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Something to say

Peter Hammill, still stretching his vocal cords

By Darrell Jónsson
For The Prague Post
November 8th, 2006 issue

The prog-rocker influenced a generation of British singers and songwriters.

"Er ..." was Peter Hammill's response when The Prague Post asked him what ever happened to progressive rock. In his case, maybe it never went away. Even though he is a veteran of the sometimes excessively baroque '60s progressive rock movement, Hammill never associated with acts that stuck daggers in their keyboards, performed wearing capes or compromised their creativity at contract signings.

Depending on which prog-rock connoisseur you talk to, Van der Graaf Generator, the band Hammill helped found in 1967, produced at least two of the genre's better works during its sporadic career. On albums like Godbluff (1975) and The Quiet Zone (1977), Hammill wielded a vocal intensity that would put many a fledgling punk rocker to shame.

"I'm damned sure Bowie copied a lot out of that geezer," Johnny Rotten said of Hammill during an interview with the BBC in 1977. Before the punks listening to the broadcast could get their hands out of their pockets to scratch their Mohawks, Rotten gushed, "I love everything [Hammill] has done."

Rotten was right. You can hear Hammill not only in Bowie's work, but in Peter Gabriel's style and in Brian Eno's song-based Taking Tiger Mountain period. More often than not, Hammill's songwriting and voice have resonated with many of the finer threads of subsequent punk, pop and glam. Many of the tracks on Hammill's 1975 release Nadir's Big Chance sound conspicuously like the first musings of Public Image Limited, the band Rotten would later reinvent himself for.

Peter Hammill

When: Tuesday, Nov. 14, at 8
Where: Divadlo Archa
Tickets: 495 Kč through Ticketpro; 440 Kč at the venue

Speculations of influence aside, most rock singers are relatively timid about going to places Hammill's voice went — and still goes. His over-the-top vocals are intentional. "From an early stage I wanted to do different stuff with the voice," Hammill says. "Perhaps over the years I've come back to more conventional aspects of control, power and discipline. But I still see it as my job to act through singing."

Leveraging what Hammill characterizes as the "openness of the [prog-rock] form at the time," he began to use his knack for composing compelling, epic-length works in the '60s. So it's no surprise that his latest studio work amounts to a postmodern rock opera/suite. There are also echoes of that approach in his 2004 release, Incoherence (on the UK's Fie! label), about which Hammill says, "There's quite a lot of reflective hollow laughter involved with Incoherence, since it is, after all, a lyrical work which bangs on about the impossibility/unworkability of language. It's also fairly episodic rather than unified, even if it's presented as one piece."

Similarly, Hammill's extensive catalog contains music and lyrics that, unlike much of rock music, are not a full-frontal insult on the audience's intelligence. Instead, he appeals to thinking listeners, sending them on a blend of symphonic and folk-tinged journeys with lyrics that do not shirk the more dark, complex and ambiguous aspects of life.

At his upcoming Archa performance, Hammill's guitar, keyboard and vocals will be accompanied by violinist Stuart Gordon. Hammill is quick to add that the word violinist "doesn't begin to describe what he does with the instrument and his effects." Gordon, who also contributes to Hammill's studio recordings, has been appearing onstage with him for the past 10 years. "It's immensely flexible — it can be really aggressive or extraordinarily gentle," Hammill says of their duo work. "In any event, the songs get taken apart and put together in a different form."

Hammill describes his style these days as "either uncommercial popular music or unpopular commercial music." Yet concertgoers should still brace themselves for spontaneous and intense moments. As Hammill notes, the program "changes nightly, only decided about an hour or so before the show. At any given time, there are probably 40-odd songs which might be called into the equation. And probably another 25 or 30 which might give the artists as well as the audience cardiac experiences."

Darrell Jónsson can be reached at features@praguepost.com


Other articles in Night & Day (8/11/2006):

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