Mean Deviation Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal
Mean Deviation Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal
Mean Deviation Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal
Metal
Copyright © 2010 Jeff Wagner
All rights reserved.
http://www.mean-deviation.com
Cover artwork and interior illustrations by Michel
“Away” Langevin
Photographs as credited
Book design by Bazillion Points
Supervised by Ian Christe
Edited by Polly Watson
First published in the United States in 2010 by
BAZILLION POINTS BOOKS
61 Greenpoint Ave. #504
Brooklyn, NY 11222
USA
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eISBN 978-1-935950-99-8
To add the original high-quality print edition of this book
to your personal library, complete with cover flaps,
16-page color insert, and the smell of paper, visit:
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“Without deviation from the norm, progress is not
possible.”
—Frank Zappa
CONTENTS
Foreword, by Steven Wilson
Prologue: Crimes Against Good Taste?
PART I: ATMOSPHERIC DISTURBANCE
1. Invention/Reinvention
2. All Moving Parts
3. By-Tor at the Gates of Delirium
4. Open Mind for a Different View
PART II: THE SCIENCE OF THE DAY
5. Passing the Threshold
6. Killed by Tech
7. A Constant Motion
PART III: A QUANTUM LEAP FORWARD
8. Sublimation from Underground I: Voivod & Celtic
Frost
9. Sublimation from Underground II: Europe
10. Sublimation from Underground III: North America
11. Sublimation from Underground IV: Florida
12. Sublimation from Underground V: From 2112 to
1993
PART IV: GENETIC BLENDS
13. Deviation or Derivation?
14. Swedish Oddballs
15. The “Weirding” of Norway
PART V: INTO DATA OVERLOAD…
16. The Expanding Universe
17. A Way Out from the Way-out?
Epilogue: …and the Geeks Shall Inherit the Earth
APPENDIXES:
A: Lest We Forget
B: Prime Numbers—50 Recommended Progressive
Metal Albums
C: Curious Collisions—Prog Covers Prog
Thanks
FOREWORD
Way back in the cultural desert of the early 1980s, I
was barely into my teens when I fell in love with music.
More specifically, I fell in love with two kinds of music:
heavy metal and progressive rock. Laying ears on the
former was easy, since the New Wave of British Heavy
Metal was in full flow, but the latter was almost
impossible to hear. Progressive music was banished, only
heard by pillaging your best friend’s big brother’s record
collection, or exploring secondhand record stores and
taking a chance on anything with an interesting cover
and/or long songs—preferably divided into movements.
At that time there wasn’t much fusion between
the worlds of metal and progressive music, aside from
the occasional extended metal epic on an Iron Maiden or
Diamond Head album. This new wave of heavy metal
was largely centered on a back-to-basics approach,
combining recycled Led Zeppelin or Judas Priest riffs
with a barroom punk rock aesthetic. Ultimately, the
“anyone can play guitar” philosophy didn’t really appeal
to me, so while my love of progressive music stayed
with me, my interest in the apparently unambitious metal
genre faded to nothing. A new album by Saxon just
didn’t have the same appeal once I discovered Frank
Zappa and King Crimson. Yes, I became a music snob!
Fast forward to 2000, and I had been making
music professionally myself for ten years, with a number
of projects in various different musical styles. One of
these bands was Porcupine Tree, which was very much
in the tradition of the progressive bands I’d grown up
listening to. Over the course of several albums,
Porcupine Tree had touched on a lot of musical styles—
but not metal. Metal remained something I thought I’d
left behind in my teens.
When meeting music journalists, we would
often discuss what I saw as the poor state of
contemporary progressive music, wondering where all
the really ambitious musicians had gone. Maybe those
kinds of people were just more inclined to be filmmakers
or writers nowadays. One day, one of these journalists
handed me an Opeth CD called Still Life, saying: “You
should listen to this; these guys are big fans of yours.”
When I played the CD at a sound check a
couple days later, what I heard forced me to completely
revise my assumptions about both metal and progressive
music. This wasn’t the barroom heavy metal I
remembered from my youth, and neither was it like the
nostalgic Genesis clones I’d become accustomed to
hearing passed off as “progressive” rock. Opeth’s music
was inventive, brutal, rhythmically complex, conceptual,
technically astonishing, beautiful, textured, powerful,
and, above all, ambitious. I was blown away.
I sent an e-mail to Opeth’s main man, Mikael
Åkerfeldt, complimenting him on Still Life, and received
an invitation by return. Within a few more weeks I was
in the studio working with the band on their
groundbreaking Blackwater Park album. What made the
music so special to me was that while it drew heavily
from the great progressive era of the ’70s, it was made
by musicians who had grown up listening to death metal.
Mikael was as influenced by the nihilistic folk of ’70s
band Comus as he was by black metallers Bathory, as in
love with the sonic experiments of Scott Walker as he
was with the bludgeoning riffing of Black Sabbath.
My discovery of Opeth was just the start of a
trail that led to my discovery of many fantastic bands
fusing heavy music with a totally progressive outlook.
Soon I discovered the music of another Swedish band,
Meshuggah, whose polyrhythmic complexities were not
simply about showing off, but were fundamental to their
brutal power. This band, perhaps more than any other,
began to influence my own music. And it went on. In a
very short time, I found a whole network of bands
creating new forms of ambitious, album-oriented music
with metal at its core. This combination of brutality and
sophistication seemed to make perfect sense to me.
In Jeff Wagner’s Mean Deviation, we now
have a definitive book on the relationship between metal
and progressive music, and the myriad variation of styles
that it has given rise to. “Progressive metal” is now well
established as a style and an approach, so much so that it
has become a recognized genre in itself. In some ways
this is unfortunate. When a blueprint for a style of music
becomes established, what follows tends to include a lot
of imitation—but to copy Mastodon, Tool, or Dream
Theater is, of course, to miss the point of “progressive”
music. The truly innovative bands simply play the music
that comes naturally to them, by listening eclectically
and seeing nothing strange in combining their influences.
In doing so—whether by accident or design—they create
new musical hybrids, which for me (along with an
allegiance to the idea of the album as a musical journey)
is one of the basic tenets of any music that can call itself
progressive. In the meantime, metal continues to mutate
and evolve, sometimes in the most unexpected ways,
demonstrating that it is far from spent and is, in fact, the
most flexible of musical forms.
It’s some kind of strange, brutal beauty.
—Steven Wilson, London, 2010
Prologue:
Crimes Against
Good Taste?
A mass of brute force riding on whirlwinds. A sound
from deep down in the churning guts of its creator,
aiming at the listener/victim in the same region and parts
below. Kicks you in the nuts and sweeps you off your
feet. Mean. Ugly. Raw. Primal. Inhuman and
otherworldly. This is the killing art of heavy metal.
So what happens when heavy metal, now
entering its fifth decade of existence, grows up, leaves
home, and progresses? What does it sound like when sex
and violence are forgotten in favor of sax and violins? Or
when time signatures mutate into quirky mathematical
headaches, song lengths peak out at fifty-five minutes,
and Pink Floyd informs a metal band’s sound more than
Black Sabbath? What happens when the barbarian
impulse is sublimated—when the lowly beast is pulled
from its cave, lured by a vast array of state-of-the-art
tools and unlimited access to technology? Is
“progressive” metal still even metal?
Quite possibly, progressive heavy metal should have
never happened. Maybe it’s an anomaly, an oxymoronic
freak of evolution—or perhaps the mutation was
inevitable. Many other music genres branched from their
source at some point—witness avant-garde jazz and
avant-garde classical music. Prog rock, one of the
earliest perturbations of the rock-and-roll form, is an
infamous manipulation of rock basics. Even decidedly
anti-progressive outcast genres such as punk and
hardcore claim their own progressive outgrowths. Why
not heavy metal?
Heavy metal is a legitimate art form, after all.
Outsiders took a while to admit as much, but metal has
proven its resilience and viability and has earned its
place in modern culture. In the 1980s, music critics too
good for the likes of Judas Priest and Metallica
dismissed the genre, misunderstanding it entirely, even
as metal bands packed stadiums and racked up sales in
the tens of millions. Inspired youngsters around the
world blasted out their takes on the genre, and the form
morphed and mutated into a zillion different subgenres,
splicing some rather interesting, experimental
outgrowths onto the tangled family tree.
Since the very beginning, the 1970s, early (or
proto-metal) bands Black Sabbath and Rush emerged
from primordial thuds to create remarkable and elaborate
pieces of nascent progressive metal. That’s just what
happens with art. The creators eke out crude blueprints
then improve upon them—they discover, experiment,
and grow. They deviate.
