Marco Minnemann – Celebration

Marco Minnemann, one of the most in demand drummers in the world – and a talented multi-instrumentalist – is releasing what will surely be another excellent album. Entitled Celebration, the album will be released on June 1, and the first 1,000 CDs sold will be autographed. I have been a fan of Minnemann – who plays all the instruments on this release – since I first heard his work on Steven Wilson’s The Raven that Refused to Sing (And Other Stories). His solo work has been widely praised (deservedly so), and I expect great things from this new release. If you would like to pre-order Celebration, you can visit http://www.lazybones.com.

Here is a promo for the new album: 

Kite, The New EP from Camelias Garden

CAMELIAS GARDEN NEW EP: KITE

It’s hard not to like this band, there are so many elements at work here that go so magically well together. Camelias Garden is where you want to be!”

– Peter Thelen, Expose 

 

Blending nostalgia with a subtle touch of modernity, Camelias Garden made a solid showcase for a band that shows a     lot of promise for the future”

 Raffaella Berry, Prog Sphere

After the debut with the album You Have a Chance (2013, Fading Records), welcomed positively by international and italian critics, Camelias Garden are back with a studio 6-track EP titled Kite.

It has been crafted to be a merge between the rich sound of the first album and the new enriched songwriting elements coming from the substantial line-up change in the band.

Consequently they did a more essential and straight-forward production from different studios in the Eternal City, that brings the band to a more experimental and electric approach.

The album will be distributed worldwide on May 20th, 2015 through the major online stores, with a few promotional physical copies.
Tracklist:

  1. Rise (2:05)
  2. Making Things Together (5:10)
  3. Kite (8:27)
  4. Red Light (3:22)
  5. The World Inside You (3:55)
  6. Useless (6:34)

Lineup:
Valerio Smordoni: lead and backing vocals, acoustic guitar, keyboards
Simone Contini: drums
Alberto Cari: bass guitar

Guests:
Manolo D’Antonio: electric guitars, 12-string and 6-string guitars, backing vocals
Gian Marco La Serra: piano, keyboards, backing vocals.

Contacts:
https://www.facebook.com/cameliasgarden
https://twitter.com/camelias_garden
https://cameliasgarden.bandcamp.com/releases
cameliasgarden@gmail.com

Bio:
Camelias Garden merge together the acoustic and vocal elements of folk songwriting with the instrumental weavings and arrangements of progressive rock and post rock.

The band was born in Rome in 2011 as a solo project of singer and multinstrumentalist Valerio Smordoni to become a full band.

You Have a Chance was their debut album, released in March 2013, which was showcased in the famous roman radio RadioRock and live for Altrock/Fading Records at La Casa di Alex in Milan, selling more than 1000 copies in a short time. This debut let the band start an intense live activity plus positive reviews from international webzines like Prog Sphere and IO Pages, and italian ones like Rockit and Roba da Rocker.

Their music style comes from films, pictures, from green fields and memories of a distant past. The soundtrack of an imaginary movie crafted by vocal harmonies, synthesizers and acoustic guitars.

In Sept. 2013 they were on the front page of ExitWell magazine.

In March 2014 they were semifinalists at Arezzo Wave festival.

In May 2014 the win the critics award at Roma Folk Fest festival.

RochaNews: Earthside

EARTHSIDE, METALINSIDER.NET LAUNCH NEW TRACK “THE CLOSEST I’VE COME”

Debut album “A Dream in Static” coming soon; additional details, special guests TBA

NEW HAVEN, Conn. – New England-based creative collective, Earthside, has teamed up with MetalInsider.netto launch a new song entitled “The Closest I’ve Come,” the first single from the band’s upcoming debut album, A Dream in Static. Stream the new instrumental track, along with some additional commentary from the band, exclusively at: http://www.metalinsider.net/new-music/exclusive-earthside-premieres-new-the-closest-ive-come.

‘The Closest I’ve Come’ was a coming of age song for us,” drummer Ben Shanbrom told Metal Insider. “It was the first piece of music we wrote for the record, and in a very personal way it represents our journey, both as musicians and people, from adolescence to maturity. This track defined us on a core level and set the bar for our future output.
“It also tells our story through an instrumental medium – the feeling of pushing oneself and striving for something greater, but also longing to reach the point of fulfillment – which rarely happens in the creative process!”

