Wednesday 26 September 2012

From Death Comes Inspiration

The 'Man Left in Space' is finally written, 59 minutes of music all present and correct and I now commence the not inconsiderable task of turning the demos into something approaching finished performances.  This requires the help of my wonderful guest musicians in some areas, and as with the previous album I'm thrilled at the sheer musicianship of what is coming back.  The guest list currently stands at Nick D'Virgilio, Lee Abraham, Steve Dunn, Simon Rogers, Matt Stevens, Greg Spawton and Dave Ware.  There are more to come too.  More updates will be appearing regularly as mixing gathers momentum.

During the summer I lost two beacons of my childhood. The first Jon Lord, was my singular inspiration for learning to play the keyboard, and for 27 or so years was credited in my world at least, as the defining keyboard player in rock music.  There are few sounds more emotive to me than a Hammond B3 being wound up through a Leslie speaker.  Jon turned the Hammond into a performance art beyond music, into an adrenaline provoking realm that is akin to the aural delights of an Italian V8 being caned on a mountain pass.  In an opposing vein, his deft touch braking the Leslie and lowering the swell pedal into a barely audible pure tone, in tracks such as 'You Keep on Moving', could bring tears to a grown man.

The second was Neil Armstrong.  My dad recently informed me I'd missed sharing the same christian name by a whisker and it was probably for the best.  He always seemed a constant in my childhood even though he shunned the attention his obvious achievement was destined to produce. The scary thing about Neil's passing in August, was that I'd spent the previous 2 months reading his autobiography as part of my research and part inspiration for 'The Man Left in Space'.  

Despite having a healthy interest in the technical and engineering aspects of the achievement, I think it was the human response to it that fascinated me the most.  It was this theme that was central to the album, 'what price for achievement?'  When I heard the news I was already halfway through Michael Collins 'Carrying the Fire' which proved similarly enlightening about Neil and the negative effects it had on the remaining member of the famous trio, Buzz Aldrin.

They say death comes in threes and sadly this month we lost my dad's sister, who again was a central character in the story of my childhood.  So for the second time in 3 years I find myself being asked to read at a family member's funeral. The first occasion had such a profound effect on me that I ended up writing an entire album about it, 'When Age Has Done It's Duty' was the result.   The preparations for the second one are already starting to reveal those forgotten family secrets.  I knew my late grandmother was something of an amateur poet, but until this evening, I'd not realised the extent of her talent.  It's one of her poems about life in a small village (Hinkshay in Shropshire), during the first world war,  that I will be reading at the funeral of her daughter (my Auntie Glen) next week.

It's sad that extended families only seem to get together at funerals but I somehow think I'll be taking the opportunity to talk to those last remaining living links to the past, and being inspired to tell their stories in words and music.

'When Age Has Done Its Duty, what remains is memory.'

Tuesday 7 August 2012

The Man Left in Space



The Man Left in SpaceI had an interesting discussion with my brother recently about inspirations for writing albums.  He offered the notion that you need to travel and experience to be inspired to write creatively, otherwise you are creatively trapped in the limits of your own immediate world.  He suggested that prisoners for example would make the worst album writers.  I'm not so sure...  It's an interesting premise but it seems I've taken the opposite route with this album and may explain why it's becoming so difficult to write.

'The Man Left in Space' is very much about insular matters, isolation, boredom, the rewards for aspiration, achievement and whether success makes someone more fulfilled.    The result of success, it seems, is to sometimes collect failure...  As the title suggests, the concept is played out against the backdrop of a futuristic journey into space with many historical references to the race for space in the 60s.  I've been doing a lot of background reading too, and the biographies of some of the protagonists of the golden era of space exploration is providing a rich vein of lyrical inspiration.

 The theme is also providing a rich source of musical influence, including more than a nod and wink to David Bowie's Space Oddity for the title track although uncharacteristically for the prog genre and for me, it's really a love song.  Greg Spawton from Big Big Train has recently provided a stunning bass performance on 'The Vacuum that I Fly Through' which also features the eerie electric guitar work of Matt Stevens and thundering grooves of Nick D'Virgilio.  Steve Dunn and Lee Abraham have also contributed some fine bass noodlings to lift 'Aspire Achieve' and 'Beautiful Treadmill' respectively.

Currently on the go is a collaboration entitled 'The Good Earth Behind Me' with Simon Rogers from Also Eden, and as with our previous collab 'On Which we Stand'  on WAHDID, it is astounding me how creatively you can work with someone in a remote studio with the umbilical link of Dropbox and email.  Musically, the album is nearing completion but there are some decisions to be made lyrically, and performance wise and I suspect unsuspecting musos from far and wide will soon be receiving distress calls to come and assist.   Time is the biggest threat at the moment or more accurately, the lack of it to dedicate to completing the album.  Hopefully having completed the writing this month, mixing will start abound in September.

