The enigma division

2 min read

Limelight

Former Xerath members reach for the Sky(net) with sci-fi-inspired project.

L-R: Conor McGouran, Ben Wanders and Ronan Burns mix up complex prog with serious pop hooks.
PRESS/DAVE KEEGAN

IRELAND-BASED PROGRESSIVE metallers The Enigma Division formed in 2019 but their story begins much further back in time: 1977 to be precise. That was when Star Wars was firing the world’s imagination and NASA launched the Voyager Program to observe the outer limits of the solar system.

Guitarist Conor McGouran explains:“People began to take an interest in space again and science fiction became embedded in pop culture like it never had before. I was always fascinated with Carl Sagan and the Voyager missions, from watching [Sagan’s 1980 TV series] Cosmos as a kid to my uncle showing me the first photos of Neptune in 1989.”

McGouran and bassist Ronan Burns began playing music together at the age of 11. They shared a passion for metal, prog, fusion, pop and classical but their trajectories diverged over time.

The guitarist reflects:“We always planned on doing a project that mirrored all the music we like but with life, we went different directions, played in different bands. We kept our promise, though.”

Enter the‘secret sauce’ drummer and vocalist Ben Wanders, McGouran’s bandmate in symphonic metallers Xerath prior to that band’s untimely implosion. Richard Thomson of Xerath is one of a constellation of musicians lending their talents to The Enigma Division’s self-titled debut. Most notable among those is ex-Dream Theater and Sons Of Apollo keyboard giant Derek Sherinian, whose cosmic contribution to the mind-blowing Echoes In The Deep is out of this world. The album concludes with the near-20 minute epic 1977 – Ad Infinitum, which features no fewer than three guest guitar soloists. The final word goes to Carl Sagan with a narration from his influential 1994 book, Pale Blue Dot: A Vision Of The Human Future In Space. Fans of Sound Of Contact will find their ears pricking up at this point: there’s a lot of sympathetic resonance here, not only thematically but in both bands’ preternatural ability to fuse complex prog with singalong pop hooks.

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