(Chris Walter)
(Chris Walter)
(Chris Walter)
(Frank White)
(Michael J. Mulley)
(Chris Walter)
New sound, new look: Queensryche’s 1986 game-changer, Rage for Order
(Frank White)
(Jim Matheos)
(Christina Ricciardi)
(Frank White)
WHAT IF?
Comic book publisher Marvel Comics began a
series in 1977 titled What If? Each issue explored an
alternate reality, something that could have transpired in
the Marvel Universe but ultimately failed to materialize.
Issues such as “What If Spider-Man Had Joined the
Fantastic Four?” and “What If Captain America Became
President?” appealed to the hard-core Marvel geek.
There are many What If? scenarios in the
Metal Universe worth pondering: What If Slayer’s Kerry
King Had Stayed in Megadeth? What If Paul Di’Anno
Had Never Left Iron Maiden? What If Black Sabbath
Had Never Discovered Drugs? One of the most
intriguing: What If Ron Jarzombek Had Joined Fates
Warning? (Get your geek helmet on, people, we’re going
in…)
In 1986, Fates Warning began the search for a
guitarist to replace original member Victor Arduini.
While Demonax guitarist Frank Aresti eventually got the
job and entered the studio with the band to record a little
album called Awaken the Guardian, a young six-string
slinger in Texas named Ron Jarzombek was close to
getting the gig instead.
6. Killed by Tech
“‘Tech metal’ was a term we coined on our flyers
without feeling like it was going to be some kind
of genre. But we had to call it something. We knew
it was different and we didn’t want people to think
that they were just coming to see a rock-and-roll
band. So we were ‘The Harvesters of Technical
Thrash Metal: Watchtower!’” —Jason McMaster,
Watchtower
(Gerrie Lemmens)
(Kevin Badami)
(Tanya)
(Gerrie Lemmens)
In 2004, Europe called again. The band was
invited to the two-day Headway Festival in the
Netherlands. Watchtower headlined one evening while
onetime rivals Sieges Even headlined the other. After
that excursion, according to Jarzombek, came “more
writing sessions, more lame songs, and we finished
writing the material for Mathematics. But things fizzled
out again and the recordings never made much progress.
I don’t want the Mathematics material to ever see the
light of day. If it gets reworked again, possibly, but
we’ve done that twice and I’m done trying to revive the
whole thing.”
Prog on a
Pogo Stick
Who says prog bands have no sense of humor? This
transcript, littered with in-jokes, comes from a
Watchtower gig intro tape, circa 1990. Mission statement
or meaningless mirth? The answer lies somewhere
between mysticism and physics.
Female voice:
The essence of belief lies somewhere between mysticism
and physics.
Pitch-shifted, double-tracked male voice:
The essence of belief lies somewhere between mysticism
and physics.
When in doubt, one can usually count on realistic
answers from the keeper of the LongBurger. Though if
one searches for such answers late at night, he is sure to
find that the keeper has closed shop.
Female voice:
Another path towards pure understanding is to hop
repeatedly.
7. A Constant Motion
“We loved progressive, complex music—Rush,
Yes, the Dixie Dregs, Frank Zappa—and also
loved heavy music: Iron Maiden, Black Sabbath,
Metallica, Queensrÿche. To us it wasn’t some
magical scientific formula that would change the
world, it was just three college kids jamming for
the fun of jamming. Trying to fill a void for
ourselves as fans to create the kind of music we’d
want to listen to.” —Mike Portnoy, Dream
Theater
(Frank White)
(Frank White)
(Mechanic Records)
(Frank White)
(Frank White)
(Choon-Kang Walther)
Mekong’s
Classical Gas
10. Sublimation from
Underground III: North
America
“Science and music are very similar, and I think
this is why many scientists are musicians—
Einstein, for instance, played violin. They both
focus on the creative and collaborative process,
and this is the reason I love them both. I’m
fortunate that I can do both science and music.
For me, they feed off one another.”—Kurt
Bachman, Believer
(Michael Henricks)
(Michel Roy)
(Mike Coles)
(Michael J. Mulley)
(Michael J. Mulley)
(Gene Kirkland)
“fusion metal”:
1993’s Spheres
(Jennifer Jarzombek)
Moving back to an instrumental format,
Jarzombek outdid himself with the Blotted Science
project. Conceived with Cannibal Corpse bassist Alex
Webster, the unlikely union resulted in perhaps the most
devastating tech-metal workout of all time. The 2007
album The Machinations of Dementia throbbed and
pulsed with a brutality not heard in Spastic Ink, while
Behold the Arctopus drummer Charlie Zeleny added a
layer of trickiness to the dizzying damage worked by
Jarzombek and Webster. Between full-time teaching
during the week, producing his own instructional DVDs,
guest appearances on various albums, and the revived
sessions for Watchtower’s Mathematics, Jarzombek has
already begun plotting the second Blotted Science
album.
(Matt Johnsen)
(Cristel Brouwer)
(Matt Johnsen)
(Esa Ahola)
Though he seems to shirk his own legacy,
Gildenlöw’s perpetual forward movement and the
intimacy of his lyrics have gained the admiration and
loyalty of fans who lionize him and the band. For a brief
time in October 2008, a fan and Wikipedia monkey-
wrencher altered the band’s listing on that site to read:
“Pain of Salvation is a Swedish progressive metal band
featuring Daniel Gildenlöw (known in a few other
countries by the name of God)… Another trademark of
the band is that each album is a concept and are the best
albums made by mankind, ever, in forever.”
Gildenlöw finds that level of adoration and
accompanying gargantuan slices of hyperbole “both
flattering and a bit scary. The music we do is a bit
different from what’s out there. And the lyrics deal with
topics people can relate to on an emotional level, so they
get drawn in close. They feel connected. They become
very convinced by all that is Pain of Salvation.”
Wisely, Pain of Salvation ripped up the
Progressive metal rulebook early in their career.
Gildenlöw acknowledges the irony of non-progressive
Progressive metal: “It’s like the Britpop wave. Britpop
bands imitated the Beatles, but the whole thing with the
Beatles was that they did not imitate. They were
breaking boundaries, trying to find new ways. The
Britpop bands get the clothes, the style, the accent, all of
the surface bits, but they don’t push the boundaries. The
Beatles were about having odd time signatures when
needed, trying different instrumentation when needed,
screaming when you want to, singing very softly when
you want to. So, for ‘Progressive metal,’ maybe we
should invent a new name.”
deconstructing cheeseburgers:
(Frank White)
(Mike Coles)
PROGRESSIVE
BY NUMBERS
Here’s a brief look at ten important voices in the modern
Progressive metal stream. A couple were there at the
very beginning; some arose in the thick of the ’90s
explosion; several are newer permutations of its
continuing evolution. This is not a complete list and is
not meant to marginalize anyone. This enormous sector
of the greater prog metal world almost deserves its own
thousand-page book.
ANDROMEDA (formed 1999, Sweden)
Obvious influence from the Big Three and Rush, pushed
in a chunkier, more modern direction; melodic,
controlled, power metal–ish vocals somewhere between
mid- and high range. Torrents of guitar/keyboard
melodies, some Dream Theater–ish shred while staying
song-based. Celestial/spacey atmosphere; even some
AOR catchiness in tracks such as “In the End”; full-time
keyboardist. Key albums: Extension of the Wish (2001),
II=I (2003) Members also played in: FKÜ, Nonexist,
Opus Atlantica, Space Odyssey
Quote: Guitarist Johan Reinholdz was asked what he
was listening to in 2003: “I’ve been listening to
Soilwork, Figure Number Five. Great album! The 3rd
and the Mortal, Tears Laid in Earth; Propellerheads; the
Twin Peaks soundtrack; Tori Amos, as always. Refused,
The Shape of Punk to Come, also some orchestral stuff
like Stravinsky and [Antonín] Dvořák.”
(Christina Ricciardi)
(Todd Brown)
(Esa Ahola)
(Todd Brown)
Abstrakt Algebra’s
(Cristel Brouwer)
(Cristel Brouwer)
Therion’s Symphonies
of the Dead
Like Mekong Delta leader Ralph Hubert, Therion’s
Christofer Johnsson has spent as much time studying
classical composers as banging his head to the metal
classics. Johnsson’s critics say he’s failing in his attempts
to be a bona fide classical composer, but they may be
failing to see the bigger picture. “Of course it’s not
classical music,” Johnsson maintains. “That’s not what
we do. It’s a blend. It only has elements of classical.”
Other metal bands took the classical bull by
the horns before Therion. Rock bands Procol Harum and
Deep Purple went symphonic as far back as the late ’60s.
It was innovative then, and its increase in popularity in
the ’70s was an integral component of the classic prog
sound. By the end of the 1990s, the idea was being
exploited by a variety of different artists across various
genres, second only to the popular acoustic/unplugged
scenario.
A fan of both metal and classical, Johnsson has
attempted a variety of metal-meets-classical projects. “If
you listen to Metallica’s S&M, you can tell they don’t
understand the classical part, and conductor Michael
Kamen doesn’t understand rock and roll,” he says,
preferring instead Yngwie Malmsteen’s Concerto Suite
for Electric Guitar and Orchestra in E Flat Minor Opus
1 and Scorpions’ collaboration with the Berlin
Philharmonic. Johnsson also appreciates more
symphonic, bombastic songs by tried-and-true metal
gods Manowar (“Battle Hymn,” “Mountains”) and Ozzy
Osbourne (“Revelation [Mother Earth],” “Diary of a
Madman”).
“I’m huge into classical and opera,” he says,
“but not much modern stuff. Nicholas Lens would be
one of few exceptions. His way of working with rhythms
on ‘Flamma Flamma’ affected me. I like ‘old modern’
composers to a certain extent. Stravinsky is brilliant, and
influenced Therion’s ‘Via Nocturna’ on the Deggial
album. But my biggest passion is Richard Wagner.
Without him it’s hard to imagine how Therion would
sound. He’s by far my biggest musical hero. Beethoven
never had any direct influence on a composition of mine,
but he should be mentioned, as Beethoven’s Fifth was
the first music I ever picked to listen to myself, when I
was around three years old. I’d press the button on our
fully automatic vinyl player and play the A side over and
over again until my mom would put headphones on me.”
In 2009, Johnsson and Therion put all their
classical cards on the table with The Miskolc Experience.
The double-CD features one disc of Therion originals,
and another disc of Therion-ized Dvořák, Verdi, Mozart,
Saint-Saëns, and Wagner compositions, all recorded live
with a full orchestra at Hungary’s International Opera
Festival of Miskolc.
The fourth Edge of Sanity album, 1994’s
Purgatory Afterglow, introduced another goth-rock track
in “Black Tears,” while opener “Twilight” was an epic
multipart adventure that opened the door a few inches for
upcoming diverse Swedish death metal bands such as
Opeth and Mourning Sign.
(Dag Swanö)
(Erik Ohlsson)
Sidereal Svensson:
Alf of Oxiplegatz
(Mike Coles)
(Mike Coles)
of Norway: Arcturus’s
(Kim Sølve)
(Matt Johnsen)
Philosophical Revolt
The following is a long (but not even complete) glossary
of additional bands that contributed to Norway’s prolific
progressive metal surge:
Age of Silence
Very much a “supergroup,” Age of Silence boasts
members from a variety of notably weird and
progressive metal bands. Keyboardist and leader Andy
Winter, currently residing in British Columbia, is a
Norwegian native. His work in Winds and Washington
State’s avant-metal band Sculptured fills out his resume.
Solefald’s Lars Nedland sings—using a style he refers to
as “Duran Duran–type vocals”—and ubiquitous
skinsman Hellhammer weirds up the drums. Sprawling,
sometimes delicate, always dark, and with plenty of
wicked organ, Age of Silence isn’t even close to black
metal. The Complications EP is based around the
delicious concept of a shopping mall in Hell, or perhaps
Hell itself as one infinite mall—all completely
metaphorical, of course.
Ansur
One of the newer sprouts in the Norwegian left field, like
most Norwegian prog/avant-metal bands Ansur started
out playing black metal and evolved quickly. Their
second album, 2008’s Warring Factions, features almost
no trace of the early sound, and that’s good. What they’re
doing—musically and conceptually—is incredibly
ambitious and even original in many ways. While in no
way a retro-prog band of any kind, Ansur still looks back
to Rush and Pink Floyd for inspiration. “Like any decent
prog rock–inspired band,” says guitarist Torstein Nipe,
“there are a few Rush things here and there. But Pink
Floyd is the ultimate. You never stop discovering more
layers in their music, even after listening to it all your
life. The musical quality of David Gilmour’s guitar
playing is truly one of a kind, perhaps the best example
that technique is not important compared to quality of
tone and melody.” Nipe’s own guitar work not only
brings in elements of Gilmour, Alex Lifeson, and several
others, but he has already carved out his own instantly
recognizable style. And the cover art of Warring Factions
is gorgeous. Hopefully their vocals will improve.
Atrox
Featuring members of Manes, Atrox plays self-described
“schizo metal.” It’s exotic for sure, steeped in the
grandeur of gothic metal, with some power/heavy metal
elements, a few indie/emo moments, lots of keyboards,
and clean male and female vocals. Atraox would
probably appeal to fans of artists as wide-ranging as
Type O Negative or Kate Bush. Contentum (2000) is a
great place to start, especially if Arcturus’s La
Masquerade Infernale is your cup of strangeness. They
really should be much bigger.
Beyond Dawn
This is one of the most unique bands in Norway, which
says a lot. Their early demo material is sick and raw
death/doom that already showed glimpses of evolution to
come. The 1994 EP Longing for Scarlet Days revealed
Voivod and Celtic Frost influences, while 1995’s Pity
Love album was drenched in gothic melancholy and
huge inspiration from New York band Swans, especially
in the deep, drugged Michael Gira–like vocals. In this
era, the band gained much attention for featuring a full-
time trombonist, Dag Midbrod. They carried their love
for brass all the way to 1999’s Electric Sulking Machine.
Even by 1998’s Revelry, metal was totally behind them.
From earthy prog/goth/darkwave, they evolved into a
synthetic, electronically based art pop sound—or as they
called it, “traumatic electro rock.” By the time of 2003’s
Frysh, Beyond Dawn’s evolution hit a wall and the band
went on hold. Frysh features an utterly mangled,
unrecognizable cover of Autopsy’s “Severed Survival.”
(Matt Johnsen)
Borknagar
Similar to Emperor’s semi-progressive
melodic/symphonic black metal, Borknagar never gets
too wacky, although Quintessence certainly fits the
Norwegian prog metal ideal. Lately the band has become
less prolific. After their sixth album—2004’s Epic—they
released an all-acoustic album, Origin, and then a “best
of” package. They finally offered new material in 2010
with Universal. Borknagar has a who’s-who lineup
history that includes past vocalists Kristoffer Rygg and
Simen Hestnæs, as well as current vocalist Vintersorg
(who still resides in Sweden). Leader Øystein G. Brun
has filled out the rest of his lineup, past and present, with
members of Enslaved, Emperor, Solefald, Spiral
Architect, Immortal, and Gorgoroth (who briefly went
weird themselves on 2000’s Incipit Satan album). Brun
also partners with Vintersorg in Cronian, which sounds
enough like Borknagar that it can be seen as an extension
office of the home base. Quintessence, The Archaic
Course, and The Olden Domain are highly
recommended.
Covenant/the Kovenant
This Norwegian industrial/electro-metal conglomerate is
not exactly experimental or avant-garde, but their
contributions should be noted simply because their
lineup has featured members of Mayhem, Arcturus,
Dimmu Borgir, Troll, and Ram-Zet. They don’t fall into
easy subgenre holes, so their role in the weirding of
Norway is duly noted. The band became the Kovenant in
1998, due to a rights conflict with a Swedish synth pop
act. At that time, guitarist Blackheart (who soon became
Psy Coma), commented: “We’re at that stage where
we’re breaking up traditional forms and starting to put
other elements in the music. We even have some stuff
that resembles cabaret, and in the future you’ll see much
more of that. Metal has been so unexplored.”
Dødheimsgard
Beginning life with a stock, by-the-book Norwegian
black metal sound, Dødheimsgard began throwing
unusual imagery (“Bluebell Heart”) and hesitantly
strange music into their thrashing black mix on second
album, Monumental Possession. By the time of 1998’s
Satanic Art EP, the band were among the progressive
elite with a sound that incorporated eerie noise,
dissonance, challenging arrangements, keyboards, and
awesome violin work (“Traces of Reality”). They
completely changed their look and outlook with third
full-length, 666 International. Few vestiges of their
black metal past remained, and while indeed a huge
forward leap, the blaring, intentionally confusing
approach lent the album a stiff, uncomfortable sound.
After an eight-year gap, main man Vicotnik (also of Ved
Buens Ende) and a mostly new cast of characters
unleashed Supervillain Outcast in 2007. The album
wasn’t any easier to digest than its predecessor, but was a
more cohesive reinvention. Highly artificial and
futuristic sounding, insanely intense and erratic, the
album is a listening experience with many conundrums
and complications. The artwork accompanying
Supervillain Outcast is almost better than the music
itself. They tried to shift away from associations with
their early days by changing the name to DHG, but most
people didn’t buy into it.
