Stephen Humphries Interviews Francis Dunnery

[Editor’s note: it is with no small amount of pleasure and pride that Stephen Humphries–well-known music journalist and accomplished author–interviewed Francis Dunnery for progarchy.com.  I’m not sure what we did to deserve Stephen’s help and friendship, but I, for one, am absolutely thrilled!–Brad]

By Stephen Humphries

Francis Dunnery’s latest albums may be titled Frankenstein Monster and Vampires, but it doesn’t mean he’s going through a goth-rock phase.

At least, not yet.

The songwriter, singer, and guitarist has reveled in a variety of musical styles during his three-decade career. Since leaving the seminal British pop-prog band It Bites, his 10 solo albums have spanned progressive rock, pop, folk, jazz, and punk. That versatility accounts for why Dunnery has occasionally paused his solo career to lend his considerable guitar prowess to the likes of Robert Plant, Ian Brown of The Stone Roses, Carlos Santana, Lauryn Hill, and Chris Difford of Squeeze.

Of late, though, Dunnery has been revisiting the progressive rock sounds that inspired him to pick up a guitar when he was a young boy. Credit Dave Kerzner from Sound of Contact for renewing Dunnery’s interest in far-out, exploratory sounds. Kerzner persuaded his friend to sing on a couple of Rush cover versions by Sonic Elements, a “Fantasy Band Tribute to Rush.”

Since then, Dunnery and Kerzner’s Sonic Elements have worked up a complete rendition of Genesis’ The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway that hasn’t yet been released. You can, however, hear Dunnery’s spot-on vocal performance of “Dancing with the Moonlit Knight” on Steve Hackett’s Genesis Revisited II. (A singer of note, Dunnery contributed backing vocals to the Anderson, Bruford, Wakeman, Howe album back in 1989.) In other recent prog-related activity, Dunnery’s fiery fret fingerwork can be heard on Kerzner’s New World album and also the title track to Big Big Train’s The Underfall Yard. Dunnery also produced and played on the 2009 album Big Sky by The Syn, the reunited progressive band that was once home to Chris Squire before he joined Yes.

In 2013, Dunnery released Frankenstein Monster, an album of re-recorded songs by the 1970s proto-prog band Necromandus that was founded by his older brother Barry. (See the video for the title track, the one original Francis Dunnery composition on the album, below.) Dunnery’s brand new album, Vampires, also looks back at another aspect of the past. It consists of 14 re-recordings of songs by It Bites, the group that he formed in Cumbria, Britain, with John Beck (keyboards), Bob Dalton (drums), and Dick Nolan (bass). This time out, Francis recorded fresh versions of the songs with his own Sensational Francis Dunnery Band.

Available January 1st from his website, Vampires includes many of the It Bites’ signature melodic shorter songs (including their top 10 UK hit “Calling all the Heroes”) as well as versions of long-form epics such as “Old Man and the Angel” and “Once around the World.”

In a Skype interview with Francis, he explained why he decided to sink his fangs into these old songs to immortalize them on Vampires.

francis dunnery from prweb

Humphries: You’ve re-recorded a massive batch of songs spanning your entire career. Why? What inspired you to do so and what did you set out to achieve?

Dunnery: The inspiration was quite similar to my last album, Frankenstein Monster, which was basically to complete the past. When your past is incomplete you cannot do anything new, because your past is taking up all your brain space. The idea of recording those songs were always in my mind and occupied a great deal of space in my head. I needed to get them recorded so I could free up space to do new things. The It Bites tracks are very much the same. Any unfinished projects or ideas floating around in your head will make you a prisoner of your past. You won’t have the energy to do anything new and fresh because all your energy will be focused on the incomplete projects from your past.

Humphries: Who are the musicians on the project and what did they bring to the table?

Dunnery: The musicians are the Sensational Francis Dunnery band. Tony Beard on drums, Michael Cassedy on keyboards and Jamie Bishop on bass. I think Tony’s drumming is a beautiful compromise between rock and “pocket.” Tony’s pocket is as close to a black drummer as you’ll get. Like me, he’s a massive fan of R&B, especially the stuff the kids are doing today. So this is It Bites note-for-note with a beautiful groove. Jamie is also very laid back in his bass playing so the tracks are very musical. Michael did a wonderful job playing John Beck’s parts.

Humphries: Which of the re-recordings are you most excited for fans to hear?

