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Topic ClosedThe Album That Killed Prog?

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Poll Question: Which Album Bears The Most Blame For Killing Prog?
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
1 [0.65%]
28 [18.06%]
2 [1.29%]
52 [33.55%]
7 [4.52%]
5 [3.23%]
2 [1.29%]
1 [0.65%]
1 [0.65%]
2 [1.29%]
1 [0.65%]
0 [0.00%]
2 [1.29%]
2 [1.29%]
8 [5.16%]
6 [3.87%]
21 [13.55%]
14 [9.03%]
This topic is closed, no new votes accepted

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bruin69 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 02 2007 at 19:48

I like several of the albums on the list - And Then There Were Three, Trick of the Tail, Tormato, 90125.... okay so they weren't totally prog, but they contained some well-crafted songs, and superb musicianship. Far better than most of the competitors at the time.

Love Beach on the other hand was completely dire. Mind you, I was never that big a fan of ELP... 
 
I don't think prog was killed off, it just ran its natural course, and was replaced by other forms of music, as is the way of the musical world. The fact that we still love it is either testament to its quality or to the fact that we're old t**ts...
 
And of course there are bands today still striving (though in my opinion largely failing) to match the subtlety, complexity and power of the 70s.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2007 at 03:30
Originally posted by darqdean darqdean wrote:

Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by darqdean darqdean wrote:

Originally posted by Shakespeare Shakespeare wrote:

Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by reality reality wrote:

Prog died when it was no longer supported by the culture, like every other movement. Prog was no different than Grunge or Disco, or we can all lie to ourselves. 

 

I disagree.  Artists are still creating Prog music. People like us are still listening to it. Simply, this keeps it alive.

 

 
TESTIFY, BROTHA!

I like idea behind reality's statement, but unlike Gothic Rock or Hip Hop that have their own sub-culture, art, literature, dress etc., Prog was never really supported by a culture or sub-culture in the first place.


Good point. Those things have something Prog never did....fashion. Prog artists are about the geekiest artists ever to live.

 

well, dressing up as a flower is not the best way to do the weekly grocery shop. LOL


We have to face it prog as an original fresh art form is dead. The culture of free expression which gathered the immence talent pool of the 70's is gone. You can claim as many new genres as you want and call them prog to lie to yourselfs and say it is evolving but it is simply not true, they are not prog. You can create the so called Progressive umbrella and lump new talent in with the old, but fans of the new will see it as a silly attempt to ressurect thier grandparents music. Do not do that to the young, it is not progressive in current venacular, they know what you are trying to do.

It is good prog is dead, it gives us a set of rules that now should govern it. There should be no debate as to what is prog and what is not. I say to The Flower Kings who are not ashamed to admit prog no longer moves forward with any relavency. Instead of trying to move away into non prog forms of music (post 1979 or so) they celebrate the past. Prog being dead as a movement makes those who took part in it very special and unique. There will never be another King Crimson nor do I want one, and there will never be another 70's and that is ok.

Let new bands be placed in new genres and let us celebrate the old ones for thier time and place.

English folk music is dead, but yet is very celebrated with many artists who cherish it. Modern folk from England is considered a different genre, why is prog any different? It is not a living breathing fresh genre, but that is what makes it special!

Edited by reality - August 03 2007 at 03:33
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2007 at 03:57

Genesis -Abacrap

 

I nearly criedEmbarrassedCry

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2007 at 17:20
 
Quote

We have to face it prog as an original fresh art form is dead. The culture of free expression which gathered the immence talent pool of the 70's is gone. You can claim as many new genres as you want and call them prog to lie to yourselfs and say it is evolving but it is simply not true, they are not prog. You can create the so called Progressive umbrella and lump new talent in with the old, but fans of the new will see it as a silly attempt to ressurect thier grandparents music. Do not do that to the young, it is not progressive in current venacular, they know what you are trying to do.

It is good prog is dead, it gives us a set of rules that now should govern it. There should be no debate as to what is prog and what is not. I say to The Flower Kings who are not ashamed to admit prog no longer moves forward with any relavency. Instead of trying to move away into non prog forms of music (post 1979 or so) they celebrate the past. Prog being dead as a movement makes those who took part in it very special and unique. There will never be another King Crimson nor do I want one, and there will never be another 70's and that is ok.

Let new bands be placed in new genres and let us celebrate the old ones for thier time and place.

English folk music is dead, but yet is very celebrated with many artists who cherish it. Modern folk from England is considered a different genre, why is prog any different? It is not a living breathing fresh genre, but that is what makes it special!
 
That is one of the most sardonic views I have ever heard. To say prog or progressive is dead is to remove all meaning from it. To progress means to move forward and change.  It is NOT a static event or period in history.  Did Rock and Roll die with Buddy Holly or Elvis?  It hasn't stopped evolving just because you or some screwball at rolling stone says it has. So quit trying kill everybodies buzz Captain Bringdown!
 
 Now that my rant is done, I will take the question as being what was the most annoying sellout and end of quality music by a given band. I have to give it to Genesis.  ELP's love beach was bad, but they were already tanking with the Works stuff.
 
And BTW Discipline was plenty progressive and an outstanding album.


Edited by Tapfret - August 13 2007 at 17:27
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2007 at 05:55
Pink Floyd's Final cut,
I don't understand this album poor PF
Remember, the death is not the end, but only a transition

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2007 at 10:51
Prog's not dead, it just went underground.
 
You should have Never mind the Bollocks by The Sex Pistols on your list. If any album made an attempt to kill it then that was it.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2007 at 11:00
new shocking and incriminating evidence of the happenings of this here mystery


Shocked


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2007 at 11:04
LOL LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2007 at 15:03
Originally posted by Tapfret Tapfret wrote:

 
Quote

We have to face it prog as an original fresh art form is dead. The culture of free expression which gathered the immence talent pool of the 70's is gone. You can claim as many new genres as you want and call them prog to lie to yourselfs and say it is evolving but it is simply not true, they are not prog. You can create the so called Progressive umbrella and lump new talent in with the old, but fans of the new will see it as a silly attempt to ressurect thier grandparents music. Do not do that to the young, it is not progressive in current venacular, they know what you are trying to do.

It is good prog is dead, it gives us a set of rules that now should govern it. There should be no debate as to what is prog and what is not. I say to The Flower Kings who are not ashamed to admit prog no longer moves forward with any relavency. Instead of trying to move away into non prog forms of music (post 1979 or so) they celebrate the past. Prog being dead as a movement makes those who took part in it very special and unique. There will never be another King Crimson nor do I want one, and there will never be another 70's and that is ok.

Let new bands be placed in new genres and let us celebrate the old ones for thier time and place.

English folk music is dead, but yet is very celebrated with many artists who cherish it. Modern folk from England is considered a different genre, why is prog any different? It is not a living breathing fresh genre, but that is what makes it special!
 
That is one of the most sardonic views I have ever heard. To say prog or progressive is dead is to remove all meaning from it. To progress means to move forward and change.  It is NOT a static event or period in history.  Did Rock and Roll die with Buddy Holly or Elvis?  It hasn't stopped evolving just because you or some screwball at rolling stone says it has. So quit trying kill everybodies buzz Captain Bringdown!
 
 Now that my rant is done, I will take the question as being what was the most annoying sellout and end of quality music by a given band. I have to give it to Genesis.  ELP's love beach was bad, but they were already tanking with the Works stuff.
 
And BTW Discipline was plenty progressive and an outstanding album.


First of all my comment was not sardonic but a praise to the Progressive rock movement. Second, dead in music genre terms means a standardizing of musical tenets so as to be properly classified. I am sorry but "going outside the rules" (as rick Wakeman defines it) does not constitute a genre in itself according to how western music defines genres. Punk broke with mainstream but had defining tenets that made it definitely punk.

Music tenets are standardized  (or the expansion of originality within a specific form has died) when it is marked by two things:

1. The culture which the movements inspiration is rooted in has changed or died.

            This does not mean clothing, hairstyles etc. It means the  late 60s early to mid 70s were a time of unique political and social upheaval for the entire western world. Experimentation  and musical expansion  was one small part of a growing  counter culture  (being the counter culture itself or the counter to the counter culture) and had specific aims that were relative to what was going on at that particular moment.  In reality once that moment had passed the music lost its relevancy. The music was a strong reaction to the simplicity of early 50s rock n roll (as was punk to the elitism of prog) and the lifestyle that went along with it.

