Author Archives: Tim Hall

Twelfth Night – The Peel, 17th May 2008

After their triumphant return to the live stage last year, 80s neo-prog veterans Twelfth Night are back for more.

Photobucket
(Photo © Jane Vincent, used with permission)

I caught the second of their two UK dates, at The Peel in Kingston. Not completely sold out, but the place seemed pretty packed. If this gig didn’t quite match the incredible atmosphere of the comeback at Deptford gig last year, the performance from the band themselves was on another level entirely. Gone was the hesitant start in the first half; this time the whole band were firing on all cylinders right from the very beginning. They didn’t look like a band who were playing only their fourth gig in twenty years. It was clear the band were really enjoying themselves on stage, Andy Sears prowling the stage like a demented uncle, showing incredible depth and range as a vocalist, both with his own later material, and his interpretations of the older songs by the late Geoff Mann. Andy Revell reeled off some incredible solos, and multi-instumentalists Clive Mitten tripled up on guitar, keys and prog-style lead bass. And yes, there was more than one bass solo.

The setlist was much the same as last year, with the bulk of the set coming from the Geoff Mann years. It’s difficult to point out the high spots from their two-hour set. The “Ceiling Speaks” makes for a dynamic opener, “Blondon Fair” never sounded more sinister and menacing, Andy Sears’ solo piano version of “First New Day” was spine-tingling and the epic “Sequences” was flawless. As last year, the second half of the show was taken up with the Fact and Fiction album played right through in it’s entirety. As Clive Mitten said at the beginning, this is prog-rock, and playing a concept album right the way through without any breaks or announcements is a very prog thing to do, right from the choirboy singing the falsetto parts of “We are Sane” to the Gilmouresque guitar wig-out at the end of “Creepshow”. They ended, of course, with the final encore of “Love Song”.

Easily in my top three or four gigs of the year, and unquestionably the best which didn’t feature female lead vocals. Whether this short run of dates is a one-off, or whether we’ll get to see them again is still an open question.

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Actual Play, Continued

A followup to my previous Actual Play post.  As before, this is an actual transcript of the message game on Dreamlyrics.com

“Quick,” Hollis muttered in mild disappointment. But now without the crossbow pointed at her, she could grab the whole person and slam him into the ceiling head first a few times. Which is what she was going to do if he was still visible…

He seems to instinctively understand what Hollis is trying to do; he drops the crossbow and concentrates on trying to avoid being dragged ceilingwards by hanging on to the stair rail. He’s pretty strong, and Hollis doesn’t have quite the right psychokinetic grip on him. But the wooden stair rail begins to creak and splinter.

“Get down here!” he cries, “Mad wizard!”.

“Not mad,” Hollis murmured. “Merely annoyed. I get that way when people try to kill me.” She shifted from trying to yank him skyward, to whipping him back and forth like a rag doll in the hands of an angry child. Since he’d tried to kill her, breaking a couple of wrists or his neck from the whiplash effect didn’t bother her in the slightest.

Sooner or later he would come loose — the sounds from the rail made sooner sound likely — and then he would be *hers*.

“We might think about backing out in just a moment …”

She could use the man to stop up the entryway while they escaped, but they needed to get him loose and get moving.

But he’s not hers just yet; she can feel him struggling, and he’s strong. Somehow he manages to brace himself, and avoids getting twisted around. That handrail isn’t going to last long, though.

Another man, this one small and wiry, appears at the top of the stairs. He’s got another crossbow.

“The woman!”, cries the big man, “Be quick”.

He aims the crossbow. 

With the new arrival Hollis couldn’t wait to wear out the handrail; she had to let go of his — so she could twist the new arrival so that his crossbow was pointed at her first assailant as he released.

“Gath, you can jump in here anythime …”

“Stop!”, says Gath, “I can explain

The man with the crossbow pays no attention.

“This is for Rik, bitch”, he says, as he looses the quarrel.

