Hello everyone, welcome to another interview from the prog metal underground! This time you will be joining me with Clément Darrieu (lead singer/guitarist and songwriter) and Henri (keyboards) from France’s own Altesia. You might know them from their critically acclaimed Paragon Circus which debuted in 2019. This album impressed the ears of many with its super progressive display of creative songwriting and elaborate, technical musicianship. This album is epic, melodic, and awe-inspiring but also so organic which makes it stand the test of time. Their sound has often been said to be a marriage between Haken’s quirky interludes and epic song structures, and Opeth’s dark atmosphere and memorable guitar sections.
Altesia’s 2019 debut Paragon Circus is thematically about a Pandora’s Box type of scenario, opening up a can-of-worms, that cannot be stopped. This has its implications on where we are as a species, massive wealth inequality, rampant political corruption, destruction of the planet, possible technological singularities, etc. However, in their 2021 sophomore album: Embryo, the band illustrates more of an optimistic response to this gloomy future. There is a glint of hope for us to save ourselves through self-reflection, cleansing the mind of attachments to frivolous things, prioritizing our purposes in life, and developing love and empathy for others.
Hello Clément and the band of Altesia, thank you for joining us for this interview. I have been a fan of your work since your debut in 2019, and I am very impressed with your work in your 2021 sophomore output Embryo. I think it stays true to who you are as a band while changing up your approach enough not to be a rehash of Paragon Circus. Additionally, it is evident that you have grown a lot as a band in terms of the technical and melodic skill in your songwriting; you can now write longer songs, shorter more catchy songs, and in a more cohesive way. However, as an Opeth fan, I will say that I miss the growls.
For our readers who have not yet listened to Altesia, how would you describe the band in your own words?
Clément: Hey Sebastian! First of all, I miss Opeth’s growls too! 😀 But it’s okay, we still have their old records, right? As for Altesia, we are a progressive metal band from France. For us, being “progressive” means we are free in the way we compose, we don’t try to fit within a particular genre and we love to experiment with different approaches, different styles, whether it is jazz, or pop, or djent, or funk or whatever!
To avid prog listeners, you wear your influences on your sleeve. How much do you guys balance conveying music that sounds like your influences and in curating your own sound with experimentation?
Clément: I guess we don’t try to sound like this or that band, even though, as you say, we have some identified influences. On our first album, “Paragon Circus”, maybe they were sometimes a bit too obvious with hindsight, so this time, I’ve opened myself to some new bands I didn’t know before, to try to add some new sounds to my palette. Also, this time, we spent a lot of time on the arrangements as a band, and I think each musician really worked hard to put his own touch to the songs. In the end, you can still feel our influences, but they are maybe more “digested”, and it sounds more personal and authentic.
Henri: My approach when arranging the songs is more about what ‘works’. I don’t think too much about if it sounds too much like so and so, or if it’s “me”, I focus more on if it serves the song. I listen to a wide variety of music, so I have a lot to pick from, and also with experience you start to realise nothing is ever ‘just you’, it comes from somewhere, experimentation is a process all musicians are part of collectively.
With “A Liar’s Oath” and “Mouth of the Sky”, Altesia has been exploring shorter and catchier tracks. What are some of the pros and cons in writing “singles” rather than longer, more experimental compositions?
Clément: Those two songs were written in that particular perspective: to be the two singles off the new album. So it was important, as you mention, to get some catchy choruses and shorter lengths. We made a lot of long songs in our first album “Paragon Circus”, so this time, I wanted to experiment with something different with shorter tracks. It’s a good format to promote a new record with a music video, and it’s also a way to put some fresh air into a show by adding a shorter track in-between two long songs. The biggest difficulty, to me at least, would be to try to make it sound “prog”, knowing that you won’t have a lot of time to develop your ideas, as making a single is the exact opposite of making long prog songs…
Not many progressive metal bands, both underground and in the mainstream, are able to write epic songs (Exit Initia and Cassandra’s Prophesy) that are as cohesive as Altesia’s. What bands do you most look towards as the golden standard for writing epic 15+ minute songs?
Clément : Definitely Haken. They remain one of my biggest influences when I start writing for Altesia, even though I try to detach myself from them, but that’s hard because I’ve been listening to them for such a long time! (Laughs). Their epics, to me, are always the best ones on their records. Though, I don’t try to make a Haken song when I compose. We share tricks and gimmicks I’d say, but I don’t try to sound like them when I compose an epic song or just a casual song. But yes indeed, not all prog bands manage to come up with really good long songs that keep you onboard for 15+ minutes! So it’s definitely a challenge, and we love that! 🙂
Henri: One of the most important things when writing such long songs is to have a progression, especially in terms of dynamics. That’s something that is very obvious in post-rock, for example, Mono has some songs that are like long crescendos. In “Exit Initia” we spent a lot of time working on the final part and the transition leading to it. We ended up with a long, dramatic build-up with a part somewhat inspired by the Requiem, that ends up exploding into the chorus. I think it’s stuff like that that makes it feel like an actual song and not just a juxtaposition of riffs and ideas.
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