I can think of two other Rush albums - A Farewell to Kings and Hemispheres that 
have the SciFi themed songs. 2112 is not entirely a SciFi themed "album".  It 
has one song on side A of the LP.  Side B's songs have nothing in common with 
2112.  IMHO, Heller got it slightly off ;-)
 
Other bands I can think of offhand are Coheed and Cambria (these guys are like 
the Robert Jordan of concept albums) with their five part Amory Wars and 
Anthropia's The Ereyn Chronicles (more Sci Fantasy)
 


--- On Fri, 6/25/10, Udhay Shankar N <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Udhay Shankar N <[email protected]>
Subject: [silk] The Rock Album as Science Fiction
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, June 25, 2010, 1:49 PM


This is going to push the buttons of a lot of list members, including
yours truly. What has he left out? :)

Udhay

http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/heller_06_10/

Moonage Daydream: The Rock Album as Science Fiction by Jason Heller

Rock 'n' roll was never intended to have a future. Hot, fast, loud,
bright: the genre was made to be as disposable as the chemically-fueled
rockets that had started putting objects into orbit just as rock was
getting off the ground in the '50s.

It's perhaps more than coincidence that the song generally considered to
be the first rock 'n' roll tune was titled "Rocket 88" — a scorching
instrumental by Ike Turner that, granted, was ostensibly an ode to an
Oldsmobile. Still, even today the song takes off in a burst of fiery
glory, one that most listeners back in the '50s surely assumed would
destroy itself in a puff of faddish obsolescence.

Of course, what "Rocket 88" — and rock 'n' roll in general — really did
was this: open up a jagged, flaming path into the world of tomorrow.

Science fiction served a similar purpose in the '50s. Having vaulted
from the fringes of pop culture into the mainstream after a newly atomic
America became obsessed with films about mutants and aliens, SF
literature matured and flowered throughout the '60s and beyond, just as
rock 'n' roll did the same. It was inevitable that the two would mix.
And although plenty of random rock songs in the '60s were fixated on SF
themes — including The Byrds' "Mr. Spaceman" from 1966 and "Space
Odyssey" from 1968, not to mention Pink Floyd's groundbreaking "Set the
Controls for the Heart of the Sun," also from 1968 — it was David
Bowie's "Space Oddity" in 1969 that really sealed the deal.

Of course, Bowie would also be the artist to put the SF concept album on
the map in the '70s. Full albums, after all, are much better vessels for
SF's sprawling tropes. Since then, some bands have tried making bona
fide, SF rock operas. Less ambitious groups have settled for loose
concepts — many dystopian — for songs to revolve around. And some simply
use the flash and fantasy of SF as a backdrop to their own warped vision
of the future.

Below are a few of the most intriguing SF-themed records launched at the
unsuspecting public since Bowie made his first foray into the concept
album. While many rock albums — like The Alan Parson Project's I Robot
or Golem's Dune-based The 2nd Moon — base their narratives to some
degree around existing SF works, the list below sticks with original
concepts: the fevered output of a few dozen buzzing brains addled by
feedback, distortion, beats, drugs and, of course, the ever-morphing
futurism of science fiction.


David Bowie, The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from
Mars (1972)

For a record that launched a thousand bloated, SF-centric concept
albums, David Bowie's The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the
Spiders from Mars is pretty concise — especially considering that title.
In 38 minutes of apocalyptic surrealism rooted in the warped SF of
Samuel R. Delany and William S. Burroughs, Ziggy Stardust tells the
melancholic yet rapturous tale of a rock 'n' roll alien who comes to
Earth during the five years prior to the apocalypse. While never
matching his sweep and scope, other glam-rock artists of the era —
including Roxy Music, T. Rex, the doomed American singer Jobraith, and
even Elton John with his hit "Rocket Man" — would share Bowie's love for
glittery, gender-bending SF. After all, what's more androgynous than a
spacesuit?


Hawkwind, Space Ritual (1973)

Progressive rock is synonymous with the concept album, but surprisingly
few bands of the '70s prog movement actually made SF concept albums
(Yes' unfocused yet excellent Tales from Topographic Oceans being a
notable exception). The idiosyncratic Hawkwind was never entirely a prog
band, but frontman Dave Brock and crew (which featured a pre-Motörhead
Lemmy on bass) took their primal, interdimensional drone to its apex
with Space Ritual. A double album that approximates what space travel
might sound like if astronauts flew around in bong-shaped ships, Space
Ritual even has some real SF credentials. Legendary author Michael
Moorcock, a regular Hawkwind collaborator, delivers a metaphysical
spoken-word piece titled "Black Corridor" — which just goes to show that
his stentorian voice is just as grandiloquent in reality as it in on the
page.


Parliament, Mothership Connection (1975)

"A pimp sitting in a spaceship shaped like a Cadillac" is the overall
vibe George Clinton said he was aiming for with Mothership Connection,
his masterpiece as the leader of the funk collective known as
Parliament. Making Bowie and his brethren look downright bland by
comparison, Clinton and company amped up the psychedelic, satirically
cartoonish edge of Kurt Vonnegut's SF work (whether they realized it or
not). The result is a cyberfunk phantasmagoria that refurbishes the
interstellar void as a vast, cosmic dancefloor. Clinton continues to man
the Mothership to this day, but this album is where he invented Funkier
Than Light travel.


