Marillion Live in the USA February 2018

by Rick Krueger

Hot on the heels of next year’s Cruise to the Edge on February 3-8, Marillion will mount the second United States leg of their ongoing FEAR tour.  This time around, they’ll play towns and cities in the South, Northeast and Midwest they haven’t visited for a while.  Dates are as follows:

 

Friday 9 February               The Plaza Live Orlando, FL
Saturday 10 February         Variety Playhouse Atlanta, GA
Monday 12 February          Carolina Theatre Durham, NC
Tuesday 13 February          Palace Theatre Greensburg, PA
Thursday 15 February        Town Ballroom Buffalo, NY

Friday 16 February             Royal Oak Music Theatre, Royal Oak, MI

Sunday 18 February           20 Monroe Live Grand Rapids, MI
Monday 19 February         The Arcada Theatre St Charles, IL
Wednesday 21 February   Granada Theater Dallas, TX

 

I can vouch for the Royal Oak Music Theatre in metro Detroit (where I’ve seen Todd Rundgren and Steve Hackett) and the Arcada Theatre in west Chicagoland (where I’ve seen Neal Morse with District 97 opening) as fine, welcoming places for this kind of show.  But I’m especially jazzed that the boys are coming to the sleek new venue 20 Monroe Live in Grand Rapids, my home town.  Steve Hackett brought his terrific Genesis Revisited with Hackett Classics tour there this past February; it turned out to be a great spot for a prog show.  And this booking answers the fervent wishes and prayers of more Marillionaires than you might think!

Owing to a long-standing communal love of prog and the dedicated advocacy of local radio legend Aris Hampers, there’s been an eager Marillion fanbase here ever since they opened for Utopia at the Lowell Showboat, touring Script for A Jester’s Tear.  By the late 1980s, the band was regularly filling DeVos Hall, Grand Rapids’ mid-size auditorium.  When I moved here in 1990, I was pleasantly shocked to hear “Kayleigh,” “Lavender” and even “Incommunicado” regularly on drive-time rock radio!  And the enthusiasm continued after Steve Hogarth replaced Fish; his The Invisible Man: Diaries 1991-1997 recounts a memorable GR weekend of packed in-store appearances, dinner and entertainment with Hampers, and a sold-out club show (yep, I was there) while touring Holidays in Eden.

As Marillion’s profile faded in the US, their visits here petered out as well; the last time the boys played Grand Rapids was on the crowd-funded tour for This Strange Engine.  From the buzz on the band’s North American Fan page on Facebook, already building since this morning’s announcement, GR fans will be more than ready to give the band (along with fans from all over the country, the continent and the world) a warm, grateful welcome.  If Marillion isn’t playing near you on this tour, feel free to come visit us next February!  (Yes, it’ll probably be cold — but between the indoor skywalks that run for nearly a mile and the unbelievable density of craft breweries, brewpubs & craft distilleries downtown, there will be ways for everyone to stay warm.)

Tickets for the tour go on sale to the general public on Friday, October 6.  Venue presales may start before then; the Facebook page will be the best place to get info, presale codes, etc.

 

 

“In Contact” continues impressive trajectory of Caligula’s Horse

Never felt like this before
Like the window in the water
Worlds of worthy sacrifice
But you made me feel alive
Like the light through dreamers eyes
I’m taking what I need
— Caligula’s Horse, “Dream the Dead”

Ever since hearing Moments From Ephemeral City back in 2011, I’ve looked forward to every release from Caligula’s Horse, the outstanding progressive quintet from Brisbane, Queensland. I didn’t write a proper review of that first release, but did say, “First, that’s a great band name. Secondly, that’s a good album title. Third, the music is just as inventive and attention-grabbing. Finally, the 12-minutes song ‘Alone in the World’ is one of my favorite songs of the year.”ch_incontact

That fabulous song contains all the ingredients that continue to shine forth in the band’s subsequent releases: a heavy-soft dynamic rooted squarely on founder and producer Sam Vallen’s stunning guitar work, a dark-light dynamic flowing from singer Jim Grey’s rich and expressive vocals, complex longer songs mixed with more immediate and very melodic shorter songs, and opaque lyrics containing a mixture of “the usual” (angst, love, fear, hope) and unusual (classical and historical references, musings on religion and spirituality). To my ear, these guys are really a cut or two above in terms of songcraft; every single solo or instrumental passage serves the greater good. There is no noodling or showing off, even though everyone has chops to burn.

