Van der Graaf Generator / Peter Hammill S& D, C or D?

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Hah, the bloke was fucking VERY up & at 'em!!

I picked up the 1st set of 3 reissues "the least we can do is wave to each other", "H to he who am the only one" & "pawn hearts". Great mastering job, nice packaging/notes. One of the bonus tracks (on "h to he..." is this thing called "squid1/squid2/octopus" good grief it's mighty. deranged mix of fucked up free jazz & demented doomy church organ, heavy and as gothic as fuck!! it's 15m long too...

Pashmina (Pashmina), Saturday, 4 June 2005 11:25 (twenty-one years ago)

Have you heard the new album? I haven't, but really want to. Also, I didn't know about those reissues - extra songs sounds great!

Pangolino 2, Saturday, 4 June 2005 16:42 (twenty-one years ago)

Good to see the classics remastered! I simply can't keep up/save money for all the reissued goodness these days.

Brooker Buckingham (Brooker B), Saturday, 4 June 2005 16:52 (twenty-one years ago)

Is that "Octopus" thing related to the track on Aerosol Grey Machine with (I think) the same name?

Jetlag Willy (noodle vague), Sunday, 5 June 2005 09:05 (twenty-one years ago)

so what are the long-lost second album of Pawn Hearts tracks like?

kyle (akmonday), Sunday, 5 June 2005 21:17 (twenty-one years ago)

two months pass...
Those VDGG reissues are $25 each! Anyone find them cheaper?

As far as solo, I have Hammill's Nadir's Big Chance and Over. I could get The Silent Corner and the Empty Stage, and The Future Now for $8 each at alldirect.com, but since those versions came out in 1990, I'm afraid remasters will pop up soon. Anyone got info on that?

A.S. Van Dorston (Fastnbulbous), Sunday, 4 September 2005 08:15 (twenty years ago)

Those VDGG reissues are $25 each! Anyone find them cheaper?

As far as solo, I have Hammill's Nadir's Big Chance and Over. I could get The Silent Corner and the Empty Stage, and The Future Now for $8 each at alldirect.com, but since those versions came out in 1990, I'm afraid remasters will pop up soon. Anyone got info on that?

A.S. Van Dorston (Fastnbulbous), Sunday, 4 September 2005 08:15 (twenty years ago)

i haven't seen them cheaper, no, and so I've only bought Pawn Hearts, but the improvement in sound quality was really worth it. I'll pick up the others as money permits

kyle (akmonday), Sunday, 4 September 2005 08:21 (twenty years ago)

Hammill's solo debut, "Fool's Mate" is a very fine record, indeed. Kind of like a pop Roy Harper; and "Child" is a song to truly send shivers down your spine. There's a smattering of music-hall in a few of the songs, as well as a brilliant final number, which is rather cheery, yet turns agonisingly dark, ending on a sustained, droning guitar chord.

Tom May (Tom May), Sunday, 4 September 2005 13:19 (twenty years ago)

I think the final chord (which is also the opening chord of the album) is played by a keyboard of some kind. Fool's Mate is a great introduction to Hammill's solo work, tho more playful than a lot of his later stuff.

I Ain't No Addict, Whoever Heard of a Junkie as Old as Me? (noodle vague), Sunday, 4 September 2005 14:02 (twenty years ago)

Looks like on amazon.co.uk, Fool's Mate also got the reissue treatment, but not any of the other solo albums. If CD Wow would start carrying them, I'd consider gettingthem all.

Fastnbulbous (Fastnbulbous), Sunday, 4 September 2005 14:26 (twenty years ago)

Could be a synthesizer of some sort, I suppose, though the sound is close to a guitar.

I'm sure others will get the re-issue treatment in due course - to be hoped for, anyway.

Tom May (Tom May), Sunday, 4 September 2005 14:39 (twenty years ago)

The re-releases are coming in batches, fairly chronologically I think. You can check Sofa Sound for more info.

I Ain't No Addict, Whoever Heard of a Junkie as Old as Me? (noodle vague), Sunday, 4 September 2005 14:42 (twenty years ago)

I was recently sent a copy of The Future Now, which is really enjoyable.

Sundar (sundar), Sunday, 4 September 2005 14:43 (twenty years ago)

I'm still waiting on FOPP selling them for £7.

Last Of The Famous International Pfunkboys (Kerr), Sunday, 4 September 2005 14:56 (twenty years ago)

Just noticed these are available at Netflix:

Inside Van Der Graaf Generator (2005)
Progressive rock pioneers Van Der Graaf Generator opened doors for groups including Genesis and Pink Floyd and remains one of the most influential yet unappreciated bands of the genre. This inside look features rare archival performance footage, plus critical reviews and in-depth analysis of the band by former Van der Graaf members Judge Smith, Nic Potter and David Jackson, as well as a team of prominent music critics and rock journalists.

Van Der Graaf Generator: Godbluff Live (2004)
Recorded on September 27th, 1975, prog rock legends Van Der Graaf Generator take to the stage to deliver some astounding rock sounds. Recorded on a tour of France, the show concentrates on the "Godbluff" album.

Fastnbulbous (Fastnbulbous), Sunday, 4 September 2005 17:22 (twenty years ago)

The recent reissues are gonna be Americanized by Astralwerks/Caroline in October or thereabouts, for substantially less money. I'm holding off.

pdf (Phil Freeman), Sunday, 4 September 2005 17:43 (twenty years ago)

I always thaought the sound at the opening and closing of Fool's Mate was a sine wave generator of some sort (maybe a synth).

And on a side note, I have a VHS of a VDGG tribute band called Van Der Graf Jr. that was shot at Barnsdall Park's auditorium, where today's Arthurfest is occuring.

nickn (nickn), Sunday, 4 September 2005 17:58 (twenty years ago)

two weeks pass...
I reviewed the first batch of Astralwerks-distributed reissues to come out on October 4.

Fastnbulbous (Fastnbulbous), Monday, 19 September 2005 11:13 (twenty years ago)

The recent reissues are gonna be Americanized by Astralwerks/Caroline in October or thereabouts, for substantially less money.

No Americanization just a sweeter bulk import deal, according to Artist-shop. I'll be sitting next to Phil in the waiting room.

doug watson (solid air), Monday, 19 September 2005 13:08 (twenty years ago)

Peter Hammill - Nadir's Big Chance
I gotta get that one. I heard the title track on a MOJO comp and it sounded great.

k/l (Ken L), Monday, 19 September 2005 13:13 (twenty years ago)

four months pass...
World Record. Lovin this album. The drum sound is pretty amazing.
This is a good press release:
http://www.vandergraafgenerator.co.uk/pawnhearts/vdgg_pressrelease.jpg

shadeball (chaki), Friday, 10 February 2006 11:20 (twenty years ago)

Wonder what's happened with the Peter Hammill Charisma solo albums after Fool's Mate? I thought they were due for re-issue too.

Deluxe (Damian), Friday, 10 February 2006 13:23 (twenty years ago)

They need re-issuing, I've got a few of them on CD and they sound like shit

Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 10 February 2006 13:32 (twenty years ago)

... or re-mastering or whatever

Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 10 February 2006 13:32 (twenty years ago)

That Fool's Mate disc has been killing me recently!

blackmail (blackmail.is.my.life), Friday, 10 February 2006 14:21 (twenty years ago)

three weeks pass...
I came across this line today that made me smile: "Van Der Graaf Generator. Simultaneously the Orson Welles and Ed Wood of rock".

Raw, Uncompromising, and Noodly (noodle vague), Saturday, 4 March 2006 20:58 (twenty years ago)

one month passes...
god, "Afterwards" ... gotta love that silly Bach piano deal ... 1st alb is so great... production is shit but these guys had it right out of the gate..

Stormy Davis (diamond), Monday, 17 April 2006 04:11 (twenty years ago)

"Running Back" is so amazing

Stormy Davis (diamond), Monday, 17 April 2006 04:19 (twenty years ago)

two months pass...
I've been listening to Hammill's song "Pompeii" today. It might be the best thing he ever wrote. It fades in: the drums play basically the same pattern throughout, the guitar's v. restrained, sax too, and his voice takes a verse or so to reach its full volume. It swells up, like the Bay of Naples, and he sings these beautiful lines about the city basking under blue skies, little archeological details about the buildings and the people, and the whole thing moves towards the climactic fall of ash and then just fades out again, a sad dream. And I'm not doing it justice but you ought to listen to it.

Shadow of the Waxwing (noodle vague), Saturday, 17 June 2006 10:32 (nineteen years ago)

I really love Nadir's Big Chance. I remember listening to it in the dark a few years ago, and it really struck me how incredibly bleak it is. Pompeii is great, but my favorite track has to be Shingle... Is it just the goth in me, or can anyone else imagine Andrew Eldritch doing a cover of it?!

I remember being really disappointed with VDGG after reading a rave about Pawn Hearts, the music just sounded ridiculously bombastic and too 'prog' for my ears at the time, then I suddenly had some kind of epiphany and love the whole thing - I don't think there's a bad moment on the album. My second fave is The Least We Can Do Is Talk to Each Other - those last doom-as-fuck organ chords in the coda to White Hammer!!!

Rombald (rombald), Saturday, 17 June 2006 11:21 (nineteen years ago)

Hopefully EMI/Virgin will get going and re-issue everything by Hammill from "Chameleon" up to, say "ph7". The booklets for the VDGG re-issues have some nice photos etc - but it's the style of booklet where all of them have the same text repeated...

Start with "Least We Can Do...", then buy "H To He", then you get "Pawn Hearts" (all re-mastered editions)...then "Silent Corner & The Empty Stage", "In Camera", "Nadir's", "Over", "The Future Now", "ph7" (all not-yet re-mastered).

So Ho La (So Ho La), Saturday, 17 June 2006 12:16 (nineteen years ago)

Shingle is fantastic.

Brigadier Lethbridge-Pfunkboy (Kerr), Saturday, 17 June 2006 12:35 (nineteen years ago)

It's a rum old album, Nadir's. Several years since I first heard it and I'm still not sure those songs sit together. I like them individually, though.

Shadow of the Waxwing (noodle vague), Saturday, 17 June 2006 12:44 (nineteen years ago)

PEOPLE YOU WERE GOING TO!!!!

Dan Selzer (Dan Selzer), Saturday, 17 June 2006 12:58 (nineteen years ago)

I know I'm about 35 years behind but VDGG are the best band I have gotten into all year.

LC (Damian), Saturday, 17 June 2006 13:16 (nineteen years ago)

I like the NBC version of "People You Were Going To" better than the original Van der Graaf recording. Some of the lyrics are a bit cringy, but then they wrote it as teenagers I think. Is that the track that Chris Judge Smith wrote? Or is it "Been Alone So Long"? Which is my favourite of the misery-ballads of that album, by the way.

Shadow of the Waxwing (noodle vague), Saturday, 17 June 2006 16:48 (nineteen years ago)

two months pass...
Regular Update: PETER HAMMILL IS JESUS

Thank you.

I Supersize Disaster (noodle vague), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 00:42 (nineteen years ago)

Aha. I call myself a prog fan but I own no VdGG. Mr. Vague, which album would you recommend I start off with, considering that my favourite works in the genre are Yes' two three-track albums?

Obvious Ninja (Haberdager), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 00:48 (nineteen years ago)

Cos in "Solitude" that shivery Frippesque guitar goes "ssssssssssshhhhhhhhhiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiccccccccccckkkkkkkkk" from one speaker to the other backwards forwards and then he hits you with "Vision" and the world sobs all over yr head.

I Supersize Disaster (noodle vague), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 00:48 (nineteen years ago)

with VdGG I'd say say Still Life first, followed by Pawn Hearts, but they represent two different versions of the band and every fan has their own favourite era. And then there's Hammill's solo stuff which is glorious in whole different ways...