     No one now can replicate authentically the music of the Progressive Rock  movement, there were  millions of different reasons why the musicians in that culture chose to write what they did. There is absolutely no authentic continuity from the 70s to now. The reasons for the culture died, therefore the reasons for the music died, therefore the music as an authentic original art is dead. The specific culture did not evolve, it was replaced (which was not a good thing but we can not deny that it happened). Many cultures (the term culture is used as in reference to movements within a society not in the overall general sense) since have had their own music with their own tenets for what defines it after the movement was replaced in relevancy.

If I write a Baroque piece and took out the basso continuo would I be evolving the genre? No of course not because that is one of the tenets of Baroque music which was standardized long ago. Even though it might have been complex and flowing and  technically difficult it would not be Baroque because it did not follow the tenets set out because Baroque music is dead.

2. The second clue that musical genre has been standardized is when the majority of the bands main influence comes from an earlier band in the same genre.

       King Crimson did not set out to make "Progressive Rock" and nor would they intend to now. Their influence was not progressive rock, but Jazz and Classical and 60s alternative pop (which were standardized genres that did not include a band like King Crimson).

     David Gilmore of Pink Floyd fame said in an interview that he does not listen to progressive rock, and why should he as he is a fan of the original influences and not the derivatives of his influence. Flash forward to the later 70s and you have bands that have never heard of the original influences but take their main influence from bands that have already done the fusing work of the different genres. Is Starcastle a fresh sounding band? Do they take influence from the classical masters? No, absolutely not, they sound like a Yes clone which was their main influence. Starcastle's intention was to make "Progressive Rock" not combine genres into an original sound. Most modern prog bands claim influence of "Progressive Rock" bands that have gone before them. It is when this started to happen that a genre is classifiable known as standardized or dead. Why do you think you use the words revival?

 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2007 at 21:26
Originally posted by reality reality wrote:

Originally posted by Tapfret Tapfret wrote:

 
Quote

We have to face it prog as an original fresh art form is dead. The culture of free expression which gathered the immence talent pool of the 70's is gone. You can claim as many new genres as you want and call them prog to lie to yourselfs and say it is evolving but it is simply not true, they are not prog. You can create the so called Progressive umbrella and lump new talent in with the old, but fans of the new will see it as a silly attempt to ressurect thier grandparents music. Do not do that to the young, it is not progressive in current venacular, they know what you are trying to do.

It is good prog is dead, it gives us a set of rules that now should govern it. There should be no debate as to what is prog and what is not. I say to The Flower Kings who are not ashamed to admit prog no longer moves forward with any relavency. Instead of trying to move away into non prog forms of music (post 1979 or so) they celebrate the past. Prog being dead as a movement makes those who took part in it very special and unique. There will never be another King Crimson nor do I want one, and there will never be another 70's and that is ok.

Let new bands be placed in new genres and let us celebrate the old ones for thier time and place.

English folk music is dead, but yet is very celebrated with many artists who cherish it. Modern folk from England is considered a different genre, why is prog any different? It is not a living breathing fresh genre, but that is what makes it special!
 
That is one of the most sardonic views I have ever heard. To say prog or progressive is dead is to remove all meaning from it. To progress means to move forward and change.  It is NOT a static event or period in history.  Did Rock and Roll die with Buddy Holly or Elvis?  It hasn't stopped evolving just because you or some screwball at rolling stone says it has. So quit trying kill everybodies buzz Captain Bringdown!
 
 Now that my rant is done, I will take the question as being what was the most annoying sellout and end of quality music by a given band. I have to give it to Genesis.  ELP's love beach was bad, but they were already tanking with the Works stuff.
 
And BTW Discipline was plenty progressive and an outstanding album.


First of all my comment was not sardonic but a praise to the Progressive rock movement. Second, dead in music genre terms means a standardizing of musical tenets so as to be properly classified. I am sorry but "going outside the rules" (as rick Wakeman defines it) does not constitute a genre in itself according to how western music defines genres. Punk broke with mainstream but had defining tenets that made it definitely punk.

Music tenets are standardized  (or the expansion of originality within a specific form has died) when it is marked by two things:

1. The culture which the movements inspiration is rooted in has changed or died.

            This does not mean clothing, hairstyles etc. It means the  late 60s early to mid 70s were a time of unique political and social upheaval for the entire western world. Experimentation  and musical expansion  was one small part of a growing  counter culture  (being the counter culture itself or the counter to the counter culture) and had specific aims that were relative to what was going on at that particular moment.  In reality once that moment had passed the music lost its relevancy. The music was a strong reaction to the simplicity of early 50s rock n roll (as was punk to the elitism of prog) and the lifestyle that went along with it.

     No one now can replicate authentically the music of the Progressive Rock  movement, there were  millions of different reasons why the musicians in that culture chose to write what they did. There is absolutely no authentic continuity from the 70s to now. The reasons for the culture died, therefore the reasons for the music died, therefore the music as an authentic original art is dead. The specific culture did not evolve, it was replaced (which was not a good thing but we can not deny that it happened). Many cultures (the term culture is used as in reference to movements within a society not in the overall general sense) since have had their own music with their own tenets for what defines it after the movement was replaced in relevancy.

If I write a Baroque piece and took out the basso continuo would I be evolving the genre? No of course not because that is one of the tenets of Baroque music which was standardized long ago. Even though it might have been complex and flowing and  technically difficult it would not be Baroque because it did not follow the tenets set out because Baroque music is dead.

2. The second clue that musical genre has been standardized is when the majority of the bands main influence comes from an earlier band in the same genre.

       King Crimson did not set out to make "Progressive Rock" and nor would they intend to now. Their influence was not progressive rock, but Jazz and Classical and 60s alternative pop (which were standardized genres that did not include a band like King Crimson).

     David Gilmore of Pink Floyd fame said in an interview that he does not listen to progressive rock, and why should he as he is a fan of the original influences and not the derivatives of his influence. Flash forward to the later 70s and you have bands that have never heard of the original influences but take their main influence from bands that have already done the fusing work of the different genres. Is Starcastle a fresh sounding band? Do they take influence from the classical masters? No, absolutely not, they sound like a Yes clone which was their main influence. Starcastle's intention was to make "Progressive Rock" not combine genres into an original sound. Most modern prog bands claim influence of "Progressive Rock" bands that have gone before them. It is when this started to happen that a genre is classifiable known as standardized or dead. Why do you think you use the words revival?

 
We have enough problems with the definition of the term ‘Progressive’ and classification of bands into the numerous subgenres that this site contains without the further complication of worrying about the semantic definition of what ‘Dead’ actually means in terms musical style or period.
 
I understand what you are saying, but I do not believe that the process is over yet and Progrssive Rock has reached the stage where it can be defined by a simple set of tenets, from my point of view there has been no discontinuity in progressive Music since 1970 to the present day as there have been album releases in every year since then that can be termed Progressive.
 
By your definition, Progressive Music 'died' in 1972 when the first clone of The Nice appeared on the scene, or when the first folk band followed Fairport Convention into the electric realm of rock music. The first clearly identifiable Progressive subgenre was probably Canterbury, yet which of those bands could truly be said to have been wholly influenced from original sources and not from each other in some way – yet they still managed to evolve and move forward by expanding and developing within themselves.
 
The notion of standardised Progressive Music does not hold, for that to be true the characteristics that define a Progressive subgenre would be present in every band within that subgenre and but that virtue, there would be defining elements present across subgenres that were common to all bands. The reality is that there are some characteristics shared by some bands, but not all characteristics are shared by all bands. Even if you restrict yourself to the era from 1970 to 75, there is no commonality between King Crimson, Jethro Tull, Yes, Genesis and Pink Floyd – they were not producing music in the style of Progressive Rock, they were producing music that was loosely gathered together under that banner.
 
You cannot equate Prog Rock with Baroque Music just because they are both music, and even of you could, removing one element from Baroque, such as the basso continuo, does not stop it from being Baroque. There are several Baroque pieces that do not have basso continuo but use polyphonic keyboard accompaniment instead and often, even though a work was published with basso continuo notation, it was not necessarily used in performance. The idea that Baroque was standardised also does not hold: the Baroque period lasted 160 years and continued to evolve throughout, (a notion clearly illustrated by the fact that Baroque is split into Early, Middle and Late periods), the culture of that period changed drastically over that timescale as did the ‘technology’ of the orchestra. You would not argue that JS Bach or Vivaldi were not Baroque because they were not contemporary to Monteverdi, nor would you say that they were involved in a Baroque revival since both progressed the genre beyond what had gone before. The same argument is true for modern Progressive bands and musicians in relation to the bands from the 70s.
 
PS: David Gilmore is a US Jazz guitarist, not the guitarist with Pink Floyd. Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2007 at 21:30
Originally posted by Nightfly Nightfly wrote:

Prog's not dead, it just went underground.
 
