Beardfish meditation – Abigails Questions from ‘Destined Solitaire’

This is the review I posted at ProgArchives.  I’m not sure I complied with all the rules nd requirements, so, just in case they take it down, I’m posting it here.

100 word minimum?  No Problem.  I’m ranting a bit tonight, so instead of cranking out 1000+, let’s just focus on one song, OK?  Can you tell I like the album?  Can you guess what my rating is going to be?

“Like the white dot in the middle of the TV when you turn it off…”  That’s right, we’re going to the infinite universe that is ‘Abigails Qusetion.’  And quoting the lyrics is not where you expect a Beardfish review to begin.  I keep saying the same thing to anyone who will listen, but I can’t believe how much I like the lyrics for this band.  That’s not supposed to be true for a prog band, or at least not usually.  That’s exactly the reason I’ve enjoyed so much international prog over the past twelve months.  Take away any understanding because you’re hearing Polish or Portuguese or French, or whatever.  But these guys are fans of Zappa, and the written (and spoken and sung) word was such a big part of what made his music special.  It was not just comedy – it communicated a big idea that could not be captured by the music alone.  ‘Billy the Mountain’ (once described as a movie-for-your-ears) is my favorite example, but there are many others.  The fascinating thing is that THESE GUYS DON’T SPEAK ENGLISH TO EACH OTHER.  They don’t speak English to their friends and family.  And while it is clearly far more common for a Swedish person to be fluent in English than visa-versa, being able to have a nice conversation in English is one thing – writing about the infinite universe, with idiom, simile and metaphor is something else entirely.  Yet, for some time now, for Rikard and the band – no problem.

Now, it’s best not to speak about Zappa too much in a Beardfish review, lest the reader get the impression that this is a one-trick-pony of Mothers-impersonators.  That’s not the case.  No way.  Then why do I even bring it up again?  because the music, the notes, the time signatures, the arrangements are tough, at times, on the listener, particularly the new listener.  And that criticism may be reasonably directed at much of Zappa’s music.  And also, these guys know the Zappa schtick upside-down, backwards and forwards, and they don’t care to hide that fact.  The thing to remember is that it is merely a jumping off point, and it is not the thing itself.  Too often I see the word ‘retro’ associated with this band, and I cringe.  With all due respect to Mike Portnoy’s very kind words about it being just like 1974, this is not retro.  This is progressive.  Ideas from the past, particularly those involving intensive composition, are being recombined and mixed with NEW sounds and NEW ideas to make NEW music.

“Nothing has a beginning.  Nothing has an end.”  What a comforting thought.  It reminds me of Neil Young (perhaps the most un-prog of artists) who said “It’s all one song.”  Well, despite that lovely refrain, Abigails Question certainly does have a beginning and an end.  It also has a TON of material in between, including a little chit chat about the density of space (basically a vacuum) compared to the density of complex living organisms, like tadpoles.  But even with that unexpected (and very  welcome) roadsign, this was the song I was waiting for on this record.

At a little more than nine minutes, this is concise, especially given the variation of music contained therein.  After a very brief bit of atmosphere, the verse begins, supported by something akin to soft mellotron hits and guitar that sounds like it’s processed an octave up.  Drums and bass drive steadily while keys, guitar and vocal meander in a daze through the first 50 seconds.  In order to get to the “Nothing has a beginning…” refrain there’s a quick little somersault that feels meant to be disorienting for the listener, but it happens so fast that we find our feet right away, and are rewarded with a bit of synth melody that would make Tony Banks proud.  Unlike most Genesis, that melody is with us for less than twenty seconds – which is actually a small eternity in Beardfish time.  Now we’re back to verse two.  The short cycle basically repeats until we’re just under the two minute mark.  All change!

Now it’s time for a somewhat anxious meditation on how an infinite universe could be a bad thing.  This is matched with an unsettling up-chop on the guitar that is so not reggae.  Basically the song is contemplating the spontaneous and immediate end of everything.  This troubling thought leads directly into a polyrhythmic section where it seems everyone is regimented in their own march.  It reminds me of Wetton-era King Crimson.  We are then rescued by an instrumental statement, similar to that earlier synth melody, but now carried by the organ.  There is a little groove here, almost like beautiful and mellow rock’n’roll music.  Is Beardfish about to become a jam band?  What do you think?  This lovely bit of music goes from just before the 3 minute mark to about 3:34.  Again, in the life of this song, that’s a pretty nice little jam.

