Try GOLD - Free

I Wanted To End Humanity!

Prog

|

Issue 164

It's the end of the world as we know it, but Arjen Lucassen feels fine. So fine, in fact, that he's written what's described as "the soundtrack to humanity's final days". Thirteen years after his last proper solo album, the Dutch polymath has gone apocalyptic on Songs No One Will Hear with a little inspiration from some of his favourite sci-fi-themed records. He tells Prog what he'll be doing when the asteroid hits and his future plans for Ayreon.

- Johnny Sharp

I Wanted To End Humanity!

It's one of many popular suggestions we hear these days to promote a healthier, more carefree approach to life: dance like no one's watching. Similarly, the idea of making music like no one is listening is surely an attractive one to any artist who labours under the weight of audience expectation.

Arjen Anthony Lucassen's primary creative vehicle, Ayreon, have built a substantial following over the course of 30 years and 10 studio albums, increasingly on the back of grand overarching concepts, multiple voices and rock opera-style narratives, so it's little wonder that he relished the idea of taking a break from that self-created arena to make a record with fewer expectations surrounding it. His desire to make a solo album was only heightened by working on a range of different collaborative projects in recent times. While putting together the Ayreon live album 01011001 – Live Beneath The Waves for release in April last year, he was also working closely with Simone Simons on the Epica singer's solo debut, Vermillion, and resurrecting his early 90s act Plan Nine to release The Long Lost Songs with longtime vocalist friend Robert Soeterboek.

“At some point I said, 'I've got to do something for myself,'” he explains. “I need to be an egomaniac, and make a solo album where I can just do whatever I want - I don't have to take into account what other people expect."

Which is one way in which the title of Lucassen’s third solo album proper, Songs No One Will Hear, sounds appropriate. But then you find out the concept informing it, and that phrase takes on a new meaning. It’s the kind of question that comes up in social conversation every so often, in various guises: what would you do if you were told you only had a few months left to live?

MORE STORIES FROM Prog

Prog

Prog

AURI

As the moonlight pierces through the stained glass windows of the Union Chapel with the stage illuminated by lanterns, Johanna Kurkela takes to the stage in a dazzling ballgown, opening the show with Those We Don’t Speak Of before the rest of Auri join her on this autumnal night.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 164

Prog

Prog

JHB GUITARIST DELVES DEEP

Nick Fletcher's fifth album, Mask of Sanity, is inspired by the psychologist Carl Jung.

time to read

1 min

Issue 164

Prog

Prog

PELAGIC FEST

Once a record label showcase held now and again in Berlin, Pelagic Fest has flourished into a bona fide annual getaway for progressive music fans. For the second year in a row, it's taking up two days at Muziekgieterij, a club in the sleepy Dutch city of Maastricht renowned for its sound quality and state-of-the-art light shows. The bill is dominated, as ever, by artists signed to the Pelagic roster, but with This Will Destroy You and Ihsahn headlining, this is by far the biggest and most diverse lineup to date.

time to read

3 mins

Issue 164

Prog

Prog

PETE LAMBROU (VLMV)

The great and good of progressive music give us a glimpse into their prog worlds. As told to Grant Moon.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 164

Prog

JO QUAIL

There's no pomposity to the opening with the release of Jo Quail's seventh studio album, Notan. Even though her music is elegant and refined, the cellist has no airs or graces - she's seen soundchecking herself and chatting with the audience pre-show, a white hoodie slung over her long black dress.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 164

Prog

SYMPHONY X

During the encore of Symphony X's LA concert, vocalist Russell Allen - a California native - tells the sold-out crowd why he left his home state 35 years ago. After finishing high school, he says, he began working as a knight on horseback at a local medieval-themed dinner theatre. When the company opened a sister location across the country, Allen was one of the employees sent east to help get the new business up and running. It was supposed to be a six-month deployment, he explains, but while he was there he “met a Jersey girl” and never returned.

time to read

1 mins

Issue 164

Prog

PENDRAGON

According to Pendragon's Nick is Barrett, \"The reason we've survived is because we've never been that popular.\"

time to read

2 mins

Issue 164

Prog

Prog

A SUNDAY IN SEPTEMBER

We're off to Balham in south London for the sixth annual A Sunday In September, a 'boutique' all-dayer in the delightful music room of The Bedford.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 164

Prog

Prog

SOEN ANNOUNCE HEAVY NEW ALBUM RELIANCE

Upcoming release is previewed by emotive single Primal.

time to read

1 min

Issue 164

Prog

Prog

SPOCK'S BEARD REUNITE FOR NEW LP

Prog veterans channel their post-tour energy into writing and recording.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 164

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size