I think it’s awesome that Thom Yorke pulled rank on Prince and kept this on Youtube!
By the way, Prince’s best album, IMHO, is Lotusflow3r.
I think it’s awesome that Thom Yorke pulled rank on Prince and kept this on Youtube!
By the way, Prince’s best album, IMHO, is Lotusflow3r.
Just as Nick Beggs told us in his interview with Progarchy.com, Steven Wilson is a huge Prince fan.
Wilson confirmed Beggs’ report when Wilson posted on Facebook on April 21:
Just 30 minutes before we went on stage in Vienna tonight I heard that Prince had died, I couldn’t believe it. It was a very tough show for me to play. The word “genius” is used a bit too often and loosely within the music world, but I think Prince was the real thing, perhaps the most naturally gifted performer of all time. I saw him play live several times, and his show at The O2 Arena in London in 2007 I would rate as the greatest concert I ever saw (Craig Blundell is agreeing with me now, he was there too).
The run of albums from Dirty Mind in 1980 through to Sign ‘O’ the Times in 1987 matches anyone in its sustained brilliance, and it was such a big part of my soundtrack as a teenager (some of you will know that The Ballad of Dorothy Parker from the latter album was on the mixtape made by my character in Hand.Cannot.Erase., which is pretty much what my mixtape would have been at that time in my life).
Tonight I made a humble attempt to sing his song Sign ‘O’ the Times, in fact just before we played David Bowie‘s Space Oddity. It’s been a while since I recorded my version so I couldn’t remember it very well, but I wanted to at least try it, it would have seemed strange to pay tribute to one unique musical genius and not the other. Farewell strange purple one, and thanks for it all.
Artist: In Mourning Album Title: Afterglow Label: Agonia Records Date Of Release: 20 May 2016 In Mourning is a name that that have flitted around the very edges of my consciousness for a few years now. ‘Afterglow’ however, takes the Swedish quintet out of my personal periphery and re-positions them at the very forefront of […]
https://manofmuchmetal.wordpress.com/2016/04/22/in-mourning-afterglow-album-review/

If you dig around a bit, you’ll find that Big Big Train has been slowly but surely releasing parts (big and small) of the new album, FOLKLORE.
The band has sent review copies out to print magazines, to British radio stations, and to a few others, but not yet to websites.
For us North American die-hard fans–just remember: STONE AND STEEL will eventually make it here, and so will FOLKLORE. We just have to be patient and trust the band’s release and marketing strategy.
Here, below, are a few snippets available now.
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About 13.5 minutes into this podcast, you can hear a single from the new album.
http://www.progzilla.com/podcast-francis-dunnery-radio-show-edition-012/
UPDATE – APRIL 22)
Davids voice sounds a little different at times. He still sounds very much like, well, David. But sometimes he’s a bit more gravelly. There are moments in ‘Brooklands’ where some might confuse him with Peter Gabriel. It fits the music and his storytelling on the album very well.
As David hinted in his first blog (http://bit.ly/1VpDzCT) Folkore is really all about storytelling. That’s in the lyrics, the delivery but also very much in the music. Greg wrote (http://bit.ly/1T37HxC) about how the subtext of ‘London Plane’ is the passage of time. Well, you can HEAR that. (Or maybe that’s just my imagination.)
Yesterday I wrote that Folklore might be Big Big Train’s best work to date. While I wrote it, I thought maybe it’s a little early for such a big conclusion. Today I think, although it indeed was early, it’s the right conclusion.APRIL 21)The crow has landed! Folklore. We all know Big Big Train’s music needs a little time to sink in and to unfold and bloom completely. That’s why I will review the album ten times. Or, better, I will take ten days to complete this review. I will write about my first impression today and will update this tomorrow and the day after tomorrow. And the day after tomorrow after tomorrow. Etc. Up to ten updates. (Today: 1/10)I’ve heard the album twice and I can say two things: BBT is proggier than ever on Folklore. And (dare I say it?) poppier. I mean that in a positive way, I keep humming those melodies. They are very (!) catchy at times. “Telling the beeeeees.”I don’t want to be too enthusiastic yet (i have nine review-days to go wink emoticonWho knows, maybe i’ll get bored with this music on day three.) But I’m afraid I have to tell you that Folklore is BBT’s best album to date! More tomorrow. http://youtu.be/U8MzlCvQqn8
The word is out that Prince is dead at the age of 57.
What does Prince have to do with prog?
Listen to the Progarchy.com interview with Nick Beggs from February 26 to hear part of the answer to that question…
Progarchy would like to wish a very happy 49th birthday to the one, the only MIKE PORTNOY! Thank you so much for all you do, Mike. Your music astounds us, connects with us, and inspires us. Your work ethic is *ahem* next to none (sorry, couldn’t resist that one), and we look forward to your future endeavors.


The issue of whether politics has a place in music sparked lively debate on this site about a month back, a debate that reignited just over a week ago following Bruce Springsteen’s sudden cancellation of a North Carolina concert in protest at legislation limiting the rights of LGBT citizens. It has been interesting to participate in the comment thread and, like Carl earlier, I’ve been prompted to expand on my initial thoughts.
To my mind, two related questions seem to have arisen from all this discussion. The first is whether artists should use their music as a vehicle for expressing their own political beliefs, cognizant of the fact that fans out there may disagree (perhaps vehemently) with said beliefs. The second (triggered by the Springsteen announcement) is whether artists have an obligation as performers that overrides any issues of conscience.
Let’s start with the second question. Issues of conscience (or lack thereof) are nothing new when it comes to live performance. Artists such as Rod Stewart, Status Quo and (mostly infamously) Queen all played the Sun City resort in Bophuthatswana at the height of apartheid, earning themselves places on a U.N. blacklist as a result. Those artists, against the prevailing opinion of the time, decided for whatever reason that politics (or, more accurately, issues of human rights) should not dictate where they chose to play. Springsteen, however, has taken the opposite view.
Was Bruce right to cancel? Some have argued that, besides disappointing many thousands of ticketholders, he also missed an opportunity to express his views from the stage. But that message would have reached only those thousands. By cancelling the show, he made it news, putting the issue in the minds of a hundred times as many. It’s clearly something he cares passionately about – and passion is something we want in our music-makers. Passion can be the fuel for great music.
Of course, it’s one thing to cancel a concert, quite another to write songs that express your deeply-held political beliefs. A concert’s an ephemeral thing but a song, once recorded and released, is out there forever. Prog exacerbates this by giving artists the freedom to write longer songs that promote their world view in much greater detail. It’s inevitable that this will cause friction with a certain section of the fan base.
Part of the problem is that we all have different ideas on where the dividing line is between mere expression of a differing opinion and prosyletizing. For example, Bryan Morey notes in the comment thread of his original article that he respects Andy Tillison’s social critique despite their differing political viewpoints, yet that same social critique also inspired a sarcastic savaging of Le Sacre du Travail by one embittered DPRP reviewer (scroll to the end of that page to read it, if you can bear to).
In a sense, it doesn’t really matter what we think as listeners, because we don’t get to vote on this. We’re not dealing with a commercial transaction here. Of course, money changes hands (in most cases), so that the artist is able to pay the bills and carry on making art, but that isn’t the most important feature of the relationship. We are not ‘consumers’ in the business sense, and we do not have consumers’ rights. An artist communicates their thoughts and feelings to us through their music: their thoughts and feelings, which may align with or contradict our own. As listeners, we are free to accept or reject the message, but we don’t get to decide its contents.
I guess I’ve listened to music from a thousand artists, and I doubt that any of them see the world in quite the same way as I do. I’ve experienced moments of discomfort when a lyric makes it clear that an artist has very different views, and I can’t pretend that it hasn’t affected my opinion of that artist, or the frequency with which I listen to their music. Neal Morse is a case in point. Much as I respect Neal for his work with Spock’s Beard and for the sense of purpose that drives his solo career, I’ll freely admit that I’m put off listening to his solo work by its overtly religious nature. But that’s my problem rather than Neal’s.
It can be valuable to hear those differing views, nonetheless. When it’s done well (I’m thinking of you here, Mr Peart!), it can shed new light and make you think about issues from a different perspective. Let’s face it, we could all benefit from standing in another’s shoes from time to time…
So, no, I don’t want anyone to ‘keep their politics out of my prog’. I don’t want our world to be a place where Marillion would think twice about writing Gaza, where Neal Morse would hesitate to profess his belief in song or where a musician wouldn’t dare to release a concept album supporting Donald Trump (a riff on Floyd’s The Wall, perhaps? :). I want all of that passion to be pure and unfettered, even if it makes me uncomfortable from time to time.
One of my greatest monthly treats is the Kscope Podcast with Billy Reeves. Four reasons to love it.
First, Reeves possesses that brilliant BBC voice and diction.
Second, it’s Kscope, the Pixar of the art/Prog Rock world.
Third, Reeves is intelligent and witty.
Most importantly, fourth, no matter how witty Reeves is, he always lets the artists speak and explain themselves. In a world of insane sound bytes and overly-dramatic personalities, Reeves allows the “other” to speak.
The latest podcast, no. 73, features the music of iamthemorning, including telling and revealing interviews with the lead singer as well as with Colin Edwin (guest bassist).
When Reeves asks about the future of Porcupine Tree, Edwin answers: well, we never talked about ending, and we’ve never talked about beginning away. As Reeves concluded, ah, you’re the perfect politician.
Enjoy.