Music Blog

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

Latest news from Heather Findlay

Odin Dragonfly at Bilston Robin 2

In a new blog post, Heather Findlay has announced that her headline show in Zoetermeer on April 13th will be filmed for release as a DVD.

This is very welcome news. As I’ve said before, Heather has yet to release anything on record that sounds quite like she does live with a full electric band; not only do the live dynamics bring the songs from The Phoenix Suite to life, but radical new arrangements transform some of her older material into something quite different from the originals. Particular highlights on the last tour were a near-metal take on Odin Dragonfly’s “Magpie”, an interesting electrified and percussion-heavy version of “Bitterness Burnt”, and “Flowers For Guns” turned into a fantastic Nile Rogers style funk number. I really hope all three end up on the DVD.

She’s also announced a temporary lineup change in her band for the short Dutch tour. With Chris Johnson temporarily unavailable the second guitarist for these three dates will be Sam Forrest. He’s not a permanent replacement, and Chris Johnson remains a part of The Heather Findlay Band.

As for the new album, currently in the writing stage, at the moment I think it’s best to keep an open mind. In the past she has send out a lot of mixed messages over the sort of music she wants to make, and the sort of audience she wants to play to. It’s a crucially important record for her, and of course it’s entirely up to her what musical direction she goes in.

The one new song “Shine” played on her tour at the end of last year was a great groove-led Led Zeppelin style rock number, and I’m hoping for more in that vein. Between her electrifying live shows and her acoustic album “Songs From The Old Kitchen” Heather gave the impression of having one foot in the classy hard rock camp, and one foot in the folk/roots/Americana camp, and that points at a sort of direction I hope the new album might take. She certainly does both of those too well to focus exclusively on one at the expense of the other. But we will just have to wait and see; she may decide to do something altogether different and unexpected.

We won’t be seeing a full UK tour for another year, which I know has disappointed some people. But, perhaps in response to the feeling that a full year without without a single UK appearance was far too long, there will now be a one-off event later this year to play the new album. If Heather or any of her team are reading this, please do hold this in a suitable sized venue such that everyone who wants to come is able to do so; don’t make it another of those artificially limited exclusives where only those who happen to be online at exactly the right moment have any chance.

Edit: An earlier version of this post did not make it clear that Chris Johnson is still part of Heather’s band and is only missing the three Dutch gigs. I have corrected this.

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How It All Started?

Anne-Marie Helder, lead singer and songwriter of Panic Room as well as playing keys, flute and backing vocals for Mostly Autumn posted the above link to Facebook:

I’ve been lucky enough to sing this in the past, with a couple of different choirs; and I can honestly say it never fails to bring goose-bumps to my skin and tears to my eyes!

If you are having a bad day – or a good day – please listen to this, and remember the sheer beauty and wonder that the world, the human soul, and this life that we are living is capable of!

If I could ever write something as incredible as this, to leave behind me in the world, then I would die happy.

When I was quite young, my mum was a member of an amateur choral society, and we all went to their annual choral concerts. I can’t remember exactly what works they performed, but Faure’s Requiem may well have been one of them. I can remember being bored by the solo pieces but enjoying the big choral numbers a lot more. Exposure to this sort of music at a formative age is probably why I developed a taste for music with a big sound and extensive use of harmony and find much three-chord music shallow and unsatisfactory. It’s not only why umpty-ump years later I’d much rather listen to Nightwish than The Arctic Monkeys, but why I appreciate the likes of Panic Room and Mostly Autumn.

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Are There Too Many Prog Festivals Now?

Knifeworld, headlining the Stabbing a Dead Horse tour.

Are there just too many Prog festivals now? The collapse of the Y-Prog Festival that was supposed to have taken place of the weekend just gone, and August’s Cambridge Rock Festival reducing prog on the main stage to a mere token presence this year are bad news for prog fans. It may be a case of extrapolating too much from limited data points, but I wonder if there are now more specialist prog festivals than the market can realistically support.

If the prog scene is to continue to grow and prosper, what part should festivals play in this? Are festivals aimed squarely at hardcore prog fandom counterproductive? Do they promote a ghetto mentality when it’s better to get the music out there in front of a wider audience? Should we instead be encouraging more prog bands with crossover appeal to play more “mainstream” rock, indie or folk festivals, and also encourage some of those festivals to add a critical mass of progressively-inclined bands to their lineup?

Ironically that’s precisely what the Cambridge Rock Festival had been doing over the past few years.

