A Progtastic Halloween

Goblin-Suspiria

A happy Halloween to all!  Considering this is the time to celebrate thrills and chills, I decided to compose a list of some of the creepiest prog rock songs and albums ever created.  As an avid fan of the horror genre, I have always enjoyed reading the novels of Stephen King and watching the movies of John Carpenter, but I had never thought about what could be classified as “horror prog.”  Here’s my list (albums first, in no particular order):

Premiata Forneria Marconi- Dracula Opera Rock (Italy’s greatest prog band released this creepy gem back in 2005)

Alan Parsons Project- Tales of Mystery and Imagination (Any album based upon the works of Edgar Allan Poe deserves a spot on this list)

Pink Floyd- The Wall (Think this isn’t scary? Check out the movie)

Aphrodite’s Child- 666 (It’s a concept album based upon the Book of Revelation; listen to The Four Horsemen and you’ll get the idea)

Mike Oldfield- Tubular Bells (It was used as the theme for The Exorcist. Enough said)

Goblin- Suspiria (The scariest prog album of all time. Sighs may be the creepiest song ever composed: just listen to it with headphones on before you go to bed)

Now the songs (in no particular order):

Jethro Tull- Sweet Dream (The music video features Ian Anderson dressed as a vampire.  If that’s not scary, then I don’t know what is)

Blue Oyster Cult- Don’t Fear the Reaper (A Halloween staple, but the song could use more cowbell)

Peter Gabriel- Intruder (Check out the Youtube video someone made to this song featuring Jason Voorhees of Friday the 13th fame)

Van der Graaf Generator- Darkness (An eerie song by an eerie band; whispered vocals add to the overall creepiness)

Atomic Rooster- Death Walks Behind You (A dark opening to an album featuring a crazed Nebuchadnezzar on the cover)

King Crimson- The Devil’s Triangle (Not only should the band’s name inspire some feeling of fear, but this song reminds me of a march into a deadly battle)

Talking Heads- Psycho Killer (This may not be prog, but Adrian Belew did play with them for a time; David Byrne sounds as paranoid as ever on this piece)

John Carpenter- Halloween Theme (Most recognizable horror theme of all time? Check. 5/4 time signature? Check.  How could I leave this off the list?)

Well there’s my list.  It is by no means exhaustive.  If you feel I am missing some songs, feel free to yell at me in the comment section.  I only had so much time to compile all of these songs; most of them just popped into my head yesterday.  If you haven’t listened to all of them, then today is the perfect day to spend some time with this list.  Have a terrifying (but fun) Halloween! (And to our Protestant friends, a happy Reformation Day!)

Count Floyd reviews the new Leah

Happy Halloween, Progarchists.

Stay tuned, because later today Count Floyd will be here to review the new Leah album: Otherworld.

You can look forward to a very scaaaaaaaaary review.

In the meantime, if it’s not too scaaaaaaaary for you to listen to, here is Leah meeting the King of the Underworld.

Ow-ow-ow-ow-owooooooooooooooooooooooo!

UPDATE: You can now find Count Floyd’s review here.

Totally Unprofessional Video #3: Arjen Anthony Lucassen

Yesterday, Arjen released a new Ayreon album, The Theory of Everything.  I’ve not received my physical copy yet, but I was able to download the mp3s from amazon.

Stunning, stunning, stunning.

Here’s my quick and dirty video assessment.  See above inserted video.

Ave, Arjen!

TheoryOfEverything

Dodson and Fogg…new album out soon

The Call

Chris Wade aka Dodson & Fogg is a prolific folk/psych-folk songwriter known to us lot on Progarchy. His second (or is it third?!) album of the year titled ‘ The Call’ is out soon and is available for pre-order here:

http://wisdomtwinsbooks.weebly.com/dodson-and-fogg-cds.html

and one of the tracks is now available on Youtube here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NBOVgppC14

Chris reckons this is his best yet and includes a number of new contributors including Chloe Herrington from Knifeworld on sax.

Chris is a bit of a polymath, being a writer as well. He’s penned a number of short surreal comedies and band biographies. This year alone he has published books on The Incredible String Band and, more recently, Black Sabbath, which I happen to have lying next to me at the moment !

Everything is available on Chris’s website here:

http://wisdomtwinsbooks.weebly.com/

so check it out and support a talented artist.

