Steven Wilson, the man behind Porcupine Tree, the remasters
of the Prog gems of the golden-era of the 1970s, and as a solo artist, has come
a long way from his first two albums (Insurgentes and Grace for Drowning) and
on pet projects including the eerie and haunting beauty with Opeth’s Mikael
Akerfeldt on Storm Corrosion, Blackfield with Aviv Geffen, and No-Man with Tim
Bowness to name a few. This time the Prince of Progressive Rock is back in
action this year with his follow up to Grace for Drowning with The Raven That
Refused to Sing (And Other Stories).
With help from engineer Alan Parsons, who’s known for his
work on Pink Floyd 1973 magnum opus, Dark Side of the Moon, The Beatles Abbey Road,
and his band, The Alan Parsons Project, is his way out of retirement to come
back and work with Wilson himself and track by track, it is an absolute
stunning beauty of storytelling and journeys that you will embark on from the
moment you put it on from start to finish.
Starting the album off is the 12-minute epic, Luminol, which was
performed on the live box set, Get All You Deserve, is an eruptive
rollercoaster ride that starts the album off with a powerful big bang.
Featuring thunderous bass and drum work done by Nick Beggs
and Marco Minnemann along with a funky Rhodes-like work by Adam Holzman that
reminisces Herbie Hancock and Jan Hammer in the 1970s for the first five
minutes of the composition before it becomes a moody atmosphere that has a mellowing
touch as Holzman does this Monk-like concerto on the piano while Steven layers
the ground with his guitar and the usage of Robert Fripp’s MKII Mellotron with some wonderful harmonizing vocalization. Most of the time, it sounds
like something that was left off the sessions for King Crimson’s Lizard album.
Drive Home, is a calm and relaxing orchestral piece. Lush,
Bliss, and Delicate, it has these elements of Folk, Jazz, and the lukewarm
crisp sounds of the acoustic guitar, Wilson’s mellowing voice sets the tone for
the song as he and Adam sings the line, “You
need to clear away all the jetsam in your brain/And face the truth/Well love
can make amends/While the darkness always ends, you’re still alone/So drive
home.” What the line really means is, all the past and present that you’ve
encountered, you have to face it and you’re still an outsider, so the best
thing to do is to drive home to forget about what happened in your childhood
and focus on the future.
Theo Travis and Guthrie Govan play the melody between the
Sax and Guitar before Govan does this wonderful jazzy guitar solo as Theo helps
him out to make it sound very dreamy and soothing. So, everything becomes a darker and
terrifying nightmare in which is where you drink with the devil himself as The
Holy Drinker. The title sounds like a Hammer Horror film, but the 10-minute
epic is the real kicker. Starting off with Adam’s Fender Rhodes into haunting
territories along with some guitar lines that Guthrie does and goes into
touches of the Jazz Fusion of The Mahavishnu Orchestra and Manfred Mann’s
Chapter Three, it is an out of this
world experience with thunderous results.
And then, the last 3-minutes of the song, becomes a
nightmarish ambient atmosphere before it goes into this homage of the shrieking
roaring sound of the Moog and guitar in the styles of early Van Der Graaf
Generator. The Pin Drop in which it deals with the loss of a love one through
the eye of the husband’s only companion, his wife, has a lot of tension and
goes through these emotional and dynamic structures while the Acid Folk turned nightmarish
surroundings of The Watchmaker, goes through various movements.
At the first three minutes, it starts off with an acoustic
guitar classical fingerpicking beauty along with flute and mellotron setting on
what is coming about into a touch of Premiata Forneria Marconi’s Storia Di Un
Minuto and Agitation Free’s Haunted Island that will have your jaws dropped on
what the band will do next. And then, in comes the closing title track.
Beautiful piano chords, experimenting atmosphere, impressive vocals from
Wilson, string quartets and the guitars setting the story that has this Edgar
Allen Poe background, there are touches of the OK Computer-era of Radiohead in
the story-complex that has an uplifting transcendent to it.
The Raven That Refused to Sing is truly a crowning achievement
and Steven Wilson is not even quitting, he’s a storyteller and there’s more for
where it came from. And who knows which stories he will have up his sleeves in
the near future.
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