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The Fierce and The Dead sign to Bad Elephant Music

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Press Release from The Fierce and The Dead

B.E.M. is delighted to announce partnering with The Fierce And The Dead for the production, release and worldwide distribution of the band’s second full-length album.

The Fierce And The Dead – guitarists Matt Stevens and Steve Cleaton, bassist and producer Kev Feazey and drummer Stuart Marshall – was originally born out of sonic experimentation when making Matt’s second solo album, Ghost, and they’ve developed into one of the most original bands in the UK rock scene. Their unique brand of instrumental rock music, fusing rock, post-rock, punk and progressive elements, has made a big impression though one full-length album and two EPs, and their incendiary live performances, most recently as part of the Stabbing a Dead Horse tour of the UK with Knifeworld and Trojan Horse.

David Elliott, founder and CEO of Bad Elephant Music said: “We’re proper made up to be working with The Fierce And The Dead. They’re absolutely our kind of band, and lovely guys too. I’m looking forward to hearing what Matt, Kev, Stuart and Steve are going to produce for us, and of course it will be an absolute monster. Collaborating with a band of TFATD’s calibre is a huge honour for us, and we welcome them with open arms to the BEM family.”

Matt Stevens, on behalf of The Fierce And The Dead, said: “We are extremely pleased to partner with Bad Elephant on this album, they are true music lovers and believe in supporting the artist. This will allow us to make the music we want to make and have the support to help us gain a wider audience, without in anyway compromising our vision for our new album. And they like a good curry, which is nice.”

The as yet untitled album is scheduled for release in the Autumn of 2013.

So there you go. We’re very pleased to have the support of B.E.M. It’s going to make a big difference to us.

And in other news you can listen to our released music on Spotify! Share it around and make a few new converts!

Kev, Matt, Stuart & Steve.

fierceandthedead.com
fierceandthedead.bandcamp.com
twitter.com/tfatd
facebook.com/fierceandthedead
youtube.com/user/TFATD

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Script for a Jester’s Tear – 30 Years On

Today is the 30th anniversary of the release of Marillion’s debut album “Script for a Jester’s Tear”.

I first got in to rock at the end of the 1970s through listening to Nicky Horne and Tommy Vance on late night radio, and the very first album I bought was Pink Floyd’s “The Wall” in 1979. It was a time when the “mainstream” was all punk and new-wave, and I found much of that simplistic and rather unsatisfying.

At the time I got the feeling that I was late to the party and had just missed out on a golden age of music. It seemed as though many the great 70s bands whose back catalogues I was catching up with had either split or had passed their prime. At any rate they were always dismissed as relics of the past, and I kept being told I should be listening to The Clash and The Jam instead. Not that it was really true; around that time Rush were producing what many now consider their finest work, and the New Wave of British Heavy Metal was just gearing up. Rock’s second generation was happening.

Into this came Marillion. I first heard their early sessions on Tommy Vance’s Friday Rock Show, and they sounded quite unlike anything else around at the time. I first saw them live halfway up the bill at the 1982 Reading Festival. I bought the first record, the 12″ single “Market Square Heroes” with “Grendel” on the b-side. A few months later I bought their first album on the day of release. Unlike Pink Floyd, Deep Purple or Genesis, here was a great band that I got in to right at the beginning of their career, and belonged to me in a way the older bands didn’t.

“Script for a Jester’s Tear” remains a remarkable record that I think still stands the test of time, and was certainly a stronger and more forward-looking statement of intent than the early 70s Genesis retread of “Grendel”. Fish’s evocative lyrical style is something you either love or hate, but there’s no denying the power of some of his imagery. The closing anti-war epic “Forgotten Sons” with it’s Psalm 23/Lords Prayer spoken word section lost none of it’s power when he performed it live last year. And right from the beginning it was obvious that Steve Rothery was a quite exceptional guitarist.

I did not imagine back then that the band would still be going strong thirty years later, as is Fish’s solo career, and subsequent generations of musicians would be citing Marillion as a major influence. Both Marillion, now with Steve Hogarth and Fish as a solo artist have reinvented themselves multiple times and today produce music with sounds that has little in common with that very first release thirty years ago. Rock itself hadn’t been going for thirty years back in 1982.

And I certainly could not have imagined the circumstances in which I would first meet Fish in 2007, but that’s another story entirely.

