The Permanent Way: Preliminary Awards, 2013

neil four corners
Ghost Rider, Neil Peart. Somewhere in the Four Corners, U.S.

Well, as tomorrow is Advent and the beginning of the Christian New Year, it seems as good a day as any (or better, frankly) to list my “best of 2013.”

Before I get to my own choices, however, I want to extend a huge, gargantuan, ginormous thanks to my fellow progarchists and to all of you who have supported us over our mere 14 months of existence.  I’m proud of us.  Extremely proud.  A good pride, I hope—not the kind that goeth before the fall.

As with almost every one we write about (in fact, most musicians in all forms and genres of music), we each have full-time jobs and many of us have big families as well.  We write for progarchy because, as I assume is obvious, we love music.  So, again, a major thanks to all who have contributed through their time and talents.  Even after 14 months, progarchy.com still boasts some of the best writing and analysts in the blogosphere.  Indeed, I would gladly hold up our writers against any group of writers.  We don’t agree on religion, politics, and a billion other subjects.  But, we each believe the reviewer must attempt to write as art, at a level commensurate with what is being reviewed.

Though our intention in the first few days of our existence was to be a kind of Dutch Progressive Rock Page/ “European Perspective” (our models and favorites) for North America, we realized pretty quickly (after a week or so), that there’s room for some thing larger than just the music scene in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, also recognizing how intimately connected we each are, one to another, across this increasingly small globe.  As I often remind my students in the history of western civilization, modern technology allows us to know of events in the world often much faster than large news agencies and governmental bureaucracies.  How different from the six to eight weeks it once took to cross the Atlantic.  One of my favorite moments over the last several years was receiving a demo copy of a song from Greg Spawton.  I commented in real time as I listened to the music, and I think Greg and I both sighed in awe at our ability to communicate instantly, though separated by 4,500 miles.  May we never take such things for granted.

The same is true with music.  The internet has allowed us to form communities that geography once prevented.  We can interact with the artists (should they be willing, and most are) in ways that were impossible 20 years ago.  I’m sure this puts a certain strain on the artist, but it also has to be satisfying as well.  We can react to songs, lyrics, and artwork in a truly satisfying manner.  T.S. Eliot once argued that no poet can write in a vacuum, in pure originality, as art is always a communal experience, building upon the past and reaching out to those of one immediate family, kin group, and society.

I especially want to thank (in no particular order): Greg Spawton, Leah McHenry, David Longdon, Andy Tillison, Giancarlo Erra, Arjen Lucassen, Matt Stevens, Matt Cohen, Steve Babb, Robert Pashman, John Bassett, Sam Healy, Jim Trainer, and Jerry Ewing.  Each of these men answered every question I asked them, usually very quickly and without any justified “why are you bugging me, Birzer?!?!”

haunting Leah
Lovely Leah, Metal Maid. Leah McHenry.

An equally important thanks goes out to all of you who have trusted us with your art, your music, and your ideas.  I hope you feel we’ve treated it with respect, a sacred trust.

Progarchy is also a way of saying thanks to the musicians and artists we love and who have inspired us.  I’m rather happy to say that I’ve been listening to prog—in some form—since 1971, the year I turned four.  Having two older brothers, I found the music of Yes, Jethro Tull, and Kansas immediately inviting.  Even before 1971, I was rather obsessed with the theme song to the Banana Splits, often putting it on the turntable, blasting it, and waking the entire family at around 3 in the morning.  My mother can verify this.  She and my brothers would come down the stairs in our duplex in Great Bend, Kansas, to find 2-year old me dancing like a madman.

At the risk of my friend and fellow progarchist, Eric Perry, calling me out as “hyperbolic,” I state this with gusto and conviction.  2013 has the best year for music in my lifetime.  I know of no other year that has been so filled with such innovation, harmony, varied time signature, and lyric quality.  And, this is saying a lot.  There have been a lot of great years for rock over the last five decades.  From my perspective, third-wave prog is now in the position jazz was between about 1955 and 1975.  This is OUR golden era, building up the brilliance of 40 years ago without imitating, mocking, or denigrating it.  Whatever small part progarchy has done to contribute to this, amen.  Again, I say, AMEN!

Preliminary Awards, 2013

Last year, I began December by offering a few “awards” to some amazing folks who are not themselves out front as musicians.  This year, I’d like to do the same, especially as I offer the “best all around progger” award.  This is the person who makes what so many others do possible.  I have to split it this year, between an American and a Brit.  For me, the American has been Billy James, president extraordinaire of Glass Onyon PR.  This guy not only loves the genre of prog, he serves the indispensable role of promoting our genre in every venue possible, and he always does it with grace, class, and enthusiasm.  Billy has been as kind and helpful as he has been informative.

Progarchy Best All-Around Progger, 2013, American: Billy James, Glass Onyon.
Progarchy Best All-Around Progger, 2013, American: Billy James, Glass Onyon.
Progarchy Best All-Around Progger, 2013, Brit: Sally Collyer.
Progarchy Best All-Around Progger, 2013, Brit: Sally Collyer.

Our Brit “all around progger” is none other than Sally Collyer.  Sally contacted me about a year ago, saying, “I’ve seen your name and your ideas, and I think we have a lot in common.”  Absolutely.  Not only have we bonded on prog, but we have on the unlikely subject of horses as well!  Progressive equines.  Or, something like this.  Again, a brilliant person, Sally answers everything, helps with everything, and continues to offer a brilliant support.  We also all know she’s an absolute mainstay in the British prog community and an equally lovely person.  The significant other of Andy Tillison, Sally keeps brightness, purpose, as well as levity, in the prog community.

So, to Billy and Sally: thank you, thank you, thank you.

Progarchy Audiophile Award Winner, 2013 (and 2012), Rob Aubrey
Progarchy Audiophile Award Winner, 2013 (and 2012), Rob Aubrey

Audiophile Award.  This one, again, goes to Rob Aubrey.  I know there’s a famous guy out there, now even more famous for his 5.1 mixes.  But, for my money, the best man in the business is Aubrey.  One only has to listen to his work this year for Big Big Train and Cosmograf to realize what an ear and mind he possesses.  Exact, precise, yet imaginative.  A hard combination to beat.  He is our generation’s Phill Brown.

fractal mirror
Progarchy Best Debut of a Band, 2013: Fractal Mirror.

Best emergence of an artist/group.  Fractal Mirror.  Combining the talents of several spectacular musicians, including the drum work of Frank Urbaniak, the keyboard and bass playing of Ed Van Haagen, the artwork of Brian Watson, the haunting goth vocals of Leo Koperdraat, and the advice of a number of major figures in the scene, including Giancarlo Erra, what more could we want?  I wish them all the well-deserved success in the world as they begin their journey as a group.

Greg Spawton and John Betjeman.
Progarchy Best Single Song, 2013: Greg Spawton and John Betjeman.

Best single song.  Big Big Train, The Permanent Way.  From the opening notes, David’s vocals move us into the twilight realms of quiet nostalgic, but without reason.  The first few times I heard this, I couldn’t quite figure out what was happening?  Was Aubrey cutting him out.  Then, I realized, David is a gentleman artist.  The voice of the song is John Betjeman.  David, rather impressively was deferring to this great poet.  From there, David build, flows, lulls, and, then, of course, rocks.

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

Best Packaging.  What’s not to love about a cd or two accompanied by explanations, lyrics, and photos.  This year, the award goes to the ninety six page booklet that comes with Big Big Train English Electric Full Power.  The photos are gorgeous, the notes are meaningful, and the tributes to past and present allies of the band is heart warming, to say the least.

 

More to come. . . .

Three Cheers for William F. Buckley, Jr!

With apologies.  In my other life, I’m a historian and biographer.  That is, when I’m not reviewing prog (I’m always listening!).  I came across this exchange from September, 1955, and it made my heart smile.

Russell Kirk: “Nor do I own a radio, or any such contraption of the devil.”

William F. Buckley’s response: “To face life without a good high fidelity phonograph is to be doctrinaire about the industrial revolution, which is something we conservatives don’t, if you will remember, approve of being about ANYTHING.”

Thank you, Mr. Buckley.

Rush 2.0: Clockwork Angels Tour (2013) Review

rush clockwork tourA friend of mine said to me—in response to my obvious glee that Rush’s Clockwork Angels Tour Blu-ray had just arrived in the mail—“it’s good to be childlike every once in a while.”  Well, maybe it was the reaction of a 13-year old trapped in a 46 year-old body.  Regardless, the reaction was sincere.  Rush!

Three thoughts and images (images as thoughts, and thoughts as images) come to me whenever I think of Rush.  Rush—brilliance.  Rush—inspiration.  Rush—comfort.  For thirty-three years, they’ve been all of these things to me.  Thank the Good Lord for that detention in seventh grade, and thank the Good Lord again for sharing that detention with Brad and Troy, the two guys who introduced me to Moving Pictures and, consequently, to Rush.  That was a heady spring.  I had also heard The Wall for the first time, the U.S. had just defeated the Soviets in hockey, and some idiots tried to kill the U.S. president and the Pope and came damn close to succeeding.  7th grade.  Prog Rock, Dr. Who, and Dungeons and Dragons.  But, most of all, Rush.

Maybe I never grew up.  These are still the things I love and share with my own kids (the oldest, now 14; he proudly wears a “prog rock—all else is noise” t-shirt; he and my twelve-year old daughter will be seeing that majesty that is Transatlantic in Chicago this coming February).

Oh, fair reader, back to the subject at hand.  Rush, Clockwork Angels Tour Blu-ray.  Holy schnikees.  Yep, God rest Chris Farley’s soul.  Holy schnikees.  What a work of absolute joy.  Over three hours of absolute joy.  A precious document of their massive tour, 2012-2013, the blu-ray captures them for a Dallas, Texas, show.

As Kev pointed out in his review of the same, there was a time when Rush fans could calculate an era by what live CD had been or was just about to be released.  All the World’s a Stage for the hard prog stage; Exit Stage Left for the melodic prog stage; A Show of Hands for the synth prog stage; and Different Stages for the return to guitar/alt rock stage.

But, this was all for Rush 1.0, testing for echo.

After the horrific tragedies in Peart’s life, his purgatory and redemption (symbolically), we’re at Rush 2.0.

I would argue rather forcefully that this is a different band, a band that finally (yes, these guys are truly humble and always have been despite their driving ambition) realizes its more than a mere band.  You can see this realization dawn, finally (again, finally!) on them in Beyond on the Lighted Stage and on the Colbert Show.

They have nothing to prove anymore when it comes to acceptance.  They never really did, but they always thought they did.  They only have to prove their excellence.  And, to me, they’ve done this in spades.  As one of my favorite Rush writers, Rob Freedman, wrote about a year ago (and I quote this whenever I can)

The story of Rush is a story of validation. When the band first started out, the mainstream music establishment largely ignored them. Geddy’s voice was the brunt of jokes, Alex’s guitar playing got no respect, Neil’s lyrics were pretentious and channeled a kooky Ayn Randian ideology, and he played too many drums, all of them with the passion of a mathematician. Meanwhile, musicians and music aficionados loved them, so you had this great narrative tension. Now they’re nearing their 40-year anniversary, their old critics are in nursing homes, their fans are in leadership positions in business, science, government, and the arts, and they’re looked to as elder statesmen of rock.

