Author Archives: Tim Hall

My somewhat satirrical definition of Hard Science Fiction is “Anything that reads like a cross between an engineering textbook and a right-libertarian tract”. This might be one cause of the sexism in the SF world, in that few women are interested in writing that kind of stuff; instead insisting on having things like three-dimensional characters.

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Now Playing – September 2013 edition

Some of the records I’ve been listening to over the past couple of days. 2013 has been a great year for new music, but here I’ve revisited some old and sometimes overlooked classics.

Marillion – This Strange Engine

Their live sets in recent years have often drawn heavily from this album, but it’s the first time I’ve given the whole album a listen for a long time. One thing that struck me was how much it resembles their more recent work, despite being a decade and a half old. When it came out it was a bit a departure for them, with more emphasis on atmospherics and textures, and drew mixed reactions. But in retrospect, a lot of their current sound has its roots in this album.

Touchstone – Discordant Dreams

Touchstone’s first full-length album shows just how far they’ve progressed since they started out. I’d forgotten that Rob Cottingham sang most of the lead vocals back in the early days with Kim singing harmonies – It was only from “Wintercoast” onwards that Kim took over as the band’s main lead singer.

Yes – Drama

The announcement that Trevor Horn and Geoff Downes from pop duo The Buggles were to replace Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman made heads explode when announced all those years ago. But thirty years on this is an album that stands the test of time far better than its unfocussed and directionless precessor “Tormato”. I think it’s fair to say that without “Drama” there would have been no Yes three decades later.

Black Sabbath – Seventh Star

Tony Iommi and former Deep Purple singer Glenn Hughes made this collaboration with a bunch of session players after the ill-fated Ian Gillan-fronted Sabbath fell apart. It was never really intended as a Black Sabbath record, and lacks the doom-laden melodrama associated with the Sabbath name. But taken on its own merits it’s an excellent blues-metal hybrid, with both Iommi and Hughes on top form.

Rush – Roll the Bones

I was never that big a fan of Rush’s “Synthesiser period” and found their late 80s output a little bloodless and sterile. Their first release of the 1990s represented a back-to-basics power trio approach with Alex Lifeson’s guitar in the centre of the mix where it belonged.  All very welcome for me, even if the rather heavier following album “Counterparts” remains my favourite Rush disc of the past two decades.

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George Osborne’s enthusiastic support of HS2 may just be a case of a stopped clock being right twice a day. Unfortunately Osborne is so discredited and so widely loathed by the majority of the British public that his stance risks undermining public support for the project.

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The Myth of the Tortured Artist

Good post from Serdar Yegulalp on the myth of the tortured artist.

I’ve long wrestled with, and rejected, the idea that damage or sickness is a prerequisite of good art — that the artist needs to be a screwed-up person in order for his art to be “genuine”. The most obvious problem with this formulation is how it leads us to believe the reverse: that in order to become an artist, you have to get screwed up.

I have to agree with every word of that.

One of the things that really gets my goat is the way the media, especially some sections of the rock press, glamourise self-destructive behaviour. It’s the mindset that encouraged Amy Winehouse to piss away her talent and eventually killed her. It’s why I’m still unapolagetic about ripping a Guardian music writer a new arsehole a few years back. I know too many singers and musicians of Amy Winehouse’ age, and I wouldn’t want it to happen to them.

It’s been suggested that the only reason the media gave Pete Doherty so much underserved hype was that they could see what a drug-addled trainwreck he was going to be, and wanted trot out the “tragic tale of lost genius” story yet again. But then he didn’t die, and instead went on make a string of mediocre records, leaving them with egg over their faces.

I’ve always believed self-destructive substance abuse in the music world wasn’t about “enhancing their art” but about their inability to cope with the pressures of fame. Far from enhancing their art, it’s more likely to diminish it.

What great music might Jimi Hendrix or Phil Lynott have produced if drug abuse hadn’t cut their careers short? And I can’t help feel that even those who didn’t actually die, such as Eric Clapton or Jimmy Page, might not have burned out early had it not been for drug addiction.

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Interview with Heidi Widdop

Heidi Widdop

I’ve interviewed former Stolen Earth and Breathing Space frontwoman Heidi Widdop for Trebuchet Magazine. While the focus is naturally on her new project Cloud Atlas, we also talked about Stolen Earth and touched on the very early days of Mostly Autumn when Heidi was in the band.

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“There was an infestation of tribbles in Apocalypstick Avenue. We sent Donald Rumsfeld to deal with them, but he couldn’t get in because of the shoggoth”. Who said software testing was boring? And yes, that was an actual, real test scenario.

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HAS Returned


Not content with playing keys for Also Eden, singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Howard Sinclair has formed a new band.

Howard Sinclair is very pleased to announce his progression from Singer-songwriter to lead singer of new band “HAS-Retuned” with the introduction of their first two new members, Becky Baldwin on bass guitar and drummer Jenn Haneef.

The band will eventually be a four-piece with a lead guitarist to complete the lineup. And I think it’s the first time I’ve heard anyone cite Panic Room as an influence.

Read the full press release here.

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Congratulations to Chantel McGregor for winning not one but two awards in the 2013 British Blues Awards. Not only has she won Best Female Vocalist again, but best guitarist as well. As anyone who’s familiar with Chantel’s music will know, both are well-deserved.

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Related Posts

I’ve added a new “related posts” feature to individual posts on this blog. It uses a combination of tags, categories and featured posts to display three other posts with content that’s likely to be relevant.

Rather than download and install a third-party plugin, I decided to try coding it myself to keep my coding skills in working order. The code I added to the template does this:

  • First it tries to find the three most recent posts with one or more tags that match those of the post. It will skip anything that doesn’t have a post thumbnail
  • If it failed to find three posts matching by tag, it looks at the post’s category instead to fill the remaining slots.
  • If all else fails, it goes for the featured posts, regardless of what they’re about. This is the fallback position, and it should always be able to find three such posts.

There’s still a bit of CSS formatting to be done, but it’s more or less there now.

Let me know what you think.

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Metal Mayhem at Reading Sub89

Fozzy at Reading Sub89

I manages to get a photo pass for a night of metal mayhem with Fozzy & Breed 77 at Reading’s Sub89. It’s not the sort of gig where I’d risk my camera anywhere near the front without a pass for the pit!

Voodoo Vegas at Reading Sub89, opening for Breed 77 & Fozzy

Opening act Voodoo Vegas played some old school rock and roll. Good to see a woman in a rock band who’s not the singer.

Breed 77 at Reading Sub89

Breed 77 were probably the most musically interesting, mixing alternative metal with flamenco and eastern influences to produce something that wasn’t a retread of things we’ve heard many times before.

Fozzy at Reading Sub89

Fozzy were a lot more traditional, rocking like it was 1985, but it’s impossible not to be impressed by their ability to work a crowd. This is a band who really understand the art of showmanship.

Even with a strict “3 songs only” I still ended up with a lot of photos. Plenty more photos from that night on my photo gallery site.

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