A Dream in Static is due to release later this year. The inherently collaborative cross-continental project was recorded in Stockholm, Sweden under the watch of renowned producer and mix engineer, David Castillo(OpethKatatoniaBloodbath), and additional mix and mastering engineer, Jens Bogren (OpethSoilworkThe OceanDevin Townsend).

A teaser video for the album can be seen on YouTube at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wG5rMe3KTV4.

Earthside guitarist Jamie van Dyck commented on the recording experience: “New surroundings and collaboration are two of the best catalysts for inspiring creative energy. Living in Stockholm and recording with David Castillo was the opportunity of a lifetime for us. We were immersed in such a vibrant musical space and passionate group of people that ultimately made this record what it is. That inclusive spirit in working with David and the guest musicians on the record brought out that energy in each of us.”

Through organic layers of living, breathing orchestra (courtesy of the Moscow Studio Symphony Orchestra), and an eclectic arsenal of world music-influenced instrumentation, Earthside fashions an ever-changing sound that is equally engrossing alongside a work of cinematic art as it is resonating throughout a densely packed concert venue.

A Dream in Static, the group’s conceptual mission statement, is a story of purposeful sacrifice and existential yearning told across sweeping instrumental movements, interwoven with adventurous vocal compositions featuring premier voices from across the rock and metal worlds.

“Our music aims to evoke the full range of human emotions,” van Dyck continued. “Having those emotions and themes expressed more directly through the voices of some of our favorite singers and musicians was an unbelievable experience and something we cannot wait to share with everyone.”

Live dates and additional album details will be announced shortly. Stay tuned for more information.

-###-
Earthside online…

http://earthsideband.com/

https://www.facebook.com/EarthsideMusic

 

 

Earthside is…

 

Jamie van Dyck – Guitar
Frank Sacramone – Keyboards
Ben Shanbrom – Drums
Ryan Griffin – Bass

Interim News: Metanarratives

INTERIM_Metanarratives_EP_ArtBrisbane-soon-to-be-Sydney hard-out rock quintet INTERIM are about to drop their 5-track EP entitled Metanarratives. The outfit are moving to Sydney to align with singer Alec Snow’s movements and are releasing the EP Friday June 12, with tour date announcements yet to come. 
 
The band has been moving from strength to strength, shifting from their high school garage grunge roots into a more layered, blues influenced style of heavy rock. 2014 saw the band recording and organising the release of this EP and coming tour, with the first taste and previous single, She’s the Devil, was released late in the year to resounding results. Shows alongside Caligula’s Horse and Monks of Mellonwah have set the tone for a huge 2015.
 
Metanarratives are literally “narratives about narratives”. Interim have constructed 5 tracks which lyrically tell stories about the stories we share as a society. Each track a carefully crafted journey, some not necessarily in the verse-chorus-verse structure – sometimes in movements, sometimes in sections – and rarely repeating sections or looking back. The EP is all about building tension to a climax – in both the songs and the overall narrative. 


Interim have shared the stage with artists such as Dead Letter OpenerBreaking OrbitCaligula’s Horse, StrangersAerials and Monks of Mellonwah and have been featured on Channel 7’s Morning Show, playing their previous single, She’s The Devil, featured on this EP. 
 
The Metanarratives EP will be released via MGM Distribution on Friday June 12. More details can be found at http://www.facebook.com/interimau.
 
 
LOVE FOR INTERIM

 

“…Brisbane lads Interim took to the stage for what was an absolute onslaught of balls out hard rock.”

– Mind the Music Blog 

 

As everything picked up, Snow’s voice got some grunt in it and [Interim] smashed into a high-energy set that had all the band members thrashing around on stage like they were possessed.” 

 Chris Condoleon, Music Feeds

 
“Each member of Interim has phenomenal on-stage energy and it doesn’t take long before the crowd are sucked into the spectacle of the driving rhythm and catc

RochaNews: GYRE

GYRE, REVOLVER LAUNCH NEW TRACK “MANIFEST” 

Upcoming EP ‘Moirai’ out May 12

NEW YORK – N.Y./N.J. progressive metal outfit, Gyre, has teamed up with Revolver to launch a brand new track, “Manifest,” from the band’s forthcoming ‘Moirai’ EP, due out May 12. Stream “Manifest” exclusively at: http://www.revolvermag.com/?p=73657.

