The cover of Spine, from which My Blood is Gold is taken.
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 band Ex Cops, a duo, with Brian Harding. The band split in 2014, and she started to release music under the name Myrkur, Icelandic for darkness. At first she tried to release her music anonymously, and her first EP was simply called Myrkur (2014). When a fan guessed her identity, she decided there was no point hiding. Her first album M (2015) was an amalgam of influences, including black metal and Scandinavian folk. Her second album Mareridt (‘Nightmares’) released in 2017 was even more diverse in style, veering towards gothic folk rather than black metal. In 2020 she released Folkesange, inspired by the success of a YouTube video she made for the Swedish folk song Två Konungabarn (‘Children of the Kings’), on which she plays the nyckelharpa (a keyed fiddle that produces drone sounds) which almost disappeared from music in the UK until it was rediscovered by the likes of the late early music specialist Clare Salaman.
Swedish Folk Song Två Konungabarn performed by Amalie Bruun (Myrkur) who sings and plays nyckelharpa
Folkesange features new arrangements of Scandinavian folk songs, and new songs written by Bruun, played by her on various traditional instruments including the mandola and lyre, both of which are stringed instruments. It was followed in late 2023 by her latest album, Spine which combines many of the styles of previous albums into a sophisticated whole, graced by her remarkably versatile voice.
Myrkur – image by Gobinder Jhitta
Spine explores various themes from Bruun’s personal life. When she was making her previous album she fell pregnant, and the new album reflects her hopes and fears for motherhood. The idea of a spine that provides the title and front cover came to her during a scan when she could see her baby’s spine starting to grow. She realised, as she told New Noise Magazine, that she was making a spine for her baby, ‘He’s just coming into the world, and the fact that I was making that for someone else, this is so alien yet human.’ Hence the metal spine on the cover.
But the song ‘Blood is Gold’ is a product of another major life event; the death of her beloved father, Michael Bruun, in 2021. Other prog artists have been deeply affected by the death of their father. Steven Wilson dedicated his 2011 album Grace for Drowning ‘to my father, Michael George Wilson’ and a few years later admitted to Jerry Ewing of Prog that when writing his next album The Raven that Refused to Sing (and Other Stories) (2013), ‘my father had just passed away when I wrote The Raven, so it stands to reason that I was in a much darker place then.’ And Roger Waters of Pink Floyd wrote a bitter account of the death of his father Eric Fletcher Waters in battle during the Second World War in the song When the Tigers Broke Free (released as a single in 1982; added to The Final Cut album by Pink Floyd in 2004).
Bruun’s father was also a musician and songwriter, and although he didn’t really talk to his daughter about his own music, the two played together and collaborated on her first solo album in 2006. She told New Noise that her father was very well-known in Denmark, ‘it just gives you comfort that everyone in my country knows him.’ To honour his name, she continues making her own music and also protects the copyright of her father’s songs. The title of the song My Blood is Gold refers to his music living on through her,
‘…after he died, I had this feeling his music lives on in me, in my blood’
My Blood Is Gold by Myrkur
The track begins with doom-laden piano and evocative strings from cellists Gyða Valtýsdóttir and Brent Arnold. Bruun’s voice enters, sombre, low in her range and funereal, as she describes the pain her father suffered from the chains of an uncaring world in which ‘all is fair in love and war.’ Her father has now been released from that pain, but she can still feel it. Eerie strings surround Bruun’s sepulchral voice, drenched in echo, as she falls into the ‘fire pit’ of the world of suffering and her voice sinks low into the pit. It rises again with passion as she describes her father’s final hour, ‘it’s hard to breathe’, as the track briefly takes on an epic quality in the chorus before it falls away again on the haunting words ‘my blood is gold.’ The track reaches a brief hiatus in which the voice is surrounded by a spectral choir and the strings descend in a short glissando as the ground falls away beneath us. The song begins again, languorously and almost unwillingly, as Bruun describes the terrible scene of despair that surrounds her, of ‘bodies scattered around.’ When the chorus returns it feels almost uplifting, with a choir of female voices joining in, but the energy drops again as the words ‘my blood is gold’ are repeated and the glacial piano motif of the start of the track returns. The track ends with a spine-tingling moment as the strings drift out of focus, eerie and unsettling, before reaching a tentative resolution. This deeply moving track perfectly describes Bruun’s despair at her father’s death and her resolve for his memory to live on through her music.
Myrkur’s European Tour starts in Berlin in April 2024, with UK dates in Manchester (9 April) and London (10 April). Spine is out now.
Sources
Douglas Menagh, New Noise Magazine – Interview – Amalie Bruun of Myrkur Talks ‘Spine’ (16/10/23)
Discogs, Michael Bruun Discography
Jerry Ewing, Prog Magazine The story of Steven Wilson’s Hand. Cannot. Erase. (February 2015)
Personal note: for the effect that my own Father had on my musical journey, see my tribute to him here.
Beatrix Players recently reformed after a hiatus during which their lead singer and main songwriter Ms Amy Birks released two solo albums, In Our Souls (2022) and All That I Am and All That I Was (2020). The Players’ first album Magnified was released in 2017 and their second, Living & Alivewas released last year.
This was the Players’ penultimate gig before Birks takes some time out to have a baby – she said she was suffering from ‘baby brain’ and could feel her daughter kicking. She also said she was surprisingly nervous because she was performing on home territory – some of her songs were written only half a mile from the hall. She needn’t have worried; the packed hall received her with great warmth and enthusiasm, and she and the band performed superbly.
As they had done at their recent gig at Manchester’s Band on the Wall, the Players began by performing the whole of their new album live. With a very clear and well-balanced sound mix from local engineer Shaun Beetham, every detail from the intricate arrangements for seven-piece band could be heard and savoured. There was a lovely interplay between the two guitarists, Tom Manning and Oliver Day. John Hackett on flute added gorgeously mellifluous and florid touches. Matthew Lumb provided elegant and flowing piano parts. The rhythm section of Kyle Welch on bass and Andrew Booker on drums provided a satisfyingly robust bottom end, Welch’s melodic bass lines and Booker’s lithe and inventive drumming making the sound rockier and livelier than on the record. When the band took flight in their instrumental breaks, as on ‘This is Your Life’, which felt faster than on the album, they were a joy to hear.
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 was clear from their enthusiastic response. She also maintained a good rapport with the audience. Rather than simply shouting, ‘Barlaston, how are you doing?’ or ‘It’s great to be here, Barlaston!’ she took the trouble to introduce the songs, providing detail and context that helped to bring them to life. So we learned that ‘Purgatory’ was inspired by a horrible example of parenting that she saw from a customer in Home Bargains (she was careful to clarify that it can’t have been Homebase as they don’t sell toothpaste.) And it came as a surprise to some that ‘Obey Me’ is a ‘cheeky’ song inspired by watching 50 Shades of Gray.
Drummer Andrew Booker sometimes carried off that difficult feat of singing backing vocals whilst playing drums (like Roger Taylor of Queen). Highlight from the first set included lovely harmony vocals from Booker and both guitarists on ‘A Beautiful Lie’, and the guitar work on ‘Overflow’ – evocative lap steel guitar and a mandolin solo from Day, Manning’s intense, almost Fripp-like electric guitar solo, and Welch’s walking bass line. Lumb contributed a haunting piano motif. Another highlight was ‘Free’, written by Birks and Manning when they were teenagers together at Staffordshire University, ‘a couple of years ago’ quipped Manning. It’s a more hopeful, uplifting song than many that Birks has written. Again the two guitarists shone – Day on slide guitar; rocky guitar and a bluesy solo from Manning. This all was topped off by flamboyant flute from Hackett.
The second set consisted of five songs from the first album, when the Players were a trio. Birks informed us that ‘Never Again’ was based on the vow she made never to go to another rave in London, and also played on her love of the Brontë sisters. ‘Rushlight’ featured a heart-stopping moment of contemplation when Booker joined Birks on vocals before the full onslaught of the ensemble, playing in a less classical style than on the original album. ‘Obey Me’ had a very catchy chorus, which perhaps spared the blushes of the audience members who now knew what the song was about. The set ended with ‘What do You Say’, an encore that wasn’t one as Birks said it was always going to be the last song. As a parting flourish she did however treat us to a little operatic vocalise. Had an encore been offered, the audience would no doubt have accepted it happily – it was a privilege to hear such a talented ensemble playing in such an intimate venue.
Birks announced at the end that she hoped the audience could get over ‘the crossing’ before it closed at 10.30, or was it 11.00 pm? (It was 11.00 pm).Locals nodded sagely, while those who had travelled from afar speculated wildly – was it something to do with the closure this weekend of parts of the M25? Was Birks referring to the nearby railway crossing, and if so, was a very long train blocking it all night? The hall cleared very quickly as the audience avoided the witching hour of 23.00. An amusing ending to an excellent evening.
Harmonic Distortion is the second disc on the Deluxe Edition of Steven Wilson’s seventh solo studio album The Harmony Codex (full review here) and is a separate, full-length album in its own right.
The Title of the Album
Harmony is the name of one of the two central characters in the short story on which The Harmony Codexalbum is based, written by Wilson and published in his 2022 book Limited Edition of One, so the word ‘harmonic’ in the title is a play on her name.
In physics, harmonics are what differentiate the sound of a violin from an oboe when they are playing the same note; different frequencies, or overtones, create the distinctive timbre of the sound.
