The New Yorker Takes on Prog

There’s a nice piece on prog rock by Kalefa Sanneh in the latest issue of The New Yorker magazine. Clearly, the author isn’t sure what to make of the genre, but he gives a fair assessment of its early years, and the unfair treatment rock critics dished out in the seventies. I wish he had written more on the current thriving scene, but it’s nice to get some respect in a mainstream publication.

You can read “The Persistence of Prog Rock” here:

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/06/19/the-persistence-of-prog-rock

 

Lonely Robot’s Latest Is A Dream

One of my top albums of 2015 was John Mitchell’s Lonely Robot: Please Come Home. In addition to my rave review, several other Progarchists recognized that album’s greatness, putting it on their Best-Of lists for 2015.

It’s two years later, and Mitchell has returned with the second installment of the Lonely Robot saga: The Big Dream. I always approach sophomore efforts with some trepidation, because an artist often uses up all of his or her best ideas in the début. No worries on that front this time! Fresh off of his work with Jem Godfrey in Frost*, Mitchell has crafted a near-perfect pop/prog collection of songs that hearken back to the glory days of Peter Gabriel’s solo work, Porcupine Tree, and others.

According to Mitchell, The Big Dream continues the saga of the astronaut in Please Come Home. He has awakened from a cryogenic sleep, and finds himself in a woodland inhabited by human/animal hybrids. The concept is a bit hazy, while the music itself is tight as a nut. I am hard pressed to think of any songs that pack a bigger 1-2-3 punch than “Awakenings”, “Sigma”, and “In Floral Green”. I had to put those three on Repeat for several listens before I even heard the rest of the album.

If you thought, like me, that Please Come Home was terrific, The Big Dream actually tops it in every way. Big melodies that grab your ears and won’t let go, great vocals, John’s always outstanding guitar – all combine to deliver an album that will definitely be on many Top Ten of 2017 lists.

Rather than taking my word for it, just check out the first single, “Everglow”:

The Big Dream is slated for release April 28.

Birzer Bandana: Becoming One

There’s a new band on the prog block: Birzer Bandana, which is Progarchy’s own Brad Birzer (lyrics) and Salander’s Dave Bandana (music and performance). According to Brad’s liner notes, his lyrics were jumpstarted by the science fiction classic A Canticle For Leibowitz, and the opening track, “Awash”, definitely conjures up images of a post-nuclear wasteland.

Awash in light, bathed and comforted
Head… deadly, deadly, deadly heat
Burns the skin and the retinas
Irradiated skies baptize the earth.

Bandana’s music is appropriately somber and evocative of someone trudging through desert sands. Olga Kent’s beautiful violin lends an exotic air.

Things pick up a bit in the second song, “Dance”. I love Bandana’s double-tracked vocals here, and the combination of acoustic guitar,  hand percussion (tabla?), Kent’s bewitching violin, and some classic-era prog organ make for a terrific track. Imagine late-period Beatles collaborating with Pink Floyd, and you get an idea of how this one sounds.

Continue reading “Birzer Bandana: Becoming One”

The Neal Morse Band Live – 2017 Tour Kickoff

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The Tour T-Shirt

A fired-up and ready-to-rock Neal Morse Band kicked off its 2017 Similitude Of A Dream Tour last night at RockeTown in Nashville, TN. They performed the entire album before an ecstatic crowd, most of whom knew every word of the 2-disc magnum opus.

This was a different kind of show than Neal and his band mates have performed before. It’s clear that they want the album as a whole to take center stage, and not the musicians themselves. For instance, Neal did not even address the audience until after Shortcut To Salvation, which was in the second half of the set. Mike spoke briefly before Freedom Song. Other than those breaks, the focus was entirely on the songs.

The performance began with a darkly cowled Neal singing Long Day off to the side, illuminated with a handheld light. Then the entire group exploded into Overture, and we were off on an adventure through all kinds of trials and tribulations. Throughout the show stunning videos complemented the songs, and Neal wore various masks and outfits.

As a group, Neal, Mike, Randy, Bill, and Eric have melded into a mighty musical force. When Randy George and Mike Portnoy lock into their groove, the result is ferocious thunder. Eric Gillette has matured into an extraordinary guitarist and vocalist (give him more lead vocals!), and Bill Hubauer’s keyboards and vocals are always rock-solid. Neal, of course, is the consummate showman – singing, pulling off amazing guitar solos, and mugging for the crowd before every keyboard showcase.

