Porcupine Tree ¦ Deadwing

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Veröffentlichung Deadwing:

2005

Hörbeispiel(e) Deadwing:




Deadwing auf Wikipedia (oder andere Quellen):

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[2]
DIY[3]
Kludge9/10[4]
KNAC(favourable)[5]
Metal Storm10/10[6]
musicOMH(favourable)[7]
Record Collector[8]
Rock Hard8.5/10[9]
Sputnikmusic[10]
Virgin Media(favourable)[11]

Deadwing is the eighth studio album by British progressive rock band Porcupine Tree, released in Japan on 24 March 2005, in Europe on 28 March,[12] and in the US on 26 April. It quickly became the band's best selling album, although it was later surpassed by Fear of a Blank Planet. The album is based on a screenplay written by Steven Wilson and Mike Bennion, and is a ghost story. Wilson has stated that the songs "Deadwing", "Lazarus", "Arriving Somewhere but Not Here", "Open Car", and "Mellotron Scratch" were originally intended for the film soundtrack, but when the project failed to find funding they were instead recorded for the next Porcupine Tree album. The album versions of "Lazarus" and "Open Car" essentially remain Wilson solo tracks onto which Gavin Harrison overdubbed drums.

The album produced two singles: "Shallow" and "Lazarus". "Shallow" also appeared in the movie Four Brothers.[13] It can be heard as background music in a bar. The album also produced music videos for "Lazarus", "The Start of Something Beautiful", and "Glass Arm Shattering".

The album includes collaborations with King Crimson's Adrian Belew, who plays guitar solos on the title track and "Halo", and Opeth's Mikael Åkerfeldt, who adds vocal harmonies on "Deadwing", "Lazarus", and "Arriving Somewhere but Not Here". He also plays the second guitar solo on "Arriving Somewhere but Not Here".

In 2017, Kscope Records purchased the album as well as the previous album In Absentia; both were remastered and rereleased in 2018 through the label, with the new versions having less compression and an overall improvement in sound quality.[14]

Background

Concept

Wilson described the album as a surreal "ghost story", and said that "the idea is ultimately that this album will form a kind of companion with the feature film."[15] He stated that David Lynch and Stanley Kubrick were major influences for the script.[16]

While introducing the song "Lazarus" during the Shepherds Bush Empire concert in December 2005, Steven Wilson explained that this song was about a mother communicating with her young son "from the grave".[citation needed]

On 1 September 2006, Steven Wilson announced in his blog that Mike Bennion (co-writer of the Deadwing screenplay) had released the first fifteen pages of the story.[citation needed] The film script thus far has made several connections to the album, including a reference to the line in "Mellotron Scratch" "A tiny flame inside my hand", the man mentioned in "Lazarus" "My David don't you worry", and to the artwork in the album's cover insert.

On 3 January 2019, Steven Wilson posted on Facebook[17] that he and Bennion had recently "reactivated and rewritten [the script] with a view to trying again [to make the film]", but that the name of the script had changed. Wilson also revealed that the "David" from the song "Lazarus" is the main character in the Deadwing script.

The members of Porcupine Tree during a meet-and-greet at AKA Records on Second Street in Philadelphia on 21 May 2005.

Note on loudness war

In a comment on the loudness war, Steven Wilson mentioned how he considered placing a message on record sleeves that reads as follows: "Please note that this record may not be mastered as loudly as some of the other records in your collection. This is in order to retain the dynamic range and subtlety of the music. Please, use your volume knob." Conversely, the CD version of the album has been proven to contain clipping and dynamic range compression, whereas the 5.1 surround mix on the DVD-A version does not.[18] However, subsequent releases Fear of a Blank Planet and Nil Recurring are mastered at lower levels, preserving more of their original dynamic range.[19]

Song details

The members of the band have made several evaluations of the album's tracks over the years.[20]

"Deadwing" – Steven, "A ten-minute piece that's very in-your-face and has no real chorus, so it's an ambitious way to start the record. A very unconventional piece of music. It's a statement of intent, a willfully uncommercial gesture. "It is interesting to note that the pulsing keyboard sound at the start of the song is similar to that used by Steven on 'First Regret', which opened his 2015 LP, Hand. Cannot. Erase.

"Shallow" – Steven explained, "The big rock moment of the record, an irresistible riff with a Zep or Soundgarden vibe to it. The equivalent of a big, dumb rock song, but in the way that people who are not dumb would do it." Richard remarked, "I tell you what I didn't like on Deadwing and that's a track called 'Shallow'. It's so out of context for Porcupine Tree. It really didn't feel like Porcupine Tree to me. It just had too much of a knowing sound to it. American kind of rock. There wasn't that naivety about it or that honesty about it." Steven Wilson later admitted in an interview that "Shallow" was written and recorded after pressure from the record label to create a radio-friendly hit off the album.

"Lazarus" – keyboardist Richard Barbieri's evaluation, "The beautiful side of Porcupine Tree. Very mellow and delicate, in the contemporary style of Coldplay or Radiohead."

"Halo" – Steven clarified, "Well, 'Halo' was on Deadwing, as Deadwing, as you probably know, is based on this film script I wrote. And there is a religious aspect in the script, there is a religious cult in the script. But the song itself 'Halo' takes that as a starting point and develops into another kind of idea. It is about the born again Christianity, the born again religious parts, the self-righteousness of those kind of people." Bassist Colin Edwin added his thoughts on 'Halo', "We came up with that round Gavin's place whilst having a group session for Deadwing. Bits of that came from Gavin having an idea in 17/16. That was pretty much a group thing. It came together quite quickly." Gavin's inspiration came about during his regular drum experiments and, with the rest of the band on board, they spent an hour working on the idea in Gavin's home studio where the writing sessions would usually take place. Steven subsequently took their work away and formed the song. Richard explained, "Gavin and I came up with this infectious groove. Has an industrial feel a la Nine Inch Nails; quirky, abrasive, and repetitive with distorted vocals, and an extraordinarily strange Adrian Belew guitar solo."

"Arriving Somewhere but Not Here" – Steven explained, "The centre-piece of the record. The most ambitious track in terms of its horizontal complexity, and its length, thirteen minutes. Slowly develops from an ambient keyboard intro. The band's progressive side coming to the fore."

"Mellotron Scratch" – Steven remarked, "The most chilled-out track on the record. Lots of overlapping harmonies, and different three-part vocal lines simultaneously weaving in and out of each other. I really went to town with that side of my musical personality."

"Open Car" – Steven stated, "'Open Car' had been one everyone was thinking was going to be a B-side. I substituted that in the mastering. I was listening to it, and I was thinking 'this is such a great track, it's come out so well' and 'So Called Friend', all the way through writing we always thought that's a great track and the final mix didn't quite gel for me. We also did it with 'Glass Arm' and 'Half Light' as well, although the changes were made a week before the mastering."

"The Start of Something Beautiful" – Richard continued, "One of my favourites; explores the band's love of unconventional time signatures. It has a groove bass line, a contemporary feel, and it washes into a beautiful textual finish line. Classic Porcupine Tree." 'The Start Of Something Beautiful' was another song which originated from an idea Gavin had while experimenting, that he titled '9 To 5'. During the writing sessions at Gavin's studio, he played it to Steven, who liked it and started jamming along on bass guitar, and so the foundations of the song were formed.

"Glass Arm Shattering" – Steven enthused, "The final epic blow-out. Has more of the aspects that people associate with the classic early sound of the band, our spacious, dreamy, almost Floyd-ian textural side. That's obviously a big part of the band's personality."

"So Called Friend" – Richard remarked, "A short, fairly heavy riff-based piece. I really like what's going on in the verses and bridges."

Track listing

The band stated that 15 songs were recorded during the Deadwing sessions. The initial release, for Europe, contained only 9 tracks. All versions contain those initial 9 tracks in the same order. For the later U.S. release, an additional track was added on, the 2004 re-recorded version of "Shesmovedon", which was originally released on their 2000 Lightbulb Sun, bringing the total to 10.

The album was also released as a DVD-Audio disc on 10 May 2005 by DTS Entertainment. The disc contains 5.1-channel surround versions of all the tracks from the US CD ("Shesmovedon (2004)" was included as an unlisted extra track.) plus three bonus tracks: "Revenant", "Mother and Child Divided" and "Half-Light", bringing the total to 13 songs.

One more song, "So Called Friend", was released on the "Lazarus" single, bringing it up to 14 songs. There is another song titled "Christenings": while it was never released as a Porcupine Tree song, it was eventually released on Steven Wilson's side project, Blackfield's 2007 album Blackfield II. An instrumental demo called "Collecting Space" made in 2003 during writing sessions for Deadwing, but never recorded by the band. A proper version of this piece was released on the limited edition of Wilson's first solo album Insurgentes as an bonus track. Another possible song from this time is "Godfearing", which was later released on the web and of which Wilson doesn't recall the exact recording period, but it was either during Deadwing or In Absentia.

Original European edition
No.TitleMusicLength
1."Deadwing"Wilson9:46
2."Shallow"Wilson4:17
3."Lazarus"Wilson4:18
4."Halo"Barbieri, Edwin, Harrison, Wilson4:38
5."Arriving Somewhere but Not Here"Wilson12:02
6."Mellotron Scratch"Wilson6:57
7."Open Car"Wilson3:46
8."Start of Something Beautiful"Harrison, Wilson7:39
9."Glass Arm Shattering"Barbieri, Edwin, Harrison, Wilson6:17
American edition
No.TitleMusicLength
10."Shesmovedon (2004)"Wilson4:59
DVD-A edition
No.TitleMusicLength
10."Revenant"Barbieri3:04
11."Mother & Child Divided"Harrison, Wilson6:20
12."Half-Light"Wilson6:20
13."Shesmovedon (2004)" (unlisted easter egg track)Wilson4:59
LP edition
No.TitleMusicLength
10."So Called Friend"Barbieri, Edwin, Harrison, Wilson4:49
11."Half-Light"Wilson6:20

Awards

Deadwing won the "Best Made-For-Surround Title" award for the 2005 Surround Music Awards,[21] and was voted the number 2 album of 2005 in Sound & Vision, which is the most widely distributed US magazine in the field of home electronics and entertainment.[22] In addition to this, the album won the "Album of the Year" award for the 2005 Classic Rock magazine awards.[23] The album was named as one of Classic Rock's 10 essential progressive rock albums of the decade.[24]

Chart positions

ChartPeak
Position
Billboard 200[25]132
France[26]100
Germany52
Greece[27]19
Netherlands[28]56
Poland[29]11
Sweden[30]26
Top Heatseekers[25]4
Top Internet Albums[31]6
United Kingdom97
Singles
SongChartPosition
"Shallow"Mainstream Rock Tracks[32]26

