Another year, another
Summers End Festival. Over the past 7 years Steven Lamb and Huw
Lloyd-Jones have built up the festival from a small one day affair to
Britain’s largest Progressive Rock festival and one that has
offered me the chance to see many bands that normally I would never
have come across, and this year was no exception.
Friday
Unsurprisingly,
“Summers End time” was kicking in again right from the start with
doors opening half an hour late. Normally to be expected and not a
problem but unfortunately this year the pub next door had closed
down, which with the late pull out of Amplifier was the biggest
disappointment of the weekend for most festival goers! Anyway, with
the doors open and proceedings under way the opening act of the
weekend was Declan Burk. Over
the last 5 years or so Burk has been making a name for himself as a
guitarist in bands like Darwins Radio and Frost* and now with
his own band. I'm not familiar with his solo efforts but given the
other two prominent bands he's in it was no surprise to find his
music comes in a very similar vein, particularly to that of Darwins
Radio. Strong melodies abound with some heavy riffing and though
hardly the most challenging of acts, he made for a good opener that
got crowd warmed up.
Originally
Amplifier where to be co-headlining this festival but two weeks ago
were forced to pull out (I gather that their tech crew were making
some very unreasonable demands on the organisers) and Antony
Kalugin and John Sloman were only too happy to step in.
Kalugin's band Sunchild were originally slated to play on the Sunday
but visa problems meant they had to pull out and with a gap opening
on the Friday as well this meant he could still play at the festival
with the help of ex Lonestar guitarist and friend Sloman. Over the
years there have been several semi acoustic keyboard/guitar duo's
performing at Summers End with varying degrees of success, but I've
got to say non have been as good as this pair, they offered up some
varied, melodic music that avoided the trap of stripping down the
songs to the bare bones with some great playing of a mix of Sunchild
and Sloman/Lonestar tracks. At 40 minutes a fairly short set but
memorable all the same.
Headliners
of the day was eclectic French act Lazuli, who in the
process became the first non-English language band to perform at the
festival and I'm hoping this can open the door for some of those
Italians. My only previous experience of Lazuli is with their debut
album Amnesie, which as it turns out is completely unrepresentative
of their sound, but with their reputation I was looking forward to
this. In a word, they were excellent. Heavy, atmospheric and very
different to every other band playing in the festival, they gave an
impassioned performance that certainly captured the crowds attention
if the shouting dancing and extended applause that met every song is
anything to go by. I'll certainly never forget the close up sight of
Claude Leonetti playing his Leode (a homemade cross between a chapman
stick and a midi trigger pad) one handed with a very high degree of
virtuosity. Interaction with the crow was at a minimum since
Dominique Leonetti's command of English is limited, for which he
apologised for but since most Englishmen have no ability with foreign
languages I dont think it was needed! The only real problem was the
lack of a bass player as bass parts where left to a backing tape, but
I gather the band doesnt have a bassist at the moment. Definitely one
of the best live performances I've ever seen and the scrum around the
merch desk afterwards told its own story.
Saturday
Saturday
was meant to start at 12 noon and amazingly the doors were only 15
minutes late, a definite improvement! German group Invertigo
started the day off. A pretty typical Neo-Prog band which are
10-a-penny. Decent melodies, songs and playing but nothing to make
the band stand out from the literally dozens of others that sound
very similar and that I've seen at the festival. Overall just a bit
bland for me and the singers voice tended to get rather flat at times
as well.
Casual
Silence where next on for what has turned out to be their
last performance as the band announced they were splitting up after
the show. This band has a fairly typical heavy prog sound to them
that can be entertaining and I suspect works best in a live setting.
Having said that it took them a couple of songs to get going but once
they did they proved to good live act keeping the audience interested
and definitely a step up from the opening group. Bassist Eric Smits
was in for a busy afternoon as he's recently joined Dutch prog metal
band Day Six, who were on next.
