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Menu:
Site Intro
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Seasons Intro
Album Tracks:
- King of Sunset Town
- Easter
- Uninvited Guest
- Seasons End
- Holloway Girl
- Berlin
- Hooks in You
- The Space
B-Sides:
- After Me
- The Bell in the Sea
- The Release
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Seasons End
Introduction:
Seasons End was the fifth Marillion studio album and features
the debut of former Europeans/ How We Live man Steve Hogarth on vocals. With
many fans viewing Fish as irreplaceable, Hogarth had a difficult job ahead
of him. So, how does Hogarth compare?
The honest truth is that Hogarth doesn't compare. Hogarth contrasts.
Where Fish would have been bitter and twisted, Hogarth is optimistic -
Compare the two eras' comments on the Irish Troubles; Fish with the barbed
anguish of Forgotten Sons, Hogarth with the plaintive lament,
Easter. In general terms, Fish is Lennon using horizontal tones -
dissonant and harmonic, keeping close to the cadences of speech, to
Hogarth's McCartney with vertical tones - consonant and melodic - the
clearly musical mind always creating ways for his words to swoop and soar.
The change has made its mark. The dark brooding clouds of Clutching
at Straws have given way to something that wants to rise up out of its
misery. When Steve Rothery's guitar cuts into the soaring opening of King
of Sunset Town you get the sense of exuberance that has returned to the
band. The lyrics are less personal, yet no less impressive, the subjects
broader yet treated with an intelligence that is all too rare in rock music.
This is no facile Scorpions doing Wind of Change nonsense. This is
adult, in depth, in your face and it admits it doesn't know all the answers.
For all that songs like Easter and Season's End are whimsical,
neither are naive. Berlin see Marillion growing more and more angry
at what they do not understand, finally lashing out blindly, screaming,
'Why?' into a wind and then calming once more bringing themselves under
control yet retaining their frustration and indignation. How many bands can
do that?
So, it's a change. It's a change, sure. A change for the better? Well,
who knows what would have happened if Fish had managed to stay. We got what
we got, and I for one like it.
Together with his lyrical collaborator, John Helmer, Hogarth offers
much less for these pages than does Fish. This is not to say that Hogarth is
a weaker lyricist, merely that he tends to use more direct imagery. However,
Hogarth/ Helmer tend to used images from classic literature, and
Christianity far more frequently than did Fish. What you will find here will
probably not unlock your understanding of the song as it might have done in
Fish era, but more probably serve to illuminate what you already knew.
Cover notes:
The cover for Seasons End is an abstract featuring four panels
each containing one of the four elements of early philosophy; Earth, Fire,
Water and Wind - a image appropriated many times in popular music - and an
image from the past. Earth has a feather, clearly one from a magpie,
although the image is not actually taken from a Marillion cover. Wind has a
belled cap falling out of shot. It is actually the one that hangs from
Torch's pocket on the front of Clutching at Straws. The chameleon on
the fire panel would initially appear to be the one from Fugazi but it is
not. The clown picture seen 'going under the water' is the same one as in
Fugazi, the under water part being that which is obscured by the
Jester's hanging arm on the Fugazi cover. Around the edge of the cover are
the orbits of two bodies. What they signify is unclear to me. Maybe they
just look pretty.
Either side of the album title are two identical stylised snowflakes,
clearly referring to the Seasons End line about it never snowing
again. At the top, the old, 'Mars bar wrapper' logo is back. Inside the
gatefold, the panels reappear but with different pictures and over lays. The
one for sky was the cover for Hooks in You, and the background from
earth was the Uninvited Guest cover. Clearly the cover is designed to
reassure the public that it's still Marillion hiding inside regardless of
who's singing.
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