Tufnell Park’s Dome is a new venue to me, if not to Londoners who like progressive rock music. It is very conveniently located across the road from Tufnell Park underground station and adjacent to the Boston Arms public house. Well, last night it hosted quite a remarkable, spectacular and effusive end of tour show and celebration for Solstice, who were concluding their current tour in support of their hugely impressive and exuberant ‘Clann’ album, you can read my Progradar review here:
Solstice had previously hit a lot of familiar points like The 1865 in Southampton and their own local Caulfield Arms in Milton Keynes, amongst others. The Dome itself is very straightforward in layout with a bar to the left and a big open floor space with a decent sized, raised, stage and a small seating area to the right. It was about two thirds full, with about 150 people or more in attendance, which isn’t a bad size for any band. I expect on the strength of this new album and tour that future shows will garner a far bigger audience as the band, in this version, are most definitely one that are going places now, promising a most rewarding experience for any prog aficionado. Many of the crowd are regular supporters of the band, although a swift poll check from Jess revealed a healthy number of new attendees, who are probably converts now after this strong showing tonight
Ebony Buckle opened the show in a more pared back incarnation but, even in this stripped-down version, their songs show their strength. Especially well received were I Think I Just Saved My Own Life,Russian Dolls and 900 Years, they all stood out for me, as did the final song Disco Lasers. A swift changeover led us into a very celebratory show from Solstice who have a stage full of artists, including violinist Jenny Newman and Andy Glass, who leads the band being their only original member from the 1980’s and who has led the band into this very new and exciting phase of their career.
Along with bassist Robin Phillips, drummer Pete Hemsley and keyboard player Steven McDaniel, they are complimented by three excellent and individual vocalists in Jess Holland,Ebony Buckle and Dyane Crutcher who together weave a beautiful magic in tandem with the rest of the band. At times I was reminded of the mighty Santana, in that the music seemed to flow like a river of music, not only in discernible points of reference in tracks that I recognised, but also in the onstage dynamics and interplay between Andy, Jenny, and the various vocalists, each of whom were really going for it.
I also loved the sheer joyful exuberance that was on show tonight. There were many highpoints such as the excellent guitar tones displayed during Mount Ephraim where Andy really laid down some seriously strong guitar lines. In truth though, there was nary a poor number played with lots of older tracks receiving a very positive reception from the very vocal crowd. There was even much prog dancing! Heaven forbid don’t tell Charlie Bramald as he’d be appalled by such joyful actions! Andy also sought to teach us prog clapping at some point, which was a bit of fun for everyone.
Overall it was a Triumphant performance by the band, as always with Solstice and they were truly stunned by such a positive reaction to their wonderful music and presence, making for a very special and important evening for both the faithful Clann and also for the band themselves. Special mention must be made for Chris Parkins of London Prog gigs who hosted this event so well and for the sound guys and merchandise staff who worked tirelessly on the band’s behalf. Also to Solstice themselves for being so accessible to their fans, they were actually somewhat overwhelmed by their response, being very gracious in both their time and willingness to sign CDs as memento’s and also to chat to everyone.
It was a most excellent evening all told, which put the matter of my arduous journey back North to the back of my mind, being both an expensive and also challenging one, with the added yet unexpected bonus of something of an adventure as I traversed the home counties in the early hours.
Voted Best Band in Prog magazine’s latest annual Reader’s Poll.
Solstice are pleased to announce the release of their 8th studio album, Clann, on April 4th, 2025 through specialist US label Progrock.com Essentials.
Voted Best Band in Prog magazine’s latest annual Reader’s Poll, and arriving on an exuberant wave of positivity created by previous albums Sia (2020) and Light Up (2022), both widely acclaimed within the prog community and beyond, Clann completes the most recent phase of Solstice’s 40-plus year career. As band founder, composer, and guitarist (winner of Prog magazine’s most recent Best Guitarist Prog Award) Andy Glass explains, “[Sia] made me realize the potential and by the time we were working on Light Up the whole band had raised its game. I believed then that a trilogy of albums was what it would take to create our best work and track that journey. Clann is the final album in the Sia Trilogy and it’s everything I’d hoped it would be. Let’s hope the universe likes it too.”
As Solstice keyboardist Steven McDaniel laughingly confesses “It’s terrifying to be in a band this good!” Boasting the same line-up since 2020, the members of Solstice channel their impressive individual talents to create music that melds elements of hi-intensity prog-folk, soaring new age, fragile ambiance, fresh funky pop-rock with world music leanings, and fist-pumping heavy rock jubilance, demonstrating a sophisticated, multifaceted modernity while retaining transcendent timeless qualities. A lauded singer-songwriter in her own right, Ebony Buckle, backing vocalist and now solid member of the Solstice family, reflects, “I love how these new songs feel like they’ve always existed.”
Enjoying both an artistic and commercial rebirth over the past 5 years, Solstice owe much to the addition of young singer Jess Holland in 2020, who brought with her not just a clear emotive voice that communicates both stridency and tenderness with equal ease and charm, but a beguiling energy that has directly impacted everyone in the band. As Andy Glass is eager to explain “Sia was our first album with Jess and what a total game changer that was. I’ve felt incredibly motivated and inspired ever since. Since then I seem to have this relentless appetite to take this music as far as we can. There’s nothing quite like feeling that kind of drive.”
