Peter Gabriel, From Genesis to Growing Up

Quick review of Michael Drewett, Sarah Hill, and Kimi Kärki, eds., PETER GABRIEL, FROM GENESIS TO GROWING UP (Surrey, ENG: Ashgate, 2010).

Birzer Rating: D.

gabriel radical lit critDon’t waste your time.

I’ve had this book for five years, but I’ve just finally had a chance to read through (yes, just through) it.  What a disaster.  I’m so very happy that scholars realize how important Gabriel is, but this is one of those “apply theory, subject doesn’t matter” books.

It’s so theory-laden that it could be just as well about Jane Austen or John Updike as it is Peter Gabriel.  And, the theory isn’t even interesting.  Deconstruct the means and methods of entertainment by the politics of identity and the power structures of an oppressive culture.

“In his search for individuated identity, XXXX undermined the very structures of power as understood in a declining corporatist society.”

Just who is XXXX?  It really doesn’t matter.  Peter Gabriel, Mercy Otis Warren, Carl Olson, or Baby Jesus.  Write book, insert subject, publish as an academic book, and sell to every library around the world.

Frankly, this book is a total mockery of the actual and individual genius of Peter Gabriel.  He deserves better, and so do we.

The Astonishing Absence

Of all the commentary on the new Dream Theater album, take a look at this excerpt which makes me speculate that maybe not everyone in the band was totally on board with this dumb idea of an album:

The Astonishing is replete with filler tracks, songs that really have no right existing other than as obscure parts they play in this (rather underwhelming) story that the album attempts to tell. And that’s not enough: cliche guitar parts mix with over-sweetness in LaBrie’s voice and bounce off the most cliche lines that Rudess can make from his keyboards.

And they’re repetitive as well. There’s no reason for “Act of Faythe”, one of the cheesiest songs ever made by Dream Theater, to exist when a track like “The Answer” exists as well. There’s supposedly a common theme being iterated upon here but it’s not interesting enough to carry the tracks forward. Nor are the ways in which the band iterate upon it interesting in anyway: they include shifting the mood just a bit to give it a lighter or darker spin and nothing else.

All of these flaws extend to the second “CD” as well, and then some. “A Life Left Behind” for example is a track which could have come right out of Awake but it’s successor, “Ravenskill” is completely pointless, taking too much time with its intro and failing to deliver when the main theme is introduced. Since the flow between the tracks, a famous trope of progressive records, has been completely abandoned here in favor of the “track by track” structure of rock operas, the second CD is hard to pin down and connect to the first.

By the time you’ve reached it, so many filler tracks have gone by without a clear approach to thematization that the thread is almost impossible to grasp. The narrative has been completely lost and every track, even the good ones, start to sound the same. That’s no accident: even the good tricks utilized on this album are the same old tricks that we know from this album itself and from past entries in the Dream Theater discography. While the overall style of the album is new, in that it taps into tropes that were only lightly present in their careers so far, the track progression is the same tried and true method.

OK, we’ve saved the best (worst) for last. Sharp-eyed readers might have noticed that we haven’t mentioned two current members of the band. The first, John Myung, might not surprise anybody; his absence, both in sound and words, from the band is a thing of legend by now. On The Astonishing, or at least on the copy that we of the press received, he is almost 100% missing. Whether in the mixing or in the recording, the bass was completely swallowed by the other instruments and is completely absent from the final product.

However, now we come, here at the end, to the most egregious and unexplainable flaw in this record: Mike Mangini. Throughout the album, Magini displays an almost impressive amount of disinterest in what’s going on around him. The drums line are not only performed in a lackluster way, they also sound as if zero effort was put into their writing. We know Mangini is a talented drummer but that talent is nowhere to be found here: obvious fill after obvious fill churn out under paper thin cymbals and pointless kick drums, ultimately amounting to nothing much. There’s literally no moments on the albums that are worth mentioning for their drums and this infuriatingly frustrating, given what we know of his obvious ability.