Not to oversimplify, but it seems to me that most (most, not all) really good to great progressive rock bands have a riveting combination of distinctive vocals and guitar work. Vallen and Grey are world class in their respective crafts; in fact, Grey has shown in his work with the now-defunct Arcane that his distinctive pipes will stand out in any context; he discusses both bands in this excellent August 2015 interview. (Speaking of Arcane, the band’s final album, Known/Learned, is one of the finest prog albums of the past few years.) Grey is a vocalist with a remarkable combination of technical skill, as evidenced in his perfect control and pitch, and emotive impact; he can convey anger, vulnerability, joy, despair, and ecstasy with stunning ease, often on the turn of a dime.

I thought that 2013’s The Tide, The Thief & River’s End was a landmark album for the band (see my Progarchy.com review) and that Bloom continued the positive trajectory. In Contact proves the band is incapable of producing anything less than exceptional, and it is arguably their best work to date. In fact, I likely would say it is their best—period—save for the inclusion of an annoying and momentum-killing three-minute-long spoken track #8 (“Inertia and the Weapon of the Wall”), which I skip on every listen.

The opener, “Dream the Dead,” begins with a salvo of soaring guitar and then segues into a melodic verse over a little riff containing hints of Daniel Lanois, then building upon the heavy-soft/dark-like dynamics mentioned earlier. “Will’s Song” is, to my ears, the most run-of-the-mill cut, with some basic djent riffing and shouted choruses. But the rest of the album (again, save cut #8) is either above average or outstanding. “The Hands are the Hardest” has a wealth of great tones, a wonderful guitar solo, and a melancholic yet rousing series of choruses and bridges. “Love Conquers All” is a pithy and lovely tune featuring Grey at his most vulnerable:

The beast that I have become
Could set me free of this
If only I had the time
If only these hands were mine

It fades away far too quickly, giving way to “Song for No One,” which is, along with the final song, the nearly 16-minute-long “Graves,” the heart of the album:

“Capulet” returns to a more subdued, acoustic-ish soundscape before “Fill My Heart” embarks on a yearning, mid-tempo slow burn that features some tasteful drumming from newcomer Josh Griffin; the final three minutes are a perfect example of the Vallen-Grey interplay, with impressive leads by both. “The Cannon’s Mouth” lives up to the name, with a series propulsive, shot-like riffs and soaring vocals. The epic closer “Graves” brings it all together, with a masterful musical arc, a lush series of a cappella harmonies, a ear-worm chorus, devastating shredding by Vallen, and final barrage of heavy riffs and atmospheric vocalizing:

My take: this is one of the best prog releases of the year. Unless spoken word is your thing, I recommend skipping track #8 and enjoying yet another impressive effort from the best-named band from Down Under.

HAIM: Valentine @HAIMtheband

This is a great rock ‘n’ roll movie.

Don’t believe me?

Watch it all the way through to the end…

A brilliant chronicle of the making of a brilliant album.

Red Bazar Release Live Video of “City and the Stars”

More people need to be listening to Red Bazar. Peter Jones’ outstanding voice and brilliant lyrics have taken the band into the stratosphere artistically. Absolutely astounding. This is what cultural commentary should look like. Some fantastic guitar work here too. Enjoy!

Perfect Beings, Perfect News

In a flurry of news-based activity, Perfect Beings have released a veritable plethora of announcement-style news items…

  1. They’ve hooked up with the InsideOut label.
  2. They are heavily-pregnant with a release, due early 2018.
  3. Drummer Sean Reinert (Death, Gordian Knot, Cynic) is their new band member.
  4. They will perform the new album (title TBA……) at Rosfest 2018 on Saturday May 5th 2018. Get them tix asap!

These guys really are awesome. Give them your love!

The Kerzner Has Landed

a0129160493_16‘Static’, the long-awaited, somewhat-delayed, therefore-more-long-awaited new album by keyboard maestro Dave Kerzner, is now available for Bandcamp pre-orderererers.

General release availability is 1st October. Get it here!

 

Tears for Fears in Albert Hall

There are no words.  The greatest pop-prog band in the world.  Color me envious!!!  Seeing them in Denver in 2015 was one of the great highlights of my life.  Such natural performers, such integrity, such artistry.  Call me smitten.

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Nice Looking Arrivals at Progarchy HQ

Several new arrivals at Progarchy HQ in Michigan.  Thank you so much to the good companies and artists for sending these!  We’re honored you would trust us.  May we continue to earn that trust.

 

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From AFL (California): Yurki Volodarsky’s RTFact’s LIFE IS GOOD.
mts from bem
From the U.K. (Bad Elephant Music): My Tricksy Spirit’s MY TRICKSY SPIRIT.
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PROG Issue 80.

Welcome, Fall

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The Wethersfield Ancient Burying Ground in my hometown.

As a born and bred New Englander, I cannot neglect this opportunity to acknowledge the time of year when my home truly becomes God’s country. May everyone enjoy a restful Fall!

O hushed October morning mild,
Thy leaves have ripened to the fall;
Tomorrow’s wind, if it be wild,
Should waste them all.
The crows above the forest call;
Tomorrow they may form and go.
O hushed October morning mild,
Begin the hours of this day slow.
Make the day seem to us less brief.
Hearts not averse to being beguiled,
Beguile us in the way you know.
Release one leaf at break of day;
At noon release another leaf;
One from our trees, one far away.
Retard the sun with gentle mist;
Enchant the land with amethyst.
Slow, slow!
For the grapes’ sake, if they were all,
Whose leaves already are burnt with frost,
Whose clustered fruit must else be lost—
For the grapes’ sake along the wall.
– “October” by Robert Frost

soundstreamsunday: “How Do You Sleep” by LCD Soundsystem

LCD soundsystemJames Murphy made no bones about the hipster cred accorded Can on “I’m Losing My Edge,” LCD Soundsystem’s 2002 dancefloor-meets-Weird Al hit.  “I was there, I was there in 1968, I was there at the first Can show in Cologne,” he sing-speaks ala King Missile, going on to target Suicide and others in the pantheon of removed, white boy cool.  It’s idolatry and idol-destroying at once, and it’s a lot of fun to listen to.  Murphy never shies from the obvious or expected, scratching musical itches and quoting hosts of precedents within his long-ish form constructions.  He makes big beats, giant basslines, and his meta smarts about the music he creates enlivens his work rather than reducing it to a nostalgia trip. Precocious, yeah, precious, no.

Murphy wrapped up his LCD Soundsystem project in 2011, but revived it last year with some shows and this year (this month in fact) with American Dream, a double LP epic that continues an obsession with Adrian Belew-era Talking Heads, Tom Tom Club, New Order, Depeche Mode, Modern English, Kraftwerk, and on and on and on….   Songs as dessert, and dessert with every meal.  And yet the lyrical content carries some heft, and whether or not you think Murphy is saying anything new or real or whatever, you can take his songs in a lot of different ways, luxuriating in all the analog richness  and the cracking drums, or thinking, as I do when listening to the lyrics of “How Do You Sleep?”, of something that relates on a personal level (in this case, there’s a Stevie Smith “Not Waving But Drowning” vibe going on).  These aren’t simply tossed off words so people who aren’t comfortable with instrumentals have something to chant, or words made to fit or counterpoint melody, which was Can’s m.o.  The lyrics crystallize, emotionalizing the epic weight of the central, insistent riff and Murphy’s all-in vocal.

soundstreamsunday presents one song or live set by an artist each week, and in theory wants to be an infinite linear mix tape where the songs relate and progress as a whole. For the complete playlist, go here: soundstreamsunday archive and playlist, or check related articles by clicking on”soundstreamsunday” in the tags section.