Video: Andy Tillison Downloads

Available at thetangent.org.

Scaling The Heights Of Heavy Prog – Persona Grata’s “Reaching Places High Above”

Reaching Places High Above

It’s probably a blessing and a curse that I tend to compartmentalize progressive rock into sub-genres in order to sort out what I’m hearing.  It’s likely a blessing in terms of having “signposts” of historical reference when trying to determine where a band’s music fits within the prog category, but perhaps a curse that I feel the need to shoehorn the band and music into a sub-genre in the first place, for we all know that progressive music rarely fits neatly into one “slot.”

No matter the reasoning, let’s just say that the Slovak proggers Persona Grata surprised the heck out of me with their new release, “Reaching Places High Above,” which for this prog fan fits nicely into the sub-genre where Dream Theater camps out – one that I’ll call “heavy prog” – and made this album an absolute pleasure to listen to.

“Reaching Places High Above” is at times aggressive, intricate, mellow, adventurous, and dynamic, but always progressive in scope, and a delight to listen to. Sound a bit like Dream Theater there?

It should. Listeners will be treated to a group that, like DT, fires on all cylinders with tight songwriting and arrangements, along with the technical prowess that easily puts them in a league with top-tier prog bands.  It’s worth mentioning in advance that the album is produced and mixed wonderfully, which can’t always be said for up-and-coming groups. It’s a big plus.

“Ace” preps us for the places we’ll go with some airline samples and radio dial tuning, eventually morphing into the track’s intro.  Those who may not be a fan of the two vocal wails at the beginning, fear not – it’s not indicative of what’s exclusively in store from the vocals department; singer/guitarist Martin Stavrovsky has plenty of range and, unlike some capable of wailing in prog, he doesn’t loiter in the high register all that much. The band moves from section to section in rapid pace with plenty of playing that’ll impress anyone who fancies quite a bit of playing in their prog.  However, they steer clear of what sometimes turns people off about virtuosic prog – shredding for shredding’s sake. The band does a fine job of keeping the song in check thematically and the song seems over before it starts.

“Edge Of Insanity” brings things down a notch with an intro electric guitar and flute (man, the flute sure is back in prog, innit?), moving to a first verse that features a lovely male/female harmony verse. The band then crescendoes with layers of aggressiveness for the next set of verses before heading back to the harmony vocals of the first verse. However, dust never settles on Persona Grata, for the prog returns almost as quickly, building to a heavy section of soloing.  Halfway though the track, the band pulls back to a section of acoustic guitar, flute and synth that brings us back to the feel of a couple of the early verses. They build back up to full-tilt, heavy prog, but seeing the bigger picture of arrangement, they bring it back down to reprise the intro.  Fab track.

The band then takes us on a three-instrumental, cross continental-themed musical journey starting with the brief “Istanbul,” which calls to mind elements of DT’s “Home” with sitar/guitar playing over a Tool-esque drum pattern. We’re then taken aboard the “Orient Express,” full of twists and turns in the vein of “The Dance Of Eternity” at nearly 10 minutes in length, then the band brings things to a close with the concluding “Venice” piece, done on harpsichord.

The album’s epic ender, “I Am You,” has an ambient start, then sees the band floating over an intricate, 5/4 piano part, then moving to a heavy yet cinematic feel that’s all ear candy.  Again, the band has a great ear for arrangements, never bleeding a riff to death and flowing from one section to another naturally. The song’s halfway point sees the band put the brakes on the heaviness a la Frost*, giving way to plucked strings that build into a full instrumental section. The harpsichord from “Venice” is back for part of the section and after one more “drop out” to a quiet section, the band cranks up to a fever pitch, followed by the obligatory anthemic finish, fading out to the ambient keyboards we heard at the beginning.

It seems like every year brings a surprise for me amidst the mass of prog releases; last year it was Big Big Train – truly a once-every-decade find for me – and this year has brought Persona Grata to the forefront of my new music listening.  Those bands certainly occupy two different sub-genres of prog, but neither lack in creativity. With “Reaching Places High Above,” Persona Grata have put themselves near the summit of the the heavy prog-rock peak.

