Classical Composer Reacts to A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers (Van Der Graaf Generator) (Episode 157)

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  • Опубліковано 8 чер 2021
  • #VanDerGraafGenerator #APlagueOfLighthouseKeepers #ProgReaction
    In this episode of #TheDailyDoug, I'm reacting to A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers by Van Der Graaf Generator. This is my first listen to anything by this band, and I was floored by its uniqueness and scope. It's a long episode, so take the plunge and follow along!
    Reference Video: • Van Der Graaf Generato...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @HangingFreud
    @HangingFreud 3 роки тому +310

    Not only Peter Hammill was doing all those voices, but David Jackson was doing all the winds and Hugh Banton was doing all the organs AND basses. These guys were just a whole orchestra by themselves.

    • @kidflersh7807
      @kidflersh7807 3 роки тому +24

      There's no bass on the song afaik, pretty sure it's all bass pedals. Hugh has nimble friggin' feet.

    • @davy1252
      @davy1252 3 роки тому +14

      @@kidflersh7807 Very little guitar either - it was organ/sax/drums with Hammill dominating with his voice and theatrics. When the band played live at that time we simply didn't either expect or miss the guitars that almost every other band relied on. A unique band. Their gigs were simply incredible when they were on form, so memorable even now.

    • @kidflersh7807
      @kidflersh7807 3 роки тому +8

      @@davy1252 Hammill does occasionally play keys/guitar (like everything on godbluff has clavinet from him).

    • @klaatoris
      @klaatoris 3 роки тому +9

      @@kidflersh7807 According to the liner notes as well as Wikipedia, Robert Fripp plays some electric guitar on this song.

    • @kidflersh7807
      @kidflersh7807 3 роки тому +6

      ​@@klaatoris You're right, he's on the "The Presence Of The Night" section, very subtly I might add. I was primarily referring to the band on an average day, since fripp was a guest.

  • @ozricaurora6943
    @ozricaurora6943 3 роки тому +99

    Peter hammill uses his voice like an instrument. Growling, squeeling, shrieking, whispering, singing softly to provide whatever is necessary for that part of the song

    • @davep8221
      @davep8221 3 роки тому +11

      "[doing[ whatever is necessary for that part of the song..."
      A major defining characteristic of prog.

    • @ozricaurora6943
      @ozricaurora6943 3 роки тому +3

      @@davep8221 absolutely

    • @davep8221
      @davep8221 3 роки тому +3

      @@ozricaurora6943 Is the Ozric in your name a reference to Ozric Tentacles? Or is your Ozric Tentacles something else? In either case, The ozzies are one of my favorite bands.

    • @ozricaurora6943
      @ozricaurora6943 3 роки тому +3

      @@davep8221 Yeah it's a reference to that. I'm obsessed with the northern lights aswell so that's the aurora. Ozric is a Nordic male name and aurora is a female name so I like the balance thing. I love that kind of stuff. Like balance of heart and mind in Cygnus book 2 by rush

    • @tomt5745
      @tomt5745 Рік тому +1

      Peter is an organ

  • @clemsplace
    @clemsplace 3 роки тому +36

    Fripp's contribution to this is so subtle and so intergrated you might miss it. A staggering piece of music. unique.

    • @tomt5745
      @tomt5745 Рік тому +4

      Fripp is in a way the spline in this fantastic construction :)

  • @GabrielVince
    @GabrielVince 3 роки тому +128

    "I love Van der Graaf cause they were a band that were on the edge, and although they had quite complex arrangements, they made some great sounds. An they were an incredibly depressing band, music to commit suicide to and that's why I loved it, because it was so out there."
    Bruce Dickinson

    • @rcautela7405
      @rcautela7405 3 роки тому +5

      Bruce (n Doug for that matter) needs to CAN a little

    • @koukouvania
      @koukouvania 3 роки тому +14

      i found it totally UNdepressing! music to become enlightened by!

    • @wtfn573
      @wtfn573 2 роки тому +9

      @@rcautela7405 Its not depressing at all. In almost every one of those depressing songs there is almost always a redeeming section at the end.

    • @incompletotrunksnautillusc1116
      @incompletotrunksnautillusc1116 Рік тому +2

      @@rcautela7405 What?

    • @Quills64
      @Quills64 Рік тому

      i guess we're not listening to the same band because ive always found VDGG incredibly depressing

  • @seghj
    @seghj 3 роки тому +204

    Hammill is my favorite singer/songwriter ever but it's so sad that he is such an unknown name even among music nerds. He is the epitome of sincerity and integrity in music and he is completely fearless and uncompromising. Listening to this man (especially his solo stuff) is an almost religious and very intimate experience. And that VOICE!!!

    • @mozstarOG
      @mozstarOG 3 роки тому +10

      He’s made it to a lot of magazine covers in the last month…! Finally some recognition on the horizon?

    • @seghj
      @seghj 3 роки тому +10

      @@mozstarOG I hope so but I'm afraid that the world will only fully realize what a genius he was when he's gone.

    • @apollomemories7399
      @apollomemories7399 3 роки тому +7

      @@seghj Not in the UK. Everybody who's switched on knows him and VDGG all too well. Thankfully!

    • @apollomemories7399
      @apollomemories7399 3 роки тому +6

      @@mozstarOG So, what's Record Collector magazine been doing all these years? Seriously, stop reading that Rolling Stone rag and Buy British!
      nb. and Mojo, who interviewed him not so long ago.

    • @gregvanblair9096
      @gregvanblair9096 3 роки тому +9

      I agree, though once I told Hammill that Gentle Giant was my favorite band...He Mr. Hammill was my favorite Artist !!!
      I love him...he's the only one which touched my soul. He's the only artist/lyricist who I actually "heard", who spoke to me, who was really worth listening to and pondering!

  • @Tyldenfilm
    @Tyldenfilm 3 роки тому +69

    This song is pure briliance. The whole album is totally unique and way ahead of it's time.

    • @mpg8314
      @mpg8314 3 роки тому +11

      H to He and Pawn Hearts don't sound like they were released at early 70s, they sound like really mature and clean prog, musically and technically speaking

  • @3ggshe11s
    @3ggshe11s 3 роки тому +44

    I think the foghorns in Part 2 are actually supposed to be the horns of two ships, trying to warn each other before they collide. The lighthouse-keeper sees the collision and can't do anything to stop it, and the rest of the song unfolds to tell us his reaction to the tragedy he was helpless to avert.

    • @ericdupont1326
      @ericdupont1326 Рік тому +5

      exactly right ( sereo effect with one ship right , one ship left )....... and after the crash we can hear the souls of the dead sailors, go out of the wreck , climbing & reaching heaven ;
      that is the reason the lighthouse keeper gets mad
      all things are a part , all things are appart

  • @jonathanhenderson9422
    @jonathanhenderson9422 3 роки тому +61

    That moment at 20:40 is one of more terrifying moments in the history of prog. The song had already been building tension up until that point, but that switch just feels like a complete descent into madness. Only King Crimson have managed something similar in their music. Not the most pleasant sound, but geez is it powerful.

