Saga
Over the course of a career that's spanned five decades, Saga have established themselves as one of Canada's most successful progressive rock bands, and have found a loyal, international audience for their ambitious music. Emerging in the late 1970s, the band broke big in 1981 with the release of their fourth full-length effort, World's Apart, which featured the hits "On the Loose" and "Wind Him Up." Despite enduring myriad lineup changes over the decades, Saga maintained a huge European fan base, specifically in Germany, and managed to release over 20 albums (and sell over eight million of them), before ceasing operations in 2018. Saga was formed in Oakville, Ontario by bassist and keyboard player Jim Crichton, and singer, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist Michael Sadler; Crichton had been a latter-day member of Toronto rockers Fludd and when he struck up a friendship with Sadler, they began writing songs. Crichton recruited fellow Fludd alumni Steve Negus (drums) and Peter Rochon (keyboards), as well as his brother, Ian Crichton (lead guitar), and the first lineup of Saga was complete, with the new band making their live debut in June 1977. From the outset, Saga was committed to playing original material their own way, and with close to 30 songs already in their repertoire, Saga went into the studio to record an album six months after their first show. The self-financed project was picked up for release by the Canadian branch of Polygram Records, and Saga's self-titled debut was released in June 1978; the album also featured two songs in what would become known as "The Chapters," a non-sequential song cycle which formed a futuristic narrative spread out over several albums. The album sold well in Canada and did surprisingly well in Germany as an import item, and Polygram signed the band to an international deal. For Saga's second album, 1979's Images at Twilight (which spawned a minor hit single in Canada, "It's Time"), Greg Chadd replaced Peter Rochon, and on 1980's Silent Knight, Chadd was out and Jim Gilmour became the band's new keyboard player. Silent Knight sold well in Canada, and Saga's next effort, 1981's World's Apart, would be their international breakthrough; produced by Rupert Hine, the album featured a major hit single in "On the Loose" ("Wind Him Up" also reached the Top 40), and earned platinum sales awards in Canada and the United States; the tour that followed produced a live album, 1982's In Transit. 1983's Heads or Tales also sold well, if not as well as its predecessor, and featured another successful single, "The Flyer," while 1985's Behaviour included the hit "What Do I Know." However, Behaviour was Saga's last album with Hine as producer, and their next effort, 1987's Wildest Dreams, found Gilmour out of the band and Steve Negus replaced by session drummer Curt Cress. Gilmour and Negus formed the Gilmour-Negus Project, and Saga went on hiatus following 1989's The Beginner's Guide to Throwing Shapes, which was a commercial disappointment. In 1993, Saga returned with their classic lineup -- Sadler, the Crichton Brothers, Gilmour, and Negus -- for a new album, The Security of Illusion. The album marked a return to the more purely progressive style of Saga's early work, and while it didn't fare well on the Canadian or American sales charts, it sold well in Germany, Sweden, and Scandinavia, where the group had developed a passionate following, and from this point onward, Saga would focus most of their touring and promotional efforts on these markets as well as their native Canada. In 1994, Saga wrote and recorded musical scores for a short-lived American television series, Cobra; this music would become the basis of the 1994 album Steel Umbrellas. 1995's Generation 13 was that prog rock staple, a concept album, and in 1997, as the band celebrated their 20th anniversary, they released two discs -- a new studio set, Pleasure and the Pain, and an archival release, Phase 1, which collected demo recordings of the songs from Images at Twilight. In 2001, the band scored an unexpected hit single in Canada with "Money Talks," an acoustic-flavored tune from the album House of Cards. In 2003, Steve Negus left Saga, and Christian Simpson became the band's new drummer, making his recorded debut on the 2004 album Network. Simpson only lasted two years with Saga, and in 2005, Brian Doerner, formerly of Helix, took over behind the drums. More surprising for many fans was the announcement by Michael Sadler that he would leave Saga at the end of 2007, citing the stress of traveling and a desire to spend more time with his family. Rob Moratti, ex-Final Frontier, was tapped to become Saga's new singer, and he appeared on their 2009 album The Human Condition. In 2011, Saga announced that Michael Sadler had rejoined the lineup, followed by major tours of Europe and Scandinavia. They released a live album from a Munich concert in 2013, and a full-length studio album, Sagacity, in 2014. In 2017 Sadler announced that the band would be calling it quits upon the conclusion of their Final Chapter farewell tour. A concert album and film, So Good So Far -- Live at Rock of Ages, was issued in September, 2018, followed by a pair of final performances in Montreal and Quebec City, later that December.© Mark Deming /TiVo Read more
Over the course of a career that's spanned five decades, Saga have established themselves as one of Canada's most successful progressive rock bands, and have found a loyal, international audience for their ambitious music. Emerging in the late 1970s, the band broke big in 1981 with the release of their fourth full-length effort, World's Apart, which featured the hits "On the Loose" and "Wind Him Up." Despite enduring myriad lineup changes over the decades, Saga maintained a huge European fan base, specifically in Germany, and managed to release over 20 albums (and sell over eight million of them), before ceasing operations in 2018.
Saga was formed in Oakville, Ontario by bassist and keyboard player Jim Crichton, and singer, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist Michael Sadler; Crichton had been a latter-day member of Toronto rockers Fludd and when he struck up a friendship with Sadler, they began writing songs. Crichton recruited fellow Fludd alumni Steve Negus (drums) and Peter Rochon (keyboards), as well as his brother, Ian Crichton (lead guitar), and the first lineup of Saga was complete, with the new band making their live debut in June 1977. From the outset, Saga was committed to playing original material their own way, and with close to 30 songs already in their repertoire, Saga went into the studio to record an album six months after their first show. The self-financed project was picked up for release by the Canadian branch of Polygram Records, and Saga's self-titled debut was released in June 1978; the album also featured two songs in what would become known as "The Chapters," a non-sequential song cycle which formed a futuristic narrative spread out over several albums. The album sold well in Canada and did surprisingly well in Germany as an import item, and Polygram signed the band to an international deal. For Saga's second album, 1979's Images at Twilight (which spawned a minor hit single in Canada, "It's Time"), Greg Chadd replaced Peter Rochon, and on 1980's Silent Knight, Chadd was out and Jim Gilmour became the band's new keyboard player. Silent Knight sold well in Canada, and Saga's next effort, 1981's World's Apart, would be their international breakthrough; produced by Rupert Hine, the album featured a major hit single in "On the Loose" ("Wind Him Up" also reached the Top 40), and earned platinum sales awards in Canada and the United States; the tour that followed produced a live album, 1982's In Transit. 1983's Heads or Tales also sold well, if not as well as its predecessor, and featured another successful single, "The Flyer," while 1985's Behaviour included the hit "What Do I Know." However, Behaviour was Saga's last album with Hine as producer, and their next effort, 1987's Wildest Dreams, found Gilmour out of the band and Steve Negus replaced by session drummer Curt Cress. Gilmour and Negus formed the Gilmour-Negus Project, and Saga went on hiatus following 1989's The Beginner's Guide to Throwing Shapes, which was a commercial disappointment. In 1993, Saga returned with their classic lineup -- Sadler, the Crichton Brothers, Gilmour, and Negus -- for a new album, The Security of Illusion. The album marked a return to the more purely progressive style of Saga's early work, and while it didn't fare well on the Canadian or American sales charts, it sold well in Germany, Sweden, and Scandinavia, where the group had developed a passionate following, and from this point onward, Saga would focus most of their touring and promotional efforts on these markets as well as their native Canada. In 1994, Saga wrote and recorded musical scores for a short-lived American television series, Cobra; this music would become the basis of the 1994 album Steel Umbrellas. 1995's Generation 13 was that prog rock staple, a concept album, and in 1997, as the band celebrated their 20th anniversary, they released two discs -- a new studio set, Pleasure and the Pain, and an archival release, Phase 1, which collected demo recordings of the songs from Images at Twilight. In 2001, the band scored an unexpected hit single in Canada with "Money Talks," an acoustic-flavored tune from the album House of Cards. In 2003, Steve Negus left Saga, and Christian Simpson became the band's new drummer, making his recorded debut on the 2004 album Network. Simpson only lasted two years with Saga, and in 2005, Brian Doerner, formerly of Helix, took over behind the drums. More surprising for many fans was the announcement by Michael Sadler that he would leave Saga at the end of 2007, citing the stress of traveling and a desire to spend more time with his family. Rob Moratti, ex-Final Frontier, was tapped to become Saga's new singer, and he appeared on their 2009 album The Human Condition. In 2011, Saga announced that Michael Sadler had rejoined the lineup, followed by major tours of Europe and Scandinavia. They released a live album from a Munich concert in 2013, and a full-length studio album, Sagacity, in 2014. In 2017 Sadler announced that the band would be calling it quits upon the conclusion of their Final Chapter farewell tour. A concert album and film, So Good So Far -- Live at Rock of Ages, was issued in September, 2018, followed by a pair of final performances in Montreal and Quebec City, later that December.
© Mark Deming /TiVo
Similar artists
-
Detours (Live) [Remastered 2021]
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Apr 17, 1998
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Network (Remastered 2021)
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Sep 20, 2004
Nearly three decades after they started, Saga have derived very little from their main mission of being one of Canada's eminent prog rock bands. Unfor ...
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
House of Cards (Remastered 2021)
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Feb 12, 2001
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Full Circle (Remastered 2021)
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on May 20, 1999
If nothing else Saga deserve kudos for sticking to their guns. Neither punk nor new wave nor grunge nor any of the other subgenres that have influence ...
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Worlds Apart (Remastered 2021)
Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Oct 1, 1981
Saga's first major-label release was also the band's commercial breakthrough; the single "On the Loose" was not only a radio hit, but one of the first ...
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Marathon (Remastered 2021)
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Feb 17, 2003
Like 1999's Full Circle, Marathon offers little more than recycled rock clichés and unfulfilling musical hooks. While 25 years into their existence Sa ...
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
The Chapters Live
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Nov 8, 2005
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Beginner's Guide to Throwing Shapes (2021 Edition)
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Jan 1, 1989
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Generation 13 (2021 Edition)
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Jun 26, 1995
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Worlds Apart Revisited (Live)
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Apr 27, 2007
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
-
The Human Condition
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Mar 27, 2009
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Security of Illusion (2021 Edition)
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Jan 27, 1993
Released in 1993, The Security of Illusion signaled a rebirth of sorts for Canadian prog rock popsters Saga, as earlier members Jim Gilmour (keyboards ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Spin It Again - Live in Munich
Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Sep 27, 2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Heads or Tales (Remastered 2021)
Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Sep 1, 1983
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Full Circle (Original Version)
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on May 20, 1999
If nothing else Saga deserve kudos for sticking to their guns. Neither punk nor new wave nor grunge nor any of the other subgenres that have influence ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Steel Umbrellas (2021 Edition)
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on May 2, 1994
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Silent Knight (Remastered 2021)
Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Aug 1, 1980
Saga's Silent Knight was released just prior to the Canadian quintet's breakthrough album Worlds Apart. Drawing inspiration from Rush, Genesis, and ot ...
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Saga (Remastered 2021)
Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Jun 1, 1978
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Images at Twilight (Remastered 2021)
Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Oct 1, 1979
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
10,000 Days (Remastered 2021)
Pop/Rock - Released by earMUSIC on Oct 19, 2007
Although they'll forever be best known Stateside for one of the most action-packed videos to ever grace the MTV airwaves -- the jailbreak-themed "On t ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo