Guitar World

Pattern-Seeking Animals

THE PROG-ROCK SUPERGROUP IS BACK WITH A LUSH NEW ALBUM, AND THIS TIME GUITARIST TED LEONARD DIDN’T FORGET TO PACK THE GUITAR SOLOS

- By Gregory Adams

THROUGHOUT ONLY PASSING Through, the third album from prog quartet Pattern-Seeking Animals, singer-guitarist Ted Leonard found strength in the single-coil sizzle of a treasured old Telecaster he had once considered trash.

“It was the first guitar I ever owned,” he says. “At one point the truss rod got stripped and there was no fixing it; I thought of [it] as a throwaway guitar.” Re-fitting the guitar with a full-scale scalloped neck and stacked Seymour Duncans, however, has since made it a favorite in the studio. That Franken-Tele is a character piece that brings a biting twang to the album’s “Said the Stranger,” whether Leonard’s quaking through spaghetti western ambiance or a blistering, if stylistica­lly divergent set of runs.

“I was always a big Steve Morse fan — a fast, chromatic, alternate picking kind of thing. That’s how that solo starts, and then it goes into this kind of chicken-pickin’, twangy sort of a thing. It’s kind of both sides of my favorite things about guitar.”

Only Passing Through is just as plush and expansive. Seventies-style synth-waves commingle with Andean stringed instrument­s like the charango and the ronroco. Its “Time Has a Way” vaults from orchestral strings, to booming Chicago brass, to flamenco-styled breakdowns. On the surface, that’s business as usual for PatternSee­king Animals, but Leonard is quick to point out that unlike much of 2020’s similarly kaleidosco­pic Prehensile Tales, he’s gleefully shredding his way through the band’s latest release.

“The second album was lacking a strong guitar presence,” he says. “It was instrument­s you wouldn’t normally hear on a rock album. This album still has little bit of that, but it definitely has more of a guitar focus — which I pushed for, of course.”

Comprising veteran players from Spock’s Beard and Enchant, PatternSee­king Animals have been on a prolific tear since forming in 2018. And unlike those acts, Leonard notes he’s cut a more profoundly personal swath of six-string sounds with Pattern-Seeking Animals: “I was super excited when we started this because I’d never really gotten to be the guitar player — I was the guy who sings and plays other people’s parts live.”

While Leonard initially brought his “Much Ado” to Enchant as a full-bore

“I’d never really gotten to be the guitar player — I was the guy who sings and plays other people’s parts live” — TED LEONARD

rocker, Pattern-Seeking Animals revamped the piece with hickory-smoked funk licks and peppery prog melodrama. “It was too good a song to never be [released], which is a distinct possibilit­y when it comes to Enchant,” Leonard says, considerin­g that act hasn’t released an album since 2014. But with Only Passing Through, Pattern-Seeking Animals are making it clear: they’re here for the long haul.

 ?? ?? Ted Leonard with an Anderson Guitarwork­s Hollow Classic
Ted Leonard with an Anderson Guitarwork­s Hollow Classic

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom