Author Archives: Tim Hall

Mermaid Kiss – Circles of Fire

It’s been a long time since there’s been any activity from the Mermaid Kiss camp, but they’ve just released a new download single, “Circles of Fire”. It’s taken from their forthcoming album “Another Country”, the culmination of their “American Images” project.

Those of you who saw the semi-acoustic version of the band supporting Panic Room, Breathing Space or The Reasoning back in 2008 may well remember this song, as it featured in the live set. It’s a great showcase for Evelyn Downing’s very distinctive vocal style, Although acoustic instruments still feature heavily with Jamie Field’s guitar and Wendy Marks’ beautiful flute playing, here it’s expanded into a full band version culminating in a great solo from lead guitarist Pete West. As a slightly harder-edged Mermaid Kiss with more emphasis on guitar compared with the keyboard-led atmospherics of their last full-length album “Etarlis”, it’s in interesting taster for the forthcoming album.

It’s available for download from CD Baby.

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Panic Room – S K I N

Panic Room have announced the title and revealed the cover artwork for their third album. Called S K I N, the album will be released in June, and details of the pre-order will be announced shortly. In the band’s words “The album has a vast and expansive feel : gracefully weaving its way through rock-solid riffs and potent grooves, there are moments of intense power, heart-stopping gravity, and delicate beauty”.

If the rest of the album is anything like as good as the two songs played live last years (and I’m sure it will be), this is well worth waiting for.

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Christopher Priest’s Arthur C.Clarke Rant

Veteran British author Christopher Priest has posted a broadside aimed at this year’s Arthur C Clarke awards.

It’s one of those well-written rants which makes a lot of good points, but then ruins the argument by going over the top in a way that ends up saying more about him than it does about the subject. He starts out well by listing the novels he thinks should have nominated in place of those actually chosen, and eloquently makes their cases. But he then descends into personal attacks on the nominated authors. His harsh words about China Miéville can be read as tough-love constructive criticism (I have yet to read the book in question), but his extraordinarily nasty attack on Charlie Stross takes him well over the line.

It is indefensible that a novel like Charles Stross’s Rule 34 (Orbit) should be given apparent credibility by an appearance in the Clarke shortlist. Stross writes like an internet puppy: energetically, egotistically, sometimes amusingly, sometimes affectingly, but always irritatingly, and goes on being energetic and egotistical and amusing for far too long. You wait nervously for the unattractive exhaustion which will lead to a piss-soaked carpet. Stross’s narrative depends on vernacular casualness, with humorous asides, knowing discursiveness, and the occasional appeal of big soft eyes. He has PC Plod characters and he writes och-aye dialogue! To think for even one moment that this appalling and incapable piece of juvenile work might actually be chosen as winner brings on a cold sweat of fear.

I do have to admire Stross’ good-humoured reaction. Cat Valente also has a well-considered response which acknowledges the positive points.

The whole “Science fiction will only be taken seriously if all this trashy stuff and their fans are driven away” reminds me of this rant about progressive rock by Robert John Godfrey; there are plenty of parallels between the science fiction world and it’s fandoms with the world of progressive rock. In both scenes, why does validation by a sometimes stuffy cultural elite have to matter more than having an enthusiastic and loyal audience?

Priest gives every appearance of wanting SF to be judged by the same criteria as Serious Literary Fiction, in which the depth of characterisation and the author’s skill as a prose stylist are the most important things, rather than the strength of the ideas or the breadth of imagination. He wants an SF where many the things that have a strong appeal to much of the existing audience are heavily watered-down to avoid alienating mainstream audiences. Yes, there is a place for that sort of crossover work, but it’s not the be and and end all of everything science fiction could and should be.

I’ve read and enjoyed several of Priest’s work, including “The Prestige” (I haven’t seen the film), and his earlier “Inverted World” was a very powerful piece of writing. But I’ve also read almost everything Charlie Stross has ever written. The “Internet puppy” has a great deal of energy and humour, and his near future imaginings of the impact of emergent technologies on our lives as surely as relevant to man’s struggle against his social-political environment as anything else. Stross doesn’t write Serious Literary Fiction, and has never pretended to either.

Posted in Science Fiction, SF and Gaming | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Piracy is Killing Music – A Big Lie?

So, where does the news that Adele’s “21″ has now outsold Pink Floyd’s legendary “Dark Side of the Moon” leave the idea that downloading is killing music?

It’s increasingly looking like a big lie.

