Prog

Once In A Lifetime

“In the early days, we used to wear these stupid kaftans with a big eye on it. We’d walk down the street in them before the show, publicising the gig. Whatever it took.”
Mick Pointer (ex-Marillion)

All things must pass, and prog’s imperial early-to-mid-70s phase was no exception. By the end of that decade, many of its chief protagonists were either seemingly spent as creative forces (ELP, Yes), about to undergo radical transformations (Genesis, Yes again) or absent (King Crimson, albeit temporarily). The upstarts of punk may have been commercial minnows in comparison, but their jibes about ‘dinosaurs’ hit where it hurt.

Yet as the 80s got underway, something unexpected was happening. Across the United Kingdom, a wave of grassroots bands set about reviving this seemingly moribund genre. A scene was emerging, largely away from the bright lights and music industry back-slapping of London. It was centred around the likes of Aylesbury’s Marillion (née Silmarillion) and space cadets Solstice, Twelfth Night (who began life as an instrumental band at Reading University), Pallas from Aberdeen, Pendragon (originally Zeus Pendragon) from Stroud and Portsmouth’s IQ (formed from the ashes of The Lens). Their ranks were swollen by countless other like-minded outfits: Chemical Alice (whose keyboard player Mark Kelly would join Marillion, and other members would go on to form Tamarisk), Trilogy, Haze, Airbridge, Liaison, Citizen Cain and others.

As the decade progressed, these bands would channel the DIY spirit of punk to create a vibrant homegrown scene, populated by a handful of larger-than-life characters and soundtracked by albums that wore their love of a then-unfashionable musical style openly. One band – Marillion – would go on to much bigger things, but others would have their own individual and collective successes, not least in keeping the progressive rock flame flickering.

Unlike earlier scenes that had been centred around specific locales, the new prog bands initially operated in isolation in towns and cities across the country, largely unaware of each other.

Mick Pointer: “Silmarillion played our one and only show at a pub in Southall [west London] called The Hamborough Tavern. We had a big fallout with the guitarist and keyboard player over a fucking Mellotron, would you believe? We started gigging as Marillion pretty bloody quickly afterwards. You have to get yourself out there in front of a whole lot of people.”

Nick Barrett: “We played Redditch College and the agricultural college in Cirencester. We got booed off at most places. At one gig, the rugby team tried to drive a car into the venue and then got onstage and started hassling us.”

Andy Glass: “I’d played with Mick Pointer in a band called Electric Gypsy. As soon as Marillion started getting gigs, they were like, ‘Do you want to come and play with us?’”

Brian Devoil: “There were a couple of pubs in Bicester where we played, a couple of places in Oxford, and the Target in Reading, which was our local pub.”

Mike Holmes: “When we started IQ in Southampton, we wanted to do any kind of music we wanted to. We had a funk track, a reggae track, but it became really obvious very early on that what we were really good at was prog.”

Paul McMahon: “We were basically a school band when we started out [in 1978]. The ambition was to do original music. We’d no idea that prog music was going to have any kind of resurgence.”

“We played The Ruskin Arms in east London, which is where Iron Maiden played a lot. We used to wear kimonos onstage. Was it a rip-off of Rush? Yeah, of course it was.”
Nik Szymanek (Trilogy)

Graeme Murray: “Glasgow really seemed to take to the whole prog thing. There was a venue on Sauchiehall Street; we used to play there on a Saturday, a lunchtime show, an evening show and a late show, and the place would be packed out the door.”

“We played The Ruskin Arms

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