Review of the Year – 2024 – Prog Rock

2024 was a stunning year for Prog Rock new and old

The Cover of Living and Alive by Beatrix Players
The Cover of  Living & Alive by Beatrix Players

The Return of Beatrix Players

Beatrix Players, led by Ms Amy Birks, made a welcome return to the progressive rock scene in late 2023 with the release of their album Living and Alive. In 2024, they brought the complete album to Manchester’s Band on the Wall and then to a triumphant home gig in the village of Barlaston, near Stoke-on-Trent. Birks was heavily pregnant and jokingly complained of ‘baby brain’; she has since given birth to a baby daughter. In the meantime, Birks and her band were superb live. Birks was a charismatic leader, her wonderfully expressive voice ranging from a warm, low mezzo to a high soprano, sometimes urgent in her delivery and at other times quietly intimate – often in the same song. She was a powerful stage presence, drawing the audience in, as their enthusiastic response showed. 

Myrkur - image by Gobinder Jhitta
Amalie Bruun (Myrkur)

Myrkur – Danish Black Metal and Scandinavian folk music

The Danish composer, vocalist, and classically trained multi-instrumentalist Amalie Bruun released her debut album under her own name in 2006. In 2011, she formed the indie pop duo Ex Cops with Brian Harding. The band split in 2014, and she started releasing music under the name Myrkur, Icelandic for darkness. In late 2023, she released Spine, which combines many of the styles of previous albums into a sophisticated whole, graced by her remarkably versatile voice. The album was partly based on her experience of being pregnant with her son Otto, who was born in 2019.

But the song My Blood is Gold, reviewed here in the ongoing Off the Beaten Track series, is a product of another significant life event: the death of her beloved father, Michael Bruun, in 2021. This profoundly moving track perfectly describes Bruun’s despair at her father’s death and her resolve for his memory to live on through her music.

Bruun brought her music to London in April 2024, demonstrating her versatility as a singer and songwriter in an eclectic set. Over the course of four albums and various EPs and singles, she has combined black metal with Scandinavian folk music, sometimes on the same album. Her latest album, Spine, her most eclectic yet, formed the bulk of the setlist, including a run of six songs at the start of the show. Bruun was joined on stage by Swedish folk singer Jonathan Hultén, the support act, in a gorgeous version of House Carpenter, a traditional Nordic folk song, attracting the most excited applause of the evening.

The front cover of SIRIN by Marjana Semkina
Marjana Semkina on the cover of her second solo album, SIRIN

Marjana Semkina and iamthemorning – a difficult but artistically successful year

Marjana Semkina is a member of the prog rock group iamthemorning with her Russian-born compatriot, the pianist Gleb Kolyadin, both of whom are now resident in the UK. The duo have released several records, the most recent being The Bell (2019) and the EP Counting The Ghosts (2020).

Semkina has recently pursued a parallel solo career, releasing her first solo LP, Sleepwalking, in 2020 and her EP, Disillusioned, in 2021. In 2024 she sang on the Moonflower EP with Zora Cock of Blackbriar, and released SIRIN, her second solo album. Semkina created this album without the support of a record label, raising tens of thousands of pounds for the project via crowd funding. She is an exceptional talent, as a singer and a songwriter, and a passionate promoter of her poetic and profound vision of the world through her music.

Semkina had a challenging year. Her bandmate Kolyadin was arrested and imprisoned in Thailand while on tour as a session musician with the Russian dissident rock band Bi-2. He faced deportation to Russia, where the band could have been persecuted for anti-war sentiments. Semkina highlighted the story via social media and an online petition.

Kolyadin was released after a week in prison and returned to England via Israel. A few days after his release, the duo performed an emotional comeback show at Piano Smithfield in London. Later in the year, the duo were joined by a full band to perform iamthemorning songs at St. Matthias Church in Stoke Newington, London. Semkina began with an evocative selection of her solo material, and Kolyadin demonstrated his supreme skill as an improviser in a solo piano set before the iamthemorning band played a superb band set.

