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Topic ClosedWhat is so wrong with Prog metal

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Paul K. View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 09:02

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


So: It's not really important that a band uses all kinds of stylistic elements on every album. It's important that a band uses the right elements in the right situations, and most Prog Metal bands do that (or are at least trying to).

Agreed 100%, but by some strange concourse of circumstances I could care less about virtually all Prog Metal bands.
I'm more 60's-70's man.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 09:14
Nothin wrong, only it ain't much to bother about, IMO.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 10:42

Quote it is a bit over the top.... there are a fair number of people who it appears don't care for it, but the vast majority have better things to do... like talk things things we DO like.. than talk about what we don't.


If that was the case we wouldn't need the forums. The whole point of the forums is to debate and question. I try to learn from people that disagree with me, not just just blatently close my mind to the possiblities. I wrote "The moral of the story..." to show that I love prog and I hate to see people be close minded within a genre. If you don't like it prog metal, fine, so be it but don't be cocky about me posing the question. I think you saying it is over the top just shows your missing the whole point of the forum. I have my opinion just as you have yours. That doesn't mean something can't be discussed or learned.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 13:07
(I apologize if this sounds repetitive)
 
In terms of the forum reasons, right on.  We have an interest in analyzing the music and what makes it good/bad/neutral, etc to the masses.  Everyone is indeed entitled to an opinion, and we cannot interfere with those without, to put it bluntly, heads being stuck...and I won't bother finishing that statement.
 
As for the topic in the forum at hand, I do have a great respect from progressive metal.  I think most people on this site have a problem with the "metal" half of it, wanting to dismiss the music as just too heavy for symphonic tastes.  I actually like bands like Dream Theater (lots) and Symphony X since they are harder and generally more innovative than the neo-prog bands out there (not to put them down too much).  The progressive metal genre has gained respect from the metal side because these bands are adding more theatrics into the usual metal genre, and the inclusion of keyboards helps stoke this further.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 13:09
All I'm going to say is that the amount of influence virtually every heavy or power metal band since has taken from Sad Wings of Destiny (and other early Priest), it's ridiculous to say it has nothing to do with metal.  It's true that it's not that heavy by today's standards, but it came out in 1976!  Black Sabbath's early stuff isn't metal by today's standards either, but without it metal today probably wouldn't exist, so we have no problem labelling it as such.

I'm staying out of the rest of this...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 13:17
^ All I meant was that this particular album is stylistically too far away from modern metal to be a direct influence for albums like Operation: Mindcrime, which was released 12 years after that. There were many groundbreaking albums in between - for example all early Iron Maiden albums, which were undoubtedly a big influence on Queensryche ... or the later Judas Priest albums.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 13:37
I'd have to agree Mike.  Judas Priest is a blueprint for metal, but it's not as much of a direct influence as a band like Iron Maiden was.  I think you could call Iron Maiden's A Number of the Beast the first modern metal album.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 16:44
Originally posted by AtLossForWords AtLossForWords wrote:

I'd have to agree Mike.  Judas Priest is a blueprint for metal, but it's not as much of a direct influence as a band like Iron Maiden was.  I think you could call Iron Maiden's A Number of the Beast the first modern metal album.


I would say that Black Sabbath's "Heaven and Hell" was the first modern metal album - had you considered that?
    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 16:54
What about Scorpions - Animal Magnetism? 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 16:55
And even earlier: Van Halen - 1 (1978). Although I admit that only some songs are metal (Running With the Devil for example) and others are a kind of Heavy Blues Rock.


Edited by MikeEnRegalia - June 05 2006 at 16:57
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 17:05
Some people seem to talk about Uriah Heep being pioneers of heavy metal, but I've simply not heard enough of their output.  I'm sure they're mot pioneers of modern metal though, more just heavy metal, like Black Sabbath.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 17:08
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by AtLossForWords AtLossForWords wrote:

I'd have to agree Mike.  Judas Priest is a blueprint for metal, but it's not as much of a direct influence as a band like Iron Maiden was.  I think you could call Iron Maiden's A Number of the Beast the first modern metal album.


I would say that Black Sabbath's "Heaven and Hell" was the first modern metal album - had you considered that?
    
 
 
I don't think Black Sabbath did anything that was particularly metal.  The overall tonality is similar in a few aspects, but the composition is much different.  Heaven and Hell comes close, but still has more in common with hard rock.  Black Sabbath's lyrical content was more "metal" than anything else they did.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 17:11
I must admit that I'm not too familiar with Black Sabbath apart from their obvious hits. I'm trying to listen to them via staytuned.de, which have all their albums, but it will take some time. Last week I listened to Sabotage and I will listen to the newer albums this week ... I know that they were getting more and more "metal" with every release, as did Judas Priest.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 17:14
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


I did not say that it doesn't have anything to do with metal - I just said that it did not influence Operation: Mindcrime more than it influenced any other metal album of the 80s. And I'm really sure that most 80s metal is more influenced by the later Priest & Maiden album which had already progressed into what I call "modern metal". That Priest album is - along with the Rush, Sabbath etc. albums of that time - still clearly "pre-modern metal".


The whole style is totally modern - it's even got thrash on it. It's the production and execution that let it down and make it sound old - don't let the lack of "bling" confuse you.

And none of that stops it being metal - you're just chucking in the "modern" comment to save face.

You also DID say "I fail to see what that album has to do with metal", or are you calling me a liar as well as a hateboy, opinionated bigot and general prog-metal basher?

You said you wrote the review after a single listen - well, that's a mistake. It took me a while to get it properly - sometimes I listen to it now and still think there's stuff I missed.

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


I see how you can get to that conclusion based on the early Queensryche albums up to The Warning. But I try to see beyond simple observations like "High Pitched / falsetto vocals -> Priest influence".


But the vocals sound like a cross between Rob Halford and Bruce Dickinson. There's no escaping that. Geddy Lee doesn't sound like either, and nor do Thom Yorke or Matt Bellamy - I can tell the difference, really I can.

And the twin guitar leads, and the basis of the riffs... the list goes on - there are too many similarities for anyone to ignore.

So to say they're like Judas Priest is completely fair comment.

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


On Operation: Mindcrime they had found their own style, which I don't find particularly interesting in itself ... the twin guitar leads are characteristic (with the melodies a little more American/AOR than Maiden) and the atmospheric acoustic guitar songs (2nd half of Operation: Mindcrime) are not to be found in either Priest or Maiden.
their style is much more apparent on Empire, which is THE key album of Queensryche IMO (not their best, but the one that shows their own unique style in perfection).


I'll review "Empire" when I get some time - but doesn't what you are saying add up to you agreeing with me that it's not the highly proclaimed masterpiece that many metalheads hold it to be?

And I find the guitar lead melodies to be a watered-down version of Maiden/Lizzy/Priest (pick your twin-barreled assault here) - not one would pass the "Old Grey Whistle Test", and not one holds any true drive or drama, since the harmonic progressions are bland and unadventurous.


Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


Another opinion on which you stand alone: That 2 star ratings mean "good".


Out of 5, on a scale of not Prog to Prog, it gets 2.

That's nearly 50% - and there's me saying that it's not really Prog.

Maybe I should downgrade my mark.


Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:


Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


- you are bashing the album even as a plain metal album.


Indeed - but maybe that's because I think it deserves it?

That's quite right - *YOU* think it deserves that. I just take offense on you assuming that most people agree with that. You talk about people who think otherwise as if they're fools.
[/quote]

Oh no I don't, etc.

But it should be apparent to anyone still bothering to keep up with all of this that all I've done is to respond rationally to your comments, which are unfair and unfounded.

Stop telling me what I think - you don't know what I think or how I think - you are a different person to me and think differently, etc, etc, etc.

Discuss the music instead of what you think of me and things might go better.


Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


I'm not complaining about the review - I'm complaining about you using
this review against me. It's just your opinion, not more, not less.


I'm not using it against you - I don't see how you can think that.

And of course it's my opinion - that's what I said... several times I think.

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

...maybe becoming a hateboy is not a good solution either.


Mike - I'm not a hateboy just because I don't like a particular album as much as you do or hold an opinion that is different to yours.

Please get over yourself.
    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 17:15
Not really, there is some poppy Hard Rock in the middle of their discography and also some poppy stuff before Ozzy left the band.
 
If you don't believe Sabbath ever played real 'Metal', listen to Master Of Reality, Sabotage and Dehumanizer. The later is their heaviest album, but not meaning atmosphere. But their early three are admitted to be Progressive Doom ahead of its time by pretty much everyone, so I don't see what is taking them so long to get on this site. Probably stereotypes and such.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 17:22
Originally posted by AtLossForWords AtLossForWords wrote:

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by AtLossForWords AtLossForWords wrote:

I'd have to agree Mike.  Judas Priest is a blueprint for metal, but it's not as much of a direct influence as a band like Iron Maiden was.  I think you could call Iron Maiden's A Number of the Beast the first modern metal album.
I would say that Black Sabbath's "Heaven and Hell" was the first modern metal album - had you considered that?     




 
 

I don't think Black Sabbath did anything that was particularly metal.  The overall tonality is similar in a few aspects, but the composition is much different.  Heaven and Hell comes close, but still has more in common with hard rock.  Black Sabbath's lyrical content was more "metal" than anything else they did.

    
What I mean is that Iommi almost completely changed his riffing style to fit around Dio's comedy metal lyrics. "Turn Up The Night" is as metal as you like - I don't know how old you are, but if you'd heard that in 1980, like I did, you would have jumped out of your chair with excitement - there's nothing from 1980 to compare it to.

The NWOBHM was all about heavy metal - that was when it was properly defined. Black Sabbath were regarded as Heavy Metal then, and I think deserve the title: The riffs are chugging, the vocals are soaring, the drums are pounding - and the lyrics are about dragons, kings and Rainbows - how much more metal can you get?

I am very confused about your phrase "overall tonality is similar in a few aspects, but the composition is much different":

The "tonality" of metal always was - and still seems to be very simple. Power chords abound, with a few tasteful changes from major to minor to promote a modal feel, with perhaps a harmonic minor scale thrown in for effect among the pentatonic minors - but almost entirely diatonic.

The formal composition of metal has never really changed: Simple rock somg form with perhaps a few additional bridges, an extended solo and a coda - nothing fancy at all.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 17:30
I like Uriah Heep, Black Sabbath, Scorpions, Metallica, Van Halen, Judas Priest, Queensryche......

Have I missed any out ? All these bands have been mentioned at various times during this car-crash of a thread.       


I can't see any Priest/Queensryche overlap/influence myself - I have been a long time fan of Priest and the subsequent NWOBHM - Sad Wings of Destiny aside I hope I never see Priest on the Prog Archives - they are 100% metal and the brum boys would laugh at that idea.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 17:34
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


I did not say that it doesn't have anything to do with metal - I just said that it did not influence Operation: Mindcrime more than it influenced any other metal album of the 80s. And I'm really sure that most 80s metal is more influenced by the later Priest & Maiden album which had already progressed into what I call "modern metal". That Priest album is - along with the Rush, Sabbath etc. albums of that time - still clearly "pre-modern metal".


The whole style is totally modern - it's even got thrash on it. It's the production and execution that let it down and make it sound old - don't let the lack of "bling" confuse you.

And none of that stops it being metal - you're just chucking in the "modern" comment to save face.



Why I'm chucking in that term is my decision ...

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:



You also DID say "I fail to see what that album has to do with metal", or are you calling me a liar as well as a hateboy, opinionated bigot and general prog-metal basher?



No, I did say that. I was implicitly referring to "modern metal", as always.

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:



You said you wrote the review after a single listen - well, that's a mistake. It took me a while to get it properly - sometimes I listen to it now and still think there's stuff I missed.



It wasn't a proper review - that's why it says "First Listen". Eventually I'll listen some more and write a proper one.

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:



Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


I see how you can get to that conclusion based on the early Queensryche albums up to The Warning. But I try to see beyond simple observations like "High Pitched / falsetto vocals -> Priest influence".


But the vocals sound like a cross between Rob Halford and Bruce Dickinson. There's no escaping that. Geddy Lee doesn't sound like either, and nor do Thom Yorke or Matt Bellamy - I can tell the difference, really I can.



Sure Tate sounds like that sometimes, but there is also another dimension to his singing - a deep, somewhat whiny voice that those two singers rarely used (except maybe Dickinson on Ayreon - The Universal Migrator). Also I'm not considering the similarity of voices as an indicator for similar styles ... singning techniques - yes, but not the voices. Otherwise Coheed & Cambria would be a Rush clone, which they clearly aren't.

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:



And the twin guitar leads, and the basis of the riffs... the list goes on - there are too many similarities for anyone to ignore.

So to say they're like Judas Priest is completely fair comment.



IMO they share many attributes, especially on the pre-Mindcrime albums, but not enough to call them similar. Please don't make me resurrect my poll about the meaning of the word similar ;-)

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:



Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


On Operation: Mindcrime they had found their own style, which I don't find particularly interesting in itself ... the twin guitar leads are characteristic (with the melodies a little more American/AOR than Maiden) and the atmospheric acoustic guitar songs (2nd half of Operation: Mindcrime) are not to be found in either Priest or Maiden.
their style is much more apparent on Empire, which is THE key album of Queensryche IMO (not their best, but the one that shows their own unique style in perfection).


I'll review "Empire" when I get some time - but doesn't what you are saying add up to you agreeing with me that it's not the highly proclaimed masterpiece that many metalheads hold it to be?



It's not a masterpiece of prog, but a really nice album. I love it - see the review on my website. But while the album scores 14.7/15 on my scale (which is not supposed to be objective - just how much you like the tracks), it's only 2.x/10 on the progressiveness scale. And even that's only due to Suite Sister Mary and Waiting for 22.

I don't mind at all if you don't like the album. But that opinion is part of a small minority, whatever that means.

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:



And I find the guitar lead melodies to be a watered-down version of Maiden/Lizzy/Priest (pick your twin-barreled assault here) - not one would pass the "Old Grey Whistle Test", and not one holds any true drive or drama, since the harmonic progressions are bland and unadventurous.



"watered down" ... some think they're brilliant. A melody doesn't have to be particularly adventurous in order to be great. Some of the best melodies that were ever conceived are inherently simplistic.

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:



Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


Another opinion on which you stand alone: That 2 star ratings mean "good".


Out of 5, on a scale of not Prog to Prog, it gets 2.

That's nearly 50% - and there's me saying that it's not really Prog.

Maybe I should downgrade my mark.



Do whatever you think makes sense.

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:


Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


- you are bashing the album even as a plain metal album.


Indeed - but maybe that's because I think it deserves it?

That's quite right - *YOU* think it deserves that. I just take offense on you assuming that most people agree with that. You talk about people who think otherwise as if they're fools.
[/quote]

Oh no I don't, etc.

But it should be apparent to anyone still bothering to keep up with all of this that all I've done is to respond rationally to your comments, which are unfair and unfounded.

[/QUOTE]

I can't comment on that - any comment would make me look bad. so I'll leave your comment here for the others to judge.

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:



Stop telling me what I think - you don't know what I think or how I think - you are a different person to me and think differently, etc, etc, etc.

Discuss the music instead of what you think of me and things might go better.


Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


I'm not complaining about the review - I'm complaining about you using
this review against me. It's just your opinion, not more, not less.


I'm not using it against you - I don't see how you can think that.



You're referring to your reviews as if they were evidence which supports your statements. That's what I mean.

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:



And of course it's my opinion - that's what I said... several times I think.

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

...maybe becoming a hateboy is not a good solution either.


Mike - I'm not a hateboy just because I don't like a particular album as much as you do or hold an opinion that is different to yours.

Please get over yourself.
    


A "fanboy" is defined here as someone who is giving unusually good ratings to albums (much above the average). A "hateboy" is someone which does the exact opposite, which is what you're doing. Isn't that what you're doing? Maybe I should rephrase it to "overly harsh critic"? It's an opinionated term, but as you're throwing around terms like "fanboy", a little reciprocity can't hurt, can it?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 17:37
The first modern metal album could be British Steel, or going further back , Hell bent for leather or Stained Class.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2006 at 17:39
^ The question is: which album progressed past the NWOBHM. IMO Modern Metal can be defined like that, with the exception of American "Party" Metal which evolved from Blues Rock.
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