While I have no figures in front of me (and distrust any numbers quoted by Big Music), there is a lot of evidence that overall music sales aren’t declining at all. What has really been happening is that the major labels have been losing market share. During the boom years they made huge profits selling overpriced CDs, and eventually grew lazy and complacent. Too much of the music they released was formulaic cookie-cutter “product” that took few risks, aimed at people who buy all their music in supermarkets, and by controlling access to the mass media they prevented anything else from being heard. The coming of broadband internet radically changed the way people discovered and consumed music, and the majors were very slow in adapting their business models to take advantage of new methods of distribution. The lost out to those that did, and the likes of iTunes ate their lunch.

Rather than develop newer business models, they screamed “piracy!” and lobbied corrupt politicians to pass draconian protectionist legislation.

I’m now starting to believe that laws like America’s Stop Internet Piracy Act and Britain’s Digital Economy Act were never really about “piracy” at all. The way such laws have the potential to cripple parts of the net used by independent musicians to promote and distributed their work wasn’t just an unfortunate side effect, it was the whole point. “Piracy” was never more than a smokescreen, a lie spun to people like Peter Mandelson.

Just think about it. Which of these two activities hurts the major labels more?

  1. “Illegally” downloading an album you probably would never have bought, listening to it once and thinking “meh”.
  2. Paying 10 quid for an independently released record, leaving you with less to spend on the majors’ music?

I rest my case

Posted in Music, Music Opinion | Tagged | 6 Comments

When I hear the words “Laffer Curve” I reach for my revolver

Warning, this is a political post. If you don’t want to read about politics, click on one of the other subjects on the menu bar…

In the context of what may or may not be in George Osborne’s budget later this week, I’m hearing a lot of mentions of the infamous Laffer Curve.

The Laffer Curve is a somewhat questionable piece of economic thinking which states, in it’s commonly-used form, that if taxation is raised to a level higher than the rich would really like to pay, then overall revenue will fall because the rich then won’t work as hard. Such an idea has obvious appeal to the types that take Ayn Rand seriously – Indeed, I always associate the term with a particularly noxious right-libertarian troll on the Pyramid Online forums a decade or so ago.

Yes, I can appreciate the hypothesis that there is a point of diminishing returns if a taxation rate is ridiculously high. It’s why nobody today is suggesting a return to Denis Healey’s 98% taxes of the 1970s. But the Lafferites go further than that. They give every appearance of insisting on a completely arbitrary figure as the threshold of diminishing returns, and expect you to accept this in the complete absence of any empirical evidence to support it.

Not that the hard right are any bigger fans of evidence-based economics as they are of evidence-based science. You can see this in their climate change denial. And don’t even get me started on young-earth creationism. This is the sort of intellectual company the Laffer Curve keeps. So why should we take it seriously?

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Graham Farish 2012-3 Programme

Bachmann have just announced the new models for the Graham Farish 2012/3 programme. It’s an interesting mix of new and retooled items. The obvious modern-era highlight is Freightliner’s class 70s “Powerhaul” locomotive, but I notice the refurbished 37 and the Deltic are being retooled as all-new models. Several new and retooled steam locos as well, with an emphasis on big Pacifics, although the humble GWR pannier tank gets a partial retooling.

Highlights for me include

  • Mk2a coaches, with TSO, BSO and FK being produced. Early Mk2s have always been a big gap in RtR N gauge. Bachmann shrinking down their existing OO models isn’t entirely unexpected, but nevertheless is greatly welcomed.
  • Retooled FK added to the Mk1 range. Probably more useful, to me at least, than the already-announced FO.
  • SR-design Bullied coaches. Again, the 4mm ones scaled down, and will add a bit of variety to my transition era fleet. They did make it to the Cornish main line at times.
  • 50′ Polybulk covered hopper. This doesn’t duplicate the Grainflow hopper of the N gauge society kit; it’s the shorter swing-roofed wagons used not only for grain but a variety of other traffic flows, including china clay and assorted chemical traffic. For a Devon and Cornwall layout, it’s an important signature item for the 1980s/90s.

While no doubt some people might be disappointed in which OO items haven’t been “shrunk”, I’m more than satisfied by the announcement of the Mk2s and Polybulks – Those are two of the most significant gaps for the region and era I’m interested in.

Posted in Modelling News | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Owain Roberts is missing

Owain Roberts of The Reasoning at Bury Met

Owain Roberts, guitarist from the Reasoning (above photo from 2010) has gone missing, and friends, family and bandmates are getting increasingly concerned for his safely. From the Dyfed and Powys Police website:

The family of 36 year old Owain Mon Roberts are increasingly concerned for his safety.

Owain has not been seen since Saturday morning, 10th March 2012.

Owain’s hair is greying particularly on the sides.  His front left tooth has a chip. He is of medium build with blue/grey eyes.  He may well have grown stubble by this time

The top he was last seen wearing has a round neck, and the cardigan he was wearing over it is a thick knit with a zip up front, with a quilted hood. The cardigan is a Topshop cardigan.

The bag he was carrying is grey in colour with orange stitching, and of canvas type material and is a shoulder bag, most likely to be worn across the front.

Owain is a sound technician with Theatr Mwldan in Cardigan

Anyone with information should call Dyfed Powys Police on 101 (or Outside Dyfed-Powys: 01267 222020)

Owain, if you’re reading this, please get in touch with the band and tell them you’re OK.

Update 14/3/12:

No news yet on Owain’s whereabouts, but the band posted this on Facebook yesterday.

The Reasoning have decided not to put the EP up for sale this week as a mark of respect to the current ongoing situation. It just would not feel right selling this EP until we had some positive news about Owain. …We have also shut down all operations to do with The Reasoning this week as well. None of the band will be in the studio at all. We just can’t concentrate and again, it doesn’t feel right.

We will assess again next week and take families’ opinions into account then make a decision from there. In the meantime, all that matters is obviously getting a firm lead as to Owain’s whereabouts. Thanks for understanding and until further notice, it’s all about bringing our friend home safe and sound.

Matt, Rach, Tony, and Jake xxxx

(Police information and link updated 14-Mar at 17:25)

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Prog-gate “The Prog Corruption Blog”

I really try to steer well clear of backstage politics in the Prog world. But sometimes things happen on public forums that leave me no choice.

There has been something of a ruction in the community over a mysterious blog calling itself the “Prog Corruption Blog”, which claimed to “try to address corruption, scamming, vote canvassing and poll rigging in the world of Progressive Rock Music as dedicated and professional artists are forced out of popularity polls and charts by PR driven outfits“. There was but a single post, which made the claim that the reader’s poll in Classic Rock Presents Prog had been rigged in favour of Panic Room and The Reasoning, two bands recently signed by Esoteric Antenna. The whole thing reeked of an agenda, and read like the work of someone with an axe to grind against either the bands, the label, or both.

I learned of this blog from a link posted in the comments on another post in this blog, I immediately bought it to the attention of CRPP and two of the bands because I felt they needed to know. To say that there was then a significant sewage/ventilation device interface incident would be an understatement. Certainly some of those parties considered the contents of that blog libellous, and there was talk of lawyers.

A few hours later, after a number of angry comments including some from a member of one of those bands, the entire site disappeared.

If you read the whole thing before it got taken down, it was less an attack on the CRPP Poll, and more a direct attack on the professional integrity of two bands and their record company. There was also an implied personal attack on Panic Room’s frontwoman Anne-Marie Helder, suggesting that she did not deserve the Best Female Vocalist of 2011 award because the band “had played no more than half a dozen pub gigs”. (Obviously untrue, we’ll get to that later)

It’s now being suggested that the author writing under the false name of “Beverly Myers” is in fact male. I’m not going to argue with someone with a Master’s degree in psychology on that point. It’s notable that the (probably male) author adopted a voice that read like a crude caricature of 1980s hairy-armpit feminism to make his dubious points. I now believe he has a misogynistic agenda – not only are two of the bands female-fronted, but the record company is also run by a woman.

Given that the author has lied about his identity, nothing else can be taken at face value. The whole thing is full of distortions, half-truths and outright lies which cannot be put down to mere poor research. It should certainly not be dismissed as “a bit of harmless internet fun” – it’s a clear and deliberate attempt to damage several people’s means of earning a living. It’s already diverted a lot of their time and energy away from creating and promoting their music towards countering these malicious lies.

One of the bands has also dropped hints that they have strong suspicions as to the identity of the perpetrators (note the use of the plural here). While I don’t want to speculate on their specific identity, it does feel like the work of a fan or maybe even a member of a prog band made up of ugly blokes who’s bitter that the record label had passed over their dated 80s-style neo-prog in favour of two bands in question. That would put the sneering references to “bands fronted by pretty girls”, “beauty contests” and “they aren’t proper prog” in to context.

Somehow I don’t think we’ve heard the last of this by a long way.

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Also Eden/Leatherat, The 12 Bar, Swindon

Double-headline gigs tend to divide options. The common criticism I hear is that you get less than a full set’s worth from whichever of the two bands you’d come to see, and with an ill-matched pair of bands there is always the risk that whole thing doesn’t quite come off. But when it does work you can end up with a great evening’s worth of music. The gig at Swindon’s 12 Bar Club saw Also Eden, a band I’d seen at the Cambridge Rock Festival sharing the bill with Leatherat, a band unknown to me, both bands playing 75 minute sets.

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Also Eden represents a triumph over adversity. Shortly after joining the band as replacement for their original singer Huw Lloyd-Jones in 2010, frontman Rich Harding was involved in a serious motorbike accident, and there were doubts whether he’d live, let alone be able to sing or walk again. By 2011 he was back on stage while still on crutches, and the band recorded and released “Think of the Children”, his first full-length album with the band.

Also Eden’s sound has many of the trappings of a typical neo-prog band with lengthy multi-part songs and that overdriven chorused lead guitar sound that’s as much a signature of prog as jangle is to 80s indie. But what sets them apart from many of their more derivative competitors is the passion and intensity of the delivery. With Rich Harding having fronted Marillion tribute bands there’s more than a hint of Fish-era Marillion, but I could also hear strong echoes of that band’s contemporaries Twelfth Night. This was very apparent in some of Harding’s politically-charged lyrics from their most recent album, from which the band drew the majority of the set. While perhaps not the most polished performance I’ve seen them do, it was nevertheless a good show. This is a band who I think ought to be destined for bigger and better things in the coming years.

Leatherat turned out to be a very different sort of band. With a mandolin-wielding frontman bearing more than a passing resemblance to Gilmi the Dwarf from “Lord of the Rings”, the five-piece played high energy electric folk rock, with electric violin as the principle lead instrument. Like Also Eden before them, the combination of a charismatic frontman and an intense performance made for a great live band. Although I had to miss the last couple of songs due to having to catch the last train home, what I did see was highly entertaining, and I’d certainly like to catch this band again.

As double-headline gigs go, this was one of the good ones, with the two contrasting but complementary bands that made a great combination. The two bands play together again at The Fleece and Firkin in Bristol on 12th April. Be there!

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The Classic Rock Society Awards

There has been a fair bit of discussion on Twitter regarding the Classic Rock Society’s annual awards. Despite it’s name, the CRS is mainly concerned with the progressive rock scene, with a membership heavily centred in South Yorkshire, where the vast majority of their gigs take place. They sponsor one of the stages of the Cambridge Rock Festival, which last year featured the likes of Morpheus Rising, Also Eden and the magnificent Kyrbgrinder.

But when it comes to their awards from the annual shindig at that Mecca of Prog, Wath-upon-Dearne, then questions start being asked about how representative of the wider progressive rock scene these awards really are, and what these awards actually achieve.

Don’t get me wrong. IQ, Mostly Autumn and Magenta are all great bands, and I probably ought to declare an interest in that I’m on first name terms with the members of one of those three. Although I’m personally not that big a fan of Pendragon, who picked up no fewer than four awards this year. But when it’s the same half-dozen bands that win year after year, you do begin to wonder exactly what purpose these awards serve. One bass player I won’t name thanked his fans online for his nomination for “Best John Jowitt Award”, which really says it all. The progressive rock scene has got far broader and far more diverse over the past decade, and the CRS awards completely fail to reflect this.

On one hand, if many of the members are diehard fans of particular bands, what’s to stop them voting for their favourites. On the other hand, the conservatism and parochialism of the awards is starting to get embarrassing. It’s getting to be the NME of Prog, and that can’t be a particularly good thing. It can even end up reflecting badly of some of the bands that win awards, in that it opens up their fanbases to accusations of being stuck in an 80s neo-prog time warp, unwilling to listen to anything new or different.

Although perhaps the real problem is simply that some people take the awards too seriously. To be voted best female vocalists by readers of a widely distributed newstand magazine that’s featured Kate Bush on the cover actually counts for something. To get the award for best album and best song on the votes of a relatively small and largely self-selecting group of people from South Yorkshire counts for rather less.

The CRS does a lot of good work in promoting progressive rock, and the leadership does appear rather more clued-in than some of the membership. But perhaps the way they do the awards need a rethink?

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