At the end of the day, when you put all of the above together, you get a disappointing album. If this had just been a bad album, we could have chalked it down to age, momentum and being out of touch. That’s impossible though, since when the album is good, it’s really quite good. If only it had been cut to about ten tracks and purged of the incessant repetitions, it might have been the best Dream Theater album in years. Instead, it’s a puerile attempt at a grand gesture that ultimately falls on its face, caught too close to the sun with wax spilling over, giving all its features the same, bland, indecipherable structure.

I don’t know how much to make of this. Aren’t there, like, only about two decent guitar solos on the whole double album (and, even so, ruined by the mix)?

I think, rather, that any absence of quality on the album is simply due to DT’s incompetent foray into the genre of musical theater.

RochaNews: Se Delan’s New Album

SE DELAN DETAILS NEW ALBUM “DRIFTER”
Sophomore album out April 29 on Kscope
LONDON, England – Se Delan, the dark, alternative, new-wave duo made up of multi-instrumentalist Justin Greaves and Swedish singer Belinda Kordic will release its new album Drifter on April 29 (June 3 in France) via Kscope. Drifter is available to pre-order now on CD and 180g black vinyl via the Kscope webstore at: www.kscopemusic.com/store with a digital pre-order to follow.
The follow-up to 2014’s The Fall, the pair set about to make an album that felt raw, more natural and human. Together with their shared influences (“music, film and life”) and a mutual understanding of the way each other works has led to Se Delan creating an album that musically and lyrically looks at madness and how the line between sanity and insanity can at times appear frighteningly thin.
Vocalist Belinda comments: “Sometimes it can take a lot of effort and hard work to stay grounded and stay on the right side of that line. Life vs Death. The unknown (and cats).”
Drifter takes the slow and dreamy nature of the music from the duo’s debut album The Falland moves it to a far darker place through the lyrics and layers of sound that pulsate throughout the record. By giving up all pretentions and just following their hearts, Justin and Belinda recorded (with Ritchie Chappell at Tripdown Studio) in a way that simply captures how they felt as humanly as possible.
Justin states: “We don’t write songs in any way with this big concept in mind. We just put our thoughts into words and feelings into music, whatever they may be.”
Stay tuned for more information on Se Delan and Drifter, out this spring on Kscope.
-###-
Se Delan is:
 
Justin Greaves – all instruments
Belinda Kordic – words & voices
guided by 1000 ravenous skulls.
Se Delan online:
Press on The Fall:
“A haunting piece that gets in your head and won’t go away” – Noisey
“You will become hooked to their haunting sound” – Never Enough Notes
“An impressive beginning” – Team Rock
“Few ears could resist the tractor beam of such beautiful and entrancing music” – Under The Radar Magazine
“Eerie prog-rock with a side of skull-splitting riffage and apocalyptically angelic vocal” – CMJ
“A deeply felt and hugely atmospheric record that speaks of greater triumphs ahead.” – Echoes & Dust

Still Amazed by Dream Theater

Recently, I said some rather negative things about the new Dream Theater album, and I meant every word of it. However, that does not mean my opinion of the rest of their music has lessened at all. I just thought I would share these outstanding live videos (one with Portnoy and one with Mangini) with you. They combine all of the emotion you could ever want with fantastic musical prowess in two of their best songs. Enjoy.

Interview with Alms

Aitor (Flute)

Alms is short for Aitor Lucena Martinez Solo. The Spanish musician has recently put out an album “An Irosmic Tragedy” and here is what he says about it, among other things.

Hey Aitor. How are you doing?

I’m fine, thank you! Enjoying the great reception of my new album!

You just released new album titled “An Irosmic Tragedy.” How do you feel about the release?

It’s being absolutely fantastic. It took two years since I started composing “An Irosmic Tragedy” until its release. It’s been so long because of my duties at work and University, but the final result is totally worth it. I’m very happy with it and, as I said, its reception is being awesome.

Continue reading “Interview with Alms”

How GENESIS REVISITED II Informed WOLFLIGHT

wolflightFrontCover
WOLFLIGHT (Insideout Music, 2015).

