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Mostly Autumn: Jilly's, Manchester.

I can't think of any other time I've been to a gig and found myself unable to listen to the music of any other band for several days afterwards. But since Wednesday night's performance in Manchester by Mostly Autumn, nothing other than "The Last Bright Light" and "Passengers" has been anywhere near my CD player.

For the uninitiated, Mostly Autumn hail from York (That's old York, not the new one), and their sound mixes progressive rock and folk elements to produce a rich multi-layered sound. The show a strong influence from Pink Floyd, with occasional moments of heavier bands such as Deep Purple or Uriah Heep. But the whole is definitely greater than the sum of the parts. And live, they create a very special atmosphere.

The band have two lead vocalists; the ethereal voice of Heather Findlay contrasts with the gruffer style of Bryan Josh, who bears more than a passing resemblance to Viggo Mortensen's Aragorn. Josh also plays some superb lead guitar, reminiscent of Richie Blackmore. MA have toured extensively with Blackmore's Night, and some the Man In Black's magic must have worn off.

In a small club it's hard to fit all seven of the band on stage, especially with Iain Jennings' 70s-style mountain of keyboards filling the right hand side. This resulted in second guitarist Liam Davidson and flautist/backing vocalist Angela Goldthorpe being half-hidden at the back of the stage.

The set drew heavily from the both the harder-edged "Passengers" and it's mellower and atmospheric predecessor "The Last Bright Light". Some of the songs from the latter were among the high point of the set, especially the haunting ballad "Half The Mountain", dedicated to the recently split Karnataka, and the epic final encore, "Mother Nature".

Mostly Autumn deserve to be far bigger than they are; not playing a currently fashionable style of music means the mainsteam music press completely ignores them. They're doing a short British tour of larger venues in late November/early December; go and see them, you won't be disappointed.

Posted by TimHall at October 10, 2004 06:53 PM | TrackBack
Comments

I need to find some of their music online.

Posted by: Scott on October 11, 2004 01:50 PM

I don't like 'em; but then again, we've already established that our musical tastes differ ;)

My main criticism is that they sound slightly amateurish - okay as a pub/club band, even a support band for someone more established, but they just don't have the feel of a slick, professional band in the 'big league', even within a minority-interest genre.

Posted by: NRT on October 11, 2004 04:05 PM

Scott: I think there are some samples available from their website - http://www.mostly-autumn.com

The Man From The Ministry: I wouldn't have described them as amateurish from Wednesday night's performance. They weren't as slickly tight as some 1980s stadium rock acts, but then the music was clearly being played by human beings.

Still, I have yet to see how they perform in a larger venue; I did seem them in a small club.

Posted by: Tim Hall on October 11, 2004 06:49 PM

I think they are great!!! I got four albums of MA and cannot wait for the latest one. Unfotunatelly I haven't seen them alive but the music they play brings the unique feelings!!!!!

Posted by: Marek on January 7, 2005 09:18 AM

I think they are great!!! I got four albums of MA and cannot wait for the latest one. Unfotunatelly I haven't seen them alive but the music they play brings the unique feelings!!!!!

Posted by: Marek on January 7, 2005 09:19 AM
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