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Is Prog Underrated?

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ExittheLemming View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote ExittheLemming Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 06 2018 at 22:11
Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

Certainly an interesting discussion although now I feel less clear about what your position actually is than before, particularly about how much relevance you ascribe to "academic scrutiny".

What I do *NOT* think is that any of it can correctly claim to have universal validity, but neither do I believe that its value depends on that.

I'm not convinced by the case for universal aesthetics



Excellent post certainlyClap. I'm in broad agreement with much of what you say and now have a better understanding of the limitations of any value that 'formal academic scrutiny' might confer on any given music. My position has drifted a little since we started this discussion by way of your responses, so you can take credit for that. Where we diverge is that I believe their is a kernel of universal aesthetics that has been revealed by 'formal academic scrutiny' i.e. there are certain intervals, cadences, modulations, pulses, patterns, harmonies, structural consistencies and tonal gravity that we as humans seem to find satisfying and pleasing.
I don't pretend to know the reasons for this but I do know that our musical history stretching back hundreds of years provides an abundance of evidence that such traits cannot be arbitrary and are demonstrably impervious to both time or fashion. I would concede that conformance with the 'kernel' cannot be inferred as qualitative.
As far as Prog not being able to withstand 'formal academic scrutiny' goes, this belief is fueled by my longstanding view that those who conflate Genesis, Yes, Camel, Greenslade, early KC, Barclay James Harvest et al with Symphonic or classical forms, development and structural integrity are completely wide of the mark. My listening tells me that such bands are very highly skilled at stringing together short unconnected and undeveloped bits of popular song material and passing off same as a pseudo suite etc. Don't get me wrong, I was weaned on such artifice and still love 'em to bits.Wink
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Frenetic Zetetic Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2018 at 01:56
Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

Prog started in the second half of the 20th century and as such it was from its beginning surrounded by postmodern ideas on aesthetic, particularly the idea that the modern ideal of originality and progress may have run its course already, basically everything has already been invented and we can now only recombine and comment rather than create something truly new. With this of course came the fundamental uncertainly about values and the relativist tendencies to which I (at least partly) adhere.

This is quite manifest in Prog, the first innovations of which were about "re-combination" of ideas, rock and classical composition, rock and free improvisation, and then (still more connected to modern ideals) technological innovation combined with futuristic/SF aesthetic ideas. Then the willingness of many of the main protagonists by the end of the 1970s to leave their earlier achievements behind and try some new re-combination, together with the ever growing influence of markets and commercialisation; w8ith an emergence, in parallel, of some artists who rather tried to conserve and develop approaches that at the age of just 10-15 years were too young, in their view, to be already left behind. In all this one can see, in my view, a fundamental insecurity about aesthetic value, which is actually quite typical for the time, which comes with its own aesthetic quality or interest.

Personally I rate those artists highest who could steer through these developments in a confident and unmistakably personal and unique way. Firstly Can (including the solo work that followed the end of the band, I didn't choose my avatar for nothing). Czukay and Schmidt in particular as students of Stockhausen even had an academic music background (and Liebezeit was an established jazz drummer when Can started) and used this, and an insatiable curiosity for all kinds of music and sounds from all over the world, to produce their very own rich mix of influences, with a strong element of spontaneity, wilful primitivity and allusion to deep hypnotic and ritualistic roots of music, without ever standing still. In similar ways, although with very different results, Robert Fripp and King Crimson also created their very own sound and updated it continuously with new influences, particularly wide open to seamless integration of whatever new band members would bring in. Further examples are Magma and Art Zoyd; these and a handfull of other artists managed to put down so strong roots that they never lost their orientation when integrating new influences and "going with the time", but on the other hand their hearts, brains and particularly ears were always open enough to the big world of sound (and everything else) that they never stood still and managed to produce something fresh over four decades and more. 

Of course I don't want to dispute the role of other prog heroes such as Yes, Pink Floyd or ELP at particular times, and chances are that in 100 years these will still be better known than more obscure artists such as Art Zoyd. Who survives in public perception is not a matter of quality alone and achieving 5-10 years of greatness combined with popularity will give an artists better chances to be remembered than four decades of flying confidently under the radar, but still, I'd expect that whoever rediscovers the work of Can, King Crimson, Magma or Art Zoyd in whatever time on whatever strange paths of music interest will be thoroughly amazed. Which of course is just my subjective opinion.

Solid post is an understatement Clap.

"I am so prog, I listen to concept albums on shuffle." -KMac2021
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote ExittheLemming Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2018 at 03:43
Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

Prog started in the second half of the 20th century and as such it was from its beginning surrounded by postmodern ideas on aesthetic, particularly the idea that the modern ideal of originality and progress may have run its course already, basically everything has already been invented and we can now only recombine and comment rather than create something truly new. With this of course came the fundamental uncertainly about values and the relativist tendencies to which I (at least partly) adhere.

Great post Lewian Clap Just some observations (not necessarily criticisms) This 'everything has already been done' line is just a cultural poison prescribed by post modernists to abrogate responsibility for a narcissistic, shallow and apathetic generationWink. It's probably gained even more momentum 'post internet' where we now have access to practically 'everything that came before' as if such were sufficient to prove the futility of originality. It's probably ironic but just maybe our prior isolation and ignorance actually helped foster innovation? (not that I'm advocating a return to such) The 'fundamental uncertainty about values' you cite circa 1945, stemmed from the experiences of WW2, so I'm not sure if you refute that to be the source?