But the real star of the evening was The Similitude of a Dream. Everything was done in service to the tale of a pilgrim on a spiritual journey – one that went from the City Of Destruction through doubt, fear, confusion, sloth, and battle until he reaches the shining city on a hill. When I first heard TSOAD, I liked it, but I wasn’t knocked out – it was just too sprawling a work for me to take in. After last night’s performance, I get it now. It all holds together as a unified work of art, and it is a beautiful allegory.

Highlights of the show were So Far Gone, where everyone takes a turn on lead vocals; a very moving Breath of Angels, which ended the first half; Shortcut to Salvation; a heavy Man in the Iron Cage; an all-acoustic Freedom Song; and the concluding Broken Sky/Long Day. By the end, everyone was wrung out and happy.

For an encore, the band tore through rip-roaring renditions of Momentum, Agenda, and The Call. Lasting nearly three hours, it was a very satisfying evening. The boys travel to Seattle and other parts west before heading up to Canada and then over to Europe and Israel. If there is any way you can catch this show, do it – it’s an amazing visual and musical experience.

Tour details can be found here.

Merry Christmas Weirdness

warblings_front_500Every year, Andy Cirzan – the Dr. Demento of obscure holiday music – releases a mix of songs from his vast collection. This year’s is Warblings From The Enchanted Forest, and it has to be heard to be believed. Joanie Sommers’ “The Peppermint Engineer” is a bizarre psychedelic children’s song, while Jimmie Dale and the Jimmy’s “Kangi – The Kangaroo  (His Xmas Hula Hoop)” unashamedly rips off “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer”. Thankfully, it never achieved the popularity Rudolph did.

You can listen to Andy talk about Warblings on this episode of Sound Opinions, and you can download the entire album here. It’s free but only for a limited time.

Merry Christmas, everybody!

 

What I Liked This Year

I wasn’t too adventurous in my listening this year – maybe because artists I’m already familiar with released so much good music that they kept me busy!

Here’s what I liked in 2016 in the world of prog:

Tales_from_Topographic_Oceans_(Yes_album)10. Yes: Tales From Topographic Oceans (Blu-ray ed.)

Technically not a 2016 release, but with Steven Wilson’s 5.1 mix, this is a new album to my ears. This has everything a Yes fan could ask for – versions of TFTO that include the original mix, a radio promo, a “needle-drop” vinyl transfer, an instrumental version, in addition to Wilson’s new mixes – literally hours of music. A sometimes maligned work gets its proper release, and it really shines.

 

The Mute Gods9. The Mute Gods: Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me

I love Nick Beggs’ blend of 70s – era FM rock with snappy songwriting. Turns out he’s much more than one of the best bassists ever.

 

Continue reading “What I Liked This Year”

The Mysterious Sound of CFCF

CFCF is Michael Silver, from Montreal (where a local TV station is CFCF-TV). I discovered his music via Spotify, where it is part of their Atmospheric Calm playlist. My students enjoy working on calculus problems while it plays in the background.

The playlist is several hours long, and CFCF’s songs consistently grabbed my attention. I went ahead and purchased his 2013 album, Outsiders, and it is a true work of beauty. He mixes 21st century ambient electronics with subdued vocals and compelling melodies. Fans of classic Peter Gabriel, Talk Talk, and Brian Eno will love this stuff. It has a definite ’80s vibe, in a respectful and appreciative way. I can’t stop listening to it.

Here’s one of the best songs off of Outsiders, “Strange Form Of Life”:

Who Is This Steven Wilson You Keep Going on About?

wilson-transience

If you’re a regular reader of Progarchy, you’re probably familiar with Steven Wilson, whether it’s as the leader of Porcupine Tree, a solo artist, or the go-to remixer of classic progressive albums. And you’ve probably raved about his work to uncomprehending friends and relatives.

Well, Mr. Wilson has just released a compilation that speaks more effectively to his artistry than any words. Transience consists of fourteen songs, clocking in at more than an hour. There’s not really anything new, unless you want to count a couple of edits, but they were hand-picked by Wilson, and as such make for an interesting listen.

All of the songs highlight Wilson’s “pretty” side – in other words, his extraordinary gift for composing a beautiful melody. The flow of the album is flawless, moving from one entrancing moment to the next. One thing that struck me was just how good his first solo album, Insurgentes, was. “Harmony Korine”, “Significant Other”, and “Insurgentes” are all included, and they really stand out.

Continue reading “Who Is This Steven Wilson You Keep Going on About?”

Prince: An Appreciation

One of my first jobs in high school was valet parking for a restaurant. Besides the perk of driving all kinds of cool cars, I also sometimes heard interesting music on the sound system. One time I hopped into a car, and there was a guy singing falsetto over a funky beat with a catchy melody. I picked up the cassette lying on the passenger seat and noted that it was by a guy named Prince, and the album was For You. I later learned that he was 17 years old, and he self-produced it.

