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Thanks for the tips on Porcupine Tree.I'll be trying the new one and In Absentia
Any Dixie Dregs fans here?
Thanks all! I've seen two that I really need to check out, Hellborg's 'Personae' and The Flower Kings.I didn't notice anyone mentioning Renaissance, so thought I had better since I saw them in concert 4-5 times way way back when. My favorites in no particular order...Scheherazade*Turn Of The CardNovellaUnplugged at The Academy... because I was there *How cool, 1001 posts and I'm writing about 1001 nights
Re : Porcupine TreeThere are several "phases" in the band's catalog. Early stuff was DIY by Steven Wilson ("On The Sunday of Life", "Up The Downstair", "Voyage 34") which is Pink Floyd-ish /techno / psychedelic/ spacey. Sampled drums with Wilson providing the voices and almost all of the other instrumentation. "Up The Downstair" is my favorite and has since had the sampled drums replaced by current drummer Gavin Harrison. Several great tracks on this one ("Synesthesia", "Always Never". "Up The Downstair", "Burning Sky", "Fadeaway"). "Sky Moves Sideways" and "Signify" are more proggish. Added drummer Chris Maitland with ex-Japan keyboardist Richard Barberi and bassist Colin Edward becoming fulltime members after contributing to "Up The Downstair"). "Sky Moves Sideways" has a long prog piece (title track) that is cut into two halves on the main disc but is a full 33 minutes on the bonus disk. This is as full blown prog as PT has ever gotten. The prog label seemed to disturb Wilson and the sound changed with "Signify", with shorter songs and an edgier sound. If you want great, old school prog go with "Sky Moves Sideways". "Stupid Dream" and "Lightbulb Sun" follow in the "Signify" vein but become at times more pop and more aggressive sounding. Both are excellent but the latter is awaiting re-release due do many label changes by Wilson. "Stupid Dream" has some stunning music and only two weaker tracks on it. Varies from spacey to pretty to brutal to melancholy to roaring. "Lighbulb Sun" continues in this vein but has a few more weak spots then "Dream".Band sound changed a bit after Gavin Harrison replaced Chris Maitland on the drum kit. Harrison is a more powerful drummer and but lacks Maitland's finesse. Wilson goes a bit more into prog metal turf but still has pop elements in his songwriting on "In Absentia" and "Deadwing". The former is much stronger IMO. Both have nice surround mixes available and the DVD of "Deadwing" sounds less compressed than the CD. Wilson released two of the best songs from the "Deadwing" time only on an EP ("So-Called Friend and "Half-light") with the single version of "Lazarus".Wilson has a great knack for "hooks" in his songs and is a very melodic soloist (very much like David Gilmore and Andy Lattimer). The bands sound has changed quite a bit down through the years. They have a live DVD coming out next month. Check their website for a lot of info. I've seen them 5 times and have tix to see them next month.Other current prog bands that I like: Shadow Gallery (excellently produced prog metal), A Triggering Myth (dual keyboards), Opeth (if you can get past the "death growl" vocals), Dream Theater. Marillion has a long varied career that has featured two lead vocalists (Fish, Steve Hogarth) and two distinct sounds (Genesis-ish with Fish and more prog pop with Hogarth). Fine, obscure band that has a great website. The old school prog (Yes, Genesis with Gabriel, Gentle Giant, King Crimson, Camel, etc) still sounds great.Jazz-rock fusion appeals to a lot of proggers (Dixie Dregs, Brand X, Return To Forever, etc).
Looks like you have a picture of Chick Corea?