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Man With Hat
Collaborator
Jazz-Rock/Fusion/Canterbury Team
Joined: March 12 2005
Location: Neurotica
Status: Offline
Points: 166178
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Posted: June 11 2008 at 22:33 |
Moatilliatta wrote:
^Furthermore, why does it matter if it's "progressive" or not? A good album is a good album, a bad album is a bad album. And if it's on here, it must be "progressive" to some extent. I don't think it's up to the reviewer to decide whether it's "progressive" or not, or more specifically to rate the album by how "progressive" it is. There is more to music than that. I think to listen to music solely or largely because it is housed under the term "progressive" is absurd. I listen to music for so many other reasons and listened to a lot of the bands on here before I realized that they could be considered "progressive ______." The term can be superficial and/or elitist. It can even cause people who like the music, who are suppsedly the "open minded" ones to be more insular than those who listen to the radio. |
Well...this is a progressive rock site. For purposes of this site it should be taken into consideration. Especially since the citeria this site uses for its reviews (masterpiece of PROGRESSIVE music...in a PROG collection)
If we are talking in general, then I agree with you.
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Dig me...But don't...Bury me I'm running still, I shall until, one day, I hope that I'll arrive Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect.
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monolith
Forum Newbie
Joined: August 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 16
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Posted: June 11 2008 at 23:18 |
I think too many people get prog rock and prog metal mixed up.Opeth is definately a metal band.
Although some of their ideas are progressive (to say the least), I would consider them a metal band.
I think their best albums are Blackwater Park and Ghost Reveries. However some of the songs on
these two albums get a bit tedious. If the new cd is as good as those, I would get it.
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The T
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
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Posted: June 11 2008 at 23:41 |
Damn! This is something else... We're now discussing one review as if that review (or any review for that matter) was really important in the big scheme of things... It's one guy's opinion! Whether he's right or wrong, knows a lot or knows sh*t, hates the music or loves it, it's one guy's review. Suddenly we are giving a review much more importance than it really has... Do you think that because of that review Akerfeldt will become depressed and suddenly stop making music? Do you think it makes the album any good, if you think it is (I think so) or any bad if you think the albus is bad? Does it really matter THAT much to you?
Hell, the reviewer in question has written many reviews that I disagree 200% with... and you know what... do you think I suddenly sold all my cds because of his negative reviews? I still like the music? The same goes opposite: do you think i love everything he gives 5 stars to? Of course not. The same with anybody's reviews! They're just opinions.
If everyone is so concerned about that review, is because for some it may say some uncomfortable truths... maybe some of you started to doubt that OPETH is really that glorious because of that review... don't let that insecurity about your tastes make you denounce a single review... If you like OPETH, (like I do), read reviews, agree or disagree, and, well, go listen to the album! Or sell it! But because YOU like it or dislike it!
Damn is so ridiculous.... Writing 1-star reviews of albums everybody praises to the heavens is dangerous, believe me I know.
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agProgger
Forum Groupie
Joined: November 20 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 54
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 00:06 |
The T wrote:
Damn! This is something else... We're now discussing one review as if that review (or any review for that matter) was really important in the big scheme of things... It's one guy's opinion! Whether he's right or wrong, knows a lot or knows sh*t, hates the music or loves it, it's one guy's review. Suddenly we are giving a review much more importance than it really has... Do you think that because of that review Akerfeldt will become depressed and suddenly stop making music? Do you think it makes the album any good, if you think it is (I think so) or any bad if you think the albus is bad? Does it really matter THAT much to you?
Hell, the reviewer in question has written many reviews that I disagree 200% with... and you know what... do you think I suddenly sold all my cds because of his negative reviews? I still like the music? The same goes opposite: do you think i love everything he gives 5 stars to? Of course not. The same with anybody's reviews! They're just opinions.
If everyone is so concerned about that review, is because for some it may say some uncomfortable truths... maybe some of you started to doubt that OPETH is really that glorious because of that review... don't let that insecurity about your tastes make you denounce a single review... If you like OPETH, (like I do), read reviews, agree or disagree, and, well, go listen to the album! Or sell it! But because YOU like it or dislike it!
Damn is so ridiculous.... Writing 1-star reviews of albums everybody praises to the heavens is dangerous, believe me I know. |
If you were including me in that, my short blurb about the guy was mostly in response to what he said here on the thread, not his review, though I found his review somewhat ridiculous. Maybe I just need some time between having played World of Warcraft for a month. I can honestly say that I became much more jaded against idiots who think they're the coolest thing ever in that month than probably the rest of my life combined.
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Friend of the honest; enemy of the arrogant and closed-minded.
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 7559
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 02:51 |
The T wrote:
Suddenly we are giving a review much more importance than it really has... |
Hey, MY reviews are IMPORTANT - I'm a SPECIAL COLLABORATOR / HONORARY COLLABORATOR, so that proves it.
agProgger wrote:
As for Cert, I think the statistics on his profile speak for themselves, with tech/extreme coming in at an average of 2.30. As for his comments on here, I won't dignify them with a response, because I can sense arrogance in an instant, and I want no part in such a discussion (when there is arrogance, there is no real discussion). Such people in my view need a few good slaps to teach them a lesson in humility.
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The statistics merely state that the albums I've heard so far have not agreed with me in those genres - nothing else.
You have, ironically, dignified my comments with a response with these words. Thanks - you underline my own opinion of myself that I am, in fact, the best.
That's not arrogance, just fact.
agProgger wrote:
I'm new (well, sort of -- I joined a while back, made a few posts and then stopped), so I was wondering what everyone's opinion of my very extensive review was. Also, I mentioned something earlier that no one responded to, and I was wondering if anyone else noticed it as well: the jarring transitions seem intentional, which conveys the whole feeling of being emotionally bipolar. It makes the main character seem very insane, and although it threw me off at first, I actually find it now to be a centerpiece attraction of the album. |
Heard it all done a hundred times by other bands - when the effect works, it's good.
Here, it sounds lame, and drags the album down quality-wise - to me.
YMMV.
agProgger wrote:
I just get turned off very quickly by arrogance on the net, because I've had too many arguments and discussions with people of the sort, and they lead nowhere. Such people need a lesson in humility and what the rest of us consider productive discussion. I'll edit it to be less personal, though. |
That's still very personal - and arrogant. I think you should be taught a lesson in humility...
The T wrote:
If everyone is so concerned about that review, is because for some it may say some uncomfortable truths... maybe some of you started to doubt that OPETH is really that glorious because of that review... don't let that insecurity about your tastes make you denounce a single review... If you like OPETH, (like I do), read reviews, agree or disagree, and, well, go listen to the album! Or sell it! But because YOU like it or dislike it!
Damn is so ridiculous.... Writing 1-star reviews of albums everybody praises to the heavens is dangerous, believe me I know. |
Much wisdom here, T - but you know me, I like a bit of danger every now and again.
stonebeard wrote:
Cert obviously dos not like Mikael Akerfeldt. Because he does not praise Mikael Akerfeldt constantly, I can only assume he's a xenophobic Briton who hates everything that ever came out of Sweden. Not only that, be he has a general malcontent for all things Scandinavian, including Pain of Salvation, Ingmar Bergman, and Ricola. Based on this undeniable fact, I vote he be kicked out of Prog Archives and forced to wear a sign around his neck saying The Daily Mail is the word of God.
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Damn.
Caught.
KeleCableII wrote:
Hey certif1ed, I'd be interested in why you think a lot of prog metal isn't really prog, and what prog metal bands you consider to be true prog. I feel like a lot of prog metal is pretty derivative and all that prog, so I'd be interested in your views on the matter.
We can stop this attacking and perhaps try to have a more serious discussion... |
Sensible idea - but would take a new thread.
I do try to reason this out in my reviews - and I do give credit for where I hear Prog (I am carefully using this neutral term so you know I'm not getting mixed up with Prog Rock) - but if it's not clear, then a thread on Prog in Prog Metal would be a useful discussion.