This is quite manifest in Prog, the first innovations of which were about "re-combination" of ideas, rock and classical composition, rock and free improvisation, and then (still more connected to modern ideals) technological innovation combined with futuristic/SF aesthetic ideas. Then the willingness of many of the main protagonists by the end of the 1970s to leave their earlier achievements behind and try some new re-combination, together with the ever growing influence of markets and commercialisation; w8ith an emergence, in parallel, of some artists who rather tried to conserve and develop approaches that at the age of just 10-15 years were too young, in their view, to be already left behind. In all this one can see, in my view, a fundamental insecurity about aesthetic value, which is actually quite typical for the time, which comes with its own aesthetic quality or interest.

The Prog audience had dispersed long before the end of the 70's and had simply abandoned the genre. Therefore the 'willingness of many of the main protagonists to leave their earlier achievements behind' was hardly of their own volition. That's like saying those who are made redundant have the choice to not work for free. At this time the industry conspired to foist upon music consumers an engineered 'brand loyalty' by fragmenting what had been an indivisible whole from which Prog drew it's ingredients: Psychedelia, Pop, Metal, Jazz, Blues, Classical, Folk, Rock etc were now rigidly separated in the browser racks as well as the fan-bases 'Mixing and combining' in this marketplace would thus have become about as viable as selling mittens from a Horror costumier. I'm not saying that mixing elements of disparate genres together is not a good idea but when it comes to Rock and Pop musicians, if you don't bother to learn the second language properly, public speaking is never a good idea. Once again you mention Rock quoting classical inspiration but like I said before, most so-called Symphonic bands merely tied short song based fragments together in the creation of pseudo suites (ELP and the Enid are noted exceptions to this) Similarly, there are very few Progressive Rock bands who could 'free improvise' with anything approaching the credibility of Jazz masters (Crimson might be a noted exception here) I guess I'm saying that 'cod Classical' and 'cod Jazz' don't represent one genre being assimilated successfully into another. Maybe musicians need to study other genres closely before they tackle them ( 'formal academic scrutiny' might help in this regard Shocked) I like to think that both of us also might recognize 80's Neo-Prog as fatuous AOR with delusions of being Next Gen Prog (the reboot)Wink
"A fundamental insecurity about aesthetic value' will emerge for any entertainer in danger of using up their shelf-life (not just ageing Proggers 'post-Punk')


Personally I rate those artists highest who could steer through these developments in a confident and unmistakably personal and unique way. Firstly Can (including the solo work that followed the end of the band, I didn't choose my avatar for nothing). Czukay and Schmidt in particular as students of Stockhausen even had an academic music background (and Liebezeit was an established jazz drummer when Can started) and used this, and an insatiable curiosity for all kinds of music and sounds from all over the world, to produce their very own rich mix of influences, with a strong element of spontaneity, wilful primitivity and allusion to deep hypnotic and ritualistic roots of music, without ever standing still. In similar ways, although with very different results, Robert Fripp and King Crimson also created their very own sound and updated it continuously with new influences, particularly wide open to seamless integration of whatever new band members would bring in. Further examples are Magma and Art Zoyd; these and a handfull of other artists managed to put down so strong roots that they never lost their orientation when integrating new influences and "going with the time", but on the other hand their hearts, brains and particularly ears were always open enough to the big world of sound (and everything else) that they never stood still and managed to produce something fresh over four decades and more.

I do like quite a lot of Can's music (prefer the Spoon compilations) but they too have been guilty of 'cod Jazz' and what I would term 'ethnic contraband' e.g. like the Talking Heads after them, and a million pale blues bands before them, a misappropriation of African elements that only serves as a great disservice to the source material. Call me a slave to structure but I've always found the fruits of 'instant composition' perish rather quickly. I also read somewhere that Schmidt was well on the way to becoming an orchestral conductor before he joined the group?. It's also ironic that the band tried to get Liebezeit to 'sound more like a machine and play robotically' Mercifully he resisted their entreaties. Isn't 'wilful primitivity' just pretending to be primitive? - Like brickies from Wolverhampton believing they're born under a bad sign. When you state you 'rate those artists highest who could steer through these developments' - does this mean that you consider their music better than that of others who have not perhaps steered through these developments (I'm implying in the marketplace) or that you are just referring to their adaptability and business acumen to remain viable?

Of course I don't want to dispute the role of other prog heroes such as Yes, Pink Floyd or ELP at particular times, and chances are that in 100 years these will still be better known than more obscure artists such as Art Zoyd. Who survives in public perception is not a matter of quality alone and achieving 5-10 years of greatness combined with popularity will give an artists better chances to be remembered than four decades of flying confidently under the radar, but still, I'd expect that whoever rediscovers the work of Can, King Crimson, Magma or Art Zoyd in whatever time on whatever strange paths of music interest will be thoroughly amazed. Which of course is just my subjective opinion.