More information: http://personagrataofficial.tumblr.com

Ayreon’s “The Theory of Everything” is now available

TheoryOfEverything

 

Ayreon fans can rejoice: even though the official release date for the compact disc of The Theory of Everything is November 2, the digital version is available today (October 29). You can purchase it at iTunes, but the best deal is at Amazon. For $16.99, you can order the 2-disc album and get all 42 tracks in mp3 format to listen to nowIf you prefer to go digital only, the price is a mere $6.99!

Lou Reed

I’m probably not alone on Progarchy in feeling the loss of Lou Reed.  His death reminds me that there was a time when the wider world considered rock’n’roll the domain of the artless, or that its limits were Dylan’s increasingly obscure folk-based lyrical flights over standard electric blues workouts.  Lou Reed changed this, and along with others like Jim Morrison, Iggy Pop, and Arthur Lee virtually created the idea of rock music as a postmodern art form, a concept so outrageous it was called punk.  His band, the Velvet Underground, harnessed both an essential primitivism and a cultivated, even academic, new music approach, backboning lyrics of doper despair, sun-drenched love odes with dark clouds hanging ‘round, and downtown cool cruelty. His solo work, hit and miss as it is, never smacks of giving up.  He was an uncomfortable icon, combative with fans and critics, yet his humanity had a profound impact on his words, his music, and the countless musicians who followed him.  He was inspired, and an inspiration.

If his wasn’t an art, I don’t know what is.

Let the train take the strain

As a Brit it is a tad odd, I suppose, that the genre of progressive rock music that really floats my boat is American third wave symphonic prog. In fact Unfolded Like Staircase by Discipline and As the World, Mei and echolyn (the ‘Window’) album are in my all-time Top 20. Along with The Darkened Room and Crush of Night by Izz.
The live version of Mei from Stars and Gardens is my current travelling companion, hence the train reference in the title. It’s a small small train, before Brad gets all giddy.
All 30 minutes plus of this phenomenal composition is a live juggernaut. The ‘Mei’ album is I think an absolutely vital cornerstone of any self-respecting prog fan’s collection. The fact that the live version segues into Shades, one of my all-time favourite tracks makes this live album one of my very best iTunes purchases.
Influenced by Yezda Urfa (see elsewhere on the site for an excellent retrospective), Kansas and Gentle Giant echolyn have I think managed something all too rare in modern prog: the ability to sound totally unique. Echolyn sound like, well, echolyn (it is meant to be a lowercase ‘e’). I could go on forever about Chris Buzby’s beautifully organic analogue synth and organ sounds; Brett Kull’s fantastically fluid guitar and gentle vocals; Ray Weston’s anguished vocals and lyricism; Tom Hyatt’s Jaco-esque bass playing and Paul Ramsay’s effortless drumming. But it’s only a relatively short train journey.

Head on over to http://www.echolyn.com and you will discover a ton of free downloads of songs from throughout their career. Yes, free downloads of full songs including rare live tracks.
For the echolyn virgin I would recommend Stars and Gardens, available on iTunes (there is a dvd of the concert too which is fabulous if you can get hold of it). Studio-wise I’d recommend As the World, recorded for major Label Sony 20 years ago or so and recently reissued in a lovingly remastered and repackaged form by the band. Then perhaps try the latest, critically acclaimed eponymous album. It topped many a critic’s ‘best of list’ in 2012 and rightly so. I reviewed it elsewhere and could not find fault with it.
So, the evening commute is over and this piece, written in real time whilst listening to one of my very favourite bands of all time has been a very enjoyable and therapeutic experience. I hope you enjoy as much discovering this wonderful band’s back catalogue.

The Joys of Mobile Computing

Tthis is a test of sorts, insofar as I have uploaded (I hope) the progarchy site admin pages onto my phone. It appears that I now have the ability to update progarchy whilst out and about and on the move. Which is splendid, especially as my old laptop has expired.
If you are reading this it means my experiment in mobile computing has been a success. And my next review, of the splendid 1996 album Human Interest Story by 3RDegree will appear via this method. The album has had a nice remastering job done and will be the band’s first release on 10T Records, as a download only on all the usual sites. An exclusive new track will be available on the 10T website. Expect a release some time in December, in a range of formats.
So, that’s all for now and I hope I have whetted your appetite for this highly anticipated release by one of my favourite American prog bands.

http://www.3rdegreeonline.com