Steven Wilson: āIām Just a Nerd Who Fell in Love with the Magic of Making Recordsā
The songwriter and multi-instrumentalist resurrects Porcupine Treeās spectral, desolate sound after a 12-year hiatus with Closure/Continuation, bringing listeners both long-awaited catharsis and new hope for the future.
In 2010, Steven Wilson was standing onstage at the Royal Albert Hall in London with his band Porcupine Tree before a sold-out crowd. He hadnāt yet told his bandmates that it would be their last showāat least for a while. The band had been engaged in what felt like a relentless cycle of recording and touring for the 17 years leading up to that point. Despite having gained a dedicated following, theyād never had a hit nor the support of mainstream radio and televisionāyet they were constantly being told their next record would be the one to break through. But with 10 albums to their name, that still hadnāt happened. Wilson was tired.
The band went on hiatus after that show, and Wilson furthered the pursuit of his solo career (which began in 2008 with the release of his debut, Insurgentes). After a while, fans began to assume that waiting around for a Porcupine Tree reunion was a lost cause.
āI was quite a big contributor to that, too,ā Wilson admits. āI would say to people, āNo, forget it, weāre not coming back.āā But it wasnāt true. āI was telling a white lie just to get them to focus on what I was doing at that point. But actually, behind the scenes, we were working toward something that would eventually herald the return of the band.ā
Porcupine Tree - Harridan (Official Lyric Video)
Porcupine Treeās 11th full-length studio album, Closure/Continuation, marks that return. With the 65-minute, 10-track record, Wilson, drummer Gavin Harrison, and keyboardist Richard Barbieri offer a new collection of compositions that build on the bandās classic sound with a reinvigorated, visceral pulse.
Opening with the guttural, aggressively percussive bass line on āHarridan,ā the album navigates through a series of kinetic musical worlds that are, in balance, both pensive and turbulent. The second track, āOf the New Day,ā has a plaintive refrain taken from its title, and later on in the album, the haunting, subtly shapeshifting āChimeraās Wreckā moves through tones of disquiet to create a nearly 10-minute narrative thatās both cerebral and emotive. Other standout tracks include the ominous āHerd Culling,ā and the sinister āRats Return.ā
Itās elusive what exactly makes the record something that moves the band forward. It might be the amorphous arrangements, which stay accessible as they seem to breathe even more freely than past works, or the seamless concatenation of foreboding, hopeful, and furious overtones, or the strength in the voice that ties together each of the self-contained, emotionally complex, often dystopian scenes. But in their time away, what Wilson calls the bandās ācreative coreā seems to have evolved.
āI would say to people, āNo, forget it, weāre not coming back.āā
Although Porcupine Tree never actually disbanded, there was a gap between 2010 and 2012 where they werenāt seeing much of each other, at least not for composing purposes. Then in 2012, they began a 10-year gestation of material that would end up becoming Closure/Continutation. Their writing sessions were sporadic, says Wilson: In the beginning, they would get together for just a few weeks at a time every other year.
āPart of the reason for that, I think, was that we didnāt want to feel any pressure in making a Porcupine Tree record,ā he shares. āA lot of people assumed that we didnāt exist anymore, and I kind of liked that because it meant that we could work on the record in a complete vacuum with no pressure, no expectation, no deadlines.ā
The 2020 lockdown motivated them to finally knuckle down and bring the record to completion, but they wouldnāt have gone through with releasing it if they didnāt feel as though they were doing something new. Part of Wilsonās jadedness at the end of that 2010 tour was because he felt, despite its relative chart success, that their last record, The Incident, was largely uninspired. āI felt like we were on a creatively downward trajectory where the music was no longer getting better,ā he says. āIn fact, it was beginning to sound a bit same-y. And itās always been very important to me and the band that every record has a sense of evolution from the previous record.ā
Porcupine Tree is Richard Barbieri (keyboards), Steven Wilson (guitars/vocals), and Gavin Harrison (drums).
Photo by Alex Lake
With the new album, he feels theyāve succeeded in that respect. āIām very proud of the music, and I think itās some of the best Iāve ever made,ā he says. āTime will tell how the album fits into the catalogāitās not something you can judge in such a close proximity. But right now, Iām fairly confident this will become one of the more popular and successful things Iāve ever done in my career.ā
The bandās followers might notice that longtime bassist Colin Edwin doesnāt appear on the album. Rather, Wilson plays bass througout. He says filling that role wasnāt at all meant as a slight to Edwin but was a result of how the music came together. āIt was just a very natural thing for me to try something different rather than picking up a guitar,ā Wilson says. āAnd we ended up writing so much of the record in that way.ā
āA lot of people assumed that we didnāt exist anymore, and I personally kind of liked that because it meant we could work on the record in a complete vacuum with no pressure, no expectation, no deadlines.ā
Wilsonās guitar-minded approach to the bass produced a style that diverts from more predictable patterns. āI play bass like a guitar player,ā he comments. āI play a lot of stuff high up, I play a lot of melodies, I play a lot of chords, and I donāt perhaps play like a traditional bass player would play.ā
Writing on bass helped make the album more groove- and riff-oriented, and less polyphonic overall than past records. The newfound approach also gave Wilson a refreshed outlook on composing. āIāve been writing on the guitar for the best part of 25 years. And frankly, when I pick it up now, Iām not sure what else Iāve got left to do!ā he shares. āBut when I pick up the bass, or I go to the keyboard, suddenly thereās so much more that Iāve never done before. I surprise myself more when I play them.ā
Steven Wilsonās Gear
Steven Wilson plays his 1963 Relic Custom Shop Tele at Londonās AIR Studios while tracking Porcupine Treeās Closure/Continuation.
Photo by Derek Bremner
Guitars & Basses
- Fender Custom Shop Telecaster
- PRS Singlecut Gold Top
- PRS Custom 22
- Takamine acoustic
- Ovation acoustic (Nashville tuning)
- Babicz Steven Wilson signature model
- Spector basses
Amps
- Bad Cat Lynx
- Supro ā64 Combo
- Hughes & Kettner Tubemeister 5
- Various software plug-ins for recording
Strings
- DāAddario NYXLs
Effects
- Strymon BigSky Reverb
- Strymon TimeLine Delay
- Diamond Vibrato
- Moog Minifooger MF Tremolo
- Origin Effects Cali 76 Compressor
- Source Audio Programmable EQ
- Analog Man Prince of Tone
- Amptweaker Tight Rock JR
- Electro-Harmonix Small Stone Phaser
- Option 5 Rotary Pedal
- Dunlop Cry Baby
- Electro-Harmonix Micro POG x 2 (one octave up and one octave down)
Aside from acoustic strumming and fingerpicking on a few tracks, and edgy riff emphasis on others, the guitar mostly takes a backseat on the album. Wilson supports his arrangements with some solos that embody his quintessential feel for the instrument, but all in all, itās apparent that the bass was truly the guiding force on Closure/Continuation.
In July, Wilson released another project: a 320-page autobiography entitled Limited Edition of One. Its subtitle, How to Succeed in the Music Industry Without Being a Part of the Mainstream, perhaps serves as its thesis. His story is that of someone whoās had success without ever having quite broken through, and that angle is exactly what helped him decide it was worth sharing.
āI always thought it would be a very boring book. I thought, āWell, thereās no book to be written because I donāt have any of those stories about being on the road and drugs and religion and groupies. Iām just a nerd that fell in love with the magic of making records.
āThen the guys at Hachette [the bookās publisher] pointed out to me, actually, thatās why a book on me would be interesting. Because that traditional rock ānā roll hedonistic thing ā¦ people are bored with that story because theyāve heard it so many times. At that point I became more convinced that maybe I did have a story to tell.ā
Porcupine Treeās new release, Closure/Continuation, had a gestation period of over a decade. The band hasnāt released an album since 2009ās The Incident.
āLove him or hate him, Kanye West is an incredibly innovative producer.ā
He also writes, in his book, that he doesnāt see himself as a guitar hero. āI always feel fake and slightly embarrassed when Iām being interviewed for guitar magazines.ā At the beginning of our conversation, Wilson says, āIāll be very boring if I talk about guitars, because I donāt know much about them, to be honest.ā
While many consider Wilson exclusively a progressive rock artist, his latest solo record, The Future Bites (2021), is but one of his works that refutes that notion, as it sits comfortably in an electronic or synth-pop category. Given that, it may not come as a surprise that when asked which musicians he thinks are truly progressive today, heās quick to praise modern hip-hop artists.
Steve Wilson plays his signature Babicz dreadnought at Washington D.C.ās 9:30 Club in 2015. The guitar features Babiczās unique touchstone of the strings fanning out from the soundboard, and an L.R. Baggs StagePro Anthem system.
Photo by Matt Condon
āLove him or hate him, Kanye West is an incredibly innovative producer,ā he says. āThen thereās Kendrick Lamar. When you listen to the way they structure music and the way they make music, itās so alien to the ear of people that grew up with rock music. I think thatās a really good thing, and thatās why we should listen to it.ā
Wilson is less certain on how to make those kinds of innovations in songwriting, or how creative inspiration works: āIāve no fucking clue.ā He draws inspiration from all sorts of things, but also often goes into the studio and just bangs his head against the wall with nothing to show for it. āYeah, [creative droughts] are really depressing. I get really down when I go through a period where I canāt create anything,ā he shares. āI always come to the conclusion that, āOh shit, Iāve written the last song Iām ever going to write. Iāve got nothing left. The well is dry.ā But I also manage, touch wood, to prove myself wrong. What I do is I carry on going to the studio, and I carry on hitting my head against the wall. I have a very strong work ethic.ā
āItās, of course, almost impossible to crystallize something in words that is beyond words,ā he continues, reflecting on the ethereality of songwriting. āI think the combination of music and words is so much more powerful than simply the written word. If you can get those two things in balance, it can almost make you understand what is beyond understanding.ā
Rig Rundown - Steven Wilson [2019]
Talking to Wilson, his affability stands in contrast to the frequently dark and lachrymose themes heard in Porcupine Treeās music. He explains that, for him, writing sad songs is like an exorcism or an unburdening of his own sadness.
āMiserabilism and melancholy ā¦ Iāve always found such a beautiful thing. Itās a profoundly magical thing if you can create empathy through focusing on some of the more negative feelings that we all share. And thatās why I still think that music, where on the surface it might be sad or melancholic or depressing, has the potential to be something incredibly uplifting and beautiful for the person who experiences it.ā
YouTube It
Get a load of these space-station control centers from Nick Reinhart (Tera Melos), Vernon Reid (Living Colour), Steven Wilson, Dweezil Zappa, and Steve Lukather.
Watch the full Rig Rundown episodes:
Tera Melos' Nick Reinhart
Living Colour's Vernon Reid
Dweezil Zappa
Toto's Steve Lukather
Steven Wilson