Nick’s Best of 2013 (Part 2)

Following hot on the heels of Part 1, here is the second part of my ‘Best of 2013’ list: positions 10 to 6 in my Top Ten.

 

10. Ulver – Messe I.X-VI.X

This liturgically-themed piece, recorded with the Tromsø Chamber Orchestra, was my introduction to Ulver. It had a powerful effect on me when first I heard it and I shall certainly be exploring their back-catalogue in future. Messe is solemn, haunting and mysterious – best heard on headphones late at night with the lights turned off.

 

9. Freedom to Glide – Rain

A richly atmospheric, superbly recorded album, evoking the grandeur of Pink Floyd in places and with liquid guitar solos that Dave Gilmour would be proud to call his own. Rain‘s story is set during World War I and is based on the experiences of band member Pete Riley’s grandfather. It’s a powerful and moving piece of work that assumes particular relevance with the imminent centenary of that awful conflict.

 

8. Henry Fool – Men Singing

A welcome return by Tim Bowness & colleagues, a mere twelve years after their debut release. The title is a neat little joke, given that this is an entirely instrumental album, Tim electing to merely play guitar rather than treat us to his wonderful and distinctive voice. What you get for your money here are four tracks of proggy, jazzy, semi-improvisational brilliance.

 

7. Bruce Soord with Jonas Renkse – Wisdom Of Crowds

This collaboration between The Pineapple Thief’s frontman and Katatonia’s vocalist is a revelation. The album consists of nine simple, elegant songs written by Soord with Renkse in mind, and the clean, minimalist production gives that spellbinding voice the space to work its magic. A modern masterpiece.

 

6. Haken – The Mountain

Haken are arguably progressive metal’s leading proponents in the UK. Each album has improved upon its predecessor and The Mountain is their best yet. These guys have the musical chops of Dream Theater but are considerably more adventurous. They also don’t take themselves too seriously, as this brilliant video for The Cockroach King shows.

 

See Part 3 for my five favourite albums of 2013…

Old-Timer’s Corner: 2013 Minus 40

Since being invited onboard as a progarchist, I’ve come more fully to terms with my clear status as an old-timer.  I’m especially aware of this at year-end, when everyone feels the impulse to produce a “best of the year” list of some kind.  When it comes to music, I’ve never been a good multi-tasker; when I listen to music, I’d rather not be doing anything else at the same time.  That puts some pretty serious constraint upon the time I can devote to listening, unlike a number of my prolific friends.  Then there’s the fact that “prog,” as much as I adore its early history and gladly greet its ongoing vivacity, is far from the only genre vying for my ear-time.  Even the wide-net application of “prog” applied by our great Proghalla leader, Oleg Birzer, doesn’t help me very much.

pink floyd Dark Side of the Moon_dark_side

Don’t miss Big Big Train’s English Electric discs, The Fierce and the Dead’s Spooky Action, and Spock’s Beard’s Brief Nocturnes and Dreamless Sleep.  Beyond that, if you need guidance on 2013, pay attention to the other distinguished progarchists.  I’ll be the one still mostly stuck in the 1970’s.

So, to continue the tradition that I inaugurated last year, I’ve done a thorough and grueling ten minutes’ worth of review via Wikipedia (they could use a donation if you use them and can spare anything, by the way). I give you this brief reminder of what was going on in the general vicinity of what was defined as “progressive” four decades ago.

1973:  London faces bombings by the IRA, along with the first death attributed to arsonist Peter Dinsdale.  In the United States, Richard Nixon begins his second term, the televised Watergate hearings begin, and U.S. involvement in Vietnam officially ends.  The Supreme Court decides on Roe vs. Wade, and the World Trade Center (New York) and Sears Tower (Chicago) both open.  George Foreman defeats Joe Frazier, and Billie Jean King defeats Bobby Riggs.

In music, The King Biscuit Flower Hour, The Midnight Special, and Don Krishner’s Rock Concert all begin airing.  The stature of the Beatles is manifest in Capitol’s release of the Red and Blue compilation albums.  Bruce Springsteen begins making his mark with not one, but two albums.  Paul Simon continues to enjoy solo success with There Goes Rhymin’ Simon.  Led Zeppelin breaks the Beatles’ previous record for concert attendance in Tampa, also recording/filming their Madison Square Garden shows, which will be released in 1976 as The Song Remains the Same.   Elvis Presley’s concert in Hawaii is the first worldwide entertainment telecast to be viewed by more people than had seen the moon landings.  Late in the year, vinyl shortages due to the oil crisis lead to delays of and limits on new album releases.  My selection of highlights here is subject to all sorts of personal bias, of course, but you can search online yourself for more complete lists of events, people, and other memories if you’d like.

Of greatest interest to our readers, presumably, will be the following list (not necessarily complete!) of prog and “prog-related” (by my arbitrary definition) albums released in 1973.  The first five are MY top five favorites from that year (as of today; such things may vary).  After that, they are listed in no particular order.

