The Neal Morse Band, The Great Adventure

I was skeptical when I heard about the Neal Morse Band’s new project.  A concept album that’s a sequel to their previous concept album?  Might Neal, Eric Gillette, Bill Hubauer, Randy George and the ever-prolific Mike Portnoy have finally taken this “epic of epic epicness” thing too far?

But then, I was skeptical about 2016’s The Similitude of a Dream, too.  A double album based on John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress sounded like a disaster in the making to me.  (Yes, this lifelong Lutheran still bore psychological scars from Morse’s Sola Scriptura.)  But, to my ears, Morse and crew rose to the challenge, unreeling Bunyan’s basic narrative with an enticing flow of steady invention, high style, and hearty commitment. And on the evidence of the Similitude of a Dream Live and Morsefest 2017 videos, the work got sharper, more dramatic and more engrossing the more the NMB played it.   At this point, along with the two Testimony sets and ?Similitude is firmly ensconced in my Top Ten of Morse-led albums.  (Which Transatlantic still rules.  But I digress.)

So I gave The Great Adventure a chance — and I’m glad I did.   It’s got enough continuity with Similitude to feel like a genuine sequel, but also enough musical and lyrical freshness to stand on its own merits.  On initial hearings, I think it’s a smashing success that will reward repeated listens.

Continue reading “The Neal Morse Band, The Great Adventure”

District 97 previews new track “Ghost Girl” @District97

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Get ready for a new release this year from prog metal masters District 97.

Here’s a foretaste! (Just click Track #9 below: “Ghost Girl”)

Andy Tillison – Now on Bandcamp!

From Andy Tillison, posting on the Tangent’s Facebook group page:

Hello – and as promised, here is a link to my very own Bandcamp page. I would like you to consider this a BETA, or work in progress. A few things I need to make clear. These are flac/wav/mp3 downloads only. I am doing this to make the music available – the re-release of these limited interest titles on any form of media would be impossible to finance. I’m sorry that the world ended up like that. However, the quality is exactly the same as the original CD releases. Nothing for your shelves… but plenty for your ears. …

Yes – the albums have to be paid for, I’m sorry but assure you that I plough as much as possible into the development of new work. Most of you realise this. More titles are in preparation from Po90, The Tangent and my own solo work.  Same time next week?

What’s in Tillison’s first wave of Bandcamp releases, you ask?  Follow the jump for the details!
Continue reading “Andy Tillison – Now on Bandcamp!”

Steve Hackett North American Tour Dates

I finished yesterday’s review of Steve Hackett’s new album At the Edge of Light like so:

Here’s hoping his 2019 tour (also featuring Spectral Mornings and Genesis’ Selling England by the Pound) crosses the pond to North America!

Not even 24 hours later, here are Hackett’s complete North American tour dates.  Note that the Quebec, Oakville, Montreal and Vancouver shows are already on sale.  Direct links for tickets are included with the official listing on Hackett’s Tour Dates page.

  • 12 September – Riviera Theatre, North Tonawanda, NY (Onsale 1 February)
  • 13 September – State Theatre, Ithaca, NY (Onsale 1 February)
  • 15 September – Grand Theatre de Quebec, Quebec, CANADA
  • 17-18 September – Oakville Centre for Performing Arts, Oakville, CANADA
  • 20 September – Danforth Music Hall, Toronto, CANADA (Onsale 1 February)
  • 21 September – Place des Arts Theatre Maisonneuve, Montreal, CANADA – * SOLD OUT *
  • 22 September – Place des Arts Theatre Maisonneuve, Montreal, CANADA
  • 24 September – Wilbur Theatre, Boston, MA (Onsale 1 February; Pre-sale code: BOSTON)
  • 25 September – Beacon Theatre, NYC, NY (Onsale 1 February)
  • 26 September – The Ridgefield Playhouse, Ridgefield, CT (Onsale 1 February)
  • 27-28 September – Keswick Theatre, Glenside, PA (Onsale 1 February)
  • 1 October – Carnegie Music Hall of Homestead, Munhall, PA (Onsale 1 February; pre-sale code: musichall)
  • 2 October – Masonic Auditorium, Cleveland, OH (Onsale 1 February)
  • 3 October – 20 Monroe Live, Grand Rapids, MI  US (Onsale 1 February)
  • 4 October – The Pabst Theatre, Milwaukee, WI, US (Onsale 1 February; pre-sale code: GENESIS)
  • 5 October – The Copernicus Center, Chicago, IL (Onsale 8 February)
  • 7 October – Pantages Theatre of Minneapolis, Minneapolis, MN (Onsale 1 February; Pre-sale code: WALRUS)
  • 10 October – Moore Theatre, Seattle, WA (Onsale 1 February; pre-sale code: WALRUS)
  • 11 October – Vogue Theatre, Vancouver, CANADA
  • 12 October – Revolution Hall, Portland, OR (Onsale 1 February)
  • 16 October – Fox Tucson Theatre, Tucson, AZ, US – Ticket link to follow
  • 17 October – The Van Buren, Phoenix, AZ (Onsale 8 February)
  • 18 October – Orpheum Theatre, Los Angeles, CA (Onsale 1 February)
  • 19 October – Crest Theatre, Sacramento, CA – Ticket link to follow
  • 20 October – Fox Theater, Oakland, CA (Onsale 1 February)

 

— Rick Krueger

Steve Hackett, At the Edge of Light

This is Steve Hackett at his best: inventive, exciting and utterly musical.  At the Edge of Light features his most consistent singing yet, typically dazzling guitar work, and bracing new compositions  — driven at high velocity through unexpected twists, turns and switchbacks to surprising, satisfying destinations.

Admittedly, the album kicks off in a familiar place with “Fallen Walls and Pedestals”: a spacious stomp a la Led Zeppelin’s “Kashmir” or Hackett’s “The Steppes”, with sinuous riffs anchoring keening melodies and high-velocity shredding.  Hackett’s guitar croons above Roger King’s plush keyboards and orchestrations over a hard-driving rhythm section — there’s even an exotic intro by Malik Mansurov on tar.  So far, so fine — but then Hackett, King and company head off-road and ditch the map!

From there, I defy anyone to predict what’s coming next.  “Beasts in Our Time’s” creepy orchestral decadence slams into desolate guitar/vocal laments for a world on the brink and scarifying solos by saxophonist Rob Townsend and Hackett, collapsing in an atonal heap after a brutal uptempo shuffle.  The gospel flavored “Underground Railroad” plows through rich, soulful singing by Durga and Lorelei McBroom, dobro-based grooves and steaming locomotive boogie, morphing from menace to triumph for the soaring playout.  Hackett and sitarist Sheema Mukherjee evoke the banks of India’s Ganges River on “Shadow and Flame”; “Hungry Years” is a killer pop song with tight harmonies, Byrds-flavored electric 12-string, and a guitar solo fade that paradoxically builds and builds … and builds …

It’s the way Hackett mixes, matches and juxtaposes his ingredients that makes this new material so thrilling.  “Those Golden Wings” is another prime example: Hackett tosses off flamenco flourishes in a minor key, joined by King’s cushion of strings.  Then a chugging major-key orchestral riff ramps up, as Nick d’Virgilio’s meaty beat propels the song forward under the lead vocal.  An instrumental verse with more electric 12-string hops to a different minor key, then stops dead for an ambient string/chorus interlude.  Then a dose of “spacious guitar stomp”, an electric 12-string reprise, a final vocal verse, another flamenco solo, more strings and chorus — and one last extended stomp, as both Hackett and d’Virgilio rock out for the fade.  Whew!

And though there’s plenty of darkness afoot in these songs, Hackett holds out for the dawn, as portrayed in the album’s devastating concluding triptych. “Descent” evokes Gustav Holst’s “Mars” with pulsing strings, punishing power chords and howling feedback; “Conflict” is lashed with dark orchestral riffs and plummeting guitar spirals over a doomy mechanical loop.  But then comes “Peace” — a gorgeous piano-based ballad, with Hackett stepping up for what may be his best vocal ever.  And even “Peace” defies any expectations of Genesis’ “Afterglow” redone, easing into a power groove with mass choir vocals, whipsawing through a solo verse over reharmonized changes, melding chordal guitar plunges with the chorale.  Then freezing on one note.  Then a final, ravishing Hackett solo over the orchestra, hanging in your memory even after the last string chord reluctantly resolves.