One
thing I've noticed this year is that it seems like there was a lot of
drop outs from the bill, one of which was American band K2, and in
their place came Day Six. I
was at new sister prog metal festival Fused Festival this past April
where Day Six held the Sunday afternoon main slot so I knew
what I was in for and it only took a few seconds for the main riff of
opener Massive Glacial Wall to kick in for front man Robbie van
Stiphout to launch into his hugely animated on stage antics, complete
with full on gurning! Day Six could uncharitably be called a Dream
Theater clone, though have much better use of softer, more melodic
sections that are as big a part of their music as the metal is. This
combination, along with the highly expressive van Stiphout, makes for
a great show and they gave one of the best performances of the
weekend, particularly with the way they dealt with the power failure
halfway through their set, picking up the song effortlessly once the
juice had been turned back on.
After
the break it was the first of the days main acts, The Tangent.
Anyone that’s seen them
recently, or heard new album COMM, will know that Andy Tillison has
found an exceptional new guitarist in Luke Machin but only three
weeks ago new bass player Dan Mashal, from Luke's other band Concrete
Lake, was added to replace Jonathan Barrett who left for medical
reasons. If Tillison hadn’t said that Dan had only been in the band
for three weeks there’s no way I would have known from his playing.
I saw the band earlier in the year and I'll say it now, this was a
far better performance. The addition of Mashal in particular has
really given them a real boost on stage as he brings a flare
and energy to the bass that has been missing since Jonas Reingold
left the band, and he cant be much older than 20! With the exception
of World that We Drive Through, most of the set was from the two
newest albums and was performed brilliantly with an energy I've not
seen from this band before, even when Beardfish made half the
line-up, and they introduced an element of improvisation to their
music that's all too lacking in modern bands. Tillison worked his
usual rapport with the audience with his jokes on the band being
split between young 'uns and oldies going down well and spent a bit
of time really talking up Mashal and Machin's other band, Concrete
Lake. I'm a big fan of The Tangent but in recent years they seem to
have slipped away from the consciousness of many prog fans since a
few certain Swedes moved on, but on the strength on Saturdays
performance I can see that trend reversing now.
Headlining
act for Saturday was Arena, returning
after several years on hold whilst the members worked on/in other
bands. I've got to admit that Arena have been a bit hit and miss for
me as though I greatly enjoy Immortal? and Peppers Ghost, but
supposed masterpiece The Visitor does nothing for me and I'd been
hearing from other at the festival that they gave a less than stellar
performance on the bands first gig with new singer Paul Manzi, so I
was worried this would turn out to be a bit of an anticlimax. I
didn’t need to worry as during the break the band didn’t mind the
punters sticking around whilst they did the sound check and the quick
run through of part of one of the new songs got everybodies attention
and raised expectations quite a bit. Arena play heavy and relatively
simple, for prog, songs with space for solos and its a very effective
approach, particularly since John Mitchel and Clive Nolan don't go
mad with the solos. This was another very strong performance that
really got the crowd going and the double act of Manzi's jovial new
boy and Nolan's grumpy old sod worked brilliantly. An assured
performance and the new material proved as strong as the rest of
their set.
Sunday
Amazingly,
the doors opened on time on Sunday morning, so I was worried that
something was wrong!Thankfully nothing was and we were about to get
one of the most amazing sets of the weekend from openers Concrete
Lake. Sundays tends to start
of a little sleepy with most of the crowd taking it easy, conserving
energy for the main acts later in the day, but not so this year.
After the stunning performance of The Tangent the night before,
everybody was eagerly awaiting to see what Concrete Lake were like
and packed the hall, and the band didn't disappoint. Taking the place
of Unto Us, who had to pull out with only a weeks notice when singer
Huw came down with a chest infection, Concrete Lake are best
described as the UK's answer to Pain of Salvation circa The Perfect
Element/ Remedy Lane (no doubt where the name comes from) complete
with triple vocal harmonies and Luke Machin surprising with a voice
that could match Daniel Gildenlow for range, if not for power. They
led off with a track that starts with Machin playing a complex
fret tapping melody over a riff and this set the tone for the whole
set. This is a band that gladly takes its PoS influence but doesn’t
get bogged down by it, forging their own sound and considering they
haven’t even got an album out yet the whole band gave a very mature
performance with all 5 of them proving to be very skilled and the
ending of each song being met by rapturous applause, shouting and
whistling. The first stand out moment was probably when Andy Tillison
joined them on stage for a song and fitted in brilliantly. The second
would be when the main set ended and the crowd started demanding an
encore. In the six years I've been going to the festival I've never
seen the crowd call for an encore from an opening act, and I was even
more surprised when the stage manager offered to let them have one,
which was massively appreciated by me and the rest of the audience. I
get the feeling this is the kind of performance that will set the
band on to a very fast rise in the prog world and I can confidently
predict they will soon surpass Haken as the UK's most appreciated
prog metal band once they have an album out. This was one hard act to
follow.
