Nil Recurring

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Nil Recurring
File:Nil Recurring.jpg
EP by Porcupine Tree
Released 17 September 2007
Genre Progressive rock, progressive metal
Length 28:44
Label Transmission
WHD (JPN)
Peaceville
Producer Porcupine Tree
Porcupine Tree chronology
Fear of a Blank Planet
(2007)Fear of a Blank Planet2007
Nil Recurring (2007) We Lost the Skyline
(2008)We Lost the Skyline2008
Alternative cover
Alternative cover
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Aquarian Weekly (A+)[1]
Epinions.com 4/5 stars[2]
Metal Storm (8.5/10)[3]
PopMatters (7/10)[4]
ReGen 3.5/5 stars[5]

Nil Recurring (also Transmission 5.1) is an EP by British progressive rock band Porcupine Tree, released on 17 September 2007 through the band's online store. The standard version of the mini-album is composed of four tracks written during the Fear of a Blank Planet recording sessions and was completed over the summer of 2007. The third track on the EP - "Cheating The Polygraph" - was originally slated as the fifth track for Fear of a Blank Planet, but was later dropped from the final tracklist.

The EP's title, which stems from the opening instrumental track on the EP, was actually derived from an unreleased demo written during the Fear of a Blank Planet recording sessions, called "Always Recurring". Although the band never formally released the song, lyrical and melodic elements of the track were reused in the closing piece of the EP, "What Happens Now?".

Nil Recurring entered the UK Top 30 Independent Label Albums at #8[6] and remains #1 EP of 2007 on Rate Your Music.[7]

Writing and recording

The band met in London in July 2006 to work on new material to follow up Deadwing. At the time, "My Ashes" and "Normal" were already written by Wilson; he later reworked the latter song, transforming it into "Sentimental".[8] The band sessions produced "Fear of a Blank Planet", "Anesthetize", "Cheating the Polygraph", and "Sleep Together", along with material that would not fit the album they were forming. Thus, when the band toured later in the year to polish songwriting and preview the upcoming record, it was played in the work-in-progress running order: the same as the final album sequence, but with "Cheating the Polygraph" in the fifth track placement. Once the tour ended, the band decided none of the extra songs nor "Cheating the Polygraph" were up to the standards of the record, as they weren't properly developed, and there was a policy not to make the album over fifty minutes long.[9] The band wrote "Way Out of Here" to bridge "Sentimental" and "Sleep Together"; after Fear of a Blank Planet was released, the four remaining tracks were mixed between June and August 2007 to make the Nil Recurring EP.

Release

The first press of the album was issued on Porcupine Tree's own label, Transmission, and was limited to 5000 copies in a fold-out digipak. It was originally decided to sell 3000 copies through the band's online store and sell the remaining 2000 at shows on the forthcoming tour, but the initial run of pre-orders through the online store were sold out in a period of 24 hours[10] so the band quickly put out more copies, whether for purchase or download in MP3/FLAC formats at a very cheap cost; the downloadable version includes exclusive printable artwork. Peaceville Records further promoted the release by constructing a Nil Recurring minisite; & more specifically in conjunction with Porcupine Tree: by creating and releasing a video for the song "Normal" which contains an edited, radio-friendly version of the song. A Japanese edition was released through WHD in late October 2007 and includes the radio edit of "Fear of a Blank Planet" as a bonus track. A second (unlimited) super jewel box (inside a cardboard slipcover) edition was released on 18 February 2008 on Peaceville Records, which contains edited versions of both aforementioned songs as bonus tracks.[11]

Title and concept

Porcupine Tree's frontman, Steven Wilson, explained the meaning of the EP's title and commented about its relationship with the concept of Fear of a Blank Planet:

“I just thought it was an interesting idea I had. I had this instrumental, and I didn’t have a title, so I called it Nil Recurring. It’s always quite hard to name instrumentals, because obviously there’s no subject matter to relate it to. I just thought the idea was quite funny. I kind of like absurd titles. I kind of have a history of having these titles that make no sense, like Up the Downstair (1993). I mean Nil Recurring is another paradox like statement. You cannot have the number nil recurring. So it’s just a bit of fun really. And of course, it seemed to fit in with the lyrical concept of some of the other pieces that featured on Fear of a Blank Planet. It was that idea of blankness, of not being there or negativity that helped gave that piece, and the E.P. its title.”[9]

Song details

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

  • The track "Nil Recurring" is an instrumental piece and features King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp on lead guitar. As well, drummer Gavin Harrison plays tap guitar on this track.[12]
  • The chorus in "Normal" is musically very similar to the chorus in "Sentimental" since the latter is a further development of the former. The lyrics of both songs contain a response to each other: while the last verse on "Normal" says "Wish I was old and a little sentimental", the first verse on "Sentimental" speaks "I never wanna be old and I don't want dependence". The song has also a lyrical reference to the song "Anesthetize" from Fear of a Blank Planet in the phrase "I do a good impression of myself". According to Wilson's statement in the live performance We Lost the Skyline, the song was written in Tel-Aviv.
  • The song "Cheating the Polygraph" debuted on the late 2006 Fear of a Blank Planet preview tour, though its title was not revealed at the time. It was later dropped out of the tracklist for the album, so the band wrote "Way Out of Here" to fill the gap.[13] On the LP version of Fear of a Blank Planet, "Cheating the Polygraph" ends the first side, therefore placed between "My Ashes" and "Anesthetize". The rest of Nil Recurring is placed on the fourth side.
  • Ben Coleman contributes electric violin to "What Happens Now?", having previously worked with Steven Wilson as part of No-Man. During live performances Coleman's parts are played on the guitar by touring guitarist John Wesley. "What Happens Now?" includes a riff featured in "Anesthetize", lyrical references to "My Ashes", and additionally; elements of an unreleased song titled "Always Recurring" - that was pegged for "Nil Recurring" but dropped - were used in the making of the song. Its title is derived from an unpublished (but sung) bridge lyric in "Way Out of Here": "I will be found with a bomb in my bag, thinking 'what happens now?'"

Promotion

Peaceville Records set a Nil Recurring minisite related to the issue of the EP, including full audio streamings for each track. The video for "Normal" was initially intended to be posted on 15 February 2008 but its release date was moved forward to 9 February 2008. It is now available for viewing through the minisite.

The site is available in four languages: English, German, French and Italian.

Track listing

In addition to the standard version, the EP is also available in 5.1 Surround Sound on the DVDA version of Fear of a Blank Planet.

No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Nil Recurring (feat. Robert Fripp)"   Wilson, Barbieri, Edwin, Harrison 6:08
2. "Normal"   Wilson 7:07
3. "Cheating the Polygraph"   Wilson, Harrison 7:06
4. "What Happens Now?"   Wilson, Barbieri, Edwin, Harrison 8:23

Personnel

Guests

  • Robert Fripp – lead guitar on "Nil Recurring"
  • Ben Coleman – electric violin on "What Happens Now?"

Chart performance

Chart Entry
UK Indie Chart[6] 8
Finland[14] 5
France[15] 114
Germany[16] 100

Release history

Country Date Label
United Kingdom 17 September 2007 Transmission
Japan 30 October 2007 WHD
Europe 18 February 2008 Peaceville
United States 19 February 2008
Germany 22 February 2008

References

  1. Aquarian Weekly review
  2. Epinions.com review
  3. Metal Storm review
  4. PopMatters review
  5. ReGen review
  6. 6.0 6.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  12. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  13. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  14. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  15. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  16. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links