Wheel

2 min read

WITH THEIR BLAZING NEW EP, THESE FINNISH/ENGLISH PROG-METALLERS ROLL INTO UNCHARTED TERRITORY

By Alison Richter

Wheel's Jussi Turunen [left] and James Lascelles perform in Finland, July 2, 2022
MIIKKA SKAFFARI/REDFERNS

WHEN FINNISH/ENGLISH prog-metal rockers Wheel got together in 2015, celebrity wasn’t on their radar. “The goal was never about making us as famous as possible,” says vocalist/guitarist/songwriter James Lascelles. “It was just an artistic outlet, and at least so far, I’m amazed we’ve gotten this far with that mindset, because it seems it’s not that normal.”

Lascelles, bassist Aki Virta, drummer Santeri Saksala and lead guitarist Jussi Turunen, who joined in 2020, recently signed a deal with InsideOut Music in advance of their new EP, Rumination. Their fifth release, it follows EPs The Path (2017) and The Divide (2018) and full-length albums Moving Backwards (2019) and Resident Human (2021).

Wheel’s definition of prog is that there is no definition, making it the ideal genre for tracks like “Blood Drinker,” the first single from Rumination. “I think it’s an accurate term for what we’re doing,” Lascelles says. “It can be a bit nebulous in some respects. Prog metal, particularly, has stylistic traits that many bands use or emulate. And then there are bands that pioneer new things — like Meshuggah, for example, who have come up with their own rhythmic identity. Prog, to me, always meant freedom to try things that wouldn’t work in a more traditional contemporary setting. So it still feels very prog to us.”

“As guitarists, of course we have some stuff in unison, but mostly we have two-part harmonies and two-part rhythms, but not in the traditional way [as] used in bands like Iron Maiden,” Turunen says. “We’re playing against each other rhythmically, and that has become our sound.”

Wheel will spend the remainder of this year and the beginning of 2023 on tour. Upon

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