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Time And Again

The last Ayreon album may have divided his loyal audience, but Arjen Lucassen is bouncing back with a reboot of his sci-fi supergroup project, Star One. Here the prolific progger offers his candid views on why Transitus split the fans, on writer’s block and control freakery, and on the concept of new album, Revel In Time.

There are those musicians who create songs as a pleasant pastime, writing when the urge to be creative strikes as a fleeting distraction from their everyday lives. Then there are people like Arjen Anthony Lucassen, for whom music and writing consumes every single day of his life.

It’s that drive that has seen him release music under a variety of guises, often laden with guest musicians to add even more sparkle to the recordings. The mainstay is Ayreon – a vehicle for all the genres ranging from metal to folk – which truly encompasses his approach to music. But there’s been a plethora of other musical monikers, from The Gentle Storm, Guilt Machine, Stream Of Passion through to albums released under his own name. The uninitiated may be confused by this array of projects, but Lucassen retains a hugely loyal fanbase who, for the most part, adore the music he produces. That said, his last Ayreon album, Transitus, produced a definite divergence in his fanbase.

“I have to say that it did sell it very well,” Lucassen tells Prog, “so that was not the problem. “It was just that opinions were varied and there was controversy. I usually don’t really get that, but it was a love-it-or-hate-it album. I had the same thing with the Guilt Machine album [On This Perfect Day, 2009], which I’m very proud of, but people either loved it and thought it was the best thing that I’ve ever done, or they didn’t like it and thought it was the worst thing that I’ve ever done. So that happened with Transitus as well and it wasn’t received that well by the fans or by the press. I think the reason was that it wasn’t really a true Ayreon album. I’d wanted to make a movie, so it was basically film music, every song was written for the movie. We needed two million euros to produce the movie and it wasn’t to be. So, the record company said ‘Let’s release it as Ayreon’, which in hindsight was a mistake.”

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Prog
Issue 127
VISUALIZZA IN NEGOZIO