Drawn
Formed by In the Woods member Christer Cederberg,
the similar-sounding Drawn are described by Christer
himself as incorporating elements of psychedelic,
progressive rock, metal, and ambient—metal being
merely one component. “My inspiration and interest
comes from a lot of different directions within music,”
he says. “Metal is not my first priority, but an interesting
expression among others.” Their one and only album,
1999’s A New World?, shares a lot in common with In
the Woods, Cure-ish melancholy, and pre–Dark Side of
the Moon Pink Floyd. The hypnotic dark metal uses a
variety of vocal approaches. A few ideas sound
unfinished, but Drawn still touched greatness more often
than most.
Drottnar
Curious, these Drottnar guys. Their lyrics come from a
Christian angle and they play what has been called “un-
black metal.” With 2006 full-length Welterwerk, they
began shooting photos and performing dressed in early-
twentieth-century military regalia, mocking notorious
Nazi and Communist regimes. And their musical scope
broadened too—Welterwerk is intensely technical,
aiming somewhere between Atheist, Extol, and the most
complex Mayhem material and almost hitting the mark.
As idiosyncratic as they come.
Emancer
Sometimes a dead ringer for later Enslaved, this band
may not be the most original out there, but they have
clout, if five full albums are anything to judge by. Loads
of ability and an interesting sound. They even have
moments where they find their own direction, and then
it’s really something. One of few Norwegian bands in
this vein that does not share members with a ton of other
bands. Recommended album: Twilight and Randomness
—has a pair of green dice on the cover, with wings!
Emperor/Ihsahn
Emperor’s place at the top of the Norwegian pantheon is
not to be marginalized. But in terms of their
progressiveness, they were never as eccentric or far-
reaching as their peers in Mayhem, Enslaved ,and Ulver,
and never went schizo like the more obscure bands
populating the country. Their contribution as a
progressive band is based on the symphonic/classical
interests of guitarist/vocalist/songwriter Ihsahn. They
were good at keeping their experimental tendencies in
check, although fourth and final album, Prometheus: The
Discipline of Fire and Demise (2001), was not only a
mouthful, but easily their most adventurous. For a view
into what Emperor likely would have sounded like had
they continued, Ihsahn solo albums The Adversary, Angl,
and the especially far-reaching After keep the flame of
proggy symphonic black metal alive. With 2010’s After,
Ihsahn wrote the best album he’s been involved with in
over a decade, within which he proves himself as one of
metal’s most formidable and recognizable lead guitarists.
Ihsahn lists Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, King Diamond,
Bathory, Diamanda Galas, and Radiohead as influences
on his solo work. His albums have featured
performances from Ulver’s Kristoffer Rygg, Opeth’s
Mikael Åkerfeldt, Spiral Architect members Asgeir
Mickelson and Lars Norberg, and Shining leader Jørgen
Munkeby. Ihsahn’s backing band for solo shows
functions as a separate entity called Leprous, who bear
some resemblance to countrymen Frantic Bleep in their
amorphous genre-blending; Leprous released Tall Poppy
Syndrome on the Sensory label in 2009. See also:
Peccatum
Fleurety
Fleurety’s early material was infamous for its shrieking
hawk vocals done by a kid just entering his teens. Their
black riffs were somewhere between Mayhem and
Voivod’s fractured structures. The recording of 1993’s
Black Snow demo was ridiculously lo-fi. With 1995’s
Min Tid Skall Komme album, they had advanced on
every level, adding psychedelic, experimental, and folk
characteristics. Four years later, the Last Minute Lies EP
made the kind of abrupt shift that Beyond Dawn and
Ulver would make careers of, and the following album,
Department of Apocalyptic Affairs, carried on the EP’s
angular, eclectic, unpredictable mixture of metal, gothic,
new wave, indie rock, and prog. The album succeeds
with the kind of approach that Sweden’s Carbonized
failed at on Screaming Machines. Department of
Apocalyptic Affairs finds saxophones, synthesizers, and
guest musicians from Mayhem, Ulver, Arcturus, and
Dødheimsgard joining the perennial core duo of Svein
Egil Hatlevik and Alexander Nordgaren. Hatlevik now
heads experimental electronic unit Zweizz, who are just
about unlistenable.
Frantic Bleep
Featuring members of Madder Mortem, Frantic Bleep
have perhaps one of the best band names ever, even if it
sounds more appropriate for an insane-BPM techno act.
The band’s only album so far, 2005’s The Sense
Apparatus, sits somewhere between fellow Norwegians
Age of Silence and Twisted into Form—more interesting
and technical than the former, not nearly as tricky as the
latter. Some elements of Faith No More, too—and only
distant allusions to black metal. Eclectic yet
approachable, they’re even melodic enough that some
fans of the Inside Out stable of Progressive metal bands
have picked up on it. Let’s hope they offer a second
album someday.
Green Carnation
Green Carnation was a pre–In the Woods band formed
by Terje Vik Schei (aka Tchort) in 1990. When he left to
join Emperor in 1993, the remaining members of the
fledging Green Carnation morphed into In the Woods.
After Schei’s departure from Emperor, he revived Green
Carnation using various members from within and
outside the In the Woods family tree. Debut album
Journey to the End of the Night (2000) was long and
sprawling stuff in the epic gothic/doom mode, but it
didn’t signal the brilliance that would come on follow-up
Light of Day, Day of Darkness (2001). One hour-long
song, Light of Day is remarkably well written and
entirely listenable. The album shows Green Carnation’s
epic doom foundation spiced with prog and art rock
elements. In its wake came the formation of the band’s
key lineup, with most members contributing to
songwriting. A Blessing in Disguise and The Quiet
Offspring are the result of this lineup, yet despite
moments of pure brilliance, neither is as consistently
impressive as Light of Day. The mellow Acoustic Verses
(2006) spotlighted the band’s folk, prog, and singer-
songwriter influences, but touring and business hassles
fragmented the band in 2007, leaving main man Schei to
pick up the pieces after five wonderful and diverse
albums. Maybe things would be totally different now had
the band become Coldplay-huge with the-hit-that-never-
was, 2006’s “The Burden is Mine…Alone.”
Madder Mortem
Releasing consistently high-quality albums since 2001,
this band has earned a dedicated cult following. Theirs is
a sound comparable to fellow Norwegians Atrox, the 3rd
and the Mortal, Frantic Bleep, and Leprous…maybe.
Dark melody lines, moments of shimmering brightness,
gothic atmosphere, eccentric diversions, and attention to
sonic detail have attracted fans from a variety of musical
backgrounds. In the band’s own words, “Our only rule to
creating music is that there are no rules.” Deadlands
(2002) and Eight Ways (2009) are especially remarkable
and recommended.
Manes
Manes is somewhat comparable to Ulver, in that they
have evolved in similar stages. Manes began releasing
demos in 1993 and somehow didn’t catch fire like many
of their peers; their first album took until 1999 to arrive.
Early Manes material is cold, symphonic, raw black
metal, somewhere between early Emperor, Limbonic
Art, and early Dimmu Borgir with an eclectic edge. Five
years later came Vilosophe, a dizzying amalgam of
avant-metal, electronica, and trip-hop. Manes’s black
metal origins were completely absent, as they were on
2007 follow-up How the World Came to an End. Even if
already expecting weirdness, listeners were surprised by
the hip-hop/nu-metal moments in opener “Deeprooted.”
Later promo pictures recall early-’90s Mr. Bungle, and,
on second thought, they probably shouldn’t be compared
to Ulver; Manes was much less prolific, more abrupt,
and less interesting. They have since broken up to
reassemble as Kkoagulaa, who play, in the band’s own
words, “electroacoustic/emotronic” music. Members of
Manes also played in Atrox and the 3rd and the Mortal.
Minas Tirith
A favorite of erstwhile Mayhem guitarist Rune Erikssen
and maybe three or four other people. Impossibly
obscure and terribly underrated, Minas Tirith has had the
same trio lineup since 1989, producing one EP and three
full-length albums. The members are probably more well
known for their work in other bands (Old Man’s Child,
Thorns, Funeral, Tulus, Antestor). While not exactly
prolific, and not at all black metal, the band deals in prog
metal that is rooted firmly in classic doom, thrash, and
death metal bands of the ’70s and ’80s, with a unique
flavor that is exceptionally hard to nail down, but quite
easy to like. Not terribly “out there,” but certainly as
unique and original as any of their more messed-up
Norwegian brethren. The band’s website pledges: “There
are no limits. Heavy or soft. Progressive or mainstream.
Everything is allowed in Minas Tirith.” Maybe their song
titles tell the story best: “Mad Alpha (Lunatic-tac),”
“Brain and the Bee,” “Wisdom’s Saberteeth,” “God of
God’s God.”
Peccatum
Comprised of Ihsahn of Emperor, his wife, Heidi (also
known from Star of Ash and Hardingrock, the latter
which also features Ihsahn), and, on their first albums,
Source of Tide’s Lord PZ. All over the place,
stylistically, their three albums and two EPs incorporated
a wide variety of influences that can only place them
under the “avant-metal” umbrella. Cool cover of Judas
Priest’s “Blood Red Skies” on the Oh, My Regrets EP
and a turn toward darkwave/gothic territory on final
release, 2005’s The Moribund People EP.
The 3rd and the Mortal
The 3rd and the Mortal were an odd band out when they
first emerged on the scene in 1993 with a three-song
demo, but word of mouth spread quickly once members
of the country’s black metal community started singing
the band’s praises. Their profile was raised even further
when original vocalist and now solo artist Kari
Rueslåtten joined members of Darkthrone and Satyricon
for the Storm project. The 3rd and the Mortal began
somewhere between goth rock, doom metal, and
whatever Enya does. Tears Laid in Earth (1994) is
timeless; it also makes a mockery of various female-
fronted “goth metal” novelty bands that have come since.
Rueslåtten left after its release, and the band found the
equally, perhaps even more capable Ann-Mari
Edvardsen. With Painting on Glass and In This Room
albums, the band delved headlong into experimentation.
The result was something incomparable to the work of
any other artist, but residing in an area not unlike a more
metal- or rock-based Dead Can Dance or Kate Bush.
Wonderful stuff, but most fans were caught off guard by
final album, Memoirs (2002), which found the core of
the band dismissing Edvardsen and turning an abrupt
corner toward an avant-pop/electronic sound, full of
samples, loops, and guitar treatments. Edvardsen went
on to weird-pop/ambient band Tactile Gemma, which
featured members of Atrox, while drummer Rune
Hoemsnes ended up in Manes. Hoemsnes also helped out
another 3rd member, Trond Engum, in the Soundbyte,
which has so far released two albums of avant-garde
metal/rock.
L–R: Carl August Tidemann, Andre Orvik, Øystein Moe, Jan Axel Blomberg,
Dorthe Dreyer, Vegard Johnsen, Hans Josef Groh, Andy Winter, Lars Eric Si
(Misty Greer)
Winds
Neoclassical, melodic prog metal having nothing to do
with black metal, but featuring veterans of that scene.
The band revolves around keyboardist Andy Winter (Age
of Silence, Sculptured), drummer Jan Axel Blomberg
(Mayhem, Arcturus, and zillions of others), guitarist Carl
August Tidemann (Arcturus, Tritonus), and vocalist Lars
Eric Si (Age of Silence, Khold, Tulus, Eikind). Mellow
in tone, bountiful in color, smooth in texture—yet still
somehow metal. Must be Tidemann’s awesome leads.
PART V:
Into Data Overload...
16. The Expanding Universe
“In an expanding universe, time is on the side of
the outcast. Those who once inhabited the suburbs
of human contempt find that without changing
their address they eventually live in the
metropolis.” —Quentin Crisp
(Michael J. Mulley)
Meshuggah’s circle of admirers extends
beyond Tool and influential peers such as Dillinger
Escape Plan. “We played Berlin,” remembers Hagström,
“and afterward this opera singer from the Berlin opera
walked up to Fredrik and said, ‘I drove down here to
catch you guys, I heard one of your records—I think
you’re awesome!’”
Meshuggah’s trademark rhythm patterns have
puzzled fans and critics to an incredible degree, yet
despite all appearances, the band claims they don’t
consciously go for total mindfuck. Though many
passages are seemingly mathematically complex in their
patterns, sometimes the tricky-sounding stuff is simply a
matter of placing accents in different places within the
same 4/4 riff cycle. Meshuggah admit that many of their
riffs are deceptively simple. “We don’t actually change
time that much,” says Hagström. “The time signature is
straight 4/4 about 85 percent of the time, but we work
around the 4/4 pattern. Sometimes it seems like we’re
using a 7/4 or 9/4 time signature but we’re not. We make
it sound like another time signature—maybe we’re not
playing the first beat, or playing against Tomas. We don’t
try to make it hard or complex; we just want to make it
intriguing.”
New technologies have always been a trait of
progressive rock music. King Crimson used Mellotrons
and some of the earliest synthesizers (such as the VCS3
unit), while less popular but no less innovative late-’60s
band United States of America are widely credited as one
of the first rock bands to exploit electronic gizmos—
such as engineer Richard Durrett’s electronic music
synthesizer and ring modulator. So too has Meshuggah
widened its scope with newfangled toys. Thordendal and
Hagström play custom seven- and eight-string guitars
made by Nevborn and Ibanez, while Thordendal uses a
“breath controller”—a MIDI device that allows him to
blow out a guitar solo through a mouthpiece, something
heard within the “Future Breed Machine” track, among
others.
On 2002’s Nothing, the band introduced
groovier rhythms marked by long sustaining notes and a
remarkably bass-heavy drone. Thordendal had proposed
using only bass guitars, but eventually chose instead a
more versatile guitar to achieve the fat drone they were
seeking. The guitarists worked with eight-string models
made by small guitar manufacturer Nevborn, but when
the prototypes failed in the studio, Hagström and
Thordendal resorted to detuning their Ibanez seven-
stringers. After the album’s release, the guitarists were
given an Ibanez endorsement deal for the company’s
own eight-string guitars. Unsatisfied with the outcome of
the original guitar tracks, they rerecorded their parts
using the new Ibanez eight-stringers, and a revamped
version of Nothing was released in 2006.
Seven-stringed technical turbulence:
(Matt Johnsen)
(Mike Coles)
(Frank White)
(Tenkotsu Kawaho)
(Christine Mussen)
(Yuko Sueta)
(LiveAlive Pictures/Kissadjekian)
(Cristel Brouwer)
Lest We Forget
The following are a variety of bands that didn’t fit into
the main narrative. Some, like Anathema, are equally
important to the forward evolution and expansion of
heavy metal as others that received greater focus in the
main body of this book. Others—like 3—are barely on
the fringes of metal, yet deserve mention. Some are
noteworthy only as oddities from the past. Even this is
not an exhaustive list.
3
Many prog-minded metal bands have evolved away from
the genre (Anathema, Beyond Dawn, Queensrÿche, etc.),
but Woodstock, NY’s 3, or Three, have inched towards
metal from afar. Their early stuff was white teen
funk/soul/alt rock with jam band and ’70s rock
tendencies. Debut album Paint by Number (1998) isn’t
their best, although some tracks hint at greatness. By
third album Wake Pig, they had morphed into a post-
prog/alt rock/melodi-metal hybrid that drew tenuous
comparisons to Tool and not-so-tenuous comparisons to
Coheed and Cambria. In 2007 they released The End Is
Begun, which exploited various metal devices on “Battle
Cry” and “These Iron Bones.” Listeners have picked up
a great variety of references, including Dream Theater,
Frank Zappa, Fleetwood Mac, Porcupine Tree, Be-Bop
Deluxe, Faith No More, Def Leppard, and Spock’s
Beard. The middle section of the band’s “All That
Remains” and moments of “Automobile” even recall
melodic Euro-metal in the style of Helloween. Basically,
3 sound twenty different ways to twenty different people.
The vocals of Joey Eppard run in a similar range to
Coheed and Cambria’s Claudio Sanchez, and there are
familial ties between the two bands. Onetime C&C
drummer Josh Eppard was also in 3 with brother Joey in
its formative years, as 3 predates C&C. Joey also plays
electric guitar in a pickless flamenco style, both rhythm
and lead, while other guitarist Billy Riker brings metallic
sturdiness to 3’s sound and image with his B.C. Rich
axes, evil wizard looks, and six-string shredding. The
band’s versatility has found them matched with
headliners as disparate as Porcupine Tree, Scorpions, and
Dream Theater. Three has it all: stellar songwriting,
excellent live performances, originality, and diversity.
Opeth’s Mikael Åkerfeldt counts himself a fan: “They’re
amazing. More so live than on album. Joey’s awesome, a
great guitar player and singer. I’m definitely interested in
them. Whenever they put something new out, I’ll buy it.”
Jim Pitulski, who ran the U.S. Inside Out label office for
almost ten years, refers to 3 with a simple gasp: “Oh my
God!”
Akercocke
Beginning as an intense and proudly satanic black/death
metal hybrid, by third album Choronzon (2003)
Akercocke turned a sharp corner toward complexity.
Fourth album Words That Go Unspoken, Deeds That Go
Undone (2005) introduced a completely reinvented band
with characteristics of ’80s new wave and indie rock,
vocal melodies reminiscent of bygone prog metallers
Anacrusis, exotic touches that recalled Dead Can Dance,
and the stated influences of Rush, Sonic Youth, and
Killing Joke—all packaged tightly within absurdly brutal
death metal. Akercocke appears in photo shoots and live
shows dressed to the nines in suits and formal attire,
debunking stereotypes about satanic bands and the
musicians playing in them, and their music matches their
sartorial sophistication and class.
Alchemist
Early Alchemist is truly strange. In 1993, drummer
Rodney Holder named their two biggest influences as
Pink Floyd and Autopsy, and rightfully the Jar of
Kingdom debut was wildly idiosyncratic. Underneath the
crush of primal death metal—muddy-as-hell guitars with
unintelligible, garbled vocals—were curious guitar lines
that provided a sole melodic element, ringing above the
din with a loopy, silly elasticity. In their own words, the
Eastern modalities and peculiar bounce fell somewhere
between Richie Blackmore and surf guitarist Dick Dale.
Lunasphere brought forth Adam Agius’s screaming
vocals—frightening in their piercing hysteria—and a
tribal percussive element in some of the rhythms.
Alchemist’s cornucopia of sound is best represented on
third album Spiritech (1997), particularly “Chinese
Whispers.” With a driving momentum that lurches along
like a mid-paced Fear Factory and a chorus with Agius’s
banshee screeching, the middle section firmly nods to
heroes Pink Floyd—and probably hints of Rainbow and
Led Zeppelin. After Spiritech they released the Eve of
the War EP, dramatically reworking the lead track from
Jeff Wayne’s War of the Worlds—a 1978 rock opera
based on the H.G. Wells novel and featuring members of
Moody Blues, Thin Lizzy, and Manfred Mann’s Earth
Band. Fourth album Organasm saw Alchemist
integrating their eccentricities deeper into aggressive
rhythms. The three-part “Evolution Trilogy” brought the
melting pot of their past into tighter focus. Still spacey
and hypnotic, if lacking diversity, Austral Alien (2003)
and Tripsis (2007) had a monochrome industrial quality.
Based in Australia, Alchemist has had problems touring
the rest of the world, but no one else in the world sounds
quite like them.
Anathema
Debate rages whether Anathema are truly progressive
metal. Their most progressive material is nothing like
metal, closer to modern rock/post-prog like Radiohead,
Muse, and Porcupine Tree, with Nick Drake added for
good measure. Their 1995 release, The Silent Enigma,
saw influences from Celtic Frost’s strangest period
seeping in. On follow-up Eternity, rife with Floydian
melancholy, they left behind their death/doom past
entirely. The 1999 album Judgement places them in the
arena of masterful progressive metal. No matter what
they’re called or wherever people want to place them,
they are probably one of the most undervalued bands on
the planet. The year 2010 brought a follow-up to 2003’s
A Natural Disaster, entitled We’re Here Because We’re
Here. Signed to Kscope, also home to “post-prog” acts
No-Man and the Pineapple Thief, Anathema may have
found its perfect partner, a company capable of steering
We’re Here Because We’re Here to the audience that will
appreciate it most.
Calhoun Conquer
This Swiss band shared similarities to Sweden’s Midas
Touch. While not a band anyone could truly love, fans of
Voivod, Disharmonic Orchestra, and Mekong Delta can
at least appreciate them. Calhoun Conquer were just
lackluster. While attempting strange and technical thrash,
poor vocals and a garagey feel let their material down.
The 1987 And Now You’re Gone EP and the 1989 Lost in
Oneself LP/CD are all they left behind. Drummer Peter
Haas was a member of Mekong Delta on Kaleidoscope,
Visions Fugitives, and Pictures at an Exhibition albums.
He also landed in Krokus for a while.
Carnival in Coal
This French duo came to notoriety via their second
album, 1999’s French Cancan, which contained
confounding covers of songs by Pantera, Genesis, Gerry
Rafferty, Morbid Angel, Michael Sembello, and Ozzy
Osbourne, which completely overshadowed the two
original tracks. C.I.C. is perhaps the only band to ever
cover a Supuration song (“1308.JP.08”), on 2001’s Fear
Not album. Caribbean music, goregrind, disco, and good
old heavy metal—they were bound to fail. Carnival in
Coal dissolved in 2007 after four admirably absurd
albums.
Paul Chain
Italian guitarist Paul Chain found cult adoration via
Death SS, whose horror metal dates back to the late ’70s.
He fled to embark on an ambitious solo career lasting
from 1984 to 2003—then officially changed his identity
to Paul Cat and burrowed to deep underground obscurity.
Intriguing and reclusive, Chain has not seen the vast
majority of his many albums released outside Italy. He
has almost nothing in common with his country’s prolific
’70s prog rock wave or the prog metal output of later
decades. He never really wrote lyrics; many of his
releases state that “the language used by Paul Chain does
not exist. It’s purely phonetic.” Chain’s albums were
wildly diverse, from old-school doom metal (In the
Darkness) and free-form experimentation (Whited
Sepulchres) to spacey jams like the Hawkwind-ish Sign
from Space and Cosmic Wind. Sometimes he was
maddeningly dull—for example, 1990’s double-length
Opera Decima and 1993’s useless In Concert—yet just
as often Chain offered majestic, convincing left-field
experimental doom as on Alkahest (1995) and Park of
Reason (2002).
Dark Quarterer
These unprolific Italians managed only five obscure
albums since 1987, playing epic progressive heavy metal
as favored by U.S. bands Manilla Road and Cirith
Ungol. After a series of albums with a ’70s hard
rock/prog aesthetic, they finally flourished with full-on
prog metal—emphasis on the “prog”—during 2008’s
Symbols. Only the overbearing accent of vocalist Gianni
Nepi keeps them from reaching a wider audience.
Deathspell Omega
The members of this French band never reveal
themselves in pictures, nor do they list performance
credits. Mysterious from the beginning, they started with
an orthodox black metal sound derived from early-’90s
Norway. When they released Si Monumentum
Circumspice, Requires in 2004, anyone already familiar
with D.O. was surprised. Their sound had turned
impossibly thick, with great dissonance and more
complex, unusual structures. Next came Kénôse, a three-
song cluster of carefully orchestrated, intellectual black
metal with a torrential undertow aligned with total death.
With Fas – Ite, Maledicti, in Ignem Aeternum in 2007,
Deathspell Omega ceased making music to be enjoyed. It
must be endured—suffered through. Riffs—incredibly
dense, protracted phrases—hardly ever repeat. The music
is hallucinatory, otherworldly, and unpretentiously
highbrow. Each release pushes several kilometers further
than the previous benchmark. Although a line runs back
to their avant-metal forebears in Norway, Deathspell
Omega is something else entirely, and truly progressive.
Egoist
Anyone who listened to Meshuggah in the mid-’90s and
imagined how radically the band might evolve over the
years is probably disappointed by now. That’s where
Polish one-man-band Egoist comes in. With ultra-thick
guitar tones and odd machinelike rhythmic churning,
Egoist builds the Meshuggah foundation into one of the
strangest structures ever. The quirky lyrics/vocals of
Talking Heads, post-modernism of Ulver, and bleep-
bloop messes of Kid A–era Radiohead run around the
eight confounding tracks of Ultra-Selfish Revolution
(2009), the second (but first official) Egoist album.
Everything is played by Stanisław Wołonciej, except two
guitar solos by Pestilence’s Patrick Mameli. Wołonciej is
also in progressive acts Newbreed and Dream System.
Forgotten Silence
Obtuse. Angular. Abstract. Whether they’re enjoyable or
not is another story. The Czech Republic’s Forgotten
Silence began with strange death metal and expanded to
other stranger areas. Since their 1994 debut, they have
progressed wildly over five full-length albums, each as
obscure and difficult to obtain as the next. In 2006 they
turned a sharp corner with Kro Ni Ka, fully embracing
the attitude and aesthetics of ’70s prog/jazz rock,
wrapped in a modern Porcupine Tree–esque CD package
(shortest song: “Mezzocaine,” at 17:57). Forgotten
Silence’s genre has been called “experimental
progressive death metal/folk/jazz,” but trying to pin them
down with absurd genre hybrids is useless. The recent
track “Tumulus” suggests a return to heavier, more
forbidding areas.
