MSH SfaJT Fugazi MC CaS SE HiE Brave AoS TSE R10 dotcom ANP Marbles SWE HitR StcbM L=M FEAR WFftO AHBID

An Hour Before It's Dark - Introduction

Introduction: An Hour Before It's Dark is Marillion's twentieth studio album (including Less = More and With Friends from the Orchestra) and the sixteenth with Steve Hogarth.

The album was recorded during
the COVID-19 pandemic. Steve Rothery, believing himself to be vulnerable, was not comfortable in being in the studio with the rest of the band for much of the period and contributed his parts from home until conditions changed sufficiently for him to feel confident to return. Otherwise, however, the writing and recording followed the established jam-record-compile approach of previous albums.

h wrote in a pre-release update how he had initially tried to avoid writing about the pandemic, but, "When push came to shove though, it was impossible not to reference it. It has become part of life so there’s no ignoring it creatively just as there's no ignoring it, period." Murder Machines and Care both touch on the pandemic, though Care is much wider in scope.

h also stated that he believes that mass-extinctions and climate change are more pressing issues than COVID and will demand a change in how people behave. These themes are explored in a number of the album's tracks, principally Be Hard on Yourself and Reprogram the Gene

The Crow and the Nightingale is about Leonard Cohen, known to be one of h's musical heroes, while Sierra Leone concerns a man that finds a large diamond.

When Be Hard on Yourself was released as the first taster of the album, many commentators were quick to note that it sounded like it was cut from the same cloth as FEAR, and it's hard to deny that there are some chord sequences, harmonies and arrangements that strongly recall The New Kings. Yet, it's equally true to say that the song is much less dense lyrically and by being considerably more pacy than anything on the previous album, it is much more accessible.

From then on, the album sounds lighter and brighter than its predecessor. Reprogram the Gene is a very decent rock song, musing on environmentalism and whether COVID might be an opportunity to do things differently in future. Murder Machines, with the short Just a Kiss introduction is their finest rock song for a good few albums - many will prefer Power, but I find this vastly superior - and the lyric is genuinely moving.

Less densely produced despite, in songs such as The Crow and the Nightingale, having real strings, horn and harp and a choir, the overall quicker pace to the album felt very welcome to me. There are many moments of real beauty on this album, where the listener feels moved (yet not manipulated to be so), and the middle section of The Crow is one of them. It certainly doesn't sound like Leonard Cohen's chansonnier style (many might say an acquired taste - there's a reason his best known song is from a cover version), but it does convey Hogarth's admiration for his words extremely effectively.

In interview I did with him for the Web UK, Mark Kelly seemed to downplay Sierra Leone. He didn't suggest it was awful - indeed, he said it had some interesting parts - however, he was less enthused than some of the other tracks. Perhaps it's not so interesting for a keyboard player, but I was particularly taken with it. I could hear some similarities with The Sky Above the Rain in terms of the palette used, but where Sky has never really connected, this one did. There's a very effective section at the end where h is multitracked that really reminded me of something off the How We Live album.

Closer Care had been talked up by the band, with many people arguing it might be the finest song they'd ever written; some comparisons were made to Neverland. It certainly connected with certain recent events in my life, and the lyrics made me weep before I'd heard a note of music. When I felt confident to try it, I didn't really get Neverland vibes at all. I did get a strong Anoraknophobia feeling from the opening section with its funky, insistent bass into the euphoric chorus. The later sections are a slow build, with lots of layering and repetition. If you have lost someone you love, prepare to shed tears, and if somehow iii. Every Cell doesn't tip you over the edge, then the call back to the 'She put her arms around me' line surely will.

For all the paranoia and pessimism of FEAR, An Hour Before it's Dark provides an antidote with some of Marillion's most uplifting songs.

The pre-release round up of news for AHBiD has been moved here.

Cover Notes:  Revealed on November 4th, the album cover is one of the simplest Marillion have ever done, twenty four paint strokes aligned around a central black splat to form a circle, they represent a twenty four hour clock. Each of the strokes is coloured in a rainbow, except the final stroke at the two and a half minutes to midnight position, representing the final hour, which is black. Other paint spatters in different colours can be seen when viewed more closely, as can a 3D effect as though the black cover was a sheet of card that had been cut and held slightly above the colours beneath.

The entire cover is by Simon Ward who has been responsible for many of Marillion's studio album covers since Sounds that can't be Made.

1 comment:

  1. Incredible album, I can stop playing side three. Through care right through to the end in unbelievable.

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for your comments.

All comments are moderated, so apologies if it doesn't appear right away!