Author Archives: Tim Hall

Ebony Tower – Angel

Angel – acoustic version by zandaking

A beautiful new acoustic song by Ebony Tower, with Zanda King on vocals.

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The acid test of whether a support act is good, bad or indifferent is how you feel at the exact moment the singer says “And this is our last song”.

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Is Twitter Pivoting?

Dalton Caldwell thinks Twitter is pivoting. This is what Twitter is now, at least to me:

The core user experience of Twitter is the sending and receiving of messages with other people. It’s a communications tool.

But that model is less effective at selling eyeballs to advertisers. So it may be turning into this:

the future of Twitter: a media company writing software that is optimized for mostly passive users interested in a media and entertainment filter.

Now, I love Twitter in it’s current form. It’s a great place for conversations and connecting with cool new people. Unlike some, I’m far less interested in following celebrities, especially those who aren’t interested in interacting with those who follow them. It may be premature to announce the death of Twitter, but it is a reminder that nothing last forever on the net.

Social networks come and go. When was the last time you logged on to MySpace? Or sent a message in last.fm?

I’ve been on the net long enough to remember when AOL killed off CompuServe. But I’m still in contact with some of the friends I made through that network. Never forget that the relationships with actual people are far more important that whatever social networks you communicate on.

And there is a reason I’m now posting more on this blog rather than on social networks.

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Panic Room Interview – Part III

Anne-Marie and Paul

The third and longest part of my interview with Anne-Marie Helder and Jon Edwards of Panic Room. This one goes behind the music itself to cover things like the music biz and Panic Room’s place in it, the use and abuse of social networking, and the thorny question of whether or not Panic Room are Prog.

Parts one and two are here and here.

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Why I Hate Facebook (again)

If you’ve got more than a handful of “friends” on Facebook, sooner or later you’ll start seeing a lot of this sort of fluff.

It’s typically shared pictures that aren’t actually photos your friends have taken, but graphics containing Hallmark card platitudes and passive-aggressive emotional blackmail, and sometimes a tide of this rubbush threatens to overwhelm the feed. I think it’s a consequence of Facebook’s edge-rank algorithm favouring pictures over text. I’m muting them on an industrial scale, with anything from Someecards, source of the example above getting shot on sight.

Now there is a blog on tumblr dedicated to this nauseating “inspirational” drivel. Got to love the sarcastic comments against each one.

As for where this stuff comes from, it’s worth quoting this comment left on an earlier post on this blog:

You ready to really hate them? Most of them come from like-farm accounts. You make a Page, you autopost platitudes, Cheezburger pics, someecards, patriotic tripe, whatever. Then you auction off the page to spammers. Yep, you want a Facebook page with 20,000 fans? Who are pre-selected for naïveté? You can buy one.

Quite.

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Stabbing A Dead Horse

Kavus Torabi of Knifeworld

Another review of mine for Trebuchet Magazine, this time of Stabbing A Dead Horse, the tour sponsored by Prog magazine, featuring Trojan Horse, The Fierce and the Dead, and Knifeworld. There were bassoons. There should be more bassoons in Prog.

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A Genuine Freakshow – Low

“Low”, from A Genuine Freakshow‘s forthcoming EP “Where The River Bends”.

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Would the world (or at least the web) be a far better place if Adobe Flash had never existed?

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One thing I’d really like Facebook and other social networks to do is give me that ability to block all .gif files containing Hallmark-card platitudes…

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Panic Room, The Borderline, London

Photo by Tom Connell

Swansea’s Panic Room began their short UK tour in the capital, with a Saturday night show at The Borderline in Central London. As is typical for London gigs by bands in the extended progressive scene, there were an awful lot of familiar faces in the crowd; the regulars had turned out in force.

York’s Morpheus Rising opened the show with their old-school mix of hard rock and metal. Their set drew entirely from the début album “Let The Sleeper Awake”, with twin guitar harmonies that owe a lot to Iron Maiden. They proceeded to play one of the best sets I’ve seen them do. Damien James Sweeting was on particularly strong form with some spectacular shredding guitar.

Howard Sinclair was up next. He described himself as “the filling in the sandwich” and told us he’d been expecting to go on first. I find acoustic singer-songwriters need strong material and delivery to make much of an impression. That counts double if they have to come on straight after a high energy rock band. But Howard Sinclair had both the songs and the stage presence to carry it off, with a short but entertaining set, drawn from his new album “The Delicious Company of Freaks”.

As regular readers of this blog ought to have noticed by now, there’s no point in trying to pretend I’m not a total Panic Room fanboy, and there’s no point repeating eveything I’ve said in previous reviews. But even by their standards, this was a astonishing performance. The setlist drew very heavily from their most recent album “S K I N”, with just a couple of numbers from each of the first two albums, including a superb “Apocalypstick”. One surprise was the return of “Blood Red Skies” from Anne-Marie’s 2004 solo EP “The Contact”. But as with the handful of shows in the spring, it’s the new material that really shines on stage. “Chances”, played live for the first time was a highlight, as was an intense take on the album’s wonderful title track.

Anne-Marie Helder’s incredible voice and stage presence, the wonderful restrained virtuosity of the band, and the way they’re both amazingly tight yet play with an incredible amount of energy makes them a phenomenal live band. They ended with a barnstorming “Hiding the World”, by which time the band were already past curfew, so there was no time for an encore.

On Monday night I went to see Nightwish play to 4000 people at Brixton Academy. That was a great gig, as I said in my review. But this gig topped it. People still say there’s no great music any more. They say there are no great bands around today to compare with the great acts of the 60s, 70s and 80s. Those of us present at the packed Borderline know that’s nonsense.

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