Alternative Weekend: More Marillion

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I often find it's rinse and repeat to get something to sink in. When a song is eighteen minutes long then this can be quite trying. On the odd occasion, the first listen sparks something in my head, but that's as rare as hen's teeth.

Take Raider II which clocks in at 23 minutes. Difficult music, you could say that? Being a Steven Wilson song, I normally have little problems, but this behemoth of long songs does not strike my chords no matter how many times I listen to it.

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Marillion – Grendal (Script for a Jester's Tear – 1983)


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I have been a fan of Marillion for what seems like forever. During the nineties, I started listening to "Misplaced Childhood" in earnest while driving to a car boot sale.

The memory is still with me, and it always triggers my journey to Clitheroe, Lancashire for some reason when I hear the likes of Blind Curve, a particularly intense bleak string of songs strung together to form a lengthy suite.

Grendal has been another "Raider II", but I was determined to break the mould and for me to 'get it'. So many speak its praises so I figured it had to be my mental music block playing games again.

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Today I am working from home (yeah it's Sunday I know), so it will be Grendal all day or until something happens.

My dull-witted musical brain has already picked up some sections that sound promising, such as at 14 minutes when the band are trying their best to pull an 'Apocalypse in 9/8', which is a late part in the 'Suppers Ready' suite from Genesis’s, 1972 highly regarded 'Foxtrot'.

While the mentioned part is distinctly superior to Grendals' obvious plagiarism attempt, it still has its merits. Ripping part of Foxtrot off is highly commendable, and it’s suitably different enough for the lawsuits not to start flying.

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Marillion – Hotel Hobbies (Clutching at Straws – 1987)


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Fish claims 'Clutching at Straws' was the band's finest moment and most accomplished work. While I have listened at length to the album, I have found it patchy at best with a few memorable tracks, apart from the singles released such as "Incommunicado".

"Hotel Hobbies" has some fabulous work from the hugely talented Steve Rothery which brought it to my attention. I am a sucker for guitar solos and this one delivers and also truncates quite abruptly as it's supposed to merge into the next track.

They used to do that a lot, and not just this band.

For me, Fish's last contribution to Marillion doesn't come close to that of "Misplaced Childhood" and that showed in the sales performance. Could it be that there's more to be found on this album?

Perhaps I should put the whole thing on automatic replay.

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Marillion – Fugazi (Fugazi – 1984)


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Why is it nobody mentions Marillion’s second album? Was it so bad that it’s best forgotten?

I for one have tended to ignore it much like everyone else, yet it pulled at me. Fish was the singer so there must be something good amongst those seven tracks which make up the album.

The title track I have heard several times for one reason or another but just like Grendal it never struck a chord. Had the band been cursed with the dreaded second album plague?

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Now I have two songs for my brain to register while on 'standby' at work which is tuning into proper work due to a few niggles within a project upgrade.

Fugazi is not as long as Grendal so if there’s something of interest in there, I would say… oh ten listens will do it.

The one sounds less like typical progressive music, but it's far from the mainstream and am I hearing some folk overtures as well as what sounds like a marching band right at the death.

I do believe something is happening…

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Marillion is one of my absolute favorite bands, and Fish is my favorite lyricist (or obscure Scottish poet, as he would have it).

Misplaced Childhood was definitely their best album, and it's the "easiest" to listen to. Hotel Hobbies is a bit of a downer with the intense focus on alcoholism, but still a pleasant listen for a rainy day. Fugazi, Market Square Heros, and the other mini-releases are a bit rougher both vocally and musically, but still have some uniquely awesome qualities. Fugazi and Emerald Lies are two of my favs from Fugazi, both lyrically and the grandeur of the sound (some might even say grandiosity). I also like some of the songs from Fish's solo albums too: my favorite is his first, "Vigil in a Wilderness of Mirrors", although it takes a few listens to get over missing the "marillion" sound.

Now I just need to get you interested in Urban Exploring as well as Fish.. 😃..

Fugazi has well and truly sunk in now, and with you mentioning Emerald Lies, I will go ahead and try that one. I haven't tried his solo material but have been listening to some of his live shows recently (in those very small venues probably in deepest Scotland). His voice has cracked and gone, but the audience still adore him.

Misplaced Childhood, wonderful.., a masterpiece... after all the prog bands of the 70's had more or less disappeared, they did this.

I think it was in my freshman year in college, my roommate got misplaced childhood, then we ended up picking up a bunch of their albums and EPs over the next couple of years. I even had a couple of their posters because I really liked the album art work (maybe a bit garish for some people, but I tend to like bright colors).

Lucky you to have geeky roommates. I dare not tell my 'friends' at that age what I was into, for fear of being weird.., though I did try once. That memory is etched into my mind.

The artwork is great but fell off after 'Misplaced Childhood'.

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I think my sister bought Script and that was my first exposure to Marillion. She's a little younger than me, but was more into music back then. This is the only one of their records I bought.

Market Square Heroes

Grendel occupies one side of this 12". I have not listened to it in a while, but may put it on later.

Track list

As I've mentioned to you I saw them live on the Misplaced Childhood tour. I think it was at the NEC and we were at the back of the hall.

Someone I used to work with met Fish when he played at her Uni and she ended up help him look at some local properties as he was looking to move.

Have you seen this old documentary about their road crew?

Have you seen this old documentary about their road crew?

No, but after watching it... I would not want to be a road crew man, too much hard work!

I think my sister bought Script and that was my first exposure to Marillion.

Your sister has great taste, it seems she was your trigger for the band. Now what made you pick up that 12', flip it and play the 'B' side. I never did when I bought singles?

I was a nerdy teen getting into prog. Of course I was going to listen to a long song! 😁

After listening to Fugazi around 8 times, its sinking in and I am getting it. Love the folky style influence at the end, another throwback to early Genesis and Gabriel.. and yet totally different.

When I first heard Big Big Train I immediately thought of Genesis and they even had the flute. I'm reading a biography of King Crimson. So much pioneering music came out of the UK around 1970.

You know I did try 'English Electric', but again it didnt have much effect. Only the amazing 'The Underfall Yard' has hit me, and I have had to stop playing this as don't want to overplay it.

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You make me think about old old time, when I was a young girl and I used to listen Kayleigh! It was around '85/'86 and that song made me think to a young boy I liked at that time. Just to know, I was in love with him, but he was not in love with me, so it's not an happy memory. 🤣

Ack..., that is a bad memory. Music doesn't half take you back years, sometimes decades. I get it all the time.

Never heard of them. I will have to check them out tomorrow when I am back in my office and I have a computer where the speakers work. My laptop stopped working for some reason a bit ago.

Never heard of them.

Count your blessings my friend :-)

Surely they aren't that bad...

The band made little impression in the US, just hitting the bottom end of the album charts with the singles getting no exposure in the hot 100. I am hardly surprised!

What a band, I think my favourite album was Script for a Jester's Tear, well to be honest any of their albums from the 80s were great.
At least you had awesome music to accompany your working Sunday from home!

'Where are the prophets'... that Fugazi has truly sunk in now!

I respect your dedication to Grendel!
I’ve had a few tracks that I wanted to love because of their reputation
but my brain just wouldn’t cooperate. 😂
That 14-minute mark sounds interesting, though—love those Supper’s Ready vibes!

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