“The song speaks of pushing yourself to the edge and finding a balance between your dreams and reality,” Gyre told Revolver. “It speaks of seeing past the tentacles that try to control and conform, and to embrace your individuality.”

‘Moirai’ can be pre-ordered now through the Gyre Bandcamp page at: www.gyrebandmusic.bandcamp.com.

An additional ‘Moirai’ track, “I Release,” can be streamed on YouTube at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dT8xhqTpS5E.

The band added: “This album is a resurgence – a reminder that it’s never too late to truly awaken your potential in life and control your own fate. We can guide ourselves to this realization by expressing our passion and doing what we love. This can be different for people, but it is through the act of creation we feel our self-worth and purpose bloom.

“‘Moirai’ is a term for the three sisters of fate. It ties this third album together. Two sisters represent birth and death, inevitable forces beyond an individual’s control. We are Lachesis, the second sister…the story in between. If we want to, if we decide…we can write our own story. Ultimately, we are all completely responsible for our own actions and emotions.”
‘Moirai’ was recorded by Juan Soaz and Ying Chee then mixed and mastered with Kevin Antressian at Backroom Studios (Dillinger Escape Plan, The Number 12 Looks Like You, Adrenaline Mob, Foxy Shazam).

1. I Release

2. Manifest

3. Behind the Eyes

4. Moirai

5. Dream the Obscene

Stay tuned for more information on Gyre and ‘Moirai,’ due out next week.

-###-
Gyre is…
Juan Soaz – Guitar

Pablo Carpio – Drums

Ian McCartney – Guitar

Chirag Bhatt – Bass

Ying Chee – Vocals
Gyre online…
www.facebook.com/gyreband

www.twitter.com/gyreband

https://instagram.com/gyreband/

www.gyrebandmusic.bandcamp.com

The Unthanks 10th Anniversary

The Unthanks aren’t always prog, but they’re always superb! They’re celebrating their tenth year with some gigging and a new release. If you’re fortunate enough to be in the area, make sure you get to see them.

The Unthanks cap both 10 years and a remarkable year with an intimate Autumn tour of small venues, followed by handful of December shows with their full 10 piece ensemble, including standing and seated London shows, and a homecoming show at Hexham Abbey.

Rather than embarking on some grand celebration, The Unthanks are quietly marking their 10th anniversary this year with a short tour of small intimate spaces, with a pared back line-up, their feeling being that if folk music is a lifelong pursuit, 10 years is just a drop in the ocean.

Small venues means tickets are likely to sell out quick. All show details are below. or on our website here.

And in the same respect, rather than putting out an exploitative ‘best of’, there will be a release of rarities, live recordings, memorabilia and unreleased material will accompany the tour.

The 5 piece intimate tour, featuring material from right across their time, will be following in December by handful of 10 piece anniversary shows to crown the year, including both standing and seated London shows at Scala and Union Chapel respectively, plus a homecoming show in the beautiful surroundings of Hexham Abbey.

The shows mark both 10 years and a remarkable year. In wall-to-wall four and five star reviews, this year’s Mount the Air has been described as “quite simply, a masterpiece”, “music that asks you to consider everything you know and un-think it”, “an epic that Sigur Rós or Elbow would be proud of”, “folk on a different level – airborne, perhaps”, “the first truly jaw-dropping album of 2015”, “both wildly experimental and comfortably familiar”, “gorgeously orchestrated”, “one of the best records I’ve ever reviewed”, “kind of beautiful, kind of blue”, and “beautiful yet stark, orchestral yet intimate, clever yet with simple purity, dark yet kissed with light, ascendant yet earthy and rooted.”

