Canada is the land of rock

pm-guns

I think I have seen Bill Clinton tooting on a saxophone, but that’s about it.

Meanwhile, up in Canada, the land of Rush, our Prime Minister sings Guns N’ Roses as he is kickin’ out the jams:

OTTAWA – Stephen Harper channelled Axl Rose for his musical encore at the annual Conservative Christmas party on Tuesday night.

Harper was on keyboards and lead vocals with his new band the Van Cats (as in 24 in French, 24 Sussex), and played the Guns N’ Roses tune “Sweet Child O’ Mine” to round out the night.

Members of Parliament, party members from the region, and political staffers took phone photos and danced in front of the stage where Harper played several numbers.

Wearing black from head to toe, he spanned the musical decades with songs by Buddy Holly, the Beatles, Johnny Cash, Grace Potter and the Nocturnals, and the French version of “Silent Night.”

Harper also sang John Denver’s “Country Roads,” changing some of the lyrics to refer to Alberta instead of West Virginia. The prime minister has played piano or keyboards for the cameras several times before, including at the National Arts Centre Gala in 2009.

Never mind what you think of his performance. I am simply impressed he knows all the words to “Sweet Child O’ Mine” and can reel them off while knocking out the chords on the keyboard.

Click on the link above if you want to watch.

I think this means that Canada has won the Battle of the Bands.

Where do we go now?

 

Listen to streaming of Dave Kerzner’s prog feast New World @DaveKerzner

Dave Kerzner announces:

BIG NEWS! My debut solo album New World has just been released here and on iTunes. It features musicians who have played with Pink Floyd, Genesis, Yes, ELP, The Who, Porcupine Tree, Big Big Train, Tears for Fears, It Bites and more. It’s now streaming in full on my Sonic Elements Bandcamp page with high quality mp3 and FLAC download plus PDF art, lyrics and liner notes. Come check it out!

https://sonicelements.bandcamp.com/album/new-world

“New World” is the debut solo album from former Sound of Contact keyboardist/songwriter/producer Dave Kerzner. It’s a Progressive Rock “concept album” that’s set in the future and follows the main character on a journey from being stranded in the desert to finding his way back to the biodomed city where he originally came from.

credits

released 09 December 2014

Track 1: Stranded pt1-5 (10:32)
Track 2: Into The Sun (7:21)
Track 3: The Lie (5:04)
Track 4: Under Control (5:54)
Track 5: Crossing Of Fates (4:49)
Track 6: My Old Friend (5:27)
Track 7: Ocean Of Stars (5:36)
Track 8: Solitude (3:39)
Track 9: Nothing (6:17)
Track 10: New World (5:57)
Track 11: Redemption: Stranded pt. 6-10 (17:25)

The Cast:

Dave Kerzner – Vocals Tracks 1-11
Keyboards Tracks 1-11
Guitar Tracks 2,4,6,9
Drum Programming Tracks 4,6,8
Fernando Perdomo – Guitar Tracks 1,2,3,5,6,7,8,9,10,11
Bass Tracks 1,3,5,6,7,8,9,10,11
Nick D’Virgilio – Drums Tracks 1,2,3,5,6,7,9,10,11
Steve Hackett – Guitar Tracks 1,11
Francis Dunnery – Guitar Tracks 10,11
Russ Parish – Guitar Track 6
Colin Edwin – Bass Track 2
Billy Sherwood – Bass Track 5
Keith Emerson – Moog Modular Synth (via Sonic Reality) Track 5
Simon Phillips – Drums Track 5
Durga McBroom – Vocals Tracks 1,11
Lorelei McBroom – Vocals Tracks 7,8
Jason Scheff – Vocals Tracks 1,11
David Longdon – Vocals Track 10
Emily Lynn – Vocals Tracks 8,11
Lara Smiles – Vocals Track 8
Heather Findlay – Vocals Track 2
Maryem Tollar – Vocals Track 6
Christine Leakey – Vocals Track 7
Ana Cristina – Vocals Track 1

Produced by Dave Kerzner

Mixed by Dave Kerzner
except “Stranded” mixed by Tom Lord-Alge
Assistant Mix Engineering & Editing by Chris Holmes

Mastered by Gavin Lurssen and Reuben Cohen for Lurssen Mastering

Artwork and Graphic Design by Christine Leakey
Cover Art by Dave Kerzner

Dave Kerzner’s prog extravaganza is now available! New World @DaveKerzner

Dave Kerzner’s prog extravaganza — New World — is now available! Buy it today… and be blown away!

