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DarksideofAbel View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DarksideofAbel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2024 at 14:56
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

Prog didn't die in 1979, it's just been resting. Norway has had a very strong scene, what with its Norwegian Blue parrots. It they seem listless, they're just pining for the fjords.

Anyway, progressive music has long been fusing styles since before Prog became a known-thing, and it continued to do so. I think in the 80s it is interesting how punk and art rock came together (think This Heat, Camberwell Now, Cardiacs) and Prog with goth etc. Post-Rock has been a very interesting development, I think. Today we have adventurous bands like Squid and black midi. It does become harder over time to be originative, but I always thought that the progressive spirit was innovative (and so originative) and innovation still happens. But I care about the music itself more than originality one might shallowly say, and I like a lot of retro music (especially of the more psychedelic, electronic and Krautrock varieties) There is this big Prog umbrella. I do tend to find the ones in the more melodic Symph vein less interesting these days than many of the ones found in Avant Prog, Post Rock, electronica...

Juts little digression if I had not digressed enough already: I love the modern music, I love the 2020's, I love the 2010s, I love the 2000s, I love the 90s, I love the 80s, I love the 70s, I love the 60s (I also love the late 50s and much earlier compositions). I actually don't care that much if one considers what I like to be Prog genre. A genre can be definitionally limiting and as it becomes more codified and stratified there is less room for experimentation and innovation often. I like to think of Progressive music, and that which is not bound to genre conventions 9can fuse genres, play with form etc.)
 well put!! But!! It did die!. 

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Logan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2024 at 14:47
^ I won't argue that exposure to the Goons would not be better for the nations of the world to take in and appreciate, but Monty Python is one of those things that has highly quotable and referential value (certainly in my circles). I'm not religious, but for my place in the world I find Biblical quotations useful to know (King James please), Shakespeare and Douglas Adams (especially 42). Now that does say quite something about my generation and my English background. There are lots more that I could list, of course, like Voltaire, Sun Tzu, Confucius, Plato, Nietzsche, Marx, Jung, The Beatles, The Beastie Boys... I'm tellin' y'all, it's sabotage.

Now please nobody be tellin' me that comedy died in 1979, or 1969, 1960, or 1959....

Edited by Logan - June 19 2024 at 14:48
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2024 at 12:45
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

...
Thanks. I have rather thought that Monty Python should be required studying in English language countries and English language forums (and exposure and openness to it world-wide potentially could do a lot of good). It is so widely referenced (so is Douglas Adams...). It is a worthy inquisition (not the Spanish...!) for those who have not yet delved into that world methinks and should not make one's brain hurt.

Hi,

Nahhh ... I would rather have the GOONS ... and their satirical comments on the government and politics is really good, but, sadly, not visual ... you have to have an imagination to visualize the sounds and effects of the whole thing ... and worse ... they were robbed ... and The Beatles were the first to do "Goons" on their early video stuff. This is also visible in the Christmas Shows they did for the fan club.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Logan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2024 at 10:44
Originally posted by essexboyinwales essexboyinwales wrote:

Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

Prog didn't die in 1979, it's just been resting. Norway has had a very strong scene, what with its Norwegian Blue parrots. It they seem listless, they're just pining for the fjords.

Anyway, progressive music has long been fusing styles since before Prog became a known-thing, and it continued to do so. I think in the 80s it is interesting how punk and art rock came together (think This Heat, Camberwell Now, Cardiacs) and Prog with goth etc. Post-Rock has been a very interesting development, I think. Today we have adventurous bands like Squid and black midi. It does become harder over time to be originative, but I always thought that the progressive spirit was innovative (and not [necessarily] so originative) and innovation still happens. But I care about the music itself more than originality one might shallowly say, and I like a lot of retro music (especially of the more psychedelic, electronic and Krautrock varieties) There is this big Prog umbrella. I do tend to find the ones in the more melodic Symph vein less interesting these days than many of the ones found in Avant Prog, Post Rock, electronica...

Juts little digression if I had not digressed enough already: I love the modern music, I love the 2020's, I love the 2010s, I love the 2000s, I love the 90s, I love the 80s, I love the 70s, I love the 60s (I also love the late 50s and much earlier compositions). I actually don't care that much if one considers what I like to be Prog genre. A genre can be definitionally limiting and as it becomes more codified and stratified there is less room for experimentation and innovation often. I like to think of Progressive music, and that which is not bound to genre conventions 9can fuse genres, play with form etc.)


Nicely put Logan!

And I love your opening paragraph😃


Thanks. I have rather thought that Monty Python should be required studying in English language countries and English language forums (and exposure and openness to it world-wide potentially could do a lot of good). It is so widely referenced (so is Douglas Adams...). It is a worthy inquisition (not the Spanish...!) for those who have not yet delved into that world methinks and should not make one's brain hurt.

Edited by Logan - June 19 2024 at 10:45
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote essexboyinwales Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2024 at 09:35
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

Prog didn't die in 1979, it's just been resting. Norway has had a very strong scene, what with its Norwegian Blue parrots. It they seem listless, they're just pining for the fjords.

Anyway, progressive music has long been fusing styles since before Prog became a known-thing, and it continued to do so. I think in the 80s it is interesting how punk and art rock came together (think This Heat, Camberwell Now, Cardiacs) and Prog with goth etc. Post-Rock has been a very interesting development, I think. Today we have adventurous bands like Squid and black midi. It does become harder over time to be originative, but I always thought that the progressive spirit was innovative (and so originative) and innovation still happens. But I care about the music itself more than originality one might shallowly say, and I like a lot of retro music (especially of the more psychedelic, electronic and Krautrock varieties) There is this big Prog umbrella. I do tend to find the ones in the more melodic Symph vein less interesting these days than many of the ones found in Avant Prog, Post Rock, electronica...

Juts little digression if I had not digressed enough already: I love the modern music, I love the 2020's, I love the 2010s, I love the 2000s, I love the 90s, I love the 80s, I love the 70s, I love the 60s (I also love the late 50s and much earlier compositions). I actually don't care that much if one considers what I like to be Prog genre. A genre can be definitionally limiting and as it becomes more codified and stratified there is less room for experimentation and innovation often. I like to think of Progressive music, and that which is not bound to genre conventions 9can fuse genres, play with form etc.)


Nicely put Logan!

And I love your opening paragraph😃
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2024 at 06:10
Originally posted by DarksideofAbel DarksideofAbel wrote:

I am guessing earth has to be pass away in order to new music genre to be born! 

Hi,

I'm not sure about that ... but the commercial aspect of it all needs to slow down and give everyone else a chance, which is only happening in one or two places, and even then one can not say that they are not "commercially" minded in some ways.

The fact is that the youngsters, do not have the instructions, or desire to do anything different than what is already out there, because it is all they see and all they know, and no schools are helping any of them to a point where the students decide to do their own thing. NOt to mention that in America, for 40 years, Republicans have been taking the arts out of schools because these arts, generally, are "too liberal".

Art scenes are about once per generation, and in the 20th century we had 2 major ones, even though the 60's are not considered in music history at all as valid, up to and including jazz. The 21st century will NOT have any artistic scenes as long as it is all about the past and not the future of our own children, who are stuck having to play the classics (all of them!) for the rest of their lives????? And you don't care?

Yeah ... in the end it goes back to the home and the start of it all ... I don't think enough parents give a damn.


Edited by moshkito - June 19 2024 at 06:13
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Hrychu Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2024 at 05:40
Originally posted by Jacob Schoolcraft Jacob Schoolcraft wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Jacob Schoolcraft Jacob Schoolcraft wrote:

...
I have always thought that if newer Prog bands had been inspired by a different choice of Classical composers that their original music wouldn't have sounded like the 70s Prog bands and possibly would have sounded just as unique and fresh as it did when it was first released in the 70s...but...no that is not the case. Instead they study what the 70s Prog bands did and are dismissive of the path in which those bands followed. ...which was to simply add the elements of Classical music written centuries ago. Instead they emulate the way Gentle Giant went about utilizing counterpoint. Don't do that. Instead realize counterpoint your own way. 
...

Hi,

Tough to discuss this, I wonder ... why? The popularity and explosion of pop music in the media and its sales from the 60's ended up changing the dynamics of the music history ... before the 60's it's really easy and simple to say that classical music is the inspiration, but that gets completely turned around if you factor in jazz .... which had really taken of in the 50's (per Tom Dowd) and still went its own way and really have not a whole lot of relationship to classical music. BUT classical music was taught in school and heard everywhere, thus it becoming an influence is fairly obvious, generally speaking.

By the time the 70's gets here, I think that many rock musicians had enough of the connection to classical music, which was obvious, and ended up creating their own scene, by being more adventurous and dynamic with the music, and even ELP did that just fine, considering that they had come from classical music, and stuck to it.

But some things don't always add up ... AD2's Renate, mentions that when they were doing "Yeti" they wanted to do something more classical minded and not western rock minded. And we will have a real hard time making this connection. This suggests that the musical understanding of a lot of folks in the 70's was no longer influenced by the media and school, as it had before ... and many of them did their own thing, since the unfolding of events was well suited to experimentation and new things ... which lasted a while until the same media decided that it was tired of these new things, and start trying to kill it all with second rate bands and the fads ... that were the main competitors, although many will say that Yes is nothing when compared to Saturday Night Live. But Yes, managed to survive and disco fell away probably because too many bars, at least in Southern California, were a haven for the new gay folks scene ... although it shouldn't be said that those were the only people in it.

The thing that we know for sure, is that there was a period of very intense INDIVIDUALITY that helped make what we call "progressive" ... and that somehow, the majority of musicians fell out of that by the end of the 70's even though I think it was more of a factor of the death of the American FM radio being raped by the Corporate Raiders and replaced the whole thing with "classic rock", which is still there 50 years later!

My take, is that bands today, are not intuitive enough, and in general, look for areas to "fit", instead of looking at themselves ... all they can see is the influence and the inspiration they can gain from the past rock musicians, which I suppose is normal ... but that does not, in many ways, says a whole lot about EDUCATION in both America and Europe, does it? 

Reminds me of Berkeley and its knack for creating "new" studies and classes, that a lot of folks flock to because it is the "new thing" .... in the end, just falling into the thing we see the most ... copy ... copy ... and just change the sound a bit, so it sounds new ... 

I don't think that a lot of rock music can improve, unless the studies in school get better ... without someone helping folks realize and understand there is more to music than just a song, and a format ... something that within the current progressive idea, we tend to make sure that most bands fit into ... instead of out of.


I agree with all of this!! Excellent viewpoints
I also agree! One of the main problems with this phenomenon for me is that, because the majority of the music consumption and creation crowd locked themselves in their echo chamber-like comfort zone of "the lazy kitschy low-effort cookie cutter product cult", that is why AI generated music nowadays is so widely accepted 🤮. And artists aren't really brave enough to push their boundaries to oppose it by creation instead of relying solely on their worthless crybaby protests and couch potato activism.

I waved goodbye to hip hop earlier this month. I said enough! If the hip hop scene and the hip hop audience is so unwilling to be musically challenged, I quit. I believe it was a good decision for what its worth.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Jacob Schoolcraft Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2024 at 05:39
Another situation affected by blackballing or Playlist mentality is the fiction in Classic Rock...or...what became Classic Rock after generations of people from the 60s and early 70s were out voted by teenagers in the late 70s. For example, the first album they may have heard by Pink Floyd was The Wall.

In 1980 Rory Gallagher seemed unheard of..but throughout the 70s he was filling the seats of the Spectrum and literally everywhere I went in my youth people generally knew of Rory Gallagher...but that faded to the point where people could no longer concieve that Rory Gallagher played to the same massive audience that Eric Clapton did...and if Gallagher did play to a huge audience it would be questioned why?

The same applies to Ten Years After, Deep Purple, Blue Oyster Cult and the list goes on and on. Today most people react like this..." Oh..Deep Purple..isn't that the group that played that song called Smoke On The Water?" That's not how thousands of kids in America thought of that band in the 70s.

BOC..isn't that ..the band that did Don't Fear The Reaper? But yet they would never disrespect Eric Clapton that way ..or Led Zeppelin and in actuality they were not better at anything. They were not Gods of Rock.

I can just hear it now.."Who is Ten Years After?" It's ignorant.

Edited by Jacob Schoolcraft - June 19 2024 at 05:42
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Jacob Schoolcraft Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2024 at 05:20
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Jacob Schoolcraft Jacob Schoolcraft wrote:

...
I have always thought that if newer Prog bands had been inspired by a different choice of Classical composers that their original music wouldn't have sounded like the 70s Prog bands and possibly would have sounded just as unique and fresh as it did when it was first released in the 70s...but...no that is not the case. Instead they study what the 70s Prog bands did and are dismissive of the path in which those bands followed. ...which was to simply add the elements of Classical music written centuries ago. Instead they emulate the way Gentle Giant went about utilizing counterpoint. Don't do that. Instead realize counterpoint your own way. 
...

Hi,

Tough to discuss this, I wonder ... why? The popularity and explosion of pop music in the media and its sales from the 60's ended up changing the dynamics of the music history ... before the 60's it's really easy and simple to say that classical music is the inspiration, but that gets completely turned around if you factor in jazz .... which had really taken of in the 50's (per Tom Dowd) and still went its own way and really have not a whole lot of relationship to classical music. BUT classical music was taught in school and heard everywhere, thus it becoming an influence is fairly obvious, generally speaking.

By the time the 70's gets here, I think that many rock musicians had enough of the connection to classical music, which was obvious, and ended up creating their own scene, by being more adventurous and dynamic with the music, and even ELP did that just fine, considering that they had come from classical music, and stuck to it.

But some things don't always add up ... AD2's Renate, mentions that when they were doing "Yeti" they wanted to do something more classical minded and not western rock minded. And we will have a real hard time making this connection. This suggests that the musical understanding of a lot of folks in the 70's was no longer influenced by the media and school, as it had before ... and many of them did their own thing, since the unfolding of events was well suited to experimentation and new things ... which lasted a while until the same media decided that it was tired of these new things, and start trying to kill it all with second rate bands and the fads ... that were the main competitors, although many will say that Yes is nothing when compared to Saturday Night Live. But Yes, managed to survive and disco fell away probably because too many bars, at least in Southern California, were a haven for the new gay folks scene ... although it shouldn't be said that those were the only people in it.

The thing that we know for sure, is that there was a period of very intense INDIVIDUALITY that helped make what we call "progressive" ... and that somehow, the majority of musicians fell out of that by the end of the 70's even though I think it was more of a factor of the death of the American FM radio being raped by the Corporate Raiders and replaced the whole thing with "classic rock", which is still there 50 years later!

My take, is that bands today, are not intuitive enough, and in general, look for areas to "fit", instead of looking at themselves ... all they can see is the influence and the inspiration they can gain from the past rock musicians, which I suppose is normal ... but that does not, in many ways, says a whole lot about EDUCATION in both America and Europe, does it? 

Reminds me of Berkeley and its knack for creating "new" studies and classes, that a lot of folks flock to because it is the "new thing" .... in the end, just falling into the thing we see the most ... copy ... copy ... and just change the sound a bit, so it sounds new ... 

I don't think that a lot of rock music can improve, unless the studies in school get better ... without someone helping folks realize and understand there is more to music than just a song, and a format ... something that within the current progressive idea, we tend to make sure that most bands fit into ... instead of out of.


I agree with all of this!! Excellent viewpoints
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2024 at 17:24
Originally posted by Jacob Schoolcraft Jacob Schoolcraft wrote:

...
I have always thought that if newer Prog bands had been inspired by a different choice of Classical composers that their original music wouldn't have sounded like the 70s Prog bands and possibly would have sounded just as unique and fresh as it did when it was first released in the 70s...but...no that is not the case. Instead they study what the 70s Prog bands did and are dismissive of the path in which those bands followed. ...which was to simply add the elements of Classical music written centuries ago. Instead they emulate the way Gentle Giant went about utilizing counterpoint. Don't do that. Instead realize counterpoint your own way. 
...

Hi,

Tough to discuss this, I wonder ... why? The popularity and explosion of pop music in the media and its sales from the 60's ended up changing the dynamics of the music history ... before the 60's it's really easy and simple to say that classical music is the inspiration, but that gets completely turned around if you factor in jazz .... which had really taken of in the 50's (per Tom Dowd) and still went its own way and really have not a whole lot of relationship to classical music. BUT classical music was taught in school and heard everywhere, thus it becoming an influence is fairly obvious, generally speaking.

By the time the 70's gets here, I think that many rock musicians had enough of the connection to classical music, which was obvious, and ended up creating their own scene, by being more adventurous and dynamic with the music, and even ELP did that just fine, considering that they had come from classical music, and stuck to it.

But some things don't always add up ... AD2's Renate, mentions that when they were doing "Yeti" they wanted to do something more classical minded and not western rock minded. And we will have a real hard time making this connection. This suggests that the musical understanding of a lot of folks in the 70's was no longer influenced by the media and school, as it had before ... and many of them did their own thing, since the unfolding of events was well suited to experimentation and new things ... which lasted a while until the same media decided that it was tired of these new things, and start trying to kill it all with second rate bands and the fads ... that were the main competitors, although many will say that Yes is nothing when compared to Saturday Night Live. But Yes, managed to survive and disco fell away probably because too many bars, at least in Southern California, were a haven for the new gay folks scene ... although it shouldn't be said that those were the only people in it.

The thing that we know for sure, is that there was a period of very intense INDIVIDUALITY that helped make what we call "progressive" ... and that somehow, the majority of musicians fell out of that by the end of the 70's even though I think it was more of a factor of the death of the American FM radio being raped by the Corporate Raiders and replaced the whole thing with "classic rock", which is still there 50 years later!

My take, is that bands today, are not intuitive enough, and in general, look for areas to "fit", instead of looking at themselves ... all they can see is the influence and the inspiration they can gain from the past rock musicians, which I suppose is normal ... but that does not, in many ways, says a whole lot about EDUCATION in both America and Europe, does it? 

Reminds me of Berkeley and its knack for creating "new" studies and classes, that a lot of folks flock to because it is the "new thing" .... in the end, just falling into the thing we see the most ... copy ... copy ... and just change the sound a bit, so it sounds new ... 

I don't think that a lot of rock music can improve, unless the studies in school get better ... without someone helping folks realize and understand there is more to music than just a song, and a format ... something that within the current progressive idea, we tend to make sure that most bands fit into ... instead of out of.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (2) Thanks(2)   Quote Logan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2024 at 17:13
Prog didn't die in 1979, it's just been resting. Norway has had a very strong scene, what with its Norwegian Blue parrots. It they seem listless, they're just pining for the fjords.

Anyway, progressive music has long been fusing styles since before Prog became a known-thing, and it continued to do so. I think in the 80s it is interesting how punk and art rock came together (think This Heat, Camberwell Now, Cardiacs) and Prog with goth etc. Post-Rock has been a very interesting development, I think. Today we have adventurous bands like Squid and black midi. It does become harder over time to be originative, but I always thought that the progressive spirit was innovative (and so originative) and innovation still happens. But I care about the music itself more than originality one might shallowly say, and I like a lot of retro music (especially of the more psychedelic, electronic and Krautrock varieties) There is this big Prog umbrella. I do tend to find the ones in the more melodic Symph vein less interesting these days than many of the ones found in Avant Prog, Post Rock, electronica...

Juts little digression if I had not digressed enough already: I love the modern music, I love the 2020's, I love the 2010s, I love the 2000s, I love the 90s, I love the 80s, I love the 70s, I love the 60s (I also love the late 50s and much earlier compositions). I actually don't care that much if one considers what I like to be Prog genre. A genre can be definitionally limiting and as it becomes more codified and stratified there is less room for experimentation and innovation often. I like to think of Progressive music, and that which is not bound to genre conventions 9can fuse genres, play with form etc.)
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DarksideofAbel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2024 at 15:40
I am guessing earth has to be pass away in order to new music genre to be born! 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DarksideofAbel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2024 at 15:37
Originally posted by Boojieboy Boojieboy wrote:

I wouldn't say that prog "died" in 1979, but for various reasons, most of the original creativity faded from that point on. Part of it was big competing new forces in music (disco, punk, New Wave, etc.) By the time those started fading away (the 90's), much of daily life and the spirit that had been around in the late 60's and 70's was gone. And so when prog. revived itself with new people and new bands, most just copied and predigested what had come before. And they probably thought they did a good job at it.

Some times and some eras are very unique to facilitate such special creativity, such as the late 60's and 70's prog. It can't necessarily be easily repeated, but it's also not impossible.
 agreed!!!! but bands these days are not trying hard enough? 
I don't know I just think it died!!. 
How can a music genre re-inverted itself again?. I find it extremely hard. look at jazz players as well, are they creating anything different, NEW! since fusion? mmm NO!.
Can we have a new Zappa? A new Miles? a new Fripp? a new Parker? 


Edited by DarksideofAbel - June 18 2024 at 15:37
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Floydoid Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2024 at 13:49
Originally posted by Boojieboy Boojieboy wrote:

I wouldn't say that prog "died" in 1979, but for various reasons, most of the original creativity faded from that point on. Part of it was big competing new forces in music (disco, punk, New Wave, etc.) By the time those started fading away (the 90's), much of daily life and the spirit that had been around in the late 60's and 70's was gone. And so when prog. revived itself with new people and new bands, most just copied and redigested what had come before. And they probably thought they did a good job at it.

Some times and some eras are very unique to facilitate such special creativity, such as the late 60's and 70's prog. It can't necessarily be easily repeated, but it's also not impossible.


Exactly. The young teenagers from the start of the 70's were maturing into adulthood by the end of the decade, and the new generation of teenagers were listening to newer and different stuff, such as punk, new wave, new romantic, synthpop or whatever as the 1980's dawned.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Boojieboy Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2024 at 13:32
I wouldn't say that prog "died" in 1979, but for various reasons, most of the original creativity faded from that point on. Part of it was big competing new forces in music (disco, punk, New Wave, etc.) By the time those started fading away (the 90's), much of daily life and the spirit that had been around in the late 60's and 70's was gone. And so when prog. revived itself with new people and new bands, most just copied and redigested what had come before. And they probably thought they did a good job at it.

Some times and some eras are very unique to facilitate such special creativity, such as the late 60's and 70's prog. It can't necessarily be easily repeated, but it's also not impossible.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DarksideofAbel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2024 at 15:27
Originally posted by Jacob Schoolcraft Jacob Schoolcraft wrote:

Bands like Gentle Giant, King Crimson, Genesis, Yes, Procol Harum and several others I have not mentioned were innovative. Most of these bands were inspired by specific Classical composers.

Imo...a lot of Prog bands in the 80s and 90s were inspired by these bands and obviously not the Classical composers..and to me that's when elements in Prog became a redundancy. Basically a repeat of perhaps what Crimson and Giant previously composed but shifted around a bit or rearranged to sound as if it was inspired as opposed to being lifted or copied.

I have always thought that if newer Prog bands had been inspired by a different choice of Classical composers that their original music wouldn't have sounded like the 70s Prog bands and possibly would have sounded just as unique and fresh as it did when it was first released in the 70s...but...no that is not the case. Instead they study what the 70s Prog bands did and are dismissive of the path in which those bands followed. ...which was to simply add the elements of Classical music written centuries ago. Instead they emulate the way Gentle Giant went about utilizing counterpoint. Don't do that. Instead realize counterpoint your own way. After all..thats what Gentle Giant did right? So why copy what they did and repeat it all again in a new decade?


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DarksideofAbel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2024 at 15:19
Originally posted by Floydoid Floydoid wrote:

Originally posted by DarksideofAbel DarksideofAbel wrote:

Originally posted by Floydoid Floydoid wrote:

Prog didn't die in 1979, it merely slipped under the radar of the average music fan.

Tho I agree the classic era (where most of the prog I love is from) is approximately 1968-78.

 
 As you can see yourself!  it did die!!!  as most of the prog that you love and I bet most of us as well, it is from 1968-79!!!  We like new bands from there on (1980 - 2024) due to nostalgia!!!! Cry



You didn't read (or understand) what I said.

LOLLOLLOLLOL
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DarksideofAbel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2024 at 15:16
Originally posted by Octopus II Octopus II wrote:

Prog didn't die in 1979, it just smelled funny. Wink
LOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOL
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DarksideofAbel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2024 at 15:13
uffff!!! the topic is still active!!!!! hey!!!! 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote mickcoxinha Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2024 at 13:55
In that notion, I would say that prog had died already in 1979. There was hardly anyone doing anything "new" by 1975, just repeating what has already been tried, padded for commercial purposes.

Of course, there is always some obscure band which released an obscure album no one has heard about, but that didn't mean anything for the genre. But new ways of making music that shaped or branched the genre, zero.

That doesn't mean they were not making great music, just that the bands were reproducing the styles created before or moving to something less daring and more commercial.
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