I Supersize Disaster (noodle vague), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 00:52 (nineteen years ago)

does that ho'mail address work, mister?

I Supersize Disaster (noodle vague), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 00:53 (nineteen years ago)

it does indeed, sah!

Obvious Ninja (Haberdager), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 00:55 (nineteen years ago)

i still need to get Fool's Mate.... any word on remastering his other solo albums? there are so many of them and I only have them all as mp3s...

kyle (akmonday), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 01:04 (nineteen years ago)

http://www.sofasound.com/

is usually the best place to check for news.

LJ i am drunkenly flailing at emails. eventually one might get thru.

I Supersize Disaster (noodle vague), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 01:07 (nineteen years ago)

did you not copy-and-paste my handle? ;-)

Obvious Ninja (Haberdager), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 01:11 (nineteen years ago)

The fault is my end and my sausage fingers and sausagemeat brain. Anyway, check yr mail in about an hour *emotiwink*

I Supersize Disaster (noodle vague), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 01:12 (nineteen years ago)

Like about now.

I Supersize Disaster (noodle vague), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 02:16 (nineteen years ago)

Jeez, the whole album? Wow, cheers! Your generosity shall not be forgotten...

Obvious Ninja (Haberdager), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 02:27 (nineteen years ago)

Johnny Rotten liked this band?

*promises to listen to NMTBHTSP after VdGG*

Obvious Ninja (Haberdager), Wednesday, 30 August 2006 02:40 (nineteen years ago)

I tried getting into them because Voivod spoks so reverentially about them but it was hard since they were so damn prolific.

I still have a couple things on the shelves.

Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Saturday, 13 January 2024 21:39 (two years ago)

I like plenty of Voivod and that shout totally makes sense but aren't we talking about another band too interesting to get appropriate respect from their genre peers?

craning to be leather (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 13 January 2024 22:32 (two years ago)

Yeah and I guess Voivod is somewhat prolific too but the difference is I was along the whole time for Voivod and came in late to Van der Graaf Generator.

Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Saturday, 13 January 2024 22:46 (two years ago)

I know Godfrey tried unsuccessfully to sue Barclay James Harvest not too many years ago; I also remember him making the quizzical statement that the Enid were loved at punk clubs because they were so "un-punk" that they were actually perceived as punk, or words to that effect.

― Halfway there but for you

yeah greg lake made the same claim about ELP. see: rick wakeman's "i'm so straight i'm a weirdo". which is _almost_ right. the truth is that being straight is just fucking weird. i mean fundamentally ok a lot of the time, don't get me wrong, but _weird_.

ELP are incredibly hetero, have you not seen the cover of Love Beach?

― frogbs

just don't ask d3n1s3 sh4rp3 about carl palmer

i definitely need to check out carmen, a lot of this stuff is like... niche symphonic and symphonic has never really been my jam. also definitely interested in david clark allen's fetish art lol.

but yes The Enid are about the one overtly gay prog band, shame it has to be that guy really.

― where did the times go (Matt #2)

i mean that's kind of queer shit in general, though... being queer means you go through a lot of shit that cishets don't and that fucks a person up, queer pioneers tend to be kinda fucked up people. if you look at a lot of the people trans people like me try to reclaim as trans, they're kinda awful. elagabalus? terrible, fucked-up person. ed wood? incredibly bad filmmaker and racist drunk. doesn't excuse it, but there's this desire for queer pioneers to be like tom hanks in _philadelphia_, which to me, from what i've seen of that movie and its legitimacy narrative, it kinda distorts a lot of what makes queer people _queer_.

i guess that's the other thing, just being queer doesn't make a person's work queer. i heard dee palmer's solo album just because i wanted to hear what kind of music she would make. i don't hear anything queer at all in it. it's just kind of an ordinary prog record. which is good! i defend that strongly. trans people don't have to make "trans music", like, our entire lives aren't about being trans.

anyway i'm gonna have to listen to their stuff but given that one of their best-known records is "aerie faerie nonsense", yeahhhh that sounds pretty queer. didn't stand out because faeries are _standard in prog_ except it's usually invoked by cishets for some reason? just... to me they're missing out on the best shit about this stuff.

