Author Archives: Tim Hall

Mostly Autumn, Islington O2 Academy, 1st Sep 2012

Photo © Howard Rankin

Mostly Autumn came to the O2 Academy in Islington for the second night of the tour promoting the album “The Ghost Moon Orchestra”. It’s their first headline appearance in the capital since 2009, three years ago, previous appearances having been restricted to co-headlining with It Bites last year, and a support for Wishbone Ash back in 2010.

While by no means full, the show still attracted a respectable crowd, and there was a buzz of anticipation before the band came on stage with the instrumental “Distant Train”. After that familiar opener from last year’s greatest hits set, they launched into “Unquiet Tears” from the new album. It began with a goth-clad Olivia Sparnenn accompanied by just the two keyboard players for the ominous and brooding opening section before exploding into a symphonic metal monster demonstrating just what she can do as a vocalist. From then on, set was a mix of old and new, drawing heavily from the new album combined with old favourites and a few more recent highlights. The sound early on was somewhat muddy, although it improved as the show went on; to be fair a seven-piece band with two guitars and two keyboard players is never going to be easy to mix.

The early part of the first set had a very strong hard rock feel. The revived “Never the Rainbow” sandwiched between two new songs gave a Deep Purple vibe, with a lot of Hammond organ from Iain Jennings. Parts of second set had more of the atmospheric celtic-prog mood of old, older epics such as “The Last Climb” alongside new album standout “Tennyson Mansions”. They threw in a few surprises, including songs from “A Weather For Poets”, the bonus disc from the now sold-out special edition of the new album. The new material comes over very strongly, and even the couple of songs which weren’t entirely convincing on record come to life on stage.

Olivia Sparnenn was on fantastic form. Unlike the last couple of tours she’s singing a far greater proportion of the lead vocals, and remained centre stage throughout the set. She’s really in her element now the band have a setlist filled with songs written for her voice. She’s taken a while to grow into the role of fronting the band, but after two years there can be few doubts that she was exactly the right person for the job. Her take on “Evergreen”, for so long one of Heather Findlay’s signature tunes, was flawless, and she really lets rip on the newer material. The former Breathing Space number “Questioning Eyes” never fails to raise the hairs on the back of the neck, and new songs such as “Unquiet Tears” and “Wild Eyed Skies” give a hint of how Nightwish might have sounded had she got the gig with them a few years back.

Anne-Marie Helder deserves a mention. While her own band Panic Room have achieved a significantly higher profile of late, her role in Mostly Autumn is more a supporting one, on keys, flute and backing vocals. But she still plays an important part in the sound. Her harmony lines, often a counterpoint to Olivia’s lead line added a lot to many songs. She’s not playing as quite much flute on this this tour, although she did get her moment in the spotlight during “The Last Climb”. Bryan’s lengthy guitar solo on the same song was mesmerising too; his playing has been getting better and better over the last couple of years.

By the final encore of “Tonight” bringing a very lengthy set to close with another of Olivia’s magnificent soaring vocals, it was clear that this was the beginning of a new and exciting chapter in the Mostly Autumn story. They packed a very powerful punch despite a few sound problems early on. It’s still the early stages of the tour, and the new songs have yet to fully bed in, so they are sure to raise their performances to still greater heights as the tour progresses.

Posted in Live Reviews, Music | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Rob Cottingham announces the female vocalist for his solo album

From the press release on the Captain Blue website.

Rob is delighted to announce that Heather Findlay will be sharing vocal duties with him on his solo album, Captain Blue.

For thirteen years, Heather fronted Mostly Autumn, taking them from fledgling local hopefuls to international Classic Rock giants. During this time Heather cemented a reputation as a celebrated songwriter, mesmerising performer and awesome vocalist, possessed of a keen ability to communicate heart, power and emotion in her singing.

Heather left Mostly Autumn in 2010, and formed an elite band from the upper echelons of the rock world and is presently carving out a highly successful solo career, with a tour planned in November.

In a statement, Rob advised “I am extremely honoured to have Heather on board. I obviously knew of Heather and her great vocal talents, but it was when she and Chris Johnson were sound checking their acoustic set in Newcastle in October last year that her voice really drew me in. I was originally going to ask Heather to duet with me on one song, but then the more I wrote, the more I realised I wanted Heather across the piece, and sure enough her contribution lifts the vocals up to the headiest of heights.”

When Rob Cottingham announced a ‘mystery female vocalist’ for his solo album a few weeks ago, I had a feeling it might well be Heather Findlay, and that feeling turned out to be correct. It sounds like her contributions to the album will be quite significant, which given her talents as a vocalist makes the album an exciting prospect.

It seems as though collaborations with other artists in a variety of genres are becoming a significant part of Heather’s post-Mostly Autumn career. Her contributions to “Captain Blue” follow her guest appearances of Liam Davison’s excellent “A Treasure of Well-Set Jewels“, and her very interesting electronica collaboration with Maidu. These varied projects have often shown a different side of her creativity to her own solo material, and demonstrate the multi-faceted nature of her musical talent.

“Captain Blue” will be released in October 2012, but can be pre-ordered from the Captain Blue website now.

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If you have an adversarial relationships between testers and developers, you’re almost certainly doing it wrong. The common enemy should be the bugs…

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Paul Teasdale leaves Stolen Earth

Stolen Earth at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

Just after their triumphal performance at the Cambridge Rock Festival comes this news, from the Stolen Earth website:

It is with sadness that we are saying goodbye to our bass player, Paul Teasdale, whose last gig with the band was at the Cambridge Rock Festival (talk about going out on a high!). We are sad to see Paul go, and we know he will be missed, but we wish him all the best for the future.

Words from Paul…

Following the release of our album and this summer’s promotional tour, I have decided the time is right for me to take a step away from Stolen Earth to concentrate on new projects.

I’d like to say a massive ‘thank you’ to everyone who bought the album and has seen us play over the last year. Thank you all for your support and your fantastic encouragement. Also thanks to everybody who has played our songs on the radio – for a songwriter there really is no greater feeling!

But most of all, thanks to the members of Stolen Earth for the journey so far. I know the band will go on to bigger and better things and I wish them well. I look forward to watching the band as a fan!

Paul

Paul was of course not just a founder member of Stolen Earth, but a founder member of Breathing Space too, Stolen Earth’s direct ancestor. He’ll certainly be missed; he’s a great guy who made an important contribution to Stolen Earth’s songwriting as well as being a great bassist. It will be interesting to hear what Paul comes up with next.

As for Stolen Earth, let’s hope finding a new bassist proves be a minor speedbump on the road to those bigger and better things.

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The Cambridge Rock Festival

My review of the weekend is now up on Trebuchet Magazine, here are a few of my photos from the weekend.

Virgil and the Accellerators at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

Virgil and the Accellerators were an early highlight, playing some guitar-shredding electric blues.

The Heather Findlay Band at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

Heather Findlay played her first full band gig on a big stage since November last year, and went down a storm.

Sankara at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

Sankara, fronted by Gareth Jones, formerly of The Reasoning played the CRS stage, and made a strong impression with their mix of hard rock, metal and AOR.

WInter in Eden at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

Winter in Eden, fronted by Vicky Johnson, played an absolute blinder as special guests on the CRS stage.

SIlverjet at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

Silverjet. Because first thing in the morning, some back to basics rock and roll is what a festival needs.

Stolen Earth at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

Stolen Earth were another band who rose to the big occasion to play one of the best sets they’ve ever done.

Panic Room at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

Panic Room did what Panic Room do, which was to blow everybody away. They really should have been far higher up the bill.

Chantel McGregor at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

Chantel McGregor delivered another incendiary set, great songwriting and some spectacular guitar pyrotechnics.

Flanborough  Head at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

Flanborough Head played some delightful old-school prog. There is nothing quite like a flute solo backed by Mellotron.

