Author Archives: Tim Hall

This blog has had a new front page format for a couple of weeks now, long enough that almost all the content on the front page is more recent than the revamp. What do regular readers think of it? Is it an improvement? Let me know in the comments.

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Crimson Sky – Dawn

Crimson Sky - DawnBristol-based rock band Crimson Sky established a reputation with the 2009′s album “Misunderstood” and some well-received gigs including a strong performance at the 2010 Cambridge Rock Festival. Unfortunately that lineup of the band imploded soon after, and for a while the continued existence of the band was in doubt.

After a lengthy hiatus the band regrouped earlier this year with a brand new lineup featuring Jane Setter on vocals and Moray McDonald on keys. Following some successful gigs that proved the new-look band had what it takes, the band went into the studio to record a four-track EP; two brand new songs, and two reworkings of songs from “Misunderstood”.

The EP opens with an atmospheric keyboard drone accompanied by bells, which leads into the eastern-flavoured guitar figure that forms the intro to “Crimson Sky”, the first of two new numbers. By the time the full band kick in one thing that’s very apparent is the quality of the production; the sound is both polished and powerful. This is prog-rock with the emphasis on Rock.

Next comes the re-recording of lengthy ballad “The Sea”, featuring an extended guitar workout. The second new number “The Park” has the feel of slightly punky Uriah Heep with it’s organ riff and energetic vocal. The EP closes with “After the Rain” with something of an indie vibe with it’s jangling guitar, at least until we get to the solo.

Changing a vocalist always has a big impact on a band’s sound. In Crimson Sky’s case, Jane Setter neither copies the previous singer’s style nor completely changes the sound of the band. She’s got greater range, but although her background is more ‘classic rock’ there’s still a touch of 80s new-wave about her vocal style. She makes her mark on the old songs without radically reinterpreting them, and then goes on to show just what she can do on the new ones.

The dominant instrumental sound is still Martin Leamon’s fluid lead guitar. There are moments, especially on “The Sea” that remind me of Twelfth Night’s Andy Revell. The other thing that strongly impresses is Moray McDonald’s keyboard playing. Much is his playing is understated, adding colour rather than playing lead, but he shines on “The Park” with that great organ riff and some lovely piano later in the song. There’s more than a touch of Marillion’s Mark Kelly about his playing, especially his solo on “Crimson Sky”.

The end result is an impressive progressive rock record that manages to avoid most of the obvious clichés of the genre. Let’s hope it isn’t too long before the band follow it up with a full-length album.

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Requirements? Are they necessary?

In a thread on the Software Testing Club, one poster came up with this gem:

I repeat, if you have no requirements, you cannot test anything. I think it’s important to grasp that there is a fundamental difference between a test, and an experiment ;-)

To which I replied:

If you have no requirements, you have to make assumptions about how and what to test based on your knowledge of the domain and the system.

Being able to make those sorts of assumptions is part of the skill-set of a good tester. So is knowing when you lack sufficient domain knowledge to be able to make any meaningful assumptions.

It’s the difference between intelligent exploratory testing and mindless script-checking. I test using a mental model of the system. Detailed functional specifications are often a very important source for that model, and when they exist, a tester should certainly read them. But knowing who and what to ask when you have gaps in your mental model is just as important.

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Mermaid Kiss – Dust Bowl Bride

Mermaid Kiss have put together a video for “Dust Bowl Bride”, from their new album “Another Country”, using footage in the Prelinger Archives in NYC.

You can read my review of the album here.

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New Blue Öyster Cult Boxed Set

BOC Boxed Set

Blue Öyster Cult have a new boxed set out. It contains remasters of all 14 albums released during their time at Columbia Records, ending with 1988′s Lovecraftian concept album “Imaginos”, plus a couple of disks of rarities.

If you didn’t pick up the remastered editions of their classic early albums released during the 00s, this is well worth picking up. But if you’re a fan you probably have those albums already, and I’m not convinced that this boxed set is worth the money for the remasters of the patchy later albums alone. Although it has been said that this box set is now the only way of obtaining the classic but now out-of-print “Imaginos”.

It’s a pity that Sony have chosen not to release those later remasters individually, and I can’t help feeling that forcing fans to shell out for things they already own as the only way to get the things they haven’t is a bit of a cynical move. This is the sort of record company that prefers to release endless “best of” compilations rather than keep the original albums in print.

Or maybe I’m just not the target audience for this thing. Enough of a fan to have picked up the first batch of remasters a few years back, but not hardcore enough to want to be a completist.

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The Mercury Music Prize is not about celebrating the best of British music in all it’s diversity. It’s about selling records to people who know nothing about music but want to appear cool and sophisticated.

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Interview with Panic Room

Trebuchet Magazine have just published the first part of my inteview with Anne-Marie Helder and Jon Edwards of Panic Room. The whole interview came out so long we decided to split it into three parts for publication – it was all too good to leave anything out! In the first part, Anne-Marie and Jon talk about the new album S K I N, telling how it was recorded and the inspiration behind some of the songs.

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One way to tell if your band is a prog-rock band. Does the bass player rock out far more than the lead guitarist?

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Kettle!

GWR No 6024

A photo from a couple of years ago. GWR No 6024 “King Edward 1″ with a full rake of chocolate and cream coaches passing Coryton Cove, Dawlish with the return “Torbay Express”. Only the solitary Mk2 coach in the formation gives away the fact it’s not a genuine 1960s train.

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Muse – 2nd Law

Muse 2nd LawI’m sometimes accused of only liking obscure prog-rock bands who sing about Hobbits in 9/8 time. One Guardian music journalist who shall remain nameless has called me the “Prog Taliban” and claimed that I don’t like pop music.

So why am I reviewing a Muse album? Because, despite the fact that they’ve headlined the indie-centric Glastonbury Festival and you can probably get their albums in Asda, Muse are a really prog-rock band.

Opener “Supremacy” begins with a dirty Jack White style guitar riff accompanied by marching Dream Theater keyboards before moving to a classically-inspired vocal melody, with a guitar solo repeating the same motif. There’s something very Prog about the whole thing.

And it goes on like that. Yes, there still are plenty of homages to Queen, starting with the pseudo-dubstep “I Want To Break Free” of “Madness”. Then there’s the disco-funk of “Panic Station”. There are nods to U2. But “Animals”, with it’s wonderful rippling guitar could easily have come from a recent Marillion album. The wide-screen atmospherics of “Save Me” recall recent Anathema, and some of the guitars remind me of mid-period Genesis. The cinematic two-part title track that closes the album is just monstrous with it’s huge choirs and Pink Floyd-style voiceovers.

This is an album that mixes pop, metal, electronica with grandiose classical sweeps and arpeggios. A lot of it is bombastic and completely over the top, but it wouldn’t really be a Muse album if it wasn’t. They’ve got a pop sensibility; three or four minute songs with big choruses. But they pack so many musical ideas into those three or four minutes.

The way the album mixes bits of many different genres to produce something more than the sum of parts reminds me of Panic Room’s SKIN. Yes, there are obvious homages to other bands which have drawn comparisons with Oasis’ pillaging of rock history. But Muse draw from a far, far broader sonic palette than simple meat-and-potatoes guitar rock. The result is an album that ought to appeal to any self-respecting prog-rock fan.

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