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Joined: October 05 2009
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Posted: April 26 2010 at 04:37
Well, sure. King Crimson is an eclectic prog band, so obviously ITCOTCK has to be eclectic too. But it's not quite as varied and undefinable as, let's say Lark's Tongues in Aspic. More than half of the album can be called symphonic prog, so that is what I am going to call it. I also call Pink Floyd's Meddle space prog even though there are blues, jazz and folk in it.
Edit: Also, ITCOTCK helped influence symphonic prog more than any other prog genre.
Edited by Silverbeard McStarr - April 26 2010 at 04:38
Joined: April 21 2010
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Posted: April 26 2010 at 08:15
Since King Crimson is being credited with being the first prog album by influencing future bands of the same style, it would be interesting to hear what Fripp says influenced him in making ITCOTCK. Did he hear something similar and used it in his own vein or did he bring it from two or more sources to create a synthesis of his own? If he was influenced by something that could be considered prog, it would support the argument he wasn't the first. If he was influenced by something not considered prog, it would support the claim of ITCOTCK being the first or at least one of the first. Does anybody know what Fripp has said?
Even a man who stumbles around in the dark will influence those he does not see.
Joined: March 12 2008
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Posted: April 26 2010 at 08:20
I consider that Moody Blues are not the first prog band...but i think what is interesting is realizing that prog is a crossroad in the middle of many things happenining at that time ( and none of this things separatedly):
We have psychedlia for one side, Jazz of course, and also what we may call just symphonic rock wich first group i consider to be Procol Harum ( and in this category will lie the Moodys).
Pink Floyd first is sonic experimentation of the first degree but its psychedelia after all.
ITCOCTCK is prog......no one that have heard "21 century..." could say that its not prog, all the ingredients are there musicianship, technical virtuosity, compositional care, rythim changes...and its rock!!!
Joined: November 24 2009
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Posted: April 26 2010 at 09:15
Devonsidhe wrote:
Since King Crimson is being credited with being the first prog album by influencing future bands of the same style, it would be interesting to hear what Fripp says influenced him in making ITCOTCK. Did he hear something similar and used it in his own vein or did he bring it from two or more sources to create a synthesis of his own? If he was influenced by something that could be considered prog, it would support the argument he wasn't the first. If he was influenced by something not considered prog, it would support the claim of ITCOTCK being the first or at least one of the first. Does anybody know what Fripp has said?
I don't think anything really sounds like King Crimson first album but if want to know who jump started what Robert Fripp wanted to do is the Beatles. It sort of the same effect the Beatles had on the Byrds going electric and jump starting folk rock
Listen to "Strawberry Fields Forever" it has signature progressive rock elements mellotron, mixed time signatures, definite use of studio as an instrument, and unusaul song structure. Now everything on Pepper is not proto-progressive or progressive rock but one of the early songs that King Crimson did cover was "Lucy In the Sky With Diamonds". It really doesn't matter if you think the Beatles were progressive rock or not they had a huge impact on these guys.
Robert Fripp on hearing the Beatles Sgt Pepper
Robert Fripp- "When I was 20, I worked at a hotel in a dance orchestra, playing weddings, bar-mitzvahs, dancing, cabaret. I drove home and I was also at college at the time. Then I put on the radio (Radio Luxemburg) and I heard this music. It was terrifying. I had no idea what it was. Then it kept going. Then there was this enormous whine note of strings. Then there was this colossal piano chord. I discovered later that I'd come in half-way through Sgt. Pepper, played continuously. My life was never the same again"
Bill Buford:
The Beatles. They broke down every barrier that ever existed. Suddenly you could do anything after The Beatles. You could write your own music, make it ninety yards long, put it in 7/4, whatever you wanted.
Joined: April 21 2010
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Posted: April 26 2010 at 15:00
Floydman wrote:
[
It really doesn't matter if you think the Beatles were progressive rock or not they had a huge impact on these guys.
Thanks Floydman. Inspiration has always fascinated me.
The fun thing (or difficult depending on your point of view) about this thread is exploring what could be described as a nebulous beginning and defining when that existence started. From this discussion, I've narrowed that beginning down to somewhere between the Big Bang (or Creation) and ITCOTCK.
One of the difficulties has been in what the definitions are that we are trying to find the beginning of. Definitions have ranged from progressing music to Progressive Rock. Then what constitutes a prog song let alone an album? Of all the myriad components of prog, how many of them does an album have to have? Are any of the components mandatory? The problem from this is that definition while explanatory, can also be limiting. We may be able to define the classic definition by saying it has to have a different time signature or no chorus or many other identifying ticks of prog. But, by definition, prog is having the freedom to leave a previous definition and explore something never done before. By defining prog, we will be readying the stage for the new prog to be something the old prog isn't.
It all boils down to the definition. One definition could be an academic one. Band A was the first to do an album containing components X, Y and Z therefore it is the first prog. But, what if only three people listened to the album and none of them created an album to further the movement? The first prog album would only be recognized by looking back in an archeological sense.
It could also be defined scientifically. For the fun of it, using quantum physics, prog didn't exist until someone was in the forest listening to it. Which may have some truth to it.
It could also be a populist definition. What do most of the people say? The big problem with this is prog has never been a populist movement. Kasey Kasem never did a top 40 for us. The Grammies don't have a category for us.
Prog's definition may be, if I can paraphrase the one from porn, we will know it when we hear it. Personally, I would rather have the definition come from the prog community rather than a quantum archeologist on am radio.
For whatever reason, the prog community, for the most part, has recognized ITCOTCK as the first prog album. Though there have been a few disagreements, none have been able to disprove it to the community. What came before it has been influential and what came after has been derivitive. King Crimson may not get support for being the originators of the components but they are getting credit for what they did with those components. Therefore it has all the definitions: one of the first to use all of the components; many people were listening to them when it came out; and the popular consensus of the prog community. Until someone can show another band answering these definitions prior to KC, KC will wear the crown.
Keep in mind one thing. All of us can point to our own origins to prog. Many of us listened to the classic prog from our dad's albums and discovered it in a retro fashion. Some of us bought the ITCOTCK when it first came out. And a few of us listened to Sgt. Pepper, The Nice, Moody Blues, Frank Zappa, etc and started to get it before it was even there. The true beginning will not be when it happened for us but when it happened for the community. Everything else is either inspirational or derivitive.
As with all things, there is no one explanation for anything. Especially when we consider prog which is all about freedom to make our own definitions. There are exceptions to this out there and that will only make the discussion more interesting.
Even a man who stumbles around in the dark will influence those he does not see.
Joined: May 06 2007
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Posted: April 26 2010 at 16:28
Nothing that came after Procols Shine on Brightly can be considered the first prog album. Absolutely absurd notion, not to be taken seriously. SOB came a year before ITCOTCK.
If you want to hallucinate something that came before might have been #1, I will allow you that indulgence.
As with all things, there is no one explanation for anything. Especially when we consider prog which is all about freedom to make our own definitions. There are exceptions to this out there and that will only make the discussion more interesting.
I think it is fair to say that there there are albums which are prog before ITCOTCK. In fact, I am willing to believe this is true just based on the fact that more than a handful of alternate candidates for first prog album have been put forward.
Also, I think any thing which arises out of a creative background probably does so through multiple roots and incrementally such that there is no clear moment of the creation of a genre. This is probably just as true in the evolution of species where no species magically started at one generation.
For my own part I enjoy the discussion and the debate.
In an effort to engage myself further with the music I know and love I will probably start examining song by song my music collection and use (and no doubt adjust) my own particular prog rock definition and see how that applies through the years of music since the late 60s. I can then compare that and share this with others hear and see if the definition appears valid. At the very least I will be learning something as I go and in a way that I will enjoy.
There may be a value in saying that the genre started a bit later than the first prog rock album...but then again for many there might not be a value in this. It should be fun finding out!