I’m in total agreement with fellow Progarchist Bryan Morey here: At the Edge of Light is audacious, gorgeous, humanistic in the best sense of the word, powerful, musically deep — in sum, outright brilliant.  After just a couple of listens, it’s easily my favorite album from Steve Hackett’s creative resurgence of the past decade; in fact, it may be my favorite Hackett album since 1979’s Spectral Mornings.  Here’s hoping his 2019 tour (also featuring Spectral Mornings and Genesis’ Selling England by the Pound) crosses the pond to North America!  In the meantime, listen for yourself:

 

— Rick Krueger

Video: Forever Still – Rew1nd @foreverstilldk

This sounds great, and it seems to be a bold, logical step forward from Forever Still’s previous releases.

It’s the video for the first single — “Rew1nd” — taken from FOREVER STILL’s new album, Breathe In Colours, out March 29, 2019 via Nuclear Blast.

Progarchy Interviews Casey McPherson @alpharev

Alpha Rev, Case.e Sessions Volume 1, 2019.

Tracks: Changeling (6:35), My Evolution (6:47), I’m A Refugee (4:02), White Matter Recess (4:24), Everyone’s Charade (5:19). You are the Peacemakers (4:33), Song of Aleppo (10:08), Silence (4:58), Write Your Name (4:22), Help Me (4:21), Silence For Humans (14:26)

Casey McPherson’s latest Alpha Rev album, Cas.e Sessions Volume 1, sees the extremely talented singer and multi-instrumentalist tackling music-making in a unique way. Modeled loosely off Neal Morse’s groundbreaking Inner Circle concept, the Cas.e Sessions membership program finds Casey making one song per month, creating a mini documentary about its creation, and presenting it to the members. After receiving positive feedback and seeing that the songs meshed together fairly well, he decided to release season 1 (2016) of the Cas.e Sessions music as a new Alpha Rev album.

Some might call this album pop, but I see it as prog in the vein of a band like Muse. There are a lot of similarities between this and Muse, such as the melodies and vocal lines, but this is a unique album that clearly comes from the heart. One might call this group of songs eclectic, but they work really well together, even though they were all written separately as a single project per month.

Continue reading “Progarchy Interviews Casey McPherson @alpharev”

Weezer – The Teal Album

weezerIn advance of their March 1 release of The Black Album comes this surprise Weezer release:

Weezer (The Teal Album)

01 Africa (Toto)
02 Everybody Wants to Rule the World (Tears for Fears)
03 Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This) (The Eurythmics)
04 Take On Me (a-ha)
05 Happy Together (The Turtles)
06 Paranoid (Black Sabbath)
07 Mr. Blue Sky (Electric Light Orchestra)
08 No Scrubs (TLC)
09 Billie Jean (Michael Jackson)
10 Stand By Me (Ben E. King)

Awesome! Weezer is clearly on a roll…

Raise Vibration on MLK Day

Here’s Lenny Kravitz for y’all. Ready to “Raise Vibration” on MLK Day?

Hold your hands up
Hold your head up
To the painted sky
Breathe in spirit
You can feel it
Let your ego die
Be a vessel
Never settle
For the status quo
Love will lead us
And complete us
This is what I know

We’ve got to raise vibration
Wake up and raise vibration
We’ve got to raise vibration
Wake up and raise vibration

Just like Jesus
As he teach us
Do it like the Lord
Just how Martin
Got it startin’
And without a sword
Just as Gandhi
Went to war
And never used a gun
We can join together
And through love we’ll get it done

Check out the drums at the end…

Super Blood Wolf Moon

Here’s a little Wolfmother to celebrate tonight’s Super Blood Wolf Moon