Showing posts with label Fish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fish. Show all posts

Monday, May 12, 2025

Dave’s Faves: Songs of the Year

Dave’s Faves:

Songs of the Year, 1900-2024

These are my personal favorite songs for each year from 1900 to present.

Click here to see other Dave’s Faves song lists.


Resources and Related Links:


Last updated 1/1/2025.

Monday, December 23, 2024

Dave’s Faves: Albums of the Year (1963-2024)

Dave’s Faves:

Albums of the Year, 1963-2024

These are my personal favorite albums each year from 1963 to the present.

You can check out other album of the year lists here. See more Dave’s Faves lists here.


Resources and Related Links:


First posted 8/12/2020; last updated 12/23/2024.

Saturday, December 30, 2023

Dave’s Faves: #1 Songs in the 2020s

Dave’s Faves:

#1’s: 2020-2029

September 18, 1982. I can peg my fascination with music charts to that date. After listening to a local radio station’s countdown of the hits of the summer, I decided to make my own list of favorites (see original list here). I ended up revising it every few days, eventually developing my own charts which I maintained into the ‘90s.

I’ve also projected before and after those lists to create speculative lists of #1 songs for eras not covered by those original charts. You can check out those links here, but this page is focused on the #1 songs that might have been for me in the 2010s.

Click here to see other Dave’s Faves song lists.


2020:

  • Feb. 1: Alanis Morissette “Reasons I Drink” (4)
  • Feb. 29: Indigo Girls “Shit Kickin’” (2)
  • March 14: Sting “(Sittin’ on) The Dock of the Bay” (4)
  • April 11: Fish “Weltschmerz” (3)
  • May 2: Eric Bazilian “Help!” (5)
  • June 6: Indigo Girls “Country Radio” (4)
  • July 4: Glass Animals “Heat Waves” (3)
  • July 25: Chris Cornell “Patience” (3)
  • Aug. 15: Fish “Garden of Remembrance” (5)
  • Sept. 12: Fish “This Party’s Over” (5)
  • Oct. 17: Bruce Springsteen “Letter to You” (1)
  • Oct. 24: John Mitchell “A Gentleman’s Excuse Me” (3)
  • Nov. 14: Crowded House “Whatever You Want” (3)
  • Dec. 5: Del Amitri “Close Your Eyes and Think of England” (4)

2021:

  • Jan. 8: Olivia Rodrigo “Drivers License” (7)
  • Feb. 27: Post Malone “Only Wanna Be with You” (6)
  • April 10: Dennis DeYoung “Isle of Misanthrope” (3)
  • May 1: Eric Bazilian “Back in the 80s” (5)
  • June 5: Styx “Crash of the Crown” (4)
  • July 3: Jon Batiste “Freedom” (3)
  • July 24: Walker Hayes “Fancy Like” (4)
  • Aug. 21: Angel Olsen “Safety Dance” (3)
  • Sept. 11: Chris Stapleton “Nothing Else Matters” (4)
  • Oct. 2: John Mellencamp & Bruce Springsteen “Wasted Days” (5)
  • Nov. 6: Tears for Fears “The Tipping Point” (4)
  • Dec. 4: Kacey Musgraves “Fix You” (3)
  • Dec. 25: Tears for Fears “No Small Thing” (4)

2022:

  • Jan. 22: Tears for Fears “Break the Man” (3)
  • Feb. 22: Keb’ Mo’ “Lean on Me” (4)
  • Mar. 12: Tears for Fears “Long Long Long Time” (3)
  • Mar. 31: Lyle Lovett “12th of June” (5)
  • May 7: Bonnie Raitt “Just Like That” (5)
  • June 11: Alan Parsons with Tommy Shaw “Uroboros” (3)
  • July 2: Michael Franti & Spearhead “Life Is Amazing” (3)
  • July 23: Weezer “Records” (3)
  • Aug. 13: Noah Kahan “Stick Season” (3)
  • Sept. 3: Michael Franti & Spearhead “No Makeup” (1)
  • Sept. 10: Hardy with Lainey Wilson “Wait in the Truck” (1)
  • Sept. 17: Death Cab for Cutie “Pepper” (2)
  • Oct. 1: Beck “Old Man” (4)
  • Oct. 29: Simple Minds “The Walls Came Down” (2)
  • Nov. 12: Willie Nelson with Lucinda Williams “Live Forever” (6)
  • Dec. 24: Jelly Roll “Need a Favor” (4)

