Music Blog

All the music-related posts gathered together in one place.

Congratulations to Karnataka for winning Best Album for the superb “Sectets of Angels” in this year’s CRS Awards, the prog-rock equivalent of The Hugos. The does not make The Guardian look good.

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Kim Seviour – Fantasise to Realise

Kim Seviour - Fantasise to RealiseFormer Touchstone frontwoman Kim “Elkie” Seviour kicks off her solo career with the single “Fantasise to Realise”. It’s a dramatic record that combines a big pulsing dance rhythm and rock guitars with a soaring vocal performance that suggests the best may be yet to come for Kim as a singer. It’s the sort of things that deserves to be a dancefloor hit if you can find enough clubs that aren’t frightened of guitars.

If that sounds a long way removed from Touchstone’s progressive rock, it’s actually a logical progression from the more pop-orientated elements of of Kim’s last album with the band. “Oceans of Time” cast around in a lot of different directions, and “Fantasise to Realise” represents something of one of those directions. It is certainly an intriguing taster for Kim’s forthcoming album.

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Pre-order Salvation Jayne’s new EP “Dahlia”

Salvayion Jayne DahliaKent-based blues-rockers Salvation Jayne are now taking pre-orders for their EP “Dahlia”.

I encoutered this band entirely by accident when they were playing a gig with a mix or originals and covers at The George Hotel in Ashford the nighr before The Ramblin’ Man Fair last July.

Their first EP “I’ll Be Damned” is also well worth a listen.

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Purson reveal cover artwork for “Desire’s Magic”

Psychedelic rockers Purson have revealed the cover for their forthcoming album “Desire’s Magic”. According to the band, “it sounds like it looks”.

Purson will be playing an album launch gig at The 100 Club on March 16th.

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John Mitchell – The Nostalgia Factory

The Nostalgia Factory“The Nostalgia Factory” by John Mitchell is the first release by White Star Records. Aside from a couple of backing vocals by former Touchstone singer Kim Seviour. John Mitchell plays and sings everything on this record himself. The only thing he didn’t do this time is write the songs. Though he’s a songwriter so prolific other musicians can’t keep up with him, this four-song EP is a record of covers.

The record takes its title from the first song, a very early Porcupine Tree number from the days before they were a full band and releasing on cassette. This take is all 80-style shimmering guitars, with a vocal that sounds more Steve Wilson than Steve Wilson.

Next up is Justin Hayward’s ballad “It Won’t Be Easy”, the theme song of the short-lived 1987 TV series “Star Cops” (Anyone remember that one?), and up-tempo pop-rock of Phil Collins’ “Take Me Home” which he played live with Lonely Robot at their showcase gigs at the end of last year.

The final song, ELP’s “C’est La Vie” is the standout of the record. It was originally intended for a Prog Magazine cover disk that never saw the light of day. It’s a thing of beauty; a simple piano figure puts the emphasis on Mitchell’s vocal, and he takes the song and simply owns it. Much like Panic Room’s version of “Bitches Crystal” intended for that same ill-fated cover disk, it shows how good ELP’s songwriting can be when you strip away their bombast.

With material from the mid-70s to the early 90s, the record has a very strong mid-80s feel about it, although there’s none of the worst excesses of 80s pop-rock production to be heard. What comes over strongly across the whole record is John Mitchell’s skill at interpretation. If you’re not intimately familiar with the originals it’s not immediately obvious that this record is made up of covers. He takes each song and makes it his both vocally and instrumentally, which is always a sign of a great creative musician.

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This Week on The Song Bar

Song-BarThis week’s topic on The Song Bar is songs with misheard, nonsense or inaudible lyrics. So far I’ve nominated Blue Öyster Cult’s Workshop of the Telescopes with its “silverfish imperetrix with uncorrupted eye” along with some classic 70s Jon Anderson and Budgie.

Nominations as usual in the comments section over there (not here!), and get them in by Monday!