Amen, Rob.  Amen.  On this issue, I can speak from some personal experience.  As I look back over my own life as a historian, a writer, and an academic, I can easily claim that Peart has had as much influence on my own thinking as any of the other greats I looks to for ideas and inspiration: Russell Kirk, Friedrich Hayek, Edmund Burke, Adam Smith, J.R.R. Tolkien, Ray Bradbury. . . .  A whole generation of us can claim to be Peart’s little brothers.  Like any older brother, Neil almost certainly will not agree with all of my own views, or with what I’ve done with his ideas.  But, then, Neil never—in any way—sought to conform the world.  One of the greatest things Neil gave to a generation was the advice to develop and hone what is best in each of us, whatever that best might be.

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Not content to fade, Rush 2.0 has decided to shimmer with excellence.  I can’t help but think of Neil’s words off of Signals, “Losing It.”

Some are born to move the world

To live their fantasies

But most of us just dream about

The things we’d like to be

Sadder still to watch it die

Than never to have known it

For you, the blind who once could see

The bell tolls for thee….

Rush is proving that greatness can beget greatness.  As I see it, Rush’s last three studio albums have done nothing if not prove this.  Vapor Trails, Snakes and Arrows, and, especially, Clockwork Angels.  While building upon everything from Rush to Test for Echo, the last three Rush albums come with a confidence, not of resignation, but assertion.  Nature has given us this time, I’ll be damned if I let it fly by unused and unappreciated.  Indeed, one can say with the last three albums, Rush looked at the world not just with confidence, but with gratitude.

So, when the band decides to release a live album for each tour, I can only shout “hooray.”  Give us as much as you can, Rush.  So many of us want to keep journeying with you in any way we can.

As with the previous tour, this one is a massive production.  Explosions, lasers, weird sets, and, best of all, incredible film clips add to the already stunning music.  The background story for the Clockwork Angels Tour film clips—an IRS agent looking for the Watchmaker is just outstanding, drop-down, gut-wrenching funny.  Geddy, Alex, and Neil appear as rather mischievous “G”nomes.

And, it’s just a joy to watch these guys perform.  They obviously love each other and what they’re doing.  In terms of playing, none of the members of Rush have ever been this good.  They are each in top form.  Watching each of them play guitar, bass, and drums is nothing if not humbling.  I hope I give as much in my lectures as these guys give in their playing.  Phew.

Musically, of course, what more could we want?  Knowing that they’ve been releasing lots of tour material over the last decade, Rush chose to play a significant portion of their 1980s material—stuff that’s not appeared on any of their live releases in a long time.  It’s worth remembering, however, that this is Rush 2.0.  They bring the sensibilities of the last three albums to the previous multitude of albums.  There’s not a dud in the live set, but songs that stand out in ways the originals didn’t: Force Ten; The Body Electric; and The Analog Kids.  Schnikees (again, apologies to Chris Farley), these are amazing.  Rocking, rocking, rocking.

It’s set two, however, that boggles the mind, the set that includes almost all of Clockwork Angels and—gasp!—a string quartet.  Phew.  Amazing.   So much energy emerges from the blu-ray in set two, it’s actually a bit wonderfully overwhelming.  YYZ is especially spectacular with the strings.

Bonus material on the blu-ray includes: Limelight, Middletown Dreams, The Pass, and Manhattan Project, as well as all of the movie clips from the tour and some documentaries.

For me, this is pretty much perfection itself.  33 years of loving this band comes down to this 3plus hour set.  Yes, Geddy, Neil, and Alex, I could never thank you enough for the confidence you’ve given me, the excellence you’ve shown me, and the hope you embody.  Whether you ever expected to get here or not, you are the embodiment of the best of rock, you are now the elder statesmen of culture.  You have persevered, and we have as well!

May the journey long continue.

BillyNews: Psychedelic Santa!

Cleopatra Records Taps Modern Psych-Space Bands
For A Psychedelic Themed Christmas Album
 
Featuring Psychic Ills, Dead Meadow, The Vacant Lots, Sleepy Sun,
Dark Horses, Elephant Stone, Sons Of Hippies, and more!
 
