Saturday, 28 July 2018

The Trunk 29/7/2018: History of the Hum

Sanguine Hum. A band with seven years' experience under their belt, over a decade more if you count their previous ventures. We're absolutely delighted to have this critically acclaimed outfit on board with us for the release of their fourth full-length album, Now We Have Power. But just who are Sanguine Hum, and what makes them so very special as a band? Well, you've come to the right place for a recap!

Before the Hum


Before there was Sanguine Hum, there was the zingy ambient-progressive act Antique Seeking Nuns. Founded at the turn of the millennium by vocalist/guitarist Joff Winks and keyboardist Matt Baber, ASN marked the start of the Hum story, releasing several EPs and exploring new sounds throughout the noughties. Two of the duo's old contacts, bassist Brad Waissman and drummer Paul Mallyon, climbed on board not long after the first EP, Mild Profundities, and the quartet was in place.

This EP's called Double Egg, but I'm more concerned with a distinct shortage of beans.

This was all slightly complicated by the other band these people were involved with: the Joff Winks Band, a very different act playing very different, more singer-songwriterly music in sharp contrast to the experimental, composerly (that's a word now) edge of the Nuns material. Juggling these two dissonant styles, though, was difficult at the best of times; the excellent JWB album Songs for Days was an early sign of the kind of genre-blending progressiveness the quartet was capable of, but it proved a hard sell for both bands' fandoms.

And so, as the 2010s drew perilously close, the decision was made to bring the Nuns, the Winks, and "Nunbient", an ambient project by Winks and Baber, together as a new, unified entity that would combine influences from all of its predecessors into a new and exciting sound. And a new sound needed a new name. That name was, of course, Sanguine Hum.

Dives and Developments


Diving Bell was Sanguine Hum's first album as Sanguine Hum, and it catapulted them to a much wider audience. Initially self-released, Diving Bell was soon picked up and re-released by Esoteric Antenna to impressive reviews; from this moment, it was clear that going forward as the Hum would yield great rewards to come.

This busy transitional period also saw a personnel change. As Paul Mallyon departed to tend to other commitments, the band found themselves approaching a RoSFest booking with no drummer; fortunately, Andrew Booker (of No Man and Henry Fool) stepped in at the eleventh hour to cover both the gig and the upcoming new album, and he stayed on board.

I love this album cover, by the way. One of my favourites.

That new album was The Weight of the World, and it was the group's greatest success yet. Between a PROG Awards nomination, a spot among Stuart Maconie's top albums of 2013, and more great reviews, the appeal of the Sanguine Hum sound was now undeniable, and the band were clearly destined for more. And more was very definitely on its way.

Now We Have...


Sanguine Hum's next project had been conceived back in 2002 as an Antique Seeking Nuns project under the name of Buttered Cat, and over a decade of quiet tweaking and refinement finally came together in early 2015 as the double concept album Now We Have Light, "a future parable set in an entirely possible scenario". It proved to be their biggest hit yet in both critical and commercial terms, and saw their audience expanding and evolving with their sound - a great relief for a band that's never been shy to innovate and change their angle.

Pictured: the BEM cat, Sid, when lunch is five minutes late.

Early 2016 saw the band looking back almost a decade to the days before Hum were Hum, releasing the double compilation CD What We Ask Is Where We Begin, featuring the first ever CD release of the Joff Winks Band's Songs for Days and a smattering of other material from rare tracks to hitherto unreleased extra bits and remixes. Even now, though, in this moment of reflection, the cogs were turning in pursuit of the next big thing.

It had been clear almost since the inception of Now We Have Light that it was going to need a sequel. Now We Have Power was, again, partially composed and assembled, but putting it together for a release demanded some changes: Andrew Booker stepped aside and original drummer Paul Mallyon, who'd been an integral part of the early design of Now We Have Power, came back as a guest. And, of course, this album would have a new publisher. Enter a plucky independent record label by the name of Bad Elephant Music. You might have heard of them.

Now We Have Power will be released this coming October, and, while preorders aren't available yet, they will be soon. As always, keep a close eye on our social media to make sure you catch the news as soon as we let it slip!

Status Update


The doors to Arms Open Wide will open wide in about three weeks - preorder now to get it at the moment of release. Dial is a little further away, but our excitement remains; we can't wait to show you just a little more of Godfrey's next masterwork!