Kate (rushomancy), Sunday, 14 January 2024 16:27 (two years ago)

I get what you're saying but I think you have to separate queerness from sexuality somehow, because prog music is pretty nonsexual as a whole to me. and when it does get horny it always comes off very weird. imo "Ladies of the Road" is worse than just a filler track, it almost ruins the band's entire image (though tbf Crimson was kind of falling apart there anyway). its not just a sex thing either, when prog bands sing about any sort of normal thing (see Triumvirat's concept album about getting laid off at the factory) it just comes off strange to me

there is a modern prog band called The Tangent that sorta pulls it off though, mainly because you just know the dude is an IT worker doing this in his spare time

frogbs, Sunday, 14 January 2024 16:40 (two years ago)

"when prog bands sing about any sort of normal thing (see Triumvirat's concept album about getting laid off at the factory) it just comes off strange to me"

surely that's good?

I think Fandangos In Space by Carmen is an essential prog album, just amazing. On David Clark Allen's blog he writes about new flamenco bands.

I always thought the faeries and other fantasy cliches weren't that prevalent in prog but just appear more than in most rock genres. Same with power metal, I expected epic fantasy full time but a lot of the songs are about the things anyone sings about.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Sunday, 14 January 2024 16:47 (two years ago)

That Gentle Giant album "Three Friends" sounds like a pretty normal mundane story.

Bulky Pee Pants (Tom D.), Sunday, 14 January 2024 16:59 (two years ago)

it is about a gay ogre orgy

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Sunday, 14 January 2024 17:59 (two years ago)

Troll Throuple

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Sunday, 14 January 2024 18:00 (two years ago)

I get what you're saying but I think you have to separate queerness from sexuality somehow, because prog music is pretty nonsexual as a whole to me. and when it does get horny it always comes off very weird. imo "Ladies of the Road" is worse than just a filler track, it almost ruins the band's entire image (though tbf Crimson was kind of falling apart there anyway). its not just a sex thing either, when prog bands sing about any sort of normal thing (see Triumvirat's concept album about getting laid off at the factory) it just comes off strange to me

there is a modern prog band called The Tangent that sorta pulls it off though, mainly because you just know the dude is an IT worker doing this in his spare time

― frogbs

King Crimson's image is really interesting to me! I think they're a very... like not musically complex, but _personally_ complex band. The image of King Crimson often doesn't accord with the reality. That's what I found so fascinating about the recent King Crimson documentary. It really delves into that.

This idea of King Crimson as this non-sexual, intellectual, cerebral band is, as far as I can tell, completely divorced from the reality. The impression I get from Fripp's statements about this period is that he was pretty much a huge slut. "Ladies of the Road" isn't even their first paean to groupies - "Cadence and Cascade" is also on that theme. In the "Larks' Tongues in Aspic" period there were a fair few references to analingus, as well.

I definitely do... I mean I don't differentiate queerness from sexuality in an _absolute_ sense. My gender identity isn't the same thing as my sexual identity. (My sexual identity is one that I've seen described as "WTFSexual", as in "What even is sex?" I'm not asking that ironically. I genuinely do not know what "sex" is supposed to be.)

I guess when I talk about queerness and the lack thereof I look at it kind of along the same lines as Natalie Reed's "Null HypotheCis". The default reading for me of prog isn't asexual or non-gendered. It's cisgender, heterosexual music, whether it's _explicitly_ sexual or not. There are a lot of implicit assumptions in there, things that aren't even noticeable to cishets but just don't track with my own experience and understanding. I mean, look, I don't want to get too sociologist here, but the music of, say, Magma, which is propulsive, repetitive music that drives towards an explosive finale... I'll just say that it _parallels_ normative cis male sexuality. I understand the appeal of that kind of sex. It's not the way I do things. That's not to say that Magma's music is explicitly sexual music or that music is all about sex or whatever whatever. There's just a level of resonance with cis male sexuality that's just _there_, it's congruent in a way where the presence or absence of congruence isn't even a question. And to me, I feel that incongruence pretty strongly.

