Brendan Foht at First Things: Neal Morse, Prog, and Christianity

First Things, a moderate to rightish Roman Catholic periodical, has a nice piece on Neal Morse, progressive rock, and Christianity this morning.  Foht is a great writer, and he certainly offers much to think about.

On February 9, I had the pleasure of finally seeing one of my favorite bands for the first time—a progressive rock supergroup called Transatlantic. Because all of my friends are too respectable for such things, I made my journey to the concert alone. For a progressive rock supergroup, however, Transatlantic has an excellent pedigree: The band was founded in 1999 as a side project of four progressive rock musicians from America and Europe (hence the name Transatlantic): Neal Morse, then of Spock’s Beard; Mike Portnoy, then the drummer for Dream Theater; Roine Stolt, the lead guitarist of The Flower Kings; and Pete Trewevas, the bassist from Marillion.

Neal Morse represents part of the growing movement of Christian progressive rock, having converted to Christianity (of a sort) in 2002. The overall terrible quality of Christian rock is well-known, and since progressive rock is already a somewhat disreputable genre, you might think Christian progressive rock is the worst of both worlds. But you also might be wrong.

To keep reading, go here: http://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2014/02/progressive-rock-redeemed

John Bassett–Stay Away from the Dark

jkbbKingbathmat’s masterful leader has released his first single from his forthcoming first solo album.  It’s a must listen.  Folkish acidish proggish.

Well, however we might label it–it’s simply excellent.

Enjoy.

Hollow Branches/The Hum

Received this, this afternoon.  Looks great.

a0613774752_2

Singles of “The Hum”

Hollow Branches recently released the new single “Weave Unweave” – the third single of a total of four, all of them a part of an EP called “The Hum” which are being released one track at a time.

Produced by Marius Sjøli and Robert Osgood, and with recording ongoing through the first winter months of 2013/2014 at Sjøli and Catl Prod Studios, “The Hum” is a stripped back collection of songs which the duo plan to release separately across the winter 2013/2014 – as each mix is completed.

“Weave Unweave” along with the singles “The Utopian” and “Silence so Clear” can be streamed on Bandcamp, Spotify and is also available through iTunes and Amazon.

http://hollowbranches.bandcamp.com

Line up for the EP:

Robert Osgood: Vocals, guitars, keyboards and sound design

Marius Sjøli: Guitars, backing vocals, keyboards and sound design

 

New upcoming full length album:

Hollow Branches also recently recorded drums for a upcoming full length album at IKA Studios. Contrasted with our previous full length, the acoustic driven, “Okanagana Waves”, the new album has a greater focus on electric guitar, vintage synth, and heavy, progressive arrangements.

Current line up for the full length:

Robert Osgood: Vocals, guitars, keyboards and sound design

Marius Sjøli: Guitars, backing vocals, keyboards and sound design

Mathew Kennedy: Bass guitar

Kenneth Mellum: Drums

 

Thanks for reading,

Marius Sjøli

Hollow Branches

My Ode to John Hughes and The Breakfast Club

John-Hughes-800-300x168

This post isn’t about music, but John Hughes (1950-2009) did much to introduce my generation to great English New Wave.  My ode to him at my other website, The Imaginative Conservative.

http://www.theimaginativeconservative.org/2014/02/genius-john-hughes.html

Long Live Rock: Boston Brightens the World with Life, Love, and Hope

In a nice coincidence, during the same time that Brad was writing and has posted his Progarchy Editorial on “The End of Rock,” I have been listening to and enjoying the new Boston CD released back in December, “Life, Love, & Hope.”

Boston has a great sound that can best be described with the adjective “soaring” — as in: soaring guitar riffs, soaring lead lines, soaring organ solos, and incredibly rich layers of soaring vocal harmonies. No wonder their signature album cover look has always been one that depicts guitars as spaceships.

I am happy to report that the new Boston album is a work of excellence. Tom Scholz has always been a perfectionist and he is very famous for his protracted battles with record companies. After he was pressured to use a non-basement studio to re-record the demo tracks for the original Boston album (1976), and after he was pressured to release the second Boston album without being fully happy with it (Don’t Look Back — 1978), Boston albums have ever since only come out at the rate of about one per decade: Third Stage (1986), Walk On (1994), Corporate America (2002), and now Life, Love, & Hope (2013).

Scholz prefers to be a loner in the studio, in order to best pursue excellence through perfectionism. There has always been something wonderfully “prog” about Scholz’s insanely detailed musical devotion. There are abundant examples of musical virtuosity on Boston records, but just take “Foreplay/Long Time” from Boston (1976) if you would dispute placing Boston in the prog pantheon. And Scholz can achieve stratospheric musical heights in just a two minute instrumental — for example, take either “Last Day of School” or “O Canada” from the new album — thus demonstrating how he can soar even higher than what the average prog band can attain in even ten minutes.

It was interesting to read Brad’s editorial and at the same time try to imagine an album like Boston (1976) being released today and achieving similar mass acclaim with sales figures of over 17 million. What a cultural loss that we cannot hear any tracks from the new Boston album being played across all radio stations everywhere! The youth of today are suffering a great deprivation.

For my part, I am thankful that I encountered Boston at the age I did. For me, Boston in effect was “starter prog,” as the excellence that they conveyed in “More Than a Feeling” opened me up to the transcendent possibilities available through music. “More Than a Feeling” was a true revelation, and my love of that song has never changed. It sounds as magical to me now as when I first heard it.

