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erik neuteboom View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: PA does harm to music history!
    Posted: September 01 2007 at 06:32
 
                                      Hello fellow progheads.
 
In the past I have created many threads about the categories but then I stopped discussing about it ..until today: I notice that Led Zeppelin is in Prog-related and Deep Purple is in Proto-Prog while these bands fit perfect in the new created category Heavy Prog. And then the Art-Rock, a wonderful category for bands like Queen, Supertramp, Bebop DeLuxe, 10CC and King Crimson (also for Anekdoten because Crossover Prog to Anekdoten looks even funny to say it a bit cynical) but PA has decided to delete the term and split it into 3 new categories, incredible, we should do something to keep that term alive, it's part of music history. I also notice that the very small category Indo-Prog/Raga Rock still exists while Prog Andaluz is ignored, the most influential and widespread blend of prog and folk ever made, it deserves way more an own category than Indo-Prog/Raga-Rock and even Zeuhl. I respect the other visions (yes, I really do fellow collaborators), I know it's a lot of work for the teams to keep it clear but if I look at the abovementioned bands and categories, to me it looks like PA does harm to music history Confused .
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 06:39
I don't think that Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple or Queen are prog, so prog-related is the only place for them on this website.

If you think otherwise you're welcome to rate and tag some albums and create your own view on prog on my website:

http://ratingfreak.com/user/MikeEnRegalia

http://ratingfreak.com/user/erikneuteboom

on your user page only your own genre assignments will be displayed ... I'll soon improve the layout of the charts facility, and you'll be able to show people how you view the world of prog ... a bit like this chart I'm preparing for prog metal:

http://ratingfreak.com/home/music.xhtml?path=artists/genre_charts/prog_metal



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erik neuteboom View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 06:46
 
           Haha, the inevitable Mike and his thread where Prog Andaluz rules Wink
 
Mike, Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple their music was very progressive and it rocked so Heavy Prog matches with these elements. And Queen was also a band that rocked and had a lot of progressive ideas, perfect for Art-Rock instead of that awful sounding category Prog-related. But the start of this thread is already a clash of subjective theories LOL


Edited by erik neuteboom - September 01 2007 at 06:51
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 06:52
^ It very much depends on the album. On my website I tagged Queen II as "prog" ... Deep Purple came close, but never quite crossed the border to prog IMO. I don't think that "Prog-Related" sounds terrible, but it is not a valid genre - only an attribute of music. I don't think that "Heavy Prog-Related Hard Rock" sounds all too bad ... and on my website you can create such labels easily.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 06:57
Erik, you're one of those who currently don't understand what's going on with these changes.

The three genres were discussed and sent to approval for a long time by now, they finally got approved, right now there will follow a work by which all the bands who were in Art Rock will be moved into the three respective genres.

Out of what you question, I have to say that, for the moment, we will focus only on Art Rock bands being sorted into Heavy, Crossover and Eclectic. After that, we may consider some bands that don't fit their category too much and may have a better place in these three genres.

Also The Split of Art Rock is meant to be a radical re-shape of ART ROCK, not of PROG ROCK. Therefore, for example we can't think of Hard ROCK bands that are currently in Proto-Prog having gained a pass towards Heavy PROG. The category of Heavy Prog will have an influence on the Hard Rock and Blues Hard Rock movement, but won't necesarily include those Hard Rock influential bands, if they are not progressive. Just the same, not much of Prog Related and Pop Prog will be redefined under Crossover, only because the genre of Crossover is a blend of progressive rock with more mainstream orientations or lost qualities.




Edited by Ricochet - September 01 2007 at 06:59
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Kotro View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 07:16
Please explain something to me: is Prog Rock part of Art-Rock or Art-Rock part of Prog Rock? Because only in this site I have I found the first option to be the case.
Bigger on the inside.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 07:20
Art Rock is part of Prog Rock and was always modeled accordingly.

Too bad Art Rock is now erased together with its clear and concise definition it had (made by Ivan Melgar), because it stated so well how Art Rock was a genre of "100% Prog Rock", plus a genre of "many influences and various styles". So far as we're "redifining" that, I don't see the big problem.

Art Rock stays Art Rock, by the fact that it was only a huge genre, weighting +500 bands and losing its focus by every new band being added. Art Rock was in fact not even a genre, as it was a category.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 07:37
I can understand what you guys are doing here but Art Rock was a widely accepted (not just here) description of bands of the likes of Queen, Roxy Music and 10cc. If someone describes a band as Art Rock then I know imediately what they're talking about. Terms like Eclectic are just a bit more vague.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 07:51
Well I can sense a confusion between what seen as Art Rock in "general music" and what's been defined as Art Rock in "Prog Rock" over here. Sure, Art Rock can elaborate to much more. It is even a reason why Bowie is so desired around here...he is an "Art Rock" great (if not fundamental) artist. But it all stops to be, however, that richly colored once we notice how Art Rock was "perfectioned" by the standard of progressive rock.

Right now, we simply mean an even better perfection and orientation for the Art Rock category, since it was on the point of exploding and losing complete focus. Heavy Prog, based on the influence of Heavy Rock and Blues Heavy Rock (like the definition states) was a much desired genre, Eclectic Prog compensates a massive orientation within the old Art Rock, mainly adapting Art Rock's old definition of "various styles" and "artistic valorous orientations", and Crossover was innovate out of the idea that there are some bands (and even a good orientation) which combines the prog attitude with mainstream or less obvious progressive values.

Going back to the "fears" these three genres may produce:

Heavy Prog may open a door to the Heavy Rock it gets its influence from (names like Zep and Deep coming in mind): it will mostly for sure not happen!
Eclectic Prog may stir confusion of prog quality: it will in fact focus on essential qualities: "various-styled" and 'artistic' prog.
Crossover may open a door to Prog Related, Pop Prog and even Pop (Queen, Roxy Music and so coming in mind): it will mostly not happen!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 08:16
Originally posted by Kotro Kotro wrote:

Please explain something to me: is Prog Rock part of Art-Rock or Art-Rock part of Prog Rock? Because only in this site I have I found the first option to be the case.
 
As in any other place, in Prog Archives Art Rock is a sub-genre of Progtressive Rock.
 
The sub-genre here is still Art Rock, it has only been splitted in three lets call sub-sub-genres or categories.
 
Quote
 
Sub-genres%20of%20Progressive%20Rock
 

Art Rock

The very border of progressive music in which more commercial styles of music were created at a different angle. Not quite progressive but almost.

Bands

Be Bop Deluxe, early Eno, Roxy Music, etc.
 
 
Also Proggnosis
 
Quote
 

SUB-GENRES

Click to view sub-genre description, styles & Artist listing
  • SUB-GENRE: Art Rock
    Overall Description: The anchors of this sub-genre are those mid-70’s bands that were not at that time considered strictly or at all prog - Roxy Music, 10cc, Alan Parsons, Be Bop Deluxe etc. Under modern standards they clearly are prog/art rock. Bands that currently play similar music - pop with an artistic flavour - fall into this sub-genre.

  •  
    Lets see Progressive Ears
     
    Quote
    Listing all Art-Rock artists

    Click the genres below for info on artists who create in that genre. You can add info about an artist (including tour dates) or add new artists by clicking Add Artist Info above.

    Page 1 of 10
    [ Prev Page  • Next Page ]
    This page maintained by ffroyd ([email protected])
    Ambient   Art-Rock   Avant-Garde   Canterbury   Electronic   Jazz-Fusion   Krautrock   Neo-Classical   Neo-Prog   Post-Rock   Prog-Fusion   Prog-Metal   Progressive-Folk   Psychedelic   Rock In Opposition   Space-Rock   Symphonic-Prog   World-Influence   Zeuhl  
     
    So it's clear Kotro, in each and every Prog site, Art Rock is a sub.genre of Progressive Rock, including Prog Archives, just the opposite of what you say.
     
     
    Iván
                
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    MikeEnRegalia View Drop Down
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 08:19
    It's really simple: I agree that Art Rock is a sub genre of Prog Rock, but you have to know that in the 70s the term "Art Rock" was used synonymously to "Prog Rock". This usage didn't last though, so today it can be discarded.
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    Bilek View Drop Down
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 08:21
    Originally posted by erik neuteboom erik neuteboom wrote:

     
                                          Hello fellow progheads.
     
    In the past I have created many threads about the categories but then I stopped discussing about it ..until today: I notice that Led Zeppelin is in Prog-related and Deep Purple is in Proto-Prog while these bands fit perfect in the new created category Heavy Prog. And then the Art-Rock, a wonderful category for bands like Queen, Supertramp, Bebop DeLuxe, 10CC and King Crimson (also for Anekdoten because Crossover Prog to Anekdoten looks even funny to say it a bit cynical) but PA has decided to delete the term and split it into 3 new categories, incredible, we should do something to keep that term alive, it's part of music history. I also notice that the very small category Indo-Prog/Raga Rock still exists while Prog Andaluz is ignored, the most influential and widespread blend of prog and folk ever made, it deserves way more an own category than Indo-Prog/Raga-Rock and even Zeuhl. I respect the other visions (yes, I really do fellow collaborators), I know it's a lot of work for the teams to keep it clear but if I look at the abovementioned bands and categories, to me it looks like PA does harm to music history Confused .
     
     
    I only agree with Deep Purple statement 100%, they are the reason why I always stood in favor of Heavy Prog, and I really can't see why they're still in Proto (and apparently intended to be kept that way) while a very similar band, Uriah Heep, and a clear DP-influenced band, Birth Control,  (rightfully) moved to Heavy...
    I can only patially agree with Led Zep, cause only a few of their albums can be said to be "prog", and these are only partly prog, i.e. still have much "unprog" moments Tongue (straightforward blues treacks, that is... even their most progressive albums include one or two of them...)
    The same can be said about Queen, and this fact makes both bands "prog related", i.e. not a 100% prog band in their own right, but having made some prog albums (Led Zep IV, Queen II, A Night at the Opera, that is...) deserving a place in a category in progarchives, albeit in the "outer rim"... Although they are not in the list, the same can be said about Rainbow as well... After 3 or four perfectly progressive albums, they too moved onto more mainstream heavy rock & AOR...
     
    And I really can't see how we can relate King Crimson to Supertramp! Supertramp is a perfect example of (previous) Art-Rock definition, but King Crimson is simply unclassifiable!!!
     
    By the way, Art Rock, as previously defined by progarchives used to be very vague and somewhat inversion of the original term... Check out this wikipedia definition: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_rock Normally Art rock should have remained a category, not a genre, which sometimes (and actually most of the time) crosses prog... Having said that, I might say that I agree with the "splitting" old Art Rock subgenre into three clearer categories (especially Heavy Prog, which I had been advocating for so long.)
     
    Listen to Turkish psych/prog; you won't regret:
    Baris Manco,Erkin Koray,Cem Karaca,Mogollar,3 Hürel,Selda,Edip Akbayram,Fikret Kizilok,Ersen (and Dadaslar) (but stick with the '70's, and 'early 80's!)
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    MikeEnRegalia View Drop Down
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 08:28
    Originally posted by Bilek Bilek wrote:

    And I really can't see how we can relate King Crimson to Supertramp! Supertramp is a perfect example of (previous) Art-Rock definition, but King Crimson is simply unclassifiable!!!
      


    That's why Supertramp will move to Crossover, and King Crimson stay in eclectic.Smile
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 08:31
    Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

    It's really simple: I agree that Art Rock is a sub genre of Prog Rock, but you have to know that in the 70s the term "Art Rock" was used synonymously to "Prog Rock". This usage didn't last though, so today it can be discarded.
     
    Yes Mike, Art Rock has changed three times:
     
    1. In the early days it was a synonymous of Prog Rock.
    2. Between 80's and mid 90's it was a synonymous of Prog Related
    3. In the late 90's Art Rock changed again and described the bands that escaped the categorization.

    It's so clear that Par Lindh created the Swedish Art Rock Society in 1991 to help the rebirth of more complex bands as an opposition to Neo Prog and AOR, a return to the roots but more radical..

    I bet you remember you and me supported this change about two years ago, because the new meaning was somehow obscure.

    Most sites remain with the 80's - 90's definition, we were ahead of most sites, but now the due to how crowded the ggenre had turned, it was necessary to split it, I believe Art Riock should remain as the main category and Ecklectic, Heavy (still believe Hard Prog is more accurate) and Crossover as sub-categories.
     
    I believe that is the intention.
     
    Iván


    Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - September 01 2007 at 08:37
                
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    Firefly View Drop Down
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 09:13
    Originally posted by erik neuteboom erik neuteboom wrote:

     (also for Anekdoten because Crossover Prog to Anekdoten looks even funny to say it a bit cynical)
     
    I'm pretty sure Anekdoten don't mind where you place them, genre-wise.  They'd just shrug their shoulders and say "ok".  Hell, if you ask them what they play, they're more likely to amile and say they just play "good music" and leave it at that. LOL


    Edited by Firefly - September 01 2007 at 09:14
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    erik neuteboom View Drop Down
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 10:22
    Ricochet, it's not that I don't understand what's going on here on Prog Archives, it's simply that I don't agree with deleting Art-rock (part of music history), putting Deep Purple and Led Zep not into Heavy Prog and ignoring Prog Andaluz while supporting Indo-Prog/Raga Rock.
    By the way, I prefer to mention Seventies bands like Yes, King Crimson, Jethro Tull, ELP, Pink Floyd and Genesis the Classic Prog bands, this does more justice to their musical heritage than splitting these bands and giving different categories.
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 10:31
    Art Rock, except under a "name", was not deleted. You'll only find that, right now, only a few bands were moved into Heavy and Eclectic, the rest still stand in Crossover (and will get fixed as soon as possible).

    Deep Purple and Led Zep can't enter Heavy Prog, since they don't have the Prog quality. Heavy Prog remains a genre of "100% prog" music, while Deep and Zep are Hard Rock and was approved as having influenced prog.

    I can't tell you anything about Prog Andaluz, it's out of my knowledge, just like Indo-Prog/Raga lies.

    About Classic Prog, we can only prefer to use such a term and regard such a phase, cause, regarding style, it's purely obvious what a complex kind of diverse great prog rock was composed, it's impossible to put everything under classic brackets.

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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 10:52
    I would also like the Art Rock term and label to be kept somehow, but I'm glad that this move of the Art-Rock team will clear a lot of this confusion between "art rock" as in a certain style of prog and "art rock" as in sophisticated (but non-prog) rock. I've seen already countless threads dwelling on that ambiguity, making various demands, and I'm glad they'll be over with.

    Regarding "Heavy Prog", I can't understand something: Erik you were the most visible advocate for "Heavy Prog" for the last year that I've been around, so one thing I was sure about the new move is that you'll be the happiest member. I remember plenty of your posts in the Symphonic thread in which you demanded the creation of a Heavy Prog category. What happened in the meantime? Confused
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 11:40
    Originally posted by erik neuteboom erik neuteboom wrote:

     
               Haha, the inevitable Mike and his thread where Prog Andaluz rules Wink
     
    Mike, Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple their music was very progressive and it rocked so Heavy Prog matches with these elements. And Queen was also a band that rocked and had a lot of progressive ideas, perfect for Art-Rock instead of that awful sounding category Prog-related. But the start of this thread is already a clash of subjective theories LOL


    Erik you and I both know that led Zep and Deep purple weren't Prog Rock bands. To say otherwise is to change history. Confused

    I am 46 years old, I was around then. Led Zep were NOT Prog. This isnt just my opinion it is an historical fact.

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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2007 at 11:53
    The thread title is disappointing, we look to our collaborators to talk positively about the site.
     
    The case for splitting the Art Rock into smaller sub-sections was well made. If the names of those new sub-groups need to be enhanced, we should discuss that without the need for tabloid style headings.
     
    As has been emphasised before though, the new categories are simply sub-splits of the previous Art Rock, they are not an excuse to skip non-prog bands into prog categories.
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