    • @erikhesjedal3569
      @erikhesjedal3569 Рік тому +1

      I bet you haven't listened much to Italian Prog. If that's your thing, try it

    • @jonathanhenderson9422
      @jonathanhenderson9422 Рік тому

      @@erikhesjedal3569 I've heard some but certainly not as much as English prog.

    • @Rog5446
      @Rog5446 Рік тому +4

      Trivia: Fripp played on one of VDG albums.

    • @Quills64
      @Quills64 Рік тому +1

      ​@@Rog5446 it was this album. he's on this track.

    • @Rog5446
      @Rog5446 Рік тому +1

      @@Quills64 Tah Muchly. I no longer have the album, as I disposed of all my vinyl, so could not check the line up.

  • @gewijdebehaeghel6935
    @gewijdebehaeghel6935 2 роки тому +33

    My all time favourite VDGG track. There's a second layer to the story which is the the lighthouse keepers' inability to save his marriage or relationship so that's one reason for the different voices, the other two being the lighthouse keeper's reaction to the horror that waits in the sea and the third the disassociation from reality and descent into madness.. There are sounds in this song when all instruments come together that are just eerie and awesome and totally unique. What a song, what a band. There is no comparison.

  • @SB36963
    @SB36963 3 роки тому +9

    David Jackson on double saxophone is legitimately to die for. Watch the live version of this. Brings whole new meaning to the beauty of it. The drumming, organ, winds, voice, etc.. etc.. everything is so in tune. I have no clue how this band went so unnoticed. They were big elsewhere, but Peter Hammills solo work is purely incredible as well. The best is that it is their life and they never truly went for success, but to express.

  • @jrusso4753
    @jrusso4753 3 роки тому +54

    I don't think one can find a more masterful, eloquent lyricist and composer than Peter Hammill in all of rock. Prog or otherwise. VDGG was huge in Europe. Still are. For a time Genesis was their opening act on tours. I had the pleasure of seeing Hammill live around 40 years ago in a very small club in Cleveland, OH. He performed solo. Just piano. He still covered many VDGG songs with just piano and vocals. Amazing! Thank you, Doug, for reacting to this. A deeper dive into more VDGG will not disappoint you.

  • @enricopaoli1183
    @enricopaoli1183 3 роки тому +9

    One of the very best Prog Rock suites by one of the best bands of the genre. Period. Peter Hammil is genius.

  • @leoscone4036
    @leoscone4036 3 роки тому +8

    I concur with the voices below. "Childlike Faith in Childhood's End". I saw Hammill perform solo once. The experience was like willingly giving oneself over to a vampire. He drew every bit of energy we were willing to give, but the gift of our "blood" was well worth the performance he gave. One of the most difficult yet rewarding of prog rock bands.

  • @Korlinath
    @Korlinath 3 роки тому +14

    As a Floyd fan since Meddle, and a Yes fan since Fragile, I was recommended the album Pawn Hearts by a guy at a record store in 1976. I'll never regret buying it. One of my favorite albums. Thanks Doug for the episode!

  • @erikeinmo8607
    @erikeinmo8607 3 роки тому +60

    I’ve recently learned that lighthouse keepers often were hit with mental problems due to exposure to vapours from the mercury used in the light-reflecting mechanism. They often had to rid the mercury of soot by manually pouring it through cloth. Kind of like mad hatters :)

    • @Doug.Helvering
      @Doug.Helvering  3 роки тому +11

      Fascinating

    • @simondee2493
      @simondee2493 3 роки тому +3

      The Mercury was used in the base for the heavy lamps to frictionlessly rotate on. Not sure about mercury soot, but vapours from the heat sounds more likely.

    • @azothamenti3378
      @azothamenti3378 2 роки тому +6

      Wow wow wow
      Mercury is assioated with madness.

    • @RolandTumble23
      @RolandTumble23 2 роки тому

      @Andy Briggs In the US paraffin refers to a petroleum-based wax. In the UK, it refers to what is called kerosene in the US.

  • @jeffreygould101
    @jeffreygould101 3 роки тому +161

    As a fan of both prog and metal (most of what you've been reacting to), Peter Hammill remains both my favorite vocalist and lyricist of all time. His 70's output both with VDGG and solo was astonishing, and he has continued to produce excellent album after excellent album up until today. Unfortunately many people may only have heard Peter screaming "Shock" on the chorus of Peter Gabriel's "Shock the Monkey and not be familiar with his work and his fantastic songwriting. Glad you've given VDGG a chance, Doug! There's a lot more out there that would warrant reactions.

  • @jeannettesimpson9778
    @jeannettesimpson9778 3 роки тому +89

    Peter Hammill does all the vocals. (His solo work is amazing.)

    • @GEAsolar
      @GEAsolar 3 роки тому +2

      He released a new album!

    • @jeannettesimpson9778
      @jeannettesimpson9778 3 роки тому +1

      @@GEAsolar Is this the covers album?

    • @sammarsh3679
      @sammarsh3679 3 роки тому +3

      I think Hugh Banton does a little bit of harmony vocal in the end, but it's pretty buried under layers of Peter.

    • @derekprice9076
      @derekprice9076 3 роки тому +1

      Should listen to king crimson, in the court of the crimson king

    • @jeannettesimpson9778
      @jeannettesimpson9778 3 роки тому +2

      @@derekprice9076 If you mean me, that was one of the first LPs I bought, and KC were one of the first bands I saw live. I have a pretty comprehensive collection of vinyl and CDs, including some of the Projekcts. I also have the excellent "In The Court of King Crimson" by Sid Smith.

  • @SB36963
    @SB36963 3 роки тому +13

    All Peter Hammill making the voices and lyrics. That dude is my favorite person in all of Rock, tied with Jim Morrison. The creativity is truly INSANE. Listen to Arrow, Man-Erg, Undercover man, Still Life, La Rossa, and so many more. Everything is a masterpiece in my mind.

  • @sebastiantorres2542
    @sebastiantorres2542 3 роки тому +107

    Finally, to all the people who asked this song. Great work Doug. You're already like a friend to me, although you have no idea. I watch you nearly every day. God bless you.

    • @Doug.Helvering
      @Doug.Helvering  3 роки тому +25

      Thanks friend!

    • @commonsensecraziness7595
      @commonsensecraziness7595 3 роки тому +3

      @@Doug.Helvering Please explore BERSERK ~Forces~ by Susumu Hirasawa.
      I guarantee it's unlike anything you've ever heard before and I'd love to hear your take on it.

    • @capricekor
      @capricekor 3 роки тому +8

      All the sounds were recorded in the studio, they were not taped natural sounds added to the mix. (Fog horns = saxophones).

    • @Bikonito
      @Bikonito 3 роки тому +1

      Careful with those parasocial relationships.

  • @brucegelman5582
    @brucegelman5582 3 роки тому +46

    Parafin wax was used to light lanterns after whale oil stopped being used

    •  3 роки тому +1

      Right! That's it.

    • @Nikioko
      @Nikioko 3 роки тому +7

      Actually, paraffin wax replaced spermaceti, which is solid and used to make candles. Waxes are the esters of fatty acids with fatty alcohols, in this case palmitic acid and cetyl alcohol.
      Whale oil, on the other hand, is liquid and was replaced by paraffin oil, also known as kerosene.

    • @lizardbizarre
      @lizardbizarre 3 роки тому +3

      Paraffin is a liquid known as kerosene in the US ofA.

  • @axolotl8694
    @axolotl8694 3 роки тому +99

    As one of the aging prog-heads who requested this song, a heartfelt thank-you! I'm well aware that this material can turn off many if not most listeners, so it was refreshing to see you engaging with a completely open mind and digging right in, and your reactions were priceless. "weird e minor"... nice. stepwise motion up and down representing the waves... I actually hadn't thought of that. And glad you dug the whole-step creep-up in the final section... it's one of my favorite techniques and I've used it in my own pieces.
    I don't think there's any pre-recorded, i.e. nature, sound in this track... it's all the musicians, mostly extended techniques from Jackson on multiple saxophones, sometimes played two at a time à la Roland Kirk, and much studio work with filters and overdubs.
    As an aside, I'm encouraged to see so many high-quality comments on this video! there is an audience for this stuff, niche though it may be. thanks for connecting more of us. now we need to produce more weird unpopular out-there shit like this. ;-)

    • @andrejz8954
      @andrejz8954 3 роки тому +3

      great comment, m8!

    • @DavidLazarus
      @DavidLazarus 3 роки тому +7

      Yeah, I won't deny that Peter Hammill/VDGG is an acquired taste and some (many) don't acquire it. I love their music though and Peter's dynamic vocals. Ironically, it's those dynamic vocals that seem to turn some people off.

    • @joook1972
      @joook1972 3 роки тому +9

      I've seen Dave playing THREE saxes at a time!

    • @saskiakroonsberg
      @saskiakroonsberg 3 роки тому +4

      @@joook1972 me too! I feel so fortunate I have been able to see them play live.

    • @BetamaxFlippy
      @BetamaxFlippy 3 роки тому +3

      Feel free to listen to the full album's original master on my channel

  • @o2bavr6
    @o2bavr6 3 роки тому +102

    Peter Hammill The Silent Corner and Empty Stage.. Absolutely incredible album. It is worth your time to listen to it.

  • @BaldJean
    @BaldJean 3 роки тому +50

    The line "I can see the lemmings coming, but I know I'm just a man" is an allusion to the other two songs on the album, "Lemmings" and "Man-Erg". "Lemmings" is about someone watching the lemmings jumping into the sea and asking himself if he should join; in the end he decides not to. "Man-Erg" is about someone realizing there is a good and a bad side inside of him; he speaks of a killer and of angels living inside him and in the end comes to the conclusion that he is just a man, and that killers and angels all are a part of him.
    So it is a concept album indeed.

    • @apollomemories7399
      @apollomemories7399 3 роки тому +1

      In short, everything by VDGG and Hammil are a concept. They just didn't do "I love you, baby" stuff. lol.

    • @DavidLazarus
      @DavidLazarus 3 роки тому +2

      @@apollomemories7399 - Ha! Yet, Peter Hammill does have long songs. Albeit not your typical ones.

    • @promierdafernandez81
      @promierdafernandez81 2 роки тому +1

      Hey, can you recognize some of the figures in the Pawn Hearts album cover art? I only recognize (I think) Tsar Nicholas II

    • @flyer5347
      @flyer5347 Рік тому

      @David Lazarus could you recommend some? I'm a big fan of strange/ intricate love songs

  • @robfractal6820
    @robfractal6820 2 роки тому +6

    Really enjoyable watching the Classical Composer be totally engaged in this unique VDGG music that still sounds as weird and wonderful as when I heard it 50 years ago. Great fun!

  • @edelcorrallira
    @edelcorrallira 3 роки тому +13

    This was incredible... I had never heard this song !!! I had heard other songs by them but not even that could prepare me. I absolutely cant be happier, this is just unbelievable!

  • @boozefueledreviews6928
    @boozefueledreviews6928 3 роки тому +42

    I clicked this... and immediately thought to myself, "Who the actual FU*K is reacting to VDGG!??!!?!?" Man, this channel is sick!!!!!!!

    • @gyro3454
      @gyro3454 3 роки тому

      You should check out the reaction channel “JustJP” he has done a lot of reactions to prog bands like Vdgg and many others.

    • @RolandTumble23
      @RolandTumble23 2 роки тому +1

      Doug is one of my tip-top tier reactors, in large pat because of his openness to off-the-beaten-path pieces.

    • @tomt5745
      @tomt5745 2 роки тому +1

      Or sane.. :)

  • @ozricaurora6943
    @ozricaurora6943 3 роки тому +17

    Scorched earth is probably my favourite VDGG song. It's 9 minutes and it's pulverising from start to finish pretty much. How they're able to pack so much music and changes into a 9 minute space is amazing

  • @wendellwiggins3776
    @wendellwiggins3776 3 роки тому +56

    VDGG were one of the most ORIGINAL of the PROG innovators with their dark mysterious voids of sonic self reflections. I think the ending needed to sustain the ascension of this Keeper (physically or etherically) I think the dot dot dot was intentional

    • @Nikioko
      @Nikioko 3 роки тому +4

      And in comparison to Godbluff or H to He, Pawn Hearts is a very experimental album.

  • @Israel-jr5ks
    @Israel-jr5ks 3 роки тому +68

    Peter Hammill vocals and songwriting are out of this world, and sadly he's probably the most unrecognized prog rock hero.
    You should listen to "Pilgrims" and "The Undercover Man", for me these two songs are the two most emotional music pieces ever writen.

    • @mespam8135
      @mespam8135 3 роки тому +14

      "Lost" and "Refugees" ;)

    • @frankwestad5084
      @frankwestad5084 2 роки тому +12

      The whole "Still Life" is a masterpiece

    • @cahyarmdhn
      @cahyarmdhn 2 роки тому +5

      @@frankwestad5084 yes, i think it sounds more mature

    • @bernhardkaiser9567
      @bernhardkaiser9567 8 місяців тому

      I totally agree! The undercover man is my favorite tune all kinds of music! Pilgrims is wonderful, too 😊

  • @gudulezzz
    @gudulezzz 3 роки тому +76

    Another of my top 5 prog classic. Yes, Peter Hammil is the only singer. His voice is incredible. David Jackson on sax is a pure genious. You should see him playing two saxos simultaneously. Hugh Banton on keyboards creates a fascinating ambiance. Guy Evans on drums, is more than a drummer. He's a true musician. No double pedal here ;-) and he sounds great. Did you notice there's no bassist ?
    With Genesis, King Crimson (so sorry you can't react to their music), Yes and EL&P, VDGG made the musical background of my youth. I'm 62 now and still listening to these great creators.

    • @jorgesimoes5706
      @jorgesimoes5706 3 роки тому

      Doug, if you decide to react to King Crimson, have a look at their eighties ressurection - at least, you'll be looking at something different. Thanks.

    • @2fs
      @2fs 3 роки тому +1

      It's an awkward compromise but...he could still respond to King Crimson, even without reusing the music...since there are official Crim "videos" on UA-cam now. He could just show the timecode, without the music being audible (to us)...and we could, in turn, merely go to the video and sync the timecodes and listen on our own. Voila...

    • @yassinbenchaouche1320
      @yassinbenchaouche1320 3 роки тому +1

      Mon album préféré d"e VDG est " still life" , j'adore ce group je les découvert vers les années 77 78 ..

