Do What You Love and the Fans Will Follow

“What I do barely feels like work to me,” says Steven Wilson. “People ask me, ‘Are you a workaholic?’ I respond that to be a workaholic, you’ve got to feel that what you’re doing is work. Making records, that’s not work. It’s fun, isn’t it?”

By any measure, Steven Wilson is one of the busiest musicians working today. In addition to writing, producing and performing with his prog-rock band Porcupine Tree, he has a steady release schedule of albums by his other projects (solo work, Blackfield, No-man and others).

He produces other artists — most notably Swedish death metal band Opeth — and is in the midst of remixing the vast King Crimson back catalog. He also writes a monthly column in Electronic Musician magazine, and wrote a May op-ed piece (“Music is not Software; Music is Art”) for the New York Times.

Despite all that activity, Wilson’s primary focus is Porcupine Tree. And his songwriting has gone through a number of stylistic phases since the first Porcupine Tree release (the cassette-only Tarquin’s Seaweed Farm in 1989). Early Porcupine Tree leaned in a psychedelic-ambient direction. In those days, Porcupine Tree was simply Wilson recording at home. But over the course of 10-plus studio albums, the band has drawn from Beach Boys-influenced pop, progressive rock and, most recently, heavy metal.

The group’s last two albums (2007’s Fear of a Blank Planet and 2009’s The Incident) cover a wide stylistic palette, but the group certainly leans in a metallic direction.

The music Steven Wilson listens to often mirrors (or has an influence on, it’s hard to discern which) where his songwriting will take the band next. So what’s Wilson listening to these days?

“Anything except metal,” Wilson chuckles. “I’m so bored with metal.” He concedes that he goes through “phases, immersing myself in a particular area of music.” But, he says, “I feel like the future [of Porcupine Tree] is going to be a long way from that. I wasn’t being completely flippant: I’m listening to all sorts of things these days. Except metal.”

Wilson suggests that, going forward, he’s most interested in creating music that is “less about songwriting, and more about this idea of music as a story for the ears.” He readily concedes that such a focus has always been evident to some degree in his music, but wants to pursue “a musical continuum that can take the listener on a journey.” He notes that everything he’s currently working on (two to three projects at once) shares a common characteristic. “If anything, the music’s becoming more spacious and less aggressive.”

Wilson has already tipped his hand in this direction on the group’s most recent album. Though it’s broken into 14 tracks on the CD, The Incident is a single long-form piece of music. “I want to take that idea further,” Wilson says. He’s fascinated by the idea of an album as “an equivalent in some ways to a novel. Although you do get short stories, or short films, most of the important examples in those media are major-length pieces that are telling a story across 90 minutes or 400 pages. It seems strange to me that music has lagged behind in terms of embracing the larger form,” he muses. “With a brief exception in the 1970s,” he quickly clarifies.

He characterizes the early ‘80s rise of MTV, with its emphasis on the three-minute pop song/video, as “almost a throwback. It was as if music was afraid of its own potential.” Wilson believes that there’s a movement afoot to return to the idea of music that’s ambitious in its goals, and he points to the success of bands like Muse and the Mars Volta to support his argument.

“In some ways the internet has liberated bands from having to think about being mainstream, from having to try and be commercial,” he says. “And I like to think that people are getting away from the idea that all they want from their music is a three-minute, hummable pop song.”

But those unfamiliar with the music of Porcupine Tree should not take from that the idea that the group creates dense, humorless music bereft of hooks or melody. Every PT album has at least a couple of songs with single potential. On The Incident, two of those songs are “I Drive the Hearse” and “Time Flies,” both tuneful, memorable numbers. On the group’s current tour, the five-piece Porcupine Tree performs The Incident in its entirety, without breaks, and then adds in a few fan favorites from their deep catalog.

Steven Wilson embraces the changes taking place in what used to be called the music industry. “Bands have given up the dream of being the next Led Zeppelin, and are instead focusing on what’s important: the music. And it’s much easier now to find a cult audience through the internet, and to survive by selling music directly to the fans.” Wilson views those changes as fostering music everywhere that has “got more integrity than it did at any other time in the last 25 or 30 years.”

— Bill Kopp is an Asheville-based music journalist whose features and reviews can be found at http://blog.billkopp.com and http://musoscribe.com.

who: Porcupine Tree and Coheed and Cambria plus The Dear Hunter
what: Indie prog-rock tour
where: Thomas Wolfe Auditorium
when: Saturday, Aug. 21 (Doors at 6:30 p.m. Show at 7:30 p.m. $29. ticketmaster.com or 800-745-3000)

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About Bill Kopp
Author, speaker, music journalist, historian, collector, and musician. His first book, "Reinventing Pink Floyd: From Syd Barrett to The Dark Side of the Moon," was published in 2018. His second book, "Disturbing the Peace: 415 Records and the Rise of New Wave," was published in 2021. His next book, "What's the Big Idea: 30 Great Concept Albums" is due in 2025.

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2 thoughts on “Do What You Love and the Fans Will Follow

  1. Musoscribe63

    An earlier 2008 interview this writer (me) conducted with Steven Wilson — plus reviews of several PT- and PT-releated projects (no-man, Blackfield etc.) can be found here: blog.billkopp.com/?p=310

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