From St. Cleve to Sirius
Transcription
From St. Cleve to Sirius
From St. Cleve to Sirius: Technological and socio-cultural trajectories of the concept album SIMON CHR ISTOPHER WOOD Bachelor of Arts (Music Industry) Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of: Bachelor of Media and Communication (Honours). Supervisor: Dr. Ed Montano Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology School of Media and Communication 25th October 2013 3 Contents 5 Abstract 7 Statement of Authorship 9 Acknowledgements 11 Introduction 15 Chapter One: An overview of the concept album 28 Chapter Two: Thick as a Brick by Jethro Tull (1972) 36 Chapter Three: Operation: Mindcrime by Queensrÿche (1988) 46 Chapter Four: OK Computer by Radiohead (1997) 54 Chapter Five: The Amory Wars by Coheed and Cambria (2002-2013) 67 Chapter Six: Conclusion 72 Image List 73 Bibliography 77 Videography 78 Discography “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 4 Simon Christopher Wood 5 Abstract This thesis investigates the development of the concept album and examines how it is situated within contemporary music practice. The term “concept album” is used within the discourse of popular music to describe a type of album with some form of conceptual unity throughout, be it musical, lyrical or otherwise. The concept album has been challenged by modern computing technologies, such as internet-based digital music services, which devalue the idea of the album format by encouraging the consumption of individual songs. Despite this, I contend that computing technologies and new media innovations could actually provide artists with creative opportunities that enhance their concept albums. Furthermore, a renewed emphasis on concept albums could reinvigorate interest in the album format within contemporary popular music. I argue that the extended playing time, extra-musical presentation aesthetics and narrative qualities of the concept album continue to hold value within the digital music industry. I suggest that this is because the concept album is a platform for artistic expression that has proven adaptable to progressions in media technologies, and can be used to comment or ref lect upon corresponding socio-cultural contexts. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 6 Simon Christopher Wood 7 Statement of authorship This thesis contains no material which has been accepted for the award of any other degree or diploma in any tertiary institution, and that, to the best of my knowledge and belief, contains no material previously published or written by another person, except where due reference is made. I grant RMIT University permission to make duplicate copies of this thesis as required. Signed: Simon Christopher Wood Date: 25th October, 2013. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 8 9 Acknowledgements I would like to thank my supervisor, Ed Montano, for having faith in my writing abilities and encouraging me to enrol in Honours. I appreciate the guidance, time and friendship you have provided, and have enjoyed sharing our common passion for music. To the program director, Adrian Miles, thank you for all of your help and suggestions. And to the new friends I have made in the Honours lab (the brotherhood), I can’t thank you enough for your positivity and motivation. Your tireless work this year has been inspirational, and I’m sure you will all reap the rewards. I would also like to give special thanks to Anne-Lise, Chris, Hanna, Laura and my bandmates for being so tolerant and supportive, and providing me with stability and sanity in what has been a frantic, but rewarding year. 10 11 Introduction This thesis interrogates understandings of the concept album, considering what it means for an album to be conceptual, and examining how concept albums have developed over four decades between 1972 and 2013. Several authors have engaged with the concept album through various critical and analytical perspectives (Dozal 2012; Montgomery 2002; Shute 2013; Stimeling 2011), generating multiple definitions. Much of the existing discussion regarding concept albums focuses on their role within the “progressive rock” scene of the 1970s (Hegarty and Halliwell 2011: 65, Macan 1997: 58), with little attention given to the place of the concept album in more contemporary contexts. While this thesis is historically informed, my intention is to consider the concept album in a more contemporary light. This study explores two key ideas: (a) the relationship between concept albums and media technologies; and (b) the extent to which concept albums function as reflections of their corresponding socio-cultural contexts. This approach is partly influenced by Anderton’s study of progressive rock as a European meta-genre, in which he discusses the genre in terms of its “socio-political and recording industry/media contexts” (2010: 422). I present four case studies in order to address these key ideas, each concerned with a rock concept album from a different decade: Thick as a Brick (1972) by Jethro Tull; Operation: Mindcrime (1988) by Queensrÿche; OK Computer (1997) by Radiohead; and The Amory Wars (2002-2013), an album series by Coheed and Cambria. My scholarship is in the field of media and communication, and thus my goal here is to provide a contemporary evaluation of the concept album as a form of communicative media. While previous discussions of concept albums have concentrated on their borrowings from “high culture” and the Romantic movement (Covach 1997; Macan 1997; Moore 1993), or have adopted musicological frameworks and notation-based analysis to compare their extended compositional structures to classical song cycles (Elicker 2001; Macan 1997; Martin 1996), the use of such methods is beyond the scope of this study. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 12 It is worth noting that my work is grounded in my personal practice as a musician and recording artist within the contemporary progressive rock music scene, as manager and drummer of the Australian progressive rock band Kettlespider. In 2012, I coordinated the release of our independently released concept album, Avadante. Studying concept albums from a critical perspective has allowed me to develop a detailed knowledge of the medium’s history and aesthetics, thereby informing any future concept album recording I undertake. It is important to discuss concept albums through the lens of technology. The continued progression of media technologies has played a major role in the dissemination of concept albums. Studies by music industry scholars and cultural theorists (Arditi 2013; Burkart 2013; Jones 2000; Park 2007) have indicated that contemporary media technologies have reshaped purchasing and listening practices for music consumers in the digital age, encouraging the consumption of individual tracks rather than complete albums. The plethora of internet-based downloading and streaming services that have developed since the turn of the new millennium, such as Napster, iTunes and Spotify, have afforded consumers the ability to easily jump between tracks by various artists and access their desired music digitally without having to purchase a physical album in a “bricks and mortar” record store. Dozal suggests that the idea of the “album as a whole” has been adversely affected by the shift to a digital music industry dominated by individual tracks. Furthermore, he indicates, “the traditional construction of the concept album has suffered even more” (2012: 9). The term “traditional”, in this instance, alludes to the concept album’s construction as a physical, self-contained artefact. Drawing upon Dozal’s observation, I investigate the extent to which concept albums have actually “suffered” in the digital age. I present a linear narrative throughout my case studies that demonstrates how artists in four different decades since the 1970s have influenced the concept album’s evolution by inventively using the pioneering technologies of their time. I also explore how computing technologies and media innovations have the potential to provide contemporary artists with new creative opportunities and methods through which to immerse audiences in concept albums. Simon Christopher Wood 13 In addition to technology, central to my discussion are the socio-cultural contexts in which my case study concept albums were released. Street has identified the profound socio-cultural influence that music is capable of having on an era (2001: 246). Many artists have engaged with social and cultural concerns through their music, with artists such as Bob Dylan, the Beatles, Public Enemy and Nirvana having been identified as giving voice to the concerns of their respective generations. There are numerous examples of concept albums that can be interpreted as aligned with the social, political, cultural or economic circumstances and conditions of their eras. Each of the concept albums I use as case studies can be seen as reflective of this in different ways, be it through their storylines, lyrical themes or visual representations. I investigate whether this could also be an explanation for the concept album’s continued relevance in the face of constant technological change. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 14 Thesis structure Chapter One provides an overview of the history and development of concept albums, alongside an exploration of some of the existing literature on the topic. The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967), arguably the first concept album (Macan 1997: 20), is used as a reference point for exploring the concept album’s aesthetics and defining characteristics, and to demonstrate how concept albums can be situated within their technological and socio-cultural contexts. Chapter Two (Jethro Tull’s Thick as a Brick), Chapter Three (Radiohead’s OK Computer), Chapter Four (Queensrÿche’s Operation: Mindcrime) and Chapter Five (Coheed and Cambria’s Amory Wars) each present case studies of commercially successful rock concept albums, chronologically ordered according to their time of release in four different decades: the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and 2000s. Each of the case studies follows a similar structure. I commence by introducing the concept album in question, building upon the foundations established in Chapter One and offering some background information on the album and recording artist. I then interrogate the relationship between the concept album and related media technologies, and then I position the album within its broader socio-cultural contexts, drawing upon aesthetics such as its concept, lyrics, artwork and design. Taken together, the case studies offer a means of: (a) analysing how artists have adapted the concept album over the course of forty years to accommodate new media technologies; and (b) testing how these artists have been influenced by, or have attempted to reflect, the corresponding social and cultural circumstances of their album’s time of release. Chapter Six concludes the thesis by considering the major trends and developments highlighted through each of my case studies, and discussing their implications. I detail six guiding considerations that contribute towards a greater understanding of the concept album in the contemporary music landscape. I also address the need for further investigation of the topic of concept albums. Simon Christopher Wood 15 An overview of the concept album CHAPTER ONE The term “concept album” has been defined in a variety of ways, yet there are certain key characteristics that are common across these various definitions. For example, Shuker suggests that a concept album is “unified by a theme, which can be instrumental, compositional, narrative or lyrical” (1998: 5; see also Macan 1997: 20), while Elicker describes a concept album as “an album by either one artist or a group which contains a unifying thread throughout the songs – be it musical, thematic or both” (2001: 229). Montgomery offers a critical analysis of the concept album, emphasising its association with vinyl long-playing records (2002: 82), and incorporating interview dialogue with prominent rock concept album producers from the 1970s such as Alan Parsons and Bob Ezrin (2002: 183, 246). Montgomery suggests that there is a lack of scholarly focus on the concept album, and a “greater understanding of the term [is] of some importance to popular music history and the history of recorded sound” (2002: 7). He outlines various definitions of the concept album from musicological studies, journals and magazines, condensing them into the following description: The term concept album describes a style of presentation, or format applied in the creation, marketing and distribution of vinyl long-playing records. The term rock concept album refers specifically to rock LPs. An LP considered conceptual was unified: i.e. it made a totality of linked songs through compositional (musical and literary) and marketing (graphic and promotional) strategies that were both thematically explicit and undefined. Defining considerations, therefore, are both musical and non-musical, as well as material and aesthetic. (2002: 33; see also Stimeling 2011: 389) “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 16 Letts observes that many music scholars and reviewers treat the term “concept album” as self-evident, “trusting that most people know what a concept album is without taking the time to define it” (2005: 9). The task of defining the concept album is one of Letts’ primary motivations, done so through a discussion of Radiohead’s OK Computer (1997), Kid A (2000) and Amnesiac (2001). Letts also observes how the concept album’s commercial potential as “a commodity with social-critical import” is often overlooked (2005: 14). By eschewing singles, artists “forced” listeners to consider their concept album as a whole, but also “forced” them to buy it as a whole (2005: 12). Letts also introduces a categorisation system with which to consider different types of concept albums. Letts’ system comprises three categories of concept albums, based on their musical or lyrical parts and structures: “narrative”, “thematic” and “resistant” (2005: 18). Dozal introduces a hierarchy system that categorises concept albums according to the depth and complexity of their concept, and the extent to which it is embedded in not only the music, but also in the supplementary material and additional media associated with the album. He suggests four ranks of concept album: “low”, “mid”, “high” and “ultra” (2012: 96-97). Shute notes that concept albums “attempt to harness the unabashed energy of popular music, while simultaneously stretching the scope of this musical style to its limit by