  1. Larks-Tongues-in-AspicKing Crimson, Larks’ Tongues in Aspic
  2. Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Brain Salad Surgery
  3. Todd Rundgren, A Wizard, A True Star
  4. Rick Wakeman, The Six Wives of Henry VIII
  5. Mike Oldfield, Tubular Bells
  • Pink Floyd, Dark Side of the Moon (one of the best-selling and most widely recognized albums in popular music, remaining on the charts from 1973 until 1988! )
  • Camel, Camel
  • Electric Light Orchestra, ELO 2 AND On the Third Day
  • Roxy Music, For Your Pleasure AND Stranded
  • Hawkwind, Space Ritual
  • Yes, Yessongs AND Tales from Topographic Oceans
  • Gong, Flying Teapot
  • Jethro Tull, A Passion Play
  • Genesis, Genesis Live AND Selling England by the Pound
  • Flash, Out of Our Hands
  • Can, Future Days
  • Gentle Giant, In a Glass House
  • Renaissance, Ashes are Burning
  • Robert Fripp & Brian Eno, (No Pussyfooting)
  • Mahavishnu Orchestra, Birds of Fire AND Between Nothingness and Eternity
  • Carlos Santana & John McLaughlin, Love Devotion Surrender

My recommendation for today’s nostalgia hit:  Listen again to Larks’ Tongues in Aspic, and keep reminding yourself what year it was released.

.

Days Are Gone (Best of 2013 — Part 13)

With this post, I now conclude my Top Thirteen Albums of 2013. Maybe, because earlier on I had invoked Black Sabbath, you were expecting me to nominate their album “13” for my #13 slot. (Melinda Selmys, after all, noted of their video for “God Is Dead?” that it is “the most Christian music video of the year.”) Well, if that is what you were expecting, then I have successfully faked you out. Because here is my twist ending…

In my final #13 slot, I give you, not heavy metal, but the pop perfection of:

Haim

I choose Haim’s pop masterpiece “Days Gone By” (which iTunes currently has on sale for a limited time) because I never want to become complacent as a citizen of the republic of Progarchy. Sure, we listen to prog because we are able to get, from prog, so much more than we usually get from the mainstream musical venues.

But sometimes the big record companies actually do get things right. (I mean, The Beatles weren’t so bad, were they?) So, it behooves Progarchy to recognize excellence wherever it may arise. (For me, that is the true spirit of prog. Devotion and dedication to excellence, in all forms. Which will, of course, take you in time towards all our favorite prog bands.)

Therefore, since this is the last day of the year, why not crank up “Days Are Gone” and send out the year on a happy note? There is nothing quite like genuine pop perfection, and anyone with a smile and a sweet tooth has got to love Haim.

2013 has been a great year for music! A big thank you to all my fellow Progarchists for sharing their musical experiences here, thereby expanding my own.

I’ll see you back here on New Year’s Day, when I will reveal the name of my fave EP from 2013 — since EPs do not count towards my Top Ten lists, which (in good prog fashion) I always dedicate to the recognition of the best contributions towards the keeping alive of The Art of the Album.

Time and Space (Best of 2013 — Part 12)

Continuing with the final three albums of my Top Thirteen of 2013, I now reveal that the #12 slot is reserved for:

Lobate Scarp

Their excellent “Time and Space” disc was actually released on December 12, 2012 (12-12-12) and although it is therefore technically ineligible for a Best of 2013 list, just as I found a loophole to get Chasing Dragons into the #11 slot for 2013, I have found a place at #12 for Lobate Scarp in my Top Thirteen of 2013.

In addition to my riffing on the band’s harmonious use of the number 12 by placing them at #12, my logic of inclusion is that I actually did not get this album until 2013, when somehow the band found a way to make the CD magically appear at home in a bundle of my snail mail. Captivated by the beautiful packaging and lyric booklet, I soon learned that what Carl concluded earlier on this year is absolutely true: this album is a first-rate achievement that deserves wider recognition.

The first track is the title track, “Time and Space.” While other bands will save their longest and most epic prog track for last (two examples from 2013’s best would be Dream Theater’s “Illumination Theory” and Sound of Contact’s “Mobius Slip”), Lobate Scarp instead kicks things off by putting their most epic track first! Wow. It’s a great way to establish their prog bona fides right from the get-go. Nicely done!

Next up is “Jacob’s Ladder,” the only track that is shorter than five minutes long. But it’s really catchy and gives us a chance to catch our breath after the epic opening.

The third track is the excellent “Beginning of Us,” which has an enchanting melody that hooks you in slowly. Then the excitement builds and soon you find yourself either singing or humming along. By the time we hit the second verse, things have gotten so funky, and the tasty synth is so perfect, we hardly expect the stratospheric guitar launch of the instrumental section that soon ensues. But off we go! Again, wow. This is a magnificent song that takes us on quite an interstellar journey in just under seven minutes.

The fourth track, “The Contradiction,” is also a supremely interesting musical journey that showcases the astonishing abilities of these fabulous musicians. These folks have supreme jazz sensibilities that really distinguish them as musicians and that mark their compositions with a peculiar brand of proggy individuality.

My favorite track on the album turns out to be the fifth track, “Save My Soul,” which starts out with an awesome heavy riff before pulling back and then slowly building up to yet more excitement. The track then goes on to have so many interesting changes and contrasts, including an epic horn freakout, that you want to stand up and cheer at the end of the thing. Amazing!

Track six, “Moment,” slows things down, but only for the first few minutes. Pretty soon Lobate Scarp finds their way into yet another one of their trademark grooves, and we get to go on another exhilarating ride with them. Zoom!

The concluding seventh track, “The Mirror,” is an ambitious musical extravaganza that even includes a gigantic choir singing in Latin. Whoa! Man, you have got to give this band kudos. They do not shy away from any sort of daring musical enterprise. Instead, propelled by their wonderful grooves, they boldly go… where no prog has gone before.

Do yourself a huge favor and buy a copy of this album. It is lovingly crafted by people who are obviously musicians’ musicians. Only rarely do ambitious projects like this succeed. But Lobate Scarp has made the jump to hyperspace and you are invited to come along for the ride to the higher musical dimensions of this upper-echelon labor of love.

Interview with Andy Tillison by James R Turner

Andy Tillison, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and driving force behind the Tangent, who had at the time I conducted this interview, released this two albums Le Sacre Du Travail (The ritual of work) and a companion piece L’Etagere Du Travail (the shelf of work), and had been hailed as the bands finest work to date. So I caught up with Andy to talk all things Tangent and Travail.

Excerpts from this interview were published on Albion Online, and are included here with their kind permission, whereas this is the full, unedited interview, remastered with bonus tracks if you like!

The new albums being well received Andy,

‘What I’ve read is encouraging, we’ve had mainly good reviews across the board, a couple just decided to break the mould, people do like to diss things from time to time. Some comments are lazy, that’s the problem online, everyone’s an expert, a couple of months ago a friend of mine accidentally put diesel in a petrol car, so he went online for advice, 50% of the people told him don’t turn your engine on, whilst the other 50% said turn it on, it’ll be fine, at which point the internet has lost its value, its gone because you get two opposite stories, its all matter of opinion rather than fact, and the editorial control online isn’t strong enough.

I’ve got no sales figures for the new album yet, as the record label we’re on (Inside Out) is no longer a cottage industry, its now part of Universal so we have to go through the accounts department, I do know that we’ve been shifting more from the house than we have for any previous release’.

Now Le Sacre de Travail, the album itself,

‘It’s a modernity thing, I’m an older guy, I love technology but every change brings something with it, Lord Reith of the BBC said TV wouldn’t take off, people said what an idiot, but he didn’t see people wanting to sit down in one place, and this changes the way we live, electronics, MP3, Spotify, means people are more inclined to listen to a track rather than an album.

Also people don’t tend to listen to the whole thing, I decided to do an album like that and let the music lead the technology, most people will want to enjoy it in one sitting, it’s a sit down album.

I have my ways of writing, which came through the years, I had concepts, a couple of things that had been around for a while, I wrote a lot of music in the 80’s which has never been published, although most is current, from the now.

I wanted to do the work thing, it would have been difficult to achieve had I not been back at work myself, I spent 10 years as a fully professional musician, and I recently changed to working in lecturing, which was meant to be one afternoon a week and has now become 4 days a week.

It put me back on the bus, back on the commute, back into a world I could comment on. If I’d not been on that bus it would have felt supercilious, elitist ‘What does Andy know about commuting, he doesn’t do it’ so I am doing it.

‘I write from experience, its very important, people I know write about things that they don’t know about, all he does is sit on his settee and yet he writes excellent music and lyrics. For me I’ve got to have lived it, if I’m spending time commenting on the futilities, the humdrum it would have presumptuous had I sat there at home.

When it comes to concepts like Roger Waters and the Wall, I don’t like it, its about the problems of being unbelievably rich, with that money you can do anything you want, so don’t complain about it, it left me cold and was far removed from the world that we live in, and I wanted to write about the world that we live in.

Sat on a bus, lots of songs out there aren’t for people on the bus, it was time for the people on the bus to have a song for them.

‘How did you find the time to complete the album whilst working full time?

‘I had to juggle time, use weekends and evenings, now its finished I’ve got to adjust to having this spare time, I’ve written some new tunes and rebuilt my motorcycle, and the timing of the release was critical as well, the album came out over Summer, so I could do interviews and promote it whilst I’m off college.

What about L’Etagere the companion piece?

‘It didn’t take shape til we’d experienced how the main album was sounding, essentially I had enough for a double album, (Le Sacre) needed to stand alone. The only reason there’s bonus tracks (on Le Sacre) is because it’s in my contract, I wish they weren’t there but that’s how it is.

The material (on L’Etagere) is the same stuff, part of the same writing sessions, it had to be separate because its not as finished, and it doesn’t include the same musicians, and it’s basically a set of high quality demos.

I’d rather release it as is than have it as the next album, we need to have a stream of income, to release an album to pay for the album we’ve made, the budget we work on is much smaller.

There may be some live shows planned for the next year for the album.

There’s lots of talented collaborators on this album, how did that come about?

‘I gave up the ghost of keeping a permanent band together because of the fact that as we were a band, we had to have meetings and the logistics of distance, I needed the freedom to get on and work. I got a phone call from Jakko (Jakszyk) offering to help out, and he said lets get Gavin (Harrison) in, as a session drummer, he’s a world famous drummer, with a high price tag, he’s not a permanent member of the Tangent, after Porcupine Tree and Level 42, I doubt he’d relish a gig at Rotherham.

We have to accept who we are, we haven’t done the Porcupine Tree thing, we’ve never attempted to become a commercial band, this is all about the music, if I were doing this for the money you wouldn’t have heard of me, there are people out there who do that, but not me.

I do love playing live, when you look at what Steven Wilsons done, that guys been on the road for 20 years, after two weeks I want to go home, the hotels, the breakdowns, not for me, he’s given his life to that but its not me, I appreciate his success.

So is there a definite work life balance for you?

‘I enjoy my work as a teacher, and having been a professional musician for 10 years is a big thing, living on the proceeds of your music, particularly in prog, but I reached the age of 53, I thought I’m suffering a lot for this, and I’d like to make it a bit easier, to have a few more things that I’d like.

My motorcycle is the only vehicle I own, I rent the house I live in, it’s a frugal existence,

So you were the man on the bus..

At 53 I decided I could do with more than just surviving, you can feel like that, when I’m at work, I know there’s more to my life than that, I know there are people for whom there is nothing else, where I’ve always got this aim, this reason.’

Listening to the album there’s more influences than just prog

‘I’m a huge prog fan, my embrace was a lot wider, certain acts like Yes/ELP/Genesis but didn’t go far enough out, from the lighter end of Renaissance to VDGG, Henry Cow, I like the whole lot. My preference lay at the heavier end like Yes Relayer or Tales from Topographic oceans, I went for those the most, but drew the line at Sky. From 4-12 my Mum played a lot of classical music, all the time, I worked my way through Stravinsky, Beethoven, Bach, then Glen Miller jazz etc the music that was around when I was 10, the Beatles etc wasn’t switching me on, I made my own stories up to the music, a lot of it to do with Thunderbirds, then I saw 2001 A Space Odyssey in 1968 and was bamboozled by it, I begged my parents to let me see it, they were baffled, but the music was amazing, Beethoven’s pastoral symphony, or the blue Danube waltz to me all about the Thunderbirds, then there’s this big spaceship to the blue Danube, after which point ‘She Loves You’ wasn’t having that effect.

I learnt about Legatti, amazing music, Stravinsky and then I heard Yes when I was 12, and thought ‘This is it’ this is someone making the music I want to hear.

Music and stories, it gets me onto one of my beefs, the concept that we view history in a funny way, when we think of movies, we think of blockbusters, black and white films, then silent movies, and before that no movies. Instead before they invented movies there were movies without pictures, Mussorgsky’s programmes of music, stories all there without a picture.

The movie industry began with pictureless movies and I still think I’ve had more pleasure out of pictureless movies, folk songs, the Beatles were folk songs, Stravinsky, Yes, all movies without pictures.’

And the album artwork ties in with these themes,

‘Anybody who grew up with prog had the vinyl experience, the experience of asserting your individuality, buying the album, reading the artwork, knowing the lyrics, taking the whole thing, I consider that important.

When we made our album Comm 2 years ago into a vinyl there were more people saying they’d buy it, than actually bought it. Inside Out were assuming that we were going to do a vinyl this time round, but I said no. Le Sacre was written for CD, I chose something bold, that looked good for its size.

If I had a 12” piece to work with I’d do more, so I do what I can with the 5”.

You make it work, and you do come up against some people who say vinyl sounded better, there’s a lot of nostalgia knocking around prog, which is difficult to overcome.

An element of the audience and artist have problems with moving prog out of the 1970’s, with people not happy to embrace the new.

Lots of people judge by records heard in the 1970’s.

There’s a young prog fan I know whose obsessed with it, he collects and knows all about it, he looks on Yes as the great gods of before and raves about the obscure, yet he see’s all of us, Magenta etc as reproduction furniture, manufactured and not the genuine thing, we get a lot of these people, the ones who’ve lived through it all and who don’t move on, they’re the ones who’ll buy all the old stuff but not ours.

The re-releases are killing it, how many times has Close to the Edge been remastered? And there’s another one out!

Another friend has every edition of Close to the Edge, every single remaster, it will all be on his shelf, and he’ll buy the new one, but he’ll not want to buy the new Magenta, he’ll just download it.

It’s a nostalgia trip, they’ll part with money for the old stuff but not buy the new, or fans who’d rather see a tribute band.

Roger Waters played a German town at the same time as the Australian Pink Floyd, and they got the larger crowd.

To my mind, if you’ve already bought the album and they remaster it you should be able to upgrade, but no-ones come up with that scheme.

A few years ago Genesis did a huge gig and made a DVD, they’d not played for over 10 years and we did some rough calculations that on the night they played, more money was made for them than has been made by all new prog bands combined since 1994.

