The title track is beautiful. Here’s a nice video complement for it, as we approach the highly anticipated release of the entire album at the beginning of February. You can also read the Progarchy preview review to whet your appetite.
Collective memory decay

About that paper in Nature, “The universal decay of collective memory and attention,” which “concludes that people and things are kept alive through ‘oral communication’ from about five to 30 years,” Kevin Berger asks Cesar Hidalgo:
In your mind, what is a classic example of collective memory decay?
I thought everybody knew “Imagine” by John Lennon. I’m almost 40 and my student was probably 20. But I realized “Imagine” is not as popular in her generation as it was in mine, and it was probably less popular in my generation than in the generation before. People have a finite capacity to remember things. There’s great competition for the content out there, and the number of people who know or remember something decays over time. There’s another example, of Elvis Presley memorabilia. People had bought Elvis memorabilia for years and it was collecting huge prices. Then all of a sudden the prices started to collapse. What happened is the people who collected Elvis memorabilia started to die. Their families were stuck with all of this Elvis stuff and trying to sell it. But all of the people who were buyers were also dying.
Dream Theater Release Another Single Off Upcoming Album
Dream Theater released their latest track, “Fall Into The Light,” off their upcoming album, Distance Over Time. This song might be one of the most well-mixed songs from Dream Theater since the Awake album. The bass is very present in this mix, which is more than can be said of every other DT album. The drums sound good too. The musical crunch in the beginning of the song is reminiscent of Train of Thought, although the vocals don’t have that growl to them. Labrie’s singing here is more like the last few albums. It is a great track. The new album should be a good one.
Best Instrumentals of 2018
Sometimes you just don’t want vocals. When I’m trying to work, for instance, I enjoy the soothing presence of music in the background but I really don’t need the additional distractions of singers or lyrics.
With that in mind, here, in no particular order, is my pick of ten great instrumental or mostly-instrumental albums I encountered last year. What have I missed? Let me know in the comments…
Adam Holzman – Truth Decay
Reflects his jazz background as well as his involvement with Steven Wilson’s band (several of whom feature amongst the guest musicians). Nine of its eleven tracks are instrumentals. Sophisticated and diverse, with some wonderful electric piano and Moog work from Adam.
Matt Baber – Suite For Piano and Electronics
Elegant, minimalist stuff from Sanguine Hum’s keyboard wizard. The title say it all, really.
Jo Quail – Exsolve
Cello, effects and loop pedal combine to thrilling effect in this intense and haunting album. For the full impact, listen in the dark with headphones 🙂
The Fierce And The Dead – The Euphoric
Dynamic, exciting, inventive and thoroughly modern guitar music. And the album artwork is fantastic. What’s not to like?
Jean-Michel Jarre – Equinoxe Infinity
The maestro is in good form at the moment. This pays tribute to his revered 1978 sophomore release but also has something new to contribute.
Kalman Filter – Exo-Oceans
Three long-form pieces from The Tangent’s Andy Tillison, drawing on influences as diverse as Tangerine Dream, Brian Eno, Stravinsky and Miles Davis. The Fierce And The Dead’s Matt Stevens contributes guitar to the first track.
Mark Peters – Innerland
Beautifully sedate and atmospheric guitar-based music from a co-founder of the shoegaze band Engineers. The delightful artwork mimics the visual style of old British Ordnance Survey maps.
Matt Calvert – Typewritten
This has a lovely gentle acoustic vibe – rather different from Matt’s work with Three Trapped Tigers. Matt plays nine different instruments on it!
Gleb Kolyadin – Gleb Kolyadin
Thoroughly excellent piano-based solo debut from iamthemorning’s hugely talented co-founder and composer. Nine of its thirteen tracks are instrumentals.
Sonar – Vortex
Pulsating, hypnotic brilliance from the Swiss instrumentalists, featuring David Torn on electric guitar. One of the best albums, of any kind, to have been released in 2018.
Album Preview: Soen – Lotus @soenmusic

Thanks to Martin Lopez, the drummer for Soen, and to the good people at Silver Lining Music, Progarchy has been enjoying a nice preview of Soen’s forthcoming album, Lotus.
There’s a satisfying edge and intensity to this new offering, which builds on all the strengths of their previous gem, Lykaia.
“Opponent” gets things off to a relentless start, but then “Lascivious” begins with more open space and a more relaxing groove before turning quickly to alternate again with the tremendous heavy guitar sound Soen has chosen for this album.
