Author |
Topic Search Topic Options
|
Martinyesman
Forum Newbie
Joined: September 03 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 7
|
Topic: Prog & Alternative Rock don`t mix Posted: January 26 2006 at 10:12 |
Some of the views I've read here typify the elitist attitude that gives prog such a bad name. I think that for a band to be truly progressive these days, they have to assimilate alternaive influences along with the best aspects of 70s prog. As much as I like bands like Glass Hammer and Galahad, they aren't doing anything original with the genre, whereas the likes of h era Marillion, Porcupine Tree, Pineapple Thief and (shock horror) the Mars Volta are the true innovators.
|
|
Tholomyes
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 16 2005
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 338
|
Posted: January 26 2006 at 10:04 |
what a...
|
|
Guests
Forum Guest Group
|
Posted: January 26 2006 at 08:45 |
Edited by s1ipp3ry
|
|
Guests
Forum Guest Group
|
Posted: January 26 2006 at 08:33 |
|
|
Dick Heath
Special Collaborator
Jazz-Rock Specialist
Joined: April 19 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 12817
|
Posted: January 26 2006 at 07:30 |
Rashikal wrote:
everyone here is so label oriented it is sad.
|
So how do you explain the sort of new music youre into, to your friends who haven't heard it? You need reference points, but would suggest there is the aspect of overdoing these things. However, I don't believe such labelling should restrict listening, because some music doesn't fit a particular pigeonhole.
|
|
Rashikal
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 07 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 546
|
Posted: January 26 2006 at 06:10 |
oh no! prog and alternative dont mix you say!?
here let me throw out every cd i own that might be called "alternative"
phew thats better, now i only listen to prog.
thanks s1ippery!
|
listen to Hella
|
|
Starette
Prog Reviewer
Joined: June 14 2005
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 502
|
Posted: January 26 2006 at 03:26 |
Seriously I couldn't give a sh*t. I've said it before and I'll say it again: I like WHAT SOUNDS GOOD. I love prog but lately I've been introduced to the Kidney Thieves and be they 'alternative' or not, I sure think they're the most proggy-alt band ever to come across meee.
|
50 tonne angel falls to the earth...
|
|
Inferno
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 30 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 152
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 23:26 |
That's the spirit!!!
|
|
Guests
Forum Guest Group
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 23:23 |
|
|
darren
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 31 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 452
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 23:18 |
Tormato wrote:
Wasn't Bob Geldoff in the "Bottom Rats" when Roger Waters called him for "The wall"?
|
Off topic I know but this reminds me of one of those docos on the making of "The Wall". Geldoff was riding in a taxi with his agent and went off on a rant. Geldoff went off talking how he hated the idea, didn't want to do the film and voiced a few words about what he thought about Pink Floyd. This being a small world, Sir Bob didn't know the cab driver was Roger Water's brother.
|
"they locked up a man who wanted to rule the world.
the fools
they locked up the wrong man."
- Leonard Cohen
|
|
Inferno
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 30 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 152
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 23:18 |
Actually, I was looking if someone would name other bands then C&C
as Alternative/prog band so to speak b'cause I consider bands like
Dredg, C&C, Oceansize to be such bands and I want to find other
bands in the same veins!
It end up that I took the time to respond to this ridiculous thread indeed
|
|
Guests
Forum Guest Group
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 23:10 |
Inferno wrote:
The Ryan wrote:
If an "Alternative" band decided to make prog (dream on!) they would no longer be alternative, they would be prog. Alternative-prog might be a way of labelling bands like Jelly Jam and Coheed and Cambria, both bands are hardly prog in the 70's sense, or perhaps not even prog-metal or art rock. When you make progressive music, an overwhelming majority of people will claim you are a progressive artist, you will not see that happen with alternative bands, many of which do not even hold the talent to make prog-rock that doesn't sound alternative. |
Why does everybody talks about prog in the 70's sense and don't accept it's evolution in the 00's?You can not like what prog has become, but it's that way. Look at what prog sounded like in the 80's! Some hated it and some loved it! I Think Coheed and Cambria has forged a new sound in the music industry and their last album is their most challenging one yet and they'll probably do better with the next one, and then the next one and then, 10 years later maybe they will be presented in a Progarchives type of site or on this site as a prog band that blended prog with Alternative and emo elements together and they will label it with whatever the name they will come up with because once again the purist will not like to see only the word Prog beside that name or whatever...
I think this thread is pretty much ridiculous! I'm with the guy that said that you label too much music, it's kinda sad!
|
Do you often take the time to responed to ridiculous threads ? is this something you enjoy doing ?
|
|
Inferno
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 30 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 152
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 21:54 |
The Ryan wrote:
If an "Alternative" band decided to make prog (dream
on!) they would no longer be alternative, they would be prog.
Alternative-prog might be a way of labelling bands like Jelly Jam and
Coheed and Cambria, both bands are hardly prog in the 70's sense,
or perhaps not even prog-metal or art rock. When you make
progressive music, an overwhelming majority of people will claim you
are a progressive artist, you will not see that happen with alternative
bands, many of which do not even hold the talent to make prog-rock that
doesn't sound alternative. |
Why does everybody talks about prog in the 70's sense and don't accept
it's evolution in the 00's?You can not like what prog has become, but
it's that way. Look at what prog sounded like in the 80's! Some hated
it and some loved it! I Think Coheed and Cambria has forged a new sound
in the music industry and their last album is their most challenging
one yet and they'll probably do better with the next one, and then the
next one and then, 10 years later maybe they will be presented in a
Progarchives type of site or on this site as a prog band that blended
prog with Alternative and emo elements together and they will label it
with whatever the name they will come up with because once again the
purist will not like to see only the word Prog beside that name or
whatever...
I think this thread is pretty much ridiculous! I'm with the guy that said that you label too much music, it's kinda sad!
|
|
Mongo
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 12 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 370
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 21:18 |
Since Darrin said most of what I was thinking, I'll just try to sum up.
These things tend to be cyclical.
Punk was a return to the roots of rock'n'roll.
Alternative can be likened to what the Beatles were doing. Not stylistically, socially.
Compare the years between punk and alt to the years between Elvis and the Beatles and you can see they match up pretty closely.
The bottom line is we should be getting to the point where we start seeing a return of PROG, indeed it is already starting. The next few years should see some really interesting music coming out.
|
"The options are ever fewer on the ground these days" Fish
|
|
Guests
Forum Guest Group
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 21:00 |
All I did was state my opinion .. and its still my opinion , I could argue with so many of you like you have with me but whats the point,in the end I`ll be enjoying my prog in 20 years while you skip from phase to phase holding onto nothing but another buzz,prog isn`t about fashion, and alternative rock is , this makes what you like a phase
Edited by s1ipp3ry
|
|
laztraz
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 22 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 216
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 19:54 |
A bigger question to ask(and somewhat tangential) is why is most top 40 or pop music NOT rock and roll anymore. It used to be,didn't it?
|
|
laztraz
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 22 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 216
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 19:50 |
I like punk, prog and "alternative". I don't like hardcore punk but I do like Ramones, Clash, Green Day, Buzzcocks etc. Most people know punk when they hear it. There is much more disagreement about what prog and alternative actually are. Alternative is a particularly generic term and has been used to describe most non-mainstream rock groups. Prog is alternative in the sense that it is clearly an alternative to what most people listen to. Sometimes alternative is progressive i.e. it advances music to a new level. Punk and traditional prog are opposites in some way but many people like both. I think anyone who listens to only prog needs to expand their horizons. I like the food analogy by Darren.
|
|
penguindf12
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 20 2004
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 831
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 19:44 |
sl1ppery's argument against the fusion of punk/alt rock and prog is self-contradictory. he compares it to mixing something "pure" with something "impure" or "common". he should ask himself: how was prog itself born? a: it was the "pure", "wholesome", "high" art of classical and jazz music mixed with the "common", "pedestrian", "low" art of rock music. Only by fusing genres, recycling old ideas together, can new styles be invented. Every time new genres are bred, the result is greater and newer, a step forward. That's why the all-inclusive Mr. Bungle is my favorite group at the moment, as are the punk-prog Mars Volta, the alt rock-prog Radiohead, etc. Ignoring and brushing aside the new is just something done to simplify the world, to keep your old world perfectly framed and undamaged. It resists change, truth, and right. The old and new must be seen equally.
|
|
alan_pfeifer
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 05 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 823
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 19:28 |
^ Yes it does
and what's wrong with a bass solo?
|
|
darren
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 31 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 452
|
Posted: January 25 2006 at 19:12 |
s1ipp3ry wrote:
In My Opinion Prog & Alternative Rock don`t mix and heres why ....
Alternative Rock is born out of whatever intelligence can be found in Punk Rock , Punk being the genre that tried to KILL prog in the 70`s (but failed) is a good reason why Prog and Alternative rock should never be mentioned in the same sentence , as a mark of respect to our ELITE form of art (Prog) and those Progressive Titans who got screwed by commerce around that time .... I have been trying to get you guys to see the light on this subject for awhile now, I hope this topic makes you think about it or perhaps give some interesting thought and ideas to perhaps Enlighten me.
After all I wouldn`t mix my finest Scotch whisky with some cheap no name brand Cola would you ? because thats what you are doing when you mix Prog with Alternative rock you are making the Prog lesser quality, oh sure art is about expression, thats granted ... but is a fart art ?
|
I'm not sure I fully understand why so many seem to be down on punk, modern rock, etc. just because it isn't prog. Is all you listen to prog? That would be a shame. Why not listen to anything and if it sounds good to your ears, listen to it again and not worry if it's prog or if it's some elaborate musical passage or some three chord rock?
Listening to something that is two chords repeating and enjoying it doesn't make you less of an intellect or make people think less of you. If you like some prefabricated, overproduced, studio trickery-laced pop by the latest pop prince (or princess) and lilke it, so what?
You eat a variety of foods (I hope), don't you? Sometimes you have toast and jam, sometimes you go out and have a gourmet meal. Sometimes you have your fine Scotch, sometimes you have orange juice. You wouldn't subject your tastebuds to the same food everytime you sit down for a meal, why are you doing the same for your ears? Does eating a ham sandwich take away from the fact that one loves French cuisine?
And I don't think punk was really out to destroy prog. Punk was a reaction to the popular forms of rock at the time. Punk was against the stadium rock where most of the audience was half a kilometre from the stage. Punk brought it back to the clubs. Punk brought rock back to the basics of 50's and 60's rock, where anyone could pick up a musical instrument and rock, rather than go through years of music lessons. Punk was against the 70's notion that concerts should include a long, lingering guitar solo, a drum solo or even (shudder) a bass solo. After all, shouldn't music be about how it makes you feel, rather than how well someone could play mixolidian modal passages in 19/4 timing? Most of the punk rage against prog was just to hit some sacred cows and simple bravado.
OK, rant over, sorry to ramble. Last thought: Since relatively few people listen to prog as opposed to other forms of rock, wouldn't that make prog "alternative" by definition?
|
"they locked up a man who wanted to rule the world.
the fools
they locked up the wrong man."
- Leonard Cohen
|
|
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.