PORCUPINE TREE Drummer GAVIN HARRISON’s “Hatesong/Halo” Video Streaming

April 9, 2015, 9 years ago

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PORCUPINE TREE Drummer GAVIN HARRISON’s “Hatesong/Halo” Video Streaming

Gavin Harrison, drummer for British prog innovators, Porcupine Tree, will release a brand new solo album of re-imagined songs from the acclaimed Porcupine Tree repertoire, Cheating The Polygraph, in North America on April 14th via Kscope (April 13th in the UK, April 17th in Germany, April 22nd in Japan).

Harrison has teamed up with Yahoo! Music to launch a music video for "Hatesong/Halo" (see below), taken from Cheating the Polygraph.

Harrison told Yahoo! Music: "Music is about listening and opening your mind. Feel the world around you. Don't get distracted by letting your eyes focus on unrelated things. Let the music create the images in your mind."

Cheating the Polygraph can be pre-ordered now through the Kscope web store at this location. An album trailer can be found below.

 

 

Tracklisting:

"What Happens Now?"
"Sound Of Muzak (So Called Friend)"
"Start Of Something Beautiful"
"Heart Attack In A Lay-By (Creator Had A Mastertape / Surfer)"
"Anaesthetize (The Pills I'm Taking)"
"Hatesong-Halo"
"Cheating The Polygraph (Mother & Child Divided)"
"Futile"

Teaser:

Gavin Harrison currently finds himself working with British progressive rock group, King Crimson. His playing and performing résumé includes stints with artists as varied as Iggy Pop, Lewis Taylor, Manfred Mann and Kevin Ayers.

Cheating The Polygraph is an ambitious project which sees the restlessly creative Harrison re-imagine eight Porcupine Tree songs in a set of vivid and vibrant new arrangements that give full, free rein to his inquiring musical mind.

The tracks which comprise the album were recorded over a five-year period, with Harrison working in conjunction with a crew of some of the finest contemporary musicians, including the gifted saxophonist Nigel Hitchcock and bass player Laurence Cottle. It's a set that will no doubt excite much controversy; Harrison's use of the 'Big Band' musical sound stage isn't some ersatz attempt to make a 'Swing' album; it's closer in execution and arrangement to the innovative works of Frank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention - a layered, richly-textured selection that is both beautifully-recorded and incisively delivered.

"I think every album needs a focus - a master plan - and whilst I thought about writing new tunes for a big band project, I made a version of Porcupine Tree's "Futile" (with Laurence Cottle) and it came out really well," commented Harrison. "It felt like a good plan to follow on with some of my personal favorite PT songs and see if we could make them work. I had a vision that the arrangements would never lean towards a clichéd classic big band sound, but always follow a modern contemporary angle. So even if you didn't know the original tune, you could still enjoy it as a modern composition that would work with this instrumentation. I couldn't be happier with the results. Laurence Cottle's immense talent as a musician and arranger was mind blowing."

No respecter of arbitrary musical pigeonholing, Harrison doesn't so much ignore genre confines as smash right through them - Harrison states in his thoughtful liner notes: "It's very important to me to push the boundaries of music whilst respecting what came before. In the arrangements of these pieces we really get 'out there' with some of the harmonies and rhythms, and we vastly extended the edges of the original compositions."

Harrison also drops little musical depth bombs throughout by interpolating shards of melody and musical themes from other Porcupine Tree songs seamlessly into the musical patina of Cheating the Polygraph, which serve to underscore his frontiersman spirit; this is some of the most enthralling, engaging and challenging music you'll hear in 2015, but there is also wit and charm in abundance here, too.

Stay tuned for more information on Gavin Harrison and Cheating The Polygraph, out this spring on Kscope.


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