2023:

  • Jan. 14: The New Pornographers “Really Really Light” (3)
  • Feb. 24: The National “Tropic Morning News” (4)
  • Mar. 4: Beck “Thinking About You” (3)
  • Mar. 25: The Revivalists “Kid” (2)
  • Apr. 8: Joy Oladokun & Noah Kahan “We’re All Gonna Die” (3)
  • Apr. 29: Jenny Lewis “Psychos” (2)
  • May 13: Ben Folds “Exhausting Lover” (2)
  • May 27: John Mellencamp “Hey God” (1)
  • June 3: Joy Oladokun “Taking Things for Granted” (1)
  • June 10: The National & Taylor Swift “The Alcott” (1)
  • June 17: John Mellencamp “The Eyes of Portland” (2)
  • July 1: Hozier “Francesca” (2)
  • July 15: Noah Kahan “Dial Drunk” (2)
  • July 29: Fall Out Boy “We Didn’t Start the Fire” (2)
  • Aug. 12: Foo Fighters with Alanis Morissette “Mandinka” (2)
  • Aug. 26: The Gaslight Anthem with Bruce Springsteen “History Books” (3)
  • Sept. 16: Zach Bryan & Kacey Musgraves “I Remember Everything” (2)
  • Sept. 30: Blink-182 “One More Time” (3)
  • Oct. 21: Bruce Springsteen “Addicted to Romance” (2)
  • Nov. 4: The Beatles “Now and Then” (4)
  • Dec. 2: Trevor Horn & Steve Hogarth “Drive” (4)

Resources and Related Links:


First posted 12/30/2023.

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Dave’s Faves: #1 Albums in the 2020s

Dave’s Faves:

#1’s: 2020-2029

These are my personal #1 albums during the 2020s. Check out my #1 albums from other decades here.


2020:
  • Jan. 4: Beck Hyperspace (2 wks)
  • Jan. 18: The Who Who (4 wks)
  • Feb. 15: David Bowie Is It Any Wonder? (2 wks)
  • Feb. 29: Huey Lewis & the News Weather (4 wks)
  • Mar. 28: Pearl Jam Gigaton (3 wks)
  • Apr. 18: The Strokes The New Abnormal (2 wks)
  • May 2: Fiona Apple Fetch the Bolt Cutters (1 wk)
  • May 9: David Bowie Changes Now Bowie (1 wk)
  • May 16: Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit Reunions (1 wk)
  • May 23: Indigo Girls Look Long (2 wks)
  • June 6: Dennis DeYoung 26 East Vol. 1 (5 wks)
  • July 11: Michael Franti & Spearhead Work Hard and Be Nice (5 wks)
  • Aug. 15: Alanis Morissette Such Pretty Forks in the Road (4 wks)
  • Sept. 12: The Killers Imploding the Mirage (2 wks)
  • Sept. 26: Prince Sign ‘O’ the Times: Super Deluxe Edition (3 wks)
  • Oct. 17: Fish Weltschmerz (6 wks)
  • Nov. 28: Bruce Springsteen Letter to You (4 wks)
  • Dec. 26: The Struts Strange Days (2 wks)

2021:

2022:

First posted 5/19/2022; last updated 7/20/2022.

Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Marillion and Fish: The Top 100 Songs/Top 20 Albums


Fish-era Marillion


Steve Hogarth-era Marillion

Marillion & Fish

Top 100 Songs/
Top 20 Albums

This list was originally posted on 4/25/2015 in honor of Fish’s birthday. He was born Derek Dick on April 25, 1958. From 1981 to 1988, he was the lead singer of British neo-progressive-rock group Marillion. They had their greatest success with 1985’s Misplaced Childhood, a #1 album in the UK. After the follow-up album, 1987’s Clutching at Straws and the live album The Thieving Magpie in 1988, Fish left the band for a solo career.

Fish released 11 studio albums as a solo act from 1990 to 2020. He claimed that his 2020 album, Weltschmerz, would be his last solo effort. Meanwhile, Marillion replaced Fish with Steve Hogarth. From 1989 to 2016, they released thirteen studio albums. The first three, Seasons End (1989), Holidays in Eden (1991), and Brave (1994) were all top-10 albums in the UK. Both acts have built devoted fanbases by asking fans to pre-order releases as a means of financing studio albums. They’ve also both released multiple live albums through their websites that are not always available through convential retail outlets.

Click here to see other best-of lists from performers and here to see other best-of lists from songwriters and/or producers.


Spotify Podcast:

Check out the Dave’s Music Database podcasts Marillion: The Best of the Fish Years, 1981-1988 (premiere: March 1, 2022 at 7pm CST) and Marillion: The Best of the Hogarth Years, 1989-2022 (premiere: March 8, 2022 at 7pm CST). Both are based on this list. Tune in every Tuesday at 7pm CST for a new episode based on the lists at Dave’s Music Database.

Awards for Marillion:

Awards for Fish:


Top 100 Songs by Marillion and Fish


Dave’s Music Database lists are determined by song’s appearances on best-of lists as well as chart success, sales, radio airplay, streaming, and awards. Songs are by Marillion unless noted otherwise.

DMDB Top 5%:

1. Kayleigh (1985)

DMDB Top 20%:

2. Incommunicado (1987)
3. Script for a Jester’s Tear (1983)
4. Warm Wet Circles (1987)
5. He Knows You Know (1983)
6. Sugar Mice (1987)
7. Garden Party (1983)
8. Lavender (1985)
9. Heart of Lothian (1985)
10. Lady Nina (1985)

11. Shortcut to Somewhere (Fish with Tony Banks, 1986)
12. Freaks (1985)
13. A Gentleman’s Excuse Me (Fish, 1990)
14. Estonia (1997)
15. Market Square Heroes (1982)
16. Hooks in You (1989)

Beyond the DMDB Top 20%:

17. Sympathy (1992)
18. The Hollow Man (1994)
19. Punch and Judy (1984)
20. Assassing (1984)

21. Childhood’s End? (1985)
22. Fugazi (1984)
23. Beautiful (1995)
24. Alone Again in the Lap of Luxury (1994)
25. Easter (1989)
26. The Uninvited Guest (1989)
27. She Chameleon (1984)
28. Forgotten Sons (1983)
29. Solo (Fish, 1993)
30. No One Can (1991)

31. After Me (1989)
32. Cliché (Fish, 1990)
33. Blind Curve (1985)
34. Cover My Eyes (1991)
35. Pseudo Silk Kimono (1985)
36. Big Wedge (Fish, 1989)
37. Chelsea Monday (1983)
38. Tux On (1987)
39. Bitter Suite (1985)
40. Credo (Fish, 1991)

41. That Time of the Night (1987)
42. Lords of the Backstage (1985)
43. A Collection (1991)
44. Another Murder of a Day (Fish with Tony Banks, 1991)
45. Cinderella Search (1984)
46. Just Good Friends (Fish, 1991)
47. Going Under (1987)
48. Hold Your Head Up (Fish, 1992)
49. The Web (1983)
50. Fortunes of War (Fish, 1994)

51. The Party (1991)
52. Incubus (1984)
53. Dry Land (1991)
54. The Last Straw (1987)
55. Internal Exile (Fish, 1991)
56. You’re Gone (2004)
57. This Party’s Over (Fish, 2020)
58. Don’t Hurt Yourself (2004)
59. Jigsaw (1984)
60. Slainte Mhath (1987)

61. Angel Face (Fish with Tony Banks, 1991)
62. Most Toys (2007)
63. White Russian (1987)
64. Just for the Record (1987)
65. White Feather (1985)
66. The King of Sunset Town (1989)
67. Waterhole (Expresso Bongo) (1985)
68. Living with the Big Lie (1994)
69. Torch Song (1987)
70. Hotel Hobbies (1987)

