Author Archives: Tim Hall

If Coldplay are “Alternative rock”, then words have ceased to have any meaning whatsoever. What, exactly, are they the alternative to?

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Things Twitter could do

FailWhaleI think few people would deny that Twitter has a troll problem. For us regular users with a few hundred followers it’s easy enough to block the occasional drive-by troll, especially if we’re male. But it’s a different story for public figures, especially women, who can find themselves bombarded with hundreds of abusive messages.

Technical solutions for social problems aren’t ideal, but trying to re-educate the sections of the population who live in the bottom half of the internet is at best a very long term project.  In the meantime there are things Twitter could do make it harder for trolls to ruin people’s Twitter experience.

One would be to give users the ability to filter the Notifictations tab. At the moment, anyone you haven’t blocked will be visible in that tab if they @message your username. It’s not technically difficult to filter than by degrees of separation, so what you see in your Connections tab can take into account things like:

  • The number of people you’re following who follow them
  • The number of people you follow who have blocked them
  • The total number of people who have blocked them relative to their number of followers.

Of course it would need to be refined to prevent the trolls themselves from gaming the system. For example, perhaps blocks from those who are very block-happy but have themselves collected a lot of blocks could be disregarded.

Twitter could also crack down on abuse of multiple accounts. There are plenty of legitimate reasons why people need multiple accounts, but it’s well known that trolls often churn through multiple throwaway accounts as each one gets blocked by their targets. Surely it’s not impossible for some kind of pattern-matching on IP addresses and word use to identify which accounts are being used by the same, and deal with them accordingly when any one is suspeded for abuse.

Twitter is very efficient at nuking spam accounts, and they’re pretty easy to identify algorithmically. Dealing with trolls is harder, and will require more human intervention, but that’s no excuse for Twitter to do nothing. As I’ve pointed out, there are plemty of things they could do if the will was there.

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Panic Room on tour again

Panic Room are on tour again in June, playing songs from their excellent new album Incarnate. The support for their show at London’s Borderline on June 14th will be the talented Matt Stevens.

The tour also includes shows in Bath, Reading, Liverpool, Bilston, Derby and Preston – full details on their tour page.

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Some Robert Heinlein fanboys are complaining on the interwebs that Robert Heinlein would not win a Hugo award today. It doesn’t occur to them that if Heinlein, who died of old age in 1988, was a man in the prime of his career today, he’d have been born two generations later. His world view would most likely be completely different, as would the books he would be writing. Quite possibly those conservatively-minded fanboys would not even like those books. And maybe they would be winning Hugos.

Posted on by Tim Hall | 4 Comments

Heather Findlay and Dave Kerzner form Mantra Vega

Mantra VegaPhoto with permission from Mantra Vega, photographer unknown.

A big announcement from Heather Findlay today.

Mantra Vega is a new transatlantic progressive rock band from Myself and Dave Kerzner (former founding members of the bands Mostly Autumn and Sound of Contact respectively) along with Chris Johnson (Halo Blind), Stu Fletcher (We Could Be Astronauts), Alex Cromarty (Mostly Autumn) and featuring legendary guitarist David Kilminster (Roger Waters).

Melding together their wide range of styles and influences in Progressive, Classic and Alternative Rock, Mantra Vega offers a fresh blend of female and male lead vocals and harmonies, atmospheric soundscapes, emotional dynamics and powerful moods. From Heather Findlay’s stunning vocals ranging from angelic to powerful, to the lush keys, guitars and sound design of Dave Kerzner and Chris Johnson to soaring guitar leads from Dave Kilminster and soulful groove from the Cromarty/Fletcher rhythm section, there’s something fresh and new for fans of artists like Peter Gabriel, Pink Floyd, Kate Bush, Fleetwood Mac, Yes, Radiohead, The Beatles, Sigur Ros and more.

Heather had originally planned to record a solo album produced by Nightwish’s Troy Donockley, but that got overtaken by events when Nightwish’s schedule changed. But this new project sounds altogether more exciting. Most of the band are from the most recent incarnation of The Heather Findlay band, though it’s especially good news to see Dave Kilminster back on board.

The solo album produced by Troy Donockley will still be happening in due course, but has been put back until Troy is available.

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The much-leaked announcement that Metallica will be headlining Glastonbury has received predicably mixed reactions. There are indie kids terrified at the prospect of guitars being played loudly rather than strummed, and metal fans claiming Metallica would be wasted on Glastonbury’s audience. But while I have the greatest respect for Dom Lawson, I cannot agree with his assertion that it’s just another half-baked vanity project. If I didn’t know him better I’d have accused him of writing archetypcal Guardian clickbait.