incorporating extended themes and storylines” (2013: 7). He examines the concept album’s history over fifty years, analysing the work of key artists including Pink Floyd, Yes, David Bowie and Genesis, before addressing the use of the medium in post-millennial music. Shute describes his book as offering “the first in-depth, critical account of the concept album, from its highest creative moments to its most pretentious, flailing abominations” (back cover). This claim indicates the mixed critical reception directed towards concept albums over the years. Simon Christopher Wood 17 Figure 1: Album Cover. Genesis. The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway. Charisma, 1974. Concept albums and progressive rock in the 1970s Hegarty and Halliwell observe that “[t]hrough the 1970s, several high-profile albums made the concept album synonymous with progressive rock” (2011: 65). One such example is The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway (1974) by the English progressive rock band Genesis (Figure 1). Holm-Hudson, in his book-length analysis of this album, states: “the concept album was one of the most prominent and distinctive manifestations of rock’s ‘art’ impulse in the late 1960s and early 1970s” (2008: 8). A lot can be gained from attending to the affiliations between concept albums and (symphonic) progressive rock music, which are addressed by scholars such as Macan (1997), Martin (1998) and Stump (2010). “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 18 Macan provides a socio-musicological history of progressive rock, investigating its history and close relationship with the English counterculture of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Martin, drawing upon a philosophical approach to the arts, distinguishes a ten-year period between 1968 and 1978, which he refers to as “the time of progressive rock” (see also Anderton 2010: 418). Stump employs a broad historical approach, making frequent reference to Macan’s arguments as a basis for further exploration. Macan suggests that progressive rock’s emergence in Britain amidst the countercultural politics and aesthetics of the late 1960s and early 1970s depended on a subculture of highly educated young people (1997: 147). Subsequent youth subcultures also developed in other areas of Europe and the bands that emerged from these subcultures shared a common appreciation for high culture, classical music and the arts (such bands include Magma from France, Premiata Forneria Marconi from Italy and Aphrodite’s Child from Greece). These impulses are evident in many progressive rock concept albums. For Stump, progressive rock “scorned convention and was in a state of permanent evolution - contrasting with the mercenary, stereotypical pop pap against which it was marketed” (2010: 7). The concept album embodied “the Romantic imagination underpinning the Progressive project” (Stump 2010: 138) and became a “physical symbol of rock’s anti-commercial rhetoric” (Stimeling 2011: 390). Progressive rock artists such as Yes, Jethro Tull and Emerson, Lake and Palmer used the concept album to engage in creative and expressive practices atypical of popular music up to that point. In Martin’s study on the band Yes, he observes how concept albums like Tales from Topographic Oceans (1973) resembled the point at which “the music, production, cover art, and so on come together as a complete work of art” (1996: 22). Ahlkvist observes that “scholarly writing on 1970s progressive rock typically presents the symphonic style as synonymous with ‘progressive rock’ in general” (2011: 640). For my research, symphonic progressive rock studies like the texts discussed above proved useful, as the symphonic bands active throughout the 1970s helped to define the concept album’s characteristics. Simon Christopher Wood 19 The Alan Parsons Project, for example, successfully embraced the concept album almost exclusively throughout their career. HolmHudson (2002) offers a collection of short essays on progressive rock by numerous authors. The collection provides a broad view of progressive rock, with the intention to “reconsider progressive rock in a way that transcends commonly held stereotypes of the genre” (2002: 1). In addition to identifying the links between 1970s progressive rock and concept albums (Anderton 2010: 419), it is also necessary to acknowledge the opposing influence that the punk movement had on concept albums in the late 1970s. While punk was a reaction to the social circumstances and right-wing politics in England at the time, it was also a back-to-basics rejection of the musical virtuosity and upper-middle class social status of progressive rock (Macan 1997: 136-7). Bennett notes how progressive rock was described by subcultural theorists at the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies: [I]ts complex musical style and often cryptic lyrics made it almost exclusively the preserve of middle-class students and hippies whose ‘educated’ listening ability and skill in the use of hallucinogenic drugs, it was argued, enabled them to fully appreciate the meaning and significance of progressive rock songs. (2000: 173) Holm-Hudson states that “[w]hen punk became an ascendant force in popular culture in 1976-77, the excesses and high-cultural pretensions of progressive rock made it an easy target, hastening its demise” (2002: 2). A select few concept albums achieved commercial success during punk’s revival of “the cultural values of rock and roll” (Keister and Smith 2008: 448), such as Pink Floyd’s political concept album and associated stage production The Wall (1979). Yet concept albums were generally seen as a commercial risk and “dismissed as pretentious and overblown” due to their complex and grandiose nature (Anderton 2010: 422). “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 20 Concept albums after progressive rock’s commercial decline Rycenga laments the way that many progressive rock bands neglected the concept album by the end of the 1970s, abandoning experimental long forms for more traditional song styles (2006: 237). Covach observes that as “progressive rock faded from view by the dawn of the 1980s; groups either broke up (Gentle Giant, ELP) or took a markedly more commercial turn (Genesis, Yes, Asia)” (2000: 15). In spite of this, it is important to acknowledge the continued affiliations between concept albums and progressive rock beyond the 1970s. The 1980s gave rise to the “neo-progressive rock” genre typified by bands like Marillion (Figure 2) and IQ (Figure 3). The symphonic progressive rock influence was prominent within this new genre, with concept albums becoming “a staple” (Ahlkvist 2011: 651). While some considered neo-progressive rock be a watered down, illegitimate and less musically ambitious version of symphonic progressive rock (Keister and Smith 2008: 434), this new period in the genre’s history provided progressive rock fans of the 1980s with the closest semblance to its predecessor (Sheinbaum 2008: 30). Progressive rock and concept albums endured throughout the 1990s, with “prog revival” bands such as Spock’s Beard, Echolyn and The Flower Kings successfully reinvigorating and modernising elements of the symphonic progressive rock style (Ahlkvist 2011: 640). Bands such as Yes and Emerson, Lake and Palmer released albums in the 1990s that gestured strongly towards their 1970s progressive heritage. Other genres related to progressive rock also emerged in the 1990s, such as “math-rock” and “post-prog”, which have both embraced the concept album form (Holm-Hudson 2002). Covach describes the advent of an “international progressive underground” in the 1990s, driven by a global network of progressive rock fans and musicians who would use the internet, exclusive fanzines and mail-order businesses to circulate news about the genre and distribute “an impressive variety of new and old recordings” (1997: 6). Atton (2001) examines eight 1990s British progressive rock fanzines, Simon Christopher Wood 21 drawing upon Frith’s concept of value discourses in music to suggest that while progressive rock of the 1990s was no longer the commercial commodity it had been in the 1970s, it had become a rather exclusive, high-art music style preserved and celebrated by a subculture of devoted fans. Hegarty and Halliwell (2011) provide a contemporary analysis of progressive rock music, devoting an entire chapter to the topic of concept albums (2011: 65). In addition to offering a retrospective retelling of progressive rock’s definitive years and exploring the work of the genre’s renowned 1970s artists, the authors succeed in reflecting their study’s title, Beyond and Before. They consider the 1950s “preempting of progressive rock” (2011: 22), noting the use of conceptual themes and extended song structures in the works of jazz artists such as Duke Ellington and Miles Davis. Equally important are the authors’ explorations of “neo-progressive rock” and the “progressive metal” genre that started with the release of Queensrÿche’s Operation: Mindcrime (1988) (2011: 272). Now spearheaded by virtuosic bands such as Dream Theater, Between the Buried and Me, Porcupine Tree and Symphony X, progressive metal is a genre in which concept albums are extremely prominent. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 22 Figure 2: Album Cover. Marillion. Misplaced Childhood. EMI, 1985. Figure 3: Album Cover. IQ. Subterranea. Import, 1997. Simon Christopher Wood 23 Characteristics and aesthetics of concept albums Released amidst the creative art impulses of the psychedelic movement, Moore (1997) suggests that the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967) represents the highpoint of the Beatles’ recording career. Notably, the album is often recognised as the “first concept album” (Macan 1997: 20). Smolko observes the “spirit of inventiveness” that emerged in the three years between the release of Meet the Beatles! (1964) and Sgt. Pepper’s (1967) (2011: 3). While acknowledging that both are rock and roll albums, he refers to the former as a “dancing” album and the latter as a “listening” album (2011: 4). James Miller contends that with Sgt. Pepper’s, the Beatles transformed rock and roll into “a music of introspective self-absorption, a medium fit for communicating autobiographical intimacies, political discontents, spiritual elation, inviting an audience, not to dance, but to listen - quietly, attentively, thoughtfully” (1999: 227-8). Sgt. Pepper’s (Figure 4) acquired its conceptual reputation because its music, artwork and packaging encouraged audiences to believe that the album was not performed by the Beatles, but was instead a theatrical performance by their Sgt. Pepper’s alter egos (Dozal 2012: 6). According to Moore, Sgt. Pepper’s established how the “concept” of an album rested on two key factors: its musical contexts and its non-musical contexts (1993: 84). Using similar reasoning, Montgomery suggests that Ballads of Sacco and Vanzetti by Woody Guthrie (recorded in 1947 and released as a detailed box set in 1960) could theoretically be considered as the first concept album (2002: 85). With this in mind, it is important to identify that there are contrasting opinions as to who recorded the first concept album. Shute suggests that singer-songwriters such as Lee Hazlewood and Johnny Cash may have released the first concept albums (2013: 10). Additionally, Frank Sinatra recorded albums such as Come Fly With Me (1958) in the 1950s, which can be seen as precursors to the concept album due to the thematic links between their music and packaging (Hegarty and Halliwell 2011: 66, Montgomery 2002: 7). However, despite Montgomery’s broader considerations, he concedes that Sgt. Pepper’s is the “prototypical rock concept album, and thus the obvious physical and musical model for a hypothetical definition” (2002: 18). “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 24 During the recording of Sgt. Pepper’s, George Martin redefined the creative possibilities of four tracks of analogue tape, utilising advanced studio techniques such as multi-track recording and overdubbing to give the instruments and particularly the vocals a thicker, layered sound. Martin calculatedly ordered the album’s songs and substituted the LP’s characteristic pauses between songs for musical segues and studio effects, allowing the songs to play in a musically continuous sequence. Martin’s deliberate reprise of the album’s opening song at the end of the album extended the overarching theme of the fictional Sgt. Pepper’s band over the course of the entire album and suggested to listeners that the album should be enjoyed as a cohesive whole. Figure 4: Album Cover. The Beatles. Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. Parlophone, 1967. Simon Christopher Wood 25 Artwork and visual representation Sgt. Pepper’s is widely regarded as a revolutionary studio achievement, yet it was also a “merchandising triumph” (Montgomery 2002: 62), due to its “combination of segued tracks . . . with Peter Blake’s groundbreaking collage cover” (Heatley 2008: 70). Inglis’ study on the album covers of the Beatles identifies four functions of the vinyl record sleeve: it protected the record it contained; it advertised the recordings; it accompanied the music; and it could be seen as a commodity in its own right (2001: 83). Jones and Sorger identify the way that Sgt. Pepper’s “set the standard for experimentation and artistic accomplishment against which subsequent covers would be judged”, as it was the first vinyl album with a designed inner sleeve, printed lyrics and a card with cut-outs (1999: 76). The album cover of Sgt. Pepper’s appears to depict a funeral gathering, at which the Beatles are “surrounded by an audience of around sixty of the group’s friends, heroes and mentors . . . wearing the satin style military uniforms of a Northern brass band” (Inglis 2001: 88). Included in the crowd are other popular music icons of the era, such as Bob Dylan and the Rolling Stones, as well as references to the psychedelia movement, which are reflective of the socio-cultural context of the time. Macan draws a comparison between the album cover of Sgt. Pepper’s and Wagner’s conception of the Gesamtkunstwerk, “in which music, words and visual art are all combined to convey a specific concept or program” (1997: 58). Osborne (2012) claims that the artwork for Sgt. Pepper’s signified two breakthroughs in the packaging of recorded music. By devoting the majority of the packaging to images and text related to the band, the Beatles assumed control of the album sleeve (2012: 171). Secondly, by dressing up as their Sgt. Pepper’s alter egos, the album represented “the dissolution of the Beatles’ conventional image” (2012: 172). The floral wreath in the image spells “Beatles”, as though the band are the deceased at the funeral, leading Inglis to suggest that with Sgt. Pepper’s, “[t]he Beatles are encouraging us to re-evaluate our assumptions about who they are” (2001: 88). “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 26 In the wake of the psychedelic explosion of the late 1960s, record companies regarded elaborate packaging and album cover designs as integral to a band’s marketing strategy, particularly for progressive rock bands, whose concept albums were complemented by these nonmusical aesthetics (Jones and Sorger 1999: 77). Stump views concept albums as an “adjunct to cinema and literature and as a means of forming narratives” (2010: 136), evaluating the relationship between “the music and the image, and their symbiosis” on albums such as Jethro Tull’s Aqualung (1971), Pink Floyd’s Dark Side Of The Moon (1973) and Yes’ Tales From Topographic Oceans (1973) (2010: 139). However, if the artwork of a progressive rock album cover did not represent its concept, it would typically relate to the theme of the album’s longest or most significant track (Macan 1997: 58). Yes’ Close to the Edge (1972), for example, uses Roger Dean’s artwork to depict a mixture of science fiction, fantasy, realism and magic (Griffiths 2010) which accompanies the album’s 18-minute title track. Hegarty and Halliwell suggest that Dean’s artworks on Yes albums such as Tales from Topographic Oceans (Figure 5) “involve the music listener in a separate, self-contained world signalled in the act of opening up the internal surfaces of the double cover” (2011: 70). With Sgt. Pepper’s, the Beatles provided a template for others’ creative work, which would later result in the fully-fledged concept album. However, creative aesthetics and conceptual ideas were not restricted to the confines of an album and its packaging. The worlds envisioned in many concept albums extended to their accompanying videos, live stage productions, lighting displays and the costumes worn by performers. As a total audio-visual package, concept albums captured the imagination of listeners unlike anything else in the pop and rock markets (Montgomery 2002: 24-5). While album artwork, packaging and extra-musical materials are perhaps overlooked in the existing literature on concept albums (Dozal 2012: 13), these elements are essential in engaging audiences, and constitute defining characteristics of the concept album today. With this background information on the concept album’s history in mind, I now introduce the first of my four case studies, an album referred to by its chief creator as “the mother of all concept albums” (Ian Anderson, Thick as a Brick CD: 1997). Simon Christopher Wood 27 Figure 5: Album Cover. Yes. Tales From Topographic Oceans. Atlantic, 1973 “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 28 Jethro Tull’s Thick as a Brick (1972) CHAPTER TWO Figure 6: Album Cover. Jethro Tull. Thick as a Brick. Chrysalis, 1972. Jethro Tull’s fifth album Thick as a Brick (1972) is one of the band’s most famous works, reaching number 1 on the Billboard Top 40 chart. Conceptually, it was described by NME as “an assault on the mediocrity and harshness of lower-middle-class existence in ‘70s Britain” (Tyler 1972). The album fused hard rock music with folk influences and key traits of the progressive rock genre, much like Jethro Tull’s previous album Aqualung (1971), which was considered a concept album by many fans and rock journalists due to its detailed packaging and socially and religiously concerned lyrical themes (Gerson 1971). Simon Christopher Wood 29 While Jethro Tull’s lead singer and flautist, Ian Anderson, prefers to view Aqualung as merely a “collection of songs” (Stump 2010: 144), he describes how the goal of Thick as a Brick was to create “the mother of all concept albums” (Thick as a Brick CD: 1997). Thick as a Brick defied the traditional album release method in a number of ways, using a range of musical and supplementary materials to articulate the album’s concept. Morris observes that “[m]usically and lyrically, Thick as a Brick takes old literary, classical and pop conventions and distorts them into a virtually unrecognizable form” (2000: Cup of Wonder). Holm-Hudson outlines the breadth of obscure literary inspirations behind rock music in the early 1970s (2002: 15). King Crimson used Homer’s Odyssey as inspiration for their album Islands (1971) and Ian Anderson revealed in an interview with Crawdaddy (1971) that some of the religious themes on Aqualung were inspired by the occult writings of Aleister Crowley. With Thick as a Brick, however, Jethro Tull “took the literary preoccupations of their peers to satirical extremes” (Holm-Hudson 2002: 15). The album was “a musical undertaking on a far grander and more elaborate scale than anything close to what the group had taken on previously” (Covach 1996: Progression). The lyrical narrative of Thick as a Brick is primarily concerned with an eight-year-old poet, Gerald “Little Milton” Bostock, who wins a literary award for his complex poem, “Thick as a Brick”. The poem (also the album’s lyrics) expresses Bostock’s disdain with English society. After Bostock’s victory, the poem is deemed profane and seemingly beyond his years in its syntax and complex themes by the “Society of Literary Advancement and Gestation” (S.L.A.G). Bostock’s poem is disqualified due to his “extremely unwholesome attitude towards life, his god and his country” (Thick as a Brick CD: 1997), with the award given to a young lady whose poem, “He Died to Save the Little Children”, praises the values of Christian ethics. This plot-line allows Jethro Tull to address their concerns regarding England’s dominant religious, governmental and educational systems in the early 1970s. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 30 With the release of Thick as a Brick, Jethro Tull maximised the potential of the media technologies available to them at the time, particularly the functional properties of the 12-inch vinyl record, the dominant sound carrier of the 1970s. Montgomery emphasises the important relationship between concept albums and vinyl long-playing records (2002: 82), widely considered to have started with the release of the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967). The artistic intention behind long-playing concept albums on vinyl records was that “[t]he listener, or audience, must experience the album from beginning to end without interruption. The time it takes to flip the album stands in place of an intermission” (Montgomery 2002: 30). Moore suggests that concept albums like Thick as a Brick (1972) and its follow-up A Passion Play (1973) were regarded as such because they “played unbroken from beginning to end, with a musical and lyrical continuity sufficiently strong to lead from one quasi-song into the next” (1993: 82). Indeed, Thick as a Brick was conceived as a single song that spanned the two sides of a vinyl LP, with a total duration of over 43 minutes. In Gerson’s review of Thick as a Brick in Rolling Stone (1972), he notes: What marks this album as a significant departure from other Jethro Tull work, and rock in general, is the organization of all its music into one continuous track. Albums like Sgt. Pepper or Tommy were complete entities in themselves, but still chose to use songs as their basic components. (Gerson 1972) Although Jethro Tull composed musical segues and “link-sequences” to transition between the various movements and verses of Thick as a Brick, its flow and continuity benefited significantly from the technologies available to the band in the recording studio. The 16-track recorders available in major studios by 1972 allowed for multitrack layering of particular instruments, and for the overdubbing of additional tracks and effects to tie musical segments together. The use of signal processing units and tape splicing methods to merge different passages together further facilitated the album’s seamless playback. Simon Christopher Wood 31 Covach explains that “the piece is not a forty-minute-plus medley of songs . . . but a single work in several sections, complete with motivic and thematic returns that structure the musical aspects of the album in conjunction with its ambitious lyrics” (2000: 14). The use of this “one continuous track” approach proved so successful that Jethro Tull adopted it a second time on their next album A Passion Play (1973), which also topped the Billboard chart in 1973. The development of media technologies in the 1970s also had a significant influence on the way that concept albums could be printed and packaged. The design of an album’s cover became central to its appeal, with much of a concept album’s value inscribed within its gatefold sleeve (Atton 2001: 36). For the release of Thick as a Brick, Jethro Tull enlisted specialist printing press services and packaged the album in a striking, meticulously detailed LP sleeve that folded out to be a 12-page newspaper known as the St. Cleve Chronicle & Linwell Advertiser (Figure 7), modelled on the Evening Standard newspaper (Ian Anderson 1979: BBC Radio). The 12x12 inch cover space of an LP sleeve served as an eye-catching advertisement for albums in the 1970s, with scope to implement myriad combinations of artwork, text, imagery, drawings, logos and even comics. Album covers increasingly became artistic spectacles, featuring subtle messages that worked in tandem with the music (Figure 8). Eventually these creative high-art impulses even extended to the design of the records themselves, with special edition vinyl in unusual colours or odd shapes proving popular. As Smolko observes with regards to the importance of album artwork in the 1970s, “[a]lbum covers did for musicians in previous decades what music videos and online websites do for artists now – attract attention to the artist and their music” (2011: 20). Jethro Tull’s Thick as a Brick, along with other album covers from the era, such as Yes’ Tales from Topographic Oceans (1973), Genesis’ The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway (1974) and Emerson, Lake and Palmer’s Brain Salad Surgery (1973) were not just containers and protective sleeves for the records they contained, they could be seen as “art works in their own right” (Osborne 2012: 176). “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 32 Figure 7: “ Figure 8: Packaging Design. Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Brain Salad Surgery. Manticore, 1973. Simon Christopher Wood 33 Jones and Sorger note the words of musician Patti Smith, who said: “If you want to see where the world’s been, just look through some old album covers” (1999: 70). They note the effectiveness of the vinyl long-playing record as a “forum for the development of a rich sense of cultural, artistic, and social history” (1999: 70). Keister and Smith (2008) discuss how progressive rock artists often addressed sociocultural issues within their albums. Jethro Tull’s ambitious decision to release an album of conceptual music in the form of The St. Cleve Chronicle and Linwell Advertiser is one such example, demonstrating just how “malleable and expressive” the vinyl LP could be (Smolko 2011: 19-20). Covach interprets Thick as a Brick as a glimpse into the life of the average middle-class Englishman, dealing in turn with birth, youth (including sexual awakening), school, military service and organized religion (1996: Progression). Morris furthers this interpretation, viewing the album’s conceptual underpinning as an “artistic attack on nearly everything in mainstream society, including attitudes toward children, art, war, and general materialism” (2000: Cup of Wonder). Thick as a Brick is critical of the supposed ignorance and stupidity of English society, as Ian Anderson outlines: The phrase ‘thick as a brick’ is a North English colloquial term meaning ‘stupid.’ Like the religious themes on Aqualung, the theme of Thick As a Brick came out of my adolescent feelings about society and how it tries to bend you away from your will and toward its will, as if you’re not bright enough to make your own choices. (1999: Guitar World) The album’s lyrics are printed as the centerpiece of the newspaper, in the guise of Gerald Bostock’s award-winning poem. These lyrics come across as rather obscure, shifting between first, second and third person viewpoints, However, when considered together with the additional extra-musical content featured in the album’s packaging, Jethro Tull’s lyrics can be understood as a cleverly disguised commentary on the state of affairs in England during the early 1970s, implying that English society are being strangled of independence by the country’s government, education systems and dominant religions, “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 34 giving rise to a collective “average”. Smolko suggests that many of the album’s lyrical passages highlight “the importance of individuality and free thinking, and how those with political power can stifle the voice of the poor and undereducated” (2011: 36). Martin has described the packaging of Thick as a Brick as “a great sendup of English pomposity, provinciality, and the class system” (1998: 211). The newspaper features bizarre headline stories that expand upon the album’s concept and themes, as well as games, puzzles, a faux review of the album, advertisements and even fictional eulogies. Covach suggests “the album packaging is almost as important in figuring out the themes addressed in the lyrics as the lyrics themselves; and this creates a crucial interdependence between the music, lyrics, and packaging that was unprecedented in its day” (1996: Progression). The St. Cleve Chronicle packaging provides further context for the lyrics, themes and moods of the music it contains and has ultimately become an iconic artefact of 1970s rock music. Furthermore, in keeping with Jethro Tull’s conception of the work as a stand-alone 43-minute piece, the album’s track listing, on both the LP sleeve and the vinyl record itself (Figure 9), simply reads “Thick as a Brick”. Perhaps even more intriguing was the band’s decision to perform Thick as a Brick in its entirety on their 1972 tour, often experimenting with its instrumentation and arrangements. Since audiences at the beginning of this tour had not yet become familiar with the elaborate work, the band made the live concert experience into a lightly theatrical affair by integrating comical interludes between songs, donning costumes and making references to the album’s concepts and lyrical themes. It should also be noted that a similar approach was adopted on their subsequent tour for A Passion Play (1973), with various media, including image projectors, also enhancing the performance. Thick as a Brick remains relevant today due its intriguing concepts and packaging, its tongue-in-cheek delivery and its complex yet accessible music and lyrics. There is also a certain nostalgic fascination with the album, as evidenced by the success of Ian Anderson’s Thick as a Brick 2 (2012), a sequel that theorises what may have happened to Gerald Bostock in the 40 years that have passed since the original album’s release. Simon Christopher Wood 35 Thick as a Brick is a landmark album release in terms of the production, marketing and presentation of recorded music in the early 1970s, and also in the way that Jethro Tull reflected socio-cultural concerns within Britain at the time. The album is an ideal case study for this thesis, representing the importance of the concept album within popular culture of the 1970s. Figure 9: Thick as a Brick Vinyl Label, UK First Issue. Jethro Tull. Thick as a Brick. Chrysalis, 1972. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 36 Queensrÿche’s Operation: Mindcrime (1988) CHAPTER THREE Figure 10: Expanded Album Cover. Queensrÿche. Operation: Mindcrime. EMI-Manhattan, 1988. Operation: Mindcrime (1988) is Queensrÿche’s third studio album and their first concept album, or “science-fiction-influenced mini-opera” (Christe 2003: 230). It has been viewed as a key release in the history of concept albums (Shute 2013: 122), delivering its narrative across a range of media. The critical acclaim Queensrÿche have accumulated for Operation: Mindcrime (1988) since its release has seen it featured in “best albums of all time” lists by leading music publications such as Classic Rock (2001) and Kerrang (1998). The concept of Operation: Mindcrime warrants some explanation, as the narrative is rather complex and multi-dimensional. The central protagonist is Nikki, a heroin abuser who is manipulated by a corrupt Simon Christopher Wood 37 religious revolutionary known as Dr. X to become an assassin and political radical in exchange for an ongoing supply of drugs. Nikki is responsive to Dr. X’s trigger word “mindcrime”, which prompts him to carry out assassinations and actions against humanity uncontrollably. Nikki questions what has come of his life when Dr. X coerces him to rebel against the church by murdering the local priest, Father William, and one of the sisters, Mary, with whom Nikki is in love. Aware that his drug supply will cease if he neglects Dr. X’s orders, Nikki is divided as to whether to follow his heart or succumb to his damaged mind. Nikki proceeds to murder the priest, but cannot bring himself to kill Mary due to the love he feels for her. When Mary is found dead shortly after, it is unclear whether Mary committed suicide, was murdered by somebody else in the story, or was ultimately killed by Nikki in his “mindcrime” state. The album begins and ends by depicting Nikki, dazed and in a mental asylum, struggling to remember the events that occurred surrounding Mary’s death. Concept albums released by heavy metal bands in the 1980s often combined the music style’s powerful sound with mystical and fantastical themes derived from literature. For example, Iron Maiden’s Seventh Son of a Seventh Son (1988) appropriates its conceptual direction from Orson Scott Card’s Seventh Son (1987), a fantasy novel based on the folkloric tale that a seventh son born to another seventh son possesses extraordinary magical abilities. Similarly, Venom’s At War with Satan (1984) draws influence from John Milton’s Paradise Lost (1667), recasting Milton’s classic poem to create an alternative version, wherein evil triumphs over heaven and angels fall into hell. While the narrative of Operation: Mindcrime is the work of lead singer Geoff Tate, some aspects of the album’s dystopian world can be seen as allusions to famous literary works such as George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four (1948) and Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World (1932). Queensrÿche developed a unique sound by merging the virtuosity, theatricality and eclecticism of progressive rock music with the more aggressive sound and ethos of heavy metal, initiating the progressive metal genre, which has spawned numerous concept albums, and influencing bands such as Dream Theater and Symphony X. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 38 The 1980s was a period of significant technological shifts in the music industry, with formats that emphasised convenience and portability overtaking vinyl LPs to become the dominant sound carriers (Bartmanski and Woodward 2012; Elborough 2008; Gibbs 2010; Laing 1990). Jones surmises that “[a]s a metaphor for the eighties, the CD is as good as any” (2005: 112). The gentle handling, dusting and flipping of sides associated with vinyl records was substituted with the simple act of loading the album in the tray and pressing play. Compared to vinyl LPs, the remodeling of concept albums to suit the CD and cassette tape was carried out with varying degrees of efficacy, due to “the lack of spectacle of the small images on the packing and the unreadability of [the] sleeve notes in necessarily tiny print sizes” (Gibbs 2010: 329). The visual properties and conceptual aesthetics of the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, for example, were not nearly as alluring on the album’s condensed reissues. Likewise, Thick as a Brick’s iconic newspaper could not be faithfully reproduced on the CD format (Smolko 2011: 29). Queensrÿche serviced the consumer demands of their era by distributing Operation: Mindcrime on vinyl, CD and cassette, and ensured that the presentation of all three distribution formats was designed to adequately reflect the album’s concept. The sonic properties of rock music changed significantly in the 1980s, as producers experimented with the latest studio technologies and production techniques. Neo-progressive rock artists updated the sound of the 1970s symphonic progressive rock acts from which they drew inspiration. Concept albums such as Pallas’ The Sentinel (1984) and Marillion’s Misplaced Childhood (1985), for example, heavily utilised delay and reverb effects, synthesisers and digital technologies such as MIDI, particularly for drum and percussion sounds. Operation: Mindcrime combines some of these neo-progressive sonic tendencies with Queensrÿche’s heavy metal heritage. Geoff Tate has discussed the pivotal role that producer Peter Collins played in the making of the album (Operation: LIVEcrime DVD: 2001). Simon Christopher Wood 39 Collins introduced the band to many people that contributed to the album, including Pamela Moore, who provided the voice of Sister Mary. He developed the album’s unique production style, characterised by multi-tracked guitars and vocals and the unmistakable “crack” of Scott Rockenfield’s layered snare drum sound (half natural/half electronic), and was also responsible for the complicated task of integrating the Operation: Mindcrime concept. The opening minutes of the album are an example of Collins studio expertise, as he manipulates the stereo headspace and utilises the multitude of recordable audio tracks available to position the listener within the mental hospital at which the story’s protagonist, Nikki, is being monitored. Before Queensrÿche launch into the instrumental overture, “Anarchy X”, a layered, cinematic sound sequence sets the scene for the Operation: Mindcrime narrative to unfold, beginning with the combined sounds of a nurse’s footsteps wandering the corridors and a bypasser whistling the melody of “The Mission”, a later track on the album. These footsteps (panned across the mix) lead us into Nikki’s room, where a TV news report can be heard in the left speaker, commenting on the string of murders that propel the album’s narrative. The nurse administers a sedative injection to a struggling Nikki, and an eerie synthesiser drone fills the stereo space, creating dramatic tension. Nikki’s words, treated with reverb, then contextualise the opening sequence as a retrospective account of what ultimately unfolds in the album’s concept: “I remember now … I remember how it started … I can’t remember yesterday … I just remember doing … what they told me.” (Operation: Mindcrime CD: 2003). Operation: Mindcrime benefited from gapless playback technology, which provided flexibility for listeners on its CD version, as the album played seamlessly in album sequence to emphasise the concept, but its songs could also be skipped or repeated more easily than on a cassette or vinyl LP. Transitions between songs were strengthened by the use of layered soundscapes, field recordings and narrative passages rather than silent gaps. The soundscapes depict various settings for the story to unfold, from the busy streets of the city, to the choir at the chapel, to the sirens approaching a crime scene. These auditory environments help carry the concept of Operation: Mindcrime, although the concept “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 40 perhaps reaches its apex when the story is articulated through the album’s promotional videos, or combined with the theatrical melodrama of Queensrÿche’s concert performances. Chief among the technological innovations in the music industry of the 1980s was the music video (Sheinbaum 2008: 31). By the latter half of the decade, rock bands and their management companies invested heavily in the production and promotion of music videos, in the hope of being broadcast on MTV. Geoff Tate notes that the single act of MTV broadcasting the “Eyes of a Stranger” video on the Headbanger’s Ball program served as an incredible sales stimulant for Operation: Mindcrime (Operation: LIVEcrime DVD: 2001). This gave the band confidence to extend the album’s promotional tour, which culminated in a series of career-defining concerts in which the band performed Operation: Mindcrime live in its entirety. The Operation: LIVEcrime show was highly technology-driven, accompanied by cinematic footage and vignettes on film screens. Trained actors and singers were not only featured in the film footage, but were also integrated into live performances, to act out the album’s story and enhance the concept (Figure 11). As well as the increasing importance of music videos and live performance technologies, one of the biggest shifts observable in the progression of concept albums from the 1970s into the 1980s was the success of Operation: Mindcrime’s singles. Progressive rock artists from the 1970s, such as Yes, Genesis and Camel, rarely, if ever, released music from their concept albums in the form of singles, thus lending emphasis to the album as a complete body of work. concept album intended for full-length listening, Operation: Mindcrime gave rise to three distinct singles: “Revolution Calling”, “I Don’t Believe in Love/The Needle Lies” and “Eyes of a Stranger” (with the 10-minuteplus “Suite Sister Mary” released as a special edition 10-inch vinyl). While these songs were essential to the cohesion of the Operation: Mindcrime narrative, they became stand-alone hit singles. Queensrÿche’s conceptual intentions can be compared to the way Stimeling views the concept albums of Willie Nelson: “an attempt to extend narratives and character development beyond the limits of a three-minute single while also creating singles that would be suitable Simon Christopher Wood 41 for radio airplay” (2011: 406-407). By featuring Operation: Mindcrime’s album logo and elements of the album’s narrative within the music videos and promotional materials for “Eyes of a Stranger” and “I Don’t Believe in Love”, these singles promoted their “mother” album to audiences, and served as samples of what could be expected from the Operation: Mindcrime concept album experience. Figure 11: Still from “Suite Sister Mary”. Operation: LIVEcrime DVD. Prod. Queensrÿche. EMI Records, 2001. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 42 Anderton has observed that “the relationship between heavy metal and progressive rock is often regarded as antagonistic” (2010: 431). Macan positions progressive rock as “upper-middle class” music—the domain of a sophisticated, socially aware audience prepared to explore alternative spiritual paths (1997: 136-7), as opposed to heavy metal, a “workingclass” music (1997: 136–7), associated with a hedonist, nihilistic subculture (1997: 86-87). Queensrÿche melded Macan’s two classes together in the 1980s, and created a “progressive/heavy metal genre hybrid” (Anderton 2010: 431). The band established themselves as a heavy metal act in their early years, before adopting a more progressive influenced sound on Rage for Order (1986), which featured unconventional time signatures and philosophical lyrics. Queensrÿche’s formulation of Operation: Mindcrime as a politically aware concept album re-affirmed their progressive tendencies, closely aligning their music with the social criticism of Jethro Tull’s Thick as a Brick and arguably positioning the band as out of step with the commercially-driven heavy metal bands of the time, such as Def Leppard, Bon Jovi and Guns N’ Roses (Barron: 2004). Queensrÿche developed Operation: Mindcrime’s narrative and settings as vehicles through which to comment on key issues affecting lifestyle and culture in America in the late 1980s, notably “the decline of American society during the Reagan administration” (Elicker 2001: 223). In the lyrics of the song “Spreading the Disease”, personal themes such as religion and sex are depicted by singer Geoff Tate as “powerplays”, and America’s economy is described as engineered so that the “rich get rich”, the “poor stay poor” and “the once percent rules America”. Taylor identifies how the Operation: Mindcrime story addresses “themes of social and political control, humans serving as tools for a hidden system of power, and technoscience’s capacity for mind manipulation” (2006: 55). These Orwellian themes of restricted thought and external interference are reflected in Operation: Mindcrime’s striking artwork (Figure 10). The centerpiece is a vibrant yellow logo, seemingly depicting the act of “mindcrime”, in the form of jagged lines passing through a skull from both sides, against the backdrop of a parade of demonstrating protesters. Simon Christopher Wood 43 Figure 12: Logo. “Black and White Figure 13: Album Cover. Yes. Advert for Operation: Mindcrime”. 90125. Atco, 1983. The vivid, direct iconography used to represent Operation: Mindcrime (Figure 12) possesses visual similarities with the releases of Yes in the 1980s, such as 90125 (1983) and Big Generator (1987). These album covers abandoned the elaborate Roger Dean landscapes that had made their past album sleeves so visually distinctive, and adopted brightly coloured, computer generated imagery stereotypical of much graphic design and advertising within commercial culture of the 1980s (Figure 13). The attention-grabbing Operation: Mindcrime logo was attractive to consumers and well-suited to the size constraints of the CD and cassette tape. However, despite the decline of vinyl LPs throughout the 1980s, the large size of the out-of-vogue vinyl sleeve was also an effective channel through which to present Operation: Mindcrime, providing audiences with additional contextualising content (liner notes, artwork) relating to the album’s concept. Audiences were provided with further context with the release of Video: Mindcrime (1989), a 40-minute video which allowed Queensrÿche to capitalise on the communicative effectiveness provided by music videos and enhance the Operation: Mindcrime storyline. Video: Mindcrime transforms Operation: Mindcrime into a multimedia experience, combining an edited version of the album’s music with footage of the band performing live and clips of actors assuming the roles of characters in the story. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 44 The video presents strong political themes and propaganda-influenced messages depicting the subversive revolution that the story’s demagogue, Dr. X, is attempting to impose. Interviews with former Queensrÿche guitarist Chris De Garmo reveal that the politically-grounded concept of the album confused some fans, who misinterpreted the artistic intentions behind Operation: Mindcrime. While on tour in the United Kingdom, controversy arose as some fans believed that the band were planning a subversive revolution against the U.S. government. De Garmo responds to this point with some sarcasm: “We’ve got nothing against the right-wing, conservative, fascist governments that run the United States” (Queensryche-Chris De Garmo and Geoff Tate: YouTube 2006). In an interview featured on the Operation: LIVEcrime DVD, Geoff Tate recalls: I can remember performing Mindcrime at Long Beach Arena in Southern California, and the fans just going crazy, and lighting fires in the arena. The whole place looked like some kind of war scene, fires going off, smoke alarms going off. . . . People are getting carried out in stretchers, it was just unreal. . . . At the time I was thinking, what are they doing? They’re not listening, they’re just reacting in a different way perhaps. (2001) This dialogue from Tate and De Garmo is suggestive of the socio-cultural implications faced by the band after releasing such a socially and politically aware concept album in the 1980s. The Operation: Mindcrime logo became a cult image in some ways, representative of the album’s concept and emblematic of Queensrÿche and the strong themes that the album projected. The logo was emblazoned onto every form of publicity related to the album, from clothing merchandise, to street posters, to bootleg videos. This allowed Queensrÿche to communicate the idea that their album contained a strong conceptual message. The strength of Operation: Mindcrime’s concept, and the enduring political issues it addresses, have been pivotal to the album’s continued relevance since its release (for example, music from the album was used during the recent “Occupy Melbourne” protests in Australia). Simon Christopher Wood 45 Operation: Mindcrime captured a point in time at which numerous media technologies were both prominent and profitable in the marketplace, new sounds and production styles were achievable in the studio and the socio-cultural circumstances of Reagan-era America were a matter of global concern that affected many people. Furthermore, Operation: Mindcrime lent further emphasis to the concept album form within heavy metal music and ultimately played an important role in maintaining the concept album’s presence within the music industry beyond the 1980s. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 46 Radiohead’s OK Computer (1997) CHAPTER FOUR Figure 14: Album Cover. Radiohead. OK Computer. Parlophone, 1997. While Radiohead’s first two albums, Pablo Honey (1993) and The Bends (1995), helped to establish them as a commercially successful alternative rock act, their third album OK Computer (1997) gave them the reputation of being an “artistically advanced band” (Von Appen and Doehring 2006: 34). This reputation was bolstered by the album’s impressive production values and, as Letts (2005) has argued, its concept. The album features many key characteristics (both musical and non-musical) of the concept album form, despite the band regularly denying associations with it. Simon Christopher Wood 47 As guitarist Johnny Greenwood has stated: “[T]his album is too much of a mess to sum up. It’s too garbled and disjointed, and the title is only supposed to introduce you to the record” (cited in Letts 2005: 28). Holm-Hudson (2002) and Letts (2005) identify parallels between OK Computer and progressive rock, although Radiohead “actively seek to distance themselves from associations with the genre” (Holm-Hudson 2002: 16). Parallels include the use of Mellotron keyboards, the subtle cartoon-style parody of Pink Floyd’s Wish You Were Here (1975) artwork on the album sleeve and the “hypermetric complexity in cross-rhythms and time signatures” evident throughout the album’s songs (Letts 2005: 5). Moreover, the lyrical themes and social commentary of OK Computer can be likened to progressive rock albums such as Pink Floyd’s The Wall (1979) and Animals (1977), and Jethro Tull’s Aqualung (1971) and Thick as a Brick (1972), which have all been associated with the “concept album” tag (Letts 2005: 5). The discernible concept of OK Computer is primarily concerned with the dehumanising effects of technology and modern culture, and the anxieties felt by many as the new millennium approached. Letts describes OK Computer as “a musically unified depiction of man’s alienation in modern society” (2005: 5), while Hubbs considers it to be a “concept album that immerses the listener in images of alienated life under techno/bureau/corporate hegemony”, noting that “a vivid flavor of alienation and disaffectedness . . . is built up by layers over the course of twelve album tracks” (cited in Letts 2005: 24). Figure 15: “Photo: St. Catherines Court”, where OK Computer was recorded. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 48 The influence of technology throughout the music industry in the 1990s was ever-present. Wikström and Burnett note that by 1992, “only a decade after the introduction of CD technology, the LP format was almost completely replaced, and digital technology was well established as the main technology for music distribution” (2009: 506). Cassette tapes also declined in the commercial marketplace, as they lacked the audio quality, durability and digital functionality of CDs, which the music industry had started promoting extensively as the dominant format. Many music consumers of the 1990s found themselves shifting their listening practices exclusively to the CD, often reinvesting in albums they already owned in other formats. This ensured that the music industry’s major record labels achieved significant capital gains in the latter half of the 20 th century from back-catalogue album sales (Park 2007). with digital studio equipment, computer functionality and electronic instruments becoming both more advanced and more prominent. It can be argued that involvement in the writing and production of popular music became more widespread in the 1990s, as recording equipment became more accessible, increasingly mobile and less attached to the hiring of expensive recording studios. With assistance from producer Nigel Godrich, Radiohead took advantage of the increased mobility of recording musical equipment necessary for the recording of OK Computer, at a 16th century manor owned by actress Jane Seymour (Figure 15). This allowed the band to escape the time constraints and distractions of an inner-city studio and exert greater control over the production of their music. Ambient noises, sampling, programmed drum loops and overdriven, heavily processed guitar tones are among the techniques and technologies used to shape the album. The recurring use of these sonic aesthetics across the album’s songs can be seen as threads that help tie the album together as a cohesive whole. Ironically, while Radiohead were questioning the potentially dehumanising effects that technological expansion could have on society, they were Simon Christopher Wood 49 simultaneously relying on and experimenting with the available studio and media technologies of their time. Osborne believes that when artists are pushing technological as well as musical boundaries, “sound recording is most in touch with its own times” (2012: 183), something which is arguably reflected in Radiohead’s OK Computer. The album’s intricate production and technology-driven sound evoked a sense of identity and originality absent from the largely revisionist work of other popular British bands in the 1990s such as Oasis and Blur. Moore and Ibrahim have stated that OK Computer “gain[ed] its age-defining status through a combination of both musical and sonic exploration. . . . It is both a timely and a timeless record, unmistakably Radiohead but still managing to express sentiments shared by people in all walks of life” (cited in Letts 2005: 25). The album also functions as a musical document of its times. It features artwork, lyrics and an album title that all serve to ref lect its time of release three years before the turn of the new millennium. OK Computer is presented as forward thinking and technology-driven. A short experimental piece, “Fitter Happier”, marks the mid-point of the album and is particularly important in contextualising the album’s recurring theme of technological impact. The musical content of “Fitter Happier” is minimal, featuring a two-chord piano progression and static sound effects, while the track’s central focus is on an emotionless, computer generated voice typical of computing technology in the late 1990s. OK Computer’s recurring themes of technological alienation and the strains of modernity are conceptually similar to David Bowie’s concept album, 1.Outside (1995). The music, lyrics, album artwork, music videos and live performances of both albums combine to construct “a space which is analogous to society at the end of the millennium” (Greco 2000: v). On OK Computer, everything from the album’s sonic experimentation, to its accompanying inner sleeve, not to mention the angst-ridden cartoon-animated music video for “Paranoid Android”, with its disaffected protagonist, gives the impression of capturing and reinforcing the album’s conceptual themes. The very act of relying on a variety of technologies and media outlets to depict OK Computer’s dystopian and overtly technology-driven world, however, can be seen as “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 50 somewhat contradictory. The question remains as to how Radiohead’s critique of technology and its potentially dehumanising effects on society would have been received had the band themselves been deprived of the many modern technologies they so heavily depended upon to construct the album. Each of the band’s releases since OK Computer have championed the expressiveness, extended playing-time and musical continuity of the album format, innovatively utilising media technologies to aid their production and distribution processes (for example, the “pay what you think it’s worth” model used for the band’s self-release of In Rainbows (2007)). Hegarty and Halliwell suggest that Radiohead have continually attempted to salvage the album format (2011: 236). Their experimental legacy can be witnessed in the sonic explorations of bands such as Coldplay and The Mars Volta, who have each embraced the album format and conceptual themes. Figure 16: Fitter Happier Litany featured in Select Magazine. July, 1997. Simon Christopher Wood 51 Some commentators have noted the presence of thematic resonances and a conceptual underpinning in OK Computer (Hegarty and Halliwell 2011; Letts 2005). However, interpretations of OK Computer’s concept (or concepts) are varied. In such debates, one thing that remains consistent is the view that OK Computer can be seen as social commentary and a reflection of life in pre-millennial English society. Stubbs suggests that OK Computer is “a protest, in a sense, against a time of plenty, a time of great material wealth” (Radiohead: OK Computer DVD: 2006), reflecting the state of economic affairs in Britain in the late 1990s. Songs such as “Electioneering” and “Karma Police” grapple with matters relating to politics and justice. The release of OK Computer in May 1997 coincided with the election of Tony Blair as British Prime Minister. In the case of “Electioneering”, “the sentiment behind it perfectly sums up the New Labour project and its effect on modern politics” (Clancy Sharp - narrator, Radiohead: OK Computer DVD: 2006). Hegarty and Halliwell describe how the album is “thematically linked as a series of meditations on the state of the individual in a highly technologized consumer society run for the benefit of a small group of its members” (2011: 235). Similarly, Azad claims that OK Computer “dared to deal with themes of urban alienation and technology’s effect on the human psyche” (2007). Ross suggests that with OK Computer, Radiohead “caught a wave of generation anxiety”, encapsulating the time of the late 1990s by crafting an album that “pictured the onslaught of the information age and a young person’s panicky embrace of it” (cited in Letts 2005: 26). The album’s title instantly provokes technological thought, and additionally, as Griffiths observes, “[t]here is a lot to be gained [from] attending to the artwork of this particular album” (Radiohead: OK Computer DVD: 2006). The album cover lacks vibrancy and is itself computer generated and indicative of a digitised existence, working in tandem with the album’s title. The text “lost child” (in the upper right hand corner of the album cover) could be seen as attached to the theme of urban alienation. The focal point of the artwork depicts bland highway infrastructure and street signs, with the nose of an aircraft “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 52 noticeable on the right hand side. Transport and travel are themes that are addressed throughout OK Computer’s lyrics and sonic explorations, and the importance of these themes in the context of the album is reflected in the album’s artwork (Figure 14), as well as on the cover of the single, “No Surprises” (Figure 17). Hegarty and Halliwell summarise the presence of the conceptual thread of transport throughout the