71. Question (Fish, 1992)
72. Made Again (1994)
73. Lady Let It Lie (Fish, 1994)
74. Something in the Air (Fish, 1991)
75. Man of a Thousand Faces (1997)
76. Grendel (1982)
77. State of Mind (Fish, 1989)
78. Half-Full Jam (2008)
79. The Voyeur (I Like to Watch) (Fish, 1989)
80. Vigil (Fish, 1990)

81. The Great Escape (1994)
82. Incomplete (Fish, 1999)
83. See It Like a Baby (2007)
84. The Company (Fish, 1990)
85. Lucky (Fish, 1991)
86. Margaret (1983)
87. Dear Friend (Fish, 1991)
88. Whatever Is Wrong with You? (2008)
89. Boston Tea Party (Fish, 1993)
90. Runaway (1994)

91. Cannibal Surf Babe (1995)
92. Apeman (Fish, 1993)
93. Berlin (1989)
94. Garden of Remembrance (Fish, 2020)
95. Family Business (Fish, 1990)
96. Emerald Lies (1984)
97. Thank You Whoever You Are (2007)
98. Three Boats Down from the Candy (1982)
99. Power (2012)
100. I Will Walk on Water (1992)


Top 20 Studio Albums by Marillion and Fish


Dave’s Music Database lists are determined by album’s appearances on best-of lists as well as chart success, sales, critics’ ratings, and awards. Albums are by Marillion unless noted otherwise.

1. Misplaced Childhood (1985)
2. Script for a Jester’s Tear (1983)
3. Clutching at Straws (1987)
4. Brave (1994)
5. Seasons End (1989)
6. Fugazi (1984)
7. Vigil in a Wilderness of Mirrors (Fish, 1990)
8. Marbles (2004)
9. Holidays in Eden (1991)
10. Internal Exile (Fish, 1991)

11. Afraid of Sunlight (1995)
12. Anoraknophobia (2001)
13. Raingods with Zippos (Fish, 1999)
14. Weltschmerz (Fish, 2020)
15. Songs from the Mirror (Fish, 1993)
16. This Strange Engine (1997)
17. Sunsets on Empire (Fish, 1997)
18. Field of Crows (Fish, 2004)
19. 13th Star (2007)
20. Happiness Is the Road (2008)


Resources and Related Links:


First posted 4/25/2015; last updated 3/8/2022.

Thursday, February 24, 2022

Fish: A Retrospective, 1981-2022

Fish

A Retrospective: 1981-2022

Overview:


Born: Derek William Dick
Date: April 25, 1958
Where: Edinburgh, Scotland


Known As:

neo-progressive rock singer/songwriter

Significant Bands:


On the Web:

Awards:

The Studio Albums:

Hover over an album for the name and year of release. Click to see its DMDB page.


Compilations/Specialty Albums


Live Albums

The Marillion Years (1981-1988):

Derek Dick, aka “Fish,” was best known for his work in the ‘80s with British neo-prog rock group Marillion. His nickname dated back to his pre-Marillion days when he was a forestry worker. He “stayed in the bathtub for hours” PF and his landlady became upset, “allowing him to take only one bath per week; threatening him with charging twenty pence for every extra bath. Fish thus stayed roughly two hours in the bathtub every time and brought beer, sweets, a book, and other leisurely objects with him!” PF

Marillion initially formed in 1979 as an instrumental band consisting of guitarist Steve Rothery, bassist Doug Irvine, keyboardist Brian Jelliman, and drummer Mick Pointer. Irvine started singing on the some of the group’s first demos in 1980, but then the band invited Fish to join as vocalist in 1981. JB

They released their debut album, Script for a Jester’s Tear, in 1983. Fish’s vocals and stage persona invited comparisons to Peter Gabriel and early Genesis. The band, however, carved out their own neo-progressive sound and grew their following over the next couple of albums, 1984’s Fugazi and 1985’s Misplaced Childhood. The latter gave Marillion a #1 album in the UK, fueled by the top-5 singles Kayleigh and Lavender.

Vigil (1988-90):

Fish’s first solo album, Vigil in a Wilderness of Mirrors, was released in January 1990 by EMI Records. It generated three top-40 singles in the UK. It “continued the theatrical flair of Marillion’s quasi-concept albums.” JB

A contractual dispute with EMI took Fish out of the spotlight. He couldn’t record music or tour. It prompted him to build his own studio, which as he said, “proved an invaluable asset and is now my residence as well as my place of work.” CO


Vigil in a Wilderness of Mirrors (1990):

  • State of Mind (10/16/89, 32 UK) KF
  • Big Wedge (12/27/89, 25 UK) KF, BB
  • A Gentleman’s Excuse Me (3/5/90, 30 UK) KF, BB
  • Cliché BB
  • The Company BB

Polydor Records and a Covers Album (1991-93):

The studio was completed in 1991 and Fish signed to Polydor Records in time to record his second album with producer Chris Kimsey, who’d worked on Fish’s last two albums with Marillion. “Equipment was still being wired in as the tapes started to roll.” CO The resulting album, Internal Exile, was released in May 1991, but didn’t have the hoped impact. “The myriad of styles on Exile led to some confusion as to which direction he should follow.” CO

In his personal life, Fish and his wife Tamara had a baby girl, Tara Rowena, on January 1, 1991.


Internal Exile (1991):

  • Internal Exile (9/9/91, 37 UK) KF
  • Credo (12/2/91, 38 UK) KF, BB
  • Something in the Air (6/22/92, 51 UK)
  • Just Good Friends (Close) (8/15/95, 63 UK) KF, BB
  • Lucky KF

As a result, Fish’s next project was a covers’ album. As he said, “I needed to rediscover the magic that had pulled me into music in the first place. I needed to get rid of the cynicism and bitterness that had taken over my music during the last couple of years and opted to purge myself by recording an album of songs that were favourites of mine when ‘Fish’ was a dream and Derek William Dick was a teenager, songs I’d performed with a broom handle doubling for a mike stand in front of a large wardrobe mirror in the upstairs of my old family home in Dalkeith. Songs that had previously inspired me in some way or another.’” CO


Songs from the Mirror (1993):

  • Hold Your Head Up (12/12/92, --)
  • Solo BB

Dick Brothers Record Company (1993-97):

Neither fans nor the record label were enamored with a covers’ album from Fish. He was, once again, without a record label. However, thanks to a successful tour, Fish opted to start his own label, the Dick Brothers Record Company. He released Sushi, a double live album of the tour as the first of a series of “official” bootlegs. Fish “was one of the first artists to promote the idea of ‘official bootlegs.’” CO

They “enabled him to finance Suits, his first independent solo release.” COSuits proved the big man…could still write and repaired some of the damage done by the covers project.” CO It also gave him a #1 independent single with Lady Let it Lie. CO


Suits (1994):

  • Lady Let It Lie (4/5/94, 46 UK) KF, BB
  • Fortunes of War (9/19/94, 67 UK) KF, BB
  • Raw Meat BB

After the Suits album, Fish released Yin and Yang, a two-album “compilation of re-recordings and previously released material from both his solo and Marillion eras.” CO This allowed the touring to continue as far as South East Asia and South America but at the same time created an awareness of the limitations of being an artist and a record company.” CO The subsequent “tour would leave an impression that would light the fuse on what many fans would regard as the resurgence of Fish’s solo career.” CO

He released another studio album, Sunsets on Empire, on the Dick Brothers label in 1997. Steven Wilson of Porcupine Tree served as producer and co-writer on the album. He “pulled him in a creative direction he had ignored for a long time and, with engineer Elliot Ness, they produced an album that defied his critics and signalled to the fans that he was back…Fish’s reputation as one of the great rock lyricists…was greatly enhanced as he welded his worldly experience with his strong sense of social justice and political awareness.” CO

The supporting tour took Fish to the United States and Canada for the first time in a decade, but it took a toll on his private life. As he said, “I returned home from tour in Christmas ‘97…I had practically lost my house, had distanced myself from my family but I had changed out there on the road. I would have made the same decision again given the chance as that experience on the Sunsets tour woke me up to life. The big problem was that I was now back in the eyes of the fans, but broke and in need of a major re-evaluation.” CO


Sunsets on Empire (1997):

  • Brother 52 (4/28/97, --) KF, BB
  • Change of Heart (8/11/97, --)
  • Goldfish and Clowns (8/11/97, --) KF, BB
  • The Perception of Johnny Punter BB
  • Tara BB

Kettle of Fish

Fish


Released: October 28, 1998


Recorded: 1989-1996


Peak: --


Sales (in millions): --


Genre: neo-progressive rock


Tracks: (1) Big Wedge (2) Just Good Friends (3) Brother 52 (4) Chasing Miss Pretty (5) Credo (6) A Gentlemen’s Excuse Me (7) Goldfish and Clowns (8) Lady Let It Lie (9) Lucky (10) State of Mind (11) Mr. Buttons (12) Fortunes of War (13) Internal Exile

Rating:

3.506 out of 5.00 (average of 7 ratings)


Awards: (Click on award to learn more).

About Kettle of Fish:

After 1997’s Sunsets on Empire, Fish signed a contract with Roadrunner Records which included his back catalog. In 1998, they released the compilation Kettle of Fish which highlighted his solo career up to that point and included two new tracks.


Tracks Not on Previously Noted Albums:

  • Chasing Miss Pretty KF
  • Mr. Buttons KF

Roadrunner Records (1998-99):

After releasing Kettle of Fish, Roadrunner Records released Fish’s next studio album, Raingods with Zippos. Fish said, “I started to work on Raingods after returning from a writing sabbatical…Sessions gave me a lot of confidence as a singer/songwriter and working with other respected writers in focused situations showed me a different approach to creating music. It was a great experience overall.’” CO The album included the 20-minute epic Plague of Ghosts, “yet another return to form.” CO

Unfortunately, Fish’s relationship with Roadrunner Records soured when the greatest-hits package didn’t meet expectations and Zippos sold “as many as Sunsets with greatly reduced income.” CO


Raingods with Zippos (1999):

  • Incomplete (3/22/99, --) BB
  • Plague of Ghosts BB

Another Label, Another Album (2000-03):

In 2000, Fish got his back catalog returned and launched a new label, Chocolate Frog Record Company, named after a lyric from “Plague of Ghosts.” CO He explained, that a “head full of chocolate frogs is a Scottish term used for someone who isn’t quite with it, who’s drunk, out of it or acting weird. It seemed appropriate for someone who’s considered a ‘bit strange’ in the current manifestation of the music industry.” CO

“Inspired by the neosurrealism of Italian movie director Federico Fellini,” CO Fish named the next album Fellini Days. Fish “took the works of the director and laid them alongside his own experiences to create ‘a movie for people's ears.’ It threaded Fish’s now intense personal life with the surrealism of road experiences in a feast of images.” CO


Fellini Days (2001):

  • Our Smile BB
  • Long Cold Day BB
  • Clock Moves Sideways BB

The album was made available through mail order several months before it was available, which gave Fish the finances to “record with the production values his followers had come to expect.” CO This allowed Fish “to make albums on his own terms, to the standard and quality he wanted, with material he was in control of, under no serious commercial pressure.” CO

As Fish says, “It doesn’t really bother me, the fact that I don’t sell millions of albums these days.” CO “I don’t need the fame fix that is the current ‘junk’ of the modern music industry. I had that in the 80’s with Marillion.” CO Now “I have a private life and the ability to choose what I want to do and when, while at the same time I can earn a living doing things that I love.” CO

“Fish’s personal life was thrown into chaos when his wife Tamara decided to return to Berlin with their daughter Tara shortly before the tour began in early 2001. Huge debts forced the sale of the farmhouse and Fish ‘regrouped’ in the studio which was now separated from the main property.” CO “2002 was spent working on converting the studio into a home while still maintaining the integrity of the sound rooms so that he could continue to write and record albums.” CO

Personal Turmoil and Field of Crows (2003-04):

Fish and Tamara divorced in 2003. That same year, Fish started work on his new studio album, Field of Crows. The inspiration for the album came from “visiting the monument to ‘The Field of Blackbirds,’ a 15th century battle between the Ottoman Empire and the Christians who were mainly Serbian, and where so many men were killed on the field that both armies had to withdraw, that Fish got his principal image to work with.” CO

Fish explained that the album was “a life cycle. The main character ‘crow’ leaves behind what he knows, driven by dreams, desires and a legacy and heads to the open fields and the ‘big city.’ He joins the hunt and ends up being hunted and eventually caged where he’s left to dream of what he lost. Eventually he returns and so another circle begins. The field represents conflict, be it as a battle or a sports game or a shoot.” CO


Field of Crows (2004):

  • Shot the Craw BB
  • Scattering Crows BB
  • Moving Targets BB

Bouillabaisse

Fish


Released: September 25, 2005


Recorded: 1985-2004


Peak: --


Sales (in millions): --


Genre: neo-progressive rock


Tracks, Disc 1 (Balladeer): (1) Just Good Friends (2) Shot the Craw (3) A Gentlemen’s Excuse Me (4) Kayleigh (5) Solo (6) Incomplete (7) The Company (8) Fortunes of War (9) Our Smile (10) Lavender (11) Lady Let It Lie (12) Cliché (13) Scattering Crows (14) Tara (15) Caledonia (16) Raw Meat

Tracks, Disc 2 (Rocketeer): (1) Big Wedge (2) Credo (3) Incommunicado (4) Goldfish and Clowns (5) Long Cold Day (6) Brother 52 (7) Clock Moves Sideways (8) The Perception of Johnny Punter (9) Moving Targets (10) Plague of Ghosts

Rating:

3.288 out of 5.00 (average of 6 ratings)

About Bouillabaisse:

The two-disc compilation covered Fish’s solo years from 1989 to 2004, but also included three cuts from his Marillion days. There was also the song Caledonia, which had previously appeared on the 2002 A Tribute to Frankie Miller.


Tracks Not on Previously Noted Albums:

  • Caledonia (2002) BB

Looking Back (2005-06):

2005 proved an important time for retrospection as Fish released a double album compilation (Bouillabaisse) that looked back over his entire career. Even more significantly, however, was the 20th anniversary of his most significant work, Marillion’s Misplaced Childhood. In celebration, Fish performed the entire album live, as well as a set of solo material. Recorded in November 2005, the concert was documented on CD and DVD – a must for fans who had followed Fish’s career since the beginning. It was released the following year.

13th Star and A Feast of Consequences (2007-13):

Fish released his ninth studio album, 13th Star, in 2007. It was first made available via mail order in September 2007 and then to retail in February 2008. The album title was a reference to Mostly Autumn, a singer who Fish referred to as the 13th female significant other in his life. However, when she left him, it became a metaphor for an unknown future relationship. It was also the thirteenth studio album of his career if you include his four albums with Marillion.


13th Star (2007):

  • Arc of the Curve (3/3/08, --)
  • Zoe 25 (10/6/08, --)

A long hiatus followed 13th Star. Fish finally returned in 2013 with A Feast of Consequences. It was yet another independent release through Chocolate Frog. Like its predecessor, this was co-written with bassist Steve Vantsis.

In his personal life, Fish married his second wife, Katie Webb, in April 2009. Sadly, they divorced after less than a year.


Feast of Consequences (2013):

  • Blind to the Beautiful (4/28/14, --)

The End? (2015-20):

After Feast, Fish took an even longer hiatus. In 2015, he announced that the album he was working on would be his last. Three years later, he finally released an EP, A Parley with Angels, which featured live songs and some of the material which would wind up on the 2020 double album Weltshmerz.

Because of failed romances and family bereavements, it looked at times like the album wouldn’t happen at all. His father died from bladder cancer and Fish underwent surgeries for his spine and shoulder and dealt with two potentially deadly bouts of sepsis. On a positive note, he married his third wife, Simone Rosler, in 2017.


Weltschmerz (2020):

  • Weltschmerz (3/12/20, --)
  • Garden of Remembrance (7/24/20, --)
  • This Party’s Over (9/11/20, --)


Resources/References:


Related DMDB Pages:


First posted 4/26/2010; last updated 8/5/2025.