It has been written that Space Opera plays "serious, complex,
satisfying music," blending rock, folk, jazz, and classical
influences to achieve their distinctive sound.
Space Opera was forged in the Texas summer heat of 1969
by David Bullock, Scott Fraser, Philip White, and Brett Wilson.
Already, their young lives had been a history played out on roadhouse
bandstands and in the coffeehouses and ballrooms of Texas. They had
worked as studio sidemen in exchange for long hours spent arranging and recording
their own songs at producer T-Bone Burnett's studio in Fort Worth.
Space Opera's first major appearance was at the legendary Texas
International Pop Festival. They refined their unique style during
years of touring Texas and the eastern seaboard, headlining shows and
opening for such groups as The Byrds, Jethro Tull, Johnny Winter, and
Jefferson Airplane. The band's sound was defined by the dense
counterpoint of chiming electric 12-strings, crisp, subtle
percussion, and choir-like vocals.
"Space Opera," an album produced
by the band at Manta Sound in Toronto, was released in 1973 by Epic
Records. Rock critic and author Ritchie York called the album
"incredibly outstanding, deliriously brilliant." The group lived and
worked in New York, Canada and Texas during the 1970s and '80s, often
augmenting their live sound with symphonic instruments.
A music
journalist once observed that Space Opera had arrived at "an early, undeserved
obscurity." Describing the band's music, he wrote, "They don't just
write songs, they compose miniature symphonies, three-to-five-minute
pieces that combine musical elements that would seem to have no
place in rock."
Over the years the musicians disbanded and regrouped
as they saw fit. In 1997 Space Opera played a 'reunion' concert at
the magnificent Caravan of Dreams in Fort Worth. New and old songs
were woven together in a suite-like concert that music writer Dave
Ferman of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram found "...musically stunning.
Moving from mood to mood and using subtle shadings of 12-string
guitars, oboe and accordion...Space Opera lived up to its legend and
pointed the way to a fresh new start."
Today, Space Opera continues
to labor in the vineyard of obscurity, creating music that is
uniquely its own for the entertainment of a small but devoted
audience.