This is a great talk by multiple Grammy and Oscar winner Joseph Henry “T Bone” Burnett about the threats posed by digital technology. You can read the talk in full text, but don’t miss the video version below, because after the talk ends at around 35 minutes, the Q&A section is excellent, and he has lots of great comments about music today (for example, listen in at the 45-minute mark, if you need convincing). Highly recommended.
Interview with Adam Green of HUMAN BRAIN

Human Brain is a project by composer and guitarist Adam Green who has been teasing his upcoming debut album with the release of “Spaces” single. In an interview for Progarchy, Adam talks about the project, and he sheds light on the album.
Hey Adam! Thanks for responding to this interview. How have you been lately?
Been great, thanks!
How might you introduce yourselves to new potential listeners?
I like to write for everyone with multiple musical tastes. If you like super hard-hitting, energetic and emotional music, you’ll love Human Brain!
What inspired the name of the project — Human Brain?
Brain dump basically. I have quite a bit of emotion and passion flowing through my brain on a daily basis that I wanted to release into my writing.

How did Human Brain initially form?
Human Brain essentially started about 3 years ago when I began getting more serious about my writing in general. I decided it was time to put an official name to it and yearned for the fulfillment of it being heard by others. I’ve been inspired by many of the great metal artists on YouTube and wanted to get my brand out there in a similar fashion.
You are about to release a debut album. What can you tell me about it? Where did the inspiration for it come from and how did you go about the whole process of writing and recording it?
10 songs spanning multiple genres including everything from alternative rock to metal. Inspiration for the album basically came from the answer above for what inspired the project as a whole.
What can be expected from the upcoming album? Would you say the released single for “Spaces” is an accurate sample?
Yes, Spaces is for sure though I will say every song has it’s own thing going on. Some are more mellow than others and many different guitars were used throughout.
What’s your songwriting process like?
My typical approach is to flesh out a track that incorporates all of the musical styles I love most (metal, rock, progressive) while taking the listener on a roller coaster of a ride with meaningful changes throughout. I wrote all of the parts in my head and laid them down in iPhone voice memos initially. From there, I tracked everything in Logic using my Kemper Profiler Power Rack, Apollo Twin and Toontrack.
What are your ultimate hopes for Human Brain?
For the music to be heard and resonate with people across the world on multiple levels just like it does for me.
Do you have any bigger plans for the future?
TV, Film, Label with some gigging sprinkled in.
The last words are yours.
I’m beyond excited to give everyone a glimpse inside my Human Brain!
Follow Human Brain on Facebook.
Video: Delain — “Nothing Left” (Live) @delainmusic
Check out this video of a fantastic live performance by Delain which is also found on their new album:
Charlotte Wessels of DELAIN on the new video: ‘2019 marks 10 years since we first released “Nothing Left” on April Rain. Nowadays it’s a rare treat to see the track performed at one of our live shows, but it hasn’t lost any of its power in the decade that has passed. Performing “Nothing Left” together with Marco Hietala was one of the highlights of the night in Tivoli, and in fact, the entire show felt like a highlight; it was one of my favourite shows of our career so far. You can relive the night through our new EP/Blu-Ray Hunter’s Moon. As it was the first time we did an entire tour with Marco as a guest, all songs featuring him, including Queen cover “Scandal” are included, and the video for “Nothing Left” is now available on Youtube. We hope you enjoy it!’
Napalm Records comments: ‘Without a doubt: Delain belong to the golden spear head of Symphonic Metal! After last year’s release of their very first live album the Netherlanders present another live masterpiece – including four brand new studio tracks! Hunter’s Moon consists of this fresh material, a live album and a live Blue-Ray disc. The catchy title track “Hunter’s Moon” and the larger than life orchestral “Masters of Destiny” offer a haunting preview of what Delain is working on for their next studio album, due 2019. The band’s guitarists step to the forefront in composing two tracks exclusive to this release in “This Silence Is Mine” (Timo Somers) and “Art Kills” (Merel Bechtold). The live portion of the release will take you on a cinematic journey to the Danse Macabre Tour in Utrecht’s Tivoli Vredenburg. The majority of the live album features the deep tones of Nightwish’s Marco Hietala and includes heart rendering hits like “Nothing Left,” “Your Body Is A Battleground,” and “Control The Storm”.’
Death metal, inspiring joy since 1987
“The dominant emotional response to this music is joy and empowerment,” said Prof Thompson. “And I think that to listen to this music and to transform it into an empowering, beautiful experience – that’s an amazing thing.”
Death metal music inspires joy not violence
Black Vulpine’s new album “Veil Nebula”
Our discovery of the week must give a tip of the hat to AMG, who first won our interest by describing Black Vulpine’s new album Veil Nebula this way: “every song here either rocks hard, dooms hard, or at least contains nuggets of stoner, doom, and/or prog brilliance.” Check it out…
Progarchy Podcast: Nick Beggs Interview