Finally (for this post!), I simply do not hear Watershed as a Prog album in any way, shape or form - it's so run-of-the mill and like so many other rock/metal albums I've heard recently that it's not funny. I feel like the little boy in the crowd shouting "The King's got no clothes on!!!".
I'm currently listening to Coldplay's new album on MySpace - and it's more progressive.
People have picked me up on the grounds of credibility, yet it is the large number of "Masterpiece of Progressive Music" ratings that damage this site's credibility, IMO, not a 1-star rating from a Collaborator.
Imagine a dyed-in-the-wool proghead coming to this site, seeing a vast swathe of 5-star Masterpiece ratings for this album - and there is a warning when you select this, so really, you should think about this and decide whether it's a Masterpiece of Progressive Music or whether you just like it a lot - there IS a difference, and I have rated wonderful albums down simply because they're not Prog.
On this subject, I'm just a forum member like anyone else - I logged on one day and all of a sudden I had all these labels on my avatar - nice, but I didn't ask for it or expect it, and would not cry if they were taken away.
I'm aware that it gives me a high profile, and that large targets are dead easy for people to take pot-shots at, but this simply means that my opinion obviously means something to those taking them - and for that, I'm grateful, because reactions from others are what keep me thinking in fresh directions.
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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russellk
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 28 2005
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 782
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 03:16 |
I do like your reasoning, Certif!ed, but there's still a big black hole in there you're not addressing. 'Not prog' is, according to you - what? Do you mean 'this album doesn't incorporate the things we associate with 70's prog rock', or 'this album shows no sign of progressing beyond accepted musical boundaries'? Or by calling it 'run-of-the-mill' should I take it you subscribe to some form of the latter definition?
If we could hear that loud and clear it would really help put your review in context. A dyed-in-the-wool proghead coming to this site might well understand that according to one of those definitions 'Watershed' is prog, but according to the other it is not. So ...
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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 21206
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 03:18 |
Certif1ed wrote:
KeleCableII wrote:
Hey certif1ed, I'd be interested in why you think a lot of prog metal isn't really prog, and what prog metal bands you consider to be true prog. I feel like a lot of prog metal is pretty derivative and all that prog, so I'd be interested in your views on the matter.
We can stop this attacking and perhaps try to have a more serious discussion... |
Sensible idea - but would take a new thread.
Maybe it would suffice if you reviewed some prog metal albums which deserve more than 3 stars in your opinion ...
I do try to reason this out in my reviews - and I do give credit for where I hear Prog (I am carefully using this neutral term so you know I'm not getting mixed up with Prog Rock) - but if it's not clear, then a thread on Prog in Prog Metal would be a useful discussion.
There is no difference between the terms "Prog" and "Prog Rock" ... unless you're adding your definitions of the terms to every post which contains them, people are bound to misunderstand.
Finally (for this post!), I simply do not hear Watershed as a Prog album in any way, shape or form - it's so run-of-the mill and like so many other rock/metal albums I've heard recently that it's not funny. I feel like the little boy in the crowd shouting "The King's got no clothes on!!!".
I don't hear any Nickelback or Creed on Watershed. So far you appear to be the only one who got the impression that this is just an arbitrary rock/metal album ...
I'm currently listening to Coldplay's new album on MySpace - and it's more progressive.
Maybe I'll give it a listen ... but their previous albums bored me to tears, so I might be slightly biased.
People have picked me up on the grounds of credibility, yet it is the large number of "Masterpiece of Progressive Music" ratings that damage this site's credibility, IMO, not a 1-star rating from a Collaborator. It is a masterpiece of progressive music ... it all depends on how you define "progressive music".
Imagine a dyed-in-the-wool proghead coming to this site, seeing a vast swathe of 5-star Masterpiece ratings for this album - and there is a warning when you select this, so really, you should think about this and decide whether it's a Masterpiece of Progressive Music or whether you just like it a lot - there IS a difference, and I have rated wonderful albums down simply because they're not Prog.
