
Category: progressive rock music
An Exclusive Interview: Chris Thompson, President of Radiant Records

For those of you who have been with us since the very beginning of this website, you know how much we love and value Chris Thompson. Even before we started the site, we contacted Chris at Radiant to make sure we could get some cds to review. Chris, rather gloriously, answered not only positively, but with great enthusiasm. It’s no exaggeration to state that his response gave us the confidence to launch progarchy.com.
As just announced, Chris is the newly-appointed president of Radiant Records, arguably the premier American label for prog and art rock.
A few years ago, progarchy.com named Chris its overall “prog-guy” of that year. In personal relations, he’s as kind and as intelligent as you might imagine. In his professional demeanor, he’s totally. . . well, professional.
Today, to celebrate his new position as president of Radiant, we had a chance to talk with Chris about his role and the role of Radiant in the coming years.
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Progarchy: Chris, thanks so much for taking your valuable time to talk with us. Can you tell us about your new position at Radiant? What will you’ll be doing as President?
Chris: Hey, Brad. This new position has been created to allow me to focus on growing Radiant Records on a global level. Also, with my focus being on the business side of the label, it will allow Neal much needed time to focus more on the music and creative side.
Progarchy: Can you give us hints as to where you’re going to take Radiant?
Chris: With increased exposure in international markets and growing Progressive fan base in North America, signing new artists, and working to become a digital download hub for Progressive Rock, our desire is to take Radiant to the next level. With a state of the art recording studio, Radiant Studios, and the many relationships in manufacturing and distribution, we have a lot of room to grow and expand our organization.
Progarchy: Sounds perfect. Can you give us a bit about your own background?
Chris: My background is purchasing and estimating, as well as with anything organizational. Having worked with Neal in every area of touring (i.e. merch, lighting, tour management, booking, logistics), I have pretty well done it all. With my experience in marketing and merchandising, I will be able to assist Neal with product design and manufacturing, as well as other artists that we sign to the Radiant label. I have 20+ years in management and customer service, and I strive to offer better service than you can get anywhere else. Nothing less.
Progarchy: Finally, how would you assess the current and future states of rock music?
Chris: Progressive Rock has held true, demanding high quality music and creative artwork and packaging. As the world is leaning toward mp3’s and a jpeg of a cover, our Progressive fans still love everything about the music and the artists that make it. Radiant’s fans and customers are the best there are, and we are dedicated to bringing them the best music, the best products, the best shows, and the best customer service we can.
Progarchy: Thanks so much, Chris. You’re definitely the future of the genre, and it’s great to have you in this new position. Congratulations!
Radiant Record’s Weekly Feature: IZZ
Greetings from the Radiant Team!
It’s time for our Weekly Featured Product! This week, our featured item is, Everlasting Instant, the new studio album from American progressive rock group, IZZ! Everlasting Instant, released April 7, 2015, serves as the final installment of a three-part series of albums that began with The Darkened Room (TDR) in 2009 and continued with Crush of Night in 2012. Everlasting Instant concludes this epic thematic arc with a fresh palette of sounds. From the syncopated rhythms and unpredictable meter changes of “Can’t Feel the Earth, Part IV,” to the through-composed nature of “Keep Away,” to the uplifting drama of “Sincerest Life,” the fearlessly modern sound of IZZ continues to surprise at every turn. A must-have addition to every prog collection! Purchase yours here today!
IZZ
Everlasting Instant
Testing for Echo: Rush’s Odd but Brilliant 1996 Masterpiece
While I’ve mentioned this in passing, i’ve yet to announce formally that I’m writing a book on the words and ideas of Neil Peart. So, if you’ll permit me, I’ll do it here.
I’m writing a book on Neil Peart.
There. Done. Announced.
And, I’m having a blast, not surprisingly. The book will come out this fall (2015) from WordFire Press under the editorial expertise of Kevin J. Anderson and Rebecca Moesta.
At the moment, the place-holder title is The Neil Peart Generation. I’m hoping to come up with something better.
In the meantime, here’s an excerpt–a raw, unedited version of my section on Peart and Rush in 1996-1997, just before all of the tragedies hit. I hope you enjoy. This is about 2,000 words of the ca. 40,000 word book. At least as I see it now.–Brad
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Rush 1.3.5
Test for Echo, the band’s sixteenth studio album, is an anomaly and a beautiful transition from the first full stage of Rush (1.0) to the final stage of Rush (2.0). Arriving a full three years after Counterparts, Rush fandom had never had to wait so long for a new album from the band. “During that time,” Peart notes in the official tourbook, “Geddy and his wife produced a baby girl, Alex produced a solo album [Victor], and I produced a tribute to the big-band music of Buddy Rich. We worked; we traveled; we lived our lives; and it was fine.”[1] The title of the album even reflects the time away from one another and from their fans. “Test for Echo,” Peart explains, was a means of Rush both asking and assuring its fan base that neither was alone. “Everybody needs an ‘echo,’ some affirmation to know they’re not alone.”[2]
Test for Echo possessed neither the overall hardness of the 1993 album nor the denseness of a Power Windows (1985). Neither, however, was it as light and sleek as Presto (1989) had been. Instead, it sounds like almost nothing Rush had done before, and yet, it sounds almost like nothing Rush did after. In the context of the history Rush, “Test for Echo” is, to be sure, its own creature. Certainly, Lifeson had never played such a strong and assertive role in the creation of an album as he did with this one. Peter Collins, English producer of Power Windows (1985), Hold Your Fire (1987), and Counterparts, returned to produce this album, keeping his view on the overall structure of the full album, with Clif Norrell (Catherine Wheel) serving as recording engineer and Andy Wallace (Faith No More) as mixing engineer.[3] While Test for Echo contains driving songs, it also contains a lot of whimsy and humor. Lee explains why the album needed both as to best reflect the meaning of the album as a whole:
“It’s about the numbing process that happens when we are exposed to great tragedies and then we’re exposed to moments of hilarity,” said singer-bassist Geddy Lee, whose band returns Tuesday to Target Center in Minneapolis. “I feel that that’s the condition of contemporary man now – when we read the paper or when we watch TV, we’re not sure if we’re supposed to laugh.”[4]
Despite being the most “progressive” album the band had produced in a decade or so, Test for Echo also has a relaxed, comfortable feel to it, something rarely found on a Rush album. Strangely, the band, especially Lee and Lifeson, felt real tension with one another during the recording of the album. There were, according to Lifeson, even a few explosions at and with one another. Lee remembers the process of making the album with little fondness.
Test for Echo was a strange record in a sense. It doesn’t really have a defined direction. I kind of felt like we were a bit burnt creatively. It was a creative low time for us.[5]
Peart, however, downplays the tensions, at least in his remembrances, and, instead, focuses on the new drumming technique he had learned from Freddy Gruber between this album and Counterparts. “I could feel I had brought my playing to a whole new level, both technically and musically. ”[6] Indeed, by the following summer, Peart was so enthusiastic about the album and the tour that he claimed “we’re already planning our next studio album.”[7] In an interview with Eric Deggans of the St. Petersburg Times, Peart thought the band had reached its peak. “Over the years, we learned how to write, how to play and how to arrange and now we have a full toolbox. Time and experience. . . [in original] there’s no substitute for that.” With previous albums, the drummer claims, he “struggled to find new ways of challenging” himself. With Test for Echo, however, he believes he “came in with so much,” he had to “edit” himself.[8]
After three years of the three members of the band being apart, though, it took more than a bit of time and patience for the band to come back together as a whole. As mentioned above, Lee expressed frustration for the beginning of the project. “Neil was being Mr. Aloof a little bit. So we kind of circled each other and we talked.”[9]
Whatever the tension, the end result is a thing of wonder. Beginning with an airy atmosphere and almost pleading guitar, the opening track, the title track, resolves into a progressive grunge. The lyrics express shock at a world that has become completely commodified in the images the media presents to the world. The result, vertigo.
Don’t touch that dial
We’re in denial
Lyrically, the song compliments “Show Don’t Tell,” from Presto. Yet, unlike that deeply personal and self-judgmental song, this one asks how all of what was once private is now public?
As if Peart has to respond to the intrusion and commercialized weaponization of mass media, he offers a statement of integrity in the following song, “Driven.” Unlike earlier Rush songs that deal with similar themes, Driven leaves lingering questions. Can a person be so driven that he finds himself “driven to the edge of a deep dark hole”? Yet, Peart (and the listener) avoids the abyss, determined not to linger in any one place too long. “And I go riding on,” the song concludes. “Driven” offers Rush at its best: great lyrics; a perfectly progressive rhythm; and Lifeson’s tastefully-grungy guitar sound. Lee considers it a “quintessential Rush song.”[10]
It’s worth noting that the video Rush produced for this song is possibly the most interesting video the band ever made. Visually, it anticipates the grime of the Matrix, but it also combines elements of Blade Runner and The Road Warrior. Armed with measures of the bizarre and carnival-esque, it is pure punk dystopia.
The third song, “Half the World,” enters a heavy candy-pop-rock world of music. Lyrically, however, Peart continues to express shock at the state of the world, a world divided by so many things. Some trivial, some major. Taking the lyrics literally, the listener cannot help but believe the world will always remain divided. The ultimate division: those who lie and steal; and those who live honorably.