album, “beginning with the car crash of the opening track, ‘Airbag’, a plane crash in the penultimate track, ‘Lucky’, and the instruction to ‘slow down’ on the closing ‘The Tourist’” (2011: 235). According to Footman, the recurring theme of transport in OK Computer is closely tied to technology, and represents “the various kinds of movement that modern life imposes on humanity” (cited in Hegarty and Halliwell 2011: 235). Ogg comments on singer Thom Yorke’s “paranoia about cars”, suggesting that the highway of the album’s cover and the lyrics of songs such as “Airbag” express “unease with being in metal boxes being shunted along highways” (Radiohead: OK Computer DVD: 2006). In another sense, the lyrics to “Airbag” could be a rare instance on the album in which Radiohead acknowledge technology’s benefits. The song describes technology’s role in a car accident, whereby the car’s airbag saves a life in a moment of tragedy. This perhaps suggests that the band were not completely damning of technology’s role in modern society, but merely “alarmed”. Letts compares the role of the aforementioned “Fitter Happier” on OK Computer to the way the Moody Blues used “eloquently intoned poems” to interconnect the songs on some of their albums (2005: 25). The automated computer voice of “Fitter Happier” dictates a litany of guidelines for an idealised human existence (Figure 16). Since computing technology in the late 1990s exerted less influence in daily life than it does today, the element of the unknown with regards to its development and potential future impact on society caused much anxiety. In the case of “Fitter Happier”, the presentation of this computerised voice as all-knowing with regards to how humans should lead their lives could be seen as a comment on the technological anxiety of the time, presenting a dystopian world view reminiscent of George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four (1948). Simon Christopher Wood 53 In Von Appen and Doehring’s “meta-list” of “the best pop and rock albums of all time” (2006: 22), the results of 38 “top albums” lists published internationally between 1985 and 2004 are compiled to create a canon of exemplary pop and rock albums. The albums featured in the meta-list are those by artists who “produce records that are judged as innovative, original, expressive, diverse but also full of ‘well-written songs’” (2006: 34). Radiohead’s OK Computer is one of only a handful of 1990s albums featured, with the majority of the list consisting of influential albums released in the “vinyl era” of the 1970s and 1980s. OK Computer’s multi-platinum status and regular inclusion in polls and lists of the “best albums of all time” (Letts 2005: 27) indicate the major influence the record has had on a broad mainstream audience, and on the full-length album format in contemporary music. As Griffiths advocates: “OK Computer might in time be a focal point for historians of life at the end of the close of the twentieth century” (2004: 114). Figure 17: Single Cover. Radiohead. No Surprises. Parlophone, 1997. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 54 Coheed and Cambria’s The Amory Wars (2002-2013) CHAPTER FIVE Figure 18: The Amory Wars Illustration. In contrast to Radiohead, the American progressive rock band Coheed and Cambria have welcomed associations with the concept album. According to the band’s chief songwriter and frontman Claudio Sanchez, “Coheed and Cambria is a conceptual band . . . there is an overall thread, our story arc called The Amory Wars, that sort of runs through all of the albums, and the albums play the chapters in that story” (Coheed and Cambria on the Story Arc: FuseTV 2013). Simon Christopher Wood 55 The Amory Wars (2002-2013) is a unique subject of study, as the focus need not be directed towards a single album, but rather towards a career-spanning body of work, consisting of seven interlinked concept albums and a host of other related media through which the concept is disseminated. While a detailed synopsis for the complex plot developments, characters and settings of The Amory Wars story is beyond the scope of this research, it is important to include a basic overview of this science-fiction inspired narrative, and to explain how it has been implemented across Coheed and Cambria’s concept albums. The Amory Wars is set in an alternate universe known as “Heaven’s Fence”, consisting of 78 planetary systems connected by a triangular beam of energy known as the “Keywork”, which is powered by the seven “Stars of Sirius”, as represented in Coheed and Cambria’s band logo. Heaven’s Fence is inhabited by three races: mages (militant rulers), prises (guardians of the Keywork) and humans, and much of the narrative of The Amory Wars is concerned with the power struggles, deception and injustice circulating between them. Although a variety of complex sub-plots, characters and settings are introduced with each instalment of The Amory Wars saga, the main character is arguably Claudio Kilgannon (named after Claudio Sanchez). Claudio embodies the role of the “hero”, escaping the bloodshed and drama inf licted within his family after his parents, Coheed and Cambria Kilgannon, are manipulated into believing that a malicious virus known as the “Sinstar” has infected their four children. Claudio sets out to seek vengeance for his family’s collapse, and to save Heaven’s Fence from the possibility of future threats. The seven albums in The Amory Wars saga to date have intentionally been released in a non-linear sequence, most recently culminating in a two-part prequel series titled The Afterman (2012, 2013). “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 56 The Amory Wars narrative sequence thus far is best interpreted as follows: 1. The Afterman: Ascension (2012) 2. The Afterman: Descension (2013) 3. Year of the Black Rainbow (2010) 4. The Second Stage Turbine Blade (2002) 5. In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3 (2003) 6. Good Apollo, I’m Burning Star IV, Volume One: From Fear Through the Eyes of Madness (2005) 7. Good Apollo, I’m Burning Star IV, Volume Two: No World for Tomorrow (2007) Similar to the Star Wars science-fiction movie franchise, in which the first movie released, A New Hope (1977), is intended as the fourth “episode” in the series, Coheed and Cambria’s first album release, The Second Stage Turbine Blade (2002), is not intended as the first chapter of The Amory Wars narrative. It is, however, an effective launch to the band’s concept, as it establishes the story’s universe, central themes and important characters. Simon Christopher Wood 57 The internet is the centralising domain underpinning most technologically-grounded discussion of 21st century music (Jones 2000: 222). After CD drives were integrated into personal computers in the late 1990s, allowing CD albums to be converted into intangible MP3 files stored on computer hard drives, the internet played a major role in transforming computers into a means that at once facilitated the storage, collation, consumption, access and sharing of music. The recording industry claimed to be in turmoil by the early 2000s. The widespread use of online peer-to-peer (p2p) file-sharing programs (Arditi 2013: 1), such as Napster and Kazzaa, infringed copyright laws and raised piracy issues by allowing internet users worldwide to share their music files free of charge. The major record labels faced significant drops in revenue by continuing to focus on physical music distribution, until the introduction of Apple’s iTunes Music Store in 2003 solidified the digital music industry, allowing major labels to regain some of the industrial control that was lost in the initial transition to digital media. iTunes offered a legal, sales-based platform for digital music, which centralised the music marketplace by simultaneously distributing major label artists alongside acts from independent labels and even selfmanaged artists. While Coheed and Cambria’s debut album, The Second Stage Turbine Blade, earned the band recognition and attracted positive reviews, their second album, In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3 (2003), established them as a commercial entity. The album’s release capitalised on the transitional period when digital music distribution was gathering momentum, but CDs still dominated the market. The online exposure and distribution of the digital album earned the band new fans, but lacked the artwork and conceptual context provided by the CD, not to mention the four limited edition vinyl versions of the album that were released (and are now highly collectable). These physical versions appealed to fans wishing to immerse themselves in The Amory Wars concept. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 58 The consumer preference for singles over full-length albums in the digital music industry has challenged the concept album form (Burkart 2013: 5). One of Apple’s portable music players, the iPod Shuffle, for example, has significantly influenced consumer listening habits, promoting variety-oriented listening by randomly “shuffling” a user’s songs and detaching them from their traditional position within an album. Atton has discussed the “shuffle” function with relation to “difficult albums”—works that have been judged to present audiences with confronting listening experiences (2012: 356). He suggests that while some albums are so musically experimental that they are almost “impossible to listen to” in their entirety, their songs can perhaps be appreciated more when listened to on contemporary MP3 players “in fragmented form”, alongside other less “difficult” songs (2012: 356). Concept albums are usually produced with the intention of being listened to in their entirety. In this regard, the “shuffle” function disrupts the traditional start-to-finish listening practices associated with concept albums. Figure 19: Album Cover. Coheed and Cambria. No World For Tomorrow. Columbia, 2007. Simon Christopher Wood 59 The construction of concept albums as engaging, tangible artefacts has been threatened, as physical music distribution has plummeted and the online distribution of recorded music has rapidly grown (Wikström 2012: 8). Coheed and Cambria have made concerted efforts to package their physical albums in an engaging manner relevant to The Amory Wars concept. Their fourth album, No World for Tomorrow (2007), for example, was widely distributed as a double-disc gatefold-style CD package, including an extensive booklet and a bonus DVD with special features (Figure 19). In the years since, the digital music industry has further revolutionised the way we think about and access music, providing us with a “celestial jukebox” of music to choose from (Burkart 2013). Artists releasing concept albums have needed to adjust to the changes and find innovative ways to engage audiences with their works. O’Reilly, Larsen and Kubacki argue that “[t]he emerging music consumer is less interested in owning a physical product like a CD, than in having access to music everywhere through a portable music player, smartphone, tablet or laptop” (2013: 24). This demand has been fulfilled by subscription-based online streaming services, such as Spotify and MOG, which feature extensive music libraries from which songs can be listened to, but not downloaded. These services represent what Wikström calls the “access model” of music distribution, functioning in a manner similar to service-centred industries such as hotels, restaurants and banks, as opposed to the “ownership model”, which is aligned with the acquisition of physical formats of distribution media (2012: 10). Streaming services allow for songs to be individually consumed and separated from their parent albums, providing users with “the freedom to create their own compilations of a musician’s catalogue” (Dozal 2012: 9). This disrupts the conceptual unity of many concept albums and compromises the artistic intentions behind them. Notably, in a similar vein to the singles from Queensrÿche’s Operation: Mindcrime, many of Coheed and Cambria’s songs are produced with an emphasis on achieving continuity and narrative relevance in the context of The Amory Wars, while also functioning as singles in their own right. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 60 This is a favourable approach to implement, as it allows for the songs to be enjoyed even if they appear out of context in a shuff le playlist, or in the listener recommendations feature of a streaming service, and could be seen as demonstrative of the band’s awareness of contemporary trends in music consumption. While digital music collections lack the “materiality” and “visual aspects” of their physical counterparts (Giles, Pietrzykowski and Clark 2007: 440), it has been argued by Kibby that materiality and personal meaningfulness can be attached to digital collections through tags, menus and playlists (2009: 433). A contrasting argument is that the digitisation of music “has made the packaging of physical products seem more precious” (Osborne 2012: 161). On this point, it is interesting to note that a new generation of consumers is gravitating towards vinyl records (Bartmanski and Woodward 2012), a nostalgic trend that could promote the ongoing value of concept albums in the 21 st century. According to U.S.-based sales tracking system Nielsen SoundScan, there were more sales of vinyl records between 2008 and 2012 than there were in the entire period between 1993 and 2007 (Bartmanski and Woodward 2012: 2). Coheed and Cambria have released their entire back catalogue on vinyl and benefited considerably from the resurgent interest in the format. Vinyl is currently in vogue in music scenes ranging from hip-hop to dance to psychedelic rock, and consumers are making the most of the vast range of both past and present repertoire being issued on vinyl, enjoying its arguably superior sound quality over that of MP3s (Anderton, Dubber and James 2013: 155). A range of technologies are capitalising on the commercial revival of vinyl, with the video game DJHero and the AirVinyl iPad app recreating vinyl’s sound by simulating analogue harmonics (Osborne 2012: 2). The presentation of The Amory Wars story arc has flourished on the sizeable packaging of the format, offering fans tactile and experiential advantages that CDs and digital albums cannot provide. The gatefold sleeves of Coheed and Cambria’s concept albums can be seen as valuable artefacts in their own right, loaded with imagery, text and artwork designed to illuminate and provide surrealistic interpretations of their respective concepts, while linking them to the broader Amory Wars Simon Christopher Wood 61 universe to which they belong. The deluxe hardcover box-set edition of The Afterman series is particularly lavish, featuring the two albums, Ascension and Descension, on silver and gold coloured vinyls (Figure 20), along with a 64-page book written by Claudio Sanchez offering a song-bysong account of the story, with accompanying artwork and lyrics for each. Vinyl provides an effective physical complement to the digital download in the face of an increasingly digitised music industry (Osborne 2012: 2). Conversely, modern digital technologies are now being effectively used to accompany and enhance vinyl releases. The vinyl editions of Coheed and Cambria’s The Afterman albums, for example, come bundled with digital download codes and internet-based content. In this regard, Coheed and Cambria have serviced the demands of the digital generation, delivering value and convenience to fans by allowing for their albums to be accessed digitally and played on portable music players, while also satisfying those consumers who appreciate the tangibility of vinyl records. Figure 20: “Coheed Limited Deluxe”. Promotional photo for The Afterman Box Set. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 62 The socio-cultural inspirations and personal messages driving The Amory Wars are less obvious than in the previous case studies. This is because they are intentionally veiled behind a fantasy narrative made up of fictional characters within an imaginary universe. Maher (2012) has investigated how Claudio Sanchez uses the fictional landscape and various characters of The Amory Wars as vehicles through which to communicate his personal experiences, feelings and emotions. Maher suggests that these “Representations of the Self” are difficult to interpret due to the regular shifts in character perspective vocalised by Sanchez and the variety of media used to tell the story. Yet she notes that Sanchez is perhaps most personally conflated with the “messianic figure”, Claudio Kilgannon, and the story’s narrator, The Writer (2012: 145). While it is common for artists to draw upon autobiographical experiences as inspiration for their concept albums, Sanchez prefers not to make the socio-cultural themes ingrained in The Amory Wars explicit to listeners: [O]perating within an alternate reality is kind of just who I am. When I created the concept for Coheed and Cambria, I was having a difficult time shifting into adulthood and handling all of the emotions and perceived judgments of that time period, so to be able to write songs and stories within a conceptual world felt much simpler to me than to deal with communicating those changes. With each album and chapter, the mythos of my own life expands and . . . I find it easier to create under the safety of a pre-existing mythos. (City Weekend Shanghai: 2013) Contemporary popular culture has an unabating fascination with science-fiction, both in a nostalgic sense and through society’s identification with its prominent themes of computers, advanced technology and virtual reality (Roberts 2000: 15). The modern television revival of Doctor Who and the popularity of feature-length film adaptations of classic Marvel comics such as Spiderman and X-Men are just some examples of this fascination. Simon Christopher Wood 63 Coheed and Cambria’s conceptual “mythos” also reveals strong sciencefiction and fantasy influences, as represented through concepts, lyrics and artwork. “IRO-Bot”, “On The Brink” and “Gravity’s Union” are songs that closely deal with science-fiction themes and the “alternate reality” through which Sanchez operates. The Amory Wars narrative allows Sanchez to convey his personal feelings and emotions about life in 21st century society, while providing audiences with an absorbing sciencefiction narrative. The Amory Wars also continues a trend observable in Radiohead’s OK Computer, whereby social and cultural trends are increasingly becoming conflated with technology, particularly computerisation and the global connectivity provided by the internet. The influence of technology within society has directly influenced Coheed and Cambria’s music. One such example is the inspiration behind the title track of their 2012 album The Afterman. As Claudio Sanchez explains: “‘The Afterman’ is definitely taken from a moment in time where my wife had discovered that a good friend of her’s had passed away on Facebook” (Amory Wars’ Claudio Sanchez ‘ Hides Behind Sci-Fi: YouTube 2013). For Sanchez, the song confronts the emotional state associated with discovering this news in such an impersonal manner. Coheed and Cambria utilise a variety of media platforms and innovative extra-musical aesthetics to communicate the The Amory Wars narrative and immerse audiences in the album listening experience. Maher describes The Amory Wars as an “ideal example of a musically based transmedia narrative” (2012: 146). Transmedia narratives, according to Maher, are “storyworlds constructed across a number of media platforms best suited to create the story’s universe” (2012: 147). Media philosopher Henry Jenkins describes “transmedia storytelling” as a process in which “integral elements of a fiction get dispersed systematically across multiple delivery channels for the purpose of creating a unified and coordinated entertainment experience” (Jenkins 2007: Transmedia Storytelling 101). “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 64 Figure 21: Comic Book Cover. The Amory Wars. In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3, Volume 2. Perhaps the most noteworthy extra-musical aspect of Coheed and Cambria’s repertoire is Claudio Sanchez’s series of detailed sciencefiction comic books and graphic novels (Figure 21), which depict the plot sequences of The Amory Wars saga and its related stories, extending the immersive experience for audiences beyond merely its musical component. The band have also promoted and disseminated The Amory Wars concept using a variety of internet-based platforms, including interactive websites, fan-targeted advertisements, music videos, recording studio updates, live performance clips and fan-based forums. The internet simultaneously functions as “a social space, medium of distribution, and engine of social and commercial change” (Jones 2000: 222), and certainly bolsters the transmedia storytelling process, allowing the band to circulate media content to a global audience at rapid speeds via social networking and interactive media. Simon Christopher Wood 65 Audience engagement with The Amory Wars albums has also been facilitated using visual approaches that offer a unique experience of the concept. During Coheed and Cambria’s 2008 Neverender concert tour, the first four installments of The Amory Wars album series were subject to full-length performances in New York, Chicago, Illinois and London, introducing revised arrangements and previously unseen visual elements. This recalls the performance structure used on Jethro Tull’s Thick as a Brick tour and Queensrÿche’s Operation: LIVEcrime shows. Additionally, Billboard.com has indicated that Mark Wahlberg’s Leverage production company, known for producing such television series as Entourage and Boardwalk Empire, has announced plans to produce a full-length motion picture adaptation of The Amory Wars (Schneider 2012: Billboard.com). This would bring together the music, concept and characters of The Amory Wars story in a similar manner to the numerous film adaptations of Marvel comic books. Audience engagement with The Amory Wars has been further enhanced through social media. The contemporary music industry can be seen as related Henry Jenkins’ notion of “convergence culture”: a process of cultural and technological transition “where old and new media collide, where grassroots and corporate media intersect, where the power of the media producer and the power of the media consumer interact in unpredictable ways” (Jenkins 2006: 2). In relation to the socio-cultural conditions of today, convergence culture allows increased social interaction between fans and musicians (producers and consumers). Facebook, Twitter and other social networks have facilitated this closer connection. A series of YouTube videos, titled “Inside The Concept” (2012-13), was recently circulated by Coheed and Cambria to coincide with the release of The Afterman albums. In these videos, Claudio Sanchez offers song-by-song descriptions explaining how these “prequel” albums relate to The Amory Wars concept and answers questions that he is regularly asked by fans. He also sheds light on the creative processes and personal inspirations behind the songs, artwork and music videos related to the albums. This ultimately furthers audience understandings of The Amory Wars concept and strengthens the band’s relationship with their fans. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 66 Both new digital technologies and older physical formats, such as vinyl, are highly valued in the production, distribution and consumption processes of contemporary popular music. This is perhaps indicative of a desire among consumers to re-engage with tactile formats, and perhaps also reflective of a growing sense of nostalgia within popular culture. Parallel to this attraction to the past is Coheed and Cambria’s furthering of the ongoing legacy of science-fiction storytelling through rock music, as evidenced over the decades by releases such as Rick Wakeman’s Journey to the Centre of the Earth (1974), The Alan Parsons Project’s I Robot (1977) and even Queensrÿche’s Operation: Mindcrime (1988). While artists such as French progressive rock band Magma have extended recurring themes or concepts over multiple albums in the past, the conception of Coheed and Cambria’s The Amory Wars as a genuine “concept discography” has set a new precedent within rock music. The Amory Wars saga should be seen as a complex manifestation of current technological trends and socio-cultural contexts, arguably generating renewed interest in the concept album’s history and certainly highlighting the ongoing significance of the concept album within 21st century popular music. Figure 22: Album Cover. Coheed and Cambria. The Afterman: Ascension. Hundred Handed, 2012. Simon Christopher Wood 67 Conclusion CHAPTER SIX In the introductory chapter of this study, I identified the need for a greater understanding of the concept album’s place within contemporary music. I put forward two key ideas that could facilitate a discussion of the concept album’s evolution from the 1970s through to the present day: (a) the relationship between concept albums and media technologies; and (b) the extent to which concept albums function as reflections of their corresponding socio-cultural contexts. I used four case studies to present my research, each concerned with a commercially successful rock concept album from a different decade. Jethro Tull’s Thick as a Brick addresses socio-cultural concerns within Britain in the early 1970s. The band innovatively utilised the functional properties of the vinyl LP, both in terms of the album’s production and its packaging. Queensrÿche’s Operation: Mindcrime depicts a corrupt political revolution against the U.S. Reagan-era government, the narrative of which was effectively conveyed using the three distribution formats in circulation during the 1980s. The band employed strong visual branding, sophisticated production, gapless playback technology, music videos and theatrical live performances. Radiohead’s OK Computer addresses themes of technological, social and political disengagement, and a pre-millennial fear that modern culture and technological advancements could have dehumanising effects on society. The band presented thematically related music, lyrics, artwork and music videos, and experimented with advanced production techniques and technologies, which communicated the core principles of the concept album to a mainstream 1990s audience. Coheed and Cambria’s The Amory Wars relies on a science-fiction story arc to articulate singer Claudio Sanchez’s feelings and attitudes about life in 21st century society. The band has used both physical and digital distribution formats, a series of graphic comic books, full-album concert performances, conceptual artwork, music videos and interactive online material to immerse their audiences. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 68 These case studies indicate that a singular comprehensive definition of the concept album is impossible to formulate. However, drawing on the trends, ideas and commonalities identified throughout the case studies, I have developed six guiding considerations that contribute towards a greater understanding of the concept album in the contemporary music landscape: 1. The “concept” of an album can benefit from dissemination across a variety of media. Whether the media platforms used are physical or digital, musical or non-musical, visual or auditory, image or text-based, the use of multiple media channels has proven to be an effective method of furthering audience engagement with an album’s concept. 2. A concept album should feature album artwork, imagery and extra-musical presentation aesthetics that reflect and enhance its music, concept and themes. This allows listeners to develop a visual interpretation of the concept being portrayed, which can then be linked with the album listening experience. 3. A concept album should be unified in some way, and produced with the intention of being listened to in its entirety. This unity can be facilitated by gapless playback technology and segues between songs (musical passages, soundscapes, narrative sequences). In light of the digital music industry’s emphasis on individual tracks, the songs on a concept album should serve the dual purpose of contributing to the fulllength album experience, while also functioning as stand-alone singles. 4. Artists can significantly enhance their concept albums by engaging with contemporary communication technologies. Technology has triggered regular changes in the manufacture, distribution and playback of recorded music, yet the concept album has continued to evolve as artists have adapted to the changing technological contexts of their time. Simon Christopher Wood 69 5. Artists releasing concept albums in the 21st century can benefit, commercially and artistically, from the resurgence of interest in vinyl long-playing records. The history of the concept album is closely associated with the vinyl LP format, and this relationship looks likely to continue. The presentation and design options associated with vinyl records allow artists to reflect their album’s concept and themes, while providing listeners with an immersive experience, and encouraging extended listening practices. 6. Concept albums can be used as a means of reflecting sociocultural contexts, thereby providing future generations with a sonic record of our times. The scope for artists to use the concept album as a musical outlet of social and cultural expression has been central to the medium’s ongoing relevance within popular music. In the face of ongoing technological progression, this will continue to hold value. I believe the above criteria may be of particular interest to contemporary musicians intending to pursue the composition, recording, presentation and release of a concept album in the 21 st century. Furthermore, my discussion of the concept album’s technological progression, particularly the ongoing centrality of long-playing vinyl records to the medium’s history, could benefit vinyl enthusiasts and observers of music industry trends. Although it has not been possible to discuss all of the socio-cultural perspectives raised throughout my case studies in depth, they address a broad range of issues that readers from a variety of disciplines may find interesting, such as social classification and education, politics and restricted thought, technological anxiety and alienation, and the use of science-fiction as an outlet for emotional expression and real world escapism. Finally, my four case studies may be of interest to fans of the bands and albums discussed, allowing them to engage with these works from a more critical perspective. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 70 The concept album is a progressive form of media that is constantly evolving. Through my research, I encountered various subject areas linked to the concept album and its evolution that were beyond the scope of this thesis, yet could provide scholars with rewarding topics for further investigation. One of these relates to the centrality of album artwork and extra-musical presentation aesthetics. These features are arguably more important for a concept album than they are for a standard album release, as they help shape one’s understanding of the concept being portrayed in the music. This area of research has also been identified by Dozal as “understudied” (2012: 13). Another topic of interest is the emergence of 21st century “sequel” concept albums such as Ian Anderson’s Thick as a Brick 2 (2012), Alice Cooper’s Welcome 2 My Nightmare (2011) and Queensrÿche’s Operation: Mindcrime II (2006). These albums seem to represent nostalgic attempts on the part of these artists to re-engage with defining moments from their past. Perhaps these albums function in a similar sense to progressive rock fanzines and online communities of the 1990s, which Atton has viewed as attempting to “revive and sustain interest in a genre that once enjoyed immense critical and commercial attention at many levels” (2001: 44). For example, Thick as a Brick 2 revives the St.Cleve Chronicle and Linwell Advertiser to exist in the digital age as the website StCleve.com. Research on this topic could further investigate the links between concept albums and Henry Jenkins’ notion of “convergence culture”, where old and new media collide. Finally, further investigation into the ongoing development of the concept album since the 1970s is required. Although concept albums from outside of the progressive rock genre have received little consideration within popular music discourse, it is worth noting that concept albums continue to be released by artists across a range of contemporary music genres, examples being Kendrick Lamar’s Good Kid, M.A.A.D City (2012), and Janelle Monáe’s ArchAndroid (2010). Lady Gaga’s forthcoming ARTPOP (2013) concept album, which will be released in physical and digital formats, alongside an interactive and content-rich “app” format, designed for iPad, iPhone, Android and computer users, underscores the ongoing significance of concept albums within contemporary music culture. Simon Christopher Wood 71 One of the limitations of this thesis is that only four case studies are presented. Choosing just four concept albums to represent a forty-year period was certainly a daunting task. However, I believe the four I addressed were logical choices, as they allowed me to thoroughly discuss the concept album as a form of communicative media. Ultimately, it is impossible to represent the socio-cultural and technological circumstances of a ten-year period through the lens of a single album of recorded music. However, through the case studies, I have provided an indication of the concept album’s ability to thrive on new media innovations, and serve as a mode of sociocultural representation. Concept albums are generally designed with the purpose of being listened to in their entirety, and they possess storytelling qualities through their combinations of sonic and visual properties. Concept albums continue to provide artists with an ideal vehicle for delivering a cohesive, culturally significant statement. From the social commentary of the St. Cleve Chronicle to the science-fiction “Stars of Sirius” that propel The Amory Wars, the concept album has been, and remains, one of the most important mediums for artistic expression, capable of capturing the imagination of listeners, and redefining the possibilities of recorded music. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 72 Image List All images in this thesis have been used in good faith under academic “fair use” and are included for noncommercial, educational purposes only. All rights are reserved to their copyright holders. All images accessed on the 12th and 13th October, 2013. Figure 1: Album Cover. Genesis. The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway. Charisma, 1974. http://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-media/product-gallery/B000002J1S/ Figure 2: Album Cover. Marillion. Misplaced Childhood. EMI, 1985. http://fanart.tv/artist/1932f5b6-0b7b-4050-b1df-833ca89e5f44/marillion/ Figure 3: Album Cover. IQ. Subterranea. Import, 1997. http://www.analog.am/products/subterranea-2 Figure 4: Album Cover. The Beatles. Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. Parlophone, 1967. http://cityoftongues.com/2013/02/15/when-the-world-was-young/ Figure 5: Album Cover. Yes. Tales From Topographic Oceans. Atlantic, 1973. http://www.retrovinyl.runmovies.eu/2010/12/16/tales-from-topographic-oceans/ Figure 6: Album Cover. Jethro Tull. Thick as a Brick. Chrysalis, 1972. http://j-tull.com/thick-as-a-brick/ Figure 7: “ http://thetangles.blogspot.com.au/2012/02/grandiose-madness-of-thick-as-brick_8654.html Figure 8: Packaging Design. Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Brain Salad Surgery. Manticore, 1973. http://www.amazon.com/Brain-Salad-Surgery-Emerson-Palmer/dp/B001I1SFQQ Figure 9: Thick as a Brick Vinyl Label, UK First Issue. Jethro Tull. Thick as a Brick. Chrysalis, 1972. http://eil.com/shop/moreinfo.asp?catalogid=59630 Figure 10: Expanded Album Cover. Queensrÿche. Operation: Mindcrime. EMI-Manhattan, 1988. http://sawtoothwave.com/2011/07/04/queensryche-operation-mindcrime/ Figure 11: Still from “Suite Sister Mary”. Operation: LIVEcrime DVD. Prod. Queensrÿche. EMI Records, 2001. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3rc91o8n44I Figure 12: Logo. “Black and White Advert for Operation: Mindcrime”. http://www.users.totalise.co.uk/~bigoleg/queensryche/om/ Figure 13: Album Cover. Yes. 90125. Atco, 1983. http://fanart.tv/artist/c1d4f2ba-cf39-460c-9528-6b827d3417a1/yes/ Figure 14: Album Cover. Radiohead. OK Computer. Parlophone, 1997. http://epianiste9.wordpress.com/2013/05/21/ok-computer-16-years-old-but-timeless/ Figure 15: “Photo: St. Catherines Court”, where OK Computer was recorded. Figure 16: Fitter Happier Litany featured in Select Magazine. July, 1997. http://citizeninsane.eu/s1997-07Select.htm Figure 17: Single Cover. Radiohead. No Surprises. Parlophone, 1997. http://fanart.tv/members/ministeren/music-images/albumcover/ Figure 18: The Amory Wars Illustration. http://whatculture.com/film/can-coheed-cambrias-the-amory-wars-movie-become-our-new-favorite-space-opera.php Figure 19: Album Cover. Coheed and Cambria. No World For Tomorrow. Columbia, 2007. http://www.amazon.co.uk/World-Tomorrow-Deluxe-Edition-Clean/dp/B000VS6PBO Figure 20: “Coheed Limited Deluxe”. Promotional photo for The Afterman Box Set. http://cobaltandcalcium.com/2012/12/18/the-afterman-deluxe-vinyl-box-set-pre-order-now/ Figure 21: Comic Book Cover. The Amory Wars. In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3, Volume 2. http://thecomixverse.com/2011/03/27/the-amory-wars-in-keeping-secrets-of-silent-earth-3-vol-2/ Figure 22: Album Cover. Coheed and Cambria. The Afterman: Ascension. 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The Amazing Spider-Man. 2012. DVD. Dir. Marc Webb. Columbia Pictures. X-Men: First Class. 2011. DVD. Dir. Matthew Vaughn. 20th Century Fox. Web Video Sources Amory Wars’ Claudio Sanchez ‘ Hides Behind Sci-Fi’. 2013. YouTube. VideoFromNewsarama. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eo4YnRJDiSQ Accessed 18th August, 2013. BBC Prog Rock Britannia an Observation in Three Movements. 2012. YouTube. Sid p. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iyPnNsY_0Pc Accessed 28th April, 2013. Coheed and Cambria on the Story Arc of Comic Book ‘Amory Wars’ & New Album. 2013. FuseTV. Cruz. http://www.fuse.tv/videos/2013/03/coheed-and-cambria-comic-book-new-album Accessed 12th August, 2013. Queensryche-Chris Degarmo and Geoff Tate Interview. 2006. YouTube. Bassplayer887. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZK7i2eX7bG8 Accessed 9th September, 2013. Radiohead – Paranoid Android. 2009. YouTube. emimusic. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sPLEbAVjiLA Accessed 1st September, 2013. The Afterman: Ascension - Inside The Concept. 2012. YouTube. Coheed Cambria. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rmmjArA55Bc Accessed 12th August, 2013. “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 78 Discography Adele. 21. Columbia, 2011. CD Alan Parsons Project, The. I Robot. Arista, 1977. LP Alice Cooper. Welcome 2 My Nightmare. Universal Music Enterprises, 2011. CD Anathema. Weather Systems. K Scope, 2012. CD Aphrodite’s Child. 666. Vertigo, 1972. LP Beatles, The. Abbey Road. Apple, 1969. LP Beatles, The. Meet the Beatles! Capitol, 1964. Digital Album Beatles, The. Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. Parlophone, 1967. LP Between the Buried and Me. The Parallax II: Future Sequence. Metal Blade, 2012. Digital Album. Camel. The Snow Goose. Decca, 1975. LP Coheed and Cambria. Good Apollo, I’m Burning Star IV, Volume One: From Fear Through the Eyes of Madness. Columbia, 2005. CD Coheed and Cambria. Good Apollo, I’m Burning Star IV, Volume Two: No World for Tomorrow. Columbia, 2007. CD Coheed and Cambria. In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3. Columbia, 2003. LP Coheed and Cambria. The Afterman: Ascension. Hundred Handed, 2012. CD and LP Coheed and Cambria. The Afterman: Descension. Hundred Handed, 2013. CD and LP Coheed and Cambria. The Second Stage Turbine Blade. Equal Vision, 2002. Digital Album Coheed and Cambria. Year of the Black Rainbow. Columbia, 2010. CD David Bowie. 1.Outside. Arista, 1995. CD Dream Theater. Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory. Elektra, 1999. CD Dream Theater. Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence. Elektra, 2002. CD Duke Ellington. Black, Brown and Beige. Columbia, 1958. Digital Album Echolyn. As The World. Cyclops, 1995. Digital Album Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Brain Salad Surgery. Manticore, 1973. LP Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Black Moon. Victory, 1992. CD Flower Kings, The. Flower Power. Inside Out, 1999. CD Frank Ocean. Channel Orange. Def Jam, 2012. CD Frank Sinatra. Come Fly With Me. Capitol, 1958. CD Genesis. The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway. Charisma, 1974. LP Ian Anderson. Thick as a Brick 2. Chrysalis, 2012. CD Iron Maiden. Seventh Son of a Seventh Son. EMI, 1988. CD IQ. Subterranea. Import, 1997. CD Janelle Monáe. ArchAndroid. Bad Boy, 2010. CD Jethro Tull. Aqualung. Chrysalis, 1971. LP Jethro Tull. Thick as a Brick. Chrysalis, 1972. LP and CD Kendrick Lamar. Good Kid, M.A.A.D City. Interscope, 2012. CD Kettlespider. Avadante. Independent, 2012. CD King Crimson. In the Court of the Crimson King. Island, 1969. Cassette Tape King Crimson. Islands. Island, 1971. LP King Diamond. Abigail. Roadrunner, 1987. CD Kiss. The Elder. Polygram, 1981. LP Lady Gaga. Artpop. Interscope, 2013. Partial Digital Album. Lee Hazlewood. Trouble Is a Lonesome Town. Mercury, 1963. Digital Album. Magma. Kobaïa/Magma. Philips, 1970. LP Marillion. Clutching at Straws. EMI, 1987. CD Marillion. Misplaced Childhood. EMI, 1985. CD Mars Volta, The. De-loused in the Comatorium. Universal, 2003. CD Miles Davis. Kind of Blue. Columbia, 1959. CD Moody Blues, The. Days of Future Passed. Deram, 1967. LP My Chemical Romance. Danger Days: True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys. Reprise, 2010. Digital Album. Simon Christopher Wood 79 Nine Inch Nails. The Downward Spiral. Atlantic, 1994. Digital Album Nine Inch Nails. Year Zero. Universal, 2007. Digital Album Pallas. The Sentinel. Centaur, 1982. LP Pink Floyd. Animals. EMI, 1974. LP Pink Floyd. Dark Side of the Moon. EMI, 1973. LP Pink Floyd. The Wall. EMI, 1979. LP Pink Floyd. Wish You Were Here. EMI,1975. Digital Album Porcupine Tree. The Incident. Roadrunner, 2009. CD Premiata Forneria Marconi. Storia Di Un Minuto. Numero Uno, 1972. CD Queensrÿche. Operation: Mindcrime. EMI-Manhattan, 1988. CD and LP Queensrÿche. Operation: Mindcrime II. Rhino, 2006. CD Queensrÿche. Rage for Order. Capitol, 1986. CD Radiohead. Amnesiac. Parlophone, 2001. Digital Album Radiohead. In Rainbows. Self-Released, 2007. Digital Album Radiohead. Kid A. EMI, 2000. CD Radiohead. OK Computer. Parlophone, 1997. CD Radiohead. Pablo Honey. Parlophone, 1993. Digital Album Radiohead. The Bends. Parlophone, 1995. Digital Album Rick Wakeman. Journey to the Centre of the Earth. A & M, 1974. LP Rush. 2112. Mercury, 1976. CD Spock’s Beard. The Kindness of Strangers. Radiant, 1997. Digital Album Spock’s Beard. Snow. Inside Out, 2000. CD Steven Wilson. The Raven Who Refused To Sing. K Scope, 2013. CD Symphony X. V: The New Mythology Suite. Inside Out, 2000. CD Venom. At War with Satan. Neat, 1984. CD Who, The. Tommy. Polydor, 1969. LP Willie Nelson. Red Headed Stranger. Columbia, 1975. LP Woody Guthrie. Ballads of Sacco and Vanzetti. Folkways, 1960. Digital Album Yes. 90125. Atco, 1983. CD Yes. Big Generator. Atco, 1987. CD Yes. Close to The Edge. Atlantic, 1972. LP Yes. Tales From Topographic Oceans. Atlantic, 1973. LP “From St. Cleve to Sirius” 80 Simon Christopher Wood 81 “From St. Cleve to Sirius”