Summer Festival Dates

27.05.15 Hay Festival Hay on Wye

27.06.15 Glastonbury Festival

(Pyramid Stage, The Unthanks with Orchestra, conducted by Charles Hazlewood)

10.07.15 Earagail Arts Festival Ireland

11.07.15 Folk at the Hall Trelawnyd, N Wales (Headliners)

19.07.15 Folk by the Oak Hatfield, Herts.

24.07.15 Folkfest Killarney Kerry, Ireland

26.07.15 Deer Shed Festival Topcliffe, N Yorks (Headliners)

01.08.15 Cambridge Folk Festival

02.08.15 Port Eliot Festival (Headliners)

14.08.15 Stockholm Culture Festival

22.08.15 Home Gathering Newcastle (Headlined and curated by The Unthanks)

23.08.15 FolkEast Glemham, Suffolk (Headliners)

29.08.15 Solfest, Silloth, Lake District (Headliners)

30.08.15 Greenbelt, Kettering (Headliners)

05.09.15 End of the Road Dorset

06.09.15 Moseley Folk Festival West Mids

25.09.15 Gaiety Theatre Douglas, Isle of Man (on sale v soon)

27.09.15 Queens Cross Church Aberdeen (on sale end of May)

17.10.15 Homegrown Bury, Castle Armoury Drill Hall (Headliners)

10th Anniversary Intimate 5-Piece Tour

22.10.15 The Customs House South Shields 0191 454 1234

23.10.15 The Witham Barnard Castle 01833 631 107

24.10.15 The Dukes Lancaster 01524 598500

25.10.15 Wem Town Hall 01939 238 279

26.10.15 The Atrix Bromsgrove 01527 577330

27.10.15 SJE Oxford 0845 413 4444

28.10.15 Holy Trinity Church Guildford 01483 566007

29.10.15 Theatre Royal Margate 01843 292795

30.10.15 St Mary’s in the Castle Hastings 01323 841414

31.10.15 The Stables Milton Keynes 01908 280800

01.11.15 Drill Hall Lincoln 01522 873894

06.11.15 Middlewich Town Hall 01606 833434

07.11.15 Trades Club Hebden Bridge (Standing Saturday Night Show) 01422 845 265

08.11.15 Trades Club Hebden Bridge (Seated Matinee Show) 01422 845 265

08.11.15 Trades Club Hebden Bridge (Seated Evening Show) 01422 845 265

13.11.15 Theatre by the Lake Keswick 017687 74411

14.11.15 Stephen Joseph Theatre Scarborough 01723 370541

15.11.15 All Saints Church Pocklington 01759 301547

10th Anniversary 10-Piece Shows

04.12.15 Hexham Abbey (10th Anniversary Homecoming Show) 01434 652477

05.12.15 The Great British Folk Festival Skegness 0300 1006648

09.12.15 Scala London (Standing 10th Anniversary 10 piece show) 0845 4134444

10.12.15 Union Chapel London (Seated 10th Anniversary 10 piece show) 0845 4134444

The Heavy Metal Philosopher @philosopher70 on Raven’s ExtermiNation: “straight from the heyday of classic metal”

The Heavy Metal Philosopher has superb, detailed coverage of the great new release, ExtermiNation, from Raven.

Here’s the bottom line:

Raven has always been a bit experimental — you might think of them of the Rush or the Yes of actual metal, so confidently anchored in the mainstays of the genre, so competent in their musicianship that they were free to incorporate whatever they chose into their songs.  On this album, it’s clear that there’s some musical influence and homage from a variety of sources — there’s passages where while listening you’ll be reminded of bands as fundamentally different as Megadeth, (pre-Hagar) Van Halen, Queensryche, Iron Maiden, Accept, and even Metal Church.  At the same time, there’s a definite contemporary power-metal sensibility running through many of the tracks — particularly in terms of the drumming. …

Simply put, this is a must-have album for anyone who is interested in contemporary heavy metal.  If we have to pick a genre to place it within, it would be Power Metal — but it’s not just that.  This is classic New Wave of British Heavy Metal, updated to the present day, by a band that has decades of achievements to their credit and is, quite simply, in their musical prime in the present.  Decades down the line, anyone who didn’t purchase this album is going to be kicking themselves for their oversight!

Go read the whole thing.

And then go rock out with Raven!

Terry Brown on FM’s Transformation: “Canada’s quintessential Prog band”

Whoa! Did you know Terry Brown mixed the new FM album, Transformation?

He brought together the original audio tracks that were recorded at each band member’s home studio.

This album is going to make the year’s Top Ten lists, mark my words.