The Cover of Harmonic Divergence by Steven Wilson

An Overview of Steven Wilson’s Year

While fans of Steven Wilson eagerly await his new album The Overview due in March, in 2024 he released a Record Store Day album Harmonic Divergence based on his 2023 album The Harmony Codex. Producer Ewan Pearson also remixed ‘Inclination’ from that album. Alexis Petridis of The Guardian wrote, ‘Ewan Pearson sprinkles sunlit Balearic euphoria’, and Wilson described the remix as ‘a hypnotic cosmic disco odyssey.’

The year also saw the re-release of Storm Corrosion, the collaboration between Wilson and Mikael Ã…kerfeldt of Swedish progressive metal band Opeth, in a new Dolby Atmos remix. Wilson has been making surround mixes of his own and other bands’ albums for so long now that he has been asked to do a surround sound mix of King Crimson’s Red for the second time after he did his first surround mix of the album in 2009. He decided to teach himself the art of surround sound mixing after Elliot Scheiner created 5.1 mixes of the Porcupine Tree albums In Absentia and Deadwing.

As Mikael Ã…kerfeldt admitted, Storm Corrosion isn’t an easy listen. However, it is certainly not as challenging to listen to as the albums Wilson has produced for his Bass Communion project, such as Ghosts on Magnetic Tape. Both albums take a while to give up their secrets and bring joy to the listener. In the Dolby Atmos mix of Storm Corrosion, the opening track makes the most startling use of the new technology. On other tracks, the effect is more muted, but when surround sound is used, it’s more effective as it is used sparingly.

Finally, in 2024, Wilson brought festive greetings to his fans with a physical release of his 2023 Christmas song, December Skies, complete with two Wilson-themed Christmas cards. The year also marked the fifth anniversary of the release of love you to bits, Wilson’s album with his no-man bandmate Tim Bowness, a melancholy disco masterpiece.                                        

Cover of Perpetual Motions by Gavin Harrison and Antoine Fafard
Perpetual Motions by Gavin Harrison and Antoine Fafard

Perpetual Change with Gavin Harrison and Antoine Fafard

Gavin Harrison, the drummer in Steven Wilson’s band Porcupine Tree, released Perpetual Motions, his second album with bass player Antoine Fafard, a collection of inventive musical explorations and collaborations from the virtuosic duo and several friends. The album’s title describes the perpetual change of musical arrangement from one of Fafard’s compositions to the next, the only constant being the playing of Fafard and Harrison on every piece. Remarkably, Fafard presented Harrison with complete recordings to add drums and percussion later; Harrison’s playing perfectly matches the pieces so it’s impossible to tell that his recordings were done separately. 

Malcolm Galloway and Mark Gatland
Malcolm Galloway and Mark Gatland of Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate

Malcolm Galloway had a more than Adequate Year

Malcolm Galloway of Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate provided deep insights into his health condition and his writing process in a fascinating two-part interview: Part One and Part Two are here. Galloway and his bandmate Mark Gatland have a new album out in March, The Uncertainty Principle. In the meantime, One Word That Means The World (Arkhipov), one of the singles from the album, was released in 2024. It’s a compelling snapshot of a moral dilemma in which one man’s brave decision probably averted World War III. Hats Off shared the bill in Camden, London with a new discovery for me, the band EBB, who have a wonderful stage presence.

Prog the Forest at the Fiddler’s Elbow

Malcolm Galloway and Mark Gatland, with the promoter London Prog Gigs, hosted a charity prog festival, Prog the Forest, at the Fiddler’s Elbow in Camden. All performers gave their services for free to support the rainforest and wildlife conservation charity, World Land Trust, which ‘protects the world’s most biologically significant and threatened habitats.’ This was the sixth year of Prog the Forest and the most successful to date, raising £2750 to protect nearly 26 acres of rainforest and other threatened habitats.