Personnel

References

  1. ^ Milano, Brett (3 November 2020). "How Steven Wilson Made Prog Rock Cool Again". uDiscover Music. Retrieved 20 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Deadwing - Porcupine Tree". All Media Network. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
  3. ^ "Porcupine Tree : Deadwing". Archived from the original on 8 November 2005.
  4. ^ "Gypsy Punks: Underdog World Strike". Kludge. Archived from the original on 21 November 2008. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
  5. ^ "KNAC.COM - Reviews - Porcupine Tree Deadwing". knac.com. Archived from the original on 15 January 2010. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
  6. ^ "Porcupine Tree - Deadwing review - Metal Storm". metalstorm.ee. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
  7. ^ "Porcupine Tree - Deadwing". musicOMH. Archived from the original on 12 January 2010. Retrieved 26 July 2012.
  8. ^ Deadwing promotional poster Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Rensen, Michael. "Rock Hard review". issue 215.
  10. ^ Schroer, Brendan (27 June 2015). "Porcupine Tree - Deadwing". Sputnikmusic.
  11. ^ "Porcupine Tree - Deadwing - Album reviews - Reviews - Music - Virgin Media<". virginmedia.com. Archived from the original on 4 November 2008. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
  12. ^ "Deadwing released!". Nomansland.demon.co.uk. 26 March 2005. Archived from the original on 7 April 2005. Retrieved 5 November 2023.
  13. ^ "Four Brothers (2005) - Soundtracks". IMDb. Retrieved 2 April 2008.
  14. ^ "Porcupine Tree Classics 'In Absentia' and 'Deadwing' to be Reissued on Vinyl in 2018". stevenwilsonhq.com. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  15. ^ "MTV News". Retrieved 21 April 2005.
  16. ^ "KNAC.COM - Features - Interview With Porcupine Tree's Steven Wilson". 25 June 2005. Retrieved 11 April 2008.
  17. ^ "Facebook post from StevenWilsonHQ".
  18. ^ "Hydrogenaudio Forums DVD-A Mastering". hydrogenaudio. July 2005. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  19. ^ "The Revealing Science of Porcupine Tree in Surround". HDTV Online Magazine. October–November 2005. Retrieved 16 July 2008.
  20. ^ "Steven Wilson: Footprints Volume I꞉ Early Years & Porcupine Tree". 2021.
  21. ^ "Surround Expo 2005". 15 December 2005. Archived from the original on 14 December 2005. Retrieved 15 December 2005.
  22. ^ "S&V 2005 Entertainment Awards". February 2006. Archived from the original on 22 November 2007. Retrieved 24 January 2006.
  23. ^ "Steven Wilson -The Complete Discography (6th Edition), p. 111" (PDF). Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  24. ^ Classic Rock, February 2010, Issue 141.
  25. ^ a b "Deadwing > Charts > Billboard.com - Artist Chart History - Porcupine Tree". Billboard. 14 May 2005. Retrieved 14 May 2005.
  26. ^ "Porcupine Tree - Deadwing - lescharts.com". lescharts.com. Retrieved 2 April 2005.
  27. ^ "PORCUPINE TREE - Discography". MusicMight. Retrieved 3 March 2008.
  28. ^ "Porcupine Tree - Deadwing - dutchcharts.nl". dutchcharts.nl. Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 2 April 2005.
  29. ^ "Porcupine Tree - Deadwing - Music Charts". acharts.us. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
  30. ^ "swedishcharts.com - Porcupine Tree - Deadwing". swedishcharts.com. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
  31. ^ December 2007 "Deadwing > Top Music Charts > Billboard.com - Top Internet Album". Billboard. 14 May 2005. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 14 May 2005. {{cite web}}: Check |archive-url= value (help)
  32. ^ "Billboard.com - Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks - Shallow". Billboard. 21 May 2005. Archived from the original on 8 September 2014. Retrieved 21 May 2005.

Artist(s)

Veröffentlichungen von Porcupine Tree die im OTRS erhältlich sind/waren:

Deadwing ¦ Lightbulb Sun ¦ Octane Twisted ¦ Stupid Dream ¦ In Absentia ¦ Fear Of A Blank Planet ¦ Closure / Continuation ¦ Voyage 34 ¦ Nil Recurring ¦ Coma Divine

Porcupine Tree auf Wikipedia (oder andere Quellen):

Porcupine Tree (wörtlich übersetzt „Stachelschweinbaum“) ist eine 1987 gegründete Progressive-Rock-Band aus England um Gitarrist, Sänger und Komponist Steven Wilson.

Geschichte

Die Anfänge (1987 bis 1990)

Porcupine Tree war zunächst ein Soloprojekt von Steven Wilson. Parallel zu seiner Arbeit mit Tim Bowness (No-Man) nahm er – beeinflusst von psychedelischen Rockbands aus den 1970er Jahren – in seinem zu Hause eingerichteten Studio erste Tapes auf. Da er befürchtete, dass ihm als „Hobbymusiker“ die Anerkennung versagt bleiben könnte, erfand er die fiktive Band Porcupine Tree, die sich angeblich nach einem längeren Gefängnisaufenthalt auf einem Rock-Festival in den 1970er Jahren zusammengefunden hatte. Er fälschte eine zugehörige Diskografie und veröffentlichte 1989 eine 80-minütige Kassette mit dem Titel Tarquin’s Seaweed Farm, die bereits eine erste Version von Radioactive Toy enthielt, einem der bekanntesten Titel aus der Frühphase von Porcupine Tree.[1] Im Inlay der Kassette waren die fiktiven Informationen über Porcupine Tree abgedruckt.[2]

Es folgten weitere Kassetten in Kleinstauflagen, die zunächst nur wenig Beachtung fanden. Dennoch nahm ihn die vom britischen Untergrundmagazin „Freakbeat“ neu gegründete Plattenfirma „Delerium“ als ersten Künstler unter Vertrag. Das Porcupine-Tree-Stück Linton Samuel Dawson wurde auf einem Sampler der Plattenfirma veröffentlicht und Tarquin’s Seaweed Farm erschien in etwas größerer Auflage.

On the Sunday of Life … und Up the Downstair (1991 bis 1994)

1992 wurde On the Sunday of Life in einer Auflage von 1000 Kopien auf Schallplatte veröffentlicht. Dieses Album enthielt eine Auswahl der besten Stücke aus den bis dahin veröffentlichten Tonträgern und war bereits kurz nach Veröffentlichung ausverkauft. Aufgrund der hohen Nachfrage wurde die Platte nachgepresst und das Album zudem auf CD veröffentlicht. Bis zum Jahr 2000 wurden von On the Sunday of Life mehr als 20.000 Kopien verkauft.[3]

In der Folgezeit wandelte sich der Stil von Wilsons Veröffentlichungen. So erschien im November 1992 die ungefähr 30 Minuten lange EP Voyage 34 (Phase 1 und 2). Die Musik vermischt Einflüsse aus Ambient und Trance und lehnte sich an Werke von Gruppen wie The Orb oder Future Sound of London an. Die Stücke sind geprägt durch lange Soli, die als liquid rock bezeichnet werden, sowie eine Erzählung, die von einem LSD-Trip berichtet. Die EP erhielt gute Kritiken und erreichte die Top 20 der UK Independent Singles Charts. Ende 1993 folgte die zweite Voyage 34-EP (Phase 3 und 4), die den Drogentrip zu Ende führte (alle vier Stücke wurden 2000 überarbeitet auf einer CD wiederveröffentlicht).

1993 folgte jedoch zunächst Up the Downstair und wurde mit Begeisterung aufgenommen. Die britische Musikzeitschrift Melody Maker bezeichnete es als ein „psychedelisches Meisterwerk“.[4] Der Musikstil, welcher wieder zwischen Rock und Ambient angesiedelt war, wurde weiterentwickelt. Die nicht verwendeten Stücke der Sessions wurden kurz danach als EP Staircase Infinities veröffentlicht. Zum ersten Mal arbeitete Wilson bei den Aufnahmen zu Up the Downstair mit seinen späteren Bandkollegen Richard Barbieri (Keyboards, früher bei der Band Japan aktiv) und Colin Edwin (Bass) zusammen, was insbesondere beim zehnminütigen Titelstück zu hören ist. Ende 1993 gaben Porcupine Tree ihr Live-Debüt. Dazu wurde noch der Schlagzeuger Chris Maitland hinzugeholt, den Wilson bereits von seinem Projekt No-Man kannte. Die „klassische“ Besetzung war geboren.[5] 1994 veröffentlichten Porcupine Tree eine Coverversion von dem Prince-Song The Cross aus dessen Album Sign "☮" the Times. Bei der CD-Neuausgabe von Up the Downstair 2005 ersetzte man den auf der ursprünglichen Fassung verwendeten Drumcomputer durch Gavin Harrisons Schlagzeugspiel und fügte Staircase Infinities auf einer Bonus-CD hinzu.

The Sky Moves Sideways und Signify (1995 bis 1997)

Die Arbeiten am nächsten Album sollten nicht vor Anfang 1995 fertig sein und daher veröffentlichten Porcupine Tree im Oktober 1994 die EP Moonloop, die zwei Stücke des nächsten Albums beinhaltete (wobei Stars Die vorerst nur auf der US-Version der Platte enthalten war und Moonloop auf dem Album gekürzt wurde).

Im Februar 1995 veröffentlichte die Band das dritte Studioalbum The Sky Moves Sideways. Es war das erste komplett mit der neuen Besetzung eingespielte Werk und wurde ein derartiger Erfolg,