    • @artysanmobile
      @artysanmobile Рік тому

      Well, fancy that, a drummer who is even a musician. What?!??

    • @benthompson9349
      @benthompson9349 Рік тому

      Hugh Banton played bass guitar on record, not all the time but it pops up now and then.
      There is actually some bass guitar on this song, drop tuned to a very low A.

  • @pinkyfloydyfan1
    @pinkyfloydyfan1 2 роки тому +5

    AN ABSOLUTE MASTERPIECE!!!!!
    Peter Hammill's voices and lyrics, the Jackson's saxes, the keyboards of Banton, all that with the pure subtle drums of Evans... all in a perfect mood! Like Miles already said: it must have been made in heaven! And the stereo mix of 2021 is even better!...
    Thanks VDGG for this MASTERPIECE!!!

  • @JohnLRice
    @JohnLRice 3 роки тому +33

    Note the subtle spelling of the final lyrics, it is intentional, not a typo:
    ALL THINGS ARE A PART
    ALL THINGS ARE APART
    ALL THINGS ARE A PART
    Meaning IMHO:
    All things are a part of the whole
    All things are separated from each other
    All things are a part of the whole

    • @ganazby
      @ganazby 3 роки тому +1

      Non duality, in other words. Perhaps.

    • @jorgelopezgalvez
      @jorgelopezgalvez 3 роки тому +1

      It’s been maybe ten years since last time I listened to this one. Clearly a masterpiece, even if it requires a lot from the listener.
      Funnily enough, I’m so used to Porcupine Tree’s Voyage 34 that I sometimes forget the VDGG sample coming from the second section of A Plague..

    • @PaulMDove2
      @PaulMDove2 3 роки тому +1

      I love the way Peter plays with words. There's the apart/a part but also "Lighthouses might house the key" which taken with the many references to physics (and the puns) in Peter's lyrics (Pioneers over C being an example of both) I've always thought this could be a reference to the relationship between light and causality, but maybe I'm reading too much into it.

    • @iansmith8783
      @iansmith8783 3 роки тому +1

      @@ganazby to me, it's the paradox of non-duality. you get to non-duality and a host of other dualities spring up, like awareness/lack of awareness of non-duality, the existence of non-existence, etc. etc. the guy has gotten to a point where he realizes there is a limit to what can be understood and ultimately he's just going to have to bite the bullet and embrace the mystery.

  • @GunnarCreutz
    @GunnarCreutz 3 роки тому +17

    Thanks for a fantastic reaction video to the greatest progressive rock epic there is! Peter Hammill's lyrics and his voice is absolutely fantastic! Hugh Banton's monster organ (with its entrails hanging out) makes the most fantastic sounds. David Jackson is a fantastic saxophone-player known for often playing two saxes at the same time. There is also Robert Fripp (of King Crimson) playing electric guitar on this album. All in all quite an odd instrumentation! There is probably just one progressive rock band with a more unortodox instrumentation and that is the Belgian band Univers Zéro (half a rock band, half a chamber ensemble). Their instrumental piece "Dense" from the album Ceux du Dehors (1981) is well worth listening to!
    On Peter Hammill's solo album In Camera (1974) there is actually a musique concrète piece called "Magog (In Bromine Chambers)". Hammill has made circa 40 studio solo albums, while VdGG has made 13 studio albums.

    • @tomt5745
      @tomt5745 2 роки тому +1

      Hammill is a force of nature

  • @juankgonzalez6230
    @juankgonzalez6230 3 роки тому +20

    It's quite interesting that you mention Musique Concrète because Hammill straight up did some Musique Concrète on his own (the name should set your expectations: "Gog - Magog (In Bromine Chambers)"; a piece whose later half I consider to be the sounds of Hell itself)

  • @docdeens4030
    @docdeens4030 10 місяців тому +2

    One of the most brilliant pieces of music ever created, IMO. Always fun to watch somebody take it in for the first time

  • @nothingmuchado
    @nothingmuchado 3 роки тому +20

    This was a deep cut in 1971, haven't listened to it in ages. Great to see a reaction. Hammill's work with Robert Fripp on his "Exposure" album is well worth a listen!

    • @jackal59
      @jackal59 3 роки тому +8

      "Disengage" was the very first thing I heard Hammill sing. Scared the shit out of me.

    • @primateinterfacetechnologi6220
      @primateinterfacetechnologi6220 2 роки тому +1

      Robert Fripp... Now there's a whole issue...
      I say that as a fan and student of King Crimson from the beginning... and Fripps' endless discussions on issues, and stuff, and things around... Plus he is probably the basis for half of my playing style. him and Carlos and Gilmore... But lately "System of a down" is what I... hear.
      they just seem to be... or reflect my... experiences of late. and for some time really, for better or worse.
      Show me better rock vocals anywhere and I will show you... something that I am confident I will not have to find... like a unicorn or a 25 lb largemouth bass. rock vocals that are just as good exist, certainly they do- But none better.
      Peace be upon you, sir.

  • @kkondakov
    @kkondakov 3 роки тому +57

    I am sure that many people agree with me here that the next VdGG needs to be "Sleepwalkers" from "Godbluff" (1975) - another insane Epic that will blow Doug Helvering out of water

    • @TheAnalyst79
      @TheAnalyst79 3 роки тому +2

      I definitely second that

    • @einarassipavicius1991
      @einarassipavicius1991 3 роки тому +4

      Yes, I used to say that Plague is my favourite VdGG piece. But Godbluff is my favourite album and with time I start to realize maybe The Sleepwalkers is my favourite VdGG song. That piece is monstrous. If Doug reacted to this, would be fantastic!

    • @gudulezzz
      @gudulezzz 3 роки тому +1

      +1000 :-D It will be a funny moment to see Doug's face reacting to this.

    • @iansmith8783
      @iansmith8783 3 роки тому +5

      godbluff is amazing. "the undercover man" would also be good.

    • @Eleventhearlofmars
      @Eleventhearlofmars 3 роки тому +7

      I love the album still life and particularly the song my room (waiting for wonderland) .

  • @Davejkn
    @Davejkn 3 роки тому +34

    SHM is simple harmonic motion in physics, although it's probably also a pun on HMS - His/Her Majesty's Ship in the british navy. Peter Hammill studied Liberal Studies in Science at university, so there are a few science references in his songs

    • @kevmdud
      @kevmdud 3 роки тому +11

      Yes! And for non-physicists, SHM generates sinusoidal (wave-like) motion over time, this ties in nicely with Doug's description of the wave-like nature of the music in this section :)

    • @soggytom
      @soggytom 3 роки тому +5

      'A few' references? Now there's an understatement! ;-)

    • @vadimzaytsev2660
      @vadimzaytsev2660 3 роки тому +4

      I think it's simple harmonic motion because they used to take acid, plug music into an oscilloscope and watch the sine waves, according to VdGG: The Book (hence also, I assume, the part titled Land's End (Sineline)). A cheeky in-joke. :D

    • @cykkm
      @cykkm 3 роки тому +1

      Thanks, indeed! Other section titles also contain puns (which I find confusing or even weirdly childish, and apparently unrelated to lyrics), so I suspected this one was too. This one at least makes perfect sense!