The big man lets out a strangled gurgle as he rolls down the stairs, to lie sprawled at the foot of the steps with a crossbow bolt sticking out of his neck.

By the time he reaches the bottom, the crossbow man has gone,

This starts out with a couple of opposed rolls between Hollis’ Superb psychokinetics and the unnamed NPC’s Good Strength.  Both rounds ended in ties; my NPC was lucky with the dice; I really hadn’t expected him to live this long.  When the new arrival turned up on the scene, his luck ran out. This was Crossbow vs. Psychokinetics, and the result was Terrible vs. Great. That’s a difference of -5.  Since I’m not using the extended combat rules fo this, that’s a near death, and because he’s an unnamed NPC and mere canon-fodder, it’s game over for the big man.

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Mostly Autumn, The Y Theatre, Leicester

I’ve not been to this venue before; like Gloucester Guildhall and Bury Met it’s a provincial theatre rather than a rock club.  I heard it described as a ‘mini York GOH’, which isn’t a bad description; quite a large balcony (which was pretty full), but standing downstairs.

Having seen the band nineteen times now, it’s getting increasingly difficult to find anything new to say about them, except that the new lineup was well and truly gelled now, and as I’d come to expect, this was a pretty tight and impassioned performance.  There’s something wrong with the British music scene when a band this good isn’t playing to much bigger audiences. 

The setlist was much the same as Gloucester, except they didn’t play ”Second Hand”, and moved “Above the Blue” to the first encore.  High spots were an impassioned “Unoriginal Sin”, a great “Simple Ways” (lovely to have that back in the setlist again), and a really strong version of “Carpe Diem”.   With the sad news from last Sunday, “Tearing at the Faerytale”, and “Heroes Never Die” (dedicated tonight to Howard) carried a very strong emotional resonance indeed. 

Only another four days, and I see them again, at the Limelight club in Crewe.

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RIP Howard Sparnenn

Howard Sparnenn, father of Livvy Sparnenn of Mostly Autumn and Breathing Space fame, passed away last Sunday.

A true larger-than-life character, his was a familiar face at a great many gigs by Breathing Space, Mostly Autumn and Odin Dragonfly.

I first met him at the Heart Full of Sky launch party in February last year.  I got chatting to him outside the pub after the gig, and at first I didn’t realise he was the father of a member of the band.  Since then I’ve met him at a great many gigs, and he always took the time to say hello. 

As well as a devoted father, he was also an accomplished drummer.  I only saw him play the once, at the Roman Baths in York, when he was filling in on drums for Breathing Space while they searched for a permanent drummer.  He told me he thought it wasn’t fair on his daughter drumming for her band; having her dad on drums would cramp her style.  He was still a very fine drummer.

Fantastic bloke, who left us well before his time. He will be missed.

“Wild West Heroes, they change the world, they make it shine. As you ride the ice, between the heavens, leave a trail for us” – Mostly Autumn, Tearing at the Faerytale.

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In a dark, dark room

In a dark, dark town, there was a dark, dark street.

In that dark, dark street, there was a dark, dark building.

In that dark, dark building, there was a dark, dark room.

In that dark, dark room, there was a dark, dark corner.

In that dark, dark, corner, well…

The gig was a double headliner, featuring Jump, and the band I’d gone to see, Panic Room.  I’d seen Panic Room’s debut gig a week earlier, and they’d been exceptionally good, especially when you consider it had been their first ever gig.  On the final date of the tour I wouldn’t have been surprised to have seen them reach greater heights. 

The vibe was really good before the gig started; I saw a few familiar faces when I first arrived at the venue, and met most of the band in the bar beforehand; Gavin Griffiths in particular is a great bloke.

To be honest I’d rather have seen Panic Room play a full-length headline set rather than the truncated one-hour 20 they were allocated following Jump.  I wasn’t that familiar with Jump’s music; I thought the first couple of songs were a bit average, although the third (or was it the fourth) number was a bit more impressive.  Just as they were getting into their stride, the power failed, not only silencing the band, but plunging the room into darkness.

Hats off to Jump’s singer for keeping the audience entertained for the best of half and hour; we heard some funny stories of their exploits supporting Marillion, we had a singalong of “Script for a Jester’s Tear” (And I could remember the words after all those years!). 

As the darkness grew longer the venue stuff discovered it wasn’t a blown fuse in the building.  Not just the street, but the entire neighbourhood was without power.  Eventually Mick the promoter gave the accouncement we’d been expecting for some time; the power was likely to be out for the rest of the evening, and it was “match abandoned”.  It will be rescheduled, but probably not until the beginning of next year.

So I never got to see Panic Room play.

What saved the evening from being a total loss for me was meeting Heather Findlay, which was completely unexpected.

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Musical Discoveries

On the Readers Recommend Overspill blog, poster DarceysDad has a disturbing realisation

More seriously, Abahachi’s comment (about new genre discovery and subsequent borderline-obsessive catching-up) got me thinking, and I’ve been hit with a freighttrain-sized realisation: Any band/genre that I believe I discovered for myself is likely to still be right up there in my all-time faves. Anything I can specifically remember being introduced to by someone is much more likely to have fallen away again in my estimation (or at least in the frequency of plays). This is REALLY scary, and not a little conflicted: random picking of songs I hear via radio and magazine covermounts thus appear to mean more to me than the considered opinions of my friends! Am I some kind of anti-social loner, musically? A cooler-than-you snob? What the f???????

I don’t think that’s true of me; I find there’s little correlation between how much I like any artist and how I first ‘discovered’ them.  It’s a random mix of recommendations from offline and online friends, radio, reviews in the media (usually the least reliable), covermount disks, seeing them live at festivals or as support acts, or in one case, through being invited to a gig by an actual member of the band.

I’ve thought about some of the bands I’ve really been into over the years, those for whom I’ve got most or all their albums, or seen live many times.

  • Rainbow: I’ve mentioned this one before, but they were the very first hard rock band I ever got into, and it was hearing ‘Eyes of the World’ on Nicky Horne’s late night show “Your mother wouldn’t like it”.
  • Pink Floyd: Blame Nicky Horne for this as well; he played “The Wall” more or less to death.  That was actually the first album I bought.
  • Deep Purple: The natural follow-up from Rainbow.  In my case I bought an album more or less at random from a secondhand record shop for a couple of quid.  It turned out to be the classic “Made in Japan”.  Pity there was a bad scratch right across ‘Child in Time’.
  • Blue Öyster Cult: This was was the first one I can definitely track down to a personal recommendation – it was a college friend who played me ‘Astronomy’ from the live album “Some Enchanted Evening”.
  • Black Sabbath:  Hearing “Heaven and Hell” and “Children of the Sea” on the late Tommy Vance’s “Friday Rock Show”.  As soon as I heard those two slices of operatic metal melodrama I knew I had to get that album the day it was released.  Even to this day I prefer them with Dio than with Ozzy.
  • Marillion: They were the first completely new band that I got into right at the start of the career.  I remember hearing their demo on the Friday Rock Show, then seeing them at the 1982 Reading Rock Festival.  I bought their debut single and album on first release, and saw them blow Black Sabbath off stage a year later at Reading in 1983. And I’ve followed them (and Fish’s solo career) ever since.
  • Porcupine Tree: The Porkies (as they’re known) sort of crept up on me.  I bought “The Sky Moves Sideways” largely out of curiosity after hearing Steve Wilson’s work on Fish’s excellent “Sunsets on Empire”.  I followed up with “Stupid Dream” and “Lightbulb Sun” on release, which got a few plays but never really became favourites.   Then NRT told me in a blog comment that they were playing at Manchester Academy, and I decided to go along.  On seeing them live, their music suddenly made sense.
  • Mostly Autumn.  You might not have guessed if you’re a regular reader of this blog.  But like Porcupine Tree, they’re a band that didn’t happen overnight with me.  It started with the cover mount disk on “Classic Rock” containing ‘Half the Mountain’. That encouraged me to buy the album “The Last Bright Light” which became a regular in the CD player.  I bought “Passengers” when it came out, but just like Porcupine Tree, it all made sense the first time I’ve saw them live, a low-key gig at Jillys in Manchester that I only found out about by pure chance. 
  • The Reasoning.  Again, this started with a covermount disc.  Not The Reasoning themselves, but Rachel’s previous band Karnataka, with the superlative ‘Talk to Me’ from their live album “Strange Behaviour”.  Before I got the chance to see them live, Karnataka imploded.  I joined TheStorm yahoogroup to find out what on earth had happened.  I found that nobody was willing to say what happened, but I did find it was an quite an interesting discussion list, which was where I first heard of the formation of The Reasoning, and of their first ever gig in Swansea, which made the journey down to.
  • Breathing Space. I said that I got into one band by being invited by a band member.  Breathing Space was that band.  The occasion was the launch party for Mostly Autumn’s “Heart Full of Sky” in London.  The gig finished at a ridiculously early time of half past nine, and Anne Marie Helder invited the entire audience to pub round the corner, which wasn’t actually that large a place.  That’s where I first met Livvy Sparnenn, Mostly Autumn’s backing singer, who also sings lead for Breathing Space.  She was very persuasive when it came to their gig in York the following weekend :)