I never picked that album up, and I didn’t hear much of Prince after that, because my tastes were more punk/new wave. However, one morning in 1982 my favorite rock radio station was playing an irresistible song where the singer declared, “Tonight I’m gonna party like it’s 1999”. Whoa! I cranked it up, because this guy was the perfect combination of rock, dance, synthpop, and rhythm and blues. It was Prince.

I did purchase that album (1999), and like later ones he would release, it was all over the place. Hard rock, gritty funk, blues, new wave, techno – it was a foretaste of Prince’s unique ability to combine seemingly incompatible styles of music into an original and appealing blend. It was also a harbinger of his incredible productivity: a double album that was “Produced, Arranged, Composed, and Performed by Prince”.

Purple RainIn 1984, it was impossible to turn on the radio and not hear something from Prince’s breakthrough album, the soundtrack to his movie, Purple Rain. A mega seller that actually deserved to be one, Prince was suddenly considered the main rival to Michael Jackson, the so-called King Of Pop. The movie made Prince a huge multimedia star. But there were things happening in Purple Rain foreshadowing the restless genius of Prince; things that indicated he was an artist who would follow his own muse, regardless of the commercial appeal.

Take the first single, “When Doves Cry”: opening with a crazy, squiggly guitar line, an insistent keyboard riff takes over, only to disappear while Prince sings over spare percussion. It took me dozens of listens before I figured out what made the song so compulsively listenable: there’s no bass! It’s impossible to sit still to, yet there’s no lower end – it’s brittle, percussive, beautiful, and spacey all at the same time.

A big part of Purple Rain’s success has to go to Prince’s band, The Revolution. A diverse group of musicians in the mold of Sly and the Family Stone, each member made a distinctive contribution to the overall sound. For the next few years, they would become integral to Prince’s success, reigning in his wildest musical forays, and providing him with song ideas he could bounce off of.

Every song is brilliant on Purple Rain, even the notorious “Darling Nikki”, which spurred Tipper Gore to fight for warning labels on music. The title track put to rest any doubt of Prince’s instrumental prowess: a gospel-tinged masterpiece, it features one of the finest guitar solos ever committed to tape. Which brings up the main contradiction in Prince’s music: he wrote some of the dirtiest lyrics any major star ever got away with, while at the same time composing almost sacred songs of devotion – and they expressed devotion to a lover or to God with equal ardor.

ATWIADThis contradiction became explicit with the next album’s closing song, “Temptation”, where Prince literally argues with God about his carnal desires vs. his spiritual struggles. Around The World In A Day, released two years after Purple Rain, confounded everyone. From its psychedelic cover to the summer-of-love sounding music within, it was the last thing anyone expected. Not surprisingly, it was a relative disappointment commercially, but after the passage of time, it is now seen as being years ahead of its time. There simply aren’t many albums containing songs as strong as “Paisley Park”, “Raspberry Beret”, “Pop Life”, and “The Ladder” all in one place.

ParadeAfter Around The World In A Day, Prince made another movie, Under The Cherry Moon, which flopped, but the songs from it served to make another extraordinary album. Parade continued Prince’s psychedelic rock explorations, this time leavened with some spare funk (“Kiss”) and smooth balladry.

Meanwhile, Prince was also writing hits for other artists, including Sheena Easton, Sinead O’Connor, The Bangles, and Tom Jones. He also participated in a side project, Madhouse, which featured funky jazz. It was as if he couldn’t get all the music in him onto tape quickly enough.

Sign1987 brought the release of the album many consider his masterpiece: Sign ‘O’ The Times. The Revolution were gone (except for a couple of live house jams), and once again Prince produced, arranged, and performed everything. A sprawling double album, Prince is all over the map stylistically, yet nothing is wasted. There are gritty R & B (“Sign ‘O’ The Times”), playful pop songs (“Starfish and Coffee”), roaring funk (“Housequake”), anthemic rock (“The Cross”), and just plain weirdness (“If I Was Your Girlfriend”).

After Sign ‘O’ The Times, Prince seemed to lose focus. He recorded the infamous Black Album but never released it, because he thought it was too profane. (That didn’t prevent bootleggers from spreading it far and wide, however. It was eventually released officially by Warner Brothers.) Instead he released Lovesexy, which had some excellent songs on it, but they were all combined into one track on the CD, which made it hard to navigate among them.

He recorded the soundtrack to Tim Burton’s Batman movie and filmed another movie himself, Graffiti Bridge, which flopped. But just when Prince was starting to sound like he was repeating himself, he released Diamonds and Pearls, which had some terrific songs in the style of classic Stax/Motown, albeit with salacious lyrics that Berry Gordy would never have allowed.