So
up steps Credo. Over
the years Credo have been a band that have shown a lot of promise but
for various reasons haven’t been able to fulfil it. 2011 seems to
be the year they are turning it around as new album Against Reason
has been drawing rave reviews everywhere, even here on PA which is
noticeably more hostile to Neo-Prog bands than some other sites. A
typical neo prog band, heavily drawing on the sounds of early
Marillion, IQ, Pendragon and Pallas, thay have one big advantage over
similar bands like Saturdays opener, Invertigo. They are bloody good
at what they do. Having been around a while they've perfected their
take on this music and the result is total confidence in themselves
and excellent shows like this. Having been on tour all summer they've
got into the groove of things a bit more so they were also better
than when I saw them earlier in the year and left a very happy crowd
behind. Given my personal preferences I was always going to enjoy
Concrete Lake more than Credo, but its hard to imagine too many other
bands that could have taken this slot at such short notice as they
did (replacing Sunchild) and done as well.
Headspace
where the main act of Sunday afternoon and we finally get a Wakeman
performing at Summers End in Adam. A progressive metal band in the
vein of Threshold (unsurprising given Damien Wilson's involvement)
they certainly set out to rock the place. This was their first live
performance in several years but it didn't show, I suspect they've
spent a lot of time together recently knocking together the new
material which should form the first album. And it was the material
from this forthcoming album as well as the EP that made up the set,
and a damn good set it was with Wilson and Adam Wakeman both on
particularly good form. I think its safe to say they achieved what
they set out to do and thats thoroughly entertain everyone.
After
the break Magenta
were next up for their first gig in 18 months whilst they had been
working on the new album, Chameleon, which was launched at Summers
End. The Welsh group have had a long association with the festival,
headlining the first one and appearing several times since, plus a
semi acoustic trio performance and the Winters End festival so its
hardly a surprise to see this as the venue of their return gig.
Magenta have always been a much stronger live band than on CD for me
as they get a much better mix of rocking out and the more restrained
aspect of their music than in studio, which tends to lean too much to
the latter for my taste. And it was clear they enjoyed being back on
stage with Chris Fry even ending the last song of the main set
(Metamorphosis) in the crowd.
Last
band of the weekend was Canterbury legends Caravan,
making their return to
action for the first time in quite a few years and hot of the heels
of a sell out performance at Sheppard’s Bush Empire the night
before (so a bit of a step down for this one!). Until recently I'd
never really been sold on Caravan but in the last few months they've
grown me, so I was really looking forward to this like everybody
else. They've undoubtedly still got it and played the likes of Golf
Girl, The Dog The Dog He's at it Again, In the Land of Grey and Pink,
Smoking Gun, Fingers in the Till, Love to Love you and the big one,
Nine Feet Underground really well. In fact, I'd say the truncated
version of the epic they played is better than the original recorded
all those years ago. By the end half the crowd was dancing around
(including Antony Kalugin, who'd stuck around the whole weekend) and
the rest of us were watching amazed at the skill being displayed,
particularly by Geoffrey Richardson who played everything from the
spoons to viola. An excellent end to a great weekend.
This
was my sixth straight Summers End, having only missed the first one,
and for me its the best one yet. Caravan, The Tangent, Concrete Lake
(who Huw took all of 10 minutes to sign up for next May's Fused
Festival) and Lazuli gave phenomenal shows and rank amongst the best
live acts I've ever seen. Credo, Day Six, Magenta, Arena and
Headspace gave the expected high quality performances and Declan
Burk, Antony Kalugin and Casual Silence entertained quite well, with
only Invertigo not doing much for me, I cant wait until next years
festival, I just hope next time they dont run out of Stronbow half
way through Sunday!