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Mostly Autumn – Glass Shadows

On Tuesday morning the pre-ordered edition of Mostly Autumn’s seventh studio album “Glass Shadows”, which I’d ordered at the beginning of the year, arrived on my doormat.

As regular readers of this blog should have noticed by now, I’ve been a huge fan of this York-based act for the past four years. They’ve actually been going for more than a decade, completely under the radar of the mainstream media. Their sound is unashamedly 70s, mixing elements of prog-rock, folk-rock, and classic AOR to produce a rich sound that’s far more than the sum of it’s parts. You can hear influences of Pink Floyd, Fairport Covention, Deep Purple and Fleetwood Mac, but they manage to transcend any simple pastiche. The band lineup has changed over the years, but the constant factor and creative heart are Bryan Josh on vocals and guitar, and Heather Findlay on lead vocals. Bryan is a fantastic lead guitarist in the mould of Dave Gilmour and Steve Rothery, and his technically limited but heartfelt vocals are balanced by Heather’s wonderful voice, a perfect mix of precision and emotion that somehow manages to sound both sensual and pure at the same time.

Heather Findlay at Gloucester
Heather Findlay at Gloucester Guildhall, 24 April

Like many bands outside the fashionable mainstream, they finance their albums through pre-orders from fans, and this is the third one of theirs I’ve ordered this way. I’m probably too much of a fan of this band to be able to write anything approaching an objective review of anything by this band. When I’ve seen them live eighteen times (so far), have met the band several times, and am on first name terms with some of them, I think I’m a little too close to be able to view their music dispassionately. But I’m going to try anyway.

This was an eagerly-anticipated release. The previous album, the good-but-flawed “Heart Full of Sky”, though the band’s biggest seller to date, rather divided the fanbase. While it included at least a couple of absolute classic songs, I felt there were too many places where half-formed ideas weren’t properly developed. It was as if the band had overreached themselves trying to produce a double album in a limited timescale, and the end result fell frustratingly short of the better album it could have been.