Now it’s the same melody, transposed and counterpointed to be a little peppier and a little more edgy.  At 3:57, we’re back to the original key for this part, and there is a small sense of resolution, small because we know it is temporary.  Just around 4:15 some synth (Moog?) foretells the next transition.  It’s the same key change, but VERY quickly followed by hits at the 4:36 mark (which is the exact halfway mark, by my calculation). Now we’re gently meandering, noodling a bit even.  Organ, bass, drums and guitar, kind of just going together, but constantly changing direction.  This is hard on the listener, unless it is setting something up.  Why yes, that’s the same theme we just heard back at the 1:14 area.  Ahhh… I feel so relaxed.  i hope this is not a false sense of comfort.  That floor tom is hitting a bit hard.

Now some noodling and  hits and then really fast vocals about checking out the trail left from that first kiss.  The lyrics are delivered so quickly that I needed to look them up, but they’re followed by the old demon voice (octave down) confirming that yes, “You should totally check it out!”  OK, stoner!  Now, at 5:23, the stage is set for something tasty.  Why, yes, that IS a delightful little clavinet solo.  Such easy rockin’ music is rudely interrupted by the aformentioned chat about the density of intergalactic space compared to some complex stuff here at home.  This voice reminds me of the seemingly benevolent super computer controlling everything on the starship, which computer (emotionless) may or may not be planning on killing the crew.  What IS definitely killing is Rikard’s organ solo, which only runs from 6:40 to 7:16.  Again, that’s a long time to be in the same progression for this song.  What I love is the maturity on that tiny little solo.  He’s got a very small amount of space and he delivers chops AND emotion.  It is an ecstatic high point to the record and perfectly sets up the rest of the band to take us home.

Repeat that extra fast lyric and then we close in on the BIG FINISH – YES!!  Nothing has a beginning, Nothing has an end!  Except with those sustaining Hammond chords and the very tasteful and understated guitar melody accents, we’re pretty much in jam band heaven from 7:28 to the finish.  It is an extremely rewarding finale for a listener who has gone through the whole experience described above and it shows the emotional power that this quartet can muster to bring the chaos to a sublime conclusion.

The rest of the record is also very good.

Odds and ends – music, friends, family, fun

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Special thanks to el Sturg and his lovely wife for hosting me in the DC metro area.  Senor Sturj and I ventured into the wilds of Columbia, MD for Progressive Nation 2009.  We got treated to Zappa Plays Zappa, Dream Theater, and even a little Queensryche.  It was a great night of music with a dear friend, but I’ll need some time to digest the whole deal.  In short, the Zappa set was brilliant, satisfying and very much what I expected.  It was a treat to see such extraordinary music played so brilliantly.  Dream Theater, quite simply, was an onslaught.  Portnoy might be the best in the business behind the drums.  I’ve seen him before, but not with HIS band.  This show was loud, abnoxious, mighty and awesome.  Like I said, more on that later.

I also received a huge supplement to my music collection via Mr. and Mrs. Sturg.  With the former, I have an opportunity to hear every single show Mahavishnu played between 1972 and 1974.  Friday night, Saturday night, Sunday night, etc, etc.  That is a deep collection.  From the later, I got to continue my education in sounds from around the world, as the Mrs. has traveled widely, speaks fluent Spanish and supplemented her considerable music collection accordingly.  I was only able to scratch the surface while being treated to pancakes and fresh fruit this morning, but I still managed to collect many gigs.  It was a good haul; just how good, will take some time to fully realize.

Friday night (still in Philly), my friend Joe had the sense to push me to Johnny Brenda’s, where I always love what I see.  In this case, it turned out top be a band I had already seen, but in a much worse venue.  I previously reflected on these events over at Fretbuzz, so there’s that.

On Thursday we wrapped up a great visit with my dear sister and her hell-ish beast-like offspring amazingly sweet and hilariously funny kids.  Dorothy has some great shots posted at her .mac sight.  I’ve got a few things to add, although most of my stills are from the Bat Mitzvah.  This video (warning: unedited!!) gives a good feel of how things progressed:

With today’s 7-3 drubbing at the hands of the Gigantos, the Phillies have now dropped a disturbing number of games on this seven-game west coast trip.  I wouldn’t worry so much, seeing as their lead in the atrocious NL East is still pretty comfortable, but they will undoubtedly have to play San Francisco and/or LA when playoff time comes, provided they get there.

