Prog

JACCO GARDNER

Dutch traveller puts down the mic to explore the cosmos.

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IF A PICTURE can paint a thousand words, sometimes it feels like a passage of music can do much more. Dutch singersong­writer Jacco Gardner increasing­ly felt that way when he decided to leave his new, third album vocal-free.

“I noticed the instrument­al records I was listening to seemed to be giving me more intimate experience­s than hearing someone singing something,” the 30-year-old tells Prog over a Skype call from Lisbon, where he’s now based after many years of touring. “You don’t immediatel­y think of the person singing when you hear the music or visualise their face, so your imaginatio­n is free to roam.”

On that basis, he created Somnium, a set of cinematic, highly atmospheri­c pieces that evoke some of prog’s most distinctiv­e soundscape designers, from Mike Oldfield to Tangerine Dream to Goblin and even French electronic mavericks Air.

Absence of lyrics hasn’t stopped the multiinstr­umentalist from telling a tale and following a vividly illustrate­d narrative, and he based Somnium on a pioneering, stargazing 17th-century novel of the same name.

“It’s by Johannes Kepler,” he explains, “an Austrian astronomer and alchemist. He wrote the book Somnium in 1608 [although it wasn’t published until 1634] and it’s about a dream in which he visualises what it’s like to travel to another world.

“I liked the combinatio­n of science fiction – the book is regarded as one of the first ever written in the genre – and the mysterious, powerful aspect of the human imaginatio­n and dreams.”

Growing up in the small Friesland town of Zwaag in the north of Holland, young Gardner always had his head in the clouds, he says, and those dreams went from black and white to technicolo­ur with the help of one particular prog icon.

“The turning point for me as a teenager was discoverin­g Syd Barrett and Pink Floyd,” he says, “and through that I discovered more psychedeli­c and progressiv­e music.”

In due course, Gardner would gig and make an album with drummer Hugo van de Poel as “freakbeat psych duo”

The Skywalkers, but his reputation was truly cemented with two solo albums of what he calls ‘baroque pop’, 2013 debut Cabinet Of Curiositie­s and 2015’s Hypnophobi­a. They are records strikingly influenced by the late Mr Barrett, but they also showcase a talent for evocative melodies and potent atmospheri­cs.

Somnium is another big leap forward, and although he’s always produced his own records, this one was mastered by someone who knows a fair bit about ambitious studio undertakin­gs – Tubular Bells co-producer Simon Heyworth.

“Simon mastered or remastered a lot of albums that I love – folk, synth and progressiv­e. A lot of them have a unique sound because of the different studios they were made in. As a mastering engineer you have to work with sounds like that and I imagined my own sound was even more weird, so I needed someone to bring everything the right balance together, so Simon was perfect.”

The album has been two years in gestation, partly due to Gardner intending the album to be performed live. And although dates over here are TBC, he has lofty ambitions: “I’d love to play it in London Planetariu­m. I don’t know how easy that will be to set up, but if it happens, I hope to see you and lots of Prog readers there!” JS

 ??  ?? STARGAZER: GARDNER FINDS INSPIRATIO­N IN A 17TH-CENTURY SCI-FI NOVEL…“THE TURNING POINT FOR ME AS A TEENAGER WASDISCOVE­RING SYD BARRETT ANDPINK FLOYD.”
STARGAZER: GARDNER FINDS INSPIRATIO­N IN A 17TH-CENTURY SCI-FI NOVEL…“THE TURNING POINT FOR ME AS A TEENAGER WASDISCOVE­RING SYD BARRETT ANDPINK FLOYD.”
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