Harmonic distortion is the result of a device subtly, or not so subtly, changing the shape of the waveform which alters the relative levels of various harmonics associated with that sound.
On Harmonic Distortion, tracks from the original album are subtly – or not so subtly – reimagined. Talking to Stephen Humphries of Under the Radar, Wilson stressed that Harmonic Distortionisn’t a remix album, ‘there’s some really creative approaches to reworking and reimagining the material.’ He told Katherine Yeske Taylor of Rock And Roll Globe that rather than going to ‘very experienced remixers’ he asked artists who had collaborated with him on the main album to do whatever they wanted with the song they had chosen, including recording their own versions if they wished. He admitted to Anil Prasad of Innerviews that sometimes it was a way of being ‘very diplomatic’ to artists whose collaborations didn’t appear on the main album, using their work on the bonus disc instead. He didn’t specify which artists he was referring to here.
Individual Tracks
1 Codex Theme #7 (0.49)
This track is one of several short ‘Codex themes’ scattered across the album, acting as bridge passages between the longer tracks, sometimes foreshadowing the next track. They give the album a lovely sense of flow, and sometimes divide up tracks of very different styles.
It features Atmospheric sound-scaping with Rotem Wilson’s (Steven’s wife) spoken words that feature on The Harmony Codex track on the main album, ‘It seems I’m miles above the surface of the earth…’ They are drenched in echo, until the final words ‘and breathe’ when the voice is suddenly in the room with us when the echo is cut, a very effective device.
2 Economies of Scale – Manic Street Preachers remix (4.05)
Produced and engineered by Loz Williams and Manic Street Preachers; remixed by Dave Eringa
The Manic Street Preachers’ remix of Economies of Scale was released as a single on 24 November 2023. The Manics’ lead singer/guitarist, James Dean Bradfield, quoted by Jerry Ewing of Prog, said the original track reminded him of The Police in the early 80s – the ‘bareness of the vocals, the steely percussion and slight detachment’ of tracks like ‘Walking in Your Footsteps’ and ‘Murder by Numbers’from Synchronicity(1983), and Police drummer Stewart Copeland’s soundtrack to Rumble Fish (1983)released in the same year. He said that the Manics’ bass player, Nicky Wire, ‘immediately sought to push the second half of the track in more of a Holy Bible[the Manics’ 1994 album] direction.’
Wilson told Graham Fuller of the arts desk in December 2023the original song is an ‘electronic soul ballad’, whereas the Manics’ version is a ‘rock guitar anthem.’ It’s fascinating to compare the two versions, particularly as they both use the same vocal melody and the complete set of lyrics (unlike some of the other tracks on this album) showing what a huge difference the chords and instruments used beneath a melody can make. The Manics’ version adds a lovely extra set of guitar chords at 1.50 and a driving earworm of a riff in the chorus, effectively creating a new track which stands up very well on its own.
3 Codex Theme #9 (0.33)
A lovely short excerpt, with flowing piano and acoustic guitar, based on the chords for What Life Brings from the main album.
4 Inclination – Faultline remix (7.30)
Faultline is the musical alter ego of producer David Kosten who worked on Wilson’s sixth studio album The Future Bites. Kosten helped Wilson bring a new, more electronic and radical sound world to that album, and his innovative approach is evident here as well. Kosten captures the aggressive atmosphere of the original track but with a quiet menace that is very different. The track begins with a haunting out of tune piano, disarmingly simple but ominous, like music for a horror film. Sampled breathing sounds like a feral beast.
The track revolves around the repeated piano motif, without the martial percussion of the original. When the percussion does appear at around three minutes in it’s absolutely brutal, in a drum and bass style. The melody is reduced to two lines only, ‘Come see the fool/He’ll swindle you out of the game.’ The vocals are heavily manipulated, with a ghostly, grotesque voice lurking below the main vocal. The melody itself is manipulated too, so that the leap to the word ‘fool’ changes from an interval of a minor third on the original track to a fourth then a fifth. A superbly evocative re-working of one of the finest tracks on the original album.
5 Impossible Tightrope – alternate version (10.11)
This is slightly shorter than the final version on the main album, omitting a section from around eight minutes in. The main difference is that Nate Navarro, who joined the Porcupine Tree tour in 2022, plays bass whereas Wilson plays the bass part on the main album. As mentioned in the chapter on the main album, Wilson’s version is much simpler than Navarro’s virtuosic playing, which can be viewed on his YouTube channel, Steven Wilson – Impossible Tightrope – BASS PLAYTHROUGH.
6 Codex Theme #6 (1.07)
Brutal low synth drones followed by evocative, plaintive solo duduk playing from ‘Beautiful Scarecrow.’
This version of the track is remixed by Jack Dangers of electronic group Meat Beat Manifesto who provides ‘additional sounds and beats’ on the original album track. Dangers takes the brutal aspects of the original track to an exhilarating extreme. He adds very heavy drum and bass beats and glittering keyboards. At around 2.40 the beats become even more extreme, clattering agitatedly. At around 3.05 the bass line drops even lower than on the original track, taking us into the heart of darkness. A simple but highly effective re-imagining.
8 Codex Theme #8 (1.03)
A gorgeous solo piano improvisation by Adam Holzman on the themes from ‘Time is Running Out.’
9 Time is Running Out – Mikael Åkerfeldt version (3.47)
This is the only track on this album which is sung by someone other than Wilson, his close friend and collaborator, Mikael Åkerfeldt. The two have worked together on music byOpeth, Storm Corrosion and Porcupine Tree. Åkerfeldt was born in 1974 so is about seven years younger than Wilson, but he delivers the lyrics to this song about ageing with great passion and authority and a sense of drama as the song develops. It’s a much simpler version than on the main album, giving prominence to Adam Holzman’s gorgeous, flowing piano part. At around 2.30, Wilson provides rich synthesised strings and theremin, playing notes from the whole tone scale often used by French composer Claude Debussy in his piano works (such as ‘Voiles’ from his first book of Préludes), to give a sense of hope and mystery which is missing from the original track.
10 Staircase – Interpol Remix (6.47)
The first of two very different versions of the song, the second one being the final track, re-versioned by The Radiophonic Workshop. This version is by the American rock band Interpol. A radical re-imagining, it drops all the original vocals, and retains only the words ‘I close my eyes’ which are taken from the spoken word section at the end of the original track. It’s also in a different key and a different time signature (six beats in a bar as opposed to four). It uses the same piano loop throughout, with some added guitar. The effect is claustrophobic, evoking the sensation of being trapped in an infinite staircase like the characters in Wilson’s short story on which the original album is based.
11 Codex Theme #3 (1.03)
Gentle ambient synth patches, and trumpet from Nils Petter Molvær, from ‘Inclination’, the opening track on the main album.
12 What Life Brings – Aug 22 mix by Roland Orzabal (4.16)
Roland Orzabal of Tears For Fears plays keyboards on this track and is joined by Aaron Sterling on drums and Doug Petty on keyboards and string arrangements. Both worked on the 2022 Tears for Fears album The Tipping Point. Wilson remixed the Tears for Fears albums The Hurting (1983), Songs From the Big Chair (1985) and The Seeds Of Love (1989). Orzabal brings a completely different feel to the song, turning it from a rock ballad into a majestic synth epic which sets the original vocal line in a completely different context. The synth parts have a similar feel to the work of the master of the sequenced synthesiser, Giorgio Moroder, particularly tracks like ‘Leopard Tree Dream’ from his score for the 1982 film Cat People which featured David Bowie on vocals. The track also features synth motifs that fall like electronic rain, and towards the end the heavily echoed, almost acapella voices of Wilson and Ninet Tayeb.
13 The Harmony Codex – long take(17.02)
This extended version of the title track of the album somehow lacks the mesmerising, spell-binding majesty of the album version, feeling like a work in progress, but still stands on its own as a good track. What is interesting is that as the track develops it takes on the sound of a fairground organ of the type heard on ‘Being For The Benefit of Mr Kite’ from The Beatles Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967). This relates to the Harmony Codex short story. Harmony appears to her brother Jamie in a vision or dream, riding a horse on a ‘magnificent fairground carousel’, accompanied by music from a pipe-organ (page 357 of the hardback edition of the book).
14 Staircase – Radiophonic Workshop remix (12.36)
The second version of the track, the first being by Interpol (see above). The BBC Radiophonic Workshop was founded in 1958 by Daphne Oram and Desmond Briscoe to create sound effects and electronic music for radio and television. Its most famous composition was the theme for the original Doctor Who TV series, written in 1963 by the Australian composer Ron Grainer and painstakingly turned into a piece of musique concrète by Delia Derbyshire. The BBC closed the Workshop in 1998, but its legacy continues under the Radiophonic Workshop name, with original members including Peter Howell, Roger Limb, Dr Dick Mills and Paddy Kingsland working together on recorded and live music, together with producer and archivist Mark Ayres who produced this version of ‘Staircase.’
Appropriately for a creative team that was originally set up to create sound effects as well as music, Ayres’ version includes sound effects that relate to the Harmony Codex short story more closely than anything written by Wilson for the main album. We hear the lift going up in the tower where Harmony’s father works; the explosion that rips through the skyscraper; footsteps as Jamie and Harmony climb the stairs; the wind swirling through the empty offices through the broken windows. There are also more electronic effects and noises which seem to reflect the more dreamlike aspects of the story, and the Earth seen from space. Then, in a remarkable and highly imaginative alternative ending, we hear the lines sung by Ninet Tayeb from ‘Rock Bottom’,
I feel it, I feel it in my bones New life, the unknown, new life, I will return
An uplifting end to one of the strongest tracks on the album.