It's probably self evident that no regular visitor to this site gives a discarded fig about who survives in the public perceptionBig smile


Edited by ExittheLemming - April 07 2018 at 07:31
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2018 at 09:59
Originally posted by Exitthelemming Exitthelemming wrote:

...
The Prog audience had dispersed long before the end of the 70's and had simply abandoned the genre. Therefore the 'willingness of many of the main protagonists to leave their earlier achievements behind' was hardly of their own volition. That's like saying those who are made redundant have the choice to not work for free. At this time the industry conspired to foist upon music consumers an engineered 'brand loyalty' by fragmenting what had been an indivisible whole from which Prog drew it's ingredients: Psychedelia, Pop, Metal, Jazz, Blues, Classical, Folk, Rock etc were now rigidly separated in the browser racks as well as the fan-bases 'Mixing and combining' in this marketplace would thus have become about as viable as selling mittens from a Horror costumier.
...

I disagree.

And if you check into the thread that is Space Pirate Radio on this board, it has a very serious following, despite it not being a "commercial" success per se, and Guy being continually abused by some folks, about his tastes and freedoms for that show, which he discusses in his blog quite well.

The music was there, just like it is today. BUT, many of us grew up and were no longer in school with mommy and daddy playing for it, and by the time you had a wife and kid, the ability to spend free time and fun listening to Klaus Schulze took a beating because it was not a 4 minute song and your local station played some "top ten" that you ended up believing in, despite having known something completely different, that you went on to forget!

My view, still is, that the media is the one that hurt you and I and helped hide things from the audience. Or as a couple of examples that I have ...  my friend, starting to play from Golden Earring's Moontan, and one other idiot from the station saying ... right over it, "it's not Rock'n'roll" ... to which Guy slowed the record to a stop, and said LOUDLY ... "who cares? It's great music!" and restarted the song ... its title? "Are you receiving me?".

It just tells you that many of the folks at many stations, and this is still true, are not into the music at all ... it's either the dope, or this or that, because big money is long gone ... the owners of the station took that away a long time ago, and most radio folks these days still are not getting regular hours and have no benefits whatsoever, and never will .... and this means that tomorrow, I wanna put on the air that blonde I want to sniff the next day, and she likes the top ten songs that Billbullcrap Magazine said were the top albums and songs in the country ... which is obviously not true, because what is number one in SF will NEVER EVER NEVER EVER be the same song as the one in NY!

Originally posted by Exitthelemming Exitthelemming wrote:

...
It's probably self evident that no regular visitor to this site gives a discarded fig about who survives in the public perceptionBig smile
 

If you want to be an artist, a writer, a musician, this is the first thing you have to ignore and not worry about. The work you do is about "you" and not the fan, or the visitor. And, in many cases, the visitor has no idea what you are about, and what you are doing, so you worrying about this, means that you are not an artist, and neither do you believe and live your art.

The "public perception" is a way to bet folks institutionalized and commercialized and since almost all the public this and that out there have some sort of connection to some big name companies that happen to own this and that and this and that ... like even PA is not likely to be safe from it ... commercials and such on the browser and such, for which they should get some small revenue, which helps pay the bills and keep the board alive. No complaints there, but right out front, here is the one thing that has hurt the life and living of "progressive", and while I will not criticize PA -- they are the best there is! --it just shows you how blurred and invisible the whole thing has become, and almost how impossible it is to get anyone to see and understand anything about "progressive" and "prog" ... the mis-information and the "fake-bands" and the bad responses and lack of respect for the art form, being the most visible of everything on this board!

I do comment, sometimes with doubtful taste, but 9 out of 10 times I am defending the art forms and their history ... we would not be talking about them if there was no "soul" or "spirit" behind them ... and this is the very essence that we have forgotten about and refuse to pay attention to. It almost does not matter how they got there, or what this and that is ... it's the essence that is its strength and it has maintained for 40 to 45 years, and you and I know ... that it ain't gonna stop there!


Edited by moshkito - April 07 2018 at 10:05
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote ExittheLemming Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2018 at 10:02
^ erm...Pedro. You are ascribing my comments to Lewian in your quotation
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2018 at 10:05
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:

^ erm...Pedro. You are ascribing my comments to Lewian in your quotation

Sorry ... hard to do doubles like that ... I got it fixed.

All in all, fairly great comments in both cases.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Saperlipopette! Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2018 at 17:25
^yeah this whole Is Prog Underrated?-question that started it all felt kind of dumb to me at first... but its a simple and effective question that for the last couple of pages (starting around the time I left) has inspired some of the best posts I've read here in years. Much thanks to Lewian who writes all the right things and has the patience, language and brilliant mind I haven't... and ExittheLemming of course - whom I fundamentally disagree with (but I've learned is mostly because of different approaches) - and finally Moshkito who's despite all is a lot smarter and knows his sh*t way more than all those who gets a round of applause for announcing their unwillingness to discuss with him.  
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Larkstongue41 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2018 at 18:18
Great read Clap
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Lewian Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2018 at 08:27
Thanks for the positive words guys, and let me second Saperlipopette's appreciation for the posts (well most of them) by moshkito and ExittheLemming.
I may have more to respond to but for the moment I jump on this one, as so much can be said about Can's music and approach and not that much of it seems to be here on this forum:
Quote
I do like quite a lot of Can's music (prefer the Spoon compilations) but they too have been guilty of 'cod Jazz' and what I would term 'ethnic contraband' e.g. like the Talking Heads after them, and a million pale blues bands before them, a misappropriation of African elements that only serves as a great disservice to the source material. Call me a slave to structure but I've always found the fruits of 'instant composition' perish rather quickly.