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The Cambridge Rock Festival have now announced the lineup for Stage 2 on Friday, sponsored by the Classic Rock Society. Headliners are Landmarq, with a bill also featuring Voodoo Vegas, Abel Ganz, Primitive Instinct, Red Jasper, The Treat, The Room, and Habu.

Posted on by Tim Hall | Comments Off

Owain Roberts – Still missing one year on

Owain Roberts of The Reasoning at Bury Met

It’s now a year since Owain Roberts, former lead guitarist from The Reasoning, disappeared near his home in west Wales, and there has been trace of him since.

I didn’t know him well, but we did meet quite a few times over the years, and he knew me well enough to greet me by name. It’s very difficult to find the right words even after a year.

Owain, if you’re still out there somewhere, wherever you are, get in touch. Let us know you’re alive and well. We still care.

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Gloryhammer

This has got to be one of the most laugh-out-loud funny music videos I’ve seen for a long, long time. It’s not so much cheesy as transcending mere cheese and coming out the other side.

GLORYHAMMER is the new project of Christopher Bowes, the mastermind of the Pirate Metal sensation ALESTORM. “Tales from the Kingdom of Fife” is a concept album and tells the story of an alternate -history medieval Scotland, a realm of dragons, wizards, magic and dark sorcery. It is the legend of the glorious hero Angus McFife, who wages a long war against the evil wizard Zargothrax, in order to free the people of Dundee.

And people still take the piss out of progressive rock for allegedly singing about trolls and wizards! And their keyboard player wears a cape…

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Cambridge Rock Festival – Back to the 70s?

Touchstone at the 2012 Cambridge Rock FestivalTouchstone at CRF 2012, not exactly a 70s band

From reading various discussions online, I’m getting the impression I’m far from the being the only one who is more than a little underwhelmed by this year’s Cambridge Rock Festival lineup as announced so far. A good acid test of a festival bill for me is “How many bands would I travel 40 miles into London to see?”. While I know there are still bands to be announced,  currently the answer this year is “one”. Last year there were no fewer than five bands I travelled 200 miles to see in York.

Worse, I’m seeing people’s suggestions for the return of the likes of Stolen Earth, Panic Room, Chantel McGregor and Winter in Eden being shot down with patronising dismissals such as “You can’t have your own personal wishlists”, which makes it look increasingly clear that none of those bands are going to be on the bill. Maybe those of us who are big fans of those acts need to recognise we’ve been spoiled over the last couple of years, and this year it’s someone else’s turn. But I still think those of us who have expressed disappointment with the bill have some valid points, and the aggressive way the festival’s defenders try to shout down dissent feels like a subconscuous recognition of this.

For me, bands such as Panic Room, Winter in Eden and Kyrbgrinder were amongst the highlights of last year’s festival. What I love about them is that while they have nothing in common with mainstream indie-rock they all sound like something out of the 21st century rather than something from the 1970s, and having them play emphasised that the festival was about music with a future as well as celebrating music from the past. This was something I emphasised when I reviewed the festival for Trebuchet Magazine.

From what’s been announced so far the bill this year appears to have cut back significantly on both progressive rock and bands with female vocalists, leaving a festival with a far stronger emphasis on old-school four-chord 70s-style hard rock. It’s a lot more of a boy’s club, and it’s also far more backward-looking in musical style. It risks giving the impression the target audience is middle-aged rock fans who stopped listening to anything new somewhere around 1973, trying to re-live their youth.

I’ve attended the full weekend for four years now. It’s always been a great weekend with a fantastic atmosphere, great people and great beer. But a strong lineup has always been part of the deal as well. So for now I’m waiting until they announce the full bill before I’m willing to part with any of my money. It might be that the CRS stage on Friday comes up with a killer bill that transforms the festival.

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Mostly Autumn Spring Tour

Spring tour dates now announced on the Mostly Autumn website.

  • 6th April – HRH Festival at the Magna Science Adventure Centre in Rotherham
  • 2nd May – Bath Komedia
  • 3rd May – Bilston Robin 2
  • 4th May – St Helens Citadel
  • 5th May – Southampton The Brook
  • 24th May – Maryport Harbour Festival
  • 2nd June – Bury Met
  • 28th June – Ulft Dru Cultuurfabriek
  • 29th June – Zoetermeer De Boerderij
  • 4th August – Cambridge Rock Festival

Rather fewer dates than in previous years, possibly reflecting the continuing economic downturn.

It’s also worth noting that the Dutch dates clash with some Panic Room dates the same weekend.

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