Published: Feb. 16, 2015

Andy Tillison, keyboard player and founder of the British progressive rock band The Tangent, will speak and give a solo performance on Thursday, Feb. 19, 5:30-7 p.m. in the Old Main Chapel at the campus.This talk is free and open to the public.

Tillison’s talk is titled “Whatever Happened to the Protest Song?” The talk will compare protest songs of the past to the songs available in the present digital world. Tillison contends that protest songs were the first form of media to go “viral.” Once written, the songs often spread through communities and regions. People would add verses to the songs “almost like the comment boxes on today’s Internet bulletin boards.”

Tillison, 55, is at the forefront of the progressive rock genre in the U.K.. His current band, The Tangent, has released eight studio albums, composedentirely of Tillison’s original compositions, since itformed in 2003.

The progressive rock genre had its heyday in the 1970s, led by bands like Genesis, Yes, Jethro Tull, King Crimson, and Emerson, Lake & Palmer. While Tillison’s work is heavily influenced by these earlier generations of progrock, his music is also contains contemporary influences that make the music unique and modern.

Tillison appears at the invitation of Bradley J. Birzer, the 2014-15 visiting scholar in Conservative Thought and Policy at the . Birzer explains that Tillison’s activism and social conscience make him an ideal choice for a speaker on this topic.

“In their revolt against conformity, the conservatives and libertarians of the 1940s and 1950s challenged the norms of society in rather mischievous ways. Tillison, an English writer, musician, and activist, falls in this very noble tradition,” says Birzer.

Sponsored by the Conservative Thought & Policy Program

IMPORTANT NOTE ON PARKING

For this event, Lot 380, the lot closest to Old Main, will be closed due to a large event at Macky Auditorium later that night. Click here for a list of permit lots that are. Click here for the.