Los Angeles, CA – The 2013 holiday season is about to get a whole lot trippier with the release of Cleopatra Record’s Psych-Out Christmas, a brand new compilation of spaced out, psychedelic interpretations of Christmas classics and new holiday favorites performed by a team of current psych-space rock bands from around the globe! The compilation is available now on both CD & vinyl at all fine music retailers as well as for download at iTunes and other digital music retailers.
 
Canadian indie rockers Elephant Stone kick things off with a sitar-infused version of the beloved Beatles’ holiday singalong “Christmas Time (Is Here Again),” followed by Sweden’s own Dark Horses turning in an original piece composed specifically for this compilation, the wintry, ethereal ballad “Jul Song.” Another Swedish band, The Movements, whose new album was released earlier this year by Cleopatra, offer a uniquely drumless take on “Little Drummer Boy” that swirls with fuzzy guitars and dreamy synths to create a headswimming sugar plum hum.
 
The vibrant psychedelic rock scene blooming on American shores is well represented here by the likes of Sleepy Sun, who thoroughly deconstruct the 19th century carol “What Child Is This?” and The Vacant Lots, who bring a Spiritualized twist to a long buried holiday treasure written by the band Suicide called “No More Christmas Blues.” The band explained their selection, “After spending many hours overdosing on the more familiar Christmas tunes, we gravitated towards the obscure Ze Christmas album track by Suicide.  As big fans of the band, ‘No More Christmas Blues’ seemed the perfect choice. The song also deals with the sadder side of the holidays, which we could relate to. It was a lot of fun to reinterpret the song in a new light and be part of a record with many other great bands.”
 
Florida-based trio Sons Of Hippies chose the unconventional yet wholly appropriate cover of The Zombies’ “Time Of the Season,” for what is Christmas if not “the season of loving”? Singer Katherine Kelly explains, “‘Time Of The Season’ was fun to cover. We replaced the organ parts on the original Zombies version with layers of distorted guitar leads and gave the drums an eerie, echoed intro. The Psych-Out Christmas compilation is unique and spooky and we wanted to be a part of that vibe.”
 
New York band Psychic Ills, currently on tour with Mazzy Star, got their Christmas wish when they were given the opportunity to record a version of Chuck Berry’s rollicking “Run Rudolph Run.” Guitarist/vocalist Tres Warren proclaims, “I always liked ‘Run Rudolph Run’ because it was a song that I’d actually want to listen to regardless of what time of year it is, and Chuck Berry is as mythical as Santa Clause in my mind.”
 
Alongside these newcomers, a few veterans join in the mix, including long time garage rock heroes The Fuzztones, and the original wild man himself Iggy Pop! Fans of these great artists, as well as anyone looking for a break from the traditional ho-hum Christmas album, is sure to find stocking full of surprises on this great release!
 
1. Christmas Monster Party (Intro) – Len Maxwell
2. Christmas Time (Is Here Again) – Elephant Stone
3. It’s Christmas Day – Cosmonauts
4. Silent Night – Quintron & Miss Pussycat
5. Jul Song – Dark Horses
6. What Child Is This? – Sleepy Sun
7. No More Christmas Blues – The Vacant Lots
8. Time of the Season – Sons of Hippies
9. Santa Claus – The Fuzztones
10. Christmas Tears – Eli Cook
11. Little Drummer Boy – The Movements
12. Jingle Bell Rock – Quintron & Miss Pussycat
13. Frosty The Snowman – The Candy Store
14. Run Rudolph Run – Psychic Ills
15. Mele Kalikimaka – Dead Meadow
16. Jingle Bells – He 5
17. White Christmas (Guitar Stooge Version) – Iggy Pop
 
Purchase the CD at Amazon: http://georiot.co/2ceI
 
Download the album at iTunes: http://georiot.co/1a7a
 
Press inquiries:
Glass Onyon PR
Billy James
 
CLEOPATRA RECORDS, INC.
11041 Santa Monica Blvd #703
Los Angeles CA 90025

 

Chris Wade aka Dodson and Fogg: An Interview

Chris, first I would like to thank you for sparing some time (again) from your obviously busy schedule. You’ve just released your second album this year and also written two band biographies on The Incredible String Band and Black Sabbath. This is also your third interview in less than a year by Progarchy with the other two by Craig Breaden to be found here:

https://progarchy.com/2013/02/10/steamfolk-the-derring-do-of-dodson-and-fogg/

Sounds of Day and Night by Dodson and Fogg

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Now I’m not normally a folk music listener but after reading a number of positive reviews of your first three albums and listening to them on numerous occasions, you’ve definitely converted me. Not only is there a special beauty to the music you write, but Craig made an important observation in an earlier interview which resonates with me deeply:
“The impulse to go long, as his folk and other prog rock predecessors might have done, is also resisted – there are few wasted notes or words. Less is more sometimes, and service here is done to Song.”

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The Call is your fourth album in a very short space of time. Your first two albums evoked classic 70s folk music but your third album, Sounds of Day and Night, developed a dreamier, slightly psychedelic sound with Eastern vibes in places. There was more use of the electric guitar and the arrangements were slightly more complex. What can we expect musically from the new album?

I’m not sure how to describe the sound, because developing from album to album is more of a natural, gut thing really. I write a song and colour it in with different sounds, and keep going until I have a set of songs, say 12 or 13, to fill an album. Then I usually carry on recording and there’s a process of elimination, where new ones come in and replace the older ones, until I am happy with it from start to finish and happy with every single note. It’s really concentrated work, and I love the mixing and producing part as well. I work on it every day. And while four albums in a year and half may seem quick, to me that year and a half has felt like forever. It literally feels like ages since I did the first CD. But this new one is by far my favourite, even though I keep saying this every time. I would say the album is full of unusual sounds blending together, it definitely has a vibe to it, quite surreal maybe and for me “songs” are very important, i.e. something with a subject, an approach, a hook, a chorus and then I think about the best way to colour the song in. I like to make interesting music that surprises and hopefully takes the listener away on a nice trip. it’s hard to describe your own work without sounding like a frilly coloured fop.

Lyrically you appear to be focus upon mellow reflections on life, love and nature. Does The Call follow this path?

My lyrics are always whatever comes to me. A phrase might come up and I elaborate on that. The lyrical content on The Call seemed to follow the same path. It’s all about awareness, being aware of your life, what’s going on around you, the people who are in your life with you and understanding what they have or have not done for you, and not forgetting that. I didn’t purposely explore this as a theme; it just seems to have developed that way. It sounds pretentious to say, but it does have a theme to it; it’s about not wasting time and appreciating the things that are here now, and may not be here in the future.

What inspires you lyrically and what comes first, the music or the lyrics?

It differs really. Many songs have been written on an acoustic guitar. I find a sound or a chord and then get a melody going, and like I say, a phrase might come into my head and it goes on from there. I love getting a different chord progression or guitar sound as a starting point and then I decide what else to do. Lyrics are becoming more important though with each album. I’m not into the idea of obvious lyrics, like openly complaining about the government or work, or the plight of the everyman, and if I do ever sing about it, it isn’t blatant. Also it’s good to write about a real issue or a feeling but not ram it down the listener’s throat. It’s good that people have their own meanings and thoughts on songs. Lou Reed once said that he didn’t like to tell people what his songs were about because it might disappoint them, and they may have attached the song to something precious in their own mind. Sorry I am waffling on now…

It’s not waffle to me Chris! – I know exactly what you mean about lyrics. Lyrics resonate with people in different ways; they become very personal and sometimes finding out the real meaning from the artist himself can disappoint.

