DPRP–Yes

closeIf you have any free time today, check out the excellent symposium re: the re-release of a number of Yes albums over at the Dutch Progressive Rock Page.  DPRP is always great, but this is spectacular, even for their very high standards.

Andy Tillison, Arjen Anthony Lucassen, and David Elliott’s guest reviews are especially good.  Not surprisingly.

And, our own lovely progarchist, Lady Alison, also contributes rather lovingly.  Lovely, lovingly.  Lots of love.

http://www.dprp.net/reviews/201379.php

The Tangent, SNOW GOOSE PROJECT–now available

The Tangent -snow goose

Progarchists, our good friend and hero, Andy Tillison, has just released a video and a special download, The Snow Goose Project, inspired by Camel.  The money raised for this will go to help those fighting cancer.  A worthy cause if ever there was one.  Please support Andy and Sally and their wonderful cause.  Plus, you’ll get some fabulous music.

Eric Perry did an excellent job introducing the project yesterday.  Go here to see it.

http://thetangent.org

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=7iKgFTYTBBo

 

I’m not the-list-kind-of-guy but…

…nevertheless I have done my homework and now will present my list of the best albums from this absolutely fantastic year of prog! 🙂 I mean 2012 and 2013 have been excellent years both of them but 2013 has been special. I think we can agree on that even though our personal lists may differ a bit. Not to be spoiling too much, but the number one was a no-brainer really, but then it was extremely hard to distinguish between albums 2 to 6. These are five albums that actually can interchange their positions depending on what kind of day it is for me. 🙂 This is how it all ended up today at least. So off we go!

10. Camelias Garden – You Have A Chance

You Have A Chance

Lovely debut album by this Italian band. Folky prog a bit in the vein of Harmonium.

9. Spock’s Beard – Brief Nocturnes and Dreamless Sleep

sb

Well, who would have thought that my favourite SB-album would be the one without both Neal and Nick? But so it is!

8. Haken – The Mountain

haken1

Rawk’n’rawl and some real quirkiness in a fine mix! Will always remember sitting in Mr Ian Greatorex’s listening room with high end stereo equipment, giving this a first listen…with a Big Big Beer in my hand.

7. Lifesigns – Lifesigns

Lifesigns CD (2)

After feeling it was a bit “meh” to start with this lush album has grown and grown. Some really beautiful songs here!

6. The Tangent – Le Sacre du Travail

tangent 2013 cover

Mr Andy Tillison’s magnum opus to date! Greatness! And with Gavin on drums and Jonas on bass, what can possibly go wrong?

5. Cosmograf – The Man Left In Space

cosmograf

Superb album by Robin Armstrong’s brainchild, comsograf! It’s one of those you just have to listen to from beginning to end totally undisturbed. 

4. Moon Safari – Himlabacken Vol. 1

Himlabacken Vol. 1

I can’t resist this band’s music! It always makes me so very happy and warm inside! Lovely peeps in the band as well!

3. The Flower Kings – Desolation Rose

"Pure Flower Kings, pure prog and Kingly epic."

Best TFK album since Space Revolver I dare say. So glad they’re back and sounding so fresch and on their toes again!

2. Steven Wilson – The Raven That Refused To Sing

Raven That Refused to Sing

What can I say? It’s a gorgeous album!

1. Big Big Train – English Electric: Full Power

Progarchy Best Packaging, 2013: Big Big Train, English Electric Full Power.

Well, nobody’s probably really surprised about this being my number one of 2013. 😀 It’s a stunner and will be for many years to come! It’s the best album of any genre for me this year. Without competition.

So…that’s it folks. Outside my list of Top 10 you can find some that are very fine albums and would have made any Top 10 from any other year before 2012. Vienna Circle – Silhouette Moon, Days Between Stations – In Extremis, Johannes Luley – Tales From The Sheepfather’s Grove and Shinebacks fine album Rise Up Forgotten, Return Destroyed (added 20130103) are examples of albums bubbling just beneath position number 10. Then we find albums that I haven’t found the time, motivation or curiousness to listen to more than very casually at the best. Riverside, Airbag, Fish, Nemo, Maschine etc are among those bands or artists that I haven’t given proper attention as of yet.

Merry Christmas and A Happy New Year everyone!

PS. Best prog-related and most fun and interesting experience of the year: Big Big Weekend 14-15 September in Winchester and Southampton!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4sIveLBgVl8

Some Cover-Artworks by Ed Unitsky

Schnikees, this is incredible.  Enjoy this fabulous cover art.  Posted here with permission of Ed Unitsky.

unitsky covers

The Overlooked and Neglected of 2012, Part II: Arrow Haze, MUSIC FACTORY

front_400As I mentioned at the end of November, I fear that a number of important 2012 releases will be lost to the annals of time.  As we’re already looking forward (happily) to 2014 and celebrating the year—perhaps the best year in the history of progressive rock—that was 2013, I want to consider some albums from 2012 that failed to garner as much attention as they should have.

My first such somewhat ignored classic of 2012 was North Atlantic Oscillation’s FOG ELECTRIC.  I give it—and everything Sam Healy does—my highest ratings.

Tonight, I want to continue with my second in the series, MUSIC FACTORY by Arrow Haze.

I’m not completely sure I would classify this Belgian album—quite excellent—as necessarily progressive rock in the sense that we might think of Big Big Train or The Tangent as prog.  Nor is MUSIC FACTORY moody in the way that Nosound is.  Instead, I think it’s much more classic 1980’s AOR, though with modern production and modern sensibilities.  Perhaps a good comparison might be with Neal Morse’s AOR project, Flying Colors.  Coralspin also comes to mind.  This is really progressive AOR, with lots of Trevor Rabin, Rush-era Counterparts, as well as grunge tendencies.

Most importantly, the album is diverse.  No song really sounds like any other song.  At first listen, this threw me off, as I was search for something to tie it all together.  But, don’t take this the wrong way.  This isn’t a criticism as much as it is an observation.

At 13 tracks over 57 minutes, MUSIC FACTORY covers a lot of territory, especially in terms of musical styles.  The opening track, “Casino,” for example, reminds me of the poppier pieces by Oceansize with its angular guitars, Oceansize.  The fifth track, “Lost,” harkens back to early 1990s groups such as Inspiral Carpets and the Charlatans.  The ninth track, “Elly Kedward,” strikes me as what Dream Theater might sound like if it decided to cover the best of Blue Oyster Cult.

Of this first album, the standout is really track 13, “Crisis.”  This is the most Trevor Rabin-like of all the tracks, a bit heavier than anything Rabin did, but outstanding.

The leader singer has an excellent voice, again with a very AOR-like sound (reminded me of being in junior high and highs school and listening to KICT-95 rock out of Wichita, Kansas), and the lyrics are poetically rendered and, generally, very life affirming.  This is not to suggest they’re always just happy go lucky.  Instead, they appropriate criticize excesses of conformism in society, but never to the extent that, say, Neil Peart did in the early 1980s.  The only exception to this is the appropriately named “Routine,” track 12.

Arrow Haze formed in 2011, and these guys—at least from the picture on the back of the booklet—are young.  These guys are brilliant musicians, and I have no doubt that we will be hearing a lot from, by, and about them over the next decade or two.

If I could offer a suggestion—offered with age if not necessarily wisdom—I hope these guys open up the spaces they’ve created.  Right now, they’re as driven as young men normally are, though, of course, while also being endowed with exceptional musical gifts.  I hope they allow themselves to explore the music itself more, to linger in it, and to allow it to encompass them.  Right now, with Music Factory, the music is a second ahead of the band.  With a bit more time, they’ll come into sync with it.

I have no doubt they will succeed admirably and with integrity.  I’m already very much looking forward to their second release.  These guys have a solid future.

To check out Arrow Haze on their home web turf, go here.

IZZ, Christmas, and Charity

music-philippines

One of my favorite bands, IZZ, just announced two new songs–Christmas songs–with the profits going for charity to help the Philippines.  Truly worthy of our support.

IZZ is pleased to offer original arrangements of two traditional Christmas carols, featuring the inspiring vocals of Anmarie Byrnes on “In the Bleak Midwinter,” and Laura Meade on “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel.”  In the spirit of the Season of Giving, all proceeds will be donated to assist in the relief efforts for the Philippine victims of Super Typhoon, Haiyan. All proceeds will be donated directly to Save the Children. Save The Children is targeting relief efforts at families and children directly affected by Typhoon Haiyan.  Thank you for your generous support for the Philippine people in the wake of this devastating storm.

To order, click here.

Suspicious Architecture: SAND

The cover of the new Sam Healy solo album, SAND.
The cover of the new Sam Healy solo album, SAND.

From the opening notes to the final ones, the first solo album by Sam Healy, SAND, is a stunning, immersive ride.  Mysteriously, SAND is at once glorious, introspective, resignated, and triumphal.  

Throughout SAND, Healy layers tensions.  Indeed, tensions lurk and hover every where in and throughout this album.  In the end, all find resolution, and this is much of what makes SAND so utterly brilliant and compelling.  There are walls of sound, there are depths of sound, and there are tidal waves of sound.

There are also silences, many of which are deafening.  Some silences allow the listener to pause, but Healy uses most of his silences to create a playful anxiety.  Tellingly, some of the silences within the tracks are longer than those between the tracks.

In the last half century of rock, one might readily compare SAND to Talk Talk, to the Beach Boys, to Mew, to ELO, to Catherine Wheel, and to Pink Floyd.  But, without a doubt (and I’ve had the joy of corresponding a bit with Healy), Sam Healy is very much his own man and artist.  He’s as dedicated to his music as he is intelligent and witty.  Yet another perfectionist.

Defining SAND, (though, there’s nothing about SAND that one could not call “particular” or merely representative) Healy juxtaposes minimalist rhythms with swirling eddies and currents of dense sounds, samples, strings, and always interesting lyrical insights.

The WordSmith

I would never want this last part of what I just wrote to be lost, somehow, in this review.  Healy possesses the gifts of the poet.  Words find their places, rather perfectly.  As T.S. Eliot wrote in “Little Gidding,”

And every phrase
And sentence that is right (where every word is at home,
Taking its place to support the others,
The word neither diffident nor ostentatious.

If I have one frustration with the reviewers of the current manifestation of progressive and post-progressive rock (overall, not at any one particular outlet) it’s that too few critics look at  the words.  Yet, if one looks carefully at the lyrics being produced by Spawton and Longdon, Tillyson, Kilminster, or Healy, she or he will see the poetic insights equivalent to the best of the 19th-century English romantics.  (And, of course, I’m not even including the non-Brits.  Add the Scandinavians and North Americans in, and we’re experiencing a brilliant moment of poetic revival.  But, this isn’t the purpose of this post. . . . For now, trust me that Healy is a master of words, a smith of words, if you will.)

Not only does he master his musical material, but he knows which word to use to emphasize the music, and which music to employ to emphasize the word.  Without getting religious here, it would be fair to state that something sacramental or incarnational appears when Healy puts words to notes and notes to words.

My favorite line of SAND:

Suspicious architecture rises on the plains of our doubt.

This is not the only gem.  Healy’s words drop mischievously like bombs at times, and always to the delight of the listener.

Without your triage and telegraph

I’m a rudderless antique oil-powered destroyer

or

While the reason slips away beneath the everyday

White picket fences circumscribe the lies that started out

Innocent as not complaining when you feel slighted

Sam Healy, an Irishman turned Scot.
Sam Healy, an Irishman turned Scot, dedicated and purposeful artist and perfectionist.

An Original

In the material promoting SAND, Healy said that he needed a “palate cleanser” after writing and recording his first two albums as North Atlantic Oscillation (also on Kscope).  And, as it turns out, Healy recorded all of this on his own, with only the most minimal help from others.  He wrote, produced, mixed, and engineered the entirety of SAND.  Would it be fair, then, to call SAND something akin to NAO 2.5?  Not in the least.  This is its own album and own project with its own purpose, meaning, and direction.  Anyone who loves NAO will additionally throw her or his love to SAND.  But, SAND is something different and original.

