EPK – Phaeton – Neurogenesis (2025)
Publicist Jon Asher – Jon[@]ashermediarelations[.com]
For fans of Mastodon, Meshuggah, Anciients, Between the Buried and Me, Devin Townsend
““Neurogenesis” is a continuation of the sounds we’ve established on our first two albums, with more of a focus on concision without sacrificing the imagination. We’ll carry you away to the nebulae, and you’ll enjoy every light-minute of it. Visceral thrill and intellectual expansion, song after song after song.” – Phaeton
Album Title: Neurogenesis
Label: INB Music
Release Date: October 24, 2025
Phaetonprog.com | Facebook.com/Phaetonband | Instagram.com/phaetonband | Youtube.com/@phaeton-officialyoutubecha9571 | X.com/phaetonband
Phaetonband.bandcamp.com | Spotify | Apple Music
All Links: https://linktr.ee/phaetonofficial
“”Neurogenesis” one of the hottest tips of the running season. At least when it comes to instrumental prog, the band has reached the top of the annual list!” – PowerMetal.de
“Oh prog-metal how we love thee…case in point, the new single ‘Isochron ft. Derek Sherinian’ from Phaeton. This dandy little slice of modern prog-metal is not only exceptionally recorded but is jammed full of stabbing riffs, fluid bass lines, drum rolls galore and of course keyboard wizardry courtesy of the legendary Derek Sherinian (Dream Theater, Planet X, Sons of Apollo). Keep an eye out for the new album “Neurogenesis” from PHAETON set to drop on Oct. 24th and to tide you over listen up for ‘Isochron’ on your Home for the Best New Rock… W-J-O-EEEE” – WJOE – Findlay’s Home for Rock & Roll
“I’ve always maintained that instrumental bands have to work harder at their craft, because the lack of vocals is one more thing they have to find a replacement for. Lead guitar breaks can take the place of vocals, as can keyboards. They do a solid job of this on the album… They have the chops, that’s for sure.” – Metal-Temple”Neurogenesis“ is a work that combines virtuosity, atmosphere and emotion in extraordinary balance.” 4/5 – MetalUnderground.at
“PHAETON’s Neurogenesis: Where Prog-Meets-Precision, and Machines Whisper to the Riffs” – Papy Jeff Metal
“Phaeton’s sound is a kaleidoscope of progressive sounds, tech-death, thrash and djent… The album opens with the song “Tethys Rising” has in it’s a lot of austerity, but you can hear perfectly strong and expressive here sound and style. Song “Discontinuum” also holds the right one level and very exciting. The dynamics and rhythm are impressive here. Piece “Isochron” with the guest participation of Derek Sherinian, he enriches and has in great riffs, but there are also Middle Eastern elements, which it also increases the effect. Number “Synethesia” it emphasizes even more the intensity and complexity of sounds with a lot of power and energy. Track “Arachnid” he has a lot of neoclassical playing, but he doesn’t forget about it crushing playing with lots of thrills. Song “Augmented” it also has a specific level to it. Title piece “Neurogenesis” he crowns the album with pride and precision. You can hear perfectly balanced music here, which has a claw, feistiness and focuses on diversity and versatility. 4/5″ – W-Mgnieniu-Rocka
“An instrumental quartet from Kimberley, British Columbia, Phaeton are skillfully blurring the boundaries between old- and new-school prog metal. Their second album, Between Two Worlds, covers a vast amount of ground, from intricate post-djent riffing, to indulgent prog pomp, and no single outstays its welcome. The nine-minute title track is a particularly impressive display of showboating and smart songwriting.” – Prog Mag – Dom Lawson (Between Two Worlds – 2023)
It’s Prog Mag’s brand new Tracks Of The Week! (April 21, 2023) – “Hailing from Columbia, Canada’s Phaeton are an interplanetary instrumental heavy prog metal quartet and as their name suggests, they are fascinated with astronomy, and the idea of life itself, in all its beauty and wonder and majesty, emerging from an instant of catastrophic cosmic violence. The epic Between Two Worlds is the title track of the band’s latest album.” (Between Two Worlds – 2023)
“Top-tier instrumental prog-metal-math music from the East Kootenay region performed by a quartet of veteran musicians.” – Stuart Derdeyn (The Vancouver Sun) (Between Two Worlds – 2023)
“Phaeton are relatively unknown, especially compared to the above mentioned bands (scale The Summit, Animals as Leaders), but they definitely hold their own on Between Two Worlds. All members absolutely kill it on their instruments, the songs are wonderfully arranged and produced, and there’s plenty of variety here to hold our attention. Instrumental prog might be a little talked about genre, but Phaeton belong in the conversation.” – Heavy Music Headquarters (Between Two Worlds – 2023)
“”Between Two World” was very competently arranged and recorded by PHAETON. Prog fans, who like sounds and virtuosity above all, will be well served with the disc.” – PowerMetal.de (Between Two Worlds – 2023)
