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Joined: March 04 2008
Location: Retirement Home
Status: Offline
Points: 3658
Topic: Flamborough Head (May 2010) Posted: May 30 2010 at 06:04
Flamborough Head is a band from Holland which has steady been building up a pretty huge following during the last ten years. Their new album was well received too. I got in touch with them for their story. Edo Spanninga answered my questions.
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What
is Flamborough Head up to these days ?
Well,
the same as all the previous years; writing, rehearsing, recording,
gigging. Not as a daily job but beside all our jobs. Now we are
focusing on the line up of ProgFarm, our annual progressive rock
festival, which we organize as a band for nearly 15 years now.
The
next part of the interview is a “this is your life” part where I
ask you some more or less intelligent questions about your music and
your albums.
When,
where and by whom was Flamborough Head formed ? Why did you choose
the name of this sea cliff in Yorkshire, England ?
In
the early nineties Flamborough Head was formed in the northern part
of The Netherlands by Edo Spanninga (keyboard player) and Koen Roozen
(drums). Marcel Derix joined quite soon. These three musicians are
the oldest members of the band. Next year we hope to celebrate the
20th anniversary of Flamborough Head, we’re getting
(b)old No special reason for the
name Flamborough Head. I liked the spot (in England) and the name,
there is no more to it.
How
was your formative years and who was your musical inspirations ?
As
we all grew up in the seventies we were influenced by bands like
Genesis, Yes, King Crimson and Camel. The usual list. Marcel is more
into bands with a harder edge.
How
did you get your record deal with Cyclops ?
The
usual way in those days. We recorded a cassette demo and sent it to
several companies hoping one of them was interested. Cyclops
responded in a positive way and since then we have been signed to
Cyclops.
Please
tell us more about your debut album Unspoken Whisper from 1998.
Some
of the tracks we recorded earlier on our demo Bridge To The
Promised Land ended up on our first album which we recorded in a
proper studio. In the nineties the home recording possibilities were
not as sophisticated as nowadays. It was our first real studio effort
which brought us an award as Best New Band by the readers of
the British magazine Wondrous Stories.
Please
tell us more about your second album Defining The Legacy from 2000.
In
a way it’s a concept album about the bad relation between a father
and a son. All lyrics relate to this concept. It was more or less a
biographical album: all lyrics were written by the lead-vocalist who
described his upbringing. Because of the theme there is a more
agressive edge to this album, different from its predecessor. After
this album Andre Cents, the guitar player, decided that he had to
leave the band, due to musical differences. Siebe Rein Schaaf, lead
vocalist and keyboard player, also decided to leave because he wanted
to spend more time with his family.
Please
tell us more about your demo album Bridge to the Promised Land from
2000. Is this strictly limited 500 x album the tape from 1994 ?
Yes.
Malcolm Parker of Cyclops suggested to re-release the demo album
Bridge To The Promised Land on his Cyclub-label, a
sub-division of Cyclops specialized in limited editions. So Malcolm
did one pressing of 500 copies in 2000. We were surprised by this
because we never intended to release this recording as a normal
cd-release. It was recorded on limited equipment in our rehearsal
studio. Having said this, even nowadays we get orders for this sold
out release.
Please
tell us more about your third album One for the Crow from 2002.
After
the departure of our guitar player and lead vocalist, Margriet
Boomsma (vocals, flute & recorders) and Eddie Mulder (guitars &
backing vocals) joined Flamborough Head. This gave a slight change of
sound: more folky and mellow and also a change from the
neo-progressive sound towards a more retro seventies prog-sound. With
this new line up we recorded the album One For The Crow.
Margriet wrote all the lyrics for this cd and all albums to come.
Please
tell us more about your fourth album Tales Of Imperfection from 2005.
Tales
Of Imperfections is a logical sequence to One For The Crow,
same line up and same sound. It was the first album we recorded
ourselves using our newly bought equipment. All our album covers were
painted by Theo Spaay, a Dutch artist. With each new album, he paints
a new cover, getting his inspiration from the lyrics.
Your
most recent album Looking For John Maddock was unleashed on us in
2009. Please tell us more about this album. Please tell us more about
the album title and the lyrical topic.
Looking
For John Maddock is a bit of a strange album for us. Eddie Mulder
felt it was time to move on. We decided to record the new songs we
had already written and these ended up on Looking For John
Maddock. During the recording sessions we were looking for a new
guitarist while Eddie recorded his last guitar tracks for Flamborough
Head. So in a way this album is not a proper scheduled album but some
kind of farewell to Eddie. About the title. Margriet inherited a
collection of porcelain from her grandfather which was made by the
English pottery firm John Maddock. She started collecting these items
and since then she has been looking for John Maddock. She used the
theme “Looking for John Maddock” as a metaphor for searching for
the things in live you don’t have and the feeling that you cannot
be yourself and incompleteness and satisfaction. The lyrics of the
title song are based on these topics.