  • @noncompulsoryl
    @noncompulsoryl 2 роки тому +10

    Wow, this takes me back! So happy that people are still discovering this today, like I did ages ago. Fantastic group of musicians.

  • @jakelm4256
    @jakelm4256 3 роки тому +6

    I get literal chills over Hammill’s vocals in the middle section even after hearing this for the 500th time

  • @alspacrat
    @alspacrat 3 роки тому +11

    "I don't hear much guitar." That was VdGG in the early 70s. I think they threw a lot of people off guard with that no-guitar approach.

    • @kidflersh7807
      @kidflersh7807 3 роки тому +5

      There's a touch of guitar on the song in on part, supplied by Robert Fripp himself.

  • @gregpapakostas7243
    @gregpapakostas7243 3 роки тому +10

    Vdgg is just astonishing. So much power . For me my favorite is Sleepwalkers. The greatest lyricist in prog by miles. Such unique set up for a band of that era. Peter's solo records are amazing as well which everyone played in too. Something like 13 or 14 records total in like 7 or 8 years together between vdgg and solo

  • @gelsol
    @gelsol 3 роки тому +21

    Peter Hammill/VDGG have an insane discography. They have a lot of mind-blowers.

  • @jackal59
    @jackal59 3 роки тому +20

    The section around 11:47 sounds like Messiaen, which makes sense since Banton is a classically-trained organist. He's released at least one album of Bach. In fact, a lot of the "bass" is him pedaling.

    • @anthonymorris6490
      @anthonymorris6490 3 роки тому +3

      He played bass guitar in the studio just so there was the bottom end in the track however when they played live Banton was an octopus feet on pedals, fingers at organ he was and still is incredible to watch play live

    • @Generatorhead
      @Generatorhead 3 роки тому +2

      Hammill has stated in numerous interviews that he is a massive fan of Messiaen, so that makes perfect sense.

  • @jazzandrocknroll3235
    @jazzandrocknroll3235 3 роки тому +17

    I’m very glad you got to experience this haunting eldritch masterpiece Doug, I highly recommend you check out more of Van der Graaf Generator’s music, especially the track “Childlike Faith in Childhood’s End” as recommended by others. I would also LOVE to see you react and dissect jazz rock band Soft Machine’s Slightly All The Time”, it’s a very musically interesting jazz piece with lots of great saxophone work and master class musicianship.

  • @thosava
    @thosava 3 роки тому +10

    A fun fact since you also react to a lot of Iron Maiden. Bruce Dickinson has stated Peter Hamill among his biggest influences as a vocalist. You can definitely hear some similarities in their projection of powerful, distorted and theatrical vocals.

  • @simply_psi
    @simply_psi 3 роки тому +10

    Excellent that you are doing some Van der Graaf Generator, they were so innovative and Peter Hammill, is a talented song writer and extraordinary lyricist with a very unique vocal style

  • @peterichards3261
    @peterichards3261 3 роки тому +58

    I love Peter Hammill's perspective on this aspect of being a sort of guardian but what if you get it wrong? Modern equivalent would be air traffic controllers. By the way Doug keep going with VDGG, the Godbluff and Still Life albums are awesome

    • @Rowenband
      @Rowenband 3 роки тому +2

      My two favorite albums too.

    • @PaulMDove2
      @PaulMDove2 3 роки тому +6

      Peter has air traffic controllers covered too with his solo piece Flight. Which has now been adopted into VDGG's repertoire with them performing it live on what may have been their last tour, I think in 2018.

    • @jonrumfitt1913
      @jonrumfitt1913 3 роки тому +5

      @@PaulMDove2 Flight (pref. studio solo version) would definitely be a good one to react to Doug. Love the channel by the way.

  • @RodM.Peters
    @RodM.Peters 3 роки тому +5

    It's Peter Hamill's singing all along, and the fact you ask is a testament to the guy's incredible voice range and emotional richness: he goes from the heavenly falsetto to the rough-edged, even jagged and desperate voice tone just like it's a cakewalk.

  • @proghead122
    @proghead122 Рік тому +4

    Doug's breakdown was a revelation and made me re evaluate my opinions . I always found this track a challenging listen at the time even though I was a VDG fan. Finally 50 years later I recently played it again and was instantly blown away. The whole album is a masterpiece and I now think that it's possibly the best Prog album I've ever heard. Better late than never and I guess that some things are meant to happen in the right moment.

  • @CanigoCatala
    @CanigoCatala 3 роки тому +21

    VdGG were unique, one reason was Peter Hammill, the other the choose of instrumentation and the ability of going from pastoral to pre-punk-like aggressive tones

  • @didierchapelot5671
    @didierchapelot5671 3 роки тому +5

    This is just the greatest progressive band of all times. And one the best band in history. Happy there's some reaction video for Peter Hammill's work. The vocals are all from Peter Hammill. He liked to change his voice according to the lyrics, like in a play. I would love you react to more from this wonderful band. There's no guitar in VDGG but in this track Robert Fripp (from King Crimson) plays some.

  • @biraoliverio
    @biraoliverio 3 роки тому +72

    All vocals are done by Peter Hammill, he us a very gifted singer.

    • @grubkiller1212
      @grubkiller1212 3 роки тому

      What do you think, should we advice him something else or is it enough?

    • @biraoliverio
      @biraoliverio 3 роки тому +4

      @@grubkiller1212 I think we can suggest other songs, like Man Erg, The Undercover Man, Refugees, and Killers.

    • @grubkiller1212
      @grubkiller1212 3 роки тому +3

      @@biraoliverio Great idea! But what about other bands ? I would like to see Doug react to whole Thick as a brick

    • @biraoliverio
      @biraoliverio 3 роки тому +1

      @@grubkiller1212 This ia a great suggestion, let’s work for it.

    • @anthonymorris6490
      @anthonymorris6490 3 роки тому +4

      The arrow is a great track to show his singing range

  • @thewal1ofsleep
    @thewal1ofsleep 3 роки тому +4

    One of the most unique and incredible bands of all time. Their music transcends genre. Legends.

  • @briannicholls2893
    @briannicholls2893 3 роки тому +3

    I was lucky enough in my university days in the early 70s to see many of the top prog bands live, but VDGG at the Cambridge Corn Exchange (the Godbluff tour) remains one of the most extraordinary gigs ever. They had an almost punk like attitude in that they were simply determined to play in their own way regardless of whether the audience liked them or not. Hammill's vocal power was unequalled by any other singer I have seen before or since, and the musicianship was superb. Above all, their use of dynamics gave them a power that even heavy metal bands could not match - and that was without a bass player and with minimal guitar. Still one of my top 5 gigs of all time.

  • @jamescpotter
    @jamescpotter 3 роки тому +4

    That is Peter Hammill singing as his voice was capable of multiple textures! Peter was an underrated vocalist because of his eccentric (yet incredibly successful) approach. Once upon a time Van Der Graaf toured with Genesis per the Charisma label both bands recorded on.

