IQ (band)

IQ

At The Classic Rock Society Awards Night, January 16th 2010. The band had won Band of the Year and Best Album for "Frequency"
Background information
Origin England
Genres Neo-progressive rock
Years active 1980–present
Associated acts Arena
Frost*
Ian Parker Band
Jadis
The Lens
Priory of Brion
Website http://www.iq-hq.co.uk/
Members
Mike Holmes
Peter Nicholls
Tim Esau
Paul Cook
Neil Durant
Past members
Martin Orford
Mark Ridout
Paul Menel
Les 'Ledge' Marshall
John Jowitt
Andy Edwards
Mark Westworth

IQ are a British neo-progressive rock band founded by Mike Holmes and Martin Orford in 1981[1] following the dissolution of their original band The Lens. Although the band have never enjoyed major commercial success and had several line up changes, IQ have built up a loyal following over the years and are still active as of 2011 having performed a series of concerts in the UK and Europe celebrating their 30th anniversary .

Contents

The Neo-Progressive movement

IQ were one of a small number of British bands formed during the early 1980s, including Marillion, Pendragon, Twelfth Night, Pallas, Quasar and Solstice that continued with the progressive rock style forsaken by 1970s bands such as Genesis and Yes.[2] The music press coined the phrase neo-progressive to describe these bands, often accusing them of simply copying the styles of other bands. This accusation has been strenuously denied by IQ, which are against of the use of the term "neo progressive"[3] and claim to have a wide-ranging and eclectic selection of musical influences.[4]

The line-up

From 1982, the line-up consisted of Peter Nicholls (vocals), Mike Holmes (guitar), Martin Orford (keyboards), Paul Cook (drums), and Tim Esau (bass). Nicholls left in July 1985 to form a new band, Niadem's Ghost, and was replaced by Paul (P. L.) Menel, but subsequently returned in 1990. Nicholls also created the cover art for most of the albums on which he appears. In early 2005, member Paul Cook left the band and was replaced on drums by Andy Edwards. On 20 July 2007 Martin Orford announced that he was leaving IQ and he was replaced by Mark Westworth from prog-rock band Darwin's Radio. As of late 2009, Paul Cook has returned to replace Andy Edwards on drums. On 7 October 2010, Mark Westworth announced on the band's official web site that he would be leaving the band and his final appearance with IQ was on 11 December 2010. On 1 January 2011, the band announced that Mark's replacement on keyboards would be Neil Durant. On 7 January 2011, bassist of 19 years John Jowitt announced on the band's website that he had left the band and that his last appearance with the band had also been the concert on 11 December 2010.[5] John was replaced by original bassist Tim Esau in January 2011.

Musical style

The band's musical style, especially earlier in their career, was reminiscent of Peter Gabriel and Steve Hackett era Genesis because of singer Peter Nicholls' vocal and stage-presence similarities to Gabriel and keyboardist Martin Orford's grandiose keyboarding. However, guitarist Mike Holmes' role was far more assertive in the band, giving them a harder edge musically. After Nicholls' departure, the band's style became increasingly commercial and radio-friendly — albeit without much success — on Nomzamo (1987) and Are You Sitting Comfortably? (1989), although each album still featured some progressive rock-style tracks. Beginning with Nicholls's return on 1993's Ever, the band returned to its prog rock roots, with longer tracks featuring intricate arrangements and complex musicianship.

Band members

Current members

Former members

Discography

Albums

Live Albums

Compilations

1. Capital Letters (In Surgical Spirit Land) 2. About Lake Five 3. Intelligence Quotient 4. For Christ's Sake 5. Barbell Is In 6. Fascination 7. For The Taking 8. It All Stops Here 9. Eloko Bella Neechi

Videos

References

  1. ^ Official IQ site. Band formed in 1981.
  2. ^ "Neo Progressive". ProgArchives.com. http://www.progarchives.com/subgenre.asp?style=18. Retrieved 7 March 2008 (2008-03-07). 
  3. ^ Orford, Martin (2000). "Out With The Neo!". DPRP. http://www.dprp.net/vision/index.php?id=13. Retrieved 7 March 2008 (2008-03-07). 
  4. ^ Prete, Mike (April 2002). "Interview with Martin Orford". ProgWeed.net. http://www.progweed.net/interviews/iq.html. Retrieved 7 March 2008 (2008-03-07). 
  5. ^ "IQ-HQ: The Official Website". iq-hq.co.uk. October 2010. http://www.iq-hq.co.uk/. Retrieved 26 October 2010 (2010-10-26). 

External links