“PHAETON releases an instrumental album in which the voice is not lacking; a nervous, boosted opus where the frank and limpid musicality makes you dizzy, where the notes invite you to travel in space to another dimension, where harmony is combined with controlled djent power; innovative music, on modern math metal-prog.” – Profil Prog (Between Two Worlds – 2023)
“If you’re open minded in your choice of Metal genres, you should feel free to let this instrumental work slip through your ears. It takes a little getting used to, so completely without singing. But if you get involved and listen carefully, one or the other will surely like something. The whole thing should appeal to fans of RUSH or DREAM THEATER.” – Hellfire Magazin (Between Two Worlds – 2023)
“The sound on all seven tracks is huge and if there was a “best sounding hammer-ons” award then March of the Synthetics could be a contender.” – Stuart Derdeyn (The Vancouver Sun) (Self-titled – 2018)
Album Title: Neurogenesis
Label: INB Music
Release Date: October 24, 2025
1. Tethys Rising (6:25)
2. Discontinuum (6:37)
3. Isochron (4:12) ft. Derek Sherinian
4. Synethesia (6:24)
5. Arachnid (4:48)
6. Augmented (4:37)
7. Neurogenesis (6:16)
Album Length: 39:19
– All songs written and performed by PHAETON.
– Engineered and Mixed by Kevin Thiessen at the Cube (Kimberley, BC, Canada).
– Mastered by Jamie Sitar at Outtatown Sound (Winnipeg, MB, Canada).
– Album Artwork by Matt Semenok (Calgary, AB, Canada).
– SOCAN members.
– Music is MAPL / CanCon.Band Lineup:
– Colin Righton: Drums & Percussion
– Daniel Airth: Lead & Rhythm Guitars
– Kevin Thiessen: Lead & Rhythm Guitars, Keyboards
– Ferdy Belland: Electric Bass
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About The Album Artwork:
Colin came up with the idea of the suspended human brain, awash with eldritch bioelectricity and cybernetic implants. Our concept of “neurogenesis” ties in with all the unsettling modern talk about the singularity, where elitist jerk-futurists are persuading everyone to get jiggy with the A.I. and upload our minds into the Wankersphere.
We wanted the album imagery to be dark and moody and wrap around all four panels of the LP’s gatefold sleeve and connect back on itself, but it was a struggle to find a suitably motivated, imaginative artist to bring the concept to life – until Colin found Calgary’s Matt Semenok! His results were impressive and astounding. Matt captured a very real visual balance between the eerie creepiness of H.R. Giger and the surreal washiness of Bill Sienkiewicz. We were damn lucky to find him, and we will trust him with future visual concepts if he can stand to work with us ever again.
The artwork’s message is a warning. Technology is exploding across our world at a highly accelerated exponential rate, and human technology always outpaces human psychology, and it’s not always for the better. We’re trying to download 21st-century software into cerebral hard drives that haven’t been updated in over 50,000 years. Hilarity will not ensue.
About the album (Lyrically and Musically):
Our third album is a left-field change of pace for us, and we’re thrilled with the results. On our debut album, we established who we are and what we do as musicians and composers, and we’ll always be proud of that first statement. When we moved on to “Between Two Worlds,” we created an album with an overall heavier sound, and all the hyper-melodic neo-classical adventurousness and the bludgeoning riffola were brought into sharper focus and expanded into broader, more lengthy, more emotionally impactful songs – which we believed, then as now, was an impressive improvement on our part. With “Neurogenesis,” the songs ended up more compact and concise, but that wasn’t deliberate – they just ended up that way. Even as an all-instrumental band, our arrangements follow what might be described as verse-chorus-verse-chorus-bridge-etc., but instead of the riffs and rhythms being frameworks for the vocal delivery of storylines, they become the frameworks for guitar melody, or keyboard melody. Which we’ve always done, but we took a sideways approach to it this time around. It’s up to the individual listener to take the titles we give our songs and let their own imaginations take them where they will as the music unfolds: jazz-fusion ears within prog-metal boundaries, so to speak. And although “Neurogenesis” isn’t a Concept Album in the strictest prog-rock definition, the individual concepts of many of the songs included here do overlap each other – we were inspired by the modern theories of the technological singularity, of how we’re only a few years away from humanity’s biological brains uniting with robotics and cybernetic implants and microchips – and whether we’ll still be human when that happens. It’s a cold warning as much as a sober observation.
