Nick’s Best of 2012 (Part 2)

Following on from my list of ‘Highly Commended’ albums, we have my ‘Top 5 Contenders’.

The following five albums have missed out on a Top 5 placing by the slimmest of margins. Once again, they are listed alphabetically, not in order of preference.

Beagle in park with little planet effectAnathema – Weather Systems

For quite a while, this was a strong contender for my album of the year. That it doesn’t make my final Top 5 is testimony to the amazing quality of this year’s releases. The music here grabs you and stirs the soul just as effectively as 2010’s wonderful We’re Here Because We’re Here. but Weather Systems benefits from the more prominent role given to Lee Douglas, particularly on the haunting Untouchable Part 2 and Lightning Song.

echolyn1echolyn – echolyn

A late entrant into my Top Ten of 2012. It’s a multifaceted, multilayered work and I’m still digesting it – else it might have crept into my Top 5. I love the variety here, encompassing classic prog complexity but also a much more contemporary sound. Different parts remind me fleetingly of Radiohead, The Pineapple Thief, Amplifier (circa The Octopus) and even Elbow, but the net result is something completely original. Stand-out tracks for me are Some Memorial and the languid Past Gravity.

itbites1It Bites – Map Of The Past

Reforming with John Mitchell at the helm was a masterstroke, resulting in the excellent The Tall Ships in 2008 – but Map Of The Past is even better than its predecessor. It’s one of those albums that you simply can’t help singing along to and it never fails to put a smile on my face. Highlights include the lovely ballad Clocks, the thrilling prog of Meadow And The Stream and the deeply moving The Last Escape. Prog-pop at its finest.

sanguinehum1Sanguine Hum – Diving Bell

I’ll confess I’m cheating slightly here, as this album appeared on Bandcamp in late 2010, but the CD from Esoteric is a 2012 release, so it qualifies as far as I’m concerned! It’s an album of strange but beautiful sounds, unusual melodies and odd rhythms. At times it calls to mind Porcupine Tree in their more reflective moments, at others a less layered, less electronic North Atlantic Oscillation. On top of this it has the acoustic feel and vocal style of Turin Brakes. Fascinating stuff.

stormcorrosion1Storm Corrosion – Storm Corrosion

This collaboration between Steven Wilson and Mikael Åkerfeldt caused consternation amongst some fans of these artists when they discovered that it didn’t sound like the expected blend of Wilson/Porcupine Tree and Opeth. Personally, I love it. I certainly can’t do better than Alison Henderson’s pithy description of it as sounding like “Simon and Garfunkel on magic mushrooms”. A subtle and mysterious album, best listened to late at night.

Old-Timer’s Corner: 2012 Minus 40

English ElectricOkay, so my top pick for 2012 is Big Big Train’s English Electric (Part One).  I’m the old-timer who’s not drinking from the fire hose, so there’s not a full list coming.  Sorry.  I’m still working slowly with early to middle Spock’s Beard, sipping and savoring.  I’ll get back to you on that.

But since I don’t have a list (and since the world did not end yesterday), here’s a quick reminder of what kind of year was coming to a close at this time forty years ago.  THE prog album of 1972 was, of course, Close to the Edge (Yes).  But I thought it might be interesting to some of you to remember what else came out during the year of Watergate.

Yes-closeHaving jogged my memory with some careful research (i.e., a few minutes on Wikipedia) here’s my list (alphabetical by artist) of favored prog and (arguably) prog-related albums from that heady year, excluding Yes’ aforementioned masterpiece (this sentence didn’t have enough parenthetical comments, so here’s one more):

  • David Bowie, The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars
  • Edgar Winter Group, They Only Come Out at Night (if only for “Frankenstein”)
  • Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Trilogy
  • Genesis, Foxtrot (Ok, I’d definitely put this at number 2)
  • Gentle Giant, Three Friends AND Octopus
  • Jethro Tull, Thick as a Brick AND Living in the Past
  • King Crimson, Earthbound
  • Pink Floyd, Obscured by Clouds
  • Lou Reed, Transformer
  • Roxy Music, Roxy Music
  • Strawbs, Grave New World
  • Uriah Heep, Demons and Wizards AND The Magician’s Birthday
  • Wishbone Ash, Argus (yes, this falls under the “arguably prog-related,” IMHO)

Foxtrot72To put some broader perspective on it, that was about when pop radio was dominated by Summer Breeze (Seals and Crofts).  Frank Zappa was moving from the quasi-prog of the early Mothers closer to jazz with Waka/Jawaka and The Grand Wazoo.  Todd Rundgren scored big with Something/Anything? (his bend toward prog was coming soon).  Bebop Deluxe, Captain Beyond, Devo, Oingo Boingo, Pavlov’s Dog, Steely Dan, and Styx were all formed that year.  If, like me, you recall early “Jesus rock,” that was also the year that Petra was born.  Other non-prog landmarks from 1972 include Paul Simon’s amazing eponymous album, ditto from the Eagles, Exile on Main Street (Stones), Harvest (Neil Young), Honky Chateau (Elton John) and Sail Away (Randy Newman).