Conclusion
Harmonic Distortion is a valuable addition to the main Harmony Codex album. Whereas some remixes of songs or albums by other artists don’t really add anything, and come sometimes even detract from the originals, the songs on this album create a satisfying whole, a genuine bonus for those lucky enough to have been able to obtain a copy before the Deluxe Box Set sold out.
Sources
Humphries, S., Steven Wilson on “The Harmony Codex” (Under the Radar 20/09/2023)
Yeske Taylor, K., Steven Wilson Goes Solo Again With The Harmony Codex (Rock and Roll Globe 4/10/2023)
Prasad, A., Steven Wilson The Never-Ending Staircase (Innerviews September 2023)
Ewing, J., Manic Street Preachers remix Steven Wilson’s Economies of Scale (Prog 27/11/2023)
Fuller, G., The arts desk Q&A: Steven Wilson on Porcupine Tree, ‘The Harmony Codex’ and electro-dominance (the arts desk 12/12/2023)
Wilson’s most eclectic album to date is ‘cinema for the ears’
*****
Steven Wilson has often said he would like to write a film score. He even wrote a screenplay with the film maker Mike Bennion, and they tried for a while to get the film made. When it became clear this probably wouldn’t happen, Wilson turned the project into Deadwing, the eighth studio album he wrote for his band Porcupine Tree. In September 2020, Wilson announced that he had rewritten the script with Bennion, and released a short film as a teaser to promote the project which was now called And No Birds Sing. The project doesn’t appear to have got any further at the time of writing, but it appears that Wilson’s passion for movies remains undiminished.
Teaser for the And No Birds Sing film project
Wilson’s new album, The Harmony Codex his seventh solo studio album, follows the unexpected release of Closure/Continuation with Porcupine Tree last year, and his previous solo album The Future Bites in 2021. The new album is an eclectic soundtrack to Wilson’s rich imagination, and his love of cinema is shown by his ambition to create an album which he has described as ‘cinema for the ears.’
Wilson’s cinematic ambition manifests itself in various ways on the album. Like the European surrealist and art films that it he so admires, it has a loose structure, a series of sometime apparently unconnected scenes which are linked by a strong vision; the songwriter and musician as auteur. Like many films, the album is based on a short story, in this case The Harmony Codex written by Wilson and published in his 2022 book Limited Edition of One. Like many film makers, Wilson takes liberties with the story and doesn’t attempt to create a linear narrative that matches the events of his story, which does generally have a clear narrative and a sense of logic and realism even when it veers into science fiction and dream logic.
Within individual songs on the album, there is often a cinematic structure, as has often been the case in Wilson’s songwriting both as a solo artist and for Porcupine Tree. Wilson is perfectly capable of writing a rock or pop ballad with a conventional song structure, and even released a Christmas song in a conventional style, December Skies, much to the surprise of many (not least Wilson himself, who collaborated with an Artificially Intelligent lyricist to write the song). But many of his songs are much longer than the standard three to five minutes, have several different but connected sections and feel like short films or stories in themselves.
December Skies – music Steven Wilson, lyrics by ChatGPT
The other cinematic aspect of the album is the sound itself. Wilson has been working with surround sound, which was originally developed for the cinema, for many years. He began mixing Porcupine Tree albums and his own solo albums in 5.1 surround sound, receiving several Grammy Award nominations in the process. He has since remixed the work of several artists, including not only bands who share his prog credentials like King Crimson, Gentle Giant, Jethro Tull and Yes but also Black Sabbath and Tears for Fears. He has more recently adopted another surround sound format originally developed for the cinema, Dolby Atmos which adds additional height speakers to create a fully immersive soundscape. Although multiple speakers are needed to recreate the full effect at home, the technology is now available in Dolby Atmos-enabled Soundbars for TV, and some streaming services allow Atmos mixes to be experienced on headphones. Wilson moved to London a few years ago and built a new home studio equipped with the latest Dolby Atmos technology. The first album he mixed in this studio was The Future Bites.
Steven Wilson’s home studio
Wilson launched the new album in a series of surround sound playbacks using spatial audio mixes in Dolby Atmos or using the L-Acoustics multiple loudspeaker system. As well as smaller listening rooms, Wilson used an actual cinema in central London and a medium-sized theatre in the EartH arts centre in Hackney, London, creating ‘cinema for the ears’ in a large, dark room. For many in the audience it was an unexpectedly profound experience, and Wilson has said he would like to recreate that experience in a live context with a band, in intimate venues with surround sound. He has said that he hopes that The Harmony Codex will become the demonstration recording to show how effective spatial audio can be for music, just as The Dark Side of the Moon was for stereo systems. But he didn’t write the album to be heard only in spatial audio – it was only in the mixing process that he considered the spatial aspects of the mix, and he was careful to ensure it worked well in stereo too. As Polly Glass said in her review in the November 2023 issue of Prog magazine, ‘we’ve listened to it at a spatial playback, through a basic Bluetooth speaker and headphones – it sounded great on all three.’
The short story provides a loose concept that influences some of the songs, but this isn’t a concept album in the way that some of Wilson’s previous solo albums are. For instance, Hand. Cannot. Erase. (2015) has an immensely complex back story about the disappearance of a young woman, and the 2013 album The Raven That Refused to Sing (And Other Stories) is based on a collection of ghost stories.
The Harmony Codex story describes a visit made by Harmony (a 12-year-old girl) and her brother Jamie (16) to visit their father in the tower block where he works in Whitechapel, East London. They ascend the skyscraper to the 38th floor, but before they can meet their father there’s an explosion. They try to escape the building via the staircase and the story passes from being a hyper-realistic description of their journey on the Tube and up in the lift, followed by a description of the moment of the explosion that reads like a film script, to a science fiction story in which Harmony and Jamie get trapped on an apparently endless staircase. The story ends ambiguously – it’s unclear whose point of view we are seeing the story from, and whether any of it has been real,
‘Did he have a dream about his sister, Harmony?Or is Harmony dreaming him now?’
Wilson grew up reading science fiction that is more about inner space, an examination of the human psyche rather than outer space, the shape of things to come. His story is inspired by a short story written by the American science fiction writer Thomas M. Disch called Descending, published in 1968 in the collection Fun With Your New Head. The story begins with a realistic description of the un-named protagonist entering a department store, using his credit card to buy things he can’t afford. He takes the escalator down from the top floor to leave the building and at this point the story morphs into a dystopian science fiction satire like an episode of Charlie Brooker’s Black Mirror. The protagonist becomes trapped on a never-ending series of descending escalators, which becomes a metaphor for the futility of life and pointless consumerism. There’s an interesting parallel with the video for Wilson’s song Personal Shopper, also a satire on consumerism, in which the protagonist is seen climbing an escalator in a shopping mall as Wilson himself descends an escalator on the other side.
The idea of an infinite staircase as a metaphor has fascinated Wilson for a long time. His second studio album for Porcupine Tree was titled Up the Downstair (1993) and it was originally going to include the single Voyage 34 (1992) which describes the 34th LSD trip of the protagonist, Brian. Spoken words on Voyage 34, sampled from an American documentary LP called LSD describe how Brian had pleasurable LSD trips until the 34th when he had a complete mental breakdown,
‘On Voyage 34 he finally met himself coming down an up-staircase and the effect was devastating.’
The staircase here is a literal description of what poor Brian experienced on his trip, but also becomes a metaphor for his complete existential confusion; his psyche is trapped in an infinite staircase, like the figures in the Dutch artist M. C. Escher’s print Ascending and Descending (1960). Wilson called the collection of unused tracks from Up the Downstair by another staircase-related name, Staircase Infinities (1994).
M. C. Escher’s print Ascending and Descending
In his short story, Wilson describes his protagonist trapped on an M. C. Escher staircase. On his new album, Wilson uses the staircase metaphor in a slightly different way, to describe the journey of life. This is another of Wilson’s recurring themes, dating back specifically to the Porcupine Tree song Arriving Somewhere But Not Here from Deadwing (2005). And the theme of pursuing a meaningful existence dates back even earlier to the albums Stupid Dream (1999) and Signify (1996).
The image of a staircase features in the album’s artwork, along with the skyscraper from the story. The German designer, illustrator, and photographer Hajo Müller has created a clever design to illustrate the infinite staircase, a bit like a 2-dimensional Rubik’s Cube, which is made up of ten bricks to represent the ten tracks of the album. A small version of the object features in the videos used to promote the album, and Wilson used a much larger version during his live show at EartH which concluded the surround sound playback of the new album.
Steven Wilson performing at EartH on 27 September 2023. Author’s photo.
The brief live show was the first time for decades that Wilson had come on stage without wearing a guitar around his neck, although he was joined by guitarist Niko Tsonev. Wilson has often played live keyboards both with Porcupine Tree and on his solo tours, but his main live instrument has always been guitar. His decision to play exclusively keyboards was influenced by the electronic nature of much of the new album. Wilson has always loved electronica and ambient music, and his side project Bass Communion uses those styles, but it was his purchase of various classic analogue synthesisers before he wrote his previous album that led him to change his writing style. Most of the songs on the new album were written on synths rather than on the more conventional guitar or piano.