Chris, you’ve introduced Chloe Herrington on saxophone and Ricky Romain on Sitar on the new album. Guest artists appear an important ingredient to your output. How important is the collaborative process in producing the music of Dodson and Fogg? 

It’s mostly important for me because I listen to a track and think ‘this might sound good with a sax here, or a sitar there.’ Sometimes I think if you’re a one man band (not like the fella that sung Rosie with the bass drum on his back) you do need character and colour from elsewhere. Celia Humphris of the folk band Trees (one of my favourite bands) appears on the new album again, and I feel her voice is very important. There was one song I wasn’t quite happy with and then she did her vocals and I loved it. So it can be really important. Coming up with the idea of the specific musician though can be quite random. I discovered Knifeworld on the internet a few months ago and loved the sax on a track, so got in touch with Kavus of that band to see if Chloe, his sax player, would be interested in playing on a track. It can be like hearing someone and then imagining them on my song. It’s a great part of it. But save for one trumpet part on Sounds of Day and Night, I was the only musician on it. So it’s not essential all the time, but I love the process of hearing what someone else has done and putting it into the song.

Chris, it’s a big understatement to say your multi-skilled! – you play so many instruments and write books on both music and surreal comedy. Do you have a first love?

Definitely music. I have played, or attempted to play at least, instruments from a really young age and always collected records as a boy. I used to dream of having a band, and I did have one with my brother and sister when I was younger and we did gigs for a while, but it fizzled out so I turned to writing, something I had also done since I was a kid. At first I got into the surreal fiction when I did the audiobooks of my stories with Rik Mayall and Charlie Chuck, but I soon found it too be quite limiting and turned back to music eventually last year, thank god, with the first Dodson and Fogg album. I didn’t expect the feedback to be so good, so I carried on and I’ve been learning more about music, releasing music and everything that comes with it. Music is definitely my main thing now and the main focus in my work and hobbies. With my music going reasonably successfully and with such a great response to it, this is the first time I have felt a proper direction, so it’s great. But I can’t take any of it too seriously, because it is still ridiculously fun!

The increasing production of music in vinyl format has attracted a lot of interest over the last few years. I read that the first album was to be released on vinyl but haven’t heard anything. Have you any more plans for vinyl releases or is the production cost too prohibitive?

Yes a company called Golden Pavilion is releasing the first album in a run of 500 next year and I will have around 50 copies available from my website, unsigned or signed, whichever is preferred. I should add though that a signed copy might add an extra value of 3 pence to the item, so I suggest the latter.  I would love to have the others on vinyl too one day, and it might be possible, so fingers crossed.

You appear to be at a creative peak replete with musical ideas. What’s next on the horizon for Dodson and Fogg, a live tour, another album?

I’ve been writing more songs, but then I tend to write songs all the time now and some never get finished and others get put in a scrap folder. But for now I am going to promote The Call and start work on more tracks after that. I don’t have any other projects lined up at the minute, so I’ll think about the next D and F album. I would love to do some gigs but I haven’t found the right musicians for the gigs yet.

Once again thanks for your time Chris and good luck for the future.

For those who would like to purchase the new album  “The Call” please visit Chris’s website here:

http://wisdomtwinsbooks.weebly.com/

or you can purchase from Bandcamp here:

http://wisdomtwinsbooks.bandcamp.com/album/the-call

Pallas Crowdfunding!

A huge thanks to Geoff Banks for letting me know about this.  Very cool.

PallasPressRelease

Prog Magazine Reader Poll, 2013

prog-vote-featureJerry Ewing, everyone’s favorite Prog editor, has just announced the 2013 Reader Poll.  Please take the time to vote as soon as possible.