Wishbone_Ash_-_Argus

If this has whetted your appetite for more of a history review, and you prefer having a link to doing your own search, here’s the link.  Otherwise, having an especially soft spot for 70’s Wishbone Ash, I recommend you go back and give a listen to Argus again.

Now, back to our regularly-scheduled transition from 2012 to 2013.  Watch for BBT’s English Electric (Part Two), coming in March!

1979, 2112, and the Making of a World View

This post has been floating around in my head for a while.  Being reminded that today, 21-12, is International Rush Day, what better day to go ahead and write it?

The year 1979 was a defining year for yours truly.  After my parents split up in 1978, my mother decided to pack up my sister and I and move us across the country.  Thus, as the clock turned over from 1978 to 1979, I was somewhere between my former home of Lewiston, Idaho, and my soon-to-be new home of Lexington, Kentucky.   On June 23rd of that same year, I became a life-long progressive rock fan at my first Yes concert (I would also see Rush on tour later that year).  Two other pivotal occurrences that year were my purchase of Rush’s seminal 2112, and a number of long discussions with my maternal grandmother.  My listening to 2112 and those discussions with my grandmother are related, and played a big part in forming part of my world view.

At this point, a little background on my mother’s family is in order.  My mother and her family hail from Germany – in fact, what was once known as East Germany.  My mother was born in Berlin during World War II, and when the shooting stopped, her family was in the part of Germany that became East Germany, which fell under the domination of a tyrannical government.  My grandfather, a literature professor, was occasionally outspoken – a quality that is fraught with danger in a country ruled by an oppressive government.  In 1953, he was warned by somebody (who I have never been able to find out) that he had better get the hell out of there.  He gathered his family, my mother and grandmother included, and boarded a train for West Berlin.  Had they been caught, my grandfather, and possibly his whole family, would have been shot by the authorities.  Luckily they made it to West Berlin, connected with others dedicated to helping those who wanted to escape the tyranny of East Germany, and were airlifted to West Germany.  They settled in Bonn, where they remained until coming to the U.S. in 1959.

Although the dormant prog gene wasn’t fully activated until that fateful night in June when I saw Yes, I had unknowingly during the spring of that year already purchased my first prog album, 2112.   I just thought it was a cool heavy metal/hard rock album by some guys that wanted to sing about something other than chicks, booze, drugs, and so on.  Certainly, the suite that gave the album its title got my attention, and not just the music but the lyrics.  More than a few times I sat in my room listening to side 1, album gatefold open so I could follow along with the lyrics, which told a fantastic story of a dystopian science fiction universe in which a guy had found a guitar, realized its beauty, and presented his discovery to the authorities only to be slapped down hard by them for deviating from “the plan.”  It seemed rather harsh and unfair to me.  Upon the first few listens, I did not realize that there was a deeper meaning to the story.

In addition to listening to 2112, I also had a number of discussions with my grandmother during the spring of 1979.  I hadn’t seen her for over 12 years prior to us moving to Lexington, and was only a toddler when we had initially moved out west.  There was a lot of catching up to do.  During our discussions, I asked my grandmother numerous questions about her previous life in Germany.  Her answers painted in my mind a picture of life under both the Nazis and later the Communists.  I learned of a society where certain books could not be read or published … a society where certain music could not be played … one in which certain ideas were not to be voiced publicly or written down.  Moreover, I learned that one could go to jail for reading or writing the wrong types of books, for listening to the wrong kind of music, and for expressing ideas that were not approved by the powers that be.  Freedom of movement was only a dream – you were told where you could and could not live.  And you certainly couldn’t leave the country any time you want.  Trying to do so without authorization could result in prison or death.  Having grown up in a mostly free country, I was stunned at the realization that countries like East Germany, the USSR, and others that restricted people in this way existed.  I knew of these countries and had a basic idea of their systems before that, but I had never fully realized how much the freedom of those that lived within them was restricted.  It wasn’t just on the big things, it was right down to a lot of very small things.