Ascending Dawn — “All in Now” from the album Coalesce by @AscendingDawn

The album Coalesce has been two years in the making. And it sure does show. Skilled attention to detail and an intense musical intelligence shines forth on this album.

Nine tracks of ambient prog metal awesomeness are kicked off by “All in Now,” which is available here as a free download.

The band comments on the track:

Pummeling riffs and soaring ambient lines are complemented by clean melodies and harmonic backings, defining our signature sound.

Lyrically, “All in Now” delves into our current state of worldly affairs; how we connect through the intangible web of communication, watching our spiritual awareness expand with the overflow of information.

Here’s a guide to the lyrics:

Verse 1
Multiplying the social
Connectivity wires us together
Questioning all the doubtful
Intertwining the need for the censor

Chorus
Breathe in to allow
Impulsive pure presence
All in now
All in now
Emotive pure essence

Verse 2
Uncertain futuristic
Ideology, transient moments
All experience is cyclic
Periodically forced to torment

Bridge
All In Now

Written by: Mark Weatherley and Marlain Angelides
Arranged by: Ascending Dawn
Ascending Dawn are: Constanze Hart, Mark Weatherley, Owen Rees, Marlain Angelides

Stoicism with the Heavy Metal Philosopher and the Punk Rock Philosopher

Stoic Week 2014 as discussed by the Heavy Metal Philosopher and the Punk Rock Philosopher:

http://www.spreaker.com/user/punkrockphilosopher/edr-33-stoic-week-interruption

Dave Kerzner — New World Album Audio Preview @DaveKerzner

First, you heard “Stranded.”

Now, take a listen to this tantalizing sample of the epic album awesomeness that is soon to be released in its entirety:

Also, here’s 2 minutes of “Into The Sun”:

In Hindsight, Frustration, and Adoration: Prog 2014, Part I

As I’ve noted too many times in these pages, I’ve been rather proudly listening to prog since the tender age of four or five, all the way back to 1972.  I’m the same age as Steven Wilson and Will Ferrell, not completely without surprise, a child born in the so-called summer of love.  Fortunate to be raised in a family that cherished all types of great music and the youngest of three boys, I inherited my tastes from good sources.  I heard the earliest of Yes and Genesis as a child, but nothing moved me at the time as much as Yessongs—in its music as well as its stunning artwork.  My first political memory is of Richard Nixon resigning (yay!), but my first musical memory is opening that three-album treasure, Yessongs.  What an invitation.  Floating islands, some idyllic wildlife, and weird looking guys.  The mystical called to me, and I gladly immersed myself in the wild world of Roger Dean.

Now that I’ve once again established my “prog street cred,” let me jump to the present.  Having listened to prog for forty years and having reviewed it for the past decade or so, I’ve never encountered a year like 2014.  Yes, this could sound downright silly.  No year is exactly like any other year.  But, as Andy Tillison and Brian Watson have so thoughtfully argued, we’ve been living in a third wave of progressive rock since about 1994.

the_tangent-not_as_good
A real work of genius, Andy Tillison’s NOT AS GOOD AS THE BOOK.

By the way, if you have not yet, you should read Andy’s discussion of Third Wave Prog in the novella accompanying the album, NOT AS GOOD AS THE BOOK.  Andy is well known for his complex and deep music, his immense integrity, and his snappy dressing—but he should also be recognized for his writing.  He is truly a master of all he does, and the world breathes a little easier because of genius.  His discussion of Third Wave Prog comes on pages 54-55 of the novella.  Indeed, NOT AS GOOD AS THE BOOK is so filled with insights and imaginings, that an academic course could be taught on it.

Back to our history and chronology.  2009 felt excellent and comfortable, as did 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013.  Each year, I thought, “this is THE best year ever in prog!”  Not that I’m innocent of hyperbole, but I meant what I wrote each year.  And, I also believe that the music being produced right now—not only in terms of quantity but much more importantly quantity—is the best since the genre first began.  What Yes and Genesis produced in the early 1970s might very well be called a “Golden Age,” but we’re not living—in any, way, shape, or form—some kind of “Bronze Age of Prog.”  If what was being produced in 1973 is gold, then what’s being produced now is Platinum.

Of course, the world of 2014 is not the world of 1974.  But, this is as true of the state of the world (very glad you’re dead Soviet Union!) as it is in Prog (good riddance, Sony Records!)  I’ll happily dance on the grave of the communists and the corporations.  Foul conformists and materialists, all!  May the abyss take them.

And since we’re on the bad news, there have been a number of nasty surprises for me this year.  I think Anathema hit its best with the stellar live DVD, Universal.  Sadly, its follow up, Distant Satellites, is as devoid of any real ideas as Universal is brilliant.  The same, I fear, is true of the new Lunatic Soul.  The albums of each reveal a profound and unhappy exhaustion.

One happy surprise for me in 2014, however, came from a reexamination of Steven Wilson’s The Raven.  I still believe it’s nothing but a rehash and reworking of Andy Tillison’s work.  But, if you have to imitate, you might as well imitate the best.

One of the finest albums of 2014.
One of the finest albums of 2014.

And, yet, so many, many great albums came out this year.  Really, give a good listen to Distant Satellites and then give an equally good listen to Newspaperflyhunting or any of the bands listed below.  Anathema simply sounds dead.  Newspaperflyhunting?  Holy Moses, keep it coming!

But, how to place these many new and newly reworked bands of 2014?  Musically, 2014 feels like a very different year than 2013.  I strongly suspect that the trio of outstanding releases last year—Big Big Train’s English Electric Full Power, The Tangent’s Le Sacre, and Glass Hammer’s Perilous—marked not only the high point, but the conclusion of third wave prog.  Simply put, these three albums are so outstanding, that they’ve surpassed the work of first and second wave prog.  The grandchildren have outlived and outperformed their grandfathers.  Not that the grandchildren could have done any of it without the grandfathers. . . but this is always true.  Granted, I’m quite fond of Roman republican notions of piety, but no progger worth her salt is not.  Of all participants and fans of genres of music, we proggers lovingly embrace pietism, genealogy, and lineage.  Only the true jazz lovers come close to us in our respect for those who came before.  Simply put, those who love prog are as much progressive as they are reactionary.  No shame in this.

But, Fourth-Wave Prog?  What might this be?  I don’t think it started this year, but it seems to have become prominent now.  Though I’m not entirely willing to commit to this (or any of this re: 4th Wave; I’m thinking out loud), I think we could probably tag ubermensch and Anglo-Saxon Guitar God, Matt Stevens, as the spearhead of the movement, an eclectic one to be sure.  I think that other great Anglo-Saxon (what is it with you English people?!?!?) bard, John Bassett.

Let me first try to define what Fourth Wave might be with the list of the best artists of the past year:  In no particular order: Jason Rubenstein, Salander, Fire Garden, Newspaperflyhunting, John Bassett, Matt Stevens, Fractal Mirror, Andy Tillison, Galahad, Glass Hammer, Cailyn Lloyd, NAO, Tin Spirits, Simon Godfrey, Flying Colors, and Heliopolis.

And, of course, Cosmograf.

More on each of these bands in the second post.

Adria — “Pull Me Under” @ThisIsAdria

Pull Me Under” is the single now pre-released from Adria’s forthcoming EP. She has a great voice and I have always loved her magnificent work with All Eyes on Saturn on their extremely hard-to-find but totally brilliant EP, “Where the Shadows Find Their Homes.” Check out her new music now on YouTube:

Patrick Moraz — “Time for a Change”

Patrick Moraz relates a nice little piece of Yes history:

“We had decided to do some writing — starting in 1975, when I was also helping Chris and Steve to record some music,” Patrick Moraz tells us. “We had started to compose and to co-compose and to gather material for what was going to be the album Going for the One, and I was very much involved in the composing of ‘Awaken’ at the time. I even recorded one or two tracks in the very, very beginning — in the early stages of sessions in 1976. I recorded some basic tracks for what was going to become ‘Awaken,’ and other tracks for Going for the One. Unfortunately, those were taken out, to allow Rick to come back to the band.”

Moraz ultimately repurposed the work he had done on “Awaken” into a solo song called “Time for a Change,” released in 1977. “When I had to exit Yes at the end of ’76, I started a new album of mine — and I decided call the album Out in the Sun,” Moraz adds. “Maybe I should have called it Time for a Change! It’s a long track; it’s the last track. There were two or three movements that were part of ‘Time for a Change.’ The very beginning of it, the first minute and half or so, reflect what I had actually co-composed for the song ‘Awaken’ itself. It’s a very beautiful kind of piece, which I used as an introduction. What ended up on the record, which is being played by Rick, is completely different than what I would have written.

You can download the entire track “Time for a Change” (9:10) for only $0.99 from iTunes.