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Topic ClosedJudas Priest for Prog Related!

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rogerthat View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 05 2011 at 23:32
Originally posted by The Miracle The Miracle wrote:

You know, I really don't care as much as to argue any further.Tongue Who has the final say in prog related inclusions anyway? Maybe that team should just vote and get it over with.

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:


And nobody would also come to prog archives to research info on LZ or Queen. Or Nightwish for that matter. Wink  I completely agree that prog related is not a good idea but if it's going to be part of the database, let's have some consistency.

 


I'm mainly concerned about this consistency argument, which is is basically an endless 'If A is here, so should B' kinda argument. Using thtat logic we'll have a lot of influential artists here that we probably shouldn't be here. Like Manowar, who has a surprisingly strong case for PR: they made a concept album (Gods of War), wrote a 28-minute epic suite (Achilles, Agony and Ecstasy in Eight Parts), made a 9-minute ambient instrumental (Today Is a Good Day to Die), covered a classical composition (Sting of the Bumblebee), made a song with orchestra and choir (The Crown and the Ring), constantly tell epic stories in heir lyrics, and surely have had some influence on prog metal, especially the power side of it.
Do we really want them here though? I actually like them(Embarrassed) but hellllllllllllll no. I just wanna make sure bands are considered on an individual basis rater than added for the sake of fairness. Two wrongs don't make a right...Tongue



My dear sir, there is simply no comparison between JP and Manowar in terms of influence on metal and I believe you'd well know it.  If you would like to make arguments for arguments sake, I am getting off.  The point is, JP is one of the five or so most influential metal bands and therefore in an entirely different category from a band like Manowar.  If you have prog metal on a prog rock database, a band like JP should be there in the PR category, it's a no brainer to me.  That they are not here is the wrong, it's not a question of one more wrong to compound an earlier - I do believe Sabbath and Maiden have a legitimate place in a database of which prog metal is an important subset.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 06 2011 at 15:23
So anyone planning to put the Judas Priest debate up to a vote? Ermm
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 07:27
No way to be featuring here in PA, what the ...... JP is a pure heavy metal band.Thumbs DownNot that I don't like them, not at all, they are a legend, but not here
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 08:41
Originally posted by Rune2000 Rune2000 wrote:

Originally posted by The Miracle The Miracle wrote:



Originally posted by Rune2000 Rune2000 wrote:

Sorry, but this argument doesn't make any sense. Manowar inspired the progressive power metal? Probably, but progressive metal featured on PA doesn't include power metal bands. Yes, some of them have slipped by through the years but the current policy is that they are not welcome. Therefore adding Manowar to PR as a predecessor to power prog will not fly.
JP, on the other hand, have a clear link to Iron Maiden and the early prog metal movement of the late '80s/early '90s.
Not "inspired", but "had some influence on". I meant the whole prog-power genre like Symphony X, Kamelot, etc... That wasn't even the main point though, they qualify because of all those characteristics I listed that fall under the definition of prog. I was just making a grotesque analogy, really.
No, they don't qualify under the definition of prog since then they would be fit for a sub-genre other than Proto-prog or Prog Related.

Symphony X (Michael Romeo and Michael Pinnella to be exact) were primarily inspired by the neo-classical metal movement and Yngwie Malmsteen, who is the pioneer of the genre, is listed under Prog Related.
Kamelot is one of the bands that slipped by in the early days of the Prog Metal sub-genre and will remain on PA out of respect to the early Prog Metal Team collaborators but we have no intention of adding any more Power Metal bands any time soon.

Kamelot definitely belong here, if not just for The Black Halo Approve
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 10:39
Originally posted by Finnforest Finnforest wrote:

I appreciate Olav's point, but I don't think that should be the primary consideration for admissions.  Our evaluations should be based solely on the music and how it relates to our genre definitions, not how others view the site, or wide open considerations as to the site's "direction."  My two cents.


I think an argument is being made that the interpretation of the genre definitions change over time as new bands are added. PA members and contributors at the end of 2011 are considering how the music of a band relates to the definitions by a standard that has been shaped by who is currently in the PA and this may result in someone coming to a different conclusion on a band than they would have in 2008. Even if it may not be the intent, the way that the definitions are viewed and applied against a specific artist's output is not static, but dynamic and changing as PA grows and adds new artists.

That said, I don't think I'd bet the farm on the admins entertaining a re-evaluation of a band for PR with no significant new material (since the consensus seems to be that Nostradamus should not be the basis of an argument for re-eval).

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 12:09
^ Understood, and it likely does happen as you describe.  I'm just saying the members primary consideration of any suggestion is the music and how it fits the Defs.  Not our image, not people's wishes for the site's "direction", or "because X is here, then Y should be" arguments.  Those are fair topics of debate, but they are not evaluation considerations, at least not the primary. 
 
Also, genre defintions themselves have been, and can be, adjusted as time goes by if the teams and/or Admin feel it  necessary. 
 
But we don't disagree on your main point that perceptions may change, and for this reason  I did suggest to the OP that he proceed if he feels it's time.  I'm not against inclusion. Just trying to describe the process a bit.  Smile
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 12:23

^ However, we have a policy of respecting previous team's decisions. If there is re-evaluation, unanimous vote must be achieved. OK, we all team members know this mantra.

The bad thing about this is that (as FunkyM said), in the same genre, but with different people in team, they COULD vote differently.

For example band that was evaluated in 2008, 2 NO votes and 1 YES vote. If it was evaluated now and it received 2 YES votes and 1 NO, it would still be rejected, because previous incarnation of team rejected it. However, if the same band was never evaluated, it would still got 2 YES votes and 1 NO vote and it would be accepted to PA database.

The same music, but different people. If the band/artist was never suggested before, it would be here, because new team would vote to accept it.

This is one of these weird situation, when you apply certain rules of PA.



Edited by Marty McFly - November 07 2011 at 12:23
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 13:12
PA rules are approaching complexity of the US tax code. LOL I'm glad tho, cuz Judas Priest has abotu as much to do with prog as Frank Sinatra.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 13:26
Originally posted by b_olariu b_olariu wrote:

No way to be featuring here in PA, what the ...... JP is a pure heavy metal band.Thumbs DownNot that I don't like them, not at all, they are a legend, but not here

It is true that Judas Priest is a "pure" Heavy Metal band and not a Prog band. But that does not disqualify them from the Prog Related category! If Judas Priest was a Prog band, I would suggest them not for Prog Related but for one of the "genuine" Prog categories. Prog Related is, after all, a category for non-Prog bands (that still bear some relation to Prog by either being influenced by Prog or having some influence on Prog or by having some other relevant relation to Prog). Black Sabbath and Iron Maiden too are Heavy Metal bands, not Prog bands, but they are related to Prog in some way or another, which makes them ideal for the Prog Related category. Indeed, it is exactly for bands like these (and I think Judas Priest too belongs to this group of bands) that the Prog Related category exists. 

I wonder why this point is so hard to get across to people. I have noticed that whenever some band is suggested for Prog Related, people always complain that they are not a Prog band and therefore should be rejected. That attitude would indeed be appropriate for any other category (except Proto-Prog) for which being Prog is a necessary condition for inclusion, but when it comes to Prog Related this is not so. Being "a pure Heavy Metal band" does indeed disqualify a band from any of the "genuine" Prog categories, but not from Prog Related! This is why I would certainly not support adding Judas Priest to Prog Metal or any other category except the only one where they would fit in - namely, Prog Related. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 13:30
I will add, however, that if there was a proto-prog metal genre, then I might concur with their inclusion for that.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 13:40
Originally posted by SouthSideoftheSky SouthSideoftheSky wrote:

Originally posted by b_olariu b_olariu wrote:

No way to be featuring here in PA, what the ...... JP is a pure heavy metal band.Thumbs DownNot that I don't like them, not at all, they are a legend, but not here

