Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
All Tomorrow's Parties
Prog
|Issue 141
A familiar name in the Canterbury scene, Dave Stewart's career reached unexpected highs in the 1980s when he teamed up with Spirogyra's Barbara Gaskin for an unlikely pop cover. Forty years on, the pair are still making "intelligent pop" with a ninth studio album on the way. Now preparing to play a very special one-off show in London this summer, Dave Stewart & Barbara Gaskin tell Prog about the unexpected spark that's led to their longstanding musical, and romantic, relationship.
In March 1981, Prog readers would have been forgiven for raising an eyebrow in surprise upon seeing Dave Stewart, previously keyboardist with Egg, Hatfield And The North and National Health, sharing a Top Of The Pops stage with The Zombies' Colin Blunstone. They were there promoting Stewart's delightfully skewed reworking of Jimmy Ruffin's What Becomes Of The Broken Hearted as it hovered just outside the UK's Top 10.
But that surprise would be as nothing compared to the shock of seeing Stewart back on the show a few months later, this time with Barbara Gaskin singing an equally idiosyncratic arrangement of Lesley Gore's 1963 teen-angst hit, It's My Party. When the song settled down to a four-week stint at No.1 nobody was more astonished than the duo themselves. "It was just completely bizarre," says Gaskin, reflecting on the strange and unexpected turn in their careers that ultimately changed their lives. "We'd both been in bands prior to that and we were 30 when we had that hit, so we were kind of mature, but of course, we were very surprised when it shot up the charts."
"It was insane," recalls Stewart. "It was like a kind of crazy film made by a lunatic director of what could happen to serious musicians if they take a step to the left into a new dimension. It was like a fantasy film."
His previous forays into TV had been with National Health on The Old Grey Whistle Test and as a member of Bill Bruford's band on BBC Two series Rock Goes To College at the tail-end of the 1970s. While both of these could be said to embody the kind of show on which you'd expect to encounter Dave Stewart, fronting a single that become a best-seller in places as far afield as Germany and Australia was most definitely not.
Recording the song was intended to be nothing more than a laugh at the time, says Stewart now.
Bu hikaye Prog dergisinin Issue 141 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Prog'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Prog
Ghosts In The Half Light
Released 20 years ago, Porcupine Tree's Deadwing was the album that Lava Records hoped would turn over a profit. Although things didn't quite work out that way, the band's eighth studio record did raise their profile and launch them to American audiences. Steven Wilson, Gavin Harrison, Lava's Andy Karp and scriptwriter Mike Bennion reflect on the journey that took Porcupine Tree from playing to 30 people to filling 1,500-capacity venues and even scoring a ride in Neil Peart's Aston Martin.
20 mins
Issue 165
Prog
Morphin' Glory
Finnish progressive metal veterans Amorphis are 15 albums into a career like few others. As the band release Borderland, bassist Olli-Pekka Laine tells Prog, the nexus of death metal and neo-prog is a truly strange place to be.
5 mins
Issue 165
Prog
Emotional Rescue
On her seventh album, Welsh art-rocker Cate Le Bon has returned to her homeland after a period of living in California. On the emotional Michelangelo Dying, she comes to terms with a broken heart and even teams up with fellow countryman John Cale. The singer-songwriter tells Prog about what she refers to as her \"necessary exorcism\" and why she's looking forward to playing her new songs live.
5 mins
Issue 165
Prog
WARRINGTON-RUNCORN NEW TOWN DEVELOPMENT PLAN
Ambient artist travels back to the 70s with synth-heavy utopian soundtracks.
2 mins
Issue 165
Prog
Gut Feeling
When Crown Lands found themselves without a label, they immersed themselves in total creative freedom, magic mushrooms and 80s King Crimson. The result is a widescreen three-album arc, starting with two psychedelic meditation records: Ritual I and Ritual II. Prog catches up with the duo to find out more about their epic prog dreams.
5 mins
Issue 165
Prog
BE PROG! MY FRIEND
After a successful comeback in 2024, Be Prog! is expanding carefully. Now set in a sci-fi-styled corner of the Poble Espanyol museum, organisers have added four extra bands and upgraded the food and chill-out zones. Across 12 colourful sets, the atmosphere at Catalonia's premier prog gathering is joyous.
3 mins
Issue 165
Prog
PINK FLOYD
Alienation, loss and a legendary live bootleg - the prog giants' post-Dark Side masterpiece gets the ultimate 50th-birthday box set treatment.
3 mins
Issue 165
Prog
BARRY PALMER
Triumvirat's former vocalist on doing The Bump, working with Mike Oldfield and his latest project with Magenta's Robert Reed.
4 mins
Issue 165
Prog
GONGOVERCOME TROUBLED TIMES
New album birthed from a period of personal challenges and heavy deadlines.
2 mins
Issue 165
Prog
Hand of Fate
Norwegian art-rockers Gazpacho stare fate in the face with their latest album, Magic 8-Ball, but things could have turned out very differently had it not been for Hollywood script-writers. Songwriter, producer and keyboard player Thomas Andersen discusses kismet, creating great art and never being afraid to rip things up and start again.
7 mins
Issue 165
Translate
Change font size