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Fun Facts – Story Angles:
1. Ferdy Belland has a record collection numbering close to 8,000 albums, which he’s been building since he was a little boy. He also collects first-edition hardcover classics, Bronze Age comics, MAD Magazines, toys from the 1970s, and assorted militaria. His house is very cluttered but utterly fascinating. Just don’t ask his poor, bewildered wife about any of that junk.
2. Ferdy Belland has an established parallel career as a respected music journalist for as long as he’s been a respected active musician, and has been published in the Georgia Straight, the Nerve Magazine, Terminal City Weekly, Absolute Underground Magazine, and numerous outlets of the Black Press chain. He’s interviewed such notables as Dweezil Zappa, Uli Jon Roth, Charlie Benante, Chuck Billy, Ian Thornley, Jeff Martin, Bert Jansch, Dave Alvin, Ian Tyson, Joey Shithead, Randy Bachman, and Greg Godovitz. Ferdy is very proud of having been told to fuck off by Terry David Mulligan.
3. Colin Righton is an excellent chef, and not only should he challenge the Red Seal, he should be operating a food truck at all the festivals, which effectively makes him the Gordon Ramsey of prog-metal, both in culinary skill and emotional temperament. And he’s into tennis the way the Pope is into Catholicism.
4. Daniel Airth’s nickname is “Danimal,” which is hilarious since he’s the quietest, gentlest, most laid-back and soft-spoken member of Phaeton. Dan is most at home at his DAW with a guitar in his hands, casually flinging out one million-dollar riff after another, minute after minute, for hours on end. And if anyone bumps into Dan in the bars after hours, please buy him an Old Fashioned.
5. Kevin Thiessen is, hands down, the best recording engineer/producer you’ll find anywhere in Southeastern British Columbia, and his talents are national-caliber talents, but it usually takes the superhuman intervention of Galactus to pry him out of his boxlike studio (aptly nicknamed “The Cube”). Kevin is also a huge die-hard fan of the “Back to the Future” trilogy, but the band has so far heroically repelled all furious pressure from Kevin to arrange Huey Lewis and the News’ “The Power of Love” into an all-instrumental prog-metal arrangement.
Photo Credit – Scott Courtemanche
Formed in the rugged wilderness of Kimberley, British Columbia, in 2017, Phaeton is a four-piece instrumental progressive metal band that fuses neo-classical melodicism, crunching rifferama, tornado percussion, and contrapuntal basslines, making them not only a captivating listening experience on record but a thrilling and ultra-heavy live band in the flesh. Named after the mythical proto-planet believed to have collided with primordial Earth, Phaeton channels cosmic chaos into meticulously crafted soundscapes that are as cerebral as they are crushing.
The band—Kevin Thiessen (guitars, keyboards) (ex-Azsension, ex-Datura), Daniel Airth (guitars) (ex-Chaos Logic), Ferdy Belland (bass) (ex-Bif Naked), and Colin Righton (drums) (ex-Chaos Machine) —has carved out a distinct sonic identity, drawing inspiration from titans like Dream Theater, Rush, Mastodon, and King Crimson. Their music is a wordless journey through shifting time signatures, soaring melodies, and tectonic riffage, designed to ignite the imagination and challenge the ear.
Following their acclaimed albums Phaeton (2018) and Between Two Worlds (2023), the band is set to release their highly anticipated third offering, the full-length Neurogenesis, in September 2025. This new chapter promises to push their compositional boundaries even further, delivering a cerebral and visceral experience that redefines what instrumental metal can be.
With a growing international following and a reputation for electrifying live performances, Phaeton continues to evolve—fearlessly, relentlessly, and without saying a word. The band has confidently shared stages with such notable artists as Beyond Creation, Anciients, and Bison, and is looking to open musical doorways across the nation and across the oceans.
Discography:
2018 – Phaeton (album)
2023 – Between Two Worlds (album)
2025 – Neurogenesis (album)
Shared Stage with: Beyond Creation, Anciients, Bison, Atavistia, Syryn, Kelevra, Striker, Terrifier
Festivals:
2024 – Loud As Hell Festival (Drumheller AB)
2025 – Fun Field Festival (Wardner BC)



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