Terry explains why in the liner notes:

Producer’s Notes…

I have always thought of FM as Canada’s quintessential Prog band – arriving on the scene in 1976 with the stunning ‘Black Noise’ album and the Prog-hit ‘Phasors on Stun’. But it was not until 1996 that I got to work with FM and produce ‘RetroActive’ live with the original three-piece. Moving forward a few years I knew that a new FM album was in the works, but when I got the call to mix ‘Transformation’ in December of 2014, I knew it was going to be Christmas with a difference. And what a difference!

The line-up is now a four-piece, but with Cameron’s distinct vocal styling, keyboard wizardry and rock-solid bass playing, the sound is classic FM. Paul DeLong has brought his astounding drum chops to the mix along with Aaron Solomon and Edward Bernard who are sharing the violin, viola, string sections and background vocals.

All the tunes on ‘Transformation’ are written with an energy that is contagious, they all have very strong melodies delivered with passion, use cleverly veiled time signatures and, save for some brief ethereal moments, are brought home with a driving edge. This is a must-have album for your collection – I hope you enjoy listening to FM Transformation as much as I did during the mix sessions!

Terry Brown [2015]

Don’t miss this spectacular album.

Truly, Rush’s loss is FM’s gain!

Mark Turner — “Lathe of Heaven”

This concept song on a jazz album, discussed by Mark Judge, sounds intriguing:

Recently jazz saxophonist Mark Turner released The Lathe of Heaven, an album which takes its title from a novel of the same name by science fiction author Ursula K. Le Guin. The book describes the life of a man, George Orr, whose dreams actually become reality. He is encouraged by his psychiatrist, Dr. Haber, to start improving the world. Yet Haber’s utopian dreams end up making things worse. Le Guin has called The Lathe of Heaven “a Taoist novel” rather than a utopian or dystopian one. But many reviewers see in the book a Hayekian warning about liberal social engineers. It’s telling that no matter what good conditions are conjured by George Orr’s dreams, it’s never enough for Dr. Haber. He simply can’t be happy.

This is an intriguing confluence of artistic projects — an acclaimed jazz musician produces an album based on a noted science fiction novel with anti-utopian overtones. Yet because conservatives, unlike liberals, don’t have a decades-old infrastructure to publicize such a work — never mind a bright cultural mind to engage with it — The Lathe of Heaven will most likely go unnoticed by the conservative media. And the same conservatives who ignore it are the ones who next week will be bemoaning the fact that the left “owns the culture.”

If the left does own popular culture, it’s because they worked hard for it, employing the conservative values of perseverance and creativity. There is a chasm that separates the infrastructure that the left has erected over the last 50 years to celebrate and interpret popular culture and the tiny space that establishment conservatism allocates to popular culture. It is for this reason, more than any claim that American popular culture is irredeemably decadent and leftist, that the right seems lost in the world of movies, music, and bestsellers. Every month, if not every week, important works of popular culture go unnoticed by the right. These are often things that speak to people’s souls — films that wrestle with questions of honor, novels, like Le Guin’s about the meaning of sex and politics, music that explores the limits of self-sacrificial love.

An interesting musical diversion

Hey fellow progarchists, hope we’re all well, and I don’t know about you, but I am astounded that it’s nearly June and 2015 is almost half way over, or if you want to look at it another way, we’ve got another 6 months of great albums to look forward to before the inevitable ‘best of’ lists and word wrangling are upon us.

Here’s four very different and very exciting albums that I have been listening to for a while, and have been trying to review in between revision, selling a house and getting divorced! It’s been a busy old year so far!

Gavin Harrison

Gavin Harrison: Cheating the Polygraph

Kscope

It’s interesting life, isn’t it?

You can spend large portions of time in the same town, the same city, the same village, seeing the same people doing the same thing, day in, day out, and you get into a really comfortable routine, where everything fits together like a jigsaw, and a comforting reliability settles in, pub on a Friday, roast on a Sunday, and the same songs played on a different days.

Then something happens, maybe a job move, maybe a house move, perhaps a divorce, and then you’re routine is changed, altered and the familiar beat alters, the groove is shaken up, the old record gets changed, or remixed if you like, and you suddenly find that once familiar things become different because of context or time, like looking at your favourite painting hanging in a different house, or a new lover in your old bed.

This is precisely the effect that Gavin Harrison’s rather spectacular new album has on your ears. It is an astonishing, intelligent reinterpretation of Porcupine Tree songs, and whilst the song remains the same, the sound really doesn’t.

