Prog-rock enthusiasts, young and old, will flock to Rahway for ProgStock 2019

by DANNY COLEMAN
Rachel Flowers interview

RACHEL FLOWERS

Multi-instrumentalist Rachel Flowers says she became enamored with progressive rock music at an early age.

“A friend of my mom and dad’s was playing (Emerson, Lake & Palmer’s) ‘The Endless Enigma’ and ‘Trilogy’ on a stereo at their house,” she says. “I wasn’t much of a rocker at the time … I was probably about 9 and I had been playing classical music like Bach … but he was playing ‘Trilogy’ and it got to the synthesizer part and I wondered, ‘What is that sound?’ Then one day my mom gave me a compilation of ELP tracks and that was the start.”

Flowers and a slew of other prog-rock performers and enthusiasts will converge on the Union County Performing Arts Center in Rahway, Oct. 11-13, for ProgStock, co-headlined by Brand X, Saga, 3.2 featuring Robert Berry, and Nektar. She will be participating on all three days, joining various artists.

The term that best describes Flowers is “hot commodity” as her talents are highly sought after and she has a string of past appearances at ProgStock festivals. “This is my third,” she says. “I was at the very first concert of the very first ProgStock.”

Flowers has overcome adversity in her life, accomplishing, through passion, what may seem like the equivalent of moving mountains to others. She has been blind since she was an infant yet took to the family piano so easily that by the age of 4 she enrolled in the Southern California Conservatory of Music.

“Piano was my first instrument, then flute when I was about 10, and then guitar,” she said as she was preparing for a violin lesson (adding yet another instrument to her arsenal). ProgStock will find her playing mostly piano and collaborating with Christopher Clark (of Brand X), Robert Berry and Michael Sadler (of Saga).

“Each set is completely different; they are short sets with three different acts,” she says. “I’ll be playing stuff from my first couple of albums and my original material will be sit-down versions on an incredible grand piano. I’m very excited.”

Robert Berry interview

ROBERT BERRY

Flowers is excited and so is Berry, not only to co-headline what he deems the mecca of progressive rock festivals, but to admire the talents of Flowers as well.

“The last time I saw Keith Emerson alive was at the NAMM music show in Los Angeles, and I met (ProgStock organizer) Tom Palmieri at the same time and he was talking about doing some things and suddenly he got this rock festival going and every year he gets bigger and better acts,” said Berry.

“Some of these acts I’ve never heard of but I’m very excited to see. He got his finger on the pulse of it so quickly. Some people just have a knack for things; he has a love for this, he has a yearning and a passion to make this good and I’m kind of surprised at how quick he built this.”

Berry sang and played bass in the ELP spinoff 3, also featuring Keith Emerson and Carl Palmer. He has also been a member of Ambrosia, and currently plays in the Greg Kihn Band. Berry released an album titled The Rules Have Changed under the 3.2 name in 2018; it featured his finished versions of songs he and Emerson had started working on together before Emerson’s death in 2016.

He’ll headline the first night of ProgStock with his 3.2. project.

“Although I’ve done things with a lot of famous people, this is such an honor, and Tom asked me to make it happen,” he said. “To me, ProgStock is the top of the mountain, so it’s really special. I’m performing with Michael Sadler and doing something a bit special with Rachel Flowers, which is the first time we will be doing that. I’m not sure how to put it. I’m just so honored because of the responses we are getting on this tour. It’s just hard for me to express it all.

“I knew Rachel as this incredible keyboard player and even saw her at NAMM and people watching were saying, ‘Wow, who is she?,’ and the next time I saw her she was playing guitar, flute … it seems like anything she wants to play, she does. It just seems like she’s capable of doing anything she wants musically, which is a wonderful thing.”

Those in attendance on Oct. 11 will have the chance to be part of something very special.

“We’re going to do a recording for a live album and a video,” said Berry. “By ProgStock, we’ll be 10 shows into the tour and we should be really smokin’ (laughs). … We’ll be playing things from my Magna Carta tribute album days (a series of albums paying tribute to various prog-rock artists), which progressive fans like because it’s material that they all know. I can’t wait to do this and I’m just honored and very excited.”

The cover of Michael Sadler’s 2004 album, “Clear.”

Another ProgStock veteran is Saga frontman Michael Sadler, who, like Berry, will be doing solo and band material as well as a few tunes with Flowers. Sadler says that when he was asked to be part of the festival lineup he was a bit unsure of how to handle it as a solo act, but things in this business can change quickly.

“I was invited to do ProgStock on my own last year because we couldn’t get the band together, which was kind of strange because I wasn’t sure what I could do solo. I knew (drummer) Jimmy Keegan so I contacted him and he made a few calls and things progressed from there. I was put in touch with (bassist) Ed Platt and he put a set together with members of the band Enchant and they became my surrogate Saga. Then I enhanced it with Rachel Flowers and I also brought my son out to do a little acoustic number that he wrote when he was 10 and it brought the house down. He got more applause than me, which he reminds me about every single day (laughs). I had went to the side of the stage and told him if he didn’t feel comfortable with doing it, he didn’t have to do so, and he looked at me and said, ‘I’ve got this dad,’ and he proceeded to own the room.”

Once he was at ProgStock 2018, Sadler slipped into a comfort zone. He says that was due to the vibe of the event. And then, of course, there was Flowers.

“I was there for the whole weekend,” he says. “I did a little emceeing, I sat in with Tom Brislin. ProgStock is really cool; it’s not like the other festivals where there’s just a bunch of bands getting together. There’s a real sense of cooperative where everybody likes everybody and people sit in with each other. It’s like one big happy family, and it’s great. I was introduced to a bunch of talent I had never heard before and it’s just a really cool experience.

“I had heard all about Rachel and everyone was raving about her — who she was and what she was all about — so I thought it might be kind of cool to do a few songs with her. I was put in touch with her so I suggested we do ‘Nights in White Satin,’ because I thought it’d be fun, a Saga tune and one of my own. She sent me back her piano version of ‘Nights in White Satin’ and she didn’t just learn the chords, she learned the entire orchestration on piano and there were no parts missing. When I heard it I thought, ‘This is impossible. Take away the fact that she’s blind. This is impossible for a sighted person.’ Now add that to the mix and it was astounding and it was great to perform with her.

“So, yeah, she’s written a few songs and there’s something to be said about possibly collaborating in one capacity or another, and I’ll be sitting in with her on Sunday (Oct. 13). I feel it’s a privilege to play with someone who can play that well and I certainly look forward to it. She’s so excitable, her innocence is remarkable. She can’t see the people applauding so last time I told her they were all standing up and she says, ‘Yay,’ and gets excited. It’s so refreshing.”

ProgStock 2019 also features an appearance by Nektar as they celebrate 50 years of music, plus multiple other acts from days gone by as well as up-and-comers.

For tickets and information about the festival, visit progstock.com.

For more about Flowers, Barry or Sadler, visit rachelflowersmusic.com., facebook.com/Robertberrymusic or michaelsadler.com.

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