You should have Never mind the Bollocks by The Sex Pistols on your list. If any album made an attempt to kill it then that was it.
 
That been said a couple times now, and I still agree!
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2007 at 21:34
I thought this thread was dead. For the last time prog did not die. It came close in the late 70s/early 80s, but Marillion awoke the dormant giant, and now prog is enjoying some of its best music yet. Heck, just look at the releases of this year alone. DT, PT, SGM, John Zorn, Amaran's Plight, Gazpacho, Symphony X, Phideaux, Anekdoten, Devin Townsend, Neal Morse, and many others. In fact, I'd 2007 up there as one of the best years for progressive music. So enough about this dead prog talk.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2007 at 21:38
Originally posted by 1800iareyay 1800iareyay wrote:

I thought this thread was dead. For the last time prog did not die. It came close in the late 70s/early 80s, but Marillion awoke the dormant giant, and now prog is enjoying some of its best music yet. Heck, just look at the releases of this year alone. DT, PT, SGM, John Zorn, Amaran's Plight, Gazpacho, Symphony X, Phideaux, Anekdoten, Devin Townsend, Neal Morse, and many others. In fact, I'd 2007 up there as one of the best years for progressive music. So enough about this dead prog talk.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2007 at 01:25
Originally posted by 1800iareyay 1800iareyay wrote:

I thought this thread was dead. For the last time prog did not die.
 
If prog can't die, why can't this thread live forever also?
 
But neoprog isn't the prog I grew up with and loved.  It's like prog died and came back all zombiefied.  It's just not the same.
 
 


Edited by ghost_of_morphy - August 19 2007 at 01:25
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2007 at 07:16
For me... This album:
 
http://www.abc.net.au/myfavouritealbum/albumart/img/bollocks.jpg
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2007 at 07:30
no album killed prog.....prog is still being made isn't it? attitudes (if anything) will kill it...... selfish and lazy ones being front of the queue!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2007 at 09:02
Originally posted by Ely78 Ely78 wrote:

For me... This album:
 
http://www.abc.net.au/myfavouritealbum/albumart/img/bollocks.jpg
 
Correct!!! Wink This is the culprit!!Angry
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2007 at 09:43
Originally posted by febus febus wrote:

Originally posted by Ely78 Ely78 wrote:

For me... This album:
 
http://www.abc.net.au/myfavouritealbum/albumart/img/bollocks.jpg
 
Correct!!! Wink This is the culprit!!Angry
No, no and thrice no Angry
 
This limp, badly recorded piece of drivelling sub-standard 3-chord Status Quo derived tosh is often held up and piloried as the epitomy of prog-killing punk, but it wasn't. The people who bought this were never ever going to buy a Prog-rock album if it was the last one in the shop and you were holding a gun to their heads. Prog rock fans at the time hated this with as much venom and distaste as the Punks did of any Pink Floyd, ELP and Yes release.
 
You give it more credit than it is entitled too. AngryAngry
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2007 at 10:50
The Sex Pistols and punk-rock in general just gave prog a down beat................. but didn't kill it. Prog is inmortal!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2007 at 16:29
For those of you who say prog is dead, I'd like you to do me a favor......



Kill yourself.

Seriously, why even suggest that an entire musical genre is dead?  Have you ever even HEARD Porcupine Tree, The Mars Volta, Dead Soul Tribe, Tool, Dream Theater, Ayreon?  These guys are legends, and will be to me for my entire life. I've listened to Close To The Edge  and Thick As A Brick countless times, trying to see the greatness in them, but I just straight up do not.

Move on from the idea that prog is all about Jethro Tull, Yes, and Pink Floyd, to name few. We are chronologically 28 years from 1979, when supposedly bands started becoming "not prog enough".  What does that even MEAN?  Progressive music isn't about stuffing in as much ambiance, long guitar solos in complex time signatures, and lengthening songs to become 20+ minutes long, or so I thought. I thought progressive music was about doing something nobody's ever done before, appreciating music for skill in musicianship and composition, creating music for music, not for commercialism.

I'm sorry, but I'm tired of people on these forums saying that progressive metal is too much metal, or that something "isn't prog enough".  It defeats the purpose of creating something you like if fans judge it so harshly that many consider everything after the 70s dead. That's all.
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