Review Roundup


Our thanks to Real Gone for this live review of The Fierce and the Dead, performing in a support slot alongside the majestic Hawkwind. We've long held that TFATD are best experienced live, and a quick read of this review should be evidence enough of that!

Sunday, 22 July 2018

The Trunk 22/7/2018: Talking Points - But Is It Prog?

We don't consider Bad Elephant Music a prog label. A lot of our bands self-identify as being progressive rock, but a lot of them don't, and honestly we'd like to think that genre-blending and genre-defying music is one of our hallmarks. But we do still have a strong connection to the prog scene, and there's one question we see repeated time and again, in person and online.

"Is (band / artist / album / song / cheese brand) prog?"

Double Meanings


Part of the problem with this question is that "prog" can have multiple meanings. Depending on who you ask, and even on specific contexts, it can refer to a fairly specific set of genre conventions or to a broader theme of musical broad-mindedness and experimentalism. These are, in many ways, worlds apart. Not only do they mean very different things, but sometimes they don't even overlap.

I was trying to think of a witty caption for this image, but then it hit me - who on earth scratches their head with a single finger like that? That has to be really inefficient, right?

You could argue, for example, that some modern bands that stick very close to the style of 70s prog classics aren't the second meaning of progressive because they're not breaking new ground - but you wouldn't dream of calling them anything but the first meaning of progressive, because that's a genre in which they're firmly rooted. Equally, bands which are undoubtedly progressive in the broader sense may not fit into the same prog box as, say, Genesis - maybe their songs are too short, maybe the instrumentation isn't thick enough, or maybe they just don't sound like Genesis even if they do sound small-P progressive.

We can't help but wonder whether a lot of "is it prog?" discussions stem from different people using different definitions of the word, and, since one indie label isn't going to convince every music fan in the world to agree on one of them, 

Why Talk About It?


So, if the discussion's so confusing, why have it? Well, we can definitely link of at least one reason why it might be useful to classify things as prog or not prog: classifications can be a very useful reference point for music fans.

Even a cursory glance at the venerable Prog Archives makes it very clear how important discrete classifications can be. At the very top of the navigation page, front and centre, is the list of "prog sub-genres", over twenty subsections representing different kinds of progressive music. Anyone familiar with metal will probably find this pretty familiar. These categories can be a little reductive, especially when a band could fit into more than one (and the discussions about which fits best can rival "is it prog?" for sheer volume and ubiquity), but they serve as a very useful signpost to help people find new music in styles that interest them. If you like, say, one math rock band, well, you may not like all of them, but you'll probably find other things you like in that same general area.

It's with good reason that, even when we're faced with a band that's truly unlike anything else we've heard, we try to describe it in terms of a combination or evolution of influences from existing bands: that's what hooks people. If we tell someone we've made something wholly unique, even if we try to describe it in terms of instrumentation, it's not as immediately eye-catching or attention-holding as saying it's X meets Y with a dash of Z. So we've seen first-hand how effective discrete classifications can be, and it does make the whole "is it prog?" question make a lot more sense.

Over to You


But enough waffle from us - what do you think? What does "prog" mean to you? Is there still a value to determining whether something is prog or not? Do you think BEM is a prog label? Does that matter? If you've got anything to say on this, we invite you to join the discussion over on Facebook!

Status Update


Unidentified Dying Objects is out now, on CD and digital download. Pick up a copy, it's really rather good!

This week we also announced a new album from Mike Kershaw: Arms Open Wide will be released on August 17th, and preorders are open right now.

Further on the horizon, Dial is still set for September... we can't wait to show you a little more of Godfrey's follow up. It's going to be good!

Review Roundup


We got a solid review of Unidentified Dying Objects in the most recent PROG, which we shall reprint for your viewing pleasure here:


Susan at Progressive Music Planet also delivered this fantastic 9/10 review of Suite for Piano and Electronics, proclaiming it "a wonderful choice... to expand your musical universe", and, over at Progradar, EvenFlow's Old Town got a writeup from the inimitable Jez Denton, "a truly wondrous collaboration that deserves further development". Thanks, guys!

Sunday, 15 July 2018

The Trunk 15/7/2018: From the Vaults - What Lies Beneath

Welcome back Welcome back to From the Vaults, the semi-regular feature where we dive back into the BEM archives to revisit some of our older releases. This week, we wind back the clock two years to 2016 - a mixed, messy year for the world at large, but a very, very good one for music. And the album we're looking at today is just one example of that trend: What Lies Beneath.

Get off the road! Please! God, this picture makes me anxious.

Singer-songwriter-keyboardist Mike Kershaw boasts an extensive back catalogue of solo work, with four full-length albums and one EP over the four years leading up to What Lies Beneath. His first project with BEM sports, for the first time, quite a few guest performers at his side, including BEM comrades Stuart Stephens (Whitewater), Leo Koperdraat and Frank Urbaniak (Fractal Mirror), and Tom Slatter (Tom Slatter), with Dan Bowles (The Rube Goldberg Machine) at the mastering desk.

What Lies Beneath is, above all else, a careful album: carefully constructed, carefully instrumentated, and carefully sung. And when I say "careful", that is absolutely a good thing. Have a listen:



One of the things I like about progressive music is variety, and that's on this album in spades, but one of the things I dislike is excess, especially where there doesn't seem to be a point to it. It's fortunate, then, that Kershaw's arrangements are so very well thought out. There's nothing here that doesn't belong, not a single ounce of padding or filler, and, as the track builds and coalesces, the growth feels considered rather than just being more for the sake of more. I don't think anyone would dispute the progressive influences at play here, but there's space to it too, and that's not as common or as lauded as it should be.

Reviewers have paid particular attention to Mike's vocals - they, like everything else on the album, are very measured, and do his beautifully elegant lyrics the justice they deserve. It's clear at every juncture that this is a man who cares deeply about the music he's making, and has refined and polished it to a mirror sheen.

Speaking of reviews, you can find one from Progradar here, one from Progarchy here, and one from PROG (noticing a pattern yet?) here. That last review is of particular note, as it calls Kershaw a "perennial underdog", and that sounds about right to us. This music deserves to reach far, far more ears, and, if you'd like yours to be among them, What Lies Beneath is available right now, physically or digitally, here.

Status Update


Unidentified Dying Objects is out this coming Friday! Time's running out if you want the album as soon as it drops - preorder now to avoid delays.

The countdown to Dial is a little longer (almost too long, we'd argue), but you can still preorder here, and listen to the single We Rescue right now to tide you over until September.

No review roundup this week. We'll catch you all next time!

Sunday, 8 July 2018

The Trunk 8/7/2018: 2018, Part Deux

Last week, we looked back. This week, we look ahead. Thus far, we've announced three more albums to be released before the end of 2018; there'll be more new music than that, rest assured, but in the meantime let's review what we know.

Unidentified Dying Objects


This one's close. So close we can taste it. In less than two weeks, Argos will unleash Unidentified Dying Objects on the world, and you've only heard a snippet of what the full album has to offer. Oh, and in case you haven't:



Don't just listen to the music, though - get a load of that guest list! Argos have enlisted some of progressive music's best and brightest, including Andy Tillison of The Tangent contributing his dazzling keyboards to the very track featured in this trailer. Unidentified Dying Objects is a none-more-prog continuation of Argos' bold, broad-church approach, with influences from across progressive history combining in a weighty, satisfying chunk of just plain good music. It also sees their permanent lineup expanding to five people, with the addition of keyboardist Thilo Brauss.

Unidentified Dying Objects releases on July 20th. Preorder here.

Dial


Announced last week, Dial is the next chapter in the Shineback saga. While we don't have preview tracks yet, we can offer you this rather good digital single, 'We Rescue', released in celebration of our fifth birthday:



After the critical and commercial success of Rise Up Forgotten, Return Destroyed, BEM's first outing in what's turned out to be a very prolific run, living up to the hype might seem daunting, but we can confirm that Godfrey has risen to the challenge, bringing back his signature rock-tinged "intelligent dance" style with some of the heavier elements seen on the Minotaur EP and an impressive laundry list of guests (we'll spare you the full list here, but you can find them all on the store page).

Dial releases on September 14th. Preorder here.

Now We Have Power


Matt Baber has already featured on the label with his Suite for Piano and Electronics, and now it seems the rest of the band want in too. Welcome aboard, Sanguine Hum, and, the rest of you, get ready for Now We Have Power! Again, there's no preview track yet, so enjoy this piece from Baber's solo album instead.