Dunnery: All of them. They sound amazing. There’s nothing to put anyone off listening to them. They are note-for-note and the sound is a million times better than the originals. The originals have the melancholy of people’s childhoods attached to them so you cannot hope to replace that, but the new versions are pretty damn cool in their own right.

Humphries: What was the criteria for selecting which It Bites songs to re-record?
320x320Dunnery: I basically picked the most important songs on the albums, the ones that I liked. The ones that I felt could be sonically updated successfully. I’m a song guy. I’m not particularly interested in how fast someone can tap an arpeggio—I’m far more interested in melody, storytelling, and lyrics. When I was 18, I was more focused on musicianship, but today’s musicians are mostly performing little tricks…which is cool but it’s not something I’m interested in today. I always loved Paul McCartney, The Beach Boys, Prefab Sprout, The Blue Nile, Laura Nyro—song people. The songs I picked were probably the best melodies.

Humphries: Were there songs that you attempted to re-record but ultimately abandoned?

Dunnery: No, we recorded all the ones I said we would record.

Humphries: Some of the original It Bites recordings sound a bit dated and very much of their time in production. Did you update them or rearrange your versions in any way? 

Dunnery: Completely updated them. Instead of brass sounds and synthesizers, we used all real stuff and it sounds killer. Sonically, it sounds a bit more like early Deep Purple during “Black Night” and “Strange Kind of Woman” —basic overdriven Hammond and electric pianos played through amps.

Humphries: John Beck’s keyboards/backing vocals and the Dalton/Nolan rhythm section had a particular sound—what was your approach to those aspects of the It Bites songs in your new recordings?

Dunnery: We copied John note for note because the parts were great, but I swapped the little tinkly bell type sounds for real meaty organ and piano. We gave the keyboards a set of balls. The drums are dry and without reverb compression or EQ. Tony Beard is an amazing drummer and he’s also amazing at tuning drums. I just put a few mics in front of him and let him do his thing.

Humphries: Can you tell me about why you chose to include It Bites B-sides such as “Vampires” and “Feels like Summertime”? In retrospect, do you wish those songs had been on the It Bites albums?

Dunnery: I liked those songs a lot. I remember when we recorded the track
“Vampires” in the Townhouse studios in London and I was going beserk with the guitar solo. It was so much fun. Incredibly intense. “Feels like Summertime” is a beautiful track. I never liked the It Bites version much because the chorus was a bit telegraphed and my vocal was too effeminate. It was great to be able to have the opportunity to fullfill that track now that I have a better knowledge of songwriting.

Humphries: How much of a challenge was it to re-record complex epics such as “Old Man and the Angel,” and “Once Around the World”? Take me into the experience of tackling those pieces again. 

Dunnery: It was pretty easy. I recently recorded some vocals for Dave Kerzner as we are re-recording the whole of the Lamb Lies Down on Broadway and those vocals were incredibly easy as well. I have been singing them for so long that I know exactly how to deliver the vocals so the melodies stand out. It was the same as the Steve Hackett album. I recorded “Dancing with the Moolight Knight” for him and it was easy. The It Bites tracks are the same.

Humphries: How many discs will Vampires consist of? Is there anything notable about the packaging?

Dunnery: The Vampires album will be 2 CDs as the songs are very long. There will be a special ‘muso’ package with downloads of the instrumentals. There is nothing particularly notable about the packaging other than my crack dealer’s phone number, which will be on there for anyone who would like to hear the tracks with more white angst.

Humphries: Has the Vampires project influenced where you want to go next?

Dunnery: It has influenced my next album in the fact that I don’t want to play any more electric guitar for a while. Frankenstein Monster and Vampires make a bold electric statement that I will not be able to supersede for quite some time. I hate doing the same stuff over and over.

Humphries: You’ve been writing new songs: How far along is it and what can you tell us about the musical direction of your next album? 

Dunnery: I am auditioning three African-American backing vocalists in New York City. I want to make a quiet album with a bass, acoustic guitar, and three African-American backing vocalists. I have some great stories to tell and some great new melodies to sing. I need African Americans because European Africans have a different feeling, African Africans are not even in the ball park and white girls can’t deliver what I’m looking for on this album. There is a sweetness to African-American musicians in general that I really love. It’s not so much what comes out of their mouth, it’s more of the feeling and the sweetness of the timing of their expression that I love. It cannot be emulated. My new album will be sweet and quiet and probably not for anyone under 25 years of age.

Humphries: You perform dozens of House Concerts across the world every year. [Visit FrancisDunnery.com to book one.] Tell me about your recently published book House Concert Expert.

Dunnery: I wrote a book because I wanted to write a book. It hasn’t yet sold anywhere near what I thought it would but they say if you want to make God laugh, make some f***ing plans! I haven’t started promoting properly so by this time next year I may be the new Stephen King.

Vampires is available January 1, 2016, at www.francisdunnery.com. Follow Francis on Twitter: @dunnery.

 

 

Lifesigns: Entering 2016

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Festive Greetings to all of our Friends !

We hope that you have all had a great festive season and are now looking forward to the New Year. This is perhaps the ideal moment to reflect on the year that has nearly run its course. We hope that 2015 has been a kind year for each of you, but more importantly that 2016 is going to be even better.

The first thing that we as a band would like to do is thank each and every one of you. Your support and encouragement is what has really made this a stand out year for all of us in the band. Whether it has been by attending gigs, buying merch or commenting on social media  you have encouraged and supported us at every twist and turn. You have helped spread the word far and wide, and we hope that you will continue to do so in 2016.

It was also so fantastic to be able to meet so many of you personally during the course of the year and to convey that thanks in person.

In a year of many, many highlights I wanted to reflect on a few of them, but also to look forward to what is to come in 2016.

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1.  Lifesigns – Under The Bridge DVD Shoot

2015 got off to a real flyer. Thanks to  your support through our Crowd Funding Campaign  at Pledge Music we were able to put a dream into action. We were very aware that there were many people who wanted to partake in the Lifesigns Live experience but who were unable to attend any of the live shows. UTB will be a way of helping Lifesigns play live all over the world. On the 22nd and 23rd January we were able to record shows that are now the core of the DVD. It was a magical couple of evenings and I think all that were there will remember it for a few years to come.

 

2.  A Studio of our very own

In September 2015 we were fortunate to be able to take on a studio of our very own in Liscombe Park Studios. It had already become a home from home for us with much of the first album being recorded there..This is a huge investment for us but one we felt was all part of the Big Plan and an opportunity we could not miss. It has already paid dividends with the majority of the vision and sound mixing for the DVD being completed in the studio. We look forward to using our new HQ in the New Year.

 

3.  Cruise To The Edge

In November we were delighted to be asked to perform as part of the CTTE extravaganza  onboard the Norweigan Pearl. There was also  a great opportunity to perform for the first time to the general public in the US as we opened the CTTE Pre-Party in Miami.

We had a fantastic time playing for everyone and it gave us an opportunity to meet some of our many US friends. It also gave us a chance to meet some of our heroes such as Caravan’s Pye Hastings who we can safely say enjoyed his first Lifesigns experience.

 

4.  Release of Live Under The Bridge DVD

November also saw the culmination of a true labour of love in the release of our Live in London, Under The Bridge DVD (inc 2 audio CD’s). As previously mentioned thanks to your generosity and support through crowd funding, what had begun in January finally saw the light of day. With wonderful artwork once again from Brett Wilde we are proud to have delivered a product that is everything that we wanted it to be. It took a lot of hard work and dedication, and lots of lessons were learnt along the way. If you are reading this and either have not as yet got a copy, or need additional copies, they can be obtained through the website at http://www.lifesigns.me/shop

All pre-order pledge copies have been delivered so if you are still waiting please let us know.

 

5.  Lexington, London

What a way to end the year ! The last date of our winter tour and it was great to be performing in front of so many of our friends. It turned out to be possibly one of our most enjoyable performances….so far.

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Having looked back on a few top moments from 2015 we would like to look forward and to some of the moments in 2016 that are already filling us with much anticipation.

 

1.  Ramblin Man Festival

Following on from an excellent inaugural festival last year, we have been invited to perform at this years festival. The festival takes place on 23rd July in Maidstone and we will be playing the Prog stage. On stage at approx 15:00. This promises to be a great event with some excellent bands across several stages

 

2.  Cropredy Festival

We are delighted to have been invited to perform at the Internationally renowned Cropredy Festival on August 12th. This is an incredible opportunity to bring Lifesigns music to a wider audience.It will be our biggest gig to date playing to 20,000 plus people.

 

3.  Trading Boundaries

Probably one of the best venues in the UK. We are delighted to have been invited to perform at Trading Boundaries once again this year on 17th June. This intimate venue offers the music lover a chance to combine listening to some wonderful progressive music whilst also enjoying an excellent meal (optional). We look forward to seeing many of you at the Trading Boundaries in June.

 

4.  New CD

Possibly one of the most important events for Lifesigns in 2016 will be the opportunity to record our second album in our very own studio. This will give us the chance to develop and record some of the tracks that appeared on the live DVD plus some additional previously unheard material. Once again we hope to fund this through the same crowd funding process as we used for the live DVD, but more about this in the new year.

 

5.  On tour with Marillion

Lifesigns are proud to announce that they will be supporting the mighty Marillion on their upcoming German tour (2016). Dates as detailed below:
14th July  Munich Muffathalle
15th July  Erfurt Gewerkschaftshaus
16th July  Wertheim Burg
18th July  Stuttgart LKA Longhorn
19th July  Berlin Huxleys neue Welt

See you there !!

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News From the Merch Desk

We now have in stock a range of T-Shirts and other merchandise, including the beautiful new Brett Wilde Designed Under the Bridge DVD T-Shirt a multi-coloured design that really does his artwork proud.

In addition the Live in London, Under The Bridge DVD/CD’s Package is also available from the Merch section of the Lifesigns website. A labour of love from the boys and one of which we are very proud. After all the work the end product has achieved everything that we wanted it to both visually and acoustically. Please continue to support us by recommending it to your friends. Its a great way to get into the Lifesigns Live Experience.

www.lifesigns.me/shop

We will also have the T-Shirt, DVD/CD’s and a range of other band related goodies at any of our Live shows for your perusal. Thank you for your continued support it really helps in our efforts to achieve our goals.

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For Your Diary

 

2016

17th January             Talking Heads, Southampton                               Information/Tickets

22nd January            King Tuts, Glasgow                                             Information/Tickets

23rd January             Bannermans Bar, Edinburgh                                Information/Tickets

24th January             Robin 2, Bilston                                                  Information/Tickets

17th June                 Trading Boundaries, Uckfield                                Information/Tickets

23rd July                  Ramblin Man Festival                                          Information/Tickets

14th July                 (With Marillion)  Munich Muffathalle                       Information/Tickets

15th July                 (With Marillion)  Erfurt Gewerkschaftshaus             Information/Tickets

16th July                 (With Marillion)  Wertheim Burg                             Information/Tickets

18th July                 (With Marillion)  Stuttgart LKA Longhorn                Information/Tickets

19th July                 (With Marillion)  Berlin Huxleys neue Welt             Information/Tickets

23rd July                 Ramblin Man Festival                                          Information/Tickets

12th August            Cropredy Festival                                                Information/Tickets

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    Lifesigns would like to thank you for your wonderful support in 2015 and we look forward to        continuing our journey together in 2016.

 

Wishing You All A Happy and Peaceful New Year !

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Streaming Without Serendipity

Teddy Wayne in the NYT on what we have lost as books and albums are no longer physically present in most homes:

When I was 13, in the early 1990s, I dug through my parents’ cache of vinyl records from the ’60s and ’70s. We still had a phonograph, so I played some of them, concentrating on the Beatles. Their bigger hits were inescapably familiar, but a number of their songs were new to me.

Were I a teenager in 2015, I may not have found “Lovely Rita” or acquired an early taste at all for the Liverpudlian lads. The albums stacked up next to the record player, in plain sight for years, would be invisible MP3s on a computer or phone that I didn’t own. Their proximal existence could have been altogether unknown to me.

S. Craig Watkins, a professor who studies the digital media behavior of young people in the department of Radio-Television-Film at the University of Texas at Austin, said that he and his family almost exclusively stream music now in their home and that he and his wife stored their old CDs in a seldom-used cabinet. To his teenage daughter, “those CDs are, at best, background matter,” he said.

“I can’t recall her ever taking time to search through what’s in there,” Professor Watkins said. “But I could imagine that when she gets a little older, it might become meaningful to her — that those artifacts are a way to connect back to us.”

Sometimes, though, he and his daughter discuss what is on their devices’ playlists.

There are several big upsides to growing up with streaming audio, one of which is accessibility: assuming I was interested enough, I could have explored, for free, the Beatles’ catalog on the Internet far beyond the scope of my parents’ collection.