He became embroiled in a long-running dispute with his record label over artistic freedom, and began referring to himself as “The Artist Formally Known As Prince”, going by an inscrutable symbol in place of any alphabetic name.

1995’s The Gold Experience was a fairly strong return to form, with Prince, oops, I mean Love symbol , anticipating virtual reality and the internet. By this time, though, he had long lost the huge fan base from the Purple Rain days.

In 1996, Prince was finally released from his Warner Brothers contract, and he quickly released a 3-disc set, Emancipation. He followed that up with the 4-disc Crystal Ball. The sheer quantity of music was enough to try the patience of the most devoted fan. He desperately needed someone to tell him what was worth releasing, and what should stay in the vault. The last album I bought was Lotusflow3r, which was a nice surprise. It featured some of his best guitar playing in years, and the songs were by and large straight-ahead rock. True to form, though, he included another disc of funk, MPLSound, and another album by his current protégé, Bria Valente, all in the same package!

Word has it there is enough unreleased music in Prince’s vault to  ensure that we’ll be getting new albums for decades to come. Regardless, there are very, very few artists who have released a string of albums as consistently strong as the ones he produced from 1984 through 1987. In that brief, four-year span, he graced us with Purple Rain, Around The World In A Day, Parade, and Sign ‘O’ The Times. If that were all we had from him, his place in the highest rank of rock artists would be assured. We should count ourselves fortunate that the restless genius of Prince compelled him to share his gift with us for as many years as he did.

RIP, Prince Rogers Nelson.

 

The Top Ten Yes Albums

Yes Logo

Inspired by fellow Progarchist Erik Heter to post a “Top Ten” list, here are what I believe to be the ten best Yes albums. Whether you agree or disagree with my choices, feel free to add your two cents’ worth in the comments!

Yes Talk

10. Talk

An album by the Rabin/Anderson/Squire/Kaye/White configuration that never got the respect it deserved. I’ve always had a soft spot for it, particularly “The Calling” and “Endless Dream”. It strikes a nice balance between the full-on pop of 90125 and the prog of the band’s glory days. Check out Time Lord’s essay on this album here.

 

yes 90125

9. 90125

Speaking of 90125, the charm and attractiveness of its songs cannot be denied. It won Yes a new generation of fans, and when I need a dose of classic ’80s rock, it’s the album I go to.

 

 

545488_YES_Progeny_LP_Jacket_Cover_13630.indd8. Progeny

Before this recent release of seven concerts from 1972, I would have placed Yessongs here. But the raw sound of these recordings makes them a really fun listen. Hear Rick Wakeman’s keyboards channel a local jazz DJ! Hear Jon Anderson tout a local vegetarian restaurant! And hear a young band at the peak of their powers playing the entire Close to the Edge album.

Tales_from_Topographic_Oceans_(Yes_album)

7. Tales From Topographic Oceans

In the rock world at large, this was considered the epitome of self-indulgence. I think Yes were ahead of their time. Nowadays, it’s normal for a prog band to record a 30-minute epic. In this album, there are some truly beautiful passages of music.

 

Yes Drama

6. Drama

Probably a controversial choice for this slot, but I love this album. It’s notorious for having Trevor Horn and Geoff Downes instead of Jon and Rick, but “Machine Messiah” and “Run Through The Light” are excellent songs. Chris Squire’s playing on this album is some of his best, as well.

 

Yes Fragile

 

5. Fragile

“Roundabout”, “Long Distance Runaround”, “Heart of the Sunrise”, no self-respecting fan of prog music can be without this classic.

 

Yes Album

4. The Yes Album

This is the one where all the disparate elements of Yes first gelled. “Starship Trooper” and “I’ve Seen All Good People” defined early-70s FM radio in America. I still get chills listening to it.

 

 

relayer

3. Relayer

The harsh sound of the original mix of this album turned me off, but Steven Wilson’s new one is a revelation. It’s a shame the Patrick Moraz edition of Yes didn’t record more. They made some wonderfully challenging and exciting music.

 

Yes-close

 

2. Close To The Edge

The pinnacle of the classic lineup (and Bill Bruford’s finest hour). A contemporary symphony that will endure for a very long time.

 

Yes Going

1. Going For The One

The punk explosion of the mid-70s lit a fire under Yes, and the opening title track features some of Steve Howe’s most aggressive guitar. “Parallels” rocks unbelievably hard, while “Awaken” is my favorite long-form Yes song. For a much better and comprehensive appreciation of this album, read Erik Heter’s review here.

 

Agree with the list or disagree? Was I wrong to leave out Tormato or Magnification? Let us know in the comments!