Instead of the sonic experimentations and haunting undertones that you get from a great Steven Wilson song, this is the pinnacle of the art of reinvention (and one other artists can learns from) because Harrison (who I assume everyone knows – if not, he’s one of the finest drummers in the world today, heir apparent to Bill Brufords jazz prog throne) and collaborator Lawrence Cottle have skilfully and adeptly produced a damn fine jazz album. And man, does it swing!

This covers the whole gamut from Porcupine Tree’s mighty back catalogue, and the skilful swing driven funk adaptation of The Pills I’m Taking (from Fear of Blank Planets Anaesthetize suite) is mighty to hear, and takes the track so far from the original, that you do have to jump back and listen and compare. It’s like the Baz Luhrman Romeo and Juliet film, the original source material is there, you just have to dig a little deeper to find it.

The sinewy bass drives the inspired combination of Lightbulb Suns Hatesong with Deadwings Halo, and it’s like the two were meant to be together, as the sinister undertones and the brass mix together to create a piece that could have fallen off a 1970’s film noir soundtrack, and then the funk kicks in. There is a sinister undercurrent running underneath this whole piece, and it is absolutely wonderful and a sublime reimagination of the work of Harrisons old band.

With a skilful jazz orchestra and of course Harrisons taut powerful drumming underpinning the whole affair, it allows Cottle and Harrison to go out there in reinterpreting and rearranging these classic songs, as trumpet, trombone and sax duel with each other as familiar riffs appear and sneak off into the ether, as the full band kicks in with some mighty power, and of course Harrisons glorious drumming and some amazing bass work.

This is a covers album like no other, and with the way these Porcupine Tree songs have been remained and so expertly dissected and reassembled, it is one of the most progressive releases (and the most enjoyable) you’ll hear so far this year!

 Echo Us

Echo Us: II: XII A Priori Memoriae

This is an album that I have been listening to since around December last year, when creative ands inventive musician Ethan Matthews sent me a copy to review and enjoy, and due to life taking its toll this year, I have just got round to penning this piece about this rather marvellous record, so first of all apologies Ethan, I hope my words will do your music justice.

I knew this was right up my street when the first track kicked, and rather like Rob Reed from Magenta, I get the impression Ethan is inspired by multi-instrumentalists like Mike Oldfield, as with the superb fluid guitar, and the more atmospheric musical soundscapes that he creates there are definite shades of Oldfield in here, and that is no way a criticism at all. For my money Mike Oldfield has created some of the finest records of the late 20th Century, and anyone who follows his footsteps and is influenced to create something original of their own is to be applauded.

This is in effect the conclusion to a trilogy of albums that started with 2009’s The Tide Decides, continued through 2012’s Tomorrow Will Tell the Story finishes here,

Echo Us is in effect multi-instrumentalist virtuoso Ethan and female vocalist Henta, who adds her own magic to the overall sound, and what an excellent sound it is.

Effectively split into two four part progressive symphonies (‘A’ Data, and ‘B’ Data)

The four part split of the two main tracks is again almost Oldfield esque in its execution, and allows the music room to breathe, to evolve and to build and build to it’s wonderful conclusion. From the ambient build of ‘A’ Data I) Exordium (apologue) with plenty of that wonderful guitar to the conclusion of ‘A’ Data iv) residium (Remainder) with it’s chilled out conclusion and plenty of beautiful languid guitar coming across reminiscent of Steve Howe.

In fact the musicianship on this album is superb throughout, as themes appear and reappear and pieces ebb and flow, building to some shatteringly wonderful musical climaxes, as Hentas voice weaves in and out, haunting, otherworldly and ethereal.

In fact with its choral power, its superb ambient soundscapes and guitar work, this reminds me very much of Mike Oldfields Songs of Distant Earth, as it has the same laid back sound and effortlessly elegiac moods throughout.

As shown by his guitar work again on the atmospheric ‘B’ data I) i.codicillus (From Far Away) Ethan is a mighty fine guitarist, and his vocal harmonies when mixed with Hentas vocals create for some really moving musical moments, as the guitar comes to the fore, as the percussion builds and builds and builds.

Layering sound upon sound, and weaving samples and vocals into some fantastic musical tapestry is a real skill and one that Ethan has in abundance as a songwriter and performer.