Digital media trains us to be high-bandwidth consumers rather than meditative thinkers. We download or stream a song, article, book or movie instantly, get through it (if we’re not waylaid by the infinite inventory also offered) and advance to the next immaterial thing.

Poking through physical artifacts, as I did with those Beatles records, is archival and curatorial; it forces you to examine each object slowly, perhaps sample it and come across a serendipitous discovery.

Scrolling through file names on a device, on the other hand, is what we do all day long, often mindlessly, in our quest to find whatever it is we’re already looking for as rapidly as possible. To see “The Beatles” in a list of hundreds of artists in an iTunes database is not nearly as arresting as holding the album cover for “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.”

Consider the difference between listening to music digitally versus on a record player or CD. On the former, you’re more likely to download or stream only the singles you want to hear from an album. The latter requires enough of an investment — of acquiring it, but also of energy in playing it — that you stand a better chance of committing and listening to the entire album.

If I’d merely clicked on the first MP3 track of “Sgt. Pepper’s” rather than removed the record from its sleeve, placed it in the phonograph and carefully set the needle over it, I may have become distracted and clicked elsewhere long before the B-side “Lovely Rita” played.

And what of sentiment? Jeff Bezos himself would have a hard time defending the nostalgic capacity of a Kindle .azw file over that of a tattered paperback. Data files can’t replicate the lived-in feel of a piece of beloved art. To a child, a parent’s dog-eared book is a sign of a mind at work and of the personal significance of that volume.

A crisp JPEG of the cover design on a virtual shelf, however, looks the same whether it’s been reread 10 times or not at all. If, that is, it’s ever even seen.

Great Review of CLOCKWORK LIVES

anderson and peart clockwork (1)
Clockwork Angels, the Graphic Novel; and Clockwork Lives. By Kevin J. Anderson and Neil Peart.

Scifi Pulse has just posted a really strong review of the latest novel by sci-fi master Kevin J. Anderson and Rush drummer Neil Peart, CLOCKWORK LIVES.

The final line: Reading the first book is not necessary to enjoy this novel; it is in a completely different format than the previous book and is equally satisfying. Anderson and Peart have created a magnificent journey for Marinda and I’m glad they returned to this universe. In fact, after the pleasure this book brought to me, I would be disappointed if they did not return for further tales. Recommended. Overall grade: A+ 

To read the full review, go here: http://scifipulse.net/in-review-clockwork-lives/

Remembering Geoff Banks

As you all know, Geoff Banks passed away not long ago.  We all mourn our loss.

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When we were first starting progarchy, Geoff was an immense help.  Not only through constant encouragement but through excellent and solid advice as well.  He also promoted us where he could–especially via the web and via his radioshow.

I’m honored to note that he and I corresponded frequently.  We agreed on absolutely nothing but music.  We had fundamentally different views about family, politics, religion, etc.  And, he was not shy in expressing his views!  But, when it came to the music, we were in complete sympathy, and music friendship transcended and healed any differences we might have had.

Geoff was very much his own man, and I already feel his absence profoundly–even an ocean away. . . . an ocean of space and time.

Geoff’s closest friend, Jon Patrick, posted this a few hours ago:

Today we reach the shortest day, for some it will be the longest and a date we will always remember for a different reason. Today we will get together, many of us who can and Celebrate the life of Geoff Banks.

We will be surrounded by Geoff’s family and many, many of his friends. Together we will support each other in our grief at this time of the final farewell. Many tears have been shed, and will be. But we must always remember that Geoff Banks was a Rocker. In his honor we will Rock! For Geoff would want that. Today we celebrate a great friend. 

For those who can’t make it you will be all represented. I will read a message from Stacy Neuman who needs our love and support at this time, as do all the family. Stacy can’t be there and I know that is so very painful for her. I’ve been asked to close things.

I would like to personally that everyone for their wonderful support. A very special thank you to Damian Wilson who will perform a song for Geoff Banks. Damian’s friendship and unique look at life will be very much needed today.

For those who can, I will see you very soon. For those who can’t I know your thoughts, support and love will be with us. XXX

According to old Catholic belief, only the dead can dance.  Dance away, Geoff!

