas over ponderous, menacing bass and drums.
King Crimson at its most aggressive could be considered a model, but this track is also very close to the so-called "zheul" sound of
Magma, another French prog-rock band of the period, which shared
Pinhas' interest in science fiction motifs, among other things. Later in the piece, the band switches gears somewhat with a slightly quicker tempo, but then after a minutes settles back into a grinding, heavy metal sound. After a short and much jauntier electronic interlude comes the second long piece, "Bolero," which uses the well-known Spanish rhythm in an opening section, but then moves into a long space jam which is anchored by a strong sequencer pulse. The result is some very effective "kosmiche" space music, much in the vein of early
Klaus Schulze. From a later vantage point, the musical style here is quite familiar, but what makes
Heldon's piece a superior thing of its kind is Auger's imaginative percussion,
Pinhas' loose, soaring guitar improvisation on top of the precise electronics, and the general interplay among musicians and between acoustic, electric and electronic instruments. Not cookie-cutter stuff by any means, this piece gives the German audionauts such as
Schulze and
Tangerine Dream some worthy competition. ~ Bill Tilland