Monday 23 April 2012

Curry, Prog and Progress.

Once again I've managed to go months without updating this blog so it's time to redress that.

The new album is going well, and I'm hoping to get it released this year.  It's called 'The Man Left in Space' and in typical Cosmograf fashion is another concept piece.

I've been blessed once again in my quest to work with some fabulous people including Nick D'Virgilio who did a storming drum session for 4 of the tracks.   I've also had the great pleasure of meeting and spending some time with Andy Poole and Greg Spawton of Big Big Train.  They are wonderful guys as well as being obscenely talented and we seem to have found common ground in a number of areas as well as prog, including a shared love of fine Indian cuisine!  Curry and prog seem to be happy bedfellows.   Their work on the forthcoming English Electric album is at times beyond comprehension. The complexity, and macro level of their craft produces the finest audio silk that is so rich and interleaved, it's hard to fathom from what constituent parts it came from.  The wonderful Rob Aubrey is mixing it all at the moment and with reports of 56 tracks of BVs on a single song he has his work cut out.   I have no doubt it will easily be widely considered album of the year when the first volume is released in September 2012.

Guest wise, on the new Cosmograf album there will be some familiar names and some new ones too.  As well as NDV, we have me old mucker Steve Dunn who will be attending to bass duties on 'Aspire,Achieve' and Simon Rogers has agreed once again to co write another track with me.  Lee Abraham will doubtless be lending some input if I can prise him away from recording his much anticipated follow up to 'Black and White' and Matt Stevens is also guesting which I'm thrilled about. Matt is a force to be reckoned with at the moment and really seems to have caught a current wave with his work on The Fierce and the Dead.  He's already recorded some very atmospheric guitar for an as yet unnamed track, which is also currently receiving some bass attention from Greg and Andy.  More news on this soon..


Thursday 2 February 2012

The Mighty NDV


I got an email earlier in the month from Rob Aubrey at Aubitt Studios to say that legendary prog drummer Nick D'Virgilio of Spock's Beard and Big Big Train fame was available on the 30th if I wanted him. YES!! but I'm not ready!!. At the time I had 1 track nearing completion and the rough ideas for two more, so needless to say it was a bit of a battle to get enough material together make the session worthwhile. One of the tracks wasn't quite 'drummer ready' and Rob in his usual inimitable style told me the 'timing sucked'. Thankfully Rob always offers a solution with the 'tell it how it is' criticism and he'd retimed most of the bass track before I'd cursed myself for getting carried away adding bass and guitar parts against my chronologically challenged guide drum track, instead of the click. Schoolboy error! "Nick needs the bass spot on to get the feel of the track", said Rob. OK. Thankfully timing on the other tracks didn't 'suck' quite so badly so we were in business.

Then it goes something like this, Rob plays the track to Nick, who sits there silently, while I suffer and squirm in the studio chair dying of embarrassment at my V-Drum track. The track ends. "Cool" he says and heads off to the drum room. The first take goes off and I'm grinning like an idiot. Now I've studied a lot of drummers; as wannabee rock stars in our teens Steve Dunn (Also Eden) and myself used to Air Drum to the finest, but you can't predict Nick. He never performs the same fill twice, and when you think you have a clue where he is going he pulls of the most audacious fill or venture into a groove which leaves you with jaw firmly open. He's an amazing talent and throughout my session and the one that followed, I witnessed the most diverse and enthralling 'set of chops' I've seen from any drummer. He's also a jolly nice bloke too and it was a thrill just to talk to the guy let alone work with him on my music.

In 4 hours we managed to get 3 tracks completed which will be coming to a Cosmograf album near you soon. Just got to surmount the more than trifling task of writing the rest of it....

In other news, Graeme 'Twig' Bell has once again agreed to reprise his role in 'artwork de cosmograf extraordinaire' and I'm really looking forward to getting stuck in with him throwing concepts around. He's also threatening to write an album himself which with his muso contacts should be pretty amazing.

Just like last time I will need the help of the prog community (and maybe musically further afield too) to help deliver the next album. As usual I'm reaching the end of my own talent and inspiration reserves in some areas so will be looking to delegate roles to more talented folk soon. I have however learned to play a stylophone and will be delighting you all with the results on the next record.

As a post script I've developed the smallest Pro Tools mixing suite in the world. It's incorporated into the arm of my sofa, and means I can generally twiddle and experiment with the more obscure editing features in between long sessions at the more amply proportioned, but bloody cold facility at the end of my garden.