 

Galahad: 30th Anniversary

To celebrate the band’s 30th anniversary Galahad will be releasing a historical double CD retrospective with a twist, the twist being that ten of the tracks included are brand new re-recorded versions of old Galahad songs, some dating back to 1985, the year the band formed, including one thirty year old track (City of Freedom) which has never been recorded properly before!

In some cases the new versions are similar to the originals but in other cases the songs have been re-worked and re-arranged considerably, either way we have tried our best to be sympathetic to the spirit of the originals whilst trying to bring them up to date in terms of their sonic quality and also so that they compare favourably, hopefully, with the Galahad sound of 2015!

As this is a rather special as well as an epic album, clocking in at approximately  2 hours and 36 minutes,  we have also included a few strategically placed ‘tributes’ to a few of our original influences within some of the newly recorded ‘old’ tracks, so it’ll be interesting to see if they’ll get spotted!

Hopefully, this collection is a fair representation of the Galahad cannon and will appeal to existing fans of the band and will also, perhaps, act as a taster to those yet to dip their toes in the world of Galahad music.

When Worlds Collide Track listing:

CD1
1. Lady Messiah (1985/2015)
2. The Chase (1988/2015)
3. City of Freedom (1986/2015)
4. Chamber of Horrors (1990/2015)
5. Dreaming From the Inside (1985/2015)
6. Room 801 (1990/2015)
7. Ocean Blue (1996/2015)
8. Don’t Lose Control (1990/015)
9. Exorcising Demons ( 1992/2015)
10. Karma For One (1997/2015)
CD2
11. Empires Never Last (2006/2014)
12. Sleepers (1992/2012)
13. Richelieu’s Prayer (1990/2012)
14. Painted Lady (1985/2014)
15. Bug Eye (1997/2014)
16. Singularity (2012)
17. Guardian Angel (2012)
18. Seize the Day (Single mix) (2012)
19. This Life Could Be My Last (2006/2014)

Yes: Who Cares?

Before I start this short post, let me state two things.

  1.  I speak ONLY for myself, not all of progarchy.
  2. Please don’t doubt my YesCred (see photo below)
IMG_1277 copy (1)
Well, it’s not complete.  I can’t find my copy of HEAVEN AND EARTH, for example.  And, I can’t find my copy of the book that has all of the Yes interviews in it–the one that explains the origins of each song.  Still, I bought each of these CDs, books, and videos because my soul said it was right and good, not because some PR guru told me to do so.

I’ve just seen the news that the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has once again rejected Yes’s admission into its supposedly august confines.

http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2015/12/17/460082433/cheap-trick-deep-purple-among-2016-rock-and-roll-hall-of-fame-inductees

Honestly, who cares?  I certainly don’t.

I thought it was really nice that Rush got in, but it had absolutely no affect on my love for Rush, one way or another.  Rush is Rush, whether the RnRHF recognizes the band’s brilliance or not.

The same is just as true for Yes.

For those of us who grew up with and on Yes, we have done so and chosen our loyalties based on our own personal standards.  If we’d run with the crowd, we’d not like Yes (or Rush).  We like some top 40 crud that mattered for all of two seconds.  Less if measured against all of western civilization.  We love Yes because they stand for something.  Succeed or fail, they tried, and they gave their all.

No one in Cleveland (or any other city) matters one iota to the legacy of Yes.  Yes is Yes.  It is what it is.  I’m sorry a board of civic leaders and PR corporate conformist types can’t see that–but should we expect them to?

Well, I know my answer.  It’s been way too long since I’ve listened to THE YES ALBUM.  Time to listen again.

Weirdos of the world, stay individual!

 

The Greatest and Bestest, 2015, Part II

Earlier today, I had the privilege of posting my ten favorite prog albums of 2015.  This is part II, the final part.

Greatest PROG Man of the Year: Chris Thompson, President of Radiant and all-around incredible guy.

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Greatest PROG Band of the Year: Glass Hammer for releasing not only its best album to date, BREAKING OF THE WORLD, but also releasing DOUBLE LIVE, an album so good it could’ve been an original (as in all new) release.

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Greatest PROG EP of the Year: Big Big Train, WASSAIL.  The perfect EP.  Tasteful and satisfying, but still leaving us wanting more.

wassail

Greatest PROG Live Album of the Year: Galahad, SOLIDARITY.  Few bands can record live as well as Galahad.  Always the perfect show.

galahad-solidarity-front-preview

Greatest PROG Instrumental EP of the Year: The Fierce and the Dead, MAGNET.  Matt and Co. simply are incapable of doing wrong.  At least when it comes to music.

magnet

Greatest PROG Instrumental Album of the Year: Arcade Messiah II.  He might call himself a muppet, but John Bassett is one of the most interesting musicians alive.  Whether he’s writing music or lyrics, he’s pretty much at the top.

