Prog

Aiming High

“Please purchase directly from us to support our independence,” Lifesigns requested via an advert in Prog a few months ago. “No terms and conditions apply.”

The prog rockers’ collective tongue was firmly in cheek when they took out the ad – “we offer solutions to a wide a range of musical yearnings,” they added – but the underlying message was sincere.

Lifesigns’ third studio album, Altitude, is intrinsically independent in nature: it came to fruition thanks to another crowdfunding campaign. This has led to some tagging them as the ‘new Marillion’, who of course pioneered asking fans to pay up front. The eight-track is what many have come to expect from Lifesigns: thoughtfully written prog rock, which is happy to flirt with major chords, earworm melodies and dexterous playing.

It’s another product of the pandemic, with the band lurching into recording following some shows in March 2020, just as the world was about to grind to a halt. And, like most music making last year, the record was pieced together with contributions that had been zapped

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Prog

Prog3 min read
“We Didn’t Force A Connection, It Just Happened.”
By the middle of 1971, Jethro Tull had made real inroads in North America, headlining to several thousand people every night. On June 24 of that year, they began a month-long tour of the US and Canada. Supporting them was none other than Yes – then o
Prog3 min read
House D’Horror!
The Château d’Hérouville, an 18th-century house located on the northern outskirts of Paris, was one of the most prestigious studios of the early 1970s. It was there, in August 1972, that Tull began work on the follow-up to Thick As A Brick. “Cat Stev
Prog2 min read
Enslaved
VENUE ISLINGTON ASSEMBLY HALL, LONDON DATE 06/03/2024 Integrity is defined in the dictionary as “the quality of being honest and having strong moral principles”. Tonight that’s manifested in both human and creative form by these five unassuming (offs

Related Books & Audiobooks