Joined: January 04 2007
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Posted: April 26 2010 at 18:34
octopus-4 wrote:
It's NOT always the case. It was in the early 60s. What I'm trying to say is that I don't think that Close to the Edge would have sold a single copy if published in 1955. The people that I have mentioned, but I omitted a lot of them, helped breaking the previous schemas and gave the following authors the freedom to look for alternative ways of expressions. Can you imagine Interstellar Overdirve played in the 50s?
If you ever see that DVD about Tom Dowd you will change your mind about how you said this ... there were a lot of "interstellar overdrives" done, and "close to the edge"s done, but they were slightly different and may have been not as electrified as you expect. The transposition of elements in time causes confusion and bringing the "rock/electric" element to the 30's is like watching Michael J Fox do his guitar thing on that movie ... "I guess you're not ready for that yet!" ... It's out of time and place. BUT, you missed the important point. That there was music out there that was being done with similar inspirations and tastes in mind. And it might have been done within different contexts in music. How else would you explain the Stravinsky's and so many others from the turn of the century on?
Music is not that "exclusive" to the point where nothing else matters ... and while you do not have to look at it in a quotidian manner, it helps, and in the end gives you a rather nice perspective. But thinking that what you "want" today, and why it did not happen yesterday ... is not going to get you any answers! It doesn't reverse a lot of bad history! ... you do know that right?
You probably want to go through the 40's and 50's jazz stuff that ended up giving us Miles and such, people that did nothing but long cuts and played for a long time, which is where some of the "prog" and "rock" things that we love got their inspiration, including classical music. See the experiments in literature, film and thater in the 30's and 40's and what was being done ... a lot of music history might make a lot more sense to you. And please, look up that Tom Dowd DVD ... it is the history of 30 years of music like you have never heard it and it will surprise the living heck out of you! ... assuming you love music enough to even appreciate having your knockers knocked senseless all day long!
Edited by moshkito - April 26 2010 at 19:09
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Joined: June 02 2005
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Posted: April 26 2010 at 23:06
It is nonsense to reduce the "start" to one band or one record; it was
simply in the air. King Crimson's first album may be the first prog
album which came out (by the way: what about "Sea Shanties" by High
Tide?), but a lot of things like that were going on at that time. Whoever published the first album can't claim that they invented it..
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Posted: April 26 2010 at 23:17
carlmarx38 wrote:
If they sold many records or not, isnt that besides the point ?
Yes, although I'm trying with this blog (and the Time line Project on my other blog), to also convey the Historical perspective of what was actually happening if you were there at the time between 69-71.....If you were an average "Prog Fan" in 1970, you probably never heard of Magma, Soft Machine, or Gentle Giant, even though they all had debut albums out at that time. Maybe you bought Saucerful of Secrets, Freak Out, and Days of Future Passed, but you didn't think of yourself as a "prog fan", because the term didn't really exist yet. But you probably associated yourself with this "cool new music" and maybe loosely associated these bands on that basis (?)
The big question is "When did the term Prog Rock first get used ?"
An excellent post indeed. Even in 1973 a lot of different names were around for that "new cool music", as can be seen in a rock-lexicon of that time.. And people back then had no progblem to put Deep Purple or Led Zeppelin (which are only prog-related in the archives) into the same category as Genesis, Pink Floyd or Yes; it was just this new cool music. At least this was the way my brother and his friends used to look at it. They never used the term "prog" at all. And this is not the faulty memory of a kid which was born about the same time as prog was born; I checked back with my brother, who is ten years older than I am.
Joined: March 12 2008
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Posted: April 27 2010 at 08:47
ProcolWho? wrote:
Nothing that came after Procols Shine on Brightly can be considered the first prog album. Absolutely absurd notion, not to be taken seriously. SOB came a year before ITCOTCK.
If you want to hallucinate something that came before might have been #1, I will allow you that indulgence.
There were some groups that have some ingredients of what would be latter called prog, one these ingredients is symphonism- wich groups like Procol mixed with rock...but it was 100 % prog. Omonimous album the one i was refering is symphonic pop-rock, no progrock.
