The Journalist is a story with music. That's what's important.
The rock opera is recorded for piano and voice and tells the story of a photojournalist caught in a conspiracy as he attempts to find meaning in his life. In Part I, he travels oversea [+]The Journalist is a story with music. That's what's important.
The rock opera is recorded for piano and voice and tells the story of a photojournalist caught in a conspiracy as he attempts to find meaning in his life. In Part I, he travels overseas and takes a picture of an object certain others wish was kept a secret. In Part II, he flees home hoping to escape his fate and the burden of the image he carries with him. It's classic action movie fare with its own rock soundtrack.
Since I started listening to music, I wanted to write a rock opera or concept album. Through college bands and one my own, I wrote a few pop songs here and there but never created a large volume of work. Because of this, I felt that I wasn't ready to tackle a full-length album/CD and definitely not a rock opera. Well, thanks to a recent bout of unemployment, I decided to dive in and wrote The Journalist in a little over a month. There's a moral in there somewhere.
The germ of a story about a photojournalist came to me a couple of years ago, but I couldn't get a song from it in its original form. I finally modified the original concept and fleshed it out as a complete drama that became The Journalist. Purists may complain about the tag "rock opera," since there's only one character narrating as the story unfolds, but it's the simplest, best tag for what the CD offers. It's the story that's important.
And the music, of course. The Journalist was written for piano and voice. The style is influenced by classical and jazz, but definitely ends up as rock. You'll hear some Discipline-era King Crimson, some Philip Glass technique, and some 70s-era Genesis, although it's probably more pop-based than any of those influences. There are a few Tony Banks' compositions that were the greatest inspiration ("One for the Vine" is top-of-the-list for musical stories), and I'm really indebted to him for that inspiration. All of the songs freely share musical themes and progressions-beyond the story, that's probably the most defining aspect that holds the work together as a whole, and the shared themes and varied arrangements are probably the most defining traits inherited from Art Rock.
Which gets us to the recording. This is not a slick studio recording, it's a home recording, and I can on
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