Steve Cochrane is a Canadian artist who went from New Age to prog over the course of three albums. His latest, a mixture of Genesis, Mike Oldfield, Camel, Anthony Phillips and Yes, is of particular interest to progsters. During the 80's, he spent five years working on an album based on the work of writer Ayn Rand; however, record companies balked at supplying the necessary cash; so he shelved it, chose a cheaper route and began focusing on recording with keyboards. Steve Cochrane later released four albums and the rest is history.
I got in touch with Steve for his story.
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Please tell us more about your musical background and where you were
born.
I was born in Nova Scotia on Canada’s east coast and we moved to
Ontario before I was 2. I have no formal musical training at all, but
picked up a guitar at the age of 15 and tried to emulate what I was
hearing on favourite records. The most important influence at this
time was Rush, so I learned a lot of chording and solo techniques from
Alex Lifeson. I also tried to sing like Geddy Lee, but that turned out
to be a pointless excercise. As Rush progressed, I followed their
influences and latched onto the likes of Genesis, Yes and Renaissance.
I had also been playing in a handful of local bands, including one
called Endpieces, which was quite ambitious. We did only original
music and wrote together as a group, challenging each other and that
contributed greatly to my development.
Endpieces disbanded after a few years and I decided to take what I’d
learned and focus on writing and recording. It was the early 80’s and
here I was creating lengthy pieces with grandiose themes, totally
oblivious to popular trends and having no idea how poorly my creations
would be received by industry people. At this time, it wasn’t possible
to record the album I’d envisioned without label backing or loads of
money, so this project ended up on the shelf for a few years.
To start with; please give me your (long or brief) thoughts and
lowdowns on.......
Heroes Awaken from 1990
By the late 80’s , MIDI technology was in widespread use, while at
the same time, I liked a lot of the instrumental music I was hearing
at the time, which was getting a lot of radio airplay. I saw new
possibilities for what I could do as I explored this, and was soon
creating what would be my first album. It was an exciting time for me
as I was expanding my capabilities with keyboards, guitar synthesis
and drum programming. It was a golden age for me as a composer and
though some may characterize the album as ‘new age’, there's much more
to it than that. If you have an appreciation for composition and
arrangement with good use of themes and motifs, there’s much to enjoy
on the album.
To See It Made Real from 1995
This begins, quite literally, where the first album ends. The arpeggio
that fades out at the end of ‘A Place to Gather Strength’ fades in
again at the beginning of ‘Reason Is the Rising Sun’. There’s a lot of
growth on this album. Technology had advanced to make audio recording
alongside MIDI more realistic for the home recordist, so I took
advantage of that to make something a little more organic. You’ll hear
a lot of guitar on this album, especially acoustic. I also made my
first appearance as a vocalist on the 11-minute title track.
The Purest of Designs from 1998
One day, I reached up to the shelf and brought down the project that
I’d been working on before Heroes Awaken. I now had the gear I needed
and the ability to see it through. Probably my proggiest record, and
despite the fact that the material was much older, I was now seeing it
as a logical continuation of the first two albums. As such, I wrote an
instrumental piece, a bit of a tour-de-force called ‘The Promise of
the Music’, which revisits themes from all three albums and serves to
tie them together as a trilogy.
The centerpiece is a 7-part, 27-minute suite called ‘Songs For
Spring’. Back in the dark days of the 80’s, I’d been told that it
would never be played on radio, but I’m happy to report that I’ve
received royalty cheques that have proven those folks wrong.
With Or Without from 2007
This project took me down a lot of different roads. After ‘Designs’,
I began working on another epic album, but various life challenges got
in the way and it bogged down after awhile. Like the previous album,
it ended up on the shelf for a few years. In the meantime, I’d been
taking my acoustic guitar into pubs in order to get some live
experience and to at least make some of my living from music. (I did a
pretty mean version of Yes’ ‘Roundabout’.) Precious little of my
recorded material translated well into a singer/guitarist format,
especially in a pub environment, but I did have other songs that did,
so it seemed to make sense that they should comprise my next album.
The idea was to finish it fairly quickly to have something to promote
and sell on a local level. But I soon got adventurous and the songs
transformed into something much grander. I’m extremely proud of the
album, though it veered far off it’s original intention.
What happened after the release of this album and what are you up to
now ?
When With Or Without was released, the skies opened up and the world
fell silent. Seriously though, at a time when attention spans have
shrunk, I have an album that is best appreciated as a whole and
without distractions. It does require a few listens and who has the
time for that?
I’ve since come back to the project that I started before With Or
Without and it’s all coming together quite nicely. The title is ‘La La
La: Variations On a Happy Song’ and it is exactly that. It’s an epic
spiritual journey comprised of continuous music with no pauses. Expect
to see the album in 2011.