I guess the last thing worth mentioning is the insane joy I’ve been getting from following Brent Spiner (Star Trek: TNG’s Data; yes, that Brent Spiner) on Twitter.  He has clearly elevated the art form.

AND, last but not least, the new Beardfish record Destined Solitaire is yet another work of genius.  Great music, lyrics, cover art, everything.  More on that later too.

Datamining social media to create unconscious collaborative art – scary, amazing!

SOCIAL SYNTHESIZER from aetherbits on Vimeo.

We take pictures and post them on Flikr.  We make calls on Skype.  Now, a group of artists and software engineers are sweeping through the minutiae of our lives.  These moments would have been lost in photo albums, stored in a musty basement.  These conversations would have run through their finite course and be left only as fading memories of the participants.

But datamining in this case is not about Dick Chaney recording those conversations or using those photos to incriminate and destroy enemies, real or imagined.  No, in this case, the data is being smashed together and run through a real-time-score generator which turns the sounds from Skype and the images from Flickr into an audiovisual representation of human existence and experience on this planet.

Forget religion.  Forget drugs.  Forget music.  This is higher consciousness, as revealed by the connectedness of all (or much of) humanity through technology.  Woah!

(via Synthtopia)

Michael Schumacher – The Return of the King

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I just read a tweet by Lance Armstrong (who tweets way too much) about Michael Schumacher’s impending return to F1.  I don’t know how intense a fan Lance is; he seems pretty busy with other things (cycling, cancer, kids, lots of different girlfriends).  But even if Lance isn’t a diligent fan, he made an observation with which few could argue: ‘The greatest of all time!!’  When Lance is wasting his precious 140 characters on an extra exclamation point, you know there are strong feelings.

My purpose is not to debate whether the greatest is Clark, Fangio, Senna, or Schumacher.  That’s a debate for another day.  There is no question of Schumacher’s greatness, and his seven championships will never be equaled in F1.  That feat is an outrageous achievement that puts Michael in the rarified air of Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods, and maybe Lance Armstrong (Lance doesn’t win championships, he just wins that one race.  It’s a bitch of a race, but it’s still one race and not a championship.  Sorry).

What was it about Schumi?  How did he become so dominant?  I can’t offer a full answer, but I can’t help but make a few observations.  It is one thing to be a perfect driver – to be able to go around a race track (a real track, not an oval) 50 or 60 times and do it perfectly every time, reaching speeds in excess of 200 mph and finding the fastest way through every turn and every corner.  That feat is hard enough, but it is only a small part of the equation that equals success.

There is also the matter of physical ability.  Many don’t understand the athleticism that is necessary for F1.  Although the physical demands are far different (and far less) than those of, say, the Tour de France, drivers are subject to brutal conditions for a period of up to two hours.  The cockpit is hot enough in a temperate climate, but in venues such as Malaysia and Bahrain, exhaustion can easily set in.  That’s not exhaustion like being tired, that’s exhaustion like you’re sweating so much that, no matter how much water you drink, you can not hydrate, and then normal body function, motor control, vision and cognition start to break down.  That can lead to mistakes in a sport where mistakes can be deadly.  The drivers must be supreme athletes to compete and succeed.

But there is more, much more.  There is that intangible aspect of competitiveness that (pardon the pun) drives these men to another level.  Schumacher’s competitiveness was like nothing I’ve ever heard of.  He would lie, cheat and steal to win.  He was so tough that he simply could not be intimidated.  But he could dish it out like no one else in the history of the sport.  Sometimes it seemed that his purpose on the track was to scare his competitors into submission.  He was not above driving into other cars, literally causing accidents, if there was some advantage to be gained from such conduct.  The word ‘ruthless’ does no justice to Schumi.  He was the Terminator, Jaws, Darth Vader, and Alien, all rolled into one, unstoppable winning machine.

He loved his team and worked tirelessly off the track to help everyone help him win.  He didn’t do it to become popular and he didn’t do it to become rich.  He lives quietly in retirement and gives away untold millions to various charities, without any of the fanfare that accompanies giving by certain American celebrities.  He gave everything he had during his years in racing and had unheard of results.  He seems to have done it simply to do it, simply because he could.