Hammers of Misfortune
A bright hope for truly progressive metal in the 2010s—
even if the sea change of 2008’s Fields/Church of Broken
Glass lost the band more fans than it gained. This band
relentlessly pushes forward, with a singular vision and a
perennially unhip aesthetic. Hammers of Misfortune are
pastoral compared to the more cosmic, futuristic vibe of
so many other modern prog metal bands. They look back
to heroes such as Thin Lizzy and Pink Floyd—plus
apparently Kansas, judging by new material—adding
traditional metal shapes, organic recording methods, a
variety of vocal approaches, and unusual topics. The
result is a special and rare breed of modern metal band.
Led by guitarist John Cobbett, Hammers of Misfortune
began with a harsher sound on 2001 debut The Bastard,
a three-act, fourteen-song conceptual piece. Next was
The August Engine (2003), which left extreme vocals
behind and showed defiantly progressive epic metal with
great songwriting chops. The Locust Years (2006) got
even more adventurous, and after that a major lineup
alteration found the band reinventing again. Double-
album release Fields/Church of Broken Glass (2008)
might stand as Hammers’ “transitional” album. Cobbett
has a unique creative mind. As he told Pitchfork:
“‘Always Looking Down’ has a lot to do with poverty,
homelessness, drugs, paranoia, crime, despair, and all
that stuff. I like the idea of Ayn Rand as a homeless
tweaker, invoking objectivist doctrine as she’s breaking
into your car.”
Heart of Cygnus
Rush-inspired name? Nylon-string acoustic guitars? Epic
landscapes on album art? Check to all. It’s hard not to
like this young Los Angeles band that invokes Blue
Öyster Cult, NWOBHM, Mercyful Fate, and Megadeth.
They sound like companions to fellow Californians
Hammers of Misfortune. Heart of Cygnus could make
something uncool very fashionable, for better or worse.
Other influences include Pink Floyd, Queen, Kansas,
King’s X, Dio, Metallica, and Queensrÿche. More power
to them.
Hieronymus Bosch
The Russians, sadly defunct as of 2010, nail the 1993-era
sound of Obliveon’s Nemesis and Loudblast’s Sublime
Dementia—yet they claim to have never heard those
albums. Perhaps it’s a matter of shared influences, as
guitarist Vladimir Leiviman holds up Voivod, Coroner,
Destruction, Mekong Delta, Death, and Pestilence as
guiding lights. They are more than thrash/death—their
progressive metal is thick with modern production, and
inspired by Fates Warning, Sieges Even, and Rush.
Incredible performances from each member and a sharp,
economical songwriting approach, despite the
complications of their chosen musical path, made
Hieronymus Bosch a band with clear influences that still
followed a distinctive path.
Into Eternity
This Canadian band began as a modern, more aggressive
answer to the Big Three—or perhaps a more progressive
version of the melodi-death blazed by In Flames and
Dark Tranquillity. Marked by the guitar-hero leader Tim
Roth and bright, infectious vocals, their first several
albums carved a niche, but Into Eternity’s patented sound
(derived from various other subgenres) has already been
co-opted by a zillion newer melodi-death bands looking
to expand their range and popularity.
Juggernaut
From Texas, the state that spawned Watchtower and Ray
Alder, Juggernaut released two quirky albums of semi-
technical thrash in the ’80s and then disappeared. The
second album, Trouble Within, features prominent bass
by main writer Scott Womack, a completely tweaked
guitar tone, and love-’em-or-hate-’em vocals by the late
Steve Cooper, a vet of cult Texas band S.A. Slayer.
Juggernaut are probably most noteworthy for introducing
metal fans to octopus-armed drum prodigy Bobby
Jarzombek (brother of Spastic Ink/Blotted
Science/Watchtower guitarist Ron), who went on to play
with Riot, Spastic Ink, Halford, Iced Earth, Fates
Warning, and others.
Kekal
Kekal couldn’t be more iconoclastic. From Indonesia,
the band began releasing demos in 1995 with a black
metal sound but a Christian viewpoint (a subgenre
dubbed “un-black” metal). By 2005’s Acidity, they were
incorporating prog rock, electronica, indie rock, psych
rock, and trip-hop. They had the good taste to cover
Voivod’s “The Prow,” and could have just as easily
originated in Norway, for all their post–black
metal/avant-garde aspirations. Unfortunately, they called
it quits in 2009.
Orphaned Land
Initially a doom/death hybrid, Israel’s Orphaned Land
quickly developed an intensely melodic character with
female singing, fluid leads, and exotic instrumentation.
Folk and Middle Eastern influences saturated 2004’s
ambitious Mabool. Their 2009 album, The Never Ending
Way of ORwarriOR, was the first metal album Porcupine
Tree’s Steven Wilson produced after completing three
albums with Opeth.
OSI
OSI (or Office of Strategic Intelligence) play chilled,
emotional music, spotted by a few heavier outbursts.
With an understated vocal approach, simple rhythm-
based ideas, samples, and stacks of keyboard/synth
layers, metal is only a small part of their modus
operandi. Each OSI album unfolds slowly, making for
patient, introspective listening. The founders are well-
respected: Jim Matheos of Fates Warning, and Kevin
Moore, the original Dream Theater keyboardist. Moore
has done similar material with his own Chroma Key.
And OSI knows how to pick supporting guest musicians.
They’ve called on Mike Portnoy (Dream Theater), Sean
Malone (Cynic, Gordian Knot), Joey Vera (Fates
Warning), Steven Wilson (Porcupine Tree), Gavin
Harrison (Porcupine Tree, King Crimson), Mikael
Åkerfeldt (Opeth), and Tim Bowness (No-Man).
Phlebotomized
This Dutch septet was one of the first progressive/avant-
garde bands to emerge from the European death metal
scene. With prominent keyboard and violins, as well as
constantly shifting, unpredictable dynamics and
unorthodox (or perhaps inexperienced) songwriting, they
stood out in the crowded ’90s European underground.
Unfortunately, their rickety productions never did the
band justice. Second album Skycontact (1997) includes
the song “I Lost My Cookies at the Disco,” which, rather
unbelievably, has nothing to do with Cookie Monster’s
own “Me Lost Me Cookie at the Disco.”
Threshold
Early followers of the Big Three, Threshold is very
melodic, featuring lots of keyboards, multifaceted
arrangements, and background harmony vocals. Tracks
range from long epics to short melodic rock songs. The
band shares common traits with the ’80s neo-prog
movement of their U.K. home, and overall they have
more in common with old-school prog rock than most
modern Progressive metal bands. Members have played
with Arjen Luccasen’s Ayreon and Rick Wakeman,
among others. Their unassuming name was inspired by
Moody Blues album On the Threshold of a Dream.
Ufych Sormeer
Appropriately, French band Ufych Sormeer are based on
Holy Records, longtime supporters of some of the
quirkiest and most experimental metal acts on the planet.
With cartoony vocal melodies, whistling, spacey power
metal riffs, lighthearted atmosphere, and a complexity
that veers into cluttered chaos, they are as likable as they
are baffling. Good luck if you attempt to tackle their
weirdness.
Urizen
Almost no country with any kind of metal population has
gone untouched by the influence of Norway’s post–black
metal avant-garde, and Urizen are one of America’s
prime examples. These Texans resemble everything from
Arcturus and Solefald to the even weirder electronic-
based material by Ulver and Manes. With the Universe
EP they began incorporating Nintendo and computer-
game sounds, moving their material away from
Norwegian influence and into something inhabiting a
Faith No More or later Thought Industry area. Or, if a
more modern comparison is needed, maybe “Horse the
Band but weirder” would be apt. And they have played
Six Flags over Texas. Curiously—and perhaps
unsurprisingly, considering what a risky investment any
super-original band can be—they found themselves
unsigned as of 2010.
Vanden Plas
These Germans somehow escaped a wider focus in
chapter 13, but they epitomize the Big Three–derived
Progressive metal sound and attitude. They first surfaced
with very slick haircuts for 1986 single “Raining in my
Heart,” which had a pomp/AOR tone. After eight years,
their first album surfaced, and Colour Temple presented
a much broader scope than the early single. Their
approach fit in nicely with the Progressive metal
zeitgeist of the mid-’90s, with plenty of melody and
bombast packed inside dramatic seven-minute songs.
They have worked steadily to expand and improve their
style, with later albums Beyond Daylight and Christ 0
drawing acclaim from the Progressive metal audience.
Somewhere between Symphony X and Dream Theater,
they were an early mover in the ’90s blitz that defined
the Progressive metal style. Vanden Plas ducked out of
2001’s ProgPower USA festival, paranoid—as many
were—about flying so shortly after the 9/11 attacks.
