What shall be left of us?

Don’t miss the fine interview with Greg Spawton (GS) and David Longdon (DL) over at Stereo Embers.

Here’s a snippet, wherein they muse on the themes of the “Grimspound” title track:

DL: So much of today’s world is based in the digital realm that it is intriguing to think about what will be left of our times as hard archaeology. If that connection to the digital realm is somehow lost due to whatever will befall our species in the future, I don’t think that much physical matter will remain to tell our story. Impermanence is a concern. That is what this song is about.

GS: My background is in archaeology and history and it is interesting that many of our activities these days are ephemeral. Information is so easily shared and yet deeper knowledge and understanding doesn’t necessarily follow. One of the core themes on the album is a call for a return to the Enlightenment tradition. We seem to be getting slightly adrift from the humanist values which gave birth to modern society.

Well, as you may know, enlightened people do leave behind vinyl…

Metal Mondays: Nikki Stringfield — “As Chaos Consumes” @nikki_shreds

Happy Monday, metal heads. Guess what? Nikki Stringield, of Iron Maidens fame, has released a totally shredtastic single. You can buy it on iTunes today.

Also, check out the sweet guitar she’s playing in the promotional video.

Rock on, Nikki. Can’t wait to hear a whole epic album from you someday. I think we’re all ready for you to unleash some prog metal on us.

Act I Synopsis: Schooltree “Heterotopia” @schooltree

In my review yesterday of Schooltree’s brilliant new album, Heterotopia, I focused primarily on its unexpectedly incredible music, and I didn’t really get into the album’s fascinating mythical storyline, which is reminiscent of the classics (e.g., compare Suzi to Genesis’s Rael, or Enantiodromia to Rush’s Cygnus).

But to give you an idea of just how terrific this fully conceived concept album is, I wanted to offer below an overview of the plot. Here’s the summary of Act I, courtesy of the band’s press kit. (I will place Act II in a separate post.) Use this as your guide to listen to Act I, if you have not yet tuned into this magnificent prog opera.

HETEROTOPIA

A Rock Opera from Schooltree

Plot Synopsis

ACT I

(Prologue) Suzi is a modern underachiever, clinging to yesteryear’s now-defunct dreams of rock-n-roll stardom. Her life became progressively darker as she found ways to support herself outside of the fame and fortune she thought was her destiny. And easier money came with a high cost. (Rocksinger)

A disillusioned Suzi reflects on the bullshit of contemporary life. In her despondence she sees having a soul in these empty times as her biggest problem, and makes a wish – someone please take it away. (The Big Slide)

Continue reading “Act I Synopsis: Schooltree “Heterotopia” @schooltree”

Album Review: Schooltree — “Heterotopia” ★★★★★ @schooltree

This is a freakin’ amazing album. If you have not yet heard Schooltree’s Heterotopia, you have no idea what you’re missing.

Imagine if Kate Bush released, in 2017, a 100-minute long, double LP concept album. Imagine if it was so damn good that it ranked right up there in rock history with The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway and Quadrophenia. Sounds like a total fantasy — too good to be true, right?

Well, that is exactly the magnitude of what is going on here with this release. Except it’s not Kate Bush. It’s an incredible musician I had never heard of, called Lainey Schooltree, who has done the miraculous. With this amazing achievement, she has forever earned her place in the history of rock. This is seriously one of the greatest albums you will ever hear.

Continue reading “Album Review: Schooltree — “Heterotopia” ★★★★★ @schooltree”

Haim — “Little of Your Love” (SNL) @HAIMtheband

Haim performed the catchy lead single “Want You Back” (track one from Something To Tell You) last night on SNL, along with a live debut of the album’s third track, “Little of Your Love.” That song uses strings to soar effectively into its final minute, over top of which Danielle gets to have fun with a tasty guitar solo:
https://vid.me/e/tGG6?stats=1

Haim: “Right Now” (Live) & “Want You Back” @HAIMtheband

For me, the Haim sisters are even reminiscent of stratospheric artists like Peter Gabriel or Steven Wilson at their most thrilling moments of pure pop perfection. No wonder, when their personal playlist unsurprisingly includes the likes of Kate Bush and ELO.

With what promises to be one of the best albums of 2017, the supremely talented Haim will return to the charts by releasing Something To Tell You on July 7.

The appropriately titled track “Want You Back” is already now available. Not to be missed is also a preview of the track “Right Now” from that same forthcoming album. Here it is, superbly performed, as a live, one-take version in the studio, filmed by Paul Thomas Anderson:

Haim will be live on SNL this weekend. Here’s how good they were last time, when they played my favorite track from 2013’s Days Are Gone, “The Wire”:

I’ve wanted them back for a long time, so I’m really looking forward to a new, full-length album from Danielle, Alana, and Este. It’s going to be a great summer!

Born to make music, check out this window on the band’s nice life story:

By the way, if you think you have them pegged as a pop band, think again. It never makes sense to put talented people in a box. Here’s proof that Haim can rock hard with the best of them:

Unleash the Archers: “The Matriarch” Video @UnleashArchers

Click through to BraveWords to watch the exclusive (currently unlisted) lyric video for the awesome new track “The Matriarch” from Apex, the forthcoming album from Unleash the Archers. Not only is this track pure metal excellence, it is a harbinger of the epic feel of the whole concept album. Here are some details:

It has now been 10 years of Unleash The Archers. These heavy metal heroes are celebrating this honour with an exhilarating feast on their upcoming album, Apex, out on June 2nd via Napalm Records.