The eclectic line-up was made up of: Spriggan Mist, a ‘pagan progressive rock band’; singer-songwriter Leoni Jane Kennedy, who was hand-picked by members of Queen for the Freddie Mercury Scholarship and plays acoustic Rush covers as well as her own songs; The Mighty Handful who include a ‘former music director of Strictly; Mountainscape who play instrumental post-metal; Theo Travis of Soft Machine, who has played saxophone and flute with numerous jazz and prog bands; Tim Bowness and Butterfly Mind; and Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate.

Nick Mason's Saucerful of Secrets at Manchester Apollo
Nick Mason’s Saucerful of Secrets

Prog History Brought to Life

The late 1960s to the mid-1970s were arguably the golden era of Prog Rock, particularly in the UK, but as can be seen from the reviews above, the genre continues to thrive, with superb new music being produced both on record and live.

New life has also been breathed into prog rock classics, with the return of Nick Mason’s Saucerful of Secrets with live interpretations of early Pink Floyd songs. Robin A Smith continued to tour Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells – the 50th anniversary, with a stunning new arrangement of the classic album; 2024 was also the 50th anniversary of the release of Peter Hammill’s solo album The Silent Corner and the Empty Stage, from which the epic track ‘A Louse is not a Home‘ is taken.

Special Thanks

With thanks to Jerry Ewing and Prog magazine for keeping the prog flag flying, and to Chris Parkins of London Prog Gigs for his tireless contribution to the live scene in London.

For an overview of the year in classical music in 2024, click here.

Double Bill: Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate and EBB – Live Review

Hats Off Gentleman It's Adequate and Ebb at The Camden Club

Monday 22 July 2024

The Camden Club, London

****

A more than ‘adequate’ set from a dynamic duo. Dramatic ebb and flow from Prog’s Best New Band of 2023

Hats Off Gentlemen It's Adequate performing at Camden Club
Mark Gatland and Malcolm Galloway of Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate

Situated opposite The Roundhouse on Chalk Farm Road, The Camden Club describes itself as ‘the newest venue to hit London’s iconic music scene’, hosting ‘the best live music in London.’ It’s a lovely venue, with a long bar along one side, a slightly raised stage with built-in lighting, seating for around 100 people and an at-seat food service. It has an excellent sound system, expertly managed at last Monday’s gig by sound engineer Tamara Sterle.

Last Monday evening’s gig was a prog double-header, featuring Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate, and EBB who won Prog’s Best New Band last year. Hats Off front man Malcolm Galloway told Nick Holmes Music in a recent interview that when playing live he and bass player Mark Gatland concentrate on songs with vocals rather than the instrumentals that pepper their studio albums. At the last minute they adapted their set from their previous appearance at Prog for Peart in Abingdon (see setlist below) so that all the piano songs came first. As the venue opened, Galloway was still sound checking a new song ‘Hydrogen’ from the forthcoming album The Uncertainty Principle, in which the protagonist is stuck in an MRI scanner wondering what the test results will reveal. The poignant words describe the anxiety of ‘waiting between two worlds’. Galloway said there wouldn’t be time to play it in the main set, and in any case the song is ‘utterly depressing’, but it did give a hint of the thoughtful music we can expect from the next album.

Galloway was soon joined on stage by bass player Mark Gatland, sporting a glove on his right hand like a latter-day Alvin Stardust, leaping in the air as he played like an excitable punk rocker. An early highlight from the piano-based section was ‘Cygnus’, a soulful song with a moving piano intro. Galloway, a former hospital doctor gave an affecting account of how in his view the 2017 Cygnus Report into a possible future pandemic was ignored in relation to the provision of PPE during COVID. ‘Here Comes the Flood’ featured a mournful piano, heartfelt vocals and a sensitive fretless bass sound. A lovely song, with a beautiful harmonic progression.