The Harmony Codex does include guitar parts, but many of them are played by collaborators such as Niko Tsonev and David Kollar. In fact, the album is remarkable for the number of additional musicians, contrasting with the most recent Porcupine Tree album on which almost all the instruments were played by the three band members. But rather than going into the studio to record with his collaborators, as Wilson had done particularly on The Raven That Refused to Sing, the new albumwas recorded in a similar way to Wilson’s first solo albumInsurgentes, where in effect a bespoke band was formed for each individual track. The album was recorded during lockdown in Wilson’s home studio, so he could call upon a much wider range of collaborators than usual via file-sharing.
There are around twenty additional musicians on the record, including regular contributors such as Adam Holzman on keyboards, Ninet Tayeb on vocals, Craig Blundell on drums, Nick Beggs on bass and Theo Travis on woodwind. New faces include Nate Navarro and Guy Pratt (from Pink Floyd’s live band and Nick Mason’s Saucerful of Secrets) on bass, Nate Wood and Sam Fogarino (Interpol) on drums, Ben Coleman (ex no-man) on violin and Wilson’s wife Rotem on spoken word inserts. One of the reasons the album sounds more eclectic than his previous solo albums, particularly The Future Bites on which Wilson played almost all the instruments himself, is the wide range of collaborators used.
1 Inclination
The opening trackwas written during the recording sessions for Wilson’s previous solo album The Future Bites. Wilson had originally intended to include the song on the bonus tracks for that album but decided it was too good. It opens with the sound of a trumpet, played by the Norwegian trumpeter and composer Nils Petter Molvær. An intriguing beginning to the record, it has some of the ornamental majesty of the first few bars of JS Bach’s famous organ piece Toccata and Fugue in D minor, drenched in echo as if being played in a large church like the Bach piece.
Bubbling synths lead to a heavily martial electronic rhythm track played by Pat Mastelotto of King Crimson, similar to the aggressive percussion pattern in Portishead’s Machine Gunfrom Third (2008). Ominous, rising keyboard washes are joined by feral, sampled breathing and a spidery trumpet solo that sounds more like a guitar. Shortly, the trumpet tone softens and sounds like Mark Isham who played trumpet and flugelhorn on albums by art rocker David Sylvian like Secrets of the Beehive (1987).
The track grinds to a halt at three minutes in and fades out with evocative soundscaping and it appears it has come to an end. Then, in a coup de théâtre that was particularly effective in the surround sound playback in the dark at EartH arts centre in London to launch the album, Wilson’s solo voice appears, sweet, almost tender but with an ominous undercurrent. He draws us in immediately, inviting us to, ‘Come see the fool.’ At first, it seems that the fool could be a figure who commands respect, a wise Fool like the court jester in Shakespeare’s tragedy, King Lear (1606); a Holy Fool with the gift of prophecy or deep religious insight; or the Tarot card that represents hope for the future. But in the next line it becomes clear that the fool is a swindler like the protagonist in Eminent Sleazefrom the previous album, ‘He’ll swindle you out of the game.’
The protagonist is extremely combative, like the main character in the Radiohead song You And Whose Army fromAmnesiac (2001); even the language is similar – compare ‘One at a time I will take you all on’ from Inclination with ‘Come on if you think/You can take us on’ from You And Whose Army. Wilson seems to be writing about a fictitious character, whereas Thom Yorke’s lyrics for the Radiohead song are much more political. In the June 2001 issue of Mojo, Yorke told Nick Kent the song was addressed to Tony Blair who was then Prime Minister.
The title of the track recalls the adage, ‘If you’ve got the time, I’ve got the inclination‘, which apparently refers to a joke in which the Leaning Tower of Pisa is addressing a clock in Westminster, London – possibly Big Ben, although the exact origin is obscure. In the context of the song, a jocular comment which possibly contains innuendo is turned into an aggressive threat.
2What Life Brings
This song is about the journey of life, and embracing whatever life throws at you. It’s unusually positive for Wilson, whose work often embraces the darker and more depressing side of life. It ends with the positive sentiment, ‘Love it all and hold it in your hands.’ There may be an autobiographical element to the song, in that his life journey has taken an unexpected – and happy – turn in recent years. In January 2017, in a rather poignant interview with Jarrett Bellini on YouTube, Wilson announced that, ‘I’ve sacrificed family for music.’ In September 2019 he got married, announcing on Instagram that it was the, ‘Happiest day of my life marrying the love of my life!’ He immediately gained a family, with two stepdaughters, and he seems to have embraced family life with all the enthusiasm he has always given to his musical projects.
Wilson in 2016 – ‘I’ve made a decision, I’m not going to have a family…’
The opening bars of the song, with languid drums and gently strummed acoustic guitars have a similarly dreamy, slightly melancholy feel to the opening of the soundtrack to Sofia Coppola’s film The Virgin Suicides (2000) written by the French band Air. On his website, Wilson described his song as ‘steeped in sun-dazed autumnal acoustics’, and this could also describe the Air soundtrack and the atmosphere of the film itself. In an interview with Jonathan Horsley of Decibelmagazine in May 2012, Wilson expressed his admiration for the film’s soundtrack.
The beautiful, delicate imagery of the ‘oscillating sunset’ fading in a previous autumn evokes the nostalgic feel of many of Wilson’s solo works. There’s another important image in the lyrics, which links to The Harmony Codex short story. The word ‘haze’ is used to describe the ‘haze of smoke and dust’ caused by the explosion in the story. The ‘dream fog’ of the song relates to the fog of smoke in the story. The protagonist of the song is lost in the fog, just as Harmony and her brother Jamie are in the story, and Harmony is addressed in the fourth song, Impossible Tightrope. The ‘black freighter’ in the next song Economies of Scale is also lost in fog. The ‘dream fog’ of What Life Brings also relates to the ‘lucid dream’ experienced by Jamie’s character in the short story, and the final image of Harmony and Jamie wondering if they are dreaming about each other in the story.
On his website, Wilson described the song as a ‘perfect entry point’ to the world of the album, but on Twitter he said that at first he was reluctant to put it on the record as it sounds like something he had written in the past on an acoustic guitar in the old-fashioned way, finding the right chords and then writing a melody to go with them. He had similar misgivings about 12 Things I Forgot on his previous album, as he felt it didn’t match the more electronic style of the other songs. But the truth is that both songs are simply too good to have been left off the records, as they demonstrate Wilson’s ability to write wistful, gorgeously melodic pop songs.
3Economies of Scale
Economies of Scale was the first track to be released as a single, in late August 2023, a month before the album’s release. Wilson introduced the track on Twitter, saying it was ‘an obvious choice to be the first taster for the album.’ That may be the case from a musical point of view, as the track is heavily electronic like much of the rest of the album, but lyrically the track is a challenge to listeners, beginning with the words ‘Black freighter regale’ which are rather obscure. The ‘black freighter’ appears to be a pirate ship, as referenced in the song Pirate Jenny from Kurt Weill’s Threepenny Opera, ‘a black freighter/ With a skull on its masthead.’ The song has been covered by, amongst others, Nina Simone, Lotta Lenya, Judy Collins, Marianne Faithfull and Marc Almond. The imagery fits with the nautical themes of many of the songs on the most recent Porcupine Tree album, Closure/Continuation.
Musically, the track continues the electronic style of Wilson’s previous solo album, The Future Bites. On Twitter, Wilson explained that the track began as a ‘weird modular synth loop’ provided by his regular keyboard player Adam Holzman. The loop can be heard at the start of the song, with added percussion which Wilson described as a ‘semi-electronic trap-beat.’ The arrangement of the song is very sparse, featuring Wilson on all instruments except Holzman’s loop. Wilson told Graham Fuller of the arts deskin December 2023 that he tried to add more instrumental parts too it, but each time he did so he felt he was making the song worse, ‘the less I added to it, the more emotional it felt.’ Wilson’s soulful vocals and rich backing vocals contrast with the skittering electronic backing track. There’s also a nod to the staircase concept, with a rising piano motif that suggests climbing stairs.
4 Impossible Tightrope
In his book Limited Edition of One, Wilson entitled chapter 21, ‘The Impossible Tightrope’ to describe trying to please both himself and his fans, concluding that he must satisfy his own musical integrity first and hope that his fans will follow him. Later in the book he uses the same metaphor to describe working with his other band members in Porcupine Tree, and his desire not to, ‘jump permanently back on the tightrope’ of having to keep everyone in the band happy while maintaining his own artistic vision.
This instrumental track is one of three on the album which are around ten minutes long, the others being the title track (also an instrumental, with some spoken word inserts) and Staircase (track ten). The ten tracks on the album are over an hour long in total. This contrasts with the previous album, The Future Bites, a tight electronic pop record only about 40 minutes long with only one ten- minute song, Personal Shopper. Wilson has said that each of his solo albums is a reaction to the previous ones, and this album to an extent marks a return to long-form progressive rock songs, although Wilson himself has always resisted the term as it doesn’t really reflect the breadth of his vision; instead it reflects the depth of his ambition in that he is always trying to progress.