How would you describe your music and which bands would you compare
your music with ?
I would describe my music as possessing a kind of epic grandeur,
balancing emotional/spiritual elements with intellectual - masculine
with feminine. To fully appreciate it requires patience and
attentiveness in order to understand the connections that exist
between songs or sections and to get the overall flow.
I’m hesitant to make comparisons, but I do recognize where certain
influences creep in. Rush, Genesis, Yes, Renaissance, Mike Oldfield -
I hear them all in various phrases and sometimes overlapping. Others
have made the above comparisons, but more specifically, my guitar
playing has been compared to Steve Howe, Steve Hackett and Alex
Lifeson. My singing has been likened to John Wetton, Ian Anderson and
occasionally Geddy Lee. Go figure.
How is your writing and creative processes ?
Painstakingly slow and laboured. I’m not the least bit prolific, as
it’s only once in a blue moon that I come up with an idea that I think
is worth pursuing. When I do have that idea, I explore it inside and
out, often in my head during everyday life rather than in my studio
surrounded by instruments. It’s not unusual for a theme variation to
play out mentally for days or weeks before being recorded. Overall
flow and structure are important to me, so I always try to stay
focussed on the whole even when I’m working out small details.
You have also contributed on Ken Baird's projects and other projects.
Please tell us more about this.
I met Ken in 1998 after both of us received airplay on a radio show
in Kentucky. ‘Designs’ was featured on the show, so the host sent me a
cassette of it. I was able to hear one of Ken’s tracks on the tape,
liked it a lot and discovered that he lived about a half hour from me.
We met and have been friends since, sharing advice as well as moral
support and occasionally performing on each other’s recordings. I’ve
made small contributions as a guitarist on each of Ken’s latest three
albums and he played a fair bit of the keyboards on With Or Without.
We’ve also played in each other’s live bands at various times in the
past.
I’ve also played guitar parts on albums by Kevin Richard (Inventing
Fire) and Mark Sarno (Dark Matter).
You wrote a concept album based on Ayn Rand which was shelved. Her
work is regarded as fascist here in Europe, although her philosophy is
the exact opposite of fascism/communism. But Rush got into trouble
with the European press over their association with Ayn Rand. Why is
you Canadians so fascinated with her Utopian philosophy ?
First of all, there’s a bit of misinformation on this that I’d like
to clarify. The album in question is ‘The Purest of Designs’, which
obviously saw the light of day eventually, so there’s no grand tribute
to Rand that I’m hiding for fear of being slaughtered by left wing
reviewers. It’s certainly not accurate to say that the album is “based
on Ayn Rand”, though Rand’s writings have been an inspiration to me
throughout my musical endeavours and signs of her influence show up in
various ways in most of my work. Some of the ideas expressed in the
lyrics of ‘Songs For Spring’ are directly related to one of her
non-fiction books, The Romantic Manifesto. And the opening track of
the album, ‘To the Glory of Man’ was my musical response to having
read The Fountainhead for the first time.
As for the rest of the question, you’re correct to state that Rand’s
philosophy is the exact opposite of fascism/communism. More to the
point, she championed the individual against the collective. I can
only guess at the motives of those who would regard her as a fascist.
As far as a Canadian fascination with her philosophy, perhaps my
work and the lyrics of Neil Peart have given that impression, but she
has as many detractors here as anywhere else. More sadly, most people
here have never heard of her.
Just to wrap this interview up; do you have any regrets in your music
career?
That I’ve never gotten to a point where I can make a living doing
what I’m most passionate about. In a field that places a high value on
youth, I’ve developed very slowly and continue to improve my skills as
a composer, guitarist, vocalist and producer. I’m doing my best work
as I approach 50. Perhaps things would be different if I’d reached
this level 25 years ago when I had a full head of hair down to my
butt.
No sense focussing on that, though. I’m proud of what I’ve
accomplished thus far and I’ve much more work to do.
What is your five all time favorite albums ?
This might change tomorrow, but these are five that I’ll never
grow tired of:
A Farewell to Kings - Rush
Scheherazade and Other Stories - Renaissance
Wind and Wuthering - Genesis
Spectral Mornings - Steve Hackett
The Yes Album - Yes
Anything you want to add to this interview ?
Just a request for those who are reading. Once or twice a day, put
aside the distractions that are a staple of modern life (log off of
Facebook, give YouTube a break, shut off the TV, dim the lights) and
just focus on music with attentive ears and an active, open mind. To
do otherwise is just skimming the surface and the only music you’ll
notice is that which is brash enough to break through the noise.
One more thing. If you like it, buy it from a legitimate source so
that the artist is rewarded for his efforts and can continue to
create.
Thank you to Steve for this interview
His PA profile is here and his homepage here