This time around, they haven’t made the same mistake. The sound, engineered and mastered by John Spence, is very different from the overambitious wall-of-sound of it’s predecessor. It’s a more stripped down, organic sound, a little closer to how the band sound live. Not quite perfect; I’d like to have heard the backing vocals of Olivia Sparnenn and Anne Marie Helder a little more prominent in the mix. With Iain Jennings and Liam Davidson only rejoining the band for the start of the tour, and Chris Johnson having left before the start of recording, it’s left to Bryan Josh to plays almost all the keyboards as well as all the guitars. While there are probably a few places where Iain Jennings could have added some of his magic touches, Bryan’s studio keyboard playing seems to have improved from the rather simplistic playing on much of HFoS. Like the last couple of albums there’s not much flute, now played by Anne Marie Helder rather than the recently departed Angie Gordon.

With a running time of just 55 minutes, they’ve concentrated on quality rather than quantity, and spent the necessary time honing the arrangements. There is nothing half-formed on this disk, and no filler either. Musically the band continues to move forward; they’ve refused to play safe by creating a pastiche of their past. Like many great bands of the past they’ve explored some new musical areas, but still kept enough elements of the past sound to keep the majority of existing fans happy.

It’s also a stronger than usual album lyrically, gone are some of the awkward and clunky lyrics that have marred previous releases. They’re not singing about Hobbits any more now; they’ve got too much from their real life experiences of the last couple of years. It’s a true life story of heartbreak, joy, tragedy and hope.

I don’t normally do song-by-song reviews, but I’ll make an exception here.

Fireside
The album opens with a strongly riff-driven hard rocker. With the subdued opening it starts off sounding like Fleetwood Mac, then turns into Led Zeppelin when the guitars come in at full strength on the second verse. Turn the volume up all the way up to eleven for this one, and rock out!

Second Hand
A dreamy atmospheric piece with Bryan singing lead that wouldn’t have sounded out of place on one of their early albums. This is one of those songs that doesn’t make an immediate impact, but creeps up on you after a couple of plays and gets stuck in your head. There are a few lyrical and musical similarities to a slowed-down version of ‘Pocket Watch’, but this is several orders of magnitude better.

Flowers for Guns
This one has ‘potential single’ written all over it, an upbeat pop song you can actually dance to. Heather’s lyrics are actually about the traumatic events of the middle of last year. Although they haven’t done anything quite like this before, somehow it still sounds like a Mostly Autumn song. There’s a great flute solo from Anne-Marie Helder in the middle.

Unoriginal Sin
This song is essentially Heather’s response to Fish’s “13th Star”. The melody and vocal delivery remind me a lot of parts of Odin Dragonfly’s “Offerings”, only an awful lot angrier. The dark brooding arrangement featuring some heavy guitar at the end, and I have to wonder if Bryan channelling Fish’s guitarist rank Usher is deliberate.

Paper Angels
Dedicated to backing singer Livvy Sparnenn, who’s going through very difficult times at the moment. One of the most emotionally intense songs on the album, and knowing exactly what Heather’s lyrics are about, this one hit me hard. Musically this could easily be a Breathing Space song, the first part a sparse piano and vocal arrangement, before Bryan launches into one of his best solos on the album.

Tearing at the Faerytale
This was the standout of the new songs they played live when I saw the in Gloucester, a big soaring guitar-driven epic that almost rivals the traditional live encore ‘Heroes Never Die’ in scope. It’s dedicated to Livvy’s dad Howard, a truly great guy I’ve had the privilege of meeting several times.

Above the Blue
In complete contrast, this song is beautiful shimmering ballad. The sparse arrangement, just piano and a subtle string arrangement from Troy Donockley gives Heather’s voice the space to shine. I find it reminiscent of ‘Broken’ from “Heart Full of Sky”, only far better.

Glass Shadows
Clocking in at more than eleven minutes in length, the title track is the only song on the album for with the label ‘prog’ is really appropriate. From the hauntingly atmospheric intro through to the intense swirling instrumental section towards the end, it’s a impressive well-structured piece, the only place where the Floydian influences they’ve worn on their sleeve on past albums come to the fore.