Mr So and So at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

Mr So and So impressed me a lot, they came over a lot better than last year.

Touchstone at the 2012 Cambridge Rock Festival

The mighty Touchstone stormed the stage to deliver an impressive high-energy set.

Olivia Sparnenn of Mostly Autumn

Mostly Autumn, special guests on the Sunday night and playing their first gig since the end of last year did not disappoint.

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On Patents and Copyright

I do wonder how much my position on the so-called “copyright wars” in the music industry is coloured by the way abuse of patent laws is wrecking the software industry, where I earn a living.

While I don’t know enough about the specifics of the recent patent lawsuit between Apple and Samsung to comment on that specific case, I know much this sort of thing can stifle innovation and competition. When you have so-called “patent trolls”, companies whose entire business is to buy up obscure patents from defunct companies, then raise money from patent lawsuits, you know something is badly broken.

There’s a strong element of land-grabbing and rent-seeking about the whole thing, and the way parts of the music industry behave has a similar smell. Not that I don’t believe creative artists are entitled for fair compensation for their work. But a lot of the draconian copyright enforcement legislation written by lobbyists employed by big media companies will have much the same effect as the broken patent laws in protecting established monopolies. It’s not in the interest of consumers, and I don’t believe it’s ultimately in the interests of the artists either.

Posted in Music, Music Opinion, Testing & Software | 2 Comments

RIP Neil Armstrong

RIP Neil Armstrong, first man on the moon.

The moon landings where the first historical event I can remember. It’s just the sort of thing that captures the imagination of an eight-year old.

I have no time for those who dismiss the entire Apollo programme as a grand folly. Shouldn’t the ingenuity and resources have been directed to solving practical problems on Earth, they say. But they surely miss the point. It’s grand projects like the space program that inspire people to pursue careers in science or engineering, who then grow up to help solve the world’s practical problems. Otherwise children will want to become financiers or marketeers, and the mess we’re in today is the consequence of that.

Quite often when I look up into the night sky and see the full moon, I stop and think. Neil Armstrong went there. And he came back. His footsteps are still there, undisturbed.

So rest in peace, Neil. You are one of the names people will remember in a thousand years time.

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How bad does someone need to be before you can’t listen?

So Dave Mustaine of Megadeth has gone off the deep end yet again, and claims the terrible recent massacres in Aurora and Milwakee weren’t the work of deranged nutters or domestic terrorists, but false-flag operations by the Obama adminstration to justify taking away everybody’s guns. And he’s already on record as being a “Birther”, spouting the brain-dead racist conspiracy theory that Barack Obama is not a natural-born American and his presidency is therefore not legitimate.

Which doesn’t leave me feeling like listening to any Megadeth records any time soon.

Which in turn begs the question: How unsavoury does someone’s political views or personal behaviour have to be before their music becomes unplayable? Ted Nugent is an obvious example; I’ve never been a particular fan of his music anyway, but the fact that he’s a nastily racist, homophobic bell-end doesn’t exactly help his cause. Likewise many, many people refuse to listen to Chris Brown because of his violence against women. Again, that’s far easier to do since his actual music is by all accounts pretty terrible. And let’s not even start on Gary Glitter.

How much can you separate the art from the artist? Are there people you can’t listen to because their opinions or behaviour are well beyond the pale? Or is there music you can enjoy despite of the artist?

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Homer Simpson was right!

“Everyone knows rock attained perfection in 1974, it’s a scientific fact.”
– Homer Simpson

Everyone of a certain age is going to be nostalgic for the music of their youth. But even so, it’s hard to escape the conclusion that mainstream pop and rock has devolved significantly in the past 20-30 years. Can anyone honestly say that Nickleback are as good as Led Zeppelin, or Justin Beiber is in the same league as Abba?

Now a team of scientists gave gone and proved it.

The combination of turning up the volume when recording the songs mixing with fewer varieties of notes and chords makes today’s musical appetite for creativity a shrinking lot. Joan Serra, who headed up the team of researchers at the Spanish National Research Council, told Reuters that you could call this trend a “homogenization” of today’s popular music. “In particular, we obtained numerical indicators that the diversity of transitions between note combinations — roughly speaking, chords plus melodies — have consistently diminished in the last 50 years.”

To further this sameness, our timbre — the term used to explain the same note sounding different on varying instruments — palette has also shrunk substantially, giving us an even greater reduction in the variety of sounds (and instruments) we hear, according to the evaluation released in the journal Scientific Reports.

Yes, it just proves what we’ve known all along. It’s the obvious end result of the focus-group driven approach taken by the corporate end of the music industry. Anything that a substantial minority of potential buyers might not like has to be removed. Any kind of instrumental solo? Throw them out! Interesting chord progressions? Debbie won’t like it! And don’t even suggest time signatures that can’t be danced to.

Debbie, by the way, is “The Archetypical Imaginary Pop Music Consumer & Ultimate Arbiter of Musical Taste for the Entire Nation“, as described by the late, great Frank Zappa way back in 1984. And things have got far worse since then.

It’s pure sausage factory. Yes, there is an enormous variety of vastly superior and more adventurous music out there, but almost all of it is completely off the radar screen of those who take all their cues from the mass media.

I suppose you could say that those who are willing to be spoon-fed rather than seek out good music for themselves deserve the thin gruel they get. But I can help feel that we all suffer from such an impoverished mainstream cultural landscape, where almost everyone who actually cares about music has opted out of the mainstream altogether.

What do you think?

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Riversea – Out Of The Ancient World

Riversea is a collaboration between singer/songwriter Marc Atkinson and keyboard player Brendan Eyre. It’s been a long time in the making, so long in fact it almost makes you wonder if the album title is a reference to how long ago since they started work on it.

Although the creative core of Riversea are a duo, it’s a full band project with a cast of guest musicians that reads like a who’s who of the somewhat incestuous York rock scene. It includes Alex Cromarty of The Heather Findlay Band on drums, Dave Clements on bass, and a whole host of guest guitarists, including Mostly Autumn’s Bryan Josh and Liam Davison, Stolen Earth’s Adam Dawson, and Mark Rowen, formerly of Breathing Space.

They have delivered a strongly song-orientated record, with a big, rich sound. Atkinson’s emotive vocals strongly recall Marillion’s Steve Hogarth, especially on the quieter parts. As one might expect, there’s an emphasis on keyboard-led arrangements ranging from simple piano accompaniments to heavy symphonic rock sections. Eyre tends to leave much of the soloing to the guest guitarists, whose differing styles add variety. Despite the presence of plenty of virtuoso musicians, there is little or no self-indulgent showboating for it’s own sake; all the solos and instrumental passages fit the song and never outstay their welcomes.

Highlights include the thought-provoking “Is This What God Wants”, and “Falling Stars” with it’s great heavy neo-prog instrumental break featuring one of Eyre’s few keyboard solos and an incredible guitar solo from by Adrian Jones. Others standouts are “The Song”, with the soaring vocal in the end section from Mostly Autumn’s Olivia Sparnenn, and “Freeze the Frame”, a lovely laid-back Pink Floyd feel, with some great guitar from former Breathing Space man Mark Rowen. But it’s hard to pick individual songs; this is really one of those albums where the quality is consistent throughout. There’s no filler here, the arrangements are thoroughly honed and polished, and nothing sounds half-finished or out of place.

With this, and the excellent albums by Mostly Autumn and Stolen Earth all released in the space of a few weeks, I wonder what it is about York. Is there something in the water?

This is an album which turned out to be well worth the wait. Fans of latter-day Marillion should love this, but it should also appeal to anyone that loves well-crafted music with plenty of emotional depth.

Old-fashioned types can buy the CD from http://riversea-band.com

The iPod generation can download it from http://riversea.bandcamp.com/album/out-of-an-ancient-world

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