It’s a genuine thrill that Scholz is still devoted to his uncompromising art and that this new album has caught me off guard by being so darn good. Every track is wonderful and I will have to post further at Progarchy about it.

For now, in the spirit of Brad’s excellent editorial, I just wanted to share with you what Scholz writes in the liner notes. His note shows that the heart of rock and roll is still beating, and that the spirit of prog is what animates that beating heart. Now, you may perhaps know that spirit by one of its more well-known names — “The Spirit of Radio” — but for me, because of what I learned early on from Scholz, I have always known that that spirit is a spirit that is indeed “More Than a Feeling”:

When I started recording this album over ten years ago, who’d have thought I’d still be working on it in 2013? OK, don’t answer that. These are all songs from the heart, each of them taking many months of effort to write, arrange, perform and record, always up to the demands of BOSTON’s harshest critic, me. They have all been meticulously recorded to analogue tape on the same machines and equipment used for BOSTON’s hits for the past 35 years.

After the internet and digital file sharing knocked the foundation out from under the music business, it no longer became possible to record a full production analogue album like this one, unless you were willing to do it purely for the art. I found out that I was. But as the years wore on, struggling with obstinate pieces, over-stressed gear, and my own uncertainty, I sometimes wondered if these songs would ever see the light of day. Now, listening to the album, I feel like I have burst from a dark tunnel of seemingly endless solitary work and self-doubt into a bright new world. If any of these songs can brighten your day for a few minutes, it was worth it.

— Tom Scholz

Holy Smokes: Two of the Best of the Best Playing Around with Eugene’s Axe

Master of all things keyboard related, Andy Tillison, has just posted this on Facebook.  Tillison and Stevens.  What form of heaven be this?!?!?!

Pictured during a 26 minute workout based on “Careful with That Axe Eugene” – the recording of the Matt StevensAndy Tillison album has been taking place on an undisclosed planet this weekend. More about this as the improvisations that have taken place are knocked into shape over the next few weeks!!! We have had SERIOUS fun.–Andy Tillison, Facebook, February 16, 2014

Masters among masters: the Anglo-Saxon pantheon--gods of guitar and keyboards, respectively.
Masters among masters: the Anglo-Saxon pantheon–gods of guitar and keyboards, respectively.

Chris McGarel on the new Gazpacho at Onemetal

Demon-300x300Over at Onemetal, the always insightful Chris McGarel has an excellent review of the forthcoming Gazpacho album, DEMON (Kscope).  As far as I know, this is the very first review of the album to appear.

These Norwegian purveyors of chilled and eccentric progressive sounds have long been a well-kept secret. Their unique blend of electronic sounds, insistent Radiohead-inspired minimalist beats, dynamic riffing and European folk instrumentation is cherished by a hardcore (and burgeoning) few. Once heard it is difficult not to fall under its spell. Demon is their eighth album.

Nordic jazz has a long tradition of fusing folksong with a cinematic rendering of the vast wildness of the landscapes into which it was born. Gazpacho’s feet are firmly planted in the rock camp though their music too seems imbued with a cold pastoral majesty while facing outwards, taking influences from ethnic traditions with a global and timeless remit. Thematically they have found another story to tell worthy of their stylistic reach.

To read the rest of this (and you should!), go here: http://www.onemetal.com/2014/02/14/gazpacho-demon/

For a progarchy take on Gazpacho, go here (Birzer) and here (Heter).  Suffice it to state, we’re fans.

Happy Birthday, Billy Reeves!

Kscope-podcast-1000I can’t believe Billy Reeves has only been offering us the Kscope podcasts for four years.  Such great stuff–seems like Billy’s voice has been been with me always.

Happy Birthday, Billy!  And, thanks for all of the joy you’ve brought us.  Looking forward to many more years.

http://www.kscopemusic.com/Podcasts/

The Beauty of Genesis

David Clayton reminisces in an interesting piece — “Genesis — Can Popular Culture Create the Desire for God? I Say Yes!” — over at his Web site, The Way of Beauty:

When I was sixteen, I had no interest in music and if you’d asked me I would have said that I just wasn’t musical. Then I heard the album (do we still use that word nowadays?) by Genesis called Selling England by the Pound. This was my first experience of hearing a piece of music that just transported me through its beauty  (the instrumental section in the last half of the track called Cinema Show and then instrumental sections, again, on the track, the Firth of Fifth ). What would happen later with Schubert, Brahms, Mozart and Palestrina happened first with Genesis.

New York Times Runs Geddy’s Picture in Rand Paul Profile

rvkeeper's avatarrush vault

RANDSIDEBAR7-filmstrip In what some might see as an unfortunate editorial decision by the editors of the New York Times , a picture of Geddy circa 1976 was included in a profile that came out earlier this week of Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), a potential serious candidate for the Republican presidential nomination in 2016. The Times piece also quotes a school friend talking about Paul’s interest in Rush’s music in the 1970s and 1980s because of the libertarian themes Neil wrote about during that period. Of particular interest to Paul was “The Trees,” which contains lyrics that both libertarians and its critics have pointed to as having a libertarian theme. Neil has talked many times about the lyrics and says he dashed them off after watching a cartoon, probably a Dr. Seuss cartoon, and that they weren’t intended to be overtly political.

Paul’s interest in Rush is well known, which is certainly…

View original post 492 more words