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Porcupine Tree - Harridan CD (album) cover

HARRIDAN

Porcupine Tree

 

Heavy Prog

4.25 | 70 ratings

From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

A Crimson Mellotron
Prog Reviewer
4 stars As unbelievable as it seems, Porcupine Tree are back, and with news spreading faster than ever, it seems unlikely that anyone has remained uninformed on the matter. The legendary 2000s prog rock outfit announced their return after some 12 years of non-existence, and above all, they return with a new album that has virtually been in the making for this exact period of time; The fantastic news also come along with a new single from the upcoming eleventh studio release by Steven Wilson & Co., named explicitly or not, 'Closure/Continuation'. It is also important to mention that the band comes back as a trio, with SW handling the guitar, the bass and the vocals, alongside fellow band mates Richard Barbieri and Gavin Harrison; Unfortunately, Colin Edwin seems to longer be part of the band.

With all this cleared out, the focus can go back to the band's new single 'Harridan', a song that has been 'in-the-making' ever since they had completed 'The Incident' sessions. And it genuinely sounds like something that could fit very well either this album or 'Fear of a Blank Planet', with the soaring guitars, the crunchy bass (which happens to be played by Wilson; and it should come as no surprise that the bass line is so quirky, as I can recall Nick Beggs commenting on Wilson's 'strange' technique of bass playing in some sort of tour documentary from around 2017) and the grim lyrical content. And on that note, we could say: forget about 'The Future Bites', forget about No-Man, forget about the latest Blackfield (which SW ended up only producing); This really is the Porcupine Tree that people crave, and this new song is quite tremendous, quite unusual but very memorable. Briefly put, it is hard to remain indifferent to it, especially with all the announcements made, so hopes are quite high for the upcoming release, and if this is the first taste of it, one can only wonder how much better it gets.

A Crimson Mellotron | 4/5 |

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