Interleaved with these discussions were my repeated listens to 2112.  At some point during this period, I started to make the connection between what was told to me by my grandmother and by the lyrics of 2112.  It began to dawn on my that 2112 wasn’t just a science fiction story set in some distant future, but was also an allegory for something that was very real in the present.  They may have had apparatchiks in politburos rather than priests in temples, but these distinctions were without difference.  Such tyranny and oppression that could prohibit an individual from doing something as seemingly innocent as playing a guitar could and did exist.  Governments that were threatened by the mere expression of certain ideas were the stuff of reality, not just lyrics for a side long rock suite set in a sci-fi future.  People that would oppress, enslave, and even kill others for merely refusing to go along with “the plan” were as much a part of the present day as they had been in the past and would certainly be in the future.  In effect, what Neal Peart was telling me through the lyrics of 2112 was the same thing that my grandmother was telling me during our discussions.

The impression that this album and the education from my grandmother left on me has never faded.  It informed my thinking during much of my time in the Navy, during the 1980’s as the Cold War reached its final phase.  I remember thinking about it again one night when I came home from work a year after leaving the Navy, turning on my TV set, and seeing that the Berlin Wall had come down.  And to this day the impression is as strong as it ever was.  Freedom is a precious thing, something never to be taken for granted and something that should be fought for at any and all costs.  Governments that oppress their citizens, that refuse to let them express themselves, be it with a musical instrument, ideas spoken or written, or their desire to move about, are pure evil and are not to be respected or tolerated.  Freedom, while often times hard, is a precious thing and something that should never be taken for granted.  It’s something for which free people should fight (metaphorically if able, literally if necessary), and oppressed people should fight to achieve or regain.  As for those who informed The Planets of the Solar Federation that they had “assumed control”, I hope they were the good guys, the forces of freedom.

This post is dedicated to those that enlightened me on such things, Rush, Neal Peart, and my grandmother, Ingeborg Stapf.  Rest in peace, Oma.

Serendipitous, Indeed

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Coming to a music hall, church auditorium, Starbucks, or living room near you, Seryn (Denton, TX) packs a massive sound and stage presence for a folk group.  I say “folk” only to set the broadest parameters, for here’s another Texas band whose sweeping sound defies taxonomy.  They do it with the simplest tools in reach — ukulele, pump organ, accordion, violin, guitar, bass, trumpet, vibraphone, lots of drums (everyone in this band seems to have one), a $200 Goodtime resonator banjo and, above all, effectual vocal harmonies — rendering a gratifying achievement.  Let them dispel any skepticism with their summer 2011 Daytrotter session.   “River Song” and “Beach Song” seem better suited to the large concert hall than coffee house.  This music emanates from the same big space that yields Explosions in the Sky and This Will Destroy You. Moving through fragile passages and tempo changes to big finales, Nathan Allen’s guitar can be as capacious as his massive red beard.  Paste was impressed enough to name Seryn the best act at the 2011 SXSW festival.

The band derives its name from serendipity — a series of uncanny accidents drew the core members together in 2009, e.g. multi-instrumentalist/lead vocalist Trenton Wheeler and dreadlocked violinist Chelsea Borher bumped into one another at an Explosions in the Sky concert and exchanged musical ideas, unaware that Allen wanted them both in his band.  Since then they have released one full length album, This Is Where We Are (2011), as well as a Christmas collection last year.

Seryn’s fluid line-up expands and contracts to accommodate additional strings and percussion as space allows. YouTube is flush with videos of the band’s iterations, but the most compelling of them feature the original quintet in cramped quarters with rapt listeners seated cross legged at their feet. Seryn have made two passes by my neck of the woods but conflicts have not permitted me to see them in person. But the opportunity would be well worth the time, as this band is too much their own muse for comparisons to be drawn.

seryn

Nick’s Best of 2012 (Part 1)

2012 has been a fantastic year for progressive music. I’ve listened to a huge pile of albums and still don’t feel like I have scratched the surface of all the great material that’s out there at the moment. I know of albums that would probably be on my ‘Best Of’ list if only I’d had the time (and money) to hear them in full before now – Katatonia’s Dead End Kings, Mörglbl’s Brutal Romance and The Void from Beardfish spring immediately to mind. But a list must be produced, so let’s activate the ERTEM and get on with it!

First, some restrictions. My list considers only original releases of full albums from 2012: no reissues or remixes and no EPs. (Hey, I’ve got to simplify things somehow, OK?)

I’ll also split my list into three parts: ‘Highly Commended’, ‘Top 5 Contenders’ and ‘Top 5’. To avoid the paralysis of indecision, only the last of these will actually be ranked; the other two will be listed alphabetically.

We’ll begin with my Highly Commended category: 10 albums that I have enjoyed hugely this year.

AstraAstra – The Black Chord

Follow-up to their 2009 debut The Weirding, boasting higher production values. Variously described as ‘retro’ or ‘classic’ in sound, I suppose because of the liberal use of Hammond organ and Mellotron. I don’t know what you’d call it, but it’s trippy, atmospheric and darned good! The epic title track is particularly splendid.

CrippledBlackPhoenixCrippled Black Phoenix – (Mankind) The Crafty Ape

A big brooding monster of an album from the stoner prog legends, probably their best yet – although I have yet to hear the follow-up that appeared recently, No Sadness Or Farewell. (Yes, you read that right: two albums in one year). Pretty much how I’d expect Pink Floyd to sound if they’d all been born 25 years later.

District97District 97 – Trouble With Machines

Yes, yes, “former American Idol finalist”, blah blah blah. Forget all that nonsense about vocalist Leslie Hunt and concentrate instead on the music – precise, technical and totally absorbing, all crunching guitars and shifting time signatures, with Hunt’s voice weaving intricate and unusual melodies throughout. Top-class prog metal. John Wetton guests on one track.

TheEnidThe Enid – Invicta

How do you even begin to categorise such a unique band? Some people simply don’t ‘get’ The Enid, but if your tastes encompass the classical or symphonic, there’s a good chance you will fall in love with them. This latest release features a wonderful new lead vocalist, Joe Payne. There is high drama here – think opera or musical theatre – but also moments of great beauty and delicacy.

FlyingColorsFlying Colors – Flying Colors

Given my innate scepticism regarding supergroups, I really wasn’t expecting this to be as good as it is. Album opener Blue Ocean starts off like a more upbeat version of a track by The Doors, and Kayla is a superbly catchy pop anthem. There’s even some real, honest-to-goodness prog in here, in the form of long-form album closer Infinite Fire. A thumbs-up to all concerned; on this evidence, the second album really will be something to relish.

SteveHackettSteve Hackett – Genesis Revisited II

What can I say? A set of well-crafted, tasteful reinterpretations of classic Genesis tracks spanning the entire Hackett era, plus new versions of a few songs from his solo career. Call me a heretic, but I think some of them improve upon the originals. There are things on here that will make you smile and probably one or two that will make you frown, but discovering which is part of the fun. See my review for more details!

NineStonesCloseNine Stones Close – One Eye On The Sunrise

The follow-up to 2010’s Traces. Powerful and atmospheric, achieving true Floydian grandeur in places, with plenty of long liquid guitar solos that would would make Dave Gilmour proud. The excellent vocals of Marc Atkinson – sadly now moving on to pastures new – are also worthy of note. Stand-out tracks are probably The Weight and Frozen Moment.

AlanReedAlan Reed – First In A Field Of One

The solo format allows this former Pallas front man’s vocal talents to really shine. Well-crafted songs with a varied mix of styles, successfully blending prog, pop, rock and even folk influences. The finger-clicking jazzy opening of final track The Usual Suspects is unexpected, to say the least!

TheReasoningThe Reasoning – Adventures In Neverland

Reviewed elsewhere in the hallowed pages of Progarchy. A real statement of intent from a band still mourning the disappearance of former guitarist Owain Roberts. I might quibble with the production, which needs to be more crisp and dynamic, but the songs are very good – particularly those on the second half of the album.

ShadowOfTheSunShadow Of The Sun – Monument

Debut album from ex-Reasoning guitarist/singer Dylan Thompson’s new band. More straight metal than prog, with only hints of The Reasoning here and there. A very enjoyable blend of heavy stuff with one or two quieter and more mellow pieces. Definitely worth a listen.

The Frost* “Speak & Spell” Duel

As an addendum to Ian’s excellent review of last Sunday’s Frost* and It Bites gig in London, the following video, from Pete Waite, may prove illuminating. As Pete himself said on Twitter:

800 people shout “Arse!” for a man playing an ironing board, this can only be a Frost* gig.