I think we were being conservative in our estimates.

They hadn’t released any new music, in fact US promoters prefer to book you if you’ve not got a new album out. I saw Kula Shaker in the T&C in Leeds and the Filmore in San Francisco, in Leeds they played the whole new album, in the states they played no new stuff and just the hits, because in the states all the promoters want is you to play the old stuff.

When Genesis toured they sold at every gig a CD of that nights performance, and fans bought every CD from the tour.

I saw what they were doing and took the Tangent off the road for the year, no one would be coming to our gigs.

Most Genesis fans did at least 2 gigs, they’d spend £500 plus on just doing the gig, the DVD and the CD’s, they really milked the market for the year.

The continued rise of old bands has created a bit of a problem for the bands who re-opened the door and all the mags who came into being on the rebirth of prog.

These guys cast a big shadow over everything, I feel it quite hard. Sometimes I feel bitter about it really, I’ve been here for 10 years with the Tangent, 12 years with parallel or 90 degress, over 20 years in the industry, I’ve won an award for a lifelong contribution to prog, had great reviews, played Europe/Russia etc and in all that not one person from the 70’s crew has commented on my music. Its like I don’t exist.

My band split up with Luke(Machin) and Dan (Mash) formed Mashine, the guys are 24 years old and its really important new music that’s about to happen, and my first thought was I need to support this. None of them were introduced via the old guard, the only one most open to it is Steve Hackett whose used a few performers on his own work.

In 2005 The Tangent headlined Rosfest (a big American prog festival) that was the last time a 3rd gen band headlined, it was the best gig we ever did, and yet since then they’ve always pulled someone out of the 70’s, Nearfest had the New Trolls headlining, who weren’t even minor league in the 1970’s.

People get obsessed with its history, and the argument goes round. Progressive never did mean a manifesto, it changed, it did progress, and then we had punk back to the three and half minute songs, then evolution like Blondie, Television, Japan, change is the nature of all music.

You take your influences and make what you want, its not the musicians, it’s the music, music that develops, not verse chorus, verse.

Its music that does something, it moves from point A to point B. Like Radioheads 2+2=5 or Paranoid Android, true progressive music takes you from one point to another.

This is documented in things in the past and I was once asked who is the most important person in prog rock?

Its Neil Armstrong, up til that point the only music about Space was Telstar, landing on the moon in 1969 needed better music, King Crimson Court of the Crimson King, Bowie Space Oddity, Concorde, Woodstock, all this amazing stuff during the age of prog rock, the zeitgeist creates all art, it was such an amazing period that the music had to be special.

We’re living through another revolution now but the internets not as good as that.

Watching man land on the Moon, I’ll never see that again, jealous people who believe the moon landing was all a hoax, they just want to be the first man on the moon.

One of the other things that annoys me, and it’ll probably be written on my tombstone is that they made a film about Apollo XIII but no-one made one about Apollo XI, no-one thought it important enough to bother.’

And would you make a piece about the moon landings?

‘It may well happen….’

 

Thanks to Andy Tillison for his time. More information can be found at www.thetangent.org

Chasing Dragons (Best of 2013 — Part 11)

I discovered this band purely by chance. Instigated mainly by my nephew (but also by others), I was attempting a Web search on “Imagine Dragons,” that overrated and overhyped band. But, as I tried to recall the name of that band I was searching for, I accidentally typed in the wrong name. Instead, I typed in “Chasing Dragons,” which is — let’s face it — a much cooler name for a band. But as I realized my mistake, I was nevertheless pleasantly surprised. For I had just discovered a much better band that was playing much more interesting music. I had discovered Chasing Dragons, the under-estimated and under-appreciated hard rock band from Leeds.

Two string-meisters, Mitch and Ant, handle the mayhem on guitar and bass. At the other two ends of this quadrilateral, on vocals and drums, we find the incredible Tank and the mighty Kate. All four of these outstanding musicians demonstrate an exceptional degree of talent.

I am very impressed with the way that Chasing Dragons stands out from the crowd. In addition to being riveted by their uncommon energy and passion, I am also very impressed by the careful artistry and consummate craftsmanship that they put into every aspect of their songwriting.

This band is so tight and generates such dramatic musical excitement that I could not believe my luck when I stumbled across them in their current relative obscurity. Who knew that hidden away in Leeds is such great musical talent, about to take the world by storm! I am hoping that they develop their fan base further and thus gain the wider recognition that they deserve. (It will be fun to follow their career as their future records take shape.)

Therefore, by the powers vested in me as a citizen of the republic of Progarchy, I am creating a special 11th spot on my traditional end-of-year, “Top Ten” list… for Chasing Dragons, my #11 for this year. I am taking this extraordinary action because it is in 2013 that I discovered this band, an epochal event which I want to commemorate somehow.

Luckily, I have a loophole: Chasing Dragons released a first-class single in 2013. By combining it with the material from their 2012 EP, “Take Flight for a Firefight,” I argue that Chasing Dragons has, as of this year, released enough music that, in composite, forms what I consider to be a solid LP of very impressive material.