This second track, “Lascivious,” really showcases the musical subtlety that is Soen’s strength, which they are able to juxtapose with the heaviest kind of rocking out. No doubt this ability stems from Soen’s commitment to explore creative depths, a fact emphasized in the album’s press release:
Having spent the last 6 months digging deep into the muddy depths of their emotions, the nine songs comprising Lotus are intoxicating, addictive aural therapies, questioning much of today’s darkness while juxtaposing them with moments of great escape and hope.
“We are all very fortunate to have this place where we can go and explore thoughts, perspectives and emotions which everyday life maybe does not have the room for,” says Martin Lopez, one of Soen’s founding members, “there are definitely things that we say, and places we go, in Soen which would be very hard to express without us coming together and creating music.”
“Martyrs” is the third track, which Soen has released already as the second of its advance release tracks for the album. It’s simply fantastic, and a clear contender for best song on the album. A taut bass line ties the whole thing together, with a headbanging chorus that emerges from some nifty riffing and certainly proves most uplifting. The unexpected keyboard meditation at the three-minute mark allows the song to regroup and summon all the emotional power the band has at their disposal. The drums and bass then start to rebuild the tension, leading to the song’s gloriously cathartic climax rising up from the keyboard’s gentle chords.
Following “Martyrs” is the devastating title track, “Lotus,” which begins softly, but then slowly builds its own emotional embrace, not fully unfurling itself until the guitar solo beginning at 2:50. Just as “Martyrs” also exhorted you to pay attention to your essence, so too “Lotus” sings about how we need to listen to our instincts:
Talk to yourself,
let your essence be the answer,
while we chase the meaning of who we are,
navigating through a storm.
Taking central place, as track number five, “Covenant” provides a musical contrast to the more straightforward ballad nature of “Lotus.” “Covenant,” rather, starts with a definite riff and groove that soon explodes into nimble acrobatics. Here too the theme is modern society’s unique challenges:
Produced by David Castillo and Iñaki Marconi at Ghostward Studios and Studio 6 between July and October 2018, the album marks the first recorded Soen work of new Canadian-born guitarist Cody Ford, whilst the centre-point of the album remains those trademark, snap-heavy, progressive Soen riffs. Songs such as “Rival”, “Covenant” and “Martyrs” are dissertations on modern societies, fraught with poetic, finitely designed confusion and chaos, yet as the name Lotus suggests, there is still strength, beauty and purity to be extracted from what at times seems like an endless cycle of human regression.
“The world right now is undeniably a very strange, tense place,” says Lopez, “I think the songs clearly reflect that, but they also reflect that we must now be stronger than ever in challenging confronting and dealing with the pandemonium life throws at us all.”
“Penance” has an unusual introduction and then slips into a beautiful melody married with the unique Soen ensemble sound. Again, Soen deploy a trademark song structure whereby the heavy rocking does not simply terminate in itself, but rather builds to a point that allows the song to eventually break upwards into a higher melodic plane. The effect is one of a musical transformation that transcends darkness into the upper atmospheres of happiness. The sweet strings at the end of “Penance” make just such a sonic affirmation.
Over keyboard washes and acoustic guitar, “River” highlights the heartfelt singing of Joel Ekelöf. It’s deceptively simple and highly effective. Then when the drums kick in after a minute and a half, the song continues to weave even stronger emotion into its elegant waltz rhythm.
The penultimate track, “Rival,” was the first to have been released in advance by Soen. If you’re like me, you’ve already downloaded it and already played it into double-digit repeated listens.
“Lunacy” clocks in at the perfect prog-length of 8:05 (it fools you into thinking it ends around the five minute mark) and provides a suitably epic finale to Soen’s greatest album yet (as Joel returns at the seven-minute mark to bring it all home).
As with the whole album, I really love the guitar sounds on this final track. But the whole team deserves commendation for the sonic excellence of the entire offering, with perfect levels and balance between the gut-punch drums and extra-thick bass and crystalline vocals and glorious guitars.
Kudos to Soen for crafting such a fine album with a life-affirming message:
“We each have our own personal ideas as to what it means,” says Lopez, “but we’d much rather discuss what others think, what our audience think, what the media thinks. I think it’s extremely important that we all communicate with each other and take the time to fully conceive our own meanings and interactions with life and creativity.”
“Ultimately,” concludes Ekelöf, “Lotus is about rising from whatever darkness, or dark places, you might find yourself. And its inspiration comes from a deep motivation to not just settle for the situation you might find yourself in. Lotus is about changing life -both your own and your surroundings for which we must all take responsibility- and make them better rather than letting darkness pacify you and take you down.”