The Progarchy Podcast interviewed Nick Beggs today, and it was a fascinating time. Take a listen to our combination of an album review and a song-by-song discussion with the artist himself:
The podcast includes a detailed discussion, for over half an hour, track-by-track, of the new album from The Mute Gods, Atheists and Believers.
Tune in if you want to hear all the details. But here are some highlights to get you excited. Listen and learn:
- how the first track, “Atheists and Believers” is devoted to telling the true story about extraterrestrial visitors to our planet;
- how Alex Lifeson of Rush got involved with the second track, “One Day,” and what he contributed to it;
- how Nick’s political views on “Knucklehed” and “Iridium Heart” spare none of us, since all of us end up being knuckle-headed in the end;
- how Nick plans to keep touring until he drops dead, after one of his joyous concerts, as a happy old geezer;
- how “The House Where Love Once Lived” incorporates Nick’s own experiences of marriage and of being a father;
- how “I Think of You” is connected to Nick’s own mother, who died at the age of 38, when Nick was 17 years old
- how “Twisted World Godless Universe” involved a collaboration with a friend of Nick’s who is a Catholic nun in Finland and whose talks with her about spirituality were part of the process by which the song was generated

Exercises in Futility
When that punk coarseness is braided with some outside influences, black metal becomes something more. Whether it’s ‘In the Nightside Eclipse’, ‘Nemesis Divina’ or the stunning ‘De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas’ — it’s crassness with sophistication, that has elevates the genre to unusual heights. Exercises in Futility is not completely rooted in the 90s, but they channel that very sensibility, and same crudeness with atmospheric elegance.
Mgła mellows that black metal fury, almost like they applied some post-metal filters to a Burzum sound. With that constant strumming interleaved with adequate doses of tremolo picking and blast beats, the sound here becomes more streamlined. In short, there are no jarring temporal switches, but more tempting progressions. It’s not an all-out melodic assault like Dissection or Watain, but a more contoured, and structured aggression. But, quite like the black metal greats, Mgła is also moving the genre forward, beyond the confines of its Norwegian creators.
S. Bollmann [CC BY-SA 4.0], via Wikimedia Commons
PROG ROCK!
Progressive Rock…

RIP Mark Hollis
Talk Talk frontman Mark Hollis has passed away suddenly at age 64. Progarchy sends its sincerest condolences to his friends and family.
The BBC has an obituary for him here: https://www.bbc.com/news/amp/entertainment-arts-47373897
Interview with ENDWORLD HALOS

Finnish dark prog debutants Endworld Halos have launched their self-titled full-length album back in October, which in the trio’s own words is “a versatile and abitious slab of Finnish prog-infused rock.” Kimmo Utrianen spoke for Progarchy about the release.
How do you usually describe your music?
The most common description is dark prog (with a highly versatile range). An aural projection of the world as seen from these cold northern regions anno 2019.
What is your writing process like?
Me and Toni both come up with ideas we wish to incorporate to this project, passing them on to each other frequently (mostly digitally) and occasionally taking them to the practice space for a guitar jam-out session. With the guitar parts or just the melodies sorted, we start to figure out the vocal patterns and melodies, then the drums and the rest of the arrangement as a whole band. Quite a few of the songs are by either one of us, but some tunes are the fruit of our musical symbiosis.

Who or what is your inspiration, if you have any?
Older prog and non-generic music, people and musicians who dare to do whatever they please artistically, without caring about trends or standards. Other than that, my inner tracts, subconscious thoughts and conflicts I cannot deal with though any other means than music. Those are my primary source of inspiration. Through this assembly, my music connects to the outside world, hopefully leaving a mark from my point of view. The chance to (attempt to) do that is also very inspiring.
What is your favourite piece on “Endworld Halos” and why?
Adjusting to Light perhaps. It represents my scale of writing really well, as it ranges from weird and psychedelic passages to peace and harmony. One of the best tunes I’ve ever written, not to forget there’s some significant co-writing value to be considered, too. I also like Toni’s bizarre percussion on that song, including some household items, but let’s not go further into that topic here.
What makes “Endworld Halos” different?
In the nowadays array of progressive music, I feel we don’t play as much “safety” as quite a few bands. Even though we are not the most uniform or the easiest band to listen, or one with a smooth and conventional modern soundscape, we have managed to squeeze quite a bit of heart’s blood and even madness to our music. I’m very happy about that, even though I’m not referring to us being the only band that’s capable of doing that in 2019. The world needs a little grit, and we’ve got just that.
What should music lovers expect from “Endworld Halos”?
Songs and compositions that don’t bow to anyone in the field of modern prog music. Hard work by three Finns now manifested through digital medias such as Spotify and Bandcamp, not to forget the CD version we released, including a striking 12-page booklet with lyrics colorful photography by the band. Music that goes where ever it needs to go, and in this case, from the twilight of man to metropolitan chaos, to turbulent skies and barren wastes and deserts, eventually to a sundown and silence.
What kind of emotions would you like your audience to feel when they listen to your music?
I’d leave that for the listener to decide, but realizing how small we are is a good pick. Confusion, too, if all else fails.
Are there any plans to promote the album live?
No, not at this point. So far we work as a designated studio act, so no tour or show plans in the horizon.
Pick your three favourite albums that you would take on a desert island with you.
Genesis: Foxtrot, Mercyful Fate: Don’t Break the Oath, Pearl Jam: Ten.
“Endworld Halos” is out now and is available to order from Bandcamp.