And now, after two plus years of retirement, he will come back to take over the Ferrari seat vacated by the injured Filipe Massa.  He will race on August 23, 2009, at Valencia, Spain, at a circuit that is unfamiliar in a car that is unfamiliar.  But this is not like Michael Jordan or Lance Armstrong coming back.  This is not a false retirement where a sporting man finds he is unable to stay away from the arena where he was once so utterly and completely dominant.  Unlike those icons, Schumacher is at peace with his retirement.  He has never once threatened to return, and, even now, it appears he will only come back at the request of his beloved Scuderia Ferrari S.p.A.

Clearly Michael will be ready.  Even with testing bans, he will find a way to get to know this car and this course.  He will put every ounce of energy he has into this project because that is the only way he goes racing.  It is a moment, like so many others in F1 history, that is the stuff of legends.  The most revered and feared F1 driver alive and the most successful in the history of the sport will come to the aid of a flagging, though once, brilliant team.  He will race in the seat vacated by one of the most beloved and most talented young men in the sport.  Massa is the type of driver upon whom F1 should to build its future, if it hopes to have one.  Schumacher and Ferrari – two icons.

But Massa’s accident and the horribly tragic death of Henry Surtees in F2 reminds us, that even with all of the innovations and technology, this is still a perilously dangerous sport.  And all the romance and all the drama is only heightened by the fear and the horror that serious men, family men, put aside every time they get behind the wheel.  Viel Glück, Michael!

F1 – is BMW calling it quits?

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An announcement is expected tomorrow, and it does not look like the news will be good.  The care this year is poor shite this year, which is so sad, because the team had made monstrous strides under the old rule formulation.  They were on pole and winning races.  I have great affection for Robert Kubica and hope he will find great success in the future, even if not with BMW.  There is no question that both Kubica and teammate Nick Heidfeld are capable drivers.  It sucks for them that the team has declined so quickly and is now being kicked to the curb by the German car manufacturer.  Let us hope that I have it all wrong and that the news tomorrow will not be so dire.

The Prisoner reboot on A&E – could be awsome?

There will never be another Patrick McGoohan.  He was the coolest, the hardest, the baddest.  To try and take his creation and his character and remake the monster that was ‘The Prisoner’ is sacrilegious, at best.  It’s not like Battlestar Galactica where, despite an amazing premise, the show was poorly executed.  On the contrary, ‘The Prisoner‘ is easily the greatest TV show I have ever seen.

But with all of that said, I am intrigued by the massive task that A&E has set for itself with the mini-series/remake that is airing this November.  And now, finally, we get a good look at what it’s going to be all about.  Caviezel’s No. 6 appears to be similarly defiant, but without that extraordinarily suave sheen.  The show deals with memories that have been erased, which was not part of the original, and, as Dorothy suggested, the show may venture into ‘Lost’ territory with the questioning of whether any of this is real, blah, blah.

Looking at this lengthy trailer, however, git the hair on the back of my neck standing.  Yes, there are things missing, as stated above.  And there are scenes blatantly copied, like buying the map or riding the taxi.  But look at Rover!!  No longer a beachball with a string attached, he is now a menacing baddy, ready to wreak real havoc to the delight of fans new and old.  And, more importantly, I get a strong sense of the chemistry between Caviezel (trying so hard to look like Christian Bale) and Sir Ian McKellan’s No. 2.  If it works between the two of them, then the whole thing will work.

Comic Con: the good, the bad, and this

I have, for several years, wanted to go to.  As the next post shows, the access to information about some of the coolest entertainment projects in the universe is unparalleled.  If I ever go, I’m making my sister take me because she has press credentials and can get on all the amazing panels – like Peter Jackson and James Cameron discussing the future of film.  The costume culture is intriguing and intimidating.  And then something like this happens:

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*shudder*

HTC Hero – WANT!

OK, American cell phone companies.  This is your big chance.  PLEASE CARRY THIS PHONE!!  I once said I wouldn’t go for the virtual keyboard; I take it back.  It was an excited utterance.  I didn’t have all the facts.  If I can have the Hero, I’ll be OK, even with the virtual QWERTY.  HTC’s build of Google Android is so lovely, I can’t stand it.  One thing, VerizionWireless – I’m not talking to you.