This is a good and interesting point and worth a discussion on its own. I am uncertain about this in ethic terms; there was a fairly recent peak of discussion of "cultural misappropriation" in the UK media and I found this a difficult topic because on one hand I get the arguments of those complaining about it, but on the other hand I have an issue with the idea of "cultural ownership". I see that creators of something great or inspirational deserve respect and a living, but I don't like the idea that this should imply strong restrictions on the "use", particularly the creative re-use and active re-examination, of such creations. There is surely a certain naivety of Can and particularly Czukay in this respect. There's the famous story that Holger Czukay got into a fight with Rebop Kwaku Baah, African percussionist of Can at the time, who accused Holger of stealing the souls of the singers who Holger was mixing into Can's music. I always felt that I'm with Holger on this one but I have certainly gained more understanding of the opposite view. In any case, I'm pretty sure Can didn't want to do the original material neither service nor disservice, They used it for inspiration and creation of their own sound. What would be naive would be to think that the way this "works" can be completely separated from the cultural connotations that come with the source material, and which may be influenced for the better or worse by this kind of "use" (I do realise that the word "use" itself points to where the problem might be). Can may to some extent be guilty of such naivety, but on the other side I feel very strongly attached to Michael Karoli's statement that "what made Can different from most of the other bands was that we were never interested in any kind of "message", we just wanted to make music" - just being interested in sound and its direct effect, probably wilfully ignoring political, ethical and other implications that seemed non-musical to them.
 
Well that's the deeper (aesth)ethical issue, regarding the musical value of the results we just may disagree. I wouldn't be attracted by all kinds of experiments of this kind, but the way this is done in a number of Can recordings and some of Holger's solo work such as Canaxis 5, Movies or the far too unknown live "Clash" is to me so fresh, explorative, deep and exciting that it has never failed to amaze me in all the years, and I'd think that this is not just personal (despite my frequent emphasis that aesthetic judgement is not objective), I think there's something genuinely special and valuable to discover in these works (which some may not like for good reasons, fair enough).  

Quote
I also read somewhere that Schmidt was well on the way to becoming an orchestral conductor before he joined the group?

Yes, and he did some orchestral work in later days, see
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gormenghast_(opera)
Quote
It's also ironic that the band tried to get Liebezeit to 'sound more like a machine and play robotically' Mercifully he resisted their entreaties.

I don't think that's true. I read quite a bit about Can and I know they were joking about Jaki's machine-like qualities, cultivated quite consciously by the man himself, but I haven't heard anything implying that they wanted Jaki to sound different from what he himself wanted to do (apart from "normal" discussions about what exactly should be done with this-or-that track).
Quote
Isn't 'wilful primitivity' just pretending to be primitive?

As before, I think this question is too "outside music" to matter much for Can, but of course it can matter to their listeners, at least the skeptical ones, and if indeed it didn't matter to the musicians themselves they may be accused of naivety - or defended against that charge. I think it's very much about exploring an experience, and I don't doubt that the band and many of their listeners had genuine experiences from this approach and as such it "worked", and I see connections there to "primitive" practices and their archaic qualities in which music is rooted. I'd say there's no pretence in the experience itself, so in my view your objection may apply to my choice of words but not to the music itself.
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 When you state you 'rate those artists highest who could steer through these developments' - does this mean that you consider their music better than that of others who have not perhaps steered through these developments (I'm implying in the marketplace)  

After having written this I thought that this was about appreciation for the (more or less) lifelong career of some musicians but this is of course different from appreciation for specific works, and surely I can value specific works of musicians as high and occasionally higher who don't fulfil the criteria I had used above over several decades. There may be some agreement between us here because when "rating" (from my personal perspective)  specific works, I'm attracted to work that creates what I'd call an "autonomous experience" rather than seemingly trying to satisfy certain expectations (even expectations that the musicians have of themselves subconsciously). Obviously it is hard to detect this from the outside but one element that distracts me is "showing off", the impression that something was created at least partly with the motivation to demonstrate virtuosity or a certain kind of "knowledge" or ability; one may see this in attempts to put "symphonic work" together that may satisfy certain criteria, maybe even academic ones.

Examples for such "autonomous" works in my view are Tangerine Dream's Zeit, Phaedra and Rubycon, Pink Floyd's "Echoes", Oldfield's "Tubular Bells", the last two albums of Talk Talk, and much by David Sylvian and Kate Bush (the latter two artists belong in my earlier list of "heroes over the decades"). "Autonomous" doesn't mean that nothing is cited and no external elements are used, rather it means that my perception is that really every musical element is there to serve the musical experience and nothing else. And obviously, when rating these, it doesn't play any role what else the artist did at other times.

I should probably admit that despite always holding up subjectivity and relativity in aesthetic judgement, "internally" I maintain a separation between "personal rating" and "critic's rating", the former meaning that I think that some music speaks to me personally but I wouldn't want to argue for this music in any more general terms; I love it but I may not think it should be highly rated in more general terms, which would be my "critic's rating"; there's music that I think has depth, potential and quality to which I don't have that much access, so it should be rated positively even though I don't like it as much as my personal heroes, but also obviously that some of those form a critic's point of view may not be all that remarkable (all the works and artists listed by me in this thread are highly rated by me in both categories).