Neal Morse News

Radiant_records-logoJust got great news re: Neal Morse from Richard Schwartz and Radiant Records (yay, Chris Thompson).  Neal Morse is releasing the New York show of the Momentum concert on DVD.  Here’s the note, directly:

The Momentum Live DVD and Audio Box Set!   

 YES… yet another big giant Neal Morse live package is on the way! I have been mixing for days now the audio for the live show that was shot in New York City last October. I have to say it’s pretty darn good. Except for that guy in the center, everybody’s really great!

Yeah, it’s a really cool set list. Here’s the track list for the DVD:

DVD 1

MOMENTUM

WEATHERING SKY

AUTHOR OF CONFUSION

THE DISTANCE TO THE SUN

TESTIMONY SUITE

(Sleeping Jesus, Prince of the Power of the Air, The Promise, Wasted Life)

THOUGHTS PART 5

THE CONFLICT (From Sola Scriptura)

 

DVD 2

QUESTION MARK SUITE

(The Temple of the Living God, Another World, Entrance, Inside His Presence)

FLY HIGH

WORLD WITHOUT END

CRAZY HORSES

SING IT HIGH

KING JESUS

How’s that for some cool info? It’s 2.5 hours plus long, and it’s the entire show. Plus Randy George has made a tour documentary as only he can. So it will be a 5 disc set in a special box, much like the “Testimony 2 Live in Los Angeles” Box Set was, it will be about the same as that.

Progarchist Mark Widhalm and I saw him the next night, in Chicago, but he didn’t play “World Without End.”  So, very glad to see this here.

Morse also noted that there will be a new Flying Colors album and, if all goes well, a new Transatlantic.

Great news for the day before the Apocalypse!  Thank you, Neal.

Some 2012 Thoughts

Tardis-in-Space-tardis-6289809-1600-1131Looking at some of the other ‘Best of 2012’ posts here, you have to wonder how some of the other Progarchists do it.  That is, how do they find the time to listen to and fully absorb that much music (and particularly prog)?  Not to be snobby or anything, but listening to prog is not a passive thing, it takes an active effort by the listener to fully “get it”.  And yet when I read through these posts, I can conclude that my fellow Progarchists are A) listening to a lot of prog, and B) “getting it.”  With the other obligations they have in their lives – families, careers, other hobbies, other blogs – it would seem like it would take a superhuman effort to fully absorb all of that music. And yet clearly they do just that.

Alas, I think I’ve figured out their secret – most, if not all of the other Prograrchists are in possession of an ERTEM – short for “Einsteinian Relativistic Time Expansion Machine.”  In short, the ERTEM is a machine about the size of a booth or a very small room.  A person may enter his ERTEM, shut the door, and emerge in what appears to be only a few minutes to an outside observer.  But aaaah, inside the ERTEM, time expands, and the occupant therein can spend several hours of “inside time.”  Thus, the Progarchist may receive a new CD or a new album in digital format, step inside his ERTEM, and indulge in hours of listening pleasure, until they fully “grok” (apologies to Robert Heinlein) their most recent prog purchase.  They may even be smuggling their laptops in their to write some of their long, detailed, and typically excellent reviews – the type that usually send me lurching toward my computer to make yet another purchase.  Continue reading “Some 2012 Thoughts”

Excellent Jerry Lucky interview with John Galgano of the fabulous IZZ

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I’ve been slowly (way too slowly) getting up a review of IZZ’s latest album, CRUSH OF NIGHT.  From my perspective, it’s one of the best albums of this past year.

As I’ve been listening and prepping, I came across this excellent interview.

Jerry Lucky: Let’s start at the beginning. What’s the short-story as to how Izz came into being?

John Galgano: IZZ started when Tom was in College with Greg DiMiceli and through Greg met Brian Coralian and Paul Bremner. Being Tom’s brother, I was sort of already involved and working with the guys. We had originally gotten together to work on a piece called Deafening Silence that ended up being on the album My River Flows. Tom had written that piece of music and we all played on it for a few live shows. After that, we began writing material as a group and used that material for what became Sliver of a Sun.

JL: Who came up with the name? And what’s it all about?

JG: I’m a big fan of the New York Mets and at the time we started thinking about band names in the mid-90s, they had these three young pitchers who were supposed to be the next great pitchers for the Mets. One of the guys was Jason Isringhausen who was nicknamed “IZZY”. I loved this nickname and mentioned it to Tom and as we talked it over, we decided to drop the “Y” and just make it IZZ. It seemed to work well and we liked the way it sounded

To keep reading, please go here: http://www.jerrylucky.com/interviews_054.htm