I don't care about "progheads who have become that rigid and inflexible over the years. And about your strategy to reduce the rating of albums who you think aren't prog: Of course you can do that, but you should be aware that the rating is used to calculate an overal average rating which people use as a reference without taking into considerations the "directions" which you include in your review. So in effect it may be misguiding to many people.
On this subject, I'm just a forum member like anyone else - I logged on one day and all of a sudden I had all these labels on my avatar - nice, but I didn't ask for it or expect it, and would not cry if they were taken away.
I'm aware that it gives me a high profile, and that large targets are dead easy for people to take pot-shots at, but this simply means that my opinion obviously means something to those taking them - and for that, I'm grateful, because reactions from others are what keep me thinking in fresh directions.
You simply stand alone with your opinion on prog metal (and modern prog in general) ... but I don't mind at all. If anything, I'm sad that you don't submit your ratings on my website ... there you could assign progressiveness to albums and thereby shed some light on your opinion, show us which albums you would truly consider to be "prog metal".
A while ago I asked you this, and you responded something like: "why should I submit ratings on another website?". Well, my answer is: "why shouldn't you?".
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 7559
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 03:33 |
russellk wrote:
I do like your reasoning, Certif!ed, but there's still a big black hole in there you're not addressing. 'Not prog' is, according to you - what?
Do you mean 'this album doesn't incorporate the things we associate with 70's prog rock', or 'this album shows no sign of progressing beyond accepted musical boundaries'? Or by calling it 'run-of-the-mill' should I take it you subscribe to some form of the latter definition?
If we could hear that loud and clear it would really help put your review in context. A dyed-in-the-wool proghead coming to this site might well understand that according to one of those definitions 'Watershed' is prog, but according to the other it is not. So ... |
It's just not Prog. It doesn't matter which definition you use (and there are plenty all over the internet) - this has nothing to do with my personal definitions. I'm not sure how clear I can make it - it's well enough understood.
There are no progressive elements in this album - sure, some of the songs are long, and there's a Mellotron, but that's it.
One review stated that one song is Prog because it starts with an acoustic guitar... I mean, there are definitions of Prog, and there's jibberish.
If you're going to ask me this question, I might just as well turn it around with another question - why aren't Coldplay or Cradle of Filth Prog?
The answers, I suspect, will be blind prejudice.
Edited by Certif1ed - June 12 2008 at 03:33
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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russellk
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 28 2005
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 782
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 03:37 |
I did answer your challenge earlier in this thread, but you appear to have overlooked it:
russellk wrote:
I think Watershed is progressive rock because: - it uses some non-conventional time signatures and sequences - songs 'develop' rather than simply returning to their original simple motifs - the use of instruments is inspired by 'classical' prog - the band has been influenced by prog musicians from KC to Camel - the band demonstrates technical virtuosity in comparison to standard rock musicians - some of the songs demonstrate a quirky humour characteristic of prog - the lyrical subjects are standard prog territory - the album is more than a collection of songs: care has been taken in song selection and placement.
None of these things, on their own, qualify any album as 'prog'. However, wouldn't most listeners suspect they were listening to something graced by progressive rock sensibilities? It's really hard for me to deny what my ears are hearing. Now I don't think 'Watershed' is the best example of OPETH's work - I gave it three stars - but I do believe reviews ought to be in the context of the BAND being reviewed and the GENRE the album sits within. If 'Watershed' is truly a one-star album, then we'd better be adding negative stars to the site!
Finally, I will criticise Cert's review for one point: I don't think reviews aren't the place to argue that an album/band is 'not prog' (particularly not when making such a definitive statement). We all have such different definitions of 'prog' that unless the reviewer is very clear what his/her definition is, there is no context for the reader to judge the 'this is not prog' statement. In particular some reviewers see prog as 'anything progressive/original' and others as 'sounds like the 70s'. These two are usually mutually exclusive, and it's often not clear which one the reviewer means. It's also provocative, since experts on the genre have agreed to the band's addition.
