concert review
We could not miss it. It was very important that any of the progressive fans didn’t miss this first edition, of a festival that had been brilliantly organized. It was an event that had been prepared for a long time, doing the best promotional work trying to reach as much people as possible. A festival that had a great band listing in a city called Manresa, a town that had been helping a lot the festival, from the city authorities to many other people to organize a very difficult event.

The bands that were playing that night were; Planeta Imaginari (Barcelona), Guillermo Cides (Argentina), Ñu (Madrid), Deus Ex Machina (Italy), Ozric Tentacles (UK) and the local group Boogie Dreams.
The musical party started a bit earlier for us in a hotel near the concert pavilion where the artists were hosted. The reason was that a meeting with the musicians and the media had been held before the festival started. So we had the opportunity to chat a bit with them asking them about progressive music matters and also allowing them to talk about their recent work. The meeting was a great deal and everything went great with a lot of communication by both parts (the content of this interviews might come out here in a future article). Meanwhile everything was going well and the people were happy and expecting the best.
The place was big enough to let in much more people than the ones that attended, so the pavilion was in two quarters empty. However that didn’t seemed to be a problem because the crowd was quite big, just about 400 people, and that’s a success in a country where nobody moves to go to any progressive music performance. In front of the main entrance we had all the services where we could easy our hunger with some food stalls and also easy our musical hunger with some CD and Magazine vendors. So the feeling was very nice and everybody seemed pleased.
The performances started around 19:30 and they opened up with a group coming from Spain called Planeta Imaginari. A band that maybe was not very known by the spanish progressive fans but that did a great show. A group with an interesting stage craft, wearing seventies’s clothes and also creating a seventies’s kind of music. These musicians from Barcelona had a lot of talent developing a difficult prog-rock but varied and nice-to-listen. A band that knew what was doing and that was able to make long compositions based mainly on the guitars and the rhytm section. Also adorning its music with keyboards and with something not very used in prog-rock which were the bongos. Their main influences were coming from important bands such as Soft Machine, King Crimson or even Henry Cow. A good festival opening.
Guillermo Cides was the next course. His performance could be labeled as surprising. On his own on the stage and with his stick bass he was able to create something as complete as a symphonic orchestra. We were stunt enjoying his playing, devising and capturing every sound and then composing the songs with them, all at the same time. Just to explain how it was you just have to figure one single man with a single instrument playing “Siberian Khatru” from Yes or some works from Bach. And that’s what he did. Surprising.
Ñu represented the image or the stamp of the seventies at Manresa. The old spanish band leaded by Jose Carlos Molina performed a set full of classic themes from the band. This group is one of the few bands coming from the seventies spanish pro-rock movement that are still alive, although they had never been much in the most classical prog water. Their style comes from the classic hard-rock more than the classic prog-rock, with parts of great flute developments plenty of power. Well, that’s what Ñu offered us a show a bit short but very emotive.
We were making for the midnight and the most brilliant moments were arriving. Deux Ex Machina with its unique singer and a great showman Alberto Piras appeared. They are a band with a superb and powerful live performance. The musicians had a great time on the stage just burning their instruments. The songs that played were pieces taken mostly from their great album "De Republica" and also from their last record "Cinque". I just need to tell you that it was worthwhile all the kilometers that we made to Manresa to see this. Progressive fireworks and a music that went beyond the prog-rock and that left all of us very impressed. A band that no one of us would have to miss.
The stars of the night were the Ozric Tentacles. A band that has been playing and still is for many years, a band that has a high status among progressive and psychedelic music followers all over the world, a band that has sold more that a million copies of their records in this last years and maybe for all these things they were the headliners. Well, they did what they were expected to do. Most of the previous performances and the bands themselves were almost unknown to many attended so that I think that was what made the people enjoy it a lot, but with the Ozric I think we all knew what was all about. They didn’t disappoint in any way. Their show was spacy taking us into a trip to some colorful and sounding madness that we all loved.
It was very late and the people were quite tired and so were us. It was quite a long time since we arrived at it and we still had to see one more group. Boogie Dreams were in charge of closing the festival. A band that I’d like to mention in a special way. A young bunch of guys that enjoy themselves a lot playing and creating, a band that has got one CD released, and that’s a hard and pricey thing to do nowadays, but they got it. They have the skill of bringing out many different styles and mixing them up like genius. I perfect way to understand this music. We’ll be watching them for sure.
We went out of the festival very late and very tired, but it was worthwhile and we’ll come back whenever they want. To give this review a fare end I would like to thank to all those that with their effort carried this huge thing out. The Minorisa Progressive festival was a success. Thank’s specially to the organizers and all those people that attended. We really hope to come back again to a new edition next year and with that give a good push to the progressive rock events in this country. Thank you.
Jordi Costa, October 2002
As i told you in the Minorisa 2002 festival review, here you have the massive interview-meeting that was held two hours before the event. An interview that gathered us with some of the musicians of all the groups performing that night and to which we were kindly invited by the organization.
DEUS EX-MACHINA
- How would you define your music?.
We are a band that has always liked to investigate. We are musicians
without any concept idea, we like to experiment with rhythms and
try to enjoy the instruments as much as we cam. It’s a music
that has a lot of elements, elements that are never the same,
we try to develop new things and I guess that is how the music
sounds.
- From "De Republica" to this
last album the band has made a significant change in style and
also you have changed the record company. What’s this change
all about?.
As i told you the change is constant. We try not to get into any
musical cage, we like to change and experiment. The record company
change has nothing to do with our evolution and to where we have
moved on this last record. We try to find the people that understand
what we do. It is not easy. It’s a hard time for music in
general and the music that we do.
- Are you a progressive band?.
The progressive label is something that we don’t
put much attention on. There are a lot of people that could be
progressive without being inside this movement. If the music that
we understand as progressive is like the word says, a music that
heads for any kind of experimentation and that it implies creation
and innovation, then I think we are progressive. But then we would
have to put people like John Coltrane
in the same bag.
- Why do you use the latin?.
We use it as a sound, we think that the lyrics have to be like
another instrument inside the band, it doesn’t matter if
it can’t be understood by the people.
- This question is asked directly to
Alberto Piras. Have you got any vocal studies?.
No i haven’t. I’ve always thought myself.
ÑU
- You lived the progressive movement of
the seventies, tell us something about that time.
In the seventies the progressive music was accepted because there
were many things that still were not invented. It was something
new and people didn’t know about it, that’s why the
musician could live with that way of making music at that time.
The media was not the same as nowadays, the musical industry was
not as nasty as it is now.
- How do you get to survive for thirty
years in the spanish music scene?.
Stealing (laughs) or trying to adapt myself a bit to the tendencies
every time. After the seventies the heavy metal broke in the spanish
market. In the nineties the folk music raised again and the acoustic
rhythms mixed with other styles. To be able to keep on making
music I had to tuck into all that, and here I am.
In the nineties the music turned into
a more folk style, and many bands took that way to create their
music. You also did that in the nineties. How would you explain
that change of doing things?.
We did it because we were starving. The musicians had to reinvent
ourselves and take something that could be easy to work with.
The nineties were hard times for many people and somehow we saw
the way out by using that formula. We had to make something for
a living.
- Your last record Réquiem was
recorded in 1996. Why did you wait so long to release it?. Are
you gonna play anything of this album tonight?.
It is not a work that I’m promoting. It’s a record
that I finished years ago and that it was made to take some musical
ideas out of my system. Some compositions that in those days I
thought it was not the time to publish them and now it is. And
no we don’t play any of those songs today.
GUILLERMO CIDES
- What can you tell us about the big names of progressives rock
with whom you have worked?.