You may think that by making this distinction I actually subscribe to the view that there are some "objective" qualities represented in the "critic's rating" that are different from what attracts me subjectively, and I admit that a certain paradox can be seen there (actually I believe that most if not all deep issues of humankind ultimately lead to paradoxes). I try to be well aware though that even my "critic's view" is *not* objective but personal as well. Only it appeals to criteria that can be more clearly communicated and refer to a discourse that is out in the open and in this sense not "inside me"; it resonates more with culture and communication rather than exclusively with inner experience.

Quote
or that you are just referring to their adaptability and business acumen to remain viable?

I tried to express something quite different. Obviously Genesis and to some extent Yes were very successful in the eighties business-wise, but I don't think they achieved this by creating a genuinely enrichening new music experience, rather by just adapting to commercial needs (if band members say that their development wasn't commercial calculation but that they genuinely wanted to take this direction for musical reasons, I would not accuse them of lying; I talk about what this music conveys to me rather than claiming to know what it "really" is). King Crimson's early 80s trilogy was commercially far less successful (despite working even in this sense better than the commercial attempts of many proggers at that time), but I see a proper and interesting musical development in it that responded to streams of the time but that I experience nevertheless as autonomous in the above sense. I don't mind the business acumen really, I don't like to see musicians aiming to be commercial on purpose, but neither do I have an issue with success, and I do value conscious development.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2018 at 09:28
Originally posted by Saperlipopette! Saperlipopette! wrote:

^yeah this whole Is Prog Underrated?-question that started it all felt kind of dumb to me at first... but its a simple and effective question that for the last couple of pages (starting around the time I left) has inspired some of the best posts I've read here in years. Much thanks to Lewian who writes all the right things and has the patience, language and brilliant mind I haven't... and ExittheLemming of course - whom I fundamentally disagree with (but I've learned is mostly because of different approaches) - and finally Moshkito who's despite all is a lot smarter and knows his sh*t way more than all those who gets a round of applause for announcing their unwillingness to discuss with him.  

Thanks a bunch, and to all others that added some to this ... they also deserve a very big and loud applause for their additions to the subject.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2018 at 09:29
Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

Prog started in the second half of the 20th century and as such it was from its beginning surrounded by postmodern ideas on aesthetic, particularly the idea that the modern ideal of originality and progress may have run its course already, basically everything has already been invented and we can now only recombine and comment rather than create something truly new. With this of course came the fundamental uncertainly about values and the relativist tendencies to which I (at least partly) adhere....

I disagree to a certain point. A lot of improvised music, did not necessarily agree with any of this and nothing in it, specially the early jazz that we found in Miles, Coltrane and others, had anything in common with the classical traditions of any "post modern" ideas. They were improvised, and they might have moments that came close to this or that, but I do not think that any of these folks were thinking, or had any weird ideas about turning these classical traditions on its ear and corpse and such! That is just plain weird and a serious lack of concentration about that very specific moment of playing!

THAT, is not to say that some folks are/were way too "advanced" in music theory and they can create mechanical and post modern stuff that comes out really well, and is also sometimes really strange to listen to ... like Keith Jarrett. While I appreciate a lot of his work, sometimes it's like someone turned on the DAW, and the metronome, and is counting and it will repeat and come back to that point! The freedom and improvisational side of it, is probably incidental at that point, I thought!

As much as I like the freedom and the EXPRESSION, of LA and SF from the early days psychedelia, in the end, they died way too soon, and were not "developed", and more than likely, the only band that did so, was THE DOORS, which had its movie-like work and poetry working really well and they prooved it all the way to the end. But, not all of it was improvised, though if you watch some of the concert footage, even though they tried to hide a lot of the freeform stuff (they did the same with Janis and Jimi!!!!!), some hints still show, and you know that some of the creative moments came though some of that.

Europe, already had artistic traditions based on experimentation and this and that, up to and including SURREALISM that even took on dreams in their clear and pure form, as artistic ideals, and something that LUIS BUNUEL illustrated with SALVADOR DALI which had many people not only scared but worried about ... what is all this, and why? It was, I call it, a real SNAPSHOT of the times and some of its ugliest and saddest moments ... and the dreams, were a nice way to show it, since many of us are capable of remembering a lot of our dreams, even from the furthest REM and NONREM areas, and even turn them into works of art.

Rock music, simply continued this in EUROPE. But as Edgar Froese stated in that Krautrock Special, it was a new time, a new place, people didn't know anything or their history, and they were alone and empty, and it became a perfect cultural development for music, arts and writing ... everyone was doing their own thing, and some of these things stuck, and some didn't. This also happened in France, and some other parts in Europe, although, for the most part in some countries (per EUROCK) many of these were extinguished and wiped because they were considered anti-government ... and in places like England, it had ... a different response, and was not as appreciated until things like HENRY COW became the darlings of academia, and from that point on, some of these things could develop. But, in general, the music "business" and "process" in England, is most similar to America, strictly commercial, for the Lords to get their next Bentley for their doggie or kitty, or that guy get another colorful balloon. And this process, is very tough on experimental folks altogether and tend to destroy all the possibilities of experimental and improvised music, not to mention any classical music that has a similar inkling and idea as some of the rock folks did.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2018 at 10:29
Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

Emotion and thinking are related in inseparable ways. Emotion can be complex and thought can be simple. Music aimed at thought or emotion only, disregarding the other, can never succeed.
The discourse on academic scrutiny and "fine art" itself is a cultural item quite devoid of emotion and  as such probably inferior to all kinds of music including baroque, classic, prog, punk, hip hop, you name it.

This is the scary part of this topic ... how to define all this properly and there are many examples in the history of music to illustrate this.

I'm going to start with a daily event kind of thing, to illustrate something and then give you a musical example, and how it can be dis-graced, by listeners.

So, we're going to take a movie example (for you to picture it!), and it's raining. In the middle of that rain, you hear some thump, thump and squish, obviously someone walking in the slush, and after a few steps GETTING CLOSER to you, it starts climbing a few steps and the quality of the thump thump gets louder ... if you think about this for a second, the "person" out there is not really a part of the music. The 20th century style of composition, made that person a part of the music, since we heard it. But trying to clarify it and show it? Almost impossible with the conventional sounding of the current orchestra/band ... because ... rain is just like rain ... and the feet and the walking had no timing or sound that helped the music of the "rain".

Now let's take the Act 2 of TOSCA, and you need to open up the score, and follow it until you get to the aria. Right in the middle of the aria, completely out of nowhere is a solo violin, that doesn't make sense whatsoever, and it is in the background, very subliminal if you will, and when you look at this, you wonder ... what's this about. So, as I used this for the "final" in my "Opera Directing" class (Peter Mark was the professor -- Virginia Emeritus now, I think), I saw this scene as a MOVIE first, and then went on to interpret the music and let the folks sing ... and guess what I found? ... you are in the jail with the guy and he starts singing and he is crying some (which is really hard to do in opera since no one can see it, and you are standing up with all the other actors and not "acting" the moment ... you are "singing" the moment!!!), and what I saw in my mind, simply surprised Mr. Mark and all the ideas ... and he said ... "you have resolved the majority of all problems that any conductor has with any opera" ... in other words, I interpreted the music very well, and gave it some clarity ... and I doubt he will EVER touch that opera, because he will want to make that moment alive!

The violin in the background, does single notes in descending order, and there are only 10 or 12 of them (I have to look - it's been 35 years or so!) ... and my movie? THESE WERE TEARS RUNNING DOWN HIS CHEEKS PAST HIS MOUTH, INTO HIS CLOTHING. THE VISUAL WOULD FOLLOW THE NOTES AND hope to distribute them to the last note being the tear arriving at its end point.

Many folks, specially visible in PA, will consider too many parts of any music, just noodling, and meandering, and not an important part of the "whole" (and it's "holistic" nature!), and this is something that hurts. You and I do not always have the ability to tell why Mahler did this and that, or why Beethoven added this and that to the end of the 9th ... like it was not another portion of some "song" that he had sitting in his breeches for 10 years!

And it is unfair to the musician, and some credit has to be given to the artist.

I have posted a lot on the "krautrock" this and that, and the most on improvisations and the ability to flow ... but in general, my definitions (and it goes for progressive music also) only go so far as the VISIBLE and ILLUSTRATIVE material goes, and it does not necessarily be "suggestive" at all, and it might just happen, as is the case with FAUST and some other similar bands that liked to use special and sound effects in tier work. It all created a VISUAL element that defined the work in its entirety, however strange it might be, and this is as true for me in AMON DUUL 2's YETI as it is in their MARILYN MONROE piece in Dance of the Lemmings, as it is in many of CAN's works, and other music's around the world.

The only thing that was hard for me, is to think that just because the singer says this is this, that we believe it and think that the music is about exactly that, and that is a weird, and sometimes fatal fallacy on the part of many bands ... assuming they know what the audience will see and find, and this is the problem with many bands ... the confusion that it adds to YES, after TFTO and RELAYER, when all of a sudden, you no longer get the feeling that the meaning was honest and spiritual at all ... it was all idealistic ... and you were left behind with old, make up and clothing, that made you look ridiculous to your friends!

Now, does the VISUAL define the whole thing as UNDER RATED OR OVER RATED ... is another story that I am not sure can be discussed with our ideas. I think these can only be defined with a good sense of history ... and this is the same thing for all artists in all possible manners, be they music, painting, writing, and so on ... if you compare it today to what it's value was yesterday, you might not be as impressed.

FRIENDS made sense 20 years ago, since it was so new to see that on TV ... but if this was done today ... gosh, who is writing this trash? And likewise, at the PF thread, it was massive 44 years ago and NOT over rated, but I seriously doubt that the majority of the fans today, with their likes for metal and rap, would even bother thinking it was worth their time listening, not to mention that it is full of meandering and noodling which is disguised with a few sound effects and inane this and that ... just like their old days in concert!

VISUAL ... !!!!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Lewian Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2018 at 10:56
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:


I disagree to a certain point. A lot of improvised music, did not necessarily agree with any of this and nothing in it, specially the early jazz that we found in Miles, Coltrane and others, had anything in common with the classical traditions of any "post modern" ideas. They were improvised, and they might have moments that came close to this or that, but I do not think that any of these folks were thinking, or had any weird ideas about turning these classical traditions on its ear and corpse and such!

I don't see this as disagreement to what I wrote. What I think is that Prog (or what we call now Prog) from the very beginning was based on conscious combination of elements, and part of these elements was the improvisational tradition from jazz. I wouldn't make that claim about that jazz tradition itself; one may find such elements in jazz as well as you noted, but probably for quite some time they weren't a major driving force.

Quote
Rock music, simply continued this in EUROPE. But as Edgar Froese stated in that Krautrock Special, it was a new time, a new place, people didn't know anything or their history, and they were alone and empty,

I may get you wrong here but this looks to me like a huge and ultimately wrong simplification. Many if not all of the early Krautrockers and quite certainly also in other European countries perceived and used Anglo-American rock and jazz music very consciously, and references to the own classical tradition were also very clear, particularly in Italy.
Also, certainly in Germany (I'm not so sure about other countries) there was a very conscious avoidance of certain traditions of their own country that had become thoroughly discredited in the eyes of that generation, but a negative reference is also a reference. (Then, as stated in an earlier posting, Froese and Tangerine Dream certainly had some more autonomy than many others.)
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2018 at 21:52
Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

...
Also, certainly in Germany (I'm not so sure about other countries) there was a very conscious avoidance of certain traditions of their own country that had become thoroughly discredited in the eyes of that generation, but a negative reference is also a reference. (Then, as stated in an earlier posting, Froese and Tangerine Dream certainly had some more autonomy than many others.)

It's on the very first episode of that Krautrock special ... what Edgar says appears to be really important since he was there and a part of it, and their early TD did exactly that.

The traditions in their country were, even per Edgar's autobiography, pretty much destroyed, so for all intents and purposes you had nothing to work on, except yourself. This, helped in two ways. The separatist side of things with each area doing different things by different people (FUTURE DAYS - David Stubbs), or it has a center, like the bar/club that was in Berlin, where so many names seemed to come together and create their own thing, a lot of it being ... much doggy do about nothing ... but the GREAT thing about goofing around with "nothing", is that it eventually teaches you how to use some parts of that nothing. In PF this would show in the early days as funny/weird/spacy/stoned bits and pieces, and eventually it all develops into a complete stage play ... THE WALL.

The "invisible" and "unknown" is one of the greatest teachers there is, but we, as "thinking people", can not imagine that something which is "nothing" can have any solid and valuable meaning in our lives. Not having words for it, is a better description, but the results? ... guess what a lot of drugs did to the music then that some folks were trying out and experimenting with? Not the same, but similar experiences that also bring about some results. The hard part, is learning to identify these moments and getting into them quickly ... it was the same thing with the acting exercise that I have explained here occasionally, that was 3 hours long with all 20 of us being 6 year old kids, closed up in a room, and with almost no lights. You do/redo all you know until about an hour, the 2nd hour you are out of tricks and your communication with one or another dominates some, and in the third hour, you find that you are much better centered and what you are doing, even with others, is not meandering and just being silly, stupid and scratching the surface for a meaningful moment that gives your experience a characterization that was not there before!

My main complaint with some of these "progressive" bands, is that to my ear and feeling, they are stuck on improvising on a riff, or a particular sound, and to free up the music, they need to let go of this, and concentrate on a story side of things (no lyrics please yet!) and develop the strength of what is underneath which is not just another (same)  lead with a different sound or effect, which is what a lot of the stuff played here as "new" is all about for the most part.

Even CAN's website, used to state very clearly that one of their most important concerns was not fall into the western musical traditions. And since most of the western music traditions were dominated by commercial radio in America and England, it was no surprise to me that developing long cuts and doing some cutting and pasting off 20 hours haphazard, was much more interesting to those folks than some idea about how this song was supposed to go, and to me, the VISUAL lives really well in almost all of the CAN material all the way to "LANDED", and after that, I think it got hurt. HOLGER continued it beautifully in his first two solo albums, both of which he told me on a letter that he was not particularly happy with them, and I THINK that it was mostly because it lost the free form that he was looking for and found and used later. Both of those first albums, as strange as they seem to be, still sound wonderfully put together, and hearing Vin Scully on top of it is almost perfect ... you are in the studio, someone opens the door and you hear the radio over from the other room! 

You don't "script" those things, usually ... they just happen, and you end up keeping them, because the freshness of the moment is so great and enjoyable, where as simply turning it into a song making a reference to something else, takes away the "real" and "now" feeling that this created.

In the Krautrock special, I did not think that Edgar was putting anything/anyone down. I felt that he was basically saying that there was a lack of knowledge and ideas in regards a lot of arts (a whole generation or two of families completely wiped for the most part prevents this from flowing!), which made for youngsters simply wanting to do this and that with that instrument. And in this sense, finding AX doing his thing with Guru Guru in the very early albums, was far out, but there were others according to EUROCK, one Ulli (I think) and others just experimenting with sound and noise, which otherwise would be laughed at and trashed in LA or SF or even NY, although in one article the differences of the early traditions of the synthesizer in America and their different views and applications, makes for a real fascinating story! Both very creative, but from totally different spheres of experience with the same instrument!

I believe in the "process" for creativity, but without a road map, so things can be found that otherwise might not be there, or get there. Setting up that "experiment", rarely fails to get results, depending on the mood of the players, thus a classroom situation is sometimes better, since the bass player showed up with 2 wild hairs up his butt for the session, and consistently refused to participate. (As an example). Or the drummer could only use the same bits he knew, and had no feel for anything new in the exercise! He was only listening to what he knew, not what he heard! 

It does get results. Not necessarily over night, but they begin showing up sooner or later, specially when your fear of the "unknown" and "invisible" within the exercises kinda give you a taste of how you can do something, which you eventually think about and learn to work with some more, and adds to your fluent abilities of playing. It's not just "rehearse, rehearse" ... it involves in this case the FEEL to be right for that moment, and this is the part that a lot of the recent "progressive" bands are lacking. And this makes for repetitive, and boring music that can only follow some guidelines.