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Quote of the Day

Quote for today comes from Trent Reznor in Rolling Stone.

“I get the sense that a lot of bands today are designing themselves to get a good review in the hip blogs, and that is probably the safest and most cowardly thing you can do as an artist,” added the Nine Inch Nails musician. “If you have something to say, then say it. Express yourself and break the rules.”

He speaks as though this is something new. But of course it’s not; this has being going on since the heyday of the “inkies” in the 1980s. How many untalented and unlistenable bands seemed to exist for the sole purpose of attracting the attention of Sounds’ Dave McCulloch, for example?

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Fish cancels May tour

Fish has sadly been forced to cancel the remaining dates of his May tour. As he says on the Fish website:

It deeply saddens me to announce that I have to cancel the entire UK tour in May.

The shows at Norwich 8th May, London 9th, Cardiff 10th, Exeter 11th, Brighton 13th, Bristol 15th ,Northampton 16th, Holmfirth 17th and Glasgow on the 18th will be rescheduled in September and December and I will give you more information as soon as I have it.

Robin Boult is still seriously unwell with chickenpox and he was incapable of performing to anywhere close to his abilities. His condition has been worsened by a suspected blood infection from aggravated sores on his back chaffed by his guitar strap in rehearsals and he has also picked up an ear infection as his immune system is on the floor.

Everything has happened so fast it’s impossible to bring in and rehearse a replacement to cover the shows and I am left with no other option but to cancel the entire tour.

Disappointing news I’m sure for anyone planning to attend any of those gigs, but unfortunately unavoidable. I wish Robin Boult a speedy recovery, and hope to catch the band for at least one the rescheduled shows in September or December.

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Haken – The Garage

Haken at The GarageHaken are one of the best of the new generation of younger progressive rock bands producing music with all the scope, ambition and virtuosity that goes with the genre label while sounding little like any band from the 1970s. Their third album “The Mountain” was a major step forward, which moved past the obvious influences (Zappa, Dream Theater) of their earlier records to develop a sound that was their own.

Support came from the four-piece My Soliloquy, with an entertaining set of highly melodic prog-metal. They made a remarkably big sound for four people, especially when they didn’t have a bassist, relying on guitarist Mike Gilpin’s riffing to fill the bottom end of the sound, and frontman Pete Morten made a strong impression both on vocals and on lead guitar. They’re a band to watch out for in the future.

Haken at The GarageThe two eight-string guitars and a six-string bass made it clear Haken were no indie band. But neither are they the sort of technically showy muso band that such things might suggest. Opening with the hymn-like but extremely earwormy “The Path”, on just piano and vocals, they proceeded to play the The Mountain in full. By the time they reached “Cockroach King” with its nod to Gentle Giant they had hit their stride. The complex material came over remarkably well live, with multi-part vocal harmonies with all six band members and the interplay between the two guitars of Richard Henshall and Charles Griffiths.

Despite the obvious virtuosity of the whole band there was relatively little in the way of soloing; the strength of their music is in the composition. The Mountain is an extremely ambitious piece that amounts to far more than the sum of its parts with it’s recurring motifs, huge soaring melodies and masterful use of dynamics. Frontman Ross Jennings has a fairly unique vocal style that has given rise to comparisons to Freddy Mercury with his extensive use of falsetto. The whole thing was an intense performance from the entire band than earned a huge applause when the final notes of the closing number “Somebody” died away.

After that tour-de-force they finished the show with a handful of older songs from “Aquarius” and “Visions”, encoring with the completely bonkers sixteen minute kaleidoscopic epic “Celestial Elixir” making a fitting end to to a fantastic night.

In the past couple of years there has been something of a sea change in the progressive rock world. The scene had been dominated by reverential homages to the 70s pioneers or flashy prog-metallers whose sound is typically dominated by instrumental pyrotechnics. Haken are one of the new breed of bands who are neither of those things. If you still think progressive rock is all about cod-Genesis 70s retreads, you should listen to Haken.

Haken will be returning with an UK tour with Leprous and Maschine in late October and early November.

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Cosmograf – The Fear Created

A track from the forthcoming album “Capacitor” by multi-instrumentalist Robin Armstrong. This track also features Colin Edwin on bass, and Nick D”Virgilio on drums.

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