They finally made it to U.S. shores for the 2003
installment of the festival, where they shared the stage
with Nightwish, Evergrey, Symphony X, and
Redemption, among others.
While Heaven Wept
Though lacking the higher profile of Opeth’s Mikael
Åkerfeldt, While Heaven Wept leader Tom Phillips has
been just as vocal in his love for ’70s-era prog rock.
WHW’s sound rests firmly in epic doom metal, with a
decidedly progressive attitude. Heavily inspired by
Candlemass, Solitude Aeturnus, and Fates Warning,
Phillips also credits prog, classical, and new age bands
like Rainbow, Genesis, Marillion, Grobschnitt, Novalis,
Devil Doll, Bach, Beethoven, Henryk Górecki, Dead
Can Dance, Vangelis, and Kitaro, to name a few. Of
Empires Forlorn (2003) featured a reworked cover of
German band Jane’s “Voice in the Wind.” On 2009’s Vast
Oceans Lachrymose, Phillips took care to cite an
enduring influence: “Although ‘To Wander the Void’ is
as deeply personal as all WHW compositions, it is also
something of a tribute to Fates Warning—one of our
earliest influences, whose rich musical legacy still
continues to inspire us to this day.” Despite their deep
well of inspirations, While Heaven Wept produce music
that is far from derivative, a must-hear for all fans of
dark progressive metal.
Windham Hell
Obviously a sinister spin on popular new age record
label Windham Hill, this band’s moniker incorporates the
surname of guitarist Leland Windham. In spirit, this band
is a kind of precursor to the even more adventurous
bands birthed in Washington in the ’90s, such as
Agalloch and Sculptured. Windham Hell released three
albums of guitar-centric metal with a very heavy
classical influence. Although their albums are
remarkable to some degree, they are noteworthy for
beating Fates Warning, Edge of Sanity, and Green
Carnation to the one-song-album idea with 1988’s fifty-
four-minute single-song demo, Do Not Fear for Hell Is
Here.
APPENDIX B:
Prime Numbers—
50 Recommended
Progressive
Metal Albums
Angra – Holy Land (1996)
Arcturus – La Masquerade Infernale (1997)
Atheist – Unquestionable Presence (1992)
Ayreon – Into the Electric Castle (1998)
Believer – Dimensions (1993)
Black Sabbath – Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (1973)
Celtic Frost – Into the Pandemonium (1987)
Coroner – Mental Vortex (1991)
Crimson Glory – Transcendence (1988)
Cynic – Focus (1993)
Cynic – Traced In Air (2008)
Death – Human (1991)
Devin Townsend – Terria (2001)
Disharmonic Orchestra – Pleasuredome (1993)
Dream Theater – Images and Words (1992)
Dream Theater – Awake (1994)
Dream Theater – Octavarium (2005)
Enslaved – Monumension (2001)
Evergrey – Solitude • Dominance • Tragedy (1999)
Fates Warning – Awaken the Guardian (1986)
Fates Warning – Perfect Symmetry (1989)
Hammers of Misfortune – The Locust Years (2006)
In the Woods – Omnio (1997)
Iron Maiden – Seventh Son of a Seventh Son (1988)
Maudlin of the Well – Bath / Leaving Your Body Map
(2001)
Mayhem – Grand Declaration of War (2000)
Meshuggah – Destroy Erase Improve (1995)
Mind Over Four – The Goddess (1990)
Obliveon – Nemesis (1993)
Opeth – Morningrise (1996)
Opeth – Still Life (1999)
Pain of Salvation – One Hour by the Concrete Lake
(1998)
Pain of Salvation – Be (2004)
Pan-Thy-Monium – Khaooohs (1993)
Psychotic Waltz – Into the Everflow (1993)
Queensrÿche – Rage for Order (1986)
Queensrÿche – Operation: Mindcrime (1988)
Rush – 2112 (1976)
Rush – A Farewell to Kings (1977)
Rush – Moving Pictures (1981)
Sigh – Hail Horror Hail (1997)
Spiral Architect – A Sceptic’s Universe (2000)
Thought Industry – Mods Carve the Pig: Assassins,
Toads and God’s Flesh (1993)
Vauxdvihl – To Dimension Logic (1994)
Voivod – Dimension Hatröss (1988)
Voivod – Nothingface (1989)
Voivod – Angel Rat (1991)
Watchtower – Energetic Disassembly (1985)
Watchtower – Control and Resistance (1989)
Zero Hour – The Towers of Avarice (2001)
APPENDIX C:
Curious Collisions—
Prog Covers Prog
“Shadow of Death” – Extol, 2001 (original by Believer,
1989)
“Sorrows of the Moon” – Therion, 1995 (original by
Celtic Frost, 1987)
“Circle of the Tyrants” – Opeth, 1996 (original by Celtic
Frost, 1986)
“Arc-Lite” – Canvas Solaris, 2007 (original by Coroner,
1988)
“Paralized, Mesmerized” – Sceptic, 2005 (original by
Coroner, 1993)
“How Could I” – Aletheian, 2008 (original by Cynic,
1993)
“Soldier of Fortune” – Opeth, 2007 (original by Deep
Purple, 1974)
“Prelude to Ruin” – Spiral Architect, 2000 (original by
Fates Warning, 1986)
“The Knife” – Dark Empire, 2008 (original by Genesis,
1970)
“Dancing on a Volcano” – Mekong Delta, 1992 (original
by Genesis, 1976)
“Mama” – Angra, 2002 (original by Genesis, 1983)
“Mama” – Carnival in Coal, 1999 (original by Genesis,
1983)
“Levitation” – Amorphis, 1996 (original by Hawkwind,
1980)
“Remember Tomorrow” – Opeth, 1998 (original by Iron
Maiden, 1980)
“Cross-Eyed Mary” – Iron Maiden, 1983 (original by
Jethro Tull, 1970)
“King of Twilight” – Iron Maiden, 1984 (original by
Nektar, 1972)
“Epitaph” – In the Woods, 2000 (original by King
Crimson, 1969)
“21st Century Schizoid Man” – Voivod, 1997 (original
by King Crimson, 1969)
“Cat Food” – Damn the Machine, 1993 (original by King
Crimson, 1970)
“One More Red Nightmare” – Realm, 1992 (original by
King Crimson, 1972)
“Arctic Crypt” – Sceptic, 2001 (original by Nocturnus,
1992)
“Multiple Beings” – Egoist, 2007 (original by Pestilence,
1993)
“See Emily Play” – 3, 2008 (original by Pink Floyd,
1966)
“Astronomy Domine” – Voivod, 1989 (original by Pink
Floyd, 1967)
“Let There Be More Light” – In the Woods, 1998
(original by Pink Floyd, 1968)
“Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun” – OSI, 2003
(original by Pink Floyd, 1968)
“The Nile Song” – Voivod, 1993 (original by Pink Floyd,
1969)
“When You’re In” – Tiamat, 1994 (original by Pink
Floyd, 1972)
“Comfortably Numb” – Queensrÿche, 2004 (original by
Pink Floyd, 1978)
“Closer to the Heart” – Fates Warning, 1996 (original by
Rush, 1977)
“Natural Science” – Devin Townsend, 1996 (original by
Rush, 1980)
“YYZ” – Atheist, 2010 (original by Rush, 1981)
“Red Barchetta” – Thought Industry (original by Rush,
1981)
“Fly to the Rainbow” – Therion, 1997 (original by
Scorpions, 1974)
“Yellow Raven” – Pain of Salvation, 2009 (original by
Scorpions, 1976)
“1308.JP.08” – Carnival in Coal, 2001 (original by
Supuration, 1993)
“Rainbow Demon” – Vintersorg, 2000 (original by Uriah
Heep, 1972)
“Brain Scan” – Martyr, 2006 (original by Voivod, 1988)
“The Prow” – Kekal, 2005 (original by Voivod, 1991)
(Note: Dream Theater have covered so many other prog
bands’ songs—even entire albums—their covers are
excluded from this list due to space limitations.)
THANKS
Super-massive gratitude and respect to my cigar-
chomping editor in the big city, Ian Christe, who for
years encouraged me to write what eventually became
this book—thanks for the opportunity, your tolerance of
my mini-panics, and your sage advice throughout.
Maybe it’s a cliché, but “I couldn’t have done this
without you” is more than appropriate here. I also extend
polyrhythmic hails in 13/8 to Hunter Ginn, for his
enthusiasm, criticism, suggestions, insight, and, above
all, friendship. Equal helpings of gratitude go to Michel
Langevin, Steven Wilson, and Polly Watson for
providing depth, detail, talent, and that most valuable of
currencies, time.