On Twitter, Wilson described the track as a mix of ‘progressive rock, spiritual jazz and electronica.’ It opens with sweet, cinematic violins played by Ben Coleman, who was the third member of art-rock band no-man before the group became a duo consisting of Wilson and Tim Bowness, most recently releasing Love You to Bits in 2019. Fiercely syncopated drums are joined by a vigorous guitar and bass riff which crescendo into explosive guitar chords. The bass line, played by Wilson himself from around 2.00 is based a single repeated low C, creating a driving, pulsating energy rather than the virtuosic, melodic part that a player like Nick Beggs might have created. The track breaks down and the explosive guitar chords are recreated by a jazzy acoustic guitar, beautifully played and recorded. The jazzy theme is continued by Theo Travis’ virtuosic and frenetic saxophone stylings, recalling his work on Wilson’s second solo album Grace for Drowning (2011).
About half-way through the song, there’s an ambient section featuring Wilson’s solo falsetto voice manipulated via software to create a melody, rather than Wilson singing the melody himself. This a technique often used in urban music – a single sung or spoken note can be processed via Auto-Tune or similar software to create a range of pitches. In August 2023, Wilson told Stephen Humphries of Under the Radar that he was probably influenced by a much earlier song, Godley & Creme’s I Pity Inanimate Objects from their 1979 album Freeze Frame. Kevin Godley, ‘sang the whole lyric in a monotone… and then programmed the Eventide Harmonizer to pitch shift up or down.’
A full choir – presumably from a sample library as no credit is given to a real choir in the sleeve notes – joins, giving the track a cinematic feel. It reaches an instrumental climax with a repeat of the unison bass and guitar riff heard earlier, followed by a spacey section which is shortly graced by virtuosic, jazzy soloing by Adam Holzman on electric piano, and some whimsical almost scat singing reminiscent of Wilson’s performance on Harridan, the first track on Porcupine Tree’s Closure/Continuation. The song ends with an invigorating analogue synth solo, creating counterpoint against a running bass line, before it finally dissolves into a reprise of the opening string section. An intriguing end to an epic song that is cinematic in its musical sweep.
5 Rock Bottom
This song is a power ballad, written by Wilson’s regular vocal collaborator the Israeli singer Ninet Tayeb, who also sings backing vocals on the first two tracks on the album. Tayeb’s soulful, earthy mezzo-soprano voice has graced some of the most emotional songs on Wilson’s solo albums such as Routine from Hand. Cannot. Erase. (2015) and Pariah from To The Bone(2017). Wilson told Mark Millar of the XS Noize Podcast, ‘there’s something magical about the way we work together.’ He said Tayeb had written the track as an indie guitar song, but that – in keeping with the cinematic theme of the album – he asked her permission to turn the song into something with, ‘a big John Barry [James] Bond theme type of sound.’
Despite the rich arrangement and soaring guitar solo from Niko Tsonev, the sentiment is very simple, similar to that of Pariah where the female voice tries to console the male voice. It’s Tayeb’s singing that gives the elemental lyrics their emotional depth and resonance. The addressee is urged to ‘break apart’, having reached rock bottom, and to embrace the hope of new life that will result.
6 Beautiful Scarecrow
Beautiful scarecrow is the second track on the album to feature a controlling, aggressive protagonist, the first being Inclination (track one). Here the protagonist is a charlatan, a fraudster or ‘racketeer.’ The title of the track is an oxymoron, or contradiction in terms – scarecrows are known for wearing tatty old clothes as they hang around in fields frightening birds. They are not known for their beauty.
Superficially, the protagonist may have a certain charm, but beneath the façade he is ‘deep in debt.’ It’s a strange image compared with the other more positive images of life’s journey elsewhere on the album. Perhaps there’s a warning here; this is how life could end up if you take the wrong path.
The song begins with an image of the protagonist pulling off the legs and wings of the person addressing him. The image of the human being as an insect may have been inspired by the character of Gregor Samsa in The Metamorphosis, the 1915 novella by the Czech absurdist writer Franz Kafka. When he was a teenager, Wilson and his friend Malcolm Stocks used to go to London together to buy novels by the likes of Kafka and the German-Swiss writer Hermann Hesse. Another literary image that may be appropriate is the lines from Shakespeare’s King Lear (1606), expressing the power that the gods exert over helpless humans,
As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods; They kill us for their sport.
Wherever the image originates, it suggests that the protagonist addressed in the song is in complete control, pulling the strings. At the end of the song, the protagonist and the person addressing him become one, ‘No longer slaves/We’re just the lonely souls that take their place.’ The subtle grace with which Wilson sings the vocals suggests a degree of empathy with the protagonist, whatever he has done.
The video for the song, directed by frequent Wilson collaborator Jess Cope of Owl House Studios in Harrogate takes the story in a different direction, indirectly inspired by the song. Co-directed by Venkatram Viswanathan, it’s a gothic horror story set in a post-pandemic world in which humanity is divided.
The track features the evocate sound of the duduk, a wind instrument which has a large double reed, originally from Armenia. The double reed is much larger than that of an oboe or bassoon, and the instrument itself looks like a recorder, with finger holes along one side but sealed at the bottom end. Here it is played by Theo Travis, a frequent collaborator with Wilson. The instrument can be heard clearly at around 2.00 minutes into the track.
7 The Harmony Codex
Thetitle track is one the most unusual tracks Wilson has recorded under his own name, as opposed to his ambient experiments under the name Bass Communion, or the material he collected for his compilation Unreleased Electronic Music (2004). To create a title track that is largely ambient, consisting of a long series of repeated, arpeggiated synth chords, is a brave move.
It would have been much easier to write a set of lyrics which are a summary of the short story Wilson wrote that provides the title for the track and build the music around that. Instead, with the confidence that comes from over 30 years of songwriting, Wilson decided to write a purely electronic track based on synth loops, reflecting his love for this style of music which he has largely ignored in his songwriting on his solo albums and for Porcupine Tree. He has often recounted the story of his mother getting Donna Summer’s album Love to Love You Baby (1975) for Christmas, and how he grew up loving the hypnotic disco sounds which she, Giorgio Moroder and producer Pete Bellotte created for the masterpiece that is the title track of that album. Wilson told FaceCulture in October 2023, ‘I love simplicity in music. I love atmosphere. I love texture in music.’
As befits the simplicity of the song, Wilson said on Twitter (X) that it was the ‘easiest and quickest to write’ as there is ‘very little to it.’ He kept adding to the song, but any extra layers detracted from the song that he had written in about 24 hours rather than the ‘months’ it often takes him to craft a song. On YouTube he showed how he built the foundations of the track with various vintage synths – an ARP 2600 to create bleeping noises and white noise, and arpeggiators on a Prophet-6 and a Moog, adjusting the filters on both keyboards in real time to vary the texture of the sound.
“Here is a quick demonstration on how I created the foundations of ‘The Harmony Codex’.”
The result is spellbinding. The words of the German poet Stefan George, ‘I feel air from another planet’ (quoted by the Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg in his Second String Quartet) come to mind. During the surround sound playback at EartH arts centre in Hackney to launch the album, the trance-like nature of the track was deeply enhanced by the immersive sound; it truly felt as if the music was being beamed from a distant planet or from a dying star, creating a feeling of deep nostalgia for lost worlds but also a profound sense of joy.
The track does however give a tantalising glimpse of the Harmony Codex short story. Wilson chooses the most ambiguous part of the story, the final few paragraphs on the last page (p. 359 in the hardback edition). He takes the thoughts of Harmony’s brother Jamie, seen from a third person point of view in the story, and puts them instead into the first person, spoken on the track by his wife Rotem. He places the protagonist in the song ‘miles above the Earth’, gazing out not just over London where the story is set, but beyond to see the lights from ‘a thousand cities’, the ships and seas beyond them, and ‘a trillion stars in a billion galaxies.’ The crucial word comes at the very beginning of the passage, ‘It seems.’ It’s unclear whether this is reality or imagined, and even whether Jamie or Harmony is dreaming the other person. The short story makes the ambiguity even more profound, ending with the words, ‘It was how all their games ended’, casting doubt on the whole story; has it all just been a game?
8 Time is Running Out
This is another song about the journey through life, probably the most autobiographical song on the album. In Chapter 24 of his book (entitled ‘60’), Wilson, then in his mid-fifties, describes the decade between 50 and 60 as only ’16 per cent’ of his time on Earth, showing how time seems to speed up as you get older. He also addresses the irony that just when you have worked out what to do with your life, you realise ‘time is running out.’
Verse one compares the short existence of the human soul to ‘a cigarette on a summer night’, that burns out all too quickly. The image of the burning cigarette recalls Macbeth’s famous speech from Shakespeare’s 1606 play of the same name, beginning with the words, ‘Tomorrow, and tomorrow and tomorrow’,
Out, out, brief candle! /Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player, /That struts and frets his hour upon the stage, /And then is heard no more.
The second verse addresses the protagonist as a ‘startled deer in the headlights’, imagery which is reminiscent of a much earlier Porcupine Tree song about life’s journey, Arriving Somewhere But Not Here from Deadwing (2005), ‘Never stop the car on the drive in the dark.’ The chorus of the earlier song expresses the same sentiment as verse two of Time is Running Out,
‘All my designs simplified/ And all of my plans compromised/ All of my dreams sacrificed.’
It’s remarkable that Wilson, writing only in his mid-to late-thirties, was able to express the sentiments of the song he wrote 20 years later.
The existential crisis suffered by the protagonist is illustrated by the panic attack he suffers ‘mid-way through the flight.’ The lyrics recall the Radiohead song Burn the Witch from their 2016 album A Moon Shaped Pool, ‘This is a low-flying panic attack.’ Another song on the same album, Glass Eyes, finds the protagonist getting off a train in a panic, finding it, ‘a frightening place’, with the cold glass eyes of the other passengers whose faces are ‘concrete grey.’
There’s a nostalgic element in verse three, Wilson name-checking the works of various bands and artist from the late 1970s when he was in his early teens. The Future Now is a 1978 album by the singer, musician and songwriter Peter Hammill, also a member of prog-rock band Van der Graaf Generator. In his book, Wilson describes the ‘twisted and nihilistic’ prog of Hammill and his band as being one of his ‘absolute favourites.’ The ‘Poison Girls’ were an English punk band formed in 1976, and their first album Hex was released in 1979. The Kick Inside was Kate Bush’s first album, from 1978. Wilson has often spoken of his admiration for her work. Finally, ‘a war of worlds’ refers to Jeff Wayne’s Musical Version of The War of the Worlds (1978) based on H.G. Wells’ novel of the same name published in 1898. Wilson discussed the album with Tim Bowness in their podcast The Album Years. Wilson described it as ‘an absolute masterpiece.’
9 Actual Brutal Facts
Unusually, this track features Wilson speaking rhythmically – not quite rapping – rather than singing. He told Stephen Humphries of Under the Radar that he was strongly influenced by Jack Dangers of the electronic group Meat Beat Manifesto, who did programming on this and other tracks, to write a track ‘in a hip-hop rhythm or at least trip hop.’ The vocals recall the quietly ominous rapping on Risingson from Mezzanine by Massive Attack (1998) provided by 3D (Robert Del Naja) and Daddy G (Grantley Evan Marshall).
Wilson created a similar sound by pitching his vocal down a few semitones; some listeners didn’t initially recognise his voice. There is a precedent for the use of spoken word/rapping in Wilson’s work – the title track of Deadwing(2005) includes a rhythmically vigorous contribution from Mikael Åkerfeldt of Opeth. And on tracks like King Ghostfrom The Future Bites Wilson heavily manipulated his voice to make it go much lower (and higher!) showing a new confidence in his vocal delivery that began with that album, partly due to the encouragement of his co-Producer David Kosten. The new confidence Wilson has in his voice is reflected in the supreme rhythmic precision with which he delivers the lyrics.
The protagonist of the song is the third of the despicable characters addressed on the album (the other two appear on Inclination and Beautiful Scarecrow; or perhaps it is the same character?). The opening line, ‘condescending will as condescending does’ is a clever reversal of the old expression, ‘handsome is as handsome does’, meaning that true beauty is revealed by a person’s deeds rather than physical beauty. There is also another reference to life’s journey and the significance that living a valid existence can bring (one of the themes of the Porcupine Tree album Signify from 1996). In this case, the protagonist’s past weighs heavily on him, ‘You drag the passing years behind you on a ball and chain.’
Beatriz G Aranda of the Spanish newspaper El País suggested to Wilson that the chorus lyrics, ‘when you turn the shit to gold it’s not appreciated’ could be autobiographical. Wilson modestly replied, ‘I don’t consider myself that good at making gold!’ He also said, however, that if he had been born ten years earlier, he would probably have found it easier to achieve recognition. But a more likely protagonist is the ‘gold man’ described in Harridan on the last Porcupine Tree album Closure/Continuation, like the mythical King Midas whose every touch turned objects into gold – at first seen as a blessing when he touched roses but then as a curse when food and even his daughter turned to gold.
10 Staircase
The final track on the album adopts the central staircase image, representing life’s journey. Wilson told Stephen Humphries that the staircase in this song represents the pressures of ‘growing older in this modern world; such as providing for your family, getting on the property ladder’, dealing with stress, anxiety, illness, your children’s health, and social pressures. In July 2022, over a year before the album’s release, speaking to Jonathan Cornell of Immersive Audio Album, Wilson said Staircase was a ‘pretty generic title’ and he was thinking of changing it, but he obviously decided not to, perhaps as the characters from the short story, Harmony and Jamie, became less important to the album than the staircase metaphor itself.
Wilson told Mark Millar of The XS Noize Podcast that the track was the last one to be written, and that he had agonised over writing it because he knew it was going to be the closing track, ‘I wanted it to feel like the final scene in a movie… the climax to this movie.’ Wilson has solved this problem, both by making the final track one of the strongest on the album, and by creating a track which has a complex structure like a short film over nearly ten minutes.
To add to the complexity of the track, there are two drummers playing at once. Wilson chose Craig Blundell who joined him on the To The Bone tour and plays on most of the current album. Blundell also played with other members of Wilson’s touring band – Nick Beggs and Adam Holzman – on the excellent jazz-inflected Trifecta. The other drummer is Sam Fogarino from the American rock bank Interpol. Wilson told Millar that Blundell played a very busy, technical part whereas Fogarino played in a more direct indie style. The result, which Wilson said took him weeks of trying different things to get right, is amusingly described by Wilson as a, ‘kind of composite Frankenstein drum pad.’
The track begins with a sparkling synth loop written on a Moog arpeggiator, in what sounds like a complex polyrhythm but is in fact in standard 4/4 – Wilson shares a love of rhythmic complexity with Gavin Harrison, Porcupine Tree’s drummer. The deep voice at around 0.45 is Wilson’s own, tuned down using vocal processing of the kind used extensively on the previous album. The bubbling bass line that arrives at around 1.15 could also have come from that album. The track springs gloriously to life at around 1.40, after some joyfully sarcastic backing vocals on the words ‘congratulate yourself’ which amplify the central theme of the first section of the track, the pointless accumulation of wealth.
The guitar solo, beautifully played by Niko Tsonev on a Fender Strat with some lovely David Gilmour string bends, breaks all the usual structural rules by appearing at just over two minutes into a nine and a half minute track. A breakdown section at around 3.00 leads to the chorus which begins with a reference that will delight Porcupine Tree fans, ‘a train set’. The song Trains from the 2002 album In Absentia is a fan favourite, with over 32m plays on Spotify at the time of writing. And Wilson got a train set for his birthday in 2019, as he excitedly announced on Instagram – nearly 50 years since his parents bought him his first one! Whether he ever got a ‘daguerreotype’ (a type of photograph popular in Victorian times) for his birthday is unknown. Like many of the words in the chorus, it appears to be there for its rhythmic punch rather than a deeper meaning.
The muscular bass solo by Nick Beggs on Chapman stick at around 5.00 is a highlight of the track, and indeed the album as a whole. The track drops away again at around 5.40; most artists would have ended it there, but Wilson instead plays some lovely contemplative piano chords that take us to the sound world of Hand. Cannot. Erase. (2015). Adam Holzman provides an evocative Moog solo that recalls the work of Swiss keyboard player Patrick Moraz, who played for Yes and the Moody Blues and worked closely with Robert Moog in the 1970s. As the track ends the Moog solo continues and we are transported again to the distant view of the Earth that we visited during the title track, via Rotem Wilson’s spoken words. A transcendent ending to a superb track.
CONCLUSION
It seems strange to classify The Harmony Codex as a lockdown album, compared for instance with the album Under a Spell by Porcupine Tree’s Richard Barbieri, which Barbieri described as a ‘weird, self-contained dream-state album’ reacting to ‘all this strangeness going on outside’ during the pandemic. In some ways, although it was written and recorded before lockdown, Wilson’s previous album The Future Bites has more of a lockdown feel to it. That album somehow reflected the intense inwardness of being trapped at home, with its concentration on electronics and heavily processed vocals and percussion. The postponement of the album’s release and cancellation of the accompanying tour because of the pandemic, with all the promotional interviews done on Zoom rather than in person, also strengthened the sense of it being a lockdown album.
Ironically, Wilson used the extra time he had at home during the pandemic to collaborate much more with other musicians, whereas the previous album had comparatively few collaborators – although it’s worth mentioning Sir Elton John’s spoken word contribution on Personal Shopper from that album. While writing The Harmony Codex, Wilson took the time to revisit his complete creative landscape, adding the richness of his solo albums before The Future Bites to the spiky electronics of that album.
The result is an album that is more eclectic than any of his previous work, more ambitious in scope, a cinematic treat for the ears and food for the soul. As Wilson approaches middle age (he was 56 last November) he uses his vast experience as a musician, songwriter and producer to create new worlds with each project. After over 30 years in the music industry, many artists (and their fans) would be very happy to repeat the same musical formula they perfected early in their career. It’s to Wilson’s immense credit that he continues to progress, sometimes deliberately alienating some of his fans, but constantly surprising and delighting those who are prepared to stay with him.
Sources
Kent, N. HAPPY NOW? Songs are coming easily, confidence has returned. After the paranoia and angst, Radiohead talk to Nick Kent about Amnesiac, love of music and a way out of the woods (Mojo, June 2001)
Horsley, J. INTERVIEW: Storm Corrosion’s Steven Wilson (Decibel, 21/05/20120
Fuller, G. the arts desk Q&A: Steven Wilson on Porcupine Tree, ‘The Harmony Codex’ and electro-dominance (the arts desk 12/12/23)
Humphries, S. Steven Wilson on “The Harmony Codex” (Part 1) The Staircase Infinities of Modern Life (Under the Radar 29/08/2023)
Millar, M. Steven Wilson: Unlocking The Harmony Codex (The XS Noize Podcast 14/09/2023)
FaceCulture Steven Wilson interview – ‘The Harmony Codex’, creating his own universe, ambiguity +more! (YouTube 02/10/2023)
Aranda, B.G.Steven Wilson, the wizard of progressive rock: ‘125,000 songs are uploaded to Spotify every day. It’s absurd’ (El País 16/10/2023)
Cornell, J. Q&A WITH STEVEN WILSON: MUSICIAN, PRODUCER & GRAMMY AWARD-WINNING IMMERSIVE MIX ENGINEER (Immersive Audio Album 10/07/22)
On Track … Steven Wilson which includes a more detailed version of the above review and an in-depth analysis of Wilson’s other seven studio albums will be published in early 2026
The Harmony Codex in immersive surround sound and live performance
Steven Wilson has often said that one of his lifetime ambitions is to write a film soundtrack – he even co-wrote a film script with the film-maker Mike Bennion which eventually became the basis of the Porcupine Tree albumDeadwing. In September 2020 the film project resurfaced, with a substantially rewritten script, under the name And No Birds Sing; there was even a short teaser on YouTube, but the film itself has not yet been released and it’s unclear whether it ever will be. Wilson has partly had to satisfy his love for cinema by writing cinematic songs like miniature movies, with widescreen production.
In the meantime, last Wednesday evening saw the launch of Wilson’s new album The Harmony Codex at EartH (Evolutionary Arts Hackney), beginning with a playback of the record in full, followed by a short live set. It’s difficult to describe the experience of listening to the album in this way, as there is no art or entertainment experience with which to compare it. The venue is a small theatre, with raked seating and a small stage which was used for the live performance. The audience were surrounded by loudspeakers and listened in near darkness. Perhaps the closest equivalent is the shared experience of being in a cinema, but without watching a film – some of the songs on the album already have excellent videos that can be seen on YouTube but the decision had been taken not to display them during the playback. The audience listened in reverent silence, clapping occasionally as if wondering what the appropriate response should be to listening to a recording.
The cinematic analogy continued in terms of the technical presentation of the music. A surround sound system was used, similar to that found in high-end cinemas. Wilson has recently started mixing his own and other people’s records in Dolby Atmos, technology that uses multiple loudspeakers to create spatial audio. The playback system at EartH was provided by L-Acoustics, giving a truly immersive experience, particularly for electronics and backing vocals. The quality of reproduction was also evident on lead vocals, Wilson and his occasional vocal partner Ninet Tayeb sounding warm, rich and intimate.
But the experience was much more than an exercise in high quality audio, although that played an important part. The experience became transcendent during the title track The Harmony Codex. The words of the German poet Stefan George ‘I feel air from another planet’ (quoted by the Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg in his second string quartet) came to mind. The trance-like nature of this instrumental track was deeply enhanced by the immersive sound; it truly felt as if the music was being beamed from a distant planet or from a dying star, creating a feeling of deep nostalgia for lost worlds but also a deep sense of joy.
Having singled out one individual track, it’s worth considering the whole experience. It felt like a movie for the ears; a surreal narrative from an art house movie, the type of film that Wilson has expressed great affection for – a series of connected scenes that don’t necessarily form an obvious linear narrative, such as works by Luis Buñuel and David Lynch.
The album playback was followed by a live set consisting of three tracks from the new album, The Harmony Codex, Economies of Scale, Actual Brutal Facts, and one track from Wilson’s last solo album The Future Bites. Wilson was joined on stage by his wife Rotem who provided voice overs, and guitarist Niko Tsonev who toured with Wilson in 2012 and plays on the new album. Behind Wilson himself was a series of large lightboxes, recreating the cover design for the album which has one coloured light for each of ten tracks, forming the staircase which features in the short story on which the album is loosely based.
What was most striking for Wilson’s fans was seeing him coming on stage without a guitar. Although he sometimes plays live keyboards, his main instrument has always been the guitar so to see him only playing keyboards was unusual. His voice was as strong as it is on the record, and the keyboard sounds were rich and immersive; it felt like a privilege to be in such an intimate space when his recent gigs with Porcupine Tree have been at major festivals and in arenas like Wembley Arena. Wilson has said that he would perhaps like to play the new album live in full surround sound at smaller venues in future, so this evening could be a foretaste of what is to come. Whatever happens in the future, this was a deeply moving, unique experience which will be hard to replicate elsewhere.
The Beatles retired from touring and playing live in August 1966, only coming out to play for the odd live TV event or the occasional rooftop gig. They spent the rest of their creative lives together in the studio, the mixing desk becoming a Fifth Instrument and their producer George Martin becoming the Fifth Beatle. In four years they created a run of albums and singles that are arguably one of the finest bodies of work in Western Art Music in the latter part of the 20th century, although some might argue that ‘it’s only rock’n’roll (but I like it)’ as the Stones said.
The Analogues, a band of musicians from Holland, can’t really be called a tribute band in the conventional sense. They make no attempt to look like The Beatles onstage or to adopt their personalities. Instead, perhaps adopting a strategy from the Early Music movement, they use an approach that is known in the world of classical music as Historically Informed Performance. This means that when playing Bach, authenticity is achieved by using authentic instruments and performance styles rather than wearing a long curly wig, a frock coat and breeches. The Analogues make no attempt to look like The Beatles or dress like them, nor do they try to get the audience to sing along to their favourite hits. Instead, they create a near-perfect analogue of the original songs, using authentic instruments including a Hammond organ with an original Leslie speaker rather than an electronic re-creation, and several vintage guitars.
The Beatles with George Martin and their engineers were pioneers of multi-tracking in the studio, often overdubbing extra parts and also bringing in orchestral musicians. So to recreate their sound faithfully on stage The Analogues were sometimes more like the Fab Forty-four rather than The Fab Four as the ‘act you’ve known for all these years’ from recordings only was magically brought to life. There were multiple guitarists, singers, keyboard players, strings and brass. And if most of the performances were very straight, concentrating on the virtuosity and accuracy of the re-creation of the music in the way that a classical ensemble would do, there were some lovely comic moments such as two recorder players coming on to play four notes on Glass Onion and a splendid brass section (including a sousaphone) marching on stage to play a few brief notes during Yellow Submarine which also included all the bells and whistles from the original song.
As Prince once said, when playing live at the 02 Arena in London, ‘so many hits, so little time’, and fans may have missed some of their favourites from the later catalogue, such as ‘Let It Be’ and ‘Hey Jude’. Otherwise, the performances were so magnificent it would be difficult to name favourites, like expressing a preference for one of your children. What we were reminded of is the sheer variety of The Beatles’ musical styles, from the blistering rock’n’roll of Back in the USSR and Day Tripper, via the transcendent poetry of Dear Prudence the proto-trance of Tomorrow Never Knows, the avant-garde playfulness of Glass Onion and I am the Walrus to the jolly music hall of Yellow Submarine, and the sublime melodies of Something and Here Comes The Sun.
This is the first time The Analogues have performed in Manchester. Their return soon would be most welcome; ‘a splendid time is guaranteed for all.’
A compelling mix of science fiction with the personal and the political
****
The core of the modestly-named prog rock band Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate consists of Malcolm Galloway (vocalist, multi-instrumentalist and producer) and Mark Gatland (bass, backing vocals, keyboards and co-producer). Their latest album, The Light of Ancient Mistakes isn’t a concept album as such, but it contains multiple overlapping themes, including politics, history, current affairs, failure of communication, threat, and the mistakes humans have made…and continue to make – as Oscar Wilde said in 1891 in his philosophical novel The Picture of Dorian Gray,
“Experience is merely the name men gave to their mistakes“
There’s also a strong science fiction influence on the album, particularly the award-winning British novelist Adrian Tchaikovsky. The longest track on the album, ‘Walking to Aldebaran’ is inspired by Tchaikovsky’s novella of the same name, and some of the instrumental tracks on the album take their titles from characters in Tchaikovsky’s books, such as ‘Avrana Kern’ (from Children of Time) and ‘Gothi and Gethli’ (from Children of Memory). Philip K Dick is also referenced, in the instrumental track ‘The Man Who Japed’, Dick’s 1956 science fiction novel.
Like the best science fiction, The Light of Ancient Mistakes urgently engages with contemporary issues. Galloway says that the track ‘Walking to Aldebaran’ was partly inspired by the dehumanisation of our enemies that enabled guards at Auschwitz to regard their victims as monsters, just as the Tchaikovsky novella describes the transformation of a man into a monster.
There’s another literary source, for the track ‘The Glamour Boys’ which takes its name from the book by Chris Bryant, the MP for Rhondda. The Glamour Boys is subtitled ‘The Secret Story of the Rebels who Fought for Britain to Defeat Hitler.’ It tells the story of a group of young, queer MPs who revealed the extent of Hitler’s brutality well before the Second World War and were branded ‘the glamour boys’ by Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain to suggest there was something untoward about them. The song is sung from the perspective of one of the MPs.
The political, in a much wider sense, is also the inspiration behind ‘Sold the Peace’ which describes politicians who won the Cold War but ‘sold the peace.’ The title track, ‘The Light of Ancient Mistakes’ is inspired by Iain M Banks’ novel ‘Look to Windward’ published in 2000. The protagonist of the song is an artificial intelligence, who according to Galloway is ‘trying to show the futility of cycles of hatred to someone planning an act of mass destruction.’ The book describes an explosion that destroys the sun, and ‘Burn the World’ looks at the effect of catastrophic climate change (see the review of that track here in the new Off the Beaten Track series).
The more personal is reflected in the track ‘Sixteen Hugless Years’, which movingly describes the emotionally-starved childhood of the late spy novelist John le Carré who was beaten by his father and abandoned by his mother. And the most personal track on the album is ‘imtiredandeverythinghurts’ a heartful cry of pain from Galloway who has what he describes as the ‘invisible disability’, Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome which causes chronic pain. Both of these songs are much more direct than others on the album, approaching punk in their delivery rather than prog. This is entirely appropriate – as John Lennon once said in response to those critics who criticised the simplicity of the lyrics to his song ‘I Want You (She’s So Heavy’) from The Beatles’ White Album (1968), if you are drowning you don’t shout that you would be incredibly pleased if someone would have the foresight to throw you a rope; you simply scream.
If those two songs are very simple, there is plenty for prog fans to enjoy elsewhere. In particular the complex bass guitar and keyboards lines are a highlight, as are the Floydian guitar solos in several songs. Galloway’s vocals are compelling too, sometimes reminiscent of Tim Bowness of no-man; elsewhere there’s a touch of the urgency and yearning of Bowie – the vocals on ‘Sixteen Hugless Years’ have something of the feel of Bowie’s Five Years from Ziggy Stardust (1972). The album is nicely paced too, with gorgeous widescreen instrumentals like ‘The Requisitioner and the Wonder’, and several versions of ‘The Anxiety Machine’, interspersing the vocal tracks. And ‘Walking to Aldebaran’ is a multi-faceted drama in its own right. A thoughtful, highly literate and political album that forms a very satisfying and coherent whole.
Sources
Notes by Malcolm Galloway
The John Lennon interview with Rolling Stone magazine by Jann S. Wenner, 4 February 1971
In a memorable phrase, the Chorus of women in T. S. Eliot’s 1935 play Murder in the Cathedral talk about ‘Living and partly living’, describing their mundane existence, quietly avoiding notice. The concept behind the new album by Beatrix Players is having the courage to move beyond ‘partly living’ and, in the words of main songwriter Amy Birks,
‘To really be alive…simply put; you are your best you, and will only ever be second best if you’re trying to be something other than you.’
Living & Alive is Beatrix Players’ second album after a hiatus following the first album Magnified released in March 2017. Since then founding member, writer and vocalist, Birks has released two solo albums, All That I am and All That I Was and In Our Souls. She is joined by her co-writers from the original Beatrix Players line-up, Helena Dove, and guitaristTom Manning. The newly expanded group also includes flautist John Hackett, guitarist Oliver Day (That Joe Payne/Yes Please), drummer Andrew Booker (Tim Bowness/ no-man), classical cellist Jane Fenton, pianist Matthew Lumb and bassist Kyle Welch.
The opening pair of tracks, ‘Snowflakes’ and ‘Somebody Else’s Eyes’ share a very similar melody, segueing seamlessly from one to another. The first track is about how easy it is to forget the most important things in life, and the second is about awareness, with a much more positive outlook on life. It’s fascinating to compare the expert way in which Birks approaches her vocal delivery in these two songs. ‘Snowflakes’ demonstrates the rich, deep and emotionally affecting contralto that she used to such powerful effect on her last two solo albums. On ‘Somebody Else’s Eyes’, the vocals are much more delicate, to reflect the more uplifting message, matched by Fenton’s lovely contemplative cello part.
‘Start Again’ was the first single from the album and has already been reviewed here as part of the Off the Beaten Track series. The song celebrates the return of Beatrix Players with expanded instrumental forces; to savour the added richness of the new chamber ensemble listen to the long instrumental section of ‘This is Your Life’, which is deliciously free-flowing. It features a haunting, chanted refrain, and a quicksilver guitar solo from Day which duets with assertive bursts of flute from Hackett. The freedom of the instrumental parts perfectly matches the message of the song which is about never letting go of ‘the child within’ whatever tribulations life brings.
The role played by the other members of the band apart from Birks extends beyond providing instrumental parts. Although Birks is the main songwriter and writes most of the lyrics, Manning co-writes three tracks including the uplifting ‘Free’ which is about letting go and living life away from the control of others. Hackett contributes to the words and music of ‘A Beautiful Lie’; the song began when he wrote the chorus. ‘We’re living a beautiful lie’, playing on the idea of living a beautiful life. Hackett describes the perfect life that many couples live on social media or in magazines, yet underneath there’s a lot of ‘concealed unhappiness.’ (Living and partly living…) Helena Dove, who provides backing vocals on ‘Overflow’, also writes the lyrics and the music for the song, which she describes as being about ‘a very ordered person’ who is ‘processing the overwhelming feelings of love’ which eventually overflow.
Birks describes the narrative flow of the album as leading to a sense of empowerment, with a renewed sense of self, ‘I’ve come through a lot over the past several years and learned a lot.’ (See the interview with her here). Her hard-earned wisdom is reflected in the many lyrical insights into the best way of living life beyond a mundane or trapped existence, but the melodies and instrumental parts are equally captivating. The whole album, which provides many moments of subtle joy, can be summed up by the opening words of the first track, ‘there’s no such thing as an ordinary moment.’
‘Start Again’ is the first single from the forthcoming album by Beatrix Players, Living & Alive. The song is about founding member, lead singer and main songwriter Amy Birks, re-forming the band after a hiatus following the first album Magnified released in March 2017. Since then, Birks has released two solo albums, All That I am and All That I Was and In Our Souls.
Instrumentally, there is more of an ensemble feel than on the previous Beatrix Players album, which felt more piano-led – although the opening theme here is provided by the piano. It’s a lovely complex mix, full of subtle touches, with multiple layers that reveal their secrets on repeated listening. Details that stand out are the delicate cello parts, elegant guitar, the proggy flute solo and the warm backing vocals towards the end of the track. Amy Birks’ vocals are rich and empathetic, particularly in the ear-worm of a chorus, and there is a folky, almost Celtic instrumental breakdown. A welcome return for a band who have been away for too long.
From the album Living & Alive, which is released on 22 September.
Art-rock band no-man were founded in 1987 when Steven Wilson and Tim Bowness started writing music together. They briefly flirted with mainstream success in 1990 when their single release colours was Single Of The Week in Melody Maker and Sounds, leading to record label and publishing deals. Wilson went on to have much more success with Porcupine Tree and as a solo artist, but no-man continued to release albums sporadically, including their most recent, love you to bits in 2019. The duo have more recently collaborated on their podcast The Album Years.
‘Pigeon Drummer’ comes from the band’s sixth album Schoolyard Ghosts released in May 2008. The song evolved from a demo by Tim Bowness called ‘City Sounds’ which can be heard here. Bowness later used the lyrics on ‘wherever there is light.’ The track ‘Pigeon Drummer’ was written at a time when Wilson was starting to move away from Porcupine Tree to focus on his solo career. His first solo album Insurgentes was released in November 2008.
What is remarkable about this track, and some of the songs on Insurgentes, is the sudden and shocking descent into extreme noise after a beautifully melodic section. This happens very quickly on‘Pigeon Drummer’ after only about 30 seconds. When Wilson uses the same technique on Insurgentes, on songs like ‘Salvaging’, the noise section appear much later in the track. Wilson had been listening to the noise project Merzbow, started in 1979 by the Japanese artist Masami Akita, and enjoying the disruptive effect the use of noise had on melodic tracks, like obliterating an Old Master painting with black ink.
Wilson has often spoken of his love of cinema, and the term ‘cinematic’ often applies to both the sound of his music and the structure of his songs. Bowness’s demo version, ‘City Sounds’ and ‘Pigeon Drummer’ share a cinematic structure. ‘Pigeon Drummer’ opens with a music box. After a burst of noise, there’s a guitar theme that might remind some listeners of the guitar at the start of ‘Dream is Collapsing’ from Hans Zimmer’s score for Inception (2010). But if that film is science-fiction, a deeply philosophical, multi-layered thriller, the no-man song is perhaps closer in structure to the European art-house movies Wilson so admires. The juxtaposition of sweetly haunting melodic sections with extreme noise has the non-linear narrative of films by the Spanish iconoclast Luis Buñuel.
The track also seems to draw from another film genre; horror. The song adopts the trope of contrasting an insouciantly sun-lit scene with a subsequent scene of violent horror. The music box could have come from Philip Glass’s score for the original Candyman film. The tolling bell, and the ethereal choir could also have come from a horror film score. There’s also something unsettling about Bowness’s vocals, which are as sweetly and gently delivered as ever but heavily compressed to give them a slightly inhuman quality, a technique Wilson often uses on Porcupine Tree albums such as on the songs about serial killers on In Absentia (2002)
Whether you choose to view ‘Pigeon Drummer’ as a slice of art/noise rock, a homage to the structure of avant-garde European cinema, or the soundtrack to a horror film, it’s an extremely evocative and effective piece of music.
This post was updated on 29 August 2023 at 10.50 to add references to Bowness’s demo version ‘City Sounds.’