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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 21206
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 03:42 |
^ I think that you simply set the standard *way* too high. As I see it, only about 10% of all the albums in the archives would fall within your definitions. For the typical music enthusiast a rock piece in 7/4 with Mellotron is prog. That doesn't mean that it can compete with one of Genesis' masterpieces, but still it's sufficiently different from mainstream rock to merit that label.
All music magazines describe Opeth as a prog band. The German magazine Eclipsed is usually quite reluctant when it comes to the more extreme styles of metal, but even they recently featured a two page article and interview with Mikael Akerfeldt. These things will not convince you to change your mind - I'm just saying that most people use an entirely different definition of "prog" than you do. And as you said in the other thread: Defining "prog" is much more difficult than defining "table". Maybe one way of uniting the different attempts of definition is to introduce levels of progressiveness - that way you could perhaps grudgingly admit that Opeth are prog, albeit on a much lower level than for example Genesis.
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russellk
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 28 2005
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 782
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 03:44 |
I can't answer your question regarding Coldplay or Cradle of Filth, as I've not really listened to either.
Edited by russellk - June 12 2008 at 03:44
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 7559
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 03:47 |
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
Sensible idea - but would take a new thread. |
Maybe it would suffice if you reviewed some prog metal albums which deserve more than 3 stars in your opinion ... |
A.C.T. - Last Epic (actually, having heard it a few times since, I think I was probably being a bit generous).
Death - Scream Bloody Gore (OK, I admit, I was having fun with that one - but it IS progressive in the literal sense of the word, if not so much in musical content).
In short, I'd need to review a Progressive Metal album that had Progressive music on it, and, many times bitten, er... many times plus one shy...
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
I do try to reason this out in my reviews - and I do give credit for where I hear Prog (I am carefully using this neutral term so you know I'm not getting mixed up with Prog Rock) - but if it's not clear, then a thread on Prog in Prog Metal would be a useful discussion. |
There is no difference between the terms "Prog" and "Prog Rock" ... unless you're adding your definitions of the terms to every post which contains them, people are bound to misunderstand. |
Yes there is - Prog is short for Progressive and is used to prefix -Rock and -Metal (not to mention Jazz, Trance and a number of other Progressive genres). It means the same in all cases.
I do not make definitions up.
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
Finally (for this post!), I simply do not hear Watershed as a Prog album in any way, shape or form - it's so run-of-the mill and like so many other rock/metal albums I've heard recently that it's not funny. I feel like the little boy in the crowd shouting "The King's got no clothes on!!!". |
I don't hear any Nickelback or Creed on Watershed. So far you appear to be the only one who got the impression that this is just an arbitrary rock/metal album ... |
It's not just me - look further up this very thread.
And that is EXACTLY the impression I have.
What is so radical about this album?
Acoustic guitar intros?
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
People have picked me up on the grounds of credibility, yet it is the large number of "Masterpiece of Progressive Music" ratings that damage this site's credibility, IMO, not a 1-star rating from a Collaborator. It is a masterpiece of progressive music ... it all depends on how you define "progressive music". |
Nickelback?
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
[QUOTE=Certif1ed]
Imagine a dyed-in-the-wool proghead coming to this site, seeing a vast swathe of 5-star Masterpiece ratings for this album - and there is a warning when you select this, so really, you should think about this and decide whether it's a Masterpiece of Progressive Music or whether you just like it a lot - there IS a difference, and I have rated wonderful albums down simply because they're not Prog.
I don't care about "progheads who have become that rigid and inflexible over the years. And about your strategy to reduce the rating of albums who you think aren't prog: Of course you can do that, but you should be aware that the rating is used to calculate an overal average rating which people use as a reference without taking into considerations the "directions" which you include in your review. So in effect it may be misguiding to many people.
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My "strategy" as you call it (and until now I had never considered) seems perfectly legitimate - if it's not Prog it can't be a masterpiece of Prog, can it?
Not caring about people that come to this site shows me where your heart is at - and it's misleading to brand stuff as something it is not.
It's clear that I'm now being accused of making stuff up and holding my own opinions.