The following is the playlist — the “virtual LP” — that I have fashioned for myself. I have been listening to it repeatedly. I argue that this playlist showcases a “Virtual LP” that constitutes, from beginning to end, a first-rate achievement. In my own mind, I christen this “Virtual LP” with the name “Seeds of Tomorrow,” because that Chasing Dragons song is arguably what should be considered their signature track:

Chasing Dragons — “Seeds of Tomorrow” (Virtual LP created from EP & Single):
1. Into the Pit
2. Under the Earth
3. Spawn of the Succubus
4. Mirror’s Edge
5. Black Velvet
6. Seeds of Tomorrow
7. City of Steel
8. Hindsight’s a Bitch
9. Let Sleeping Lions Lay

“Unplugged” Bonus Tracks:
10. It’s Bravery, Honestly
11. Spawn of the Succubus (Live Acoustic)
12. Into the Pit (Live Acoustic)

The first nine tracks as above form a solid 40 minutes of excellent female-fronted metal music. The last three tracks are 12 minutes of acoustic bonus tracks that prove the band’s remarkable musical versatility, thus pointing towards a promising future. By the way, “Black Velvet” is a cover of the tune by 1990 Grammy winner Alannah Myles, and it is even better than the original. So, I say that, any way you look at it, Chasing Dragons have shown themselves capable of producing not just the cumulative output of an LP’s worth of material, but of astoundingly upper-echelon material.

I myself think of the LP-sized slice of nine tracks above as forming a showcase of “Past” (“Into the Pit,” “Under the Earth,” and “Spawn of the Succubus”), “Present” (“Mirror’s Edge,” “Black Velvet,” and “Seeds of Tomorrow”), and “Future” (“City of Steel,” “Hindsight’s a Bitch,” and “Let Sleeping Lions Lay”). What I mean is that the band shows their “Past” first by singing songs with themes that are genre-bound in lyrical inspiration; then they showcase in the “Present” the fact of their undeniable ability as a band to write truly superb original songs and the fact that they are so talented themselves that even their covers can transcend the original inspirations and showcase the band’s unique personality; and finally they give some exciting indications of the directions in which their “Future” work might head. In short, this is a very dynamic band moving quickly, rapidly developing before our very ears, hurtling from one excellent achievement to another. The Virtual LP captures that truth in a musical snapshot.

If I had to pick favorite tracks by Chasing Dragons they would probably be “Mirror’s Edge,” “Seeds of Tomorrow,” and “City of Steel,” because of Tank’s great lyrics in them. But really, all the band’s tracks are excellent. Sample them all, and please notice how there are nice bursts of creative genius from all four corners of this band. As just one example, take this great line from the chorus to their 2013 single, their ode to hindsight:

If regrets were made of bullets
then we’d all be dead inside

Keep your ear on this band. If you like female-fronted metal, then be sure to try out all the tracks. As I have said, I find they all work exceedingly well together as a solid unit in the playlist order that I have invented and listed above.

Make sure you always buy music from and support the promising artists in our midst like Chasing Dragons. Indeed, this young band arguably has within them the “Seeds of Tomorrow.” Therefore, let me end my review here with a quote from their own song of that name. This song could be considered their musical signature. Arguably, its lyrics, paired with the powerful music, sum up how we should best construe the meaning of the band’s formidable name, Chasing Dragons:

Chase the demons away
Show them where the trouble’s at
Take up arms and fight
Show them that you won’t hold back

Chase your demons away
Show them you’re not here to play games
Take your life in your hands
Tomorrow’s ours
So let’s take it back

Top Ten… or Top Thirteen?

For my personal Best of 2013 list, I have just posted (over the last few days) an alphabetical listing of my Top Ten:

Big Big Train: English Electric Part Two

Deep Purple: NOW What?!

Dream Theater: Dream Theater

Haken: The Mountain

Holy Grail: Ride the Void

Kingbathmat: Overcoming the Monster

Sound of Contact: Dimensionaut

Spock’s Beard: Brief Nocturnes and Dreamless Sleep

Steven Wilson: The Raven That Refused to Sing and other stories

The Winery Dogs: The Winery Dogs

But, as promised, I am now going to add three more to the list, as three bonus additions, and thus make this a Top Thirteen list.

Why? Well, because this is the year 2013, and also because Black Sabbath released 13 this year (which also happened to be one of Mike Portnoy‘s favorites).

So, stay tuned for #11 on my Top Thirteen of 2013…

Nick’s Best of 2013 (Part 1)

In this, the first part of my round-up of 2013’s best releases, I highlight eleven superb albums that all made it onto my shortlist and managed to remain there – no mean feat given the incredible quality of the new music that appeared this year. Each of these has made a huge impression on me and yet, amazingly, none of them feature in my Top Ten. (We’d best not dwell on the excellent releases from Days Between Stations, Lifesigns, Spock’s Beard and others that eventually got pushed off the bottom of this shortlist, but what can you do when progressive music is enjoying a fecundity not seen since the early 70s?)

