I'd like to announce that, over a very extensive two days of comparing our notes (demos, lyrics, song sketches, bits from unreleased songs, etc.), we have come up with a strong outline for the new album. Keep in mind that this is not to say that we have finished writing the album, but that we have structured everything and now have a strong framework with which to work on specific sections of songs and a strong idea as to where we want them to head. As of now, there is no title or track order, but I can share the information:
Marooned Dream: At the Water's Edge [instrumental] / The Human Cavity / Brittlestar / Ripples and Waves [instrumental] (23:01)
The outline as it stood was comprised of two poems that I wrote with brief musical accompaniment being placed in the center bracketed by a section from an unreleased song. The poems didn't have any strong music direction, as the recordings I have were mostly just my strumming a guitar and reading them, but the outline had it hitting, as you noted, about 23 minutes. The guys found some demos that they had worked out and Daniel spent about four or five hours stitching things together to make the finished song. I then rerecorded my vocals and we did some harmony recording that just flew by. Several bits of the song were improvised as we were recording, but that gave it a sort of warm, organic feel that really added weight to the tune. This is precisely why I am big on extensive musical note taking in terms of recording melodies, harmonies, demos, lyrical snippets, etc. It makes assembling songs very easy when you get back into a workers frame of mine.
Move the Earth (31:24)
The guys decided to take all of my rhythmic ideas for the album and stitch them into a single song. This is closer in feel to, say, fusion-period
Davis or the afrobeat of
Fela Kuti than prog rock. As a result, the track has a sort of danceable groove to it, while maintaining a kind of hot, sticky, fever-dream kind of feel. The only lyrics are "Move the Earth", shouted by everyone in the band. This is one of my favorite pieces we've ever made.
Crossing the Ocean: All of the Above / New World / Against the Devil's Hands / Charlotte / Bridges / Strange Soul / Whirling and Whirling and Whirling (43:45)
This song was actually an older song that we had in skeletal form that was very easy to assemble, again, thanks to extensive note-taking. As you may have noticed, these tracks are rather long. We found early in our career that we are pretty good at writing epics, but that they can be a bit tiring to have one right after the other. So, we'd write them and keep them in the vaults and maybe release one or three per album. The shorter songs are the ones that tend to get written entirely in the studio. However, since this is the first Theosophical Society album proper since about
Shades, we figured we'd pull out all the stops and release essentially a big box of epics. The newer parts came from demos that Jon and Daniel had been screwing around with. Musically, the song is a giant tribute to the prog rock group
Transatlantic, with the various sections named in reference to various songs they've written. It was written very much in their kind of style, since they specialize in the same kind of prog that we have been yearning to return to in TTS; huge, classic era, bombastic prog rock. This is actually the first of four such tributes we have outlined but, as you may note, the first one we finished, primarily due to the fact that most of the work had been done prior to our hiatus.
Sophia: Passivity [instrumental] / IAM / Love / Wisdom / Birth / My Sophia (21:52)
This is one thing that I felt didn't really fit with the rest of my solo stuff. I had a great deal of the song written and all of it outlined before I approached the guys for each of them to add their touches. I always referred to my ex as my sophia, in reference to "sophia" being Greek for "wisdom." That isn't her name, but it was my pet name. We eventually named our first-born, our daughter, Sophia and this is a song sort of jointly to both of them. I am still in contact with my ex-wife and we still love each other a great deal. We just couldn't be married anymore. And my daughter is a grown woman now. This is probably my most personal song. Originally, I didn't want to include it on anything, but my ex and my daughter encouraged me to share it. The style is very much piano-oriented at the moment with guitars sort of soaring over top. It's like a massive ballad.
The Tree: Hang A Fruit / The Calculus [instrumental] / The Fire / A Dance of Rememberance, A Dance of Mourning (18:39)
"The Tree"'s outline is primarily composed of various bits that the other guys had that worked well together. All of their little bits had a couple lyrical ideas jotted down with them that all had to do with trees, so it became a good working title for the piece. This is one of the most
Beatles-esque tracks we have ever written and will be a great joy to record.
A Circus of Gods and Monsters (9:14)
This is a song that Mark, Baph, and Derek have been working on for a long time in various approaches for a while now, but we're pushing it in a more classic prog style, which seems to be working. All versions of it hover between about 7:30 and 10:00 in length, but a brief studio run-through Derek did as a scratch track hit what you see and it seems to work really well. The time may vary a bit by the time it gets released, but not by much. Also, this will be the shortest track on the box. It can't ever be said that we don't return in a big way.
Roots: Beatles / Yes / King Crimson / Genesis / Rush / Gentle Giant / Jethro Tull / Camel / Pink Floyd / Van der Graaf Generator (28:04)
This is the second of the prog rock tribute songs we created. Obviously, instead of being devoted to a single band, it is devoted to those early prog rock bands that got us into this wacky, wonderful type of music in the first place. We tend to name our demos and riffs with descriptive names instead of more poetic titles, like "Rush Guitar Thing" or "Pink Floyd Space Keys" or things like that. We figured that, since we've been around a while, it would be fun to just take all the various prog-inspired things we had and stitch them into a single big song as just a loving ode to all the classic prog bands we could feasibly fit. This was especially cool for us since it seems that there are a decent number of prog bands out right now, but most tend to be influenced by newer prog rock bands. So, this can act as a sort of 30-minute primer in classic prog for them, as well as just being fun as hell for us. As you can see, we cover the ground of
the Beatles,
Yes,
King Crimson,
Genesis,
Rush,
Gentle Giant,
Jethro Tull,
Camel,
Pink Floyd, and
Van der Graaf Generator. A very fun one, indeed. It should be noted that we didn't pinch their riffs or anything, but just played in their style.
Of Crimson Kings, Topographic Oceans, and Snow Geese (13:40)
This is the third of four tribute songs, this one specifically focusing on the first three prog rock albums that I owned, those being
In the Court of the Crimson King by King Crimson,
Tales from Topographic Oceans by Yes, and
Songs inspired by the Snow Goose by Camel. With this one, we aren't playing in their styles directly or anything, but instead just crafting a song about that magical first encounter with prog rock through those three albums. The sketches for this one have it being a bit punchier than the other songs and a little jazzier, but Jon is really pushing to add a symphonic middle bit. The time you see is including that bit, which is gaining more votes by the hour.
Progress: Neal Morse / Flower Kings / Dream Theater / Opeth / Pain of Salvation / Phideaux / Sieges Even / Porcupine Tree (24:04)
And the fourth of the tribute songs. This one is in the same vein as the second, only with us touching on the styles of more recent prog bands that we find inspiring. You will note that there are some more metal-oriented bands that we play the style of for this song, but I assure you, the sketches are of their more rock stuff than their metal side. The bands, as you probably have noted, are
Neal Morse,
the Flower Kings,
Dream Theater,
Opeth,
Pain of Salvation,
Phideaux,
Sieges Even, and
Porcupine Tree. We're aware that it may be a bit cheesy to arrange songs like this and make the tribute so blatant, but they were so refreshing and fun to hear that we feel compelled to sit down and make these songs work.
And You're Standing Here Beside Me (19:09)
The final thing is another mathy, rhythmic prog number based off of one of the demos I intend for my personal album. The riff I used actually got tossed out quickly, but the other guys liked it enough to pull up other riffs they had of similar styles. The way the riffs sound on top of each other, at least in the rough state this is in, is almost like a lighter
Meshuggah meets
Talking Heads. This one also has a very thick groove, but to our ears, we don't see a way that anyone could really dance to it!
Again, I must remind everyone that these songs range from demos and riffs clipped together on a computer to only somewhat more complete versions. We haven't finished writing the songs in total and haven't begun really recording. We released a three-track online-only item comprised of the demos for three of the songs to give everyone a feel and to prove that we are working, but these will take a bit. Not too terribly long because, again, we have extensive notes on these songs and work fairly efficiently. This upcoming album is terribly exciting to us.
See you all on the other side!
- Langdon
(OOC: Thanks for the compliments about my RPing. It does mean a lot to me. I just try to avoid RPing personal drama or things like that; keep it focused on songs, albums, tours. You know, music things. And I'm glad that is appreciated. It means a lot, it really does.)