Posts Tagged ‘Fish’

The Friday Mixtape: 6/12/09

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Editor’s note: This week’s mixtape has an inordinate amount of song edits. While the prog purists who prefer the full-length epics might take offense, we simply cannot post 12-or-so tunes at 13-plus minutes apiece (and two songs clocking in at a half hour each). We hope you’ll understand why we’ve done as we’ve done and then show your support to the bands below by buying their albums.

10cc – Une Nuit a Paris from The Original Soundtrack (1975)
Transatlantic – Duel With the Devil from Bridge Across Forever (2001)
Frost* – Milliontown (Ballad Edit) from Milliontown (2006)
Dream Theater – Finally Free from Metropolis Part 2: Scenes From a Memory (1999)
Kerry Livgren featuring David Pack – Ground Zero from Seeds of Change (1980)
GTR – When the Heart Rules the Mind from GTR (1986)
Fates Warning – A Pleasant Shade of Gray Part Six from A Pleasant Shade of Gray (1997)
Emerson, Lake & Palmer – Take a Pebble from Emerson, Lake & Palmer (1970)
Fish – A Gentleman’s Excuse Me from Vigil in a Wilderness of Mirrors (1989)
Genesis – Fading Lights from We Can’t Dance (1991)
King Crimson – Model Man from Three of a Perfect Pair: 30th Anniversary (1984)
Marillion – Whatever Is Wrong With You from Vol. 2—Happiness Is the Road: The Hard Shoulder (2008)
Wetton Downes – Let Me Go from Icon (2005)
Yes – Soon (from The Gates Of Delirium) from Relayer (1974)

“When you think cogs, think Cogswell Cogs!”

Popdose Interview: Ian Mosley of Marillion

I’m not exaggerating when I say that I’m a big fan of the band Marillion, although I came to be one in a roundabout way: finding a cassette tape of their concept album from 1985, Misplaced Childhood, in a cutout bin. By the time I had it, the synths had already dated the recording somewhat, but I listened obsessively anyway. In 1989, original lead singer and lyricist Fish struck out for solo territory and was replaced by Steve Hogarth. Hogarth’s voice added a new dimension to the band — he was suited for just about any material the band presented, and was able to give those songs a great pop feel.

While that would have made “H” the new guy, the position was once assumed by drummer Ian Mosley, who joined in 1984 for the band’s second album Fugazi. Now the band — Steve Rothery on guitar, Mark Kelly on keyboards, Pete Trewavas on bass, “H” at the microphone and Mosley behind the kit — is in full write/record mode for their fifteenth studio album. It is projected to be a double CD, lavishly packaged in a hardcover book in slipjacket, as was their 2004 entry Marbles, and funded primarily by pre-orders from ravenous fans. While the band may be only a blip on the radar in the US, their fans have been known to migrate to the UK from to attend the band’s convention/festival Marillion Weekend.

Popdose recently contacted the band via e-mail, and Ian Mosley took a moment away from the rigors of the creative process to answer a few questions about what’s happening with the group, with music in general, and with the state of the music professional in the up-for-grabs world of illegal downloading. (A side note: You will notice we have posted some MP3s from the band — in the interest of full disclosure, these examples are just that, examples, and have been cleared by the band through their communications manager Lucy Jordache. It is the intention of Popdose to expose new listeners to the music and, hopefully, compel them to buy the full albums.)

Now, on to the interview with drummer Ian Mosley! (more…)