A lot of what I like about prog rock is what I've seen referred to as "padding", as being "aimless". King Crimson talks of their name being evocative of a "man with an aim". I'm a woman and to the extent that I have an aim, it's mostly to live in and embody the moment. (Which, actually, is King Crimson's aim too... we get along a lot better than the name might suggest!)

Prog rock songs can be very long and while they do tend to eventually get where they're going, it's a long, often scenic trip. They don't get in and out within two minutes. Which, again, I'm not condemning. I think that's pretty cool, having that quick hardcore blast of energy. When I think about myself, how I express myself, that's not how I do things. If I arrive at a conclusion at all, it's almost by accident. That's the feeling I get from my favorite prog - oh, that actually makes sense? I didn't expect that to make sense, I thought we were just wandering around aimlessly. When I do stuff that's... _maybe_ sex? Anyway, that's kind of how I go about things. I'm very fond of the "fuck around and find out" approach.

And there's a sort of tension between that sort of structural _queerness_ I find in prog with the way so much of it is cishet coded. That's kind of what I mean when I talk about music not being queer, I don't necessarily mean explicitly, I mean sometimes people's queerness informs their work, the way cishet people's cishet-ness informs their work. Honestly maybe that's why Palmer's album disappointed me... it's missing any kind of implicit sense of gender or sexual identity whatsoever. It's just kind of _there_.

Kate (rushomancy), Sunday, 14 January 2024 18:26 (two years ago)

That Gentle Giant album "Three Friends" sounds like a pretty normal mundane story.

― Bulky Pee Pants (Tom D.), Sunday, January 14, 2024 8:59 AM (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink

it is about a gay ogre orgy

― I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm)

six of one, half a dozen of the other

Kate (rushomancy), Sunday, 14 January 2024 18:28 (two years ago)

six months pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videos

^uploading VDGG and Hammil bootlegs in roughly chronological order every day

Maresn3st, Thursday, 8 August 2024 21:24 (one year ago)

Oh balls, I bet this doesn't work either -

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTq5H7Di7Bc-

Maresn3st, Thursday, 8 August 2024 21:25 (one year ago)

Oh it did, good then.

Maresn3st, Thursday, 8 August 2024 21:26 (one year ago)

v nice resource/project, Maresn3st - thanks for posting.

Fizzles, Friday, 9 August 2024 08:41 (one year ago)

eleven months pass...

I was once at a gig and a hippy came over to me and said "Has anyone ever told you, you look exactly like Nic Potter of Van der Graaf Generator?".

I've got to admit the resemblance is or rather was uncanny, this is exactly what I looked like in my 20s.

https://www.vandergraafgenerator.co.uk/pawnhearts/nicpotter_vital2.jpg

Corny Capitalism (Tom D.), Tuesday, 5 August 2025 21:38 (ten months ago)

just saw there's a massive Hammill box set on the way:

https://www.loudersound.com/bands-artists/peter-hammill-to-release-20-disc-the-charisma-and-virgin-recordings-1971-1986-box-set-in-september

looks very nice though this is far more Hammill than I need in a physical format (I already have the majority of these on vinyl). Past forays into remastering of VdGG and Hammill stuff have been bad, but not sure who is handling these ones.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Tuesday, 5 August 2025 22:04 (ten months ago)

just don't ask d3n1s3 sh4rp3 about carl palmer

ok I need this explained to me, I googled and landed in very old usenet discussions about the Division Bell and Publius Enigma.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Tuesday, 5 August 2025 22:08 (ten months ago)

one month passes...

The Hamm!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6eG4bW1tCZQ

Robert Adam Gilmour, Sunday, 14 September 2025 18:56 (eight months ago)


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