Hats Off Gentlemen It's Adequate at The Camden Club

The piano was duly despatched from the stage, and Galloway was unleashed to play his PRS guitar, with epic Floydian tones on ‘Walking to Aldebaran’, and the title track from The Light of Ancient Mistakes. There was a punky version of ‘One Word That Means The World (Arkhipov)’, reviewed here in the Off The Beaten Track series. It’s a fascinating song that describes how Arkhipov’s decision probably averted World War III. Gatland quipped that he was happy to play a song about a nuclear apocalypse. He was quick to qualify his comment;- he was happy because war was avoided. This was followed by the industrial funk of ‘All Empires Fall’, a song which describes the concept that, as Galloway puts it, ‘At the most basic level, the second law of thermodynamics suggests that any conquest is ultimately temporary’. It’s an poetic trope (the falling of empires, not the second law of thermodynamics) that dates back many centuries to poems like the late ninth century Anglo Saxon works The Wanderer and The Seafarer, and beyond. The set ended with ‘Century Rain’, which began as a slow-burn ballad which transformed to full-on prog with Galloway’s voice almost cracking with emotion, and a spectacularly energetic guitar solo.

Hats Off Gentlemen It's Adequate Setlist for The Camden Club
The setlist for Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate. Courtesy of Mark Gatland

If Hats Off… lit up the room with their passion and dedication, EBB created a different, more theatrical vibe, the prog equivalent of the indie band The Last Dinner Party another up and coming female band who are flamboyantly dressed on stage, the difference being that EBB have a male bass player, the superbly virtuosic Bad Dog.

EBB at Camden Club
EBB: left to right:  Suna Dasi, Bad Dog (almost hidden), Erin Bennet, Nikki Francis, 
Kitty Biscuits, Anna Fraser. Photo courtesy Doug Wregg

The six members of EBB were joined on stage by a flowers (‘a flower?’) as was Myrkur in her recent London gig. More significantly, the Seventh EBB, known only as ‘Jenny’, joined the band on stage dressed in various theatrical outfits. The set began with a coup de théâtre, Jenny dressed as a jester animating the members of the band, lifting them from their knees and bringing them to life.

Images courtesy of Doug Wregg

The band follow the best traditions of prog rock, exhibiting a restless ambition that makes them hard to put in a convenient musical box, truly progressive in the best sense of the word. The theatricality of their stage show is matched by the musicianship – front woman Erin Bennet is a fine guitarist and singer, Suna Dasi provides atmospheric keyboards and evocative backing vocals, Nikki Francis brings precise keyboard textures and some lyrical sax, and Anna Fraser is an excellent drummer. Kitty Biscuits brings charisma and drama to the set, with spoken word sections and operatic backing vocals, sometimes ululating like Yoko Ono. When the three vocalists sang together, the effect was extraordinary.

EBB played whole of their new three-track EP, The Management of Consequences and several tracks from their first album Mad & Killing Time (2022). Highlights of the set included ‘Silent Saviour’ with an ambient start that moved to some deliciously proggy keyboards, rocky guitar and vocals, with added sax and a final guitar and bass unison flourish. There was a delightful funky, metallic syncopated riff in ‘Tension’, and we were introduced to a brand new piece ‘No One’s Child’.

A teaser of No One’s Child

The set ended with ‘Mary Jane’, a rousing song that reminded us that strong, simple melodies and vocal harmonies are always an important aspect of the best prog rock, as well as instrumental pyrotechnics. The audience demanded an encore, and EBB obliged with ‘Hecate’, with its grand prog metal riffs, liquid, undulating piano flourishes, and dramatic vocals from Kitty Biscuit.

Malcolm Galloway returned to the stage at the end to thank everyone for coming, and to stress the importance of live music. Audiences shouldn’t need too much persuading to come out when the venue, sound, music and performances are as good as this. Hats Off… brought cerebral drama and passion, and EBB brought musical and physical drama with the help of their seventh, silent member playing several different characters. What united both bands was the sheer joy in live music that they brought to the stage.

This blog was republished at 17.55 on Monday 29 July to replace a previous version that had minor edits and the final section missing; further minor edits were made at 22.47.