Recorded both in a variety of recording studios and by individual band members at home, Clann includes a first in the band’s career with the track Plunk which features a brass section recorded at the beautiful Grand Chapel Studio in Toddington, Bedfordshire. Glass admits that “there might be a bit of a Big Big Train influence there somewhere!”
Clann manages to cover a great deal of musical ground in its nearly 40-minute running time. Firefly opens up proceedings and will be familiar to many already through its airing at numerous gigs and its inclusion on both the band’s Live At The Stables and Return To Cropredy releases. Its pulse-pumping energy, hard-edged yet infectious grooves, whirling bursts of synth and violin and its glorious guitar solo lift the spirit and sweep us into Solstice’s mesmerizing world. Elsewhere Life delivers smooth, soulful, modern pop with an elegant dance-friendly heart and Plunk is taut swaggering funk in 7/8 with brass stabs and a left-field, gritty guitar solo. Frippa is built on an urgent, bluesy Crimson-esque riff in 5 and spotlights organ, violin and even more incendiary guitar. Final track, the 14-minute Twin Peaks, in some ways harks back to what prog polymath and longtime Solstice fan Steven Wilson once described as the band’s “spacey and spacious” early material – it’s gentle, reflective and airy with pastoral, folky strains, yet builds into a soaring expression of rapturous celebration and spiritual freedom.
Lyrically, the album continues established Solstice themes of love, joy, peace, harmony and acceptance, yet Clann admits that not everything in the garden is always rosy. Although longing for some ultimate redemption, both Plunk and Frippa feature a level of reproach for unidentified liars and cheats with Plunkeven exercising some wry schadenfreude at the downfall of the song’s antagonist.
Check out the video for the first single “Firefly” here:
Solstice will be supporting the release of Clann with a strings of live dates including festival appearances in the UK, Europe and north America. The band’s live work has been fundamental to their growing popularity with a wide audience demographic. Always more than just a magical musical experience, the band’s gigs are consistently celebratory, invigorating, warm hearted and a lot of fun. The live work has fed directly into Andy Glass’s writing – “One of the joys of this beautiful band is the energy on stage… and that’s definitely played into the writing for this album. I only need to think about the gigs to imagine the possibilities and for the ideas to start forming.”
Clann Track List 1.Firefly 2.Life 3.Plunk 4.Frippa 5.Twin Peaks
All songs written by Andy Glass
Solstice line-up Andy Glass – Guitars, backing vocals Jenny Newman – Violin Pete Hemsley – Drums Jess Holland – Lead vocals Robin Phillips – Bass Steven McDaniel – Keyboards Ebony Buckle – Backing vocals Dyane Crutcher – Backing vocals
Formed in Aylesbury, UK, Solstice played their first gig at Berkhamsted Town Hall in early 1980. Although very much considered part of the early 80s British neo-prog movement, sharing stages with the likes of Marillion, IQ and Pallas, Solstice drew more on folk, folk-rock, neo-classical and psychedelic space-rock than most of their contemporaries. The band gained a small legion of devoted fans touring extensively, playing many notable venues such as The Marquee in London and The Friars in Aylesbury as well as at the prestigious Reading Festival in 1983. Although releasing self-financed cassette demos during this period, they didn’t record their debut studio album until 1984’s Silent Dance, before this chapter of the band’s career came to an end with Solstice splitting up in 1985. Over the next 20 years Solstice had long periods of inactivity peppered with one-off reunions, brief reformations and two further studio albums, New Life (1993) and Circles (1997), the latter featuring Clive Bunker from Jethro Tull on drums. The pressures of line-up instability, family life, other musical projects and the imperative of making a living proving more of a priority than keeping this particular band going.
With their re-mastered back-catalogue issued in 2007, Solstice enjoyed something of a renaissance, appearing live more frequently and going on to record a further two albums – Spirit in 2010 and 2013’s Prophecy. However, although the albums were well-received and a core fan-base persisted, there remained a sense that the band was treading water rather than moving forward in any meaningful way. Then, somewhat unexpectedly, everything changed in 2019 when Andy Glass, founder and sole surviving original band member decided he really wanted to record one more album. Looking at who might front the band, they settled on young singer and musician Jess Holland. This decision transformed the band’s fortunes in ways they could hardly have imagined. Prog magazine journalist Martin Kielty summed up the feelings of many when he opined that this led to “Solstice becoming the band they were always meant to be”.
With new album Clann set to complete a trilogy of albums begun with 2020’s Sia, Solstice have been busier over the last three years then they probably have been for the last couple of decades, playing numerous shows including high profile festival appearances at Glastonbury, Cropredy and Milan. Enjoying a level of acclaim and critical praise that surprises even the band themselves, Andy Glass almost has to pinch himself – “Suddenly there’s this out-pouring of creativity. We’re making music that’s as good as [anything] I’ve ever been involved in making. And people are responding to it. It’s absolutely extraordinary… I mean surprise doesn’t cover it. I never saw anything like this coming… and it feels incredible. It’s what’s driving me now having never been ambitious in the past.”