Which to me, is where the over rated and under rated concept comes from. But next to the "real" and "strong" artists, the wording and thoughts or any kind of rating, has a tendency to fall apart. The history of the arts, for the most part, have all survived that kind of criticism ... they would not be here otherwise, and this is the part that we fail to see time and again. I am not sure, that the person asking that question, realized that ... wait a minute ... that music has lasted 45 years ... how can Sgt. Pepper's be over rated? Or The Rite of Spring? Or The Bolero? Or Snowflakes are Dancing? The question is not valid at that point.

We're trying, I think, to add more substance to the topic, and I wonder if we are actually getting away from it. But I think that we are helping define the understanding for a lot of the music that we love. AND, specially, why it became so valuable and is still heard!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote ExittheLemming Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2018 at 03:09
Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:



This is a good and interesting point and worth a discussion on its own. I am uncertain about this in ethic terms; there was a fairly recent peak of discussion of "cultural misappropriation" in the UK media and I found this a difficult topic because on one hand I get the arguments of those complaining about it, but on the other hand I have an issue with the idea of "cultural ownership". I see that creators of something great or inspirational deserve respect and a living, but I don't like the idea that this should imply strong restrictions on the "use", particularly the creative re-use and active re-examination, of such creations. There is surely a certain naivety of Can and particularly Czukay in this respect. There's the famous story that Holger Czukay got into a fight with Rebop Kwaku Baah, African percussionist of Can at the time, who accused Holger of stealing the souls of the singers who Holger was mixing into Can's music. I always felt that I'm with Holger on this one but I have certainly gained more understanding of the opposite view. In any case, I'm pretty sure Can didn't want to do the original material neither service nor disservice, They used it for inspiration and creation of their own sound. What would be naive would be to think that the way this "works" can be completely separated from the cultural connotations that come with the source material, and which may be influenced for the better or worse by this kind of "use" (I do realise that the word "use" itself points to where the problem might be). Can may to some extent be guilty of such naivety, but on the other side I feel very strongly attached to Michael Karoli's statement that "what made Can different from most of the other bands was that we were never interested in any kind of "message", we just wanted to make music" - just being interested in sound and its direct effect, probably wilfully ignoring political, ethical and other implications that seemed non-musical to them.
 


I guess that Can, unlike pretty much any of their contemporaries, were all too aware of the impossibility or even desirability of 'authenticity' when appropriating third world musical elements in their output. (If the titles of their Ethnological Forgery Series are anything to go by). I do agree that there is no copyright on 'spirit' or 'inspiration' and stifling their use merely consigns the originators further into obscurity. I also probably didn't intend the discussion to feature Can so heavily (as I suspect the OP would, like myself, be very reticent to describe the Colognians as being remotely representative of the broad thrust of Prog ) Would you at least entertain the idea that Can might have been pleased to provide a didactic role in the opening up of 'world music to a larger listening public? they are after all, the greatest dance band that Prog would ever deign to call its own....)
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2018 at 03:53
Originally posted by Saperlipopette! Saperlipopette! wrote:

^yeah this whole Is Prog Underrated?-question that started it all felt kind of dumb to me at first... but its a simple and effective question that for the last couple of pages (starting around the time I left) has inspired some of the best posts I've read here in years. Much thanks to Lewian who writes all the right things and has the patience, language and brilliant mind I haven't... and ExittheLemming of course - whom I fundamentally disagree with (but I've learned is mostly because of different approaches) - and finally Moshkito who's despite all is a lot smarter and knows his sh*t way more than all those who gets a round of applause for announcing their unwillingness to discuss with him.  
This is because a thread is only as good as the people who respond to it. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2018 at 06:59
Not being a part of the music academia, I can't comment on the above posts. However, I do feel that prog, being a part of rock, is looked down on from upon high with a  prejudiced eye. I believe one professor of music referred to rock n roll as "atonal noise". That statement says a lot.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote ForestFriend Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2018 at 09:59
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

I believe one professor of music referred to rock n roll as "atonal noise". That statement says a lot.


If listening to modern classical music has taught me anything, I'm sure that must be a compliment. Many composers have worked very hard to make sure their music isn't tonal in the least bit.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2018 at 12:01
^ I believe its a case of admitting that the sound he heard is music but not very good music.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Lewian Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 09 2018 at 18:29
Quote This 'everything has already been done' line is just a cultural poison prescribed by post modernists to abrogate responsibility for a narcissistic, shallow and apathetic generationWink.

Well, it was a diagnosis, not a prescription. I don't by the way think that really "everything has already been done"; I do think however that originality/progress at all cost is a dead end.
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 It's probably gained even more momentum 'post internet' where we now have access to practically 'everything that came before' as if such were sufficient to prove the futility of originality. It's probably ironic but just maybe our prior isolation and ignorance actually helped foster innovation? (not that I'm advocating a return to such) The 'fundamental uncertainty about values' you cite circa 1945, stemmed from the experiences of WW2, so I'm not sure if you refute that to be the source?

I think it started already with WW1 (Dada movement), with first signs perhaps even earlier. WW2 surely played a big role, too.

PS: Bloody captcha starts bugging again. Angry
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