"Did we mention that there’s also a pool?" Prog sets sail on Cruise To The Edge
Marillion, Steve Hackett, Flying Colors, Haken, Big Big Train and more make a big prog noise on the high seas
Marillion, Steve Hackett, Flying Colors, Haken, Big Big Train and more make a big prog noise on the high seas
Released in 2014, Norwegian art rockers worried the album would make them sound like they were trying to be intellectuals - when they weren’t
Cool new proggy sounds to check out from Rendezvous Point, The Casimir Connection, Waxamilion and more...
They were more likely to go out for dinner than indulge in drugs and groupies - but that didn’t stop their 1979 album becoming the second-biggest selling prog album of all time
As epic new sci-fi show 3 Body Problem hits Netflix, Tesseract bassist/avid sci-fi fan Amos Williams picks the novels that encapsulate the genre at its best
On his 30th solo album, he decided to address a wide range of personal issues he’d wanted to tackle for years – taking in influence from The Hero With A Thousand Faces, The Odyssey and Pinocchio
Van der Graaf Generator's third reunion album, 2011's A Grounding In Numbers saw the trio working with shorter form but no less complex material
Experimental cellist explains how she took two very different musical approaches and blended them with the very different voices of Maria Franz and Lorenzo Esposito Fornasari
Inspired by the work of bandmate Peter Hammill and Frank Zappa, Smith aimed never to sound like them – and after working on large ensemble pieces and stage musicals, admitted he’d quite like to “just roll in with a guitar”
Guitarist Sam Vallen explains Charcoal Grace is a deliberately dark record so the band could leave their own darkness behind
From spanning musical styles to blending odd time signatures, the band have always been restlessly creative
On October 7, 1991, Tool played their primal debut gig, and so began three decades of prog metal trailblazing
The punk explosion was expected to kill Supertramp. Instead, they thrived and enjoyed huge success worldwide – and these are their best albums
Neo-prog pioneers (who already resented that position) took “difficult second album” to new depths as they ran out time, burst the budget and seemed incapable of keeping a fifth member aboard
The guiding light of NWOBHM geeks out on Peter Gabriel leaving Genesis, covering Jethro Tull but not wanting to meet Ian Anderson, the length of ELP solos, his struggle to get into Marillion and more
Bassist explains new wave outfit were massive Genesis fans when they started out – and he used to sing the whole of Foxtrot while working as a painter and decorator
Emerson, Lake and Palmer legend, composer and synthesiser pioneer Keith Emerson fused the power of rock music with the beauty of classical
The story of how Periphery V: Djent Is Not A Genre finds the US prog metallers at their defiant best.
In an alternative universe, a late 60s Pink Floyd song could have taken them down an entirely different path