Arena Re-Visited Box Set and Double Vision Vinyl now available

A limited edition Box Set consisting of 1 BluRay, 1 DVD, 2 CD’s and a 18x18cm 48 Page colour Booklet, commemorating our 2018 Tour is now available to buy in our store.  

Click HERE to see more details including an unboxing video to get a closer look at the contents!

Recorded on 12th May 2018 at the Boerderij, Zoetermeer in front of a sell-out crowd, the box set contains the full 2hr show on both a BluRay disc and DVD disc, along with the audio recording across 2 CD’s and captures the Visitor in entirety.  The box set also includes a large 18cmx18cm 48 page colour booklet of photo’s taken on the tour. The Box Set is limited to 500 copies.

The full set list is as follows:Part 1 (The Visitor):   Crack in the IcePins and NeedlesDouble VisionEleaThe Hanging TreeA State of GraceBlood Red RoomIn the Blink of an Eye(Don’t Forget to) BreatheSerenityTears in the Rain Enemy Without Running from Damascus The Visitor Part 2:                   PoisonedJerichoMirror LiesTinder BoxSolomonAscensionCrying 7 You can now purchase the Box Set on our shop HERE

Also available is a double gatefold Vinyl edition of Double Vision, 2x180g Gold Discs.

Double Vision is now available to purchase on Vinyl.  The Album is 2 180g Gold discs, you can buy from our website HERE

Arena Re-Visited Box Set and Double Vision Vinyl now available for Pre-Order

A limited edition Box Set consisting of 1 BluRay, 1 DVD, 2 CD’s and a 18x18cm 48 Page colour Booklet, commemorating our 2018 Tour is now available to pre-order.  

Recorded on 12th May 2018 at the Boerderij, Zoetermeer in front of a sell-out crowd, the box set contains the full 2hr show on both a BluRay disc and DVD disc, along with the audio recording across 2 CD’s and captures the Visitor in entirety.  The box set also includes a large 18cmx18cm 48 page colour booklet of photo’s taken on the tour. The Box Set is limited to 500 copies.

The full set list is as follows:
Part 1 (The Visitor):   
Crack in the Ice
Pins and Needles
Double Vision
Elea
The Hanging Tree
A State of Grace
Blood Red Room
In the Blink of an Eye
(Don’t Forget to) Breathe
Serenity
Tears in the Rain
Enemy Without
Running from Damascus
The Visitor 

Part 2:                   
Poisoned
Jericho
Mirror Lies
Tinder Box
Solomon
Ascension
Crying 7

You can pre-order the Box Set on our shopHERE

Also available is a double gatefold Vinyl edition of Double Vision, 2x180g Gold Discs.

Double Vision is now available to Pre-Order on Vinyl.  The Album is 2 180g Gold discs, you can pre-order from our website HERE

On Tour next month!

We are excited to back on tour in Canada later this month and then in the UK and Europe next month.

Ticket links are provided in the list below and available via links on our website.

We are also offering VIP passes for these gigs, the VIP pass get’s you in to see the soundcheck, have a meet & greet and photo opportunities with the band, a limited edition poster and an exclusive VIP laminate – from 5pm to 6pm on the day of the gig (please note this is an add-on to your ticket, so you will still need to buy a ticket for the show)

– Click HERE to find out more details and purchase

Saturday 30th MarchSalle Jean-Paul-Tardif, Quebec City, Canada 
Wednesday 3rd AprilAcademy 3, Manchester, England
Thursday 4th AprilRobin 2, Bilston, England
Friday 5th AprilWaterfront Studio, Norwich, England
Saturday 6th AprilULU, London, England
Tuesday 9th AprilZ7, Pratteln, Switzerland
Wednesday 10th AprilBackstage, Munich, Germany
Thursday 11th AprilDas Rind, Rüsselsheim, Germany
Friday 12th AprilZeche Carl, Essen, Germany
Saturday 13th AprilBoerderij, Zoetermeer, Netherlands
Sunday 14th AprilNeuberinhaus, Reichenbach, Germany

ARENA – DOUBLE VISION – VERGLAS

Arena, a band that in many ways was brought together by a running joke in an underground fanzine, which led directly to Mick Pointer realizing that there was quite a vibrant prog scene. In turn, he was introduced to Clive Nolan, and the rest, as they say, is history. The debut ‘Songs From The Lion’s Cage’ was released in 1995, and the jokes soon started about never being at far left or far right on a band photo as you would be the next to leave, but the guys have been stable now for quite sometimes, with the same line-up since 2011’s ‘The Seventh Degree of Separation’. That was the last album I heard, as for some reason I missed 2015’s ‘The Unquiet Sky’, although I have been listening to quite a lot of Clive’s other works, as well as releases featuring guitarist John Mitchell (the line-up being completed by singer Paul Manzi and bassist Kylan Amos).

Having played Clive’s ‘Alchemy’ so much that it is almost worn out (according to LastFM it is my second most played album since I joined that site in 2007, behind only Camel’s ‘The Snow Goose), plus having known him for more than quarter of a century (I feel old) and having most of his projects, I was really looking forward to this album, and I wasn’t disappointed. While Arena is first and foremost a progressive rock band, what I found fascinating with this album is the amount of theatricality within it. Paul Manzi surely has one of the most expressive and emotive voices around, and his relationship with Clive is long-standing in this and other projects, and they have an innate understanding of what is needed to take a song to the next level. There are times when I am clearly reminded of his performance on the aforementioned ‘Alchemy’, such is the power of his storytelling.

But, this is very much a band album, although it obviously has been heavily influenced by Clive who wrote or co-wrote every song and provided all the lyrics, but Mick is playing better than ever, Kylan has a great sliding style that really suits the music. Then on top of it all, there is the incomparable John Mitchell. He may not have been the original guitarist (who was Keith More, ex-Asia, for the first two albums) but he has been there for twenty years now, during which time he has built a considerable reputation as one of the finest guitarists in the scene, and I don’t think anyone was really surprised when he joined It Bites. He knows when to riff and drive the music along when to provide solos, when to use restraint and when to just let the music rock.

Here we are in 2018 and both Galahad and Arena have this year released possibly the finest albums of their careers, only time will fully be able to judge that, showing that although they were in the underground scene in the Nineties, playing all the dives that entailed due to no publicity (or internet!), they are ready and able to reap the rewards of keeping going when others have given up. This is a stunning album, one that all progheads need to discover at once if not sooner. I loved it the very first time I played it, and it has only got better the more I listen to it.

9/10

By Kev Rowland