I won’t even attempt to rank this selection, but will instead list the albums by artist, alphabetically. Think of them all as being in a notional 11th place in my Best of 2013 list!

A word on criteria: I have considered only studio albums and I have ignored remasters, remixes and rereleases (whole or partial) of pre-2013 material. (In one case, this has had a significant impact on my choices.)

Ready? Off we go…

amplifierAmplifier – Echo Street

The masters of the heavy groove take a step back from the sprawling madness of 2011’s splendid The Octopus. The result is more reflective and refined but no less compelling. Echo Street is subtle rather than subdued, rich in atmosphere (‘matmosphere’?) and dreamy soundscapes but still with enough big riffs to get the blood pumping. The highlight is probably Where The River Goes, an epic that starts in delicate fashion with 12-string acoustic guitar before building to a thunderous conclusion.

ee2Big Big Train – English Electric, Part 2

Part 1 was my Album of 2012, but don’t be fooled by the follow-up’s apparent lowly position this year, as the difference in quality really isn’t that huge. Like its predecessor, Part 2 is a paean to the landscapes, history and fading industrial heritage of England. There are excellent songs to be found here – Worked Out, The Permanent Way and Keeper Of Abbeys are probably the highlights for me – but the album doesn’t flow as smoothly as Part 1 (a minor defect that combined album English Electric: Full Power has since rectified though a reordering of tracks and the introduction of new material).

????????Glide – Assemblage One & Two

Who knew that Echo & The Bunnymen guitarist Will Sergeant was such a fan of 70s electronica pioneers like Kraftwerk and Tangerine Dream? Or that he could pay homage in such a respectful and skillful manner? Assemblage is wonderfully evocative of that classic era of electronic music without being derivative. Strongly recommended if you are a fan of TD or other artists of that ilk. Its hypnotic rhythms will transport you to other realms…

guapoGuapo – History Of The Visitation

‘Guapo’ means ‘handsome’ in Spanish, but I’m not sure that’s an entirely appropriate term for the music that Dave Smith, Kavus Torabi, James Sedwards & Emmett Elvin have produced here. Visitation, Guapo’s first recorded output for five years, is a satisfyingly dense and complex slab of instrumental art rock, full of dark tones and edgy riffs. Intense 26-minute opener The Pilman Radiant dominates, providing all the shifting moods and time signatures that a prog fan craves, while Complex #7 provides a richly atmospheric interlude in which to catch the breath before the mayhem resumes with up-tempo closing number Tremors From The Future. Highly recommended.

lunarossaLuna Rossa – Sleeping Pills & Lullabies

The glorious voice of Anne-Marie Helder continues to delight, this time in partnership with fellow Panic Room member Jonathan Edwards. Panic Room’s Skin was one of last year’s surprise hits for me, a powerful demonstration of the growing sophistication and maturity of their sound. Much of that improvement carries over to the efforts of this acoustic double-act (unsurprisingly, given they are the principal songwriters for the band). Sleeping Pills is a delicate and beautiful album, beguiling in its simplicity.

midlakeMidlake – Antiphon

Imagine what it must feel like to be stalled in the midst of a lengthy and difficult recording process for your fourth album, when suddenly you lose your vocalist and principal songwriter! Midlake certainly demonstrated the ‘courage of others’ in scrapping two years of work and starting again from scratch. Given these circumstances, new album Antiphon, written and recorded in only six months, is a triumph. Stand-out tracks from these champions of American prog folk are probably The Old And The Young and Ages, although the whole piece is immensely enjoyable, albeit without quite the same degree of melancholic elegance as its predecessor.

sandSand – Sand

A magnificent solo effort from North Atlantic Oscillation’s Sam Healy. Sam has suggested that Sand serves as a ‘musical palette cleanser’ before work begins on new NAO material, and he has spoken of this album’s different feel – but in truth, Sand could easily be mistaken for a new NAO album. The characteristic NAO ingredients are all here – drum machines, samples, layered electronics and dreamy vocal harmonies – but Sand manages to eclipse 2012’s Fog Electric, feeling somewhat gentler and more refined. Stand-out tracks for me are Clay, Destroyer and Astray.

shinebackShineback – Rise Up Forgotten, Return Destroyed

A bold statement from Tinyfish frontman Simon Godfrey, ably assisted by lyricist Rob Ramsay. With its strong pop, dance music and electronica influences it certainly won’t be to every proghead’s taste, but adventurousness such as this is surely necessary to evolve and reinvigorate the genre. Highlights are probably Passengers, the languid Faultlines – the “A paper doll in Scissorland” lyric is particularly memorable – and the ten-minute title track. The vocals are at times a little too thin and tend to get overwhelmed by the more forceful passages of music, else this might have made my Top Ten.

solsticeSolstice – Prophecy

I’ve always had a soft spot for Solstice. I saw them live many times during the mid 80s and the feel-good hippy vibe of their performances never failed to put a smile on the face. It was gratifying to see them return in 2010 with Spirit and even more gratifying to see them take further strides forward this year with Prophecy. The focal point, as ever, is the superb guitar playing of Andy Glass, but everyone plays their part and Jenny Newman’s violin playing contributes greatly to the overall feel of the album. Forget the new age lyrics if that kind of thing bothers you and just revel in the gloriously uplifting sounds that this band can produce. A most welcome bonus is a trio of Steven Wilson remixes of tracks from the band’s 1984 debut Silent Dance that greatly improve on the originals.

Sound-of-Contact-Dimensionaut-Cover-300x300Sound Of Contact – Dimensionaut

The debut release from the new project of Simon Collins and Dave Kerzner is another of 2013’s unexpected pleasures. The underlying concept doesn’t really fire the imagination, to be honest, but the music most certainly does! Ironically, the album’s prog epic – the 19-minute Möbius Slip – is probably the weakest track, but that’s mainly because the rest of it is so melodic and catchy as hell. It is difficult to pick out highlights, but the five-track sequence from Pale Blue Dot through to Beyond Illumination is near-perfect. Simon Collins is excellent on vocals, with just the slightest hint of father Phil prompting a shiver of recognition here and there.

Spooky-Action-CD-Cover-FinishedOverThe Fierce & The Dead – Spooky Action

Matt Stevens & Co move from strength to strength with this, their second album. As before, it’s an unfailingly energetic and heady mix of King Crimson, math rock, punk and other influences – difficult to categorise adequately, but that is surely part of the attraction. This is the sound of a band charting new ground and growing in confidence as they do so. I can’t wait to hear what they come up with next.

Mike Portnoy’s Top Ten

From MikePortnoy.com:

MP’s Top 10 Albums of 2013
(in no particular order):

1. Steven Wilson – The Raven That Refused To Sing
2. Haken – The Mountain
3. Queens Of The Stone Age – …Like Clockwork
4. Biffy Clyro – Opposites
5. Black Sabbath – 13
6. The Ocean – Pelagial
7. Megadeth – Super Collider
8. Fates Warning – Darkness In A Different Light
9. Spock’s Beard – Brief Nocturnes And Dreamless Sleep
10. Stryper – No More Hell To Pay

Mike is right about the Stryper album being awesome metal!

And, in case you missed it, Stryper also released a nicely done retrospective album of re-recordings in  2013.

The Winery Dogs (Best of 2013 — Part 10)

Coming in the #10 slot (in alphabetical order) on my Best of 2013 list is this supergroup’s eponymous bolt of lightning:

The Winery Dogs

Wow. This album blew me away.

One of my all-time favorite prog drummers, Mike Portnoy, teamed up with Richie Kotzen and Billy Sheehan this year, and they demonstrate to us all the unbeatable power of the power trio when it is done right.

The thrill of listening to these catchy songs, and to the virtuoso musical chops on display in them, evoked a lot of happy musical memories of musical “first encounters” for me.

First, there is the rush of listening to Rush. Like I say, there is nothing quite as exciting as the hard rock power of the power trio when it is done right. The Winery Dogs evoke for me the musical joy I experienced when first listening to Rush in high school. Of course, the greatness of Rush is still there to be savored with every listen. But there is nothing quite like the first ten times that you listen to a truly great album. With this release from The Winery Dogs, we get to experience that kind of magic again, as for the first time.

Second, there is the sonic adrenaline that I love to tap into by listening to Chris Cornell and Audioslave. Therefore I am dedicating my Winery Dogs nomination here for the Best of 2013 to Carl, my fellow Soundgarden aficionado in the republic of Progarchy, in case he has not heard it yet. It’s remarkably satisfying, for those of us who can’t get enough of such upper-echelon vocal stylings, how well Richie Kotzen can recreate the thrill of listening to Chris Cornell.

Third, there is the undefinable excitement that skilled musicianship can bring to enhance and elevate any genre’s tropes. Suddenly, as you round what seems to be a familiar musical corner, you are blindsided and pleasantly surprised by an unexpected display of virtuosity that showers you with musical grace. When Billy Sheehan works his otherworldly magic here on bass guitar, or when Richie Kotzen transports us into ordinarily inaccessible dimensions of guitarcraft, or when Mike Portnoy muscles his way out of the speakers and right into the room next to you, I am reminded of those magical younger days when my friends and I first began listening to all those great, lesser-known albums by “musicians’ musicians.” Those discs opened up musical pathways that most of our schoolmates were missing out on. For some reason, when listening to The Winery Dogs, memories of listening to The Steve Morse Band come to mind for me. But each of you will find that your own personal memories of your first listens to “the greats” will be evoked by this album’s dazzling display of virtuosity.

Best of all, this album is a perfect cure for the dragon sickness of any nascent prog tendency to become a tribal, self-enclosed musical world. It makes the joy of music available to anyone with the ears to listen.

This disc is a perfect illustration of how musical men with prog chops can quite simply put their musical skills in the noble service of simply rocking out. Anyone with a heart can relate to this cause. I invite you to happily endorse it with the simplest of gestures, like a fist pump or an air guitar solo.

Rock on, gentlemen.