Until the Story Ends
A semi-acoustic love song about not one but two couples (I won’t say who, but Richard Nagy’s illustration on the lyric booklet is a big giveaway). The lyrics are perhaps a little bit soppy, but by this stage I think they’ve earned the right to a bit of soppy.

A Different Sky
This is the only song on the entire album that just doesn’t work for me. It’s not that it’s a bad song in itself, but this summery sixties-style pop number just sounds out of place on the album. The previous song makes such a musically and emotionally satisfying album closer that this song somehow diminishes it. I’ve suggested on the band’s web forum that they leave this song off the June retail edition of the album, and release it on it’s own as a single instead.

Aside from that one quibble about the final track, this is a very good album indeed. It might not quite be the career-defining masterpiece some people close to the band had been hyping it up to be, but it comes very close. The limited edition, complete with “making of” DVD is available from the band’s website. The normal retail edition will be released in June.

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An Actual Play Example

This is an “actual play” example from my ongoing online game on Dreamlyrics – the actual thread is here. It’s a conflict between Hollis, the psychokinetic human rebel assassin played by Nicki Jett, and an as-yet-unnamed NPC, actually guild security from the Guild of Victuallers. Hollis is searching for clues in the cellar of a tavern – the stakes for the meta-conflict were that Hollis would find a Significant Clue in return for a ‘complication’.

It’s a typical cellar of a tavern; full of beer barrels, some redundant furniture stacked in one corner. Hollis’ eyes are initially drawn to a bloodstain on the floor; enough blood for a nasty wound, not enough for someone to have bled to death.

A little searching reveals two items; a five-glerin coin bearing the head of Sarkan Vorsath of Karmork, and square black object resembling the communicators issued to members of the Karazthan.

“Aha,” Hollis whispered. “A clue. Two of ‘em, in fact.”

She collected the items and after a close perusal, pocketed them, then continued to search. aside for looking for clues, she was also trying to figure out the route the bad guys had employed, as opposed to the one Gath used to escape. She assumed that was they way she’d come in.

“Put you hands where I can see them” comes a male voice from somewhere behind Hollis. “And no funny business from you either, Gath”.

Hollis kept her hands wide and turned toward the voice, taking note of any useful objects in the vicinity as she did so. “No problem,” she said cheerfully.

The voice belongs to a thick-set human with arms and legs resembling tree trunks. Hollis doesn’t recognise the face, but she does notice he’s pointing a seriously large crossbow at her.

“Now, you two are going to explain to me precisely what you are doing grubbing around in this cellar. And that explanation had better be a good one”.

“Just trying to find my cousin Wozzeck,” Hiollis said cheerfully. “He’s not right in the head. Someone told us they’d seen him wandering around down here, so I persuaded this gentleman …” she turned to Gath apologetically, “I didn’t even get his name. Gath, you say? I persuaded Mister Gath to help me look.”

She gave Gath an imperceptible nod, then turned back. “Perhaps you’ve seen him. Stringy brown hair, about forty, with a scar right here … ”

… and with the faintest, harmless-looking flick of her fingertips along side her face, as if demonstrating the scar location, she *snatched* the quarrel right off the top of his crossbow.

Assuming that went as planned, she would flip the quarrel end for end and then drive it right into the big man’s eye.

This is a fight scene. Hollis has Fast-Talk at Fair, and Psychokinetics at Superb. The NPC’s relevant abilities for the encounter are Insight, Perception and Dodge, all at Fair, and Crossbow at Good. This guy is a professional, but nothing like the power level of a typical PC.

I decided to resolve this in two stages – first is Fast-Talk vs. Insight to see if Hollis managed to distract him. If Hollis wins, she can do the PK trick with the quarrel. If she loses, he attempts to shoot her (which would probably be Crossbow vs. PK to actually hit her, so he’d probably miss)

If Hollis wins the first contest, it’s then PK vs both Perception and Dodge – Perception to realise what’s going on, and Dodge to get out of the way.