SOEN:
Joel Ekelöf – Vocals
Martin Lopez – Drums
Lars Åhlund – Keys & Guitar
Stefan Stenberg – Bass
Cody Ford – Lead Guitar
LOTUS CREDITS:
Written by Soen
Produced by David Castillo and Iñaki Marconi
Mixed by David Castillo
Mastering by Jens Bogren
Cello by Emeli Jeremias
The Amazing Grace of Wytch Hazel

One of the best albums of 2018 was Wytch Hazel’s II: Sojourn. It was tied for the #10 spot on my Top 10 Metal list, but I should not have put down Seventh Wonder’s Tiara instead of it because, now in January, I am repeatedly returning to listen to Wytch’s Hazel’s great concept album of metal in the classic style, instead of Seventh Wonder.
Take a look at that album cover. Isn’t it just awesome? And the picture sums up the story of the album. You can gaze at it as you listen, if you like. It helps to draw you in to the story.
“The Devil is Here” kicks off the album with the theme of the arrival of the enemy who must be fought in war. After three tracks chronicling the warrior’s battles, we then have the magnificent “See My Demons” (track #5) which pairs incredible music with the poignant theme of the PTSD of a medieval war veteran. (This was the first track to really grab my attention: its nimble musicality is truly excellent.)
But then our hero finds redemption on the next track, “Barrow Hill,” which (obviously anachronistically but nonetheless theologically timelessly) echoes famous lines from the hymn “Amazing Grace,” as our hero speaks of once being lost but now being found (and later on this album’s side he will even sing of once being blind but now seeing).
Born again from this spiritual rejuvenation, we then get the album’s best two tracks next, which are cross-faded into one another for one big long proggy epic: “Chorale” and “Slaves to Righteousness.” The former begins with a church organ solo and then breaks into a breakneck instrumental of rocking out, whereas the latter has our spiritually rejuvenated hero riding again into the final crucial battle, obedient to righteousness.
Our hero then achieves “Victory” in the penultimate track, but of course as in every great war movie this hero sacrifices his life for the victory, so in the final track “Angel Take Me” we have his dying prayer on the battlefield. The great part of this album is that it is neither pro-war nor pro-religious propaganda but rather just fine storytelling and excellent classic metal. Don’t make my mistake of underrating it, until giving it a chance for a few more listens. It packs a real punch, so enjoy at maximum volume.
The Big Lebowski – Dream Sequence
The Dude abides:
“We can make a difference. We can turn this ship in the way we want to go, man! We can turn this ship toward love, toward creating a healthy planet for all of us. Tag, you’re it!”
Phoenix – “Listomania” @AOC
This is Phoenix’s “Listomania,” from their terrific album Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix. It’s the opening track, but my fave on the album has always been “Love like a Sunset” (Part 1 and Part 2 — shades of prog!), not to mention also “Lasso” (track six). Wait, who’s that dancing in the video below?
Album Preview: Soen – Lotus

From an early review of Soen’s forthcoming Lotus:
When I say that Soen is pushing progressive metal forward, what I mean is that they take divergent strains and piece them together in a way no one else is capable of. They have the dynamics and chord choices of classic Opeth, and they marry with that the rhythmic bent of djent. But unlike the latter, where everything becomes muted by the chugging technique, Soen’s focus on open notes and chords slips melody into the rhythm, which is such a simple yet devastating trick I’m amazed I can’t recall anyone else who has mastered the art. Soen really is a synthesis.
…
“Lotus” is a work that stands entirely on its own, but it also works as a companion piece to “Lykaia”. They are cut from the same cloth, but are shaded differently by the spotlight. “Lykaia” is the darker, slightly heavier record, while “Lotus” is the more richly melodic affair. If such a word can be applied to Soen’s sound, this is their ‘optimistic’ record. Though still dark, there is an uplifting spirit to the melodies, which is a balance that only enhances the effect.
…
“Lotus” is an album even more after my heart. Soen have taken what they have always excelled at, and added in even stronger melody. They took the formula from what I consider one of the best metal albums of the last five to ten years, and made it even better. Fortunately, I have had the time to live with this record long enough to feel it settle within me, so I don’t have to predict how the record will age. As I listened again and again, “Lotus” continued to peel back new petals, revealing the sweet nectar waiting in the center. As good as “Lykaia” is, and as much as I love that record, “Lotus” makes an impact capable of digging deeper into our emotions.
Do Yourself a Favor and Listen to Southern Empire
Wow. How on God’s beautiful earth did I miss Southern Empire? “Civilisation” and its 2016 predecessor, “Southern Empire,” are absolutely brilliant. Progressive rock/metal at its best. If you’re like me and somehow let this band slip your attention, remedy that now and check them out. You will not regret it.