Whatever.
YOU decide, and I'll keep listening and reviewing.
You're all different
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 7559
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 03:57 |
russellk wrote:
I did answer your challenge earlier in this thread, but you appear to have overlooked it: |
Thanks - I did overlook it!
russellk wrote:
I think Watershed is progressive rock because: - it uses some non-conventional time signatures and sequences |
So does "Golden Brown" by the Strangers and "Take Five" by Dave Brubek.
russellk wrote:
- songs 'develop' rather than simply returning to their original simple motifs
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Actually, one of my issues with this album is that this is not the case - there is next to no development.
russellk wrote:
- the use of instruments is inspired by 'classical' prog
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Hmm - a Mellotron, an ARP and a Hammond?
Ever heard the Small Faces?
russellk wrote:
- the band has been influenced by prog musicians (...)
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So were the Sex Pistols.
russellk wrote:
- the band demonstrates technical virtuosity in comparison to standard rock musicians
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Really?
I must've missed that - and I did listen very hard, all the way through - no cheating or skipping stuff.
russellk wrote:
- some of the songs demonstrate a quirky humour characteristic of prog
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Very tentative and extgremely subjective.
russellk wrote:
- the lyrical subjects are standard prog territory
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What is this "standard prog" of which you speak?
russellk wrote:
- the album is more than a collection of songs: care has been taken in song selection and placement.
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Sounds like a collection of songs to me.
I expect ABBA were careful about song placement too, as was Frank Sinatra, when he compiled "Wee Small Hours" - widely regarded as the very first concept album.
russellk wrote:
None of these things, on their own, qualify any album as 'prog'.
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Nor do they together.
Progressive music is progressive. SImple.
It is not standard rock - and Watershed is so similar to hundreds of rock songs I've listened to recently that it doesn't stand out from the pack in any way - apart from, maybe, the note I wondered about at length.
russellk wrote:
Finally, I will criticise Cert's review for one point: I don't think reviews aren't the place to argue that an album/band is 'not prog' (particularly not when making such a definitive statement).
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The reviews are the very place to do that, as the Rating system shows clearly.
russellk wrote:
It's also provocative, since experts on the genre have agreed to the band's addition.
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Yes, but not every band seen as Progressive consistently releases Prog albums - for example, Yes, ELP, Genesis - so the experts credibility is not questioned for a moment.
It's provocative, because it's provoked discussion, which is a GOOD thing.
Edited by Certif1ed - June 12 2008 at 04:01
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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russellk
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 28 2005
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 782
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 04:05 |
^ No, the review rating guidelines say absolutely nothing about 'not prog'. In fact, given that we have a 'prog related' category, it seems to me clear we have to rate some albums differently - or end up with the maximum rating available for prog-related albums as a 3.
And I don't agree that even if an album has those things I listed all together (I accept you dispute some of them in the case of Watershed) it still might not be prog. After all, the list was lifted from the definition of prog offered on this site.
To be clear: are you arguing that the definition of prog offered on this site is NOT correct, but on the other hand insisting that we ought to abide by the LITERAL meaning of the rating guidelines?
Edited by russellk - June 12 2008 at 04:07
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oddentity
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 28 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 248
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 04:50 |
Certif1ed wrote:
It is not standard rock - and Watershed is so similar to hundreds of rock songs I've listened to recently that it doesn't stand out from the pack in any way - apart from, maybe, the note I wondered about at length. |
Please give some examples of rock songs that resemble the tunes in Watershed. I want to hear them!
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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 21206
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 05:10 |
Certif1ed wrote:
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
Sensible idea - but would take a new thread. |
Maybe it would suffice if you reviewed some prog metal albums which deserve more than 3 stars in your opinion ... |
A.C.T. - Last Epic (actually, having heard it a few times since, I think I was probably being a bit generous).
I wouldn't call that one prog *metal* ... but I like it, too.
Death - Scream Bloody Gore (OK, I admit, I was having fun with that one - but it IS progressive in the literal sense of the word, if not so much in musical content