In fact with it’s musical counterpoints, the way it effortlessly moves through moods and back, and with Ethans dextrous playing, this is a superb release, and whilst it fits into the musical genre that Mike Oldfield is well known for, Echo us is something new and exciting, and if you enjoy the music of Mr Oldfield, it’s a dead cert you will love this.

Man

Man: Reanimated Memories

Esoteric Antenna EANTCD1046

Having masterminded the recent superb remastering and reissuing of the indefatigueable Welsh blues prog rock legends Mans entire back catalogue it seems entirely appropriate that the groups first new release in five years comes on the Esoteric Antenna label, and accompanied by concerts in the UK and abroad.

Having always had a fluid attitude to things like line ups and genres, this reanimated Man band consists of Man veterans Martin Ace and Phil Ryan, ably accompanied by new blood Josh Ace (Martins son, taking his place in the family business) James Beck and Rene Robrahn rounding out the 21st century Man line up.

Adding some steel guitar to the proceedings is special guest, the legend that is BJ Cole.

So, what is this new album like?

Well rest assured Man fans; it is firmly in the spirit of the group that made legendary albums like Back into the Future or Be Good To Yourself at least Once a Day and the Twang Dynasty.

With the younger blood in the band, in the form of Josh Ace, who contributes some fine songs on here including the brilliant No Solution and the great contemporary God Delusion, it adds some bite to the sound, which is classic Man.

The opening blues rock Ballad of Billy Lee, provided by Martin Ace, is a Western on Record, with some great cinematic lyrics and BJ Coles pedal steel guitar adds a wonderful touch, whilst Martin Aces vocals add the gruff touch needed to this story of a world weary gunfighter.

Martin also contributes the wonderfully bluesy One More Ride on the Waltzers, with its great blues sound, and its it wistfully beautiful lyrics features some sublime keyboard work from Phil Ryan and great harmony vocals.

Phil Ryan contributes the ten minute epic In Time, which draws on all elements of Mans mighty heritage, with some amazing duelling guitar work, fantastic keyboard work and great vocals, whilst managing to sound contemporary and fresh. You wouldn’t think this was the work of a band with over 46 years history.

Reanimated Memories is as strong a work of music as Man have committed to record, and not only does it stand up strong compared to their legacy, it also continues to build on that legacy.

A great record.

 FM

FM: Transformation

Esoteric Antenna EANCD1050

Pioneering Canadian proggers responsible for such legendary albums as Black Noise, Direct to Disc and City of Fear, all of which took something from the school of space rock and fronted by Cameron Hawkins, whose distinctive vocals add so much to the FM sound, added so much more to the genre.

Now the groundbreaking group are a quartet, fronted by founder and driving force Cameron Hawkins, rounded out by Paul DeLong whose impressive drum works pushes this album on, and staying true to the traditional FM sound there is now not one, but two violinists Aaron Solomon (who adds vocals) and Edward Bernard (who also adds viola, mandolin and vocals to the mix) this really fleshes out the superb sound FM make, and with three vocalists the harmonies on here are reminiscent of the tremendous Trevor Rabin Yes era. Adding a contemporary sound, whilst remaining uniquely FM.

The violin is, in my opinion very underused in prog rock, and with twin violinists duelling (particularly on the amazing Children of Eve) through the different stereo channels, it gives so much more to a record, and with those amazing harmony vocals it really does send shivers down your spine.

The harmonies again are to the fore on the amazingly beautiful Safe and Sound, which would be echoing round the country if there were any radio stations left willing to broadcast FM in FM to the nation, as Hawkins vocals and lyrics blend seamlessly with the music, as the synths, the violins, the harmonies come together to create 6:18 minutes of perfection, building perfectly on the FM sound of old and then picking it up, running with it and taking it somewhere different and new.

In fact the violin is the dominant force throughout the album, weaving and soloing where the guitar would normally be, and as such adds real power and energy to the tracks.

Songs like the brilliant Soldiers of Love with its extended violin duet/fight coda, the opening boot in the stereo that is Brave New Worlds and the closing joyous lyrics in Heaven On Earth (which in tone, if not style is reminiscent of mid 90’s Yes) prove that as a musical force Cameron Hawkins and FM have plenty more to give. This is a triumphant musical return from one of Canada’s most eclectic and exciting musical groups, a stunning record in every way.