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sm sm
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 02 2005
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Points: 155
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 15:29 |
A lot of 60's bands were sick and tired of playing boring 4/4, 3 minute songs, hence the Beatles transformed from "I wanna hold your hand" to "Elinor Rigby.
On the other hand, a lot of bands either run out of creativity or no longer want to starve, and start to write pop songs, hence Genesis transformed from "afterglow" to "invisable touch"
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Sit Ubu Sit
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Joined: August 25 2005
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Points: 33
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 15:04 |
cm's answer is right on the money. I believe that "pop" is short for popular. If a prog band releases a song that is picked up by the masses, and played to death on one of those godawful "pop" stations, then it becomes a pop tune.
Who woulda thunk??
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Trickster F.
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 10 2006
Location: Belize
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 14:29 |
Well, since Prog's origin comes from Pop music, I wouldn't say that Pop is some opposite of Prog.
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chopper
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Joined: July 13 2005
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 14:15 |
What about It Bites? "Calling all the heroes" was a pop hit in the 80s, yet there are recognised as a prog band.
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heyitsthatguy
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Joined: April 17 2006
Location: Washington Hgts
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 14:15 |
Well, as far as prog being poppy, take a look at Porcupine Tree. Great band, and they manage to incorporate elements of prog while simultaneously having pop based melodies/harmonies
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Syzygy
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 14:12 |
aapatsos wrote:
^ I can't here any pop in Bohemian Rhapsody |
It was number 1 in the UK singles chart for several weeks, sold millions and a large percentage of the population can sing along word for word (if not note for note). If that isn't pop, I don't know what is.
I could also mention the Beach Boys here - Good Vibrations is the obvious example, but have you ever really listened to California Girls? There's a hell of a lot going on in that song - and then there's Heroes and Villains, complex as anything by most prog bands.
Let's face it, if Silver Machine by Hawkwind can be considered prog rock I don't see why the infinitely more sophisticated work of Brian Wilson shouldn't be thought of as prog pop.
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'Like so many of you
I've got my doubts about how much to contribute
to the already rich among us...'
Robert Wyatt, Gloria Gloom
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Paulieg
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 18 2005
Location: United States
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Points: 934
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 13:37 |
I think bands like Spocks Beard are pop prog. Not my cup of tea, though.
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clairvoyant
Forum Groupie
Joined: February 26 2006
Location: United States
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Points: 68
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 13:31 |
If you ask me, a lot of Peter Gabriel's solo work is pop/prog
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TheProgtologist
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Joined: May 23 2005
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 13:14 |
Listen to A.C.T.
They are "prog-pop" if you ask me.
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R_DeNIRO
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 17 2005
Location: Spain
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Points: 431
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 13:13 |
Bohemian Rhapsody is a very famous song, but not pop music.
Muse have prog elements, but it's not prog at all.
Pop music could never be prog, but could get a poppy sound (example: Marillion's Misplaced Childhood). Anyway, the sound don't define the genre. Prog music, for example, doesn't have an own unique sound (think in the different sound of bands like KC, Camel, Opeth, ELP, Mars Volta, Dream Theater, Zappa, Mr. Bungle, Triana, Jethro Tull, Pink Floyd...) but have common factors (in terms of composition, structure, etc..).
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We were always be much human than we whish to be.
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aapatsos
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 12:55 |
crimson magus wrote:
A prog song, album, can become a pop work, if there is a key-factor which will draw the masses. You mentioned Muse, they have a progressive sound, but the voice of the singer and the easy - listening formula of the songs make it pop (the key-factors). Pop is not exactly a genre but music which is listened by the majority of people in a country, or the world, or a specific place. So yes, progressive music can be pop.
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interesting reply CM
but I would consider pop as a genre...
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aapatsos
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 12:54 |
^ I can't here any pop in Bohemian Rhapsody
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coffeeintheface
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 02 2005
Location: United States
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Points: 397
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 12:47 |
Definately. A perfect example is Bohemian Rhapsody, which i consider to be a prog song even though some people would say they're not a 100% prog band.
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OBQM: www.soundcloud.com/onebigquestionmark (solo project)
nQuixote: www.soundcloud.com/n-quixote (ambient + various musical ideas)
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crimson magus
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Joined: August 09 2006
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 12:42 |
A prog song, album, can become a pop work, if there is a key-factor which will draw the masses. You mentioned Muse, they have a progressive sound, but the voice of the singer and the easy - listening formula of the songs make it pop (the key-factors). Pop is not exactly a genre but music which is listened by the majority of people in a country, or the world, or a specific place. So yes, progressive music can be pop.
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aapatsos
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Posted: September 07 2006 at 12:21 |
I was wondering about this and particularly after a discussion I had with a friend
Thinking about bands like Muse (for example): the description from a friend - fanatic about Muse - is pop-rock
So I was wondering how much pop there is in prog and if pop bands can be also classified as prog
IMO, the combination is very hard (and I don't see bands like Alan Parsons Project as pop, at least, the first albums)
is there a pop-prog genre ?
Edited by aapatsos - September 07 2006 at 12:22
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