The band states: “We are extremely excited to release another full on concept album; it’s just so much fun to play out a story when you’re up on stage. This one has a protagonist that we call ‘The Immortal’ being forced to serve the antagonist, a.k.a. ‘The Matriarch’ as she embarks down a very dark path to achieve immortality. We had a great time writing this record, and I think the cohesiveness of the story has really shone through in the music as well. It has a certain vibe throughout, from beginning to end, and we can’t wait to hear what our fans have to say about the direction this album has taken. We don’t like to write the same record over and over again and we are very happy with the progression of our sound on Apex. We think it will appeal to all of our fans old and new; it has the best parts of our past albums combined into one with just a little more spit and polish.”

BBT’s Greg Spawton on the shared history that binds us together @bigbigtrain

There’s a really great interview with Big Big Train’s Greg Spawton over at Echoes and Dust. Don’t miss it!

Here’s a tasty sample, which tells the band’s wondrous story from The Underfall Yard to Grimspound:

Greg: The Underfall Yard was certainly the album where we went headlong into the history and landscape story-telling. I don’t think it was thought through, particularly, it was more a reaction to what I was reading about at the time. I remember reading some of the stories around Brunel and the Victorian engineers and I read a book by Richard Fortey who was then a paleontologist at the Natural History Museum. His book started with a description of a railway journey to the west and he mentioned that the rocks further west are much older than those that could be found in London, so it was like a journey into deep geological time. On the title track which was becoming quite a sprawling, epic piece, I connected the engineers with the landscape they worked on (and under) and I also introduced some themes about the Enlightenment as those engineers were very much men who lived by Enlightenment and scientific values. I really enjoyed writing the song and that led me to other stories which I thought would be nice to write about such as the Winchester Diver. When I was writing all of these songs, I didn’t realise that I was about to meet and connect with David, who is very much my musical soul-mate. Some singers might shy away from that sort of subject matter, but he met the challenge of those songs head-on. And as he is a writer himself, he was able to ensure the vocal arrangements and performances suited the material.

(((o))): Was there a point where the other band members thought “why on earth are we writing songs about Victorian engineers!”

Greg: It wasn’t really like that back then. We didn’t really have a full band identity at that stage. We had started as a band, and then, like a reverse butterfly, had undergone this gradual metamorphosis into a studio project. At the time of The Underfall Yard, we were just beginning the process of becoming a proper band again. So, at the point of writing those songs, there wasn’t really anybody to tell me what to do and I just did what I wanted to. It is different now, we discuss and agree things, so I have had to let go a bit, but the benefits of being in a full-band with all that extra creative input far outweigh the fact that I am less able to exhibit any control-freak tendencies. I think we all feel we have carved out a bit of territory for ourselves in the last few years which has worked well in defining the band and giving us a strong identity.

(((o))): Moving forward a bit and the idea of the “story” is explored even further on Folklore. The themes and ideas or a lot less immediate here though. It almost feels more insular than English Electric, as if the songs are hushed secrets?

Greg: We think of the work we have done in the last few years as a sort of cycle of albums which has moved from songs about the individuals who worked on and under the land, to songs on the English Electric albums about the communities that those people formed and finally through to songs on Folklore about the stories that have bound those communities together over time. Again, it wasn’t planned, it evolved, and it isn’t as neat as all that, but that is, broadly speaking, the arc of it. Grimspound ties some of the threads together, it is the last full new studio album that we will be doing in this cycle of releases.

(((o))): The stories that are told through history become a kind of fabric that binds us. Do you see the music you make as a natural extension of this?

Greg: That is exactly what we hope to achieve. We would like to be a small part of the process of remembering the stories and the characters that define us as communities. There is a lot of identity politics around at the moment which seems to break people up into ever small groups of individuals, enabling people to be played off against each other in a sort of competition of who is or isn’t the least privileged. In reality, there are far more things that bind us together than separate us, and much of that is down to shared history.

(((o))): Big Big Train’s story continues with Grimspound. Can you elaborate on this enigmatic figure and what we can expect from the new album?

Greg: The title of the album came from a Bronze-Age settlement on Dartmoor. It is an incredibly evocative place with a mysterious name which was given to it by the Anglo-Saxons who connected it and other such places to one of their gods, Grimr. Our friend, Sarah Louise Ewing who paints our cover and booklet art had provided us with a beautiful painting of a crow for the cover of Folklore and during a conversation she asked David what the crow’s name was. His instinct was to call it Grimspound. So the name of the album came about by quite a circuitous route.

As for the album itself, I think it is in the grand tradition of progressive rock. It was an album made without any pressure. We had just released Folklore, had a couple of songs that we hadn’t had time to finish and so thought we would write one or two more songs and release an EP to fill in the gap before our gigs later this year. The amount of material we had available to us grew very quickly, with David and myself both writing some big pieces and with major writing contributions from Rikard, Rachel and Danny. So, we suddenly found ourselves with almost a double album of songs and we selected the hour or so of music that fits best together to make a cohesive album.

BBT: “Meadowland” (performed live at Real World studios in April 2017) @bigbigtrain

This is a magnificent live performance of a song from the new Big Big Train album, Grimspound:

And here is more of the most recent video excellence from BBT:

Prog on, gentlemen!