Marillion In The 1980s
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Marillion In The 1980s

Nathaniel Webb

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eBook - ePub

Marillion In The 1980s

Nathaniel Webb

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Über dieses Buch

Derided as seventies throwbacks upon their arrival and misremembered by the wider population as one-hit wonders, Marillion rode the 1980s as one of the most successful bands in Britain. Delivering the musical and conceptual density of early progressive rock with the caustic energy of punk, the Aylesbury heroes both spearheaded the neo-prog revival and produced its crown jewel in their number one album Misplaced Childhood and its Top 5 singles 'Kayleigh' and 'Lavender.' Musically, their influence reaches from prog legends Dream Theater and Steven Wilson to household names like Radiohead and Muse.
The 1980s encapsulated Marillion's birth, commercial apex, and near-implosion. This book combines meticulous history with careful musical analysis to chronicle their most turbulent decade from their first gig, through the dizzying success and destructive decadence of their time with frontman Fish, to his bitter departure and replacement by Steve Hogarth. It turns an experienced critical eye not only on their five albums of the decade - from the seminal Script For A Jester's Tear to Season's End - Hogarth's debut - and a line up that remains as active as ever. The book also discusses demos, singles, and Fish's solo debut to dissect a band which critics still love to hate, even as today's music industry stands upon their shoulders as pioneers of self-promotion and internet-based crowd funding.

Nathaniel Webb is an American author, musician, and game designer. As a lead guitarist, he has toured and recorded for numerous acts including Grammy-nominated singers Beth Hart and Jana Mashonee, Colombian pop star Marre, and Talking to Walls. His writing includes the novels Expedition: Summerlands, The Days of Guns and Roses, and Arcadia Mon Amour. A graduate of Phillips Exeter Academy and Wesleyan University, Nathaniel lives in Portland, Maine with his wife and son under a big pile of cats. He can be found on Facebook and Twitter @nat20w.

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Information

Sonicbond Publishing Limited
www.sonicbondpublishing.co.uk
First Published in the United Kingdom 2020
First Published in the United States 2020
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data:
A Catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Copyright Nathaniel Webb 2020
ISBN 978-1-78952-065-1
The right of Nathaniel Webb to be identified as the author of this work
has been asserted by him in accordance with the
Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission in writing from Sonicbond Publishing Limited
Printed and bound in England
Graphic design and typesetting: Full Moon Media
Contents
Introduction
Prologue: Silmarillion
1980: Professional Outlook Required
1981: The Crying Jester
The Roxon Tape
1982: Let the Blood Flow
Market Square Heroes
1983: I’m Just the Drummer
Script for a Jesters Tear
1984: Passion, Pain and Pride
Fugazi
1985: The Heart That We Have Live
Misplaced Childhood
1986: The Soporific Demands of Worldwide Acclaim
1987: What Am I Doing Wrong?
Clutching at Straws
1988: We’ve Still Got Our Sound
1989: Coming In Out of the Cold
Seasons End
1990-2020: Such an Amazing Thing
Vigil in a Wilderness of Mirrors

Introduction

One of the great pleasures of writing about a cult band is meeting other people who are as obsessed as you are. Until I began work on this book, I had only one person to talk to about Marillion: my friend Andrew, who loves Grendelso much he taught himself Anglo-Saxon and translated Beowulf.
Otherwise I was alone.
I discovered Marillion via my brother, an avid reader of rock reviewer Glenn McDonald, who for twenty years wrote a column called The War Against Silence. On 7 September 2000, McDonald published TWAS #293, an essay titled Chalk Hearts,in which, inspired by the recent release of The Singles ‘82-88, he spent 4,500 words comparing all fourteen versions of Kayleighthen extant.
Here, thought my sixteen-year-old self, was something worth obsessing over.
At Bull Moose in Portsmouth, New Hampshire I picked up a CD called Kayleigh, which I thought was maybe the album the song was from but turned out to be a Dutch singles compilation from the mid-nineties, presumably made as a quick cash grab. It didnt matter, though: it opened with a seventeen-minute monster epic called Grendeland the eight songs that followed were as drunkenly romantic as McDonalds strange essay had promised.
I was hooked.
Marillion are a cult band in nearly every sense, especially for American fans. Their records sold well in Britain throughout the eighties but they barely registered in the States. Meanwhile, the band has been dismissed or mocked by most mainstream pop gatekeepers, who crowed in 1981 that progressive rock was long since dead and buried and ought to stay that way, ate their words over the next decade, then promptly decided that the group could be safely, if inaccurately, relegated to the one-hit wonders bin. Looking back, every one of Marillions successes seems coloured with a note of surprise, as though nobody really expected things to go so well... with one grand exception: the fans.
The fans have always been a huge part of the Marillion story. The stories of the bands dedication to their fanbase are countless, ranging from the epic (buss...

Inhaltsverzeichnis