As the opening line of the album states, “There’s weather enough for us all.”  Whether Healy meant this to have a double meaning or not, it comes with one for the listener.  Healy’s certainly not distancing himself from NAO, he’s just noting there’s much to do, much to discover, and much to create.

Yet, this is clearly a Healy project.  There are just two things that Healy will never be able to escape, though I also very much hope he never tries.  First, Healy has one of the most distinctive voices in the rock world.  It has the depth of everything David Longdon brings to Big Big Train and the lush beauty (yes, I’m calling a man’s voice beautiful, as it is) of Leah McHenry or Sarah McLachlan.  It carries the urgency of Catherine Wheel but also offers the varied tones (sorry, I’m not a musician, so I might not be using the proper terminology) of what Andy Partridge was capable of with the best of XTC, such as what he did on The Big Express.  Healy’s voice is the music, to a large extent, and the other instruments really serve to augment what he’s capable of, vocally.

kscope

An Artist Colony

Kscope, the home of Healy’s music, seems a small but mighty paradise to me, the equivalent, from a century ago, of the artist colonies of Ditchling in England or Taos in the United States.  In the morning, you work in the fields, in the afternoon, you learn to blacksmith, and in the evening, you write and tell stories around the hearth, all of it in good company.

I also imagine Kscope, in much more modern terms, as the English equivalent of Pixar, a place of toys, machines, spaces, treats, delights all available for human ingenuity and creativity to flow.  Maybe a Steve Jobs (RIP) or a John Lassiter pops his head into your office every once in a while, giving you the thumbs up and the encouraging smile.

These, of course, are just the passing fancies of a middle-aged American lover of fine music, sitting in his office, recovering from grading 65 final papers.

Still, what I hear in SAND is not a part of my fancy at all, though it certainly tickles it.  No, this is reality.  And, a beautiful one at that.  Even the cover of the album reveals much about Healy’s overall project.  SAND, printed in a minimalist font across the front, hovers over a black hole and a swirling galaxy, itself rotating around the abyss.  A star, powerful in and of itself and the single brightest element of the cover, keeps its distance from that which would devour it.  Yet, more tensions.

I must admit, I hope that Healy does two things in the future, though with no rush.

First, I hope he puts his rather considerable writing skills to creating a concept album.  I’m sensing a coherency of ideas running throughout SAND, but it would be wonderful for Healy to be explicit.

Second, I hope he rents an organic space and employs several string and woodwind players, and produces one of the most gorgeous albums imagined.  Healy is a natural director and composer, but he does almost everything on SAND via various machines.  And, what he does with those machines makes my heart flutter.  But, I have to wonder what he would do with a string and woodwind ensemble, recording in an intimate setting.  Imagining this, my heart goes beyond the flutters and begins to pound!

SAND_image

A Must Own

So, Progarchists, let me apologize.  Had I heard this album prior to December 1, it would have made it—unquestionably—into my top of 2013.  Why apologize—because,  you need to buy this album.  Yes, you need to spend more money.  This is a must-own, an aural delight, a real piece of art for the headphones.  We need to support the likes of Sam Healy as much as we can.  He has earned it, and we owe it to the very ideal of beauty itself.

As a Catholic, I can state that my new year began on the first day of Advent.  So, I’m declaring SAND the first truly great work of 2014.  Yes, I know I’m cheating.  But, I’m cheating for the best of reasons.  Maybe, I’m just a Jesuit.

Now, please excuse me.  Some suspicious architecture is calling me. . . .

Forthcoming Book on Rush

Thanks to Steve Horwitz, man of many talents, for letting me know about this forthcoming book, EXPERIENCING RUSH, by Darrell Bowman.

It looks stunning.  Here’s a long writeup about it from the author’s website:

http://durrellbowman.com/?page_id=1567