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Rebecca Downes – The 100 Club

Singer-songwriter Rebecca Downes came to London’s legendary 100 Club on a Tuesday night for the launch of her excellent second album “Believe”. Despite it being a school night still drew an appreciably-sized crowd., and you could tell this was going to be a blues gig by the number of Nord Electro keyboards on the stage. Blues-rockers love these distinctive red instruments, and there were no fewer that three of them at the beginning of the evening. Only one belonged to Rebecca Downes’ band; the other two were for the two support bands.

The first of those supports, Bruce Lok, had an interesting sound. On the slower numbers his voice had something of the late Ian Curtis, not what you normally expect from a blues band. There were moments that suggested what Joy Division might have sounded like had they played lounge jazz rather than post-punk, though he sang in more of a rock style on the up-tempo numbers. It did leave the impression of an artist who undoubtedly has some talent, but has yet to find a musical identity.

The second support, Greg Coulson, was far more old-school rock’n'roll musically, and had a sense of showmanship the first act lacked. Greg doubled up on keys and guitar, alternatively working up a blur of notes on that Nord Electro, sometimes playing it with his knee, or swapping solos with the band’s other guitarist. All high-energy and huggely entertaining, it set things up nicely for the headliner.

Launching into the blues-rock boogie of album opener “Never Gonna Learn”, Rebecca Downes proved to be as dynamic a live performer as she is an excellent singer on record, and her tight band proved an superb foil, going from hard rock to soul to funk. The set included most but not quite all of the new album interspersed with highlights from her début, plus a cover of Janis Joplin’s “Piece of my Heart”. Everything from the new album came across powerfully live’ these were songs built to be performed on stage. “Night Train” was an early highlight, featuring some delightful Ray Manzerek style electric piano and an appropriately locomotive-like rhythm.

For much of the set the band played as a five piece with Steve Birkett handling all the guitar parts, but for the last couple of songs Rick Sandford joined them for a spectacular guitar-shredding “Sailing on a Pool of Tears” and the hard-rocking finale of the album’s title track. Unfortunately the strict curfew meant there was no time for an encore.

Rebecca Downes’s music exemplifies the old adage that your favourite genre didn’t just stop as soon as popular fashion moved on. She plays the blues in the style of the classic rock era of the sixties and seventies, and makes few concessions to contemporary musical fashion. But as this gig showed she’s very good at what she does. She will be on tour across much of Britain over the course of the year, playing a number of festivals including the Cambridge Rock Festival in August.

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Fantasise to Realise

Former Touchstone singer Kim Seviour is releasing a single “Fantasise to Realise” om Marth 7th, with the album to follow in the summer.

It’s co-written and produced by the incredibly prolific John Mitchell, who I’m sure is in about seventeen dfferent bands because nobody else can keep up with him.

You can pre-order a signed copy of the limited-edition CD from White Star Records.

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Gloryhammer to support Blind Guardian in May

What better than the band who made a concept album about undead uncorns touring in support of the band who once set Tolkien’s Silmarillion to music?

The tour take in Glasgow, Manchester, Dublin and Nottingham, finishing at The Forum in Kentish town on May 22nd.

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Ramblin’ Man Fair – More bands announced

The most significant is the announcement of Family as the Sunday night headliner on the Prog stage.

It’s a rather disappointing bill compared with last year. With the exception of Von Hertzen Brothers, a band whose appeal has always rather escaped me, the top three on the prog stage on both nights are all legacy acts. It’s true that Uriah Heep continue to release albums and aren’t guaranteed to play a set they could have played in 1974, but it’s unlikely to be as focussed on newer material as Marilion’s superb set last year. It doesn’t do much to suggest progressive rock is a living form of music, rather it’s a nostalgia-fest for the middle-aged who want to relive their youth. The younger and more interesting bands are too few in number and too low down the bill.

Uriah Heep, Purson and The Fierce and the Dead are worth seeing, but their will be other opportunities to pay far less money to see see them play longer sets.

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