"Shine on brightly" is a concept album, the music have contaminations but miss some ingredients like jazz, and hiper fantastic rock riffs, things like that.
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Posted: April 27 2010 at 08:51
And maybe clear that i was not saying that Procol made the first symphonic prog-rock album, no i was saying that they were the first to made symphonic rock. So calm down procolwho
Joined: May 28 2005
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Posted: April 27 2010 at 09:01
I believe that "Sea Shanties" is every bit as progressive as ITCOTCK. but "Sea Shanties" also can be seen as the first prog-metal album - so it is in my opinion a better candidate for getting the honors. only "Sea Shanties" is not as well known as ITCOTCK
A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
Joined: January 04 2007
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Posted: April 27 2010 at 16:41
BaldFriede wrote:
It is nonsense to reduce the "start" to one band or one record; it was simply in the air. King Crimson's first album may be the first prog album which came out (by the way: what about "Sea Shanties" by High Tide?), but a lot of things like that were going on at that time. Whoever published the first album can't claim that they invented it..
Thank you Baldie ... sometimes I think we need to lock some of these people up with Miles in a room somewhere in 1954 and listen to these guys for 30 minutes ... not to just appreciate jzz, mind you, but to get people to realize ... the inspiration and the love for creating "music" ... has absolutely nothing to do with the wording and terminology that we talk about 50 years later!
Not sure some folks here want to hear that about "prog", though!
Edited by moshkito - April 27 2010 at 16:45
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Joined: May 22 2004
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Posted: April 27 2010 at 18:20
BaldFriede wrote:
carlmarx38 wrote:
If they sold many records or not, isnt that besides the point ?
Yes, although I'm trying with this blog (and the Time line Project on my other blog), to also convey the Historical perspective of what was actually happening if you were there at the time between 69-71.....If you were an average "Prog Fan" in 1970, you probably never heard of Magma, Soft Machine, or Gentle Giant, even though they all had debut albums out at that time. Maybe you bought Saucerful of Secrets, Freak Out, and Days of Future Passed, but you didn't think of yourself as a "prog fan", because the term didn't really exist yet. But you probably associated yourself with this "cool new music" and maybe loosely associated these bands on that basis (?)
The big question is "When did the term Prog Rock first get used ?"
An excellent post indeed. Even in 1973 a lot of different names were around for that "new cool music", as can be seen in a rock-lexicon of that time.. And people back then had no progblem to put Deep Purple or Led Zeppelin (which are only prog-related in the archives) into the same category as Genesis, Pink Floyd or Yes; it was just this new cool music. At least this was the way my brother and his friends used to look at it. They never used the term "prog" at all. And this is not the faulty memory of a kid which was born about the same time as prog was born; I checked back with my brother, who is ten years older than I am.
You hit right on the nail head. Almost everything back then that wasn't top 40 was called progressive rock. I never heard the term prog until this decade. The development of what we now call prog (which is what we meant by the British groups) evolved over several years. There are many albums that contained elements of prog many listed in this thread. So what was first or when did it happen are kind of relevant because there were elements in some of the music we wouldn't place here that eventually went into prog. 1969, 1966 what does it matter.?
"What are you going to do when that damn thing rusts?"
Joined: May 06 2007
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Posted: April 27 2010 at 20:40
shockedjazz wrote:
And maybe clear that i was not saying that Procol made the first symphonic prog-rock album, no i was saying that they were the first to made symphonic rock. So calm down procolwho
I'm not sure if you understood what I was saying or if I understand what you're saying.
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Posted: April 28 2010 at 03:43
The good thing with this post is that we are debating about a question that can't be answered. For me prog is a way to feel music so highly individual. I think us olders are mentioning groups and artists that made us feel the "prog" sensation for the first time. Others look back to older artists looking for the beginning.
I guess that in 2015 this post will still be receiving comments.
About Procol Harum, symphonic ir not, they conquered me to prog with "A salty dog".
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