  • @andreacosta74
    @andreacosta74 3 роки тому +3

    The most underrated rock band in the history

  • @fredoniabulsara9414
    @fredoniabulsara9414 3 роки тому +6

    Didnt know these guys before! Absolutely gonna add them to my smoking playlist! Feels like Maiden and King Crimson had a kid.
    Thanks to the people suggesting this masterpiece and thanks to you bringing it to us!
    Edit: The Spy by The Doors would be definetly worth your time!

  • @firstdegreehurrdurr
    @firstdegreehurrdurr 3 роки тому +3

    All of VDGG 70's output is among the very, very best of progressive rock, and this song in particular is one of many masterpieces from those albums.

  • @chuckybastard
    @chuckybastard 3 роки тому +19

    Excited for this one! To answer your question @ 7:41 , the only vocalist is Peter Hamill, I feel like his unique voice contributes a lot to the Van der Graaf sound. I also want to thank you for these videos!! I’ve enjoyed these works of art (they obviously are) for many years but, thanks to your analysis, I’ve come to appreciate them in a different way! Please keep it up with the Prog epics, I dunno if this might be your cup of tea, but it may be worth a shot to give Italian Progressive Rock a go… Ill Balletto di Bronzo has a fantastic concept album called YS, might be a long piece but just an analysis of the first two “Incontros” is worth an analysis video. All the best from Mexico!!

  • @micaelmelomachado
    @micaelmelomachado 3 роки тому +63

    Doug, since you're escalating on the scale of "prog wierdness" (Pink Floyd to Yes to Genesis to ELP to King Crimson to VDGG), the next natural step would be Gentle Giant! Perhaps "Knots", maybe?

    • @yes_head
      @yes_head 3 роки тому +15

      And then on to Magma. I'd like to see how he deals with Klingon opera.

    • @grahamhowes6904
      @grahamhowes6904 3 роки тому +4

      Yes please Gentle Giant but do source the performance from their live album PLAYING THE FOOL Octopus for instance

    • @ananas8031
      @ananas8031 3 роки тому +6

      I'd like to see him react to Trout Mask Replica. The final stage of weirdness

    • @stubking1397
      @stubking1397 3 роки тому +9

      On Reflection. Doug writes choral music. I would love to get his reaction to this Gentle Giant gem

    • @biraoliverio
      @biraoliverio 3 роки тому +4

      @@yes_head Mekanïk Kömmandöh

  • @alexsander2112
    @alexsander2112 3 роки тому +15

    Also, for Friday sections, as you love doing prog suites, I'd love to see a full Jethro Tull's "Thick as a Brick" (or even "A Passion Play")

  • @fischergreen4134
    @fischergreen4134 3 роки тому +2

    My all time favourite Prog track. It’s been part of my musical life for over 40 years and I never tire of it.

  • @bastiangustavsen3168
    @bastiangustavsen3168 3 роки тому +12

    Saw them live in 2011, Never heard about them beforehand, had to pick between them and The Stranglers. I am so glad I made the choice to watch their show. Incredible musicians! Peter Hammill is a wonderful person to watch! Totally electrifying!

    • @jeannettesimpson9778
      @jeannettesimpson9778 3 роки тому +1

      Never got to see them live - and I saw many bands in the 70s - so this is my biggest regret. (Never saw The Stanglers live either, which is another regret.)

    • @bastiangustavsen3168
      @bastiangustavsen3168 3 роки тому

      @@jeannettesimpson9778 bet you got to see so many wonderful acts in the 70s! Lots of music from that era that I wish I could have seen, but I was born in the 90s

    • @lemming9984
      @lemming9984 3 роки тому +2

      Oh yeah! I went to see VdGG on that tour and saw a Stranglers poster for a gig the same night. Manchester?

    • @bastiangustavsen3168
      @bastiangustavsen3168 3 роки тому

      @@lemming9984 indeed!

    • @kidflersh7807
      @kidflersh7807 3 роки тому +1

      But did you know ua-cam.com/video/uD-hITDxgkc/v-deo.html exists

  • @paulramon3353
    @paulramon3353 3 роки тому +33

    Hi Doug I would add the relevance here of Hammill's training by the Jesuits, Catholicism's ideological special forces unit as he later called them. There's more than a touch of contemporary Christian existentialism here, especially if the lyrics are read allegorically. The closing line, playing on the ambiguity of 'a-part', is very likely an allusion to Yeats' The Second Coming (things fall apart etc). VDGG seem the supreme example of Edward Macan's argument that the secularization of Church training is an overlooked influence on English prog. Many proggers had public school choirboy backgrounds and Hugh Banton went on to develop a successful line in electronic church organs.

    • @soggytom
      @soggytom 3 роки тому +5

      Spot on. I feel Hammill was forever trying to quench and resolve depression and a bit of mania through his lyrics, often quite blatantly ('In The End', "House With No Door"). And the attempts to resolve conflicts with Christianity come through loud and clear as well ("The Lie"). Regardless, ALL the music is stunning and moving. VdGG is the one band (and Hammill solos) I can never get enough of.

    • @jackal59
      @jackal59 2 роки тому +1

      Excellent comment. I've always thought that "Man-Erg" is one of the most direct songs of theirs I've heard and that it is essentially a humanist hymn.

  • @TheAnalyst79
    @TheAnalyst79 3 роки тому +37

    You are not going to get this recommendation from many others, but another 20+ minute epic you should try is Mumps by Hatfield and the North. You will not be disappointed.

    • @allangmiller
      @allangmiller 3 роки тому +3

      Good call.

    • @poststructuralisthero9290
      @poststructuralisthero9290 3 роки тому +3

      I'm hearing more and more people call for Canterbury bands lately. It's going to happen.

    • @odrioper
      @odrioper 3 роки тому +2

      Yep. Marvelous piece.

    • @FiddlerNick
      @FiddlerNick 3 роки тому +2

      Yep it'll blow your brain

  • @geraividet
    @geraividet 2 роки тому +3

    There is a live version of this song. If I'm not mistaken it was recorded in Belgium. It's truly impressive seeing the four of them playing this live.

  • @aeglyndagon4070
    @aeglyndagon4070 3 роки тому +2

    Finally van der graaf generator :) i hope you listen other songs of this group. Great work!

  • @anthonymorris6490
    @anthonymorris6490 3 роки тому +12

    Hey the vocalist was Peter Hammill all the way through, he was and still is an amazingly distinctive and versatile singer

    • @magusperde365
      @magusperde365 3 роки тому

      Some may argue that he lost his voice today. But I think he still has that intensity. Just less versatile and more raw.

    • @anthonymorris6490
      @anthonymorris6490 3 роки тому

      @@magusperde365 some may yes, I will confess I was rather astounded how his voice has changed when "Do Not Disturb" came out, however he has that chameleon ability to change with his age even some of the old songs are different but not in a bad way for me

  • @mvjonsson
    @mvjonsson 3 роки тому +7

    Doug, if you want to further hear the close connection between modern classical music and prog, I would suggest listening to the Belgian progband Univers Zero and especially their album Ceux du Dehors (1981) with tracks such as Dense, Bonjour Chez Vous and Combat. They played a dark, medieval, atmospheric music inspired by composers such as Bela Bartok, Stravinskij, Iannis Xenakis and Huybrechts. Also the French Zeuhl progband Magma, led by Christian Vander, is worth a listen.