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Ten Years Later: Glass Hammer’s Live at Belmont

Glass Hammer, Live at Belmont (Arion/Sound Resources, 2006).  2-disc DVD.

Tracks, Disk 1: Long and Long Ago; One King; Run Lissette; Farewell to Shadowlands; Through the Glass Darkly; Knight of the North; When We Were Young; Having Caught a Glimpse; and Heroes and Dragons.

Tracks, Disk 2: Tales of the Great Wars; and Lirazel.  Five additional items: documentaries, slides, etc.

Glass Hammer, 2005: Steve Babb; Susie Bogdanowicz; Carl Groves; Fred Schendel; Matt Mendians; David Wallimann; Eric Parker; Bethany Warren; and Flo Paris.

 

cover GH Live
DVD Cover, 2006.

For a band that specializes in studio magic and technological prowess, Glass Hammer performs astonishingly well in a live setting.  This year’s DOUBLE LIVE intrigued me so much and proved itself so wonderful and extraordinary as an original release—in a year during which the prog scene has simply exploded beyond any serious quantification—that I had to go back through all of the band’s previous releases.

Having been around, officially since 1993 and, unofficially, a bit longer, the band has released three live albums—LIVE AND REVIVED (1997), LIVE AT NEARFEST (2004), and DOUBLE LIVE(2015).  It has also released four live videos—LEX LIVE (2004); LIVE AT BELMONT (2006); LIVE AT THE TIVOLI (2008); and DOUBLE LIVE (2015).

sturgis pastAs 2015 comes to a close, it seems appropriate to go back to Glass Hammer’s concert performed at Belmont University during Professor Amy Sturgis’s massive conference honoring the fiction of C.S. Lewis, “Past Watchful Dragons,” in November 2005.

I’ve never hidden my love of everything Glass Hammer related.  They are, to my mind, the premiere prog band of the American third wave, the grand statesmen of the scene, having carried the flag and pioneered the form for nearly a quarter of a century now.  They’re never afraid to innovate, and they’re equally willing to embrace or to challenge custom and convention.  I have a sneaking suspicious that every time a reviewer somewhat dismissingly notes the Yes influence on the band, Babb and Schendel throw in something extraordinarily Yes-ish an the next album just to be mischievous and to tweak, rather playfully, the distractors.

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BREAKING OF THE WORLD, 2015.

The band also knows how to recruit incredible talent and, even more importantly, how to cultivate that talent.  Really, just listen to the angelic voice of Susie Bogdanowicz, the sheer drumming prowess of Aaron Raulston, the confidence of Carl Groves (no stranger to fronting a band), and the smooth and expert glow of Kamran Alan Shikoh’s guitar.  Yet, it’s always Babb and Schendel conducting, organizing, and orchestrating, who so ably and brilliantly prove to be the pillars that uphold the Glass Hammer universe.

Jump back ten years, then, to that late autumn performance at Belmont College.  Babb and Schendel, of course, hold it all together.  But, there’s Susie (looking and sounding amazing), and, for the first time, there’s Carl Groves.  Also, for the firs ttime, there’s electric guitarist David Wallimann and Eric Parker on acoustic and steel guitar.  Matt Mendians is drumming, and Susie’s sister, Bethany, and Flo Paris add to the vocals.  We can’t stop here, though.  There is also a string trio, the Adonia, performing with Glass Hammer.  Still not content to stop here (I’m telling you, Babb and Schendel never take the easy route.  NEVER!), Belmont University’s 150-member choir join for the second half of the concert.  Even writing this is taking my breath away.  This was a HUGE production.

Despite all of this pressure and enormousness, Babb, Schendel, and Bogdanowicz look as if they’re having the time of their lives.  In the minds of these three, this is just a really, really, really big studio in which they get one take.  And, the university president, many of the students, faculty, and staff, and Glass Hammer fans from around the world have come to watch this one take in the studio.  No pressure.

And yet, whatever pressure the band felt, they reveal nothing but grace.

In preparation of this piece, I asked my friend (yes, I’m proud of this friendship), Steve Babb, if he wanted to comment on the night.  My plan was to integrate what he said—in journalistic fashion—into this reminiscence.  But, once again, Steve does nothing halfway, and I was so taken with what he wrote me that I’ve decided to print it as a whole.  It’s a document that should be preserved for the years.  Here’s what Steve wrote me:

Carl Groves was drafted to be an auxiliary keyboardist with Glass Hammer, and of course we’d asked Salem Hill to open for us. Just a few weeks before the show Walter Moore made his exit and Carl was suddenly in the front-man position. This situation went back and forth for a short time, and Carl probably felt like a ping pong ball. About two weeks before show time, he was again moved to the front man spot and just barely had time to rehearse with the band and learn the lyrics. It was a crazy, stressful time for everyone, but we knew we were heading toward something special so everyone pulled together.

We had worked with choirs before at NEARfest 2003, but Belmont represented an opportunity to work with some of the nation’s best singers. There were probably around 100 or slightly more involved. There are always technical difficulties when trying to mic a vocal group and get them loud enough to be discernible over a loud rock band. Belmont was no different. The monitor mix crew left in the middle of the sound check and never addressed the issues the choir had. Neither the choir nor the director could really hear what was going on!

We later found the monitor crew unapologetically eating the band’s lunch in the hospitality area. Glass Hammer must eat, so we made our way to the college cafeteria and ate pizza with the students. It was about this time that I discovered this was to be David Walliman’s first-ever stage appearance, and he was feeling a little shaky. We had the ‘appearance’ of a live, performing group (and later we really would become that), but it was in truth a group of good friends and studio musician’s making every effort to pull something off that was, frankly, above our pay grade at the time. Not to say we weren’t all veterans of the stage – but Glass Hammer performances in those days were sometimes years apart. Thankfully, we were all highly motivated and committed to do our best regardless of the obstacles.

So back to the stage for the show. The choir director is conducting a choir singing simultaneously in English, Latin, and Tolkien’s Elvish (I’m not kidding.) She can’t hear. This is the cue for our drummer Matt Mendians to play louder. What to do? If you watch closely, you can probably see Fred conducting the stage right choir by bouncing up and down to keep them on time. I’m doing the same for the choir members directly behind the drummer while Susie is directing the stage left choir. I was thinking to myself the whole time, “This is Nashville! Why is this so hard?”

Regardless – the performance left the audience flabbergasted – many of them in tears, including the president of the college. The show was a success. We even determined to repeat the effort once more and did much the same type of concert in Chattanooga where we filmed “Live At The Tivoli”–Steve Babb, December 3, 2015

Let me note—as I know, Steve—when he states the audience was “flabbergasted,” he means it.  He’s not one to brag, but he certainly tells the truth.  He has too much integrity to exaggerate.

Watching and re-watching the extraordinary performances on Live at Belmont makes me realize something yet again.  Even with all of the gifts that the band possesses, as listed above, there’s one quality that, I think, really makes GH stand out.  Depth.  Depth of feeling, depth of ability, depth of integrity, and depth of communication.

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Chesterton’s 1925 masterpiece.

Last night, as I was grading final examinations and taking breaks between tests to reward myself for a certain number of blue books completed, I was reading G.K. Chesterton on mythology.  I came across one of my favorite passages in all of Chesterton:

Behind all these things is the fact that beauty and terror are very real things and related to a real spiritual world; and to touch them at all, even in doubt or fancy, is to stir the deep things of the soul. . . . These are the myths: and he who has no sympathy with myths has no sympathy with men[Everlasting Man]

babb lay
The best book of poetry released in 2014, and one of the most important reasons Glass Hammer gives such a feeling of depth to its music.  

GH understands this.  What they create is not merely wall-paper, background music.  They are, after all, very proudly a prog group.  Lots of instruments, intricate melodies, and switches in time signatures are an integral part of prog’s DNA.  But, critically, they make something that is beyond even the lovely and glorious joy ride that is in the best prog.  What they do is create myth.  And, in so doing, they ask us to enter this rather perilous realm of their’s.  When we do, we find terrible beauties, meaningful tragedies, maidens fair, and dragons demonic. . . but also joys so tragically unremembered and unseen in this real whirligig of postmodern reality.

Watching LIVE AT BELMONT only reminds me of what realities Glass Hammer has touched.  And, shared.