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GIANCARLO ERRA

Issue 162

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Prog

Nosound's mastermind and melancholic soundtracker on rediscovering the heart of his music, playing the Marillion Weekend in Italy and accidentally gathering enough material to make a mini-album.

- Dom Lawson

GIANCARLO ERRA

Giancarlo Erra is one of modern prog’s most fastidious creatives. Over the last 23 years, he’s become a staple fixture in a vibrant scene, initially with Nosound, but now with the addition of a solo career and occasional collaborations with Tim Bowness. Erra’s records are almost always beautiful, elegant and lush with melancholic warmth, even when he’s gleefully meddling with his own formulae.

The last time Nosound released a full-length album, they sounded hell-bent on redefining themselves, eschewing the languorous post-rock epics of previous, celebrated albums A Sense Of Loss and Afterthoughts, and opting for an eclectic, electronic-based approach, albeit still with Erra’s songwriting at its tender core. Broadly acknowledged as a convincing evolutionary step, Allow Yourself was swiftly followed by deafening silence, as Nosound retreated into the shadows. Since then, Erra has been an intermittent presence. Two gorgeous solo albums – Ends I-VII and Departure Tapes – revealed a new, more experimental side to his music, while an updated, remixed version of his 2011 team-up with Bowness (formerly Warm Winter, but now titled Memories Of Machines) emerged in 2022. Meanwhile, Nosound have been conspicuous by their absence, one polarising Floyd cover aside.

As Erra tells Prog from his immaculate studio in sunny Norfolk, the long wait for a new Nosound record ends right now. It might seem like a paltry return after seven years of silence, but new mini-album To The Core is 20 minutes of the most absorbing and emotional music that anyone will hear this year. Nosound appeared to be done with guitars when

Prog

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GIANCARLO ERRA

Nosound's mastermind and melancholic soundtracker on rediscovering the heart of his music, playing the Marillion Weekend in Italy and accidentally gathering enough material to make a mini-album.

time to read

4 mins

Issue 162

Prog

Prog

Father Figure

Singer-songwriter and the voice of the Genesis Revisited shows, Nad Sylvan has moved further away from his onstage persona with his latest solo album, Monumentata. He reveals the story behind the intimate record that pays homage to his late father and finds him mixing up influences - from Pink Floyd and Keith Emerson to The Addams Family!

time to read

6 mins

Issue 162

Prog

WHISPERS OF GRANITE

White Willow and Frequency Drift members team up for cinematic sounds.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 162

Prog

Prog

GRACE HAYHURST

Classically trained multi-instrumentalist lets rip on her complex debut.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 162

Prog

Prog

Where Are We?

Stockholm instrumentalists Gösta Berlings Saga are back and celebrating 25 years of heady musical adventures with their seventh album, Forever Now. Driven by a thrill-seeking wanderlust to explore new sounds and the desire to remain recognisable, the band tell Prog they're always searching for something new, even if they're not actually sure what that is.

time to read

5 mins

Issue 162

Prog

Prog

MAESTROWORKS

Bringing a hard-rock swagger and the majesty of metal to their own brand of prog rock, Magic Pie break a six-year studio silence with Maestro. Frontman Eiríkur Hauksson tells Prog about being a metalhead in a prog world, writing songs at bus stops, and feeling the heat on Cruise To The Edge.

time to read

5 mins

Issue 162

Prog

Prog

Dogged Determination

Forty years ago this September, Kate Bush released Hounds Of Love. Her fifth studio record reinstated her position as one of the most innovative and creative artists of all time and yielded the (future) chart-topper Running Up That Hill. But its creation wasn't always smooth. Here's the story behind one of Bush's best-loved albums.

time to read

10 mins

Issue 162

Prog

Prog

Innovative And Uncategorisable

Born in the titular Kent city in the late 60s, the Canterbury scene spawned some of prog's most creative and quirky acts. From The Wilde Flowers and Soft Machine to Caravan and Gong, each had a distinctive sound and, in many cases, image that captured the hearts and minds of their followers. But the scene's impact didn't end in the 70s. Phil Howitt, Facelift editor and Hugh Hopper's biographer, explores the new breed of progressive acts inspired by it, both consciously and unwittingly, and unearths the secrets of the 'Canterbury chord'.

time to read

11 mins

Issue 162

Prog

Prog

IN MEMORY OF DAVE COUSINS

Strawbs co-founder Dave Cousins died in July following a long illness. The singer, songwriter and guitarist enjoyed an active musical career spanning more than six decades and has been name- checked by many musicians as a key influence and inspiration. We reflect on his rich legacy and reveal plans for a number of posthumous releases, including the long-awaited new Strawbs album.

time to read

7 mins

Issue 162

Prog

Prog

GALAHAD

Forty years ago, a group of Dorset lads named their new band after a local fruit and veg delivery business, not an Arthurian knight as was widely perceived. They've since battled through numerous lineup changes and personal challenges, but Galahad never gave up on their musical quest.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 162

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