Fast-Talk vs. Insight goes to Hollis, but only by a narrow margin. For the second contest, Hollis rolls -1 (Great) against the NPCs +3 (Superb) for Perception and 0 (Fair) for Dodge.

“Never heard of him”, he says. His reactions are far quicker than Hollis would have imagined; by the time the crossbow quarrel pierces where his eye would have been, his head is no longer there, leaving the quarrel embedded in the wood.

In the current playtest draft rules, there are two different ways you can combine two skills. In some circumstances you can use either skill, in which case you roll against both and take the best result. In others, you need both skills, so you roll against both skills, and take the worst roll.

I ruled Perception + Dodge as an “either” and used the better of the two rolls. Since his Superb beat Hollis’ Great, that means Hollis missed.

Now, in the context of this fight, I’m wondering if that approach really makes sense. Any opinions?

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Mostly Autumn – Gloucester Guildhall

Heather Findlay
Heather Findlay

It doesn’t seem like four months since the last time I saw my favourite live band. This may be because I’ve seen more than half the band already this year, either as members of other bands (Breathing Space and Panic Room), or as audience members at other gigs.Gloucester Guildhall is a new venue for me. This gig wasn’t one I’d originally planned to go to, but when circumstances forced me to abandon my planned trip to Devon and Cornwall taking in the Penzance and Tavistock shows, Gloucester turned out to be one I could make as a substitute. It’s a provincial theatre rather than a rock club, somewhat reminiscent of The Met in Bury.

Andy Smith
Andy Smith

This year they have yet another new lineup. The 2008 bands sees the welcome return of Liam Davidson on guitar and Iain Jennings on keys, and a brand new drummer in the shape of Henry Bourne. In addition, Anne-Marie Helder, who initially filled in as a guest on the short December tour continues on keys, flute and backing vocals. Unfortunately Livvy Sparnenn wasn’t present tonight due to exams (That excuse really isn’t very rock’n'roll, is it?)The performance reminded me of just why I love this band. I’d read reports of a few wobbles and technical glitches on the first date the previous weekend at Bilston, but there were no such problems this time round. All the band were in great spirits and on fine form. With Liam back on second guitar the sound was noticeably heavier, and I was impressed by new boy Henry Bourne’s drumming. On only his second gig with the band his style definitely suits the band. And Heather, four months pregnant, was on fantastic form vocally; especially when the choice of songs had her singing lead the majority of the time.

Heather Findlay
Heather again

The setlist was much changed from last year. Naturally it features a lot of new material from the forthcoming “Glass Shadows”. It usually takes me a few listens to really appreciate new songs, but “Flowers for Guns” (an MA song you can dance to!) impressed on first hearing, as did “Tearing at the Faerytale”. They’ve also rested quite a few of the regular standards in favour of several songs from “Passengers”, an album they’ve seriously neglected in recent years. I’ve waited a long time to hear “Another Life” and “Simple Ways” live, and it was worth the wait.

Bryan Josh
Bryan Josh

Only the second show of the tour with a new lineup, and the band is already gelling pretty well, even if they haven’t quite reached “the zone” I’m sure they’ll get to on later dates. This is going to be a great tour, I can tell.

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Spring Music Meme

Meme from both HippyDave and Psycho Chicken.

List seven songs you are into right now. No matter what the genre, whether they have words, or even if they’re not any good, but they must be songs you’re really enjoying now, shaping your spring. Post these instructions in your blog along with your 7 songs

  • Panic Room – Elektra City
  • Mostly Autumn – Flowers for Guns
  • Mermaid Kiss – Mermaid Kiss
  • Marillion – Script for a Jester’s Tear
  • Fleetwood Mac – Sisters of the Moon
  • Mostly Autumn – Heroes Never Die
  • Panic Room – Endgame

OK, for the last two, perhaps enjoying isn’t quite the right word at the moment, but I’m including them for very strong personal reasons that I don’t really want to explain on a public forum.

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