It is true that Judas Priest is a "pure" Heavy Metal band and not a Prog band. But that does not disqualify them from the Prog Related category! If Judas Priest was a Prog band, I would suggest them not for Prog Related but for one of the "genuine" Prog categories. Prog Related is, after all, a category for non-Prog bands (that still bear some relation to Prog by either being influenced by Prog or having some influence on Prog or by having some other relevant relation to Prog). Black Sabbath and Iron Maiden too are Heavy Metal bands, not Prog bands, but they are related to Prog in some way or another, which makes them ideal for the Prog Related category. Indeed, it is exactly for bands like these (and I think Judas Priest too belongs to this group of bands) that the Prog Related category exists. 

I wonder why this point is so hard to get across to people. I have noticed that whenever some band is suggested for Prog Related, people always complain that they are not a Prog band and therefore should be rejected. That attitude would indeed be appropriate for any other category (except Proto-Prog) for which being Prog is a necessary condition for inclusion, but when it comes to Prog Related this is not so. Being "a pure Heavy Metal band" does indeed disqualify a band from any of the "genuine" Prog categories, but not from Prog Related! This is why I would certainly not support adding Judas Priest to Prog Metal or any other category except the only one where they would fit in - namely, Prog Related. 


Being "a pure Heavy Metal band" would disqualify them from Prog Related too. Unless there was some other good reason to include them.

And the guy6 you qouted didn't say they weren't Prog, just that they didn't belong. Meaning presumably not in prog Related either


Edited by Snow Dog - November 07 2011 at 13:41
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 14:09
If Judas Priest were some obscure 70's band instead of Judas Priest, and they had only released Rocka Rolla and Sad Wings of Destiny, then they would probably get consideration for a category like crossover or heavy prog; maybe even enough to be added, after all they would be obscure, probably unknown by most and therefore not controversial.  On the flipside, if Judas Priest were some obscure 90's metal band instead of Judas Priest and they had only released Painkiller and/or Nostradamus they would probably get consideration for prog metal, or maybe again heavy prog. If a suggestor were to select the right couple of songs to provide as samples to the evaluation team they could probably get added to the database.
 
They aren't an obscure band though, they are Judas Priest and they also released British Steel and Defenders of the Faith and Screaming for Vengeance and Ram It Down, etc.  This makes them controversial, like Black Sabbath and Iron Maiden and Blue Oyster Cult before them.   
 
When previously discussing their possible addition to prog related with the admins my argument to them was that it was the 4 albums mentioned in the first paragraph that they needed to consider for determining if there was anything progressive about Judas Priest.  The admins response to me that yes there were songs, and parts of songs that were progressive/somewhat progressive but not enough that they felt justified adding Judas Priest.  They felt that Judas Priest's influence on bands within the Prog Metal universe was strictly on the metal side of the ledger, not the progressive side of the ledger. 
 
Honestly, I don't think that this argument will go any further.   
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 14:48
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 Being "a pure Heavy Metal band" would disqualify them from Prog Related too. Unless there was some other good reason to include them. 

Well, I am pretty sure that by calling Judas Priest "a pure Heavy Metal band", b_olario meant that they are not Prog or not progressive enough or some such thing. But according to the official criteria of Prog Related a band need not be a Prog band in order to fit into Prog Related (indeed, if it was it would be suitable for a "real" subgenre of Prog):    

Not all of the bands that have been a part of the history and development of progressive rock are necessarily progressive rock bands themselves. This is why progarchives has included a genre called prog-related, so we could include all the bands that complete the history of progressive rock, whether or not they were considered full-fledged progressive rock bands themselves.

Putting it like this does not exclude a Heavy Metal band as long as it has some relevant relation to Prog, right? The "other good reasons" to include Judas Priest are the same or very similar to those for which Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden and several other bands were already included. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 14:56
Originally posted by Finnforest Finnforest wrote:

... perceptions may change, and for this reason  I did suggest to the OP that he proceed if he feels it's time.  I'm not against inclusion. Just trying to describe the process a bit.  Smile

Thank you, but I'm not quite sure how to proceed really. Many collaborators seem to agree that adding Judas Priest would be a good idea and I think that we have a case. But how to make the relevant people take notice? 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 14:56
Originally posted by SouthSideoftheSky SouthSideoftheSky wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 Being "a pure Heavy Metal band" would disqualify them from Prog Related too. Unless there was some other good reason to include them. 

Well, I am pretty sure that by calling Judas Priest "a pure Heavy Metal band", b_olario meant that they are not Prog or not progressive enough or some such thing. But according to the official criteria of Prog Related a band need not be a Prog band in order to fit into Prog Related (indeed, if it was it would be suitable for a "real" subgenre of Prog):    

Not all of the bands that have been a part of the history and development of progressive rock are necessarily progressive rock bands themselves. This is why progarchives has included a genre called prog-related, so we could include all the bands that complete the history of progressive rock, whether or not they were considered full-fledged progressive rock bands themselves.

Putting it like this does not exclude a Heavy Metal band as long as it has some relevant relation to Prog, right? The "other good reasons" to include Judas Priest are the same or very similar to those for which Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden and several other bands were already included. 


So as I said a "pure heavy metal " band would not qualify.

Priest however had some variety in the early days but not enough, at least to me, for PR. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 15:06
This is almost as entertaining as the abortion thread.
Trust me. I know what I'm doing.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 15:10

Oops, isn't this the abortion thread then?


Let's make lists now, this JP abortion is getting too painful.
Here's my attempt at a ranking of prog-relatedness of non-prog metal bands:

Iron Maiden > Metallica > Judas Priest > Led Zeppelin > ...     ...  > Blue Oyster Cult > Black Sabbath




Edited by Bonnek - November 07 2011 at 15:16
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 15:12
No.
 
 
You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 15:19
Originally posted by rushfan4 rushfan4 wrote:

If Judas Priest were some obscure 70's band instead of Judas Priest, and they had only released Rocka Rolla and Sad Wings of Destiny, then they would probably get consideration for a category like crossover or heavy prog; maybe even enough to be added, after all they would be obscure, probably unknown by most and therefore not controversial. 
The reason a plain vanilla metal band would not be included in Crossover or Heavy Prog is because they might be considered a plain vanilla metal band (not because they're obscure or not controversial)

On the flipside, if Judas Priest were some obscure 90's metal band instead of Judas Priest and they had only released Painkiller and/or Nostradamus they would probably get consideration for prog metal, or maybe again heavy prog. If a suggestor were to select the right couple of songs to provide as samples to the evaluation team they could probably get added to the database.

It should be self evident that 'cherry picking' albums would lead to all manner of PA anomalies in support of your argument e.g. If ELP had ONLY released Love Beach what category would they fit?

 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2011 at 15:32
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:

Originally posted by rushfan4 rushfan4 wrote:

If Judas Priest were some obscure 70's band instead of Judas Priest, and they had only released Rocka Rolla and Sad Wings of Destiny, then they would probably get consideration for a category like crossover or heavy prog; maybe even enough to be added, after all they would be obscure, probably unknown by most and therefore not controversial. 
The reason a plain vanilla metal band would not be included in Crossover or Heavy Prog is because they might be considered a plain vanilla metal band (not because they're obscure or not controversial)

On the flipside, if Judas Priest were some obscure 90's metal band instead of Judas Priest and they had only released Painkiller and/or Nostradamus they would probably get consideration for prog metal, or maybe again heavy prog. If a suggestor were to select the right couple of songs to provide as samples to the evaluation team they could probably get added to the database.

It should be self evident that 'cherry picking' albums would lead to all manner of PA anomalies in support of your argument e.g. If ELP had ONLY released Love Beach what category would they fit?

 


I think that what Rushfan wants to say is that when considering Judas Priest you should ignore all their non-prog-related releases, just like we ignore all non-prog released from the bands in the regular subs (or in prog-related for that matter, or is Metallica here for Load and Unload?)





Edited by Bonnek - November 07 2011 at 15:34
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