The fourth song, “The Color of Right,” offers a more positive take on similar notions, noting that right (and righteousness, properly understood) can transcend all differences in this world. This is Peart at his Platonic and Aristotelian best.
Track five, “Time and Motion,” returns the listener to the style of the first two tracks of the album, offering nothing less than a mini-prog gem. As the title indicates, the song plays with the modernist ideas of time and movement, similar to Permanent Waves’ Natural Science.
Time and motion
Flesh and blood and fire
Lives connect in webs of gold and razor wire
Everything is connected to everything else in this world, and, yet, this can mean we’re each attached to both the good and the ill. Thus, man must be:
Superman in Supernature
Needs all the comfort he can find
Spontaneous motion
And the long-enduring kind
“Totem” looks, rather whimsically and mockingly, at all types of religions, meshing Christianity with Hinduism with a variety of pagan practices. The song ends, ominously, with “Sweet chariot, swing low, coming for me.”
“Dog Years,” the seventh track, again revealing Rush’s rather humorous side and considers exactly what the title claims: the life of a dog, complete with fleas, sniffs, and howls. That this song appears after totem is not accidental. Both explore irrationality and instinct. Peart, however, considered the song a “feast” at the time of its release, arguing at length about its own depths.
Well, no. As always I try to weave it in on several levels, so certainly the listener is welcome to take it just as a piece of throwaway foolishness. That’s certainly in there. Even the story of its writing is kind of amusing, because it was right when we got together for the first time, the three of us, after quite a long break apart. We did a little celebrating the first night and the following day I was a bit the worse for wear, and a little dull-witted, and I thought, “Gee, I don’t think I’m going to get much done today, but I’m a professional, I’d better try.” So I sat down all muzzy-headed like that and started trying to stitch words together – that’s what I was there for, after all. “Dog Years” is what came out of that kind of mentality, and born of observations over the years too, of looking at my dog thinking, “What’s going through his brain?” and I would think, “Just a low-level zzzzz static.” “Food. Walk.” The basic elemental things. When I look at my dog that’s how I see his brainwaves moving. Other elements in there of dog behavior, and I’ve had this discussion with other dog owners too: “What do you think your dog is really thinking about?” I say, “I don’t think he’s thinking about too much.” That was certainly woven into it as well.[11]
A heavy track that would not appear out of place on Counterparts, “Virtuality” considers the reality and unreality of the world wide web, connecting all things intangibly, one to another.
“Resist” is a deeply personal anthem, a restatement of Peartian principles of individualism, but done so in a very acoustic, singer-song writer friendly way. Inspired by the dark romantic, Oscar Wilde, Resist never crosses the line into melodrama.[12] Rather, it successfully embraces a bardic feel. “I can learn to close my eyes/to anything bug injustice.” Combining humor with a progressive rhythm, “Limbo,” offers an instrumental Rush version of the “Monster Mash,” complete with Frankenstein sound effects. Interestingly enough, it’s also a play on and against a more infamous Rush, Rush Limbaugh–Rush Limbo.[13]
“Carve Away That Stone,” finishes the album on an uplifiting note, rewriting the tragic Greek myth of Sisyphus. In the traditional story, the gods punish Sisyphus for his deceit, making him roll a stone up a mountain, only to have it roll back down, forcing Sisyphus to start all over again, endlessly. In the ancient version, the gods punish Sisyphus not just for his deceit but also for his hubris, that is, his very challenge of and to the power of the gods. Peart’s extremely Stoic lyrics call for the good person to accept the fate of the gods, and to push the stone with all his best effort and integrity, thus showing to the gods and all of humanity that man can indeed best them. The song ends with the wry note: “If you could just move yours/I could get working on my own.” In other words, every man, woman, and child shares the fate of Sisyphus in this world. Accept it and move on.
Notes:
[1] Peart, The Test for Echo Tour Book: Official Guidebook and User’s Manual (1996).
[2] Peart, Test for Echo Tour Book.
[3] Peart, Test for Echo Tour Book.
[4] Lee quoted in Jim Abbott, “Echo Has More than One Meaning,” Minneapolis Star Tribune, October 27, 1996.
[5] Lee quoted in Vinay Meon, Rush: An Oral History, Uncensored (Stardispatches, 2012, iBooks). At the time of the album release, Lifeson felt great about it. See his interview with Steven Batten, “Testing for Echo: Rush Return After Two Years in Hiding,” Northeast Ohio Scene (October 31-November 6, 1996). Lifeson especially liked the “aggressiveness” of his guitar. Peart thought that the tension came from Lifeson, as he had the experience of producing Victor on his own and wanted to assert much of what he’d learned from that. See Alan Sculley, “Rushing Back Into the Spotlight,” St. Louis Post-Dispatch, June 5, 1997.
[6] Peart, Traveling Music, 34.
[7] Peart quoted in Betsy Powell, “Peart is a Different Drummer,” Toronto Star, June 30, 1997, pg. E4.
[8] Peart quoted in Eric Deggans, “Rush Recharged,” St. Petersburg Times, December 6, 1996, pg. 18.
[9] Lee interview, “Text for Echo World Premier, WKSC-FM (Chicago), September 5, 1996.
[10] Lee interview, “Text for Echo World Premier, WKSC-FM (Chicago), September 5, 1996.
[11] Peart interview, “Test for Echo World Premier,” WKSC-FM, September 5, 1996.
[12] Peart, Test for Echo Tour Book.
[13] Paul Verna, “After a 3-Year Break, Trio Regroups for New Atlantic Set,” Billboard (August 3, 1996).
PROG magazine issue # 54 CD review
I could hardly be happier. My latest issue of PROG magazine just arrived—the one with the Marillion cover (and a great article about the neo-prog bands of the early 80s).
But as fun as the magazine is, I submit it’s worth the price of subscription just to get the CD sampler. I am of the generation that has been (is) fighting (within my own brain) the battle for physical, “hard copy” media and thus I don’t download. Being too cheap to have satellite radio in the auto, I love CD samplers. PROG’s latest collection, “LORDS OF THE BACKSTAGE” is a corker; maybe the best one I’ve heard.
With 10 tracks clocking in at about an hour I only found one song that gets a less than an “A” rating.
Track 1: “The Storm” from Arjen Lucassen and Anneke vanGiersbergen’s latest magnum opus THE GENTLE STORM kicks of…
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A Very Moody Top-Ten
The TOP-TEN Reasons The Moody Blues ARE Prog!
- Have you not looked at the cover art of their first 7 LPs??? Plus: Gatefolds!
- They are not now, or ever will be, in the “Rock and Roll” Hall of Fame (sic).
- The concept album Days of Future Passed with the “London Festival Orchestra” (some Decca classical musicians)
- Camel and Tull had flute players…Ray Thomas, anyone?
- Res Ipsa baby:
- 12 years of participation by one-time YES keyboard wizard Patrick Moraz.
- Songs with Graeme Edge’s poetry (Robert Frost he wasn’t)
- They’ve got to be old Prog dinosaurs…they’ve done an Ocean Cruise gig…and they ARE British.
- Justin Hayward took part in Jeff Wayne’s musical version of The War of The Worlds…that’s got to count for something.
Drum Roll Please
And the Number One Reason The Moody Blues ARE Prog!
- Three Words: Mike Pinder: Mellotron!
IZZ, EVERLASTING INSTANT Mini-Review
Mini review of IZZ, “Everlasting Instant,” 2015. Released today.

I promise to provide a much more in-depth review of this album in the coming weeks. It arrived happily this morning at the Birzer estate in Longmont, Colorado. The sun is shining, the Rockies radiating, and some of the best music of the progressive rock era (about my age, as it turns out) is playing for the third time. As most of you know, “Everlasting Instant” is the conclusion to the trilogy that began with “The Darkened Room” (2009) and continued with “Crush of Night.” (2012).
As this is merely a mini review, let me state a couple of things.
- First, the album is absolutely outstanding.
- Second, while it is an excellent piece of art on its own, “Everlasting Instant” successfully incorporates themes (lyrically and musically) from the previous two albums, thus closing the trilogy with a profound sense of accomplishment.
- Third, the music surprises me a bit—only because it’s as melodic as all IZZ albums, but its minimalism at points and its equally hard progressive aspects jarred me several times during the initial listens. Frankly, this album is far more prog than the previous two, and it’s gone well beyond what I expect of IZZ. All to the good!
As proggers, we should all rejoice with the release of this gorgeous album.
As American proggers (those of us who are), we should raise our fists in victory. This has been a VERY, VERY good year for American prog: Glass Hammer, Neal Morse, IZZ. Please, keep them coming!
Speaking of YES (or, Justin Hayward and Greg Lake in ‘sexy’ Pirate Shirts)
Yes I know that the internet has been flooded with countless parodies based on the 2004 Foreign film DOWNFALL which features the incredible performance of actor Bruno Ganz as Hitler in the final days of WW II’s Battle for Berlin. Some of the funnier ones have dealt with Star Trek, the New England Patriots, and Batman. But this one wherein the Prog Titan band YES is being ranted about is my favorite. And just for the sake of trolling internet PC Gestapo (ba, da, dump!) I think the Nazis and Hitler were evil.
Mellotron set to 11