  • @atlasking6110
    @atlasking6110 3 роки тому +17

    All things are a part. All things are apart. Doug, there's a live video recording of the whole piece that's just amazing. They have the whole studio filled with hundreds of candles, very atmospheric. You can find it on UA-cam with an annoying watermark. I have it on the GODBLUFF DVD where it is a bonus track.

    • @bongobong3302
      @bongobong3302 3 роки тому

      I believe it's the second time they ever played the whole piece. They never planned to play it live but French TV said they had to..

    • @raybysouth3523
      @raybysouth3523 3 роки тому

      This live piece was done in 2 parts. Saw them do it in London at the Barbican as a 3 piece good but lack Jackson.

  • @Laurasiana
    @Laurasiana 3 роки тому +23

    Alright! So with Van der Graaf and King Crimson, you’ve started on the path of the Music that Bites Back! From here, it’s on to RIO (Rock In Opposition). Bands like Henry Cow, Univers Zero, Sammla Mammas Manna, and Etron Fou Leloublan await you.

  • @batteryacid1464
    @batteryacid1464 3 роки тому +9

    Please react to Peter Hammill - A Louse is not a Home. Love the videos! ❤️❤️❤️

  • @sheldonwheaton881
    @sheldonwheaton881 3 роки тому +54

    Scherazade by Renaissance?

    • @dougmphilly
      @dougmphilly 3 роки тому +2

      next please

    • @Nikioko
      @Nikioko 3 роки тому

      Wasn't that by Rimski-Korsakov? ;-)

    • @markjacobsen8335
      @markjacobsen8335 3 роки тому +3

      @@Nikioko Renaissance did an amazing piece call "Song Of Scheherazade" that is about 24 minutes long. Much different than the Rimsky-Korsakov piece.

    • @malekmo64
      @malekmo64 3 роки тому

      @@Nikioko no only a reoccurring motif that alludes to Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherezade, not a complete copy of but inspired by, their title is Song Of Scheherezade.

    • @ianashleigh
      @ianashleigh 3 роки тому

      Ashes Are Burning for a shorter track

  • @edoianna
    @edoianna 2 роки тому +2

    After more than 40 years this record remains the Absolute to me, the summit, the lighthouse, the guide

  • @IntheCourtoftheCrimsonKing
    @IntheCourtoftheCrimsonKing Рік тому +1

    Yes. Peter Hammill was singing all the vocal parts on this. I was blessed to see him live in Quebec City in the 80s and what a range of expressivity he had.

  • @brucegelman5582
    @brucegelman5582 3 роки тому +6

    The end sounds like angelic redemption rising into the heavens

  • @RalphBellairs
    @RalphBellairs 3 роки тому +3

    One of my all time favourite bands. Saw them live 3 times and also a Peter Hammill solo gig in the 1970s. The memory of them opening with "Lemmings" at the Free Trade Hall, Manchester in 1972 still gives me chills to this day!

  • @williamknutson6163
    @williamknutson6163 Рік тому +1

    Great review... I been a fan for many years. I see that this composition could be metaphorical in nature... The artist's, and musicians/composer's in the world are alienated and conflicted in their lives like the lighthouse keepers...

  • @Bryman1970
    @Bryman1970 2 роки тому +2

    I have heard very little of VDGG. This song almost made me insane just listening to it. Wow. What an epic. I love when emotion is expressed so well in a song. This definitely hit the nail on the head, Thanks again, Doug.

  • @drob281159
    @drob281159 3 роки тому +4

    A couple of things. Peter Hammill said in an interview that VDGG's aim from the start was to create a "glorious racket" (oh I love this one!). And classically trained organist Hugh Banton gives a lesson on working Hammond and Farfisa organs to their respective limits.

  • @bobfitzpatrick8952
    @bobfitzpatrick8952 3 роки тому +4

    I never heard these guys until about two years ago, even though I've been a fan of Yes and ELP for decades. Very talented. I also really like "Refugees" as well.

  • @domi01234
    @domi01234 3 роки тому +1

    Hey Doug,
    Congratulations, you "survived" VDGG's A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers :-)
    Yes, it's Peter Hammill doing all the voices.
    Their instrumental work is mainly centered on Banton's keyboards (highly customized for the period) and Jackson's saxophones (highly customized too, electrified, and yes he can play two at the same time live) plus the incredible drums from Evans.
    You said "fascinating" several times and "unique piece" and you're right: VDGG never tried to go commercial.
    Peter Hammill plays electric guitar but mostly on his solo albums (with the support of the VDGG members...)
    VDGG + Peter Hammill discography is gigantic.
    Even a punk singer like Sex Pistols' Johnny Rotten considers Peter Hammill the God Father of pre-punk. As a supporting sample you can browse the Nadir's Big Chance album (1975) there: ua-cam.com/video/rKoP19WHcFA/v-deo.html. Try also "Open your eyes". Beyond the pre-punk aspect, one song beats all the others in this album: "The Institute of Mental Health". All the pre-punk God Father thing is kind of BS IMHO, you can find plenty of burgeoning proto-punk work everywhere. First example to come to mind: Detroit-based MC5 - Kick out the jams (1969) ua-cam.com/video/yvJGQ_piwI0/v-deo.html
    Lyrical content: yes, all Peter Hammill lyrics are pretty heavy. You won't find Girl meets Boy and will live happily after in his songs.
    After his divorce, Peter Hammill wrote one of the most sad song one can listen to: "(On Tuesday She Used To Do) Yoga" from the album "Over" where the electric guitar lacerates like a scythe: ua-cam.com/video/tfr9ndkWxpA/v-deo.html
    The theme of survival and rebirth is very present in Peter Hammill's work. See for instance "Lost And Found" from the same album: ua-cam.com/video/6hXxyJnv6hE/v-deo.html
    You can find similar "we don't give a s..t about commercial" bands. Take for example the Kraut Rock period in Germany during the 60s. For obvious reasons Germany is and stays apart of the cultural and musical affairs of the world, also the British Invasion is in full swing. The frustated younger German musicians thus had to explore "new" music and do their own things between themselves. The most famous being Kraftwerk and Tangerine Dream. But it's only the tip of the iceberg. Try the list below to find works that are also unique and different:
    Can / Halleluwah from the Tago-Mago album (1971): ua-cam.com/video/Gp6oPyQnX60/v-deo.html
    Neu! / Hallogallo (1971): ua-cam.com/video/zndpi8tNZyQ/v-deo.html
    Neu! / Negativland (1971): ua-cam.com/video/fhiNtanvImg/v-deo.html
    You can look for Amon Düül on UA-cam and dig into the results. Sounds like Jefferson Airplane or Greatfull Dead but through a "let's make it much weirder" filter.
    Here is a band that really really did not give a s..t: Faust. Example: It's a Rainy Day (Sunshine Girl) 1972: ua-cam.com/video/GRxvQmTTz5I/v-deo.html A song where the economy of lyrics is astonishing :-) Even more for the beat! Virgin Records signed them not really knowing what they were doing, ROFL.
    Ten years later, Kraut Rock has become "Euro Rock" and still lived on. Example:
    Die Krupps - Wahre arbeit, wahrer lohn (1981): ua-cam.com/video/D98JkEz6ckg/v-deo.html (unfortunately they later ended up going commercial) It beats Suicide IMHO.
    They are all different, but most importantly, their music is timeles.
    Interestingly it's always artists who have something to say who write the songs that will last (they are even catchy sometimes). For example: Dubioza kolektiv "Himna generacije", ua-cam.com/video/Z5xuauDWxYw/v-deo.html.
    Your channel is very interesting. Thank you for bringing the musician expertise to the things we listen too. I'm very appreciative and we are learning things. Keep on the good work! TYVM.
    Warmest regards,
    Dominique

  • @Hasbaya1960
    @Hasbaya1960 3 роки тому +1

    Love your episodes, Doug. Thank you for featuring this song, which for me represents the high water mark of 1970's British prog, A few nuggets that others haven't mentioned yet: when David Jackson, the saxophonist played live with VdGG, he played two saxes at once, with one fed through a frequency doubler and a wah-wah pedal. The organist, Hugh Banton, has had a parallel career building organs. He specialized in electronic organs that mimic large pipe organs (he studied at Wakefield Cathedral in Yorkshire as a teen, and has recorded and released his own version of Bach's Goldberg Variations which he transcribed from the harpsichord to organ). Much of the organ work in this song was played on an electronically modified Italian organ called a Farfisa, that was a modified transistor accordion. Through his modifications and the effects pedals he ran the output through, he got a fairly realistic pipe organ sound. At one point, there are 16 simultaneous overdubs of organ, mellotron, piano, clavinet, drums and saxophones. VdGG never found the success they deserved, but this album ("Pawn Hearts") was #1 in Italy, and the band faced near riots of fans when they toured there. Thanks again for spending time sharing your insights on this piece!

  • @Lightmane
    @Lightmane 3 роки тому +20

    Here's another one I think you might enjoy; U.K.'s debut album, featuring their opening number, a 3-part 13 minute Suite called 'In the Dead of Night'. Part 2 is called 'By the Light of Day' and part 3 is 'Presto Vivace and Reprise'. 'Nevermore' is the other track I think you'd enjoy and from their second album, 'Carrying No Cross'. A 12+ minute Prog masterpiece.

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley 3 роки тому +1

      I’m going to have to check that one out.

    • @Lightmane
      @Lightmane 3 роки тому +1

      @@Hartlor_Tayley Great. Let me know what you think 😀

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley 3 роки тому

      @@Lightmane will do.

    • @manuelbarros4898
      @manuelbarros4898 3 роки тому +2

      Tremendous album. Allan Holdsworth is just amazing and the band is so tight.

    • @Lightmane
      @Lightmane 3 роки тому +2

      @@manuelbarros4898 Easily makes my top 10 Prog Rock albums. Might make top 5. Too bad not many people have heard it.

  • @Dmdmello
    @Dmdmello 3 роки тому +20

    "Lost" is another great VDGG song

    • @Pjaypt
      @Pjaypt 3 роки тому +1

      Yes it is! A fantastic romantic song!
      And once more Hugh Banton giving that watery sound...

    • @josedealbuquerquejr.941
      @josedealbuquerquejr.941 3 роки тому +2

      Nic Potter favorite VDGG song

    • @lemming9984
      @lemming9984 3 роки тому +4

      Lost is equal to Plague for me. I just can't decide which I like the best!

    • @NicolaMenel
      @NicolaMenel 2 роки тому

      Love it!

  • @carolinecrouch9123
    @carolinecrouch9123 Рік тому +1

    It is just Peter singing. I was fascinated by this album and was lucky enough to see Peter Hammil doing a small live show in Liverpool back in the early 70s

  • @SB36963
    @SB36963 3 роки тому +1

    PLEASE do more on Van Der Graaf man. I can promise you there are some who truly appreciate music that DEEPLY want their music broken down.

  • @NakiLogos
    @NakiLogos 3 роки тому +91

    This is not kindergarten music like Dream Theater, this is real deal!

  • @Tsongkapa1
    @Tsongkapa1 3 роки тому +5

    Oh, and I always understood "Lighthouse Keeper" to be a metaphor for himself and the band as the keepers and us, the acid-soaked audience, as the navigators. Peter is pretty frank about the drugs in interviews.

  • @mcasualjacques
    @mcasualjacques 2 роки тому +1

    when the drummer is named Guy, you know it's gonna be good, that's a law of the Universe

  • @augustoanjos2866
    @augustoanjos2866 3 роки тому +1

    The saxophonist played two saxes at the same time (influenced by saxophonist Rland Kirk) and also processed the sound of the sax, electrifying it.
    The keyboard player was trained as an organist and had knowledge in electronics, so he changed the Hammond, making it with a heavier and more differentiated sound.

  • @kidflersh7807
    @kidflersh7807 3 роки тому +16

    If you liked this, try "A Louse is Not A Home" by Peter Hammill (and definitely his most acclaimed song). It's one of the best solo songs by the singer of VdGG. It has all the past members of VdGG. Also maybe could do "The Sleepwalkers" by VdGG

    • @TheAnalyst79
      @TheAnalyst79 3 роки тому +2

      Those would be my top two next PH/VdGG suggestions as well

    • @einarassipavicius1991
      @einarassipavicius1991 3 роки тому +2

      Two excellent suggestions. I second that!

    • @frankwestad5084
      @frankwestad5084 2 роки тому

      Good suggestion, "Louse" is an epic piece of music

  • @TheBuglemouthBass
    @TheBuglemouthBass 3 роки тому +6

    Interesting tidbit about David Jaxon. The foghorns you hear are him playing not one but TWO saxophones at the same time, harmonized. He did this quit a bit in his time with the band.

  • @soggytom
    @soggytom 3 роки тому +1

    The original guitarist was Nic Potter. He left the band during recording the previous album, "H to He, Who Am The Only One". They never replaced him, Hammill occasionally playing guitar if one was required. Potter rejoined in 1977, but that was two break-ups and two reunions later.

  • @iansmith8783
    @iansmith8783 3 роки тому +4

    legendary. genesis, vdgg, and gentle giant are the holy trinity.

  • @philosophysenpai659
    @philosophysenpai659 3 роки тому +10

    Welcome, maestro, to the uniqueness that is VDGG. Unique in their selection and combination of instruments and that awesome skinny poetic and composing genious of Peter Hammill. Yes, he is the only one that sings. Next time please do try the (least experimental) but majestic musical jewels: "Man Erg" and "My Room"...

  • @jonathanhenderson9422
    @jonathanhenderson9422 3 роки тому +4

    So glad you got to this one. Even after having heard a ton of prog before I got to VdGG and this piece it still blew me away like few things have. It's just so cinematic and tonally powerful. As for further classic prog suggestions, you really need to do Jethro Tull's Thick as a Brick and The Advent of Panurge by Gentle Giant.

  • @robbertstrengholt8429
    @robbertstrengholt8429 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for this great video. I've been listening to Van der Graaf Generator and Peter Hammill since the late 70's when I was like 15 years old. But your video made me understand this song better, both technically and storywise.

  • @danbeaudet6718
    @danbeaudet6718 2 роки тому +1

    I saw Peter Hammil in Montreal, in 1982. He was alone with a grand piano and an electric guitar. He made my hair stand up! What a performance!