Every musician is different from each other, and every instrument
is also different from each other. The music that we make is not
the same and what we do is trying to mix it all up as well as
we can. What i can say is that i have learnt a lot playing with
people like ELP or Fish. The experience is unique, but in musical
terms we all are different, the main difference is that some of
these artists have done things that has become more important
inside the musical history.
- Do you always play on your own?. It
is maybe to give more importance to an instrument that maybe has
become a second course inside rock music?.
No, i don’t play always alone. In fact i have three different
bands depending on the place and the idea of what i want to do
each time. There is one group of seven people, another of five,
and the last one which is myself alone on the stage. I don’t
think the stick is a second course. It is an instrument with and
endless number of possibilities.
-Which is the situation of prog rock
in Argentina?
Before the economic collapse the progressive music scene was very
healthy, i’ve been playing for a lot of people in South
America. I think people from there are giving up a bit the popular
music and are beginning to find what they really like.
PLANETA IMAGINARI
- Tell us about your influences, we haven’t had the opportunity
to listen to your work, but we have red your names together with
Frank Zappa , Henry Cow , Soft Machine.
Yes, it is the kind of music that we like and it’s the music
that inspires our work. We can not cope with what has been happening
to the music lately and we want to concentrate to create something
that we really believe and relieve us as musicians. All that influences
are natural things that happen.
- Are you related in some way to the
catalan progressive movement called “rock laieta”?.
No, actually we don’t know any of those bands that formed
that movement. I don’t think we have something to do with
them, because we don’t know them.
OZRIC TENTACLES
Could you account for briefly from where your music comes. Have
you got any kind of idea what you are gonna do before recording?.
I say it because your music seems to be
and endless jam session.
Our music is never been made out of an idea that we had thought
before playing. It is made of a bunch of different ideas coming
from everybody in the group. We do have an idea how we want focus
or direct the music but this is not a concept that we have previously
thought about.
- How can you keep alive that style of
doing music?.
I guess is this source of ideas that somehow creates the music
and also our style.
- You have had many success in Europe
but, what about America?
Yes, now we are succeeding in many places around the United States.
We’ve done some very successful concerts there. It’s
not easy to enter the american market.
- The sense of humor is something that
seems to be an important part of you.
Yes, that’s right. We never take ourselves very seriously.
- Which are your main influences?.
Uffff! There are so many. How long do we have?. Because we could
spend the hole night.
- From where did you take the name of
Ozric Tentacles?.
It comes (the guitar player looked up raising his arms to the
sky) well, I can’t explain. Sorry.
BOOGIE DREAMS
- How have you planned the end of this big party?
We are very happy to be in this festival among these such brilliant
bands. The truth is that we don’t know if we are going to
be to this artistic level. We do what we like and what we want
with our music. We hope everything goes all right.
ORGANIZATION
- How can there be someone nowadays willing to held a big musical
event, a big festival without needing to earn anything, just doing
it for free?.
We do it the same way many of the bands or musicians do it most
of the times. We do it because we love this music and we don’t
mind to sacrifice ourselves, work and doing all the best to take
this kind of thing to the right end. We are very happy with what
we are going to do and we hope that we’ll be able to do
it again from now on every year. (Applause)
FOR ALL
- What is progressive rock for you?.
All the musicians more or less answered something like: a music
that creates. A music that develops brand new musical ideas. A
music that experiment and that sometimes is wrongly used, to name
music that is just copying what some other people did in the past,
and that is not progressive music.
- Do you think Internet has helped this
kind of music?.
Ozric Tentacles: internet has been
very important for non commercial music. It has connected the
public with all kind of innovating musical movement and through
it this music has had a better opportunity. It has let the musician
to have the control over the promotional work and in some way
the musician has become a business man dealing directly with his
music.
Deus Ex Machina: i think that is something that somehow does not give a very good image. I’m not against internet, but it is kind of wyrd to see musicians doing business and trying to move into a unknown territory. I don’t thing that is the musician’s thing, but i do think that it’s been something good in general.