Altri articoli in questo numero


REGULARS
PROG PRESENTS…
Discovering e.a.r MUSIC Located in Hamburg, Germany, earMUSIC
Ed’s Letter
Hello, and welcome to the new issue of
Bloody Well Write
Send your letters to us at: Prog, Future Publishing, 121-141 Westbourne Terrace, London, W2 6JR, or email prog@futurenet.com . Letters may be edited for length. We regret that we cannot reply to phone calls. For more comment and prog news and views, find us on facebook.com under Prog.
INTRO
IF IT’S OUT THERE, IT’S IN HERE
BARON CRÂNE
The explosive French trio broaching stoner rock, jazz-fusion, and much more
PHASE TRANSITION
Portuguese prog-metallers tackle the state of the world on their debut record
The prog top 30 albums
Compiled by December 2021 1 RADIOHEAD Kid A
WIN! SIGNED TARJA BOOK
What got us all grooving this month…
SOM
Constants side-project mix shoegaze, post-rock and doom-pop to maximum effect
RHIZONE
With their three-album rock opera, these Austrian art rockers are thinking big
GRAHAM GOULDMAN
He went from writing hits for The Hollies and Yardbirds to success with ‘The Worst Band In The World’ – 10cc, the experimental rock outfit he co-founded. Now the singer-songwriter bassist-guitarist looks back on his career and hints at what the band’s upcoming Ultimate Greatest Hits Tour could hold…
The Clock Is Ticking
It’s been six years since FEAR was released during a time of political turmoil, and yet nothing could have prepared Marillion for the challenges they’d face in making its follow-up. Prog catches up with the band as they prepare to release An Hour Before It’s Dark, and finds out how they turned some of their darkest subject matter into one of their brightest and most optimistic-sounding records
Standing Out From The Crowd
Crowdfunding, copyright claims and the birth of the Marillion Weekend. In an extract from his recent autobiography, Marillion, Misadventures & Marathons: The Life & Times Of Mad Jack, keyboard player Mark Kelly recounts the story behind the band’s first fan-financed album, Anoraknophobia
THE PROG INTERVIEW
MADDY PRIOR
MARILLION
The clock is running down on us all, and Steve Hogarth and co are counting the seconds on their lushly pre-apocalyptic new album
JARROD GOSLING
The great and good of progressive music give us a glimpse into their prog worlds.  As told to Grant Moon
FEATURES
Rise And Shine
After a tumultuous period in their career, US trio Cynic were dealt a double blow in 2020, when two core members tragically died. The remaining co-founder Paul Masvidal re-grouped, and re-emerged with the fourth Cynic album. In his only interview for the UK and European press, Masvidal tells Prog the full, troubled story of Ascension Codes.
Blessed And Cursed
From playing high-octane “post-rock‘n’roll” to writing the soundtrack for a horror classic, Toundra are one of instrumental music’s most versatile bands. Now they’re pushing themselves again, with an album featuring a three-part suite decrying hatred and homophobia. Esteban Girón tells us more
A Glimpse Behind The Curtain
It’s been 10 years since this mysterious British duo got together, mixing cinematic post-rock with breathtaking multimedia – and not forgetting those costumes. With crowdfunding now helping to bring third album Symbiosis to light, Nordic Giants’ drummer-guitarist Rôka tells us more about the continuing theme of nature’s influences to them, and how to remain off-grid personally and musically
Meeting Of The Minds
Matt Baber and Richard Wileman never intended to make a record together, but through a combination of serendipity, fruitful raids on their respective archives, and a natural musical chemistry they found themselves with an album. They walk Prog through the creation of Baber Wileman, from accidental conception to a finished product that’s taken them both by surprise
Old Dogs, New Fangs
Since 1984’s To The Death! demo, Canada’s progressive metal veterans Voivod have built their songs out of winding improvisations and free-wheeling jam sessions. When the pandemic took those away from them, the band were forced to adapt their songwriting process. Their latest album, Synchro Anarchy, is the sound of that adaptation. A record full of darkness, dystopia and devilment, drummer Michel ‘Away’ Langevin reveals how unfamiliar territory helped the band create one of their finest albums yet
Myths
US proggers Wilderun continue their journey of creating expansively gorgeous but sometimes brutal orchestral progressive music with fourth album Epigone – and it could be their darkest, most folk-summoning yet
Aiming High
With some vital new blood bolstering their line-up, rising British prog rockers The Paradox Twin are daring to dream. Here the band’s founder Danny Sorrell and co-vocalist Nicole Johnson take us inside their latest album, Silence From Signals, and reveal the deeply personal concept behind it
Decree Nice Guy
Now the dust has settled on Transatlantic’s long-awaited comeback, Roine Stolt is back with his main band, The Flower Kings. New double album By Royal Decree reunites the founder with original band member, and brother, Michael. We discuss their new material, the upcoming reissues campaign and why Stolt’s keeping an open mind on the future
New Adventures In The North
Progressive metal masters Amorphis have trimmed the symphonic fat on their new, 14th album, Halo, and revealed something… almost poppy, but only how they can do pop. Rhythm guitarist Tomi Koivusaari talks to Prog about their streamlined anthems, sourcing inspiration from Finnish myths and how they built their unique death metal and folk music-flecked soundscape
Differences
Influenced by the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal as well as classic prog, US pioneers Watchtower were an instant sensation to a new progressive generation. But they were too ahead musically and too behind in industry knowledge, as founder/drummer Rick Colaluca, guitarist Ron Jarzombek and vocalist Alan Tecchio explain
Wonky SANCTUARY
French-Irish quartet Molybaron find no time for boredom with their second album, The Mutiny, which bagged them a label deal with InsideOut. Frontman Gary Kelly tells Prog how a move to Paris helped change his life and why he’s thinking big on the band’s third release
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