Wonderful interview with Steve Hackett at Ultimate Classic Rock.  Just one good quote below, but it’s worth reading the whole interview.

I’ve always had a strong love of Hackett’s art (well, at least since 1978 or so), but that appreciation has grown exponentially over the past several months.  Can’t believe I’m finally listening to WOLFLIGHT.  Had I done so before, it would’ve been a top three album of 2015 for me.  So artistic.

I hate to admit it, but I avoided listening to this album simply because I thought the cover was cheesy.  Now that I understand the album, the cover makes perfect sense.  So much for not judging an album by its cover!

Yeah! I think the response to the whole Genesis Revisited idea was so strong, it really turned things around for me in every sense of the word. I still love the Genesis songs that we all wrote and crafted together, and I have been able to work with a wonderful band live for many years. The bass playing position, which is also a 12-string-playing position, had been somewhat flexible. So far, it’s been between Nick Beggs and Lee Pomeroy, both of whom are great players and lovely guys. So, sometimes it’s one, sometimes it’s the other. And it may be that this year I have to work with some other player live, because they’re much in-demand. I share Nick Beggs with Steven Wilson — so, some years, Steven gets the priority, and other years, I get the priority.

Read More: Steve Hackett on Rangy ‘Wolflight,’ the Joys of Collaboration and Genesis: Exclusive Interview | http://ultimateclassicrock.com/steve-hackett-interview-2015/?trackback=tsmclip

New Cailyn Video: Fantasia

Who doesn’t love the work of Cailyn Lloyd?  Incredible.  Here’s a video from her 2012 album, FOUR PIECES.  Stunning.  Really stunning.

Metal Mondays: Gygax, “The Rope of Shadow”

One of the terrific 2015 releases that I missed but am getting caught up on in 2016 is Gygax’s Critical Hits.

Here’s my favorite track from it, to celebrate Metal Monday:

The Musical Momentum of Steven Wilson

stevenwilson_poland2007
Steven Wilson live with Porcupine Tree at Arena, Poznan, Poland. 28 November 2007. (Wikipedia)

John Kelman of AllAboutJazz.com has written an excellent piece about the trajectory of Steven Wilson’s career, intertwining details about Wilson’s music, career choices, and closest collaborators:

Continue reading “The Musical Momentum of Steven Wilson”

Celebrating Mediocrity, Part II: Genesis

In part I of this review, I attempted–and I hope succeeded–in professing my respect for Genesis, 1978-1983, while admitting my disappointment in INVISIBLE TOUCH (1986) and my nearly complete ignorance of anything the band released after 1986.  When Steve Hackett first introduces the [insert positive descriptive] Ray Wilson on one of the Genesis Revisited concerts, I had to google the guy.  I had no idea who he was.  This, for better or worse, probably tells you how little I know about Genesis’s later history.  I also noted that there were a few good things about the documentary the BBC made a year or so ago, Genesis Together and Apart.  Some of the questions, the footage, and the memories truly moved me.  I’d never heard of one of the talking heads, but, frankly, they were pretty entertaining, and I enjoyed their enthusiasm.

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The documentary that teaches selling Britannia is better than SELLING ENGLAND

Overall, the BBC narrative just infuriated me.

Some smart guys meet in an elite school.  They really like one another, except for Tony, whom everyone simply tolerates because of his talent.  Oh, and when there is disagreement, Tony gets grumpy.  Rather than backing down, everyone gives into Tony.  His moodiness isn’t worth combatting.  The friends write music that taps into nostalgia for pre-industrialized, Edwardian England.  From there, they create complex, artful tunes and dress in funny costumes.  Along for the ride comes some guy–who according to Tony–plays the guitar “stiffly” and another guy who plays the drums fiercely but who also smiles a lot and loves fun and gets along with everyone.  Weirdo costume guy leaves the band and becomes happy, even writing a pop anthem.  Stiff guitarist guy leaves the band and no one really cares one way or the other if he is happy or not.

Continue reading “Celebrating Mediocrity, Part II: Genesis”