Rush, 2112 (1976)

Although this list is meant to focus on original works of SF music, it's
hard to dismiss Rush's 2112 as a mere adaptation, despite the fact that
it borrows blatantly from Ayn Rand's novel Anthem as well as two
episodes — "Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?" and "Stopover in a
Quiet Town" — of The Twilight Zone. In fact the latter example is even
titled "The Twilight Zone." But there's no denying that Rush's drummer
and lyricist, Neil Peart, folded his SF influences into a unique and
stunning work of sustained imagination that pairs the cosmic, dystopian,
multi-suite epic "2112" with excellent yet unconnected tracks that
showcase the band's prog chops, celestial melody, and philosophical
waxing. Oh, and it rocks, too.


Gary Numan and Tubeway Army, Replicas (1979)

Glam, punk, and the robotic tones of Germany's groundbreaking electronic
group Kraftwerk came together in the late '70s to form the basis of much
of the new wave movement. But before bands like Duran Duran could chew
that sound up into bubblegum in the '80s, some truly edgy artists mined
that dark sonic domain — one of the greatest being Gary Numan. His
second album with Tubeway Army, Replicas, picks up on many of Philip K.
Dick's themes of alienation and self-negation in the wake of runaway
technology. He wasn't alone; at the same time Replicas was released,
everyone from Klaus Nomi to Frank Zappa was using rock music to riff on
androids as symbols of our dwindling humanity. Replicas' bleak depiction
of artificial intelligence and metaphysical estrangement should be
considered not only great pop music, but part of the cultural
groundswell that resulted in the 1982 film, Bladerunner (Dick again, and
“replicants”), and the cyberpunk explosion soon after.


Styx, Kilroy Was Here (1983)

Styx wasn't the first mainstream '70s rock band to tinker with SF after
the '80s hit — ELO beat them to it by two years with 1981's
alien-abduction parable, Time — but Styx set the standard for both
excellence and excess with Kilroy Was Here. Capitalizing on the buildup
to 1984, one of the most infamous years in the SF canon, Kilroy is
singer-keyboardist Dennis DeYoung's over-the-top masterpiece. A rock 'n'
roll dystopia, it casts the oppressed rocker Kilroy as Winston Smith
from George Orwell's 1984, and the fascist leader Dr. Righteous as Big
Brother. Bowie, of course, had already harvest Orwell's most famous
novel for his 1974 album Diamond Dogs, but Kilroy was a symphonic,
synthesizer-soaked update for the Moral Majority era. Really, though, it
all boils down to the album's indelible hit single, "Mr. Roboto," a song
that's more or less a rock opera unto itself.


Jonzun Crew, Lost in Space (1983)

While much of the SF community — and the world at large — debated just
how close the real world was coming to resemble that of Orwell's 1984,
Jonzun Crew figured partying might be a healthier reaction. Picking up
where George Clinton's P-Funk crew left off (not that P-Funk ever really
stopped), Jonzun Crew was part of an entire electro movement that
married hardcore synthesizers and hip-hop into a sleek, chilling, yet
wholly fun music. Granted, some electro groups like Time Zone and
Cybotron were a bit gloomier, but Jonzun Crew's SF-steeped Lost in Space
struck the perfect balance between the nightmare of the future and the
hangover of tomorrow.


Planet P Project, Pink World (1984)

Double albums were pretty much a dim memory of the '70s in the slim,
trim world of 1984. And yet Tony Carey's Planet P Project decided that
year was when the massive, 26-song Pink World needed to be unleashed. It
failed to make the mark he'd hoped, but the album's cult status
persists, and for good reason. Although taking the name of his project
from Planet P in Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers, Carey — like the
SF world itself in 1984 — had focused past the trite, tired tropes of
space opera and tapped into the terrifying realms of inner space and the
near future. Mixing the iciness of new wave with the chops, pomp, and
circumstance of prog, Pink World remains a dizzying and literate SF vision.


Queensrÿche, Operation: Mindcrime (1988)

The spacefaring Hawkwind inspired many of the early metal bands, but it
wasn't until 1988 that the metal world truly embraced the idea of the SF
concept album. Voivod's brutal Dimension Hatröss is one such record that
came out that year, but the more stunning example is Operation:
Mindcrime by Queensrÿche. Melodic, immaculate, and surprisingly coherent
for a concept album, Mindcrime is a speculative thriller about a
heroin-addicted political dissident whose brain is rewired for
assassination. Despite the ups and downs metal has suffered since the
rise of grunge in the early '90s, Operation: Mindcrime has remained a
touchstone of the genre, even inspiring a serviceable sequel in 2006,
Operation: Mindcrime II.


Donald Fagen, Kamakiriad (1993)

The '90s were a tough time for the SF concept album (no, we're not
counting Billy Idol's 1993 flop, Cyberpunk). Ironically, it took an old
guy to remind everyone about the future. Donald Fagen of Steely Dan
released his sophomore solo album, Kamakiriad, in 1993, and while it
sounds as breezy yet sophisticated as your typical Steely Dan classic,
it turned out to be a high-concept, cyberpunk travelogue through a
virtual world of Fagen's device, one that seems to tap into both J.G.
Ballard and Neal Stephenson. (Another old guy, one David Bowie, would
usher out the '90s with another SF concept album — 1999's Outside — that
would set the stage for the format's wild resurgence in the following
decade.)


Deltron 3030, Deltron 3030 (2000)

Hip-hop producer Dan the Automator already had one SF concept album —
Dr. Octagon's scattershot Dr. Octagonecologist — under his belt when he
undertook 2000's self-titled album with Deltron 3030. With rapper Del
tha Funkee Homosapian on the mike, the disc is a rich, multilayered,
post-apocalyptic storyline whose polyglot music actually sounds like a
new configuration of the future — that is, exactly what the year 2000
direly needed. To paraphrase Del himself in the song "3030," the album
is a "perfect blend of technology and magic". The track "Time Keeps on
Slipping," which features guest vocals from Damon Albarn of Brit-pop
traditionalists Blur, set the stage for Dan's and Albarn's massively
successful "virtual band," Gorillaz — a group that released its own
futureshock concept album, Plastic Beach, in 2010.


Coheed and Cambria, The Amory Wars (2000-on)

The most ambitious SF story arc to ever be attempted in the rock arena,
Coheed and Cambria's The Amory Wars, is not an album but an entire epic
that spans almost every song the band has released since its early days
as an unknown group called Delirium Trigger. A few random, early songs
introduced the characters of Coheed and Cambria Kilgannon and their
messianic son, Claudio — who just so happens to share a first name with
Claudio Sanchez, the frontman of Coheed and Cambria. Unlike fellow
post-hardcore practitioners My Chemical Romance, who have tried the
concept-album thing with less success, Sanchez and crew are now five
albums deep into the Amory Wars storyline. Besides spawning a comic
book, the latest release in the arc, Year of the Black Rainbow, spun off
into a novel that Sanchez co-wrote with Peter David. Sanchez's Star
Wars-meets-Dune story has its faults, but paired with the band's
soaring, anthemic, neo-progressive rock, it's as close to concept-album
heaven as the SF world has come.


The Flaming Lips, Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (2002)

Sometimes the first symptom of addiction to concept albums is denial.
That definitely seems to be the case with The Flaming Lips' Wayne Coyne,
who followed his band's cinematic record The Soft Bulletin with
something even more solidly narrative: Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots.
Coyne has flatly denied that Yoshimi is a concept album, and certainly
it wanders from the narrative quite a bit. However, there's no denying
that, at its core, the record is a sculpted, symphonic, indie-rock
parable full of the kind of pop-culture pastiche Cory Doctorow would be
proud to call his own.


Nine Inch Nails, Year Zero (2007)

Many of SF's most horrifying predictions about the future have come
true, in one form or another since 2001. Nine Inch Nails' Trent Reznor
used the specters of perpetual war, terrorism, societal disintegration,
and overall dystopia as fodder for Year Zero, a concept album that
details militaristic oppression in the not-so-far-flung future of 2022.
Compared to NIN classics like The Downward Spiral, Year Zero is jagged,
guttural, and oozing paranoia — a high-tech yet visceral scenario that
wouldn't be out of place in a Richard K. Morgan thriller.


The Lisps, Futurity (2009)

Steampunk-associated acts like Rasputina and Sleepytime Gorilla Museum
are as fueled by gleeful anachronism as the genre itself. But the Arcade
Fire-influenced, Brooklyn-based outfit The Lisps took things a few steps
further with Futurity. Rather than an album per se, Futurity is a
full-length stage musical the band produced in 2009 — the story of a
Civil War soldier and science fiction writer beset by hallucinatory
visions of the future. With the same melting-pot abandon used by
novelists like Cherie Priest and Brian Francis Slattery, The Lisps have
crafted an indie-rock opera that combines vintage Americana with
mind-bending weirdness. Now they just need to record the damn thing.


Mastodon, Crack the Skye (2009)

Heavy metal made a huge comeback in the '00s, and so did the space
opera. It only makes sense that the two would converge sooner or later.
Mastodon, one of the heaviest yet most complex figureheads of today's
metal scene, used their latest record, Crack the Skye, as an opportunity
to explore the darkest reaches of the universe — and of reality itself.
It's an overblown album, but gloriously so. Based around a paraplegic
protagonist who travels the cosmos via astral projection, it's more
Arthur C. Clarke than Alastair Reynolds. But the metaphysical aspect of
the story doesn't dim the fact that Crack the Skye revels in the rich
tradition of the SF concept album — including a "Space
Oddity"-influenced video for the single "Oblivion" that brings
everything full circle.

Fads and styles in music and SF come and go, but one thing is a
constant: musicians will probably be trying to perfect the amalgamation
of the rock album and the science-fiction novel for as long as there is
such a thing as the future.

ISSN 1937-7843   Clarkesworld Magazine © 2009 Wyrm Publishing.
Illustrations by Serj Iulian.

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))




      

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