I must admit, I’m far more excited to vote for this than I was either for the 2013 local elections or the 2012 national (here in the U.S.) elections.  I’d be pretty happy to have Greg Spawton as my mayor or my president.

http://www.progrockmag.com/news/vote-now-in-the-prog-readers-poll-for-2013/

3RDegree Remastered 1996 “Human Interest Story”

From 10T News:

 

3RDEGREE re-release their seminal 1996 CD HUMAN INTEREST STORY as a re-mastered digital download exclusively available immediately through 10T Records’ online store.  HUMAN INTEREST STORY will be available through all major mainstream online download outlets (iTunes, Amazon, etc.) on December 10, 2013.  This is the very first time the album has been available digitally anywhere except the band’s own website.

Before American progressive rock band 3RDegree came to the consciousness of the worldwideprog rock press with the 2008 album NARROW-CASTER and its follow-up release, 2012’s THE LONG DIVISION, the band knocked around the New York City area from 1990 to 1997 with little notice. They put out 2 albums during this timeframe, the second of which, 1996‘s HUMAN INTEREST STORY, was a particular milestone.

Having just added lead vocalist George Dobbs the summer before, the album’s April release was the culmination of 3 solid years of writing and recording to which Dobbs added his golden pipes in the 11th hour, taking over the spot from bassist/keyboardist Robert James Pashman. ”I was more than happy to relinquish the lead vocals in exchange for a better band and a less busyme!” says Pashman.

For listeners familiar with the band’s more recent albums, HUMAN INTEREST STORY does not sound a decade away from it’s follow-up. Patrick Kliesch explains, “Since Narrow-Caster consisted of many songs or ideas started in ’95-’97 but not finished, there’s a connection between the albums despite the 8 year break-up in the band”.

“Perhaps because of the band’s now more masked 90’s influences of Soundgarden, Jellyfish, and King’s X, Human is more guitar heavy, with keyboards in the background as more of a garnish than a main course” adds Dobbs.

“Never mind a second chance, HUMAN INTEREST STORY never got a first chance really. Marketing an album such as this in the mid-90’s was beyond frustrating!” notes now occasional drummer Rob Durham. Many songs from this 1996 collection have appeared in recent 3RDegree set lists. “There’s a bunch of songs that sit very nicely next to our newer material and are very much a part of us, so we keep playing them” says Pashman.

Songs like the title track with it’s memorable melody sailing on top of the start-stop rhythm section and its Jerry Springer-inspired subject matter (sister song to The Long Division’s “Televised” about reality shows), the heart-on-sleeve delivery of the vocal on the Todd Rundgren-inspired “Ladder,” and the snarky tone by Dobbs on the intense “Top Secret” (the NSA flavored ditty written the year Snowden was entering kindergarten). This song, from the point of view of a spy laughing at “the little people,” shows Dobbs doing something he would reprise on THE LONG DIVISION’s “Incoherent Ramblings,” delivered in the voice of a TV political strategist.

Additionally, anyone who purchases the new collection via digital download directly from10TRecords.com will be emailed a code for an exclusive download of a new song from the band called “What It Means To Be Human” (no relation!).  This is 3RDegree’s first new music since the summer of 2012.

While a new album is forthcoming in 2014, 10T Records president Steve Carroll says, “Anyone thirsty for new 3RDegree who hasn’t delved into material from their 90’s incarnation is really missing something special. This material from the 20-something version of 3RDegree is no less interesting or polished!

All tracks from HUMAN INTEREST STORY are now available to preview in their entirety on the 3RDegree artist page at 10T Records.  Downloads are immediately available in MP3, M4A (Apple Lossless) and Hi Def 16-bit WAV formats.

After December 10th, HUMAN INTEREST STORY will be available through all major mainstream digital download outlets.

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Totally Unprofessional Video Review #5: Gazpacho, NIGHT

My praise of one of the greatest albums of third-wave prog, Gazpacho’s NIGHT (2007).

Available at amazon (U.S.) right now for $7.92 (download).

Happy Birthday, Yessongs. Unprofessional Video Review 4

Yessongs, taken from the Close to the Edge tour, arrived in the world in 1973.  Happy Birthday, Yessongs, my first prog love.  And, what’s not to love?  My two reasons why.  Enjoy.