Sanguine Hum's previous album, the double CD Now We Have Light, began a "future parable", following a man named Don through a strange, surreal tapestry of songwriting and storytelling. Now We Have Power is set to continue this story with over an hour of new music, featuring guest performances from Mark Kesel, Kimara Sajn, and the band's former drummer Paul Mallyon.

Now We Have Power releases on October 12th. Preorders are forthcoming - and, in the meantime, you can catch a special acoustic performance from the guys at EppyFest later this month.

Review Roundup


Our thanks to Anil Prasad for this excellent writeup of Suite for Piano and Electronics, which you can still pick up here.

And to Stuart Maconie - yes, that one! - for featuring The Bob Lazar Story on this episode of Freak Zone! We're pretty close to the middle this time around, but we do recommend giving the whole thing a listen, as Stuart's tastes are fascinating and generally right on the ball. Baritonia is available to buy here.

Sunday, 1 July 2018

The Trunk 1/7/2018: Five Years of BEM

Happy birthday to us, happy birthday to us...

Oh yes, today marks exactly five years since the release of Rise Up Forgotten, Return Destroyed, and, with it, the birth of Bad Elephant Music as an entity.

I don't think any of us, back in 2013, anticipated where this little project was going. If you'd told me back then that, in five years' time, we'd have this many releases in our catalogue and this many talented musicians on our roster, I'd have given you, at the very least, a cautious side-eye. Watching BEM develop, at first from the outside, then from the inside as a copywriter, and eventually across social media, was fascinating. It wasn't a meteoric rise to fame, more a progression of being quietly impressed every couple of months when we hit some milestone or signed some new artist or picked up a juicy nugget of press attention. But, looking back now with the benefit of being able to chart a complete course, all those milestones really do add up.

We released two albums in 2013: the aforementioned Rise Up Forgotten and Spooky Action. We're proud to have both Simon Godfrey and The Fierce & The Dead still with us, still producing fantastic music, from Simon's multifarious projects with Valdez and as himself to TFATD's The Euphoric, which has become something of a crossover breakthrough this year. 2017 saw fifteen major releases, and this year looks set to keep the same pace, with eight albums already out and several more in the pipeline. Again, this pace - more than one release every month - was unthinkable when we started this venture, but, as the BEMpire (ooh, I like that, I think I'll keep using it) has grown, so too has our capacity and our audience.

There was one thing, though, of which we were absolutely certain, even back in 2013. We knew that Simon Godfrey was not done with Shineback.


Dial will be released on 14 September, 2018. It's a new full-length album from Shineback, this time a full collaboration between Godfrey and long-time cooperator and enabler Robert Ramsay. It comes with a star-studded lineup of special guests, including BEM alumni Dec Burke (Audioplastik), Matt Stevens, Joe Cardillo (Valdez), and Daniel Zambas (We Are Kin), and many more listed in full on the album page. Yes, there's an album page, and yes, you can preorder from it right now.

You'll note that the page doesn't have a tracklist yet. But, if you think we're going to tease you like this and leave you without any new music, you are sorely mistaken. See, during the Dial sessions, Simon recorded an extra song specifically to celebrate BEM's fifth birthday. It's called 'We Rescue', and we'd like to share it with you here.



And, if that's whetted your appetite as much as it did ours, you can buy 'We Rescue' as a digital single here, naming your own price.

Happy birthday indeed, Bad Elephant Music. Here's to more independent sounds for independent souls.

Status Update


We've had a couple of releases in the past couple of weeks that are worth spotlighting: Exo-Oceans, sold in partnership with Andy Tillison's solo project Kalman Filter, and Old Town, an EP from Evenflow, a joint project by Stuart Stephens (Whitewater) and Mike Kershaw. Both these albums are available from the BEM webstore.

Unidentified Dying Objects is now less than three weeks away - to get it right on time and avoid disappointment (as well as getting the preview track 'The Hunter's Last Stand' immediately), preorder now.

Review Roundup


Rather than actual reviews, this week we're bringing you a couple of mid-year top lists that feature BEM artists. The Progressive Aspect's best of 2018 so far features Mothertongue and The Fierce & The Dead, while the latter got in at #29 on Louder's top 50 of the first half of 2018! Congratulations are in order to both bands.