Review by Gary Hill In 2015 Neal Morse put together Morsefest. It was a two night event. On one night of the show, he performed his ? album, while the second night they did Solo Scriptura. This set is an amazing document of the event. It includes four audio CDs of all the music. There are also two DVDs, one of each night. For those who don't know, Morse was the main guy in Spock's Beard until around 2002 when he left to pursue his religious fervor by going into Christian prog. Let me just say that if you like Spock's Beard, you will love this. It's quite similar. I do need to talk a bit about the Christian aspect. Personally, I tend not to be too worried about the type of stuff being sung in music. It doesn't really have a lot of impact on my enjoyment of the songs. I'll say as a non-Christian that there were only two points here where the message did get in the way for me a little. In one case it was an actually preaching section (spoken), and the other was lyrics that got me trying to figure out where Morse's head could be to have such a wrong idea of what non-Christians are thinking. Beyond that, though, this is the kind of thing that will appeal to prog fans regardless of their theological biases.
Getting into some more details here. First, in addition to his solo work, Morse and company performed some Spock's Beard and Transatlantic (another outfit that has Morse as a member) music. For the main band, Morse has the legendary Mike Portnoy on drums, Randy George on bass, Bill Habauer on keys and Eric Gillette on guitar. All of those guys also provide some vocals, while Morse does guitar, keys and vocals. There are some other musicians here including a horn section, background singers and a string section. Additionally, Nick D'Virgilio guests on drums and vocals and Phil Keaggy provides some guitar.
This is a very satisfying and entertaining set. There is a Blu-Ray version, but personally, I think I prefer this one because I'll probably listen to the CDs a lot more than I'll watch the videos. That said, I should talk about the video. This is a classy production. The sound and video quality are top-notch. One complaint I need to make is that there are two bonus features listed, but only one here. The "behind the scenes" listed on the first disc, doesn't appear to be there. It's on the second disc instead of the "prog jeopardy" that's listed on that one. That's more an explanation or description than a complaint, though. Given the quality of what we get, the extra bonus feature is not missed at all.
This review is available in book format (hardcover and paperback) in Music Street Journal: 2017 Volume 3 at lulu.com/strangesound.