Your
live album Live In Budapest was released in 2008. Please tell us more
about this live album.
After
four studio albums we felt it was time to release a live album. Our
friends of the Rumanian band Yesterdays invited us to come over to
Budapest to gig with them on the A38. A club on a boat moored in the
Danube. We had the chance to record our gig and Cyclops was
interested in releasing it. We had a tremendous time in Budapest and
hopefully you can hear this on the album.
What
is the lyrical topics you mostly cover in your songs ?
As
I said, Margriet writes our lyrics. She writes about daily life,
about love and friendship, what it means to grow older, what to
expect from life and which choices you can make yourself, to make
things better. So, not the normal prog lyrics with all sorts of
hobbits around.
What
is your experiences with the music/record industry ?
Not
much. We all do this as a hobby besides our daily jobs. We do not
have to make a living out of Flamborough Head, which makes it all
very easy. In prog there is no money, no audience and because of all
the downloading, the sales are very poor. Prog is a alive because of
all the enthusiasts who are releasing albums, organizing festivals
and gigs and publishing magazines and websites in their spare time.
Not as an industry but out of love for a beloved genre. We feel this
is ok for us.
You
played Baja Prog in 2005. How was that experience ?
Unfortunately
Baja stopped organizing their annual festival in Mexico. We gigged
there in 2006 and we had a marvelous time. It was one of the
highlights of Flamborough Head. Baja was an important festival, one
of the major festivals in the scene. It was an honor to be invited
and to be part of it.
Fortunately
Baja was not our only highlight. We were lucky to gig at several
major foreign festivals so far. We gigged in Holland, Belgium,
France, Italy, England, Rumania, Hungary, Mexico, Germany and Poland
and all these gigs were a pleasure. We met all sorts of kind people
and we made a lot of friends throughout the years.
I
first thought your band was a folk rock band due to your name when I
bought the Defining The Legacy album long before I even knew about
ProgArchives and it's excellent record reviews database. I was both
pretty surprised and glad to discover that it was a symphonic
neo-prog album instead. So no harm whatsoever. Symphonic prog is the
description I would use on your music. But how would you describe
your music ?
It’s
so difficult to describe our music. The first two albums are neo-prog
but the last three albums are symphonic prog as you suggest. Margriet
her female vocals and flute & recorders give the sound of
Flamborough Head some folky hints. But we are not a standard folk
rock band. On the website we use this quote from a review:
"Flamborough Head. Seventies influenced melodic progressive rock
music; highly recommended to all the fans of real symphonic retro
prog with a taste of folk (and even some neo-prog:-). There
is happening a lot in a musical way, you never get bored."
Is
there anything on your albums and/or in your career you regret ?
Can’t
think of any. We are happy with the career of Flamborough Head and
are proud of all our achievements.
In
my ears, Flamborough Head sounds more like a British band than a
Dutch band. Do you regard yourself a member of any scene or does
Flamborough Head transcend any scenes or countries ?
All
Dutch bands are influenced by British bands, they set the high
standard in (prog) rock music. We do not intend to sound British but
perhaps we do. Of course we regard ourselves a member of the prog
scene. We like this type of music and that’s where we belong.
You
are from Friesland, a province in the north of Holland with it's own
language and identity. Friesland is perhaps most known for the black
and white cattle. They are excellent cows. How is life in Friesland
and why is this area so special ?
It’s
a nice and beautiful province to live in although no one in the band
speaks the Frisian language. In fact only Margriet was born in
Friesland. We all live here by coincidence. No nationalistic feelings
in Flamborough Head I’m afraid.
I
guess Flamborough Head does not fill every hour of your lives. What
else are the band members up to ?
Gert
is a computer-programmer, Marcel is a community worker and the rest
of the band are teachers.
What
is the plans for Flamborough Head this year and in the future ?
This
year we recorded a track for the Purgatorio concept album project of
the Finnish Colossus magazine (released by Musea) and we gigged at
Cluj-Napoca in Rumania. Now we are writing new material for a new
album we hope to release next spring. Apart from the Colossus
projects this will be the first album with our new guitar player Gert
Polkerman. I am sure he will give the band a new and fresh direction.
In the meantime we are also focusing on the organization of our
annual festival ProgFarm which Flamborough Head is organizing on
every first Saturday of November since 1997. In July we will gig in
Germany. This autumn we will do some gigs in Holland. Later this year
we will participate in two prog-samplers with one new song and a
cover.
Anything
you want to add to this interview ?
No,
I just want to say thanks for showing interest in Flamborough Head
and for giving the opportunity to give some information on our band.
Good luck with all your musical activities.
A big thank to Edo and Flamborough Head.
Their PA profile is here and their homepage is here.
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