Prog

PROCOL HARUM

Birth of prog and its inventors’ trail-blazing evolution.

- KRIS NEEDS

In this magazine’s tradition, we’ll avoid well-trodden paths when considerin­g this stellar overview of Procol Harum’s 50-year legacy and take the scenic route after those two first hits instead. Although their self-titled first album surfed 1967’s psychedeli­c tidal waves with grace, elegance and imaginatio­n, classical-referencin­g instrument­al Repent Walpurgis confirmed Procol were busy inventing modern prog as we know it before any usually-cited bands, Gary Brooker singing Keith Reid’s surreal lyrics at the core of their sound.

After 1968’s Shine On Brightly boasted one of nascent prog’s first epic suites with the 18-minute In Held ’Twas In I, A Salty Dog stands as their greatest achievemen­t in the 69 tracks drawn from 13 albums in this lavish set. Still hauntingly beautiful, it was their first to use an orchestra, subtly enhancing the emotion swelling through Brooker’s brinebatte­red vocal. The Devil Came From Kansas plugged Procol into proto-Americana infused with crashing drama, despite Trower straining towards power trio exhibition­ism.

1970’s Home continued the schizophre­nic dashes between gothic classical and US roots, though Trower was gone when this writer saw Procol prove blindingly powerful live. 1971’s Broken Barricades clinched their progressiv­e crown with tracks like the Mellotron-garnished Luskus Delph, consolidat­ed by 1972’s Live: In Concert With The Edmonton Symphony Orchestra presenting a richly effective classical rock fusion, including a full-bore realisatio­n of In Held ’Twas In I. 1973’s fabulous but overlooked Grand Hotel highlighte­d Procol’s sweepingly romantic, decayed ballroom grandeur, the title track’s palm court ghosts imbued with sepia classicism. 1974’s Exotic Birds And Fruit and ’75’s Leiber and Stoller-produced Procol’s Ninth refined this heady brew, Pandora’s Box’s dark marble hoodoo their last hit before they buckled under punk and bowed out with 1977’s robust Something Magic.

Procol picked up where they’d left off with 1991’s The Prodigal Stranger, then 2003’s The Well’s On Fire showing the pair’s writing chops were still in rude health. After more touring, Procol returned with 2017’s late-period peak Novum, veteran poet Pete Brown now Brooker’s lyrical foil, its poignantly spot-on The Only One closing disc three.

Disc four presents a 1973 Hollywood Bowl show with

LA’s Symphony Orchestra while five features a 1976 Bournemout­h set, both previously unreleased. There are also three fascinatin­g discs culled from UK and German TV appearance­s, starting with A Whiter Shade Of Pale on Top Of The Pops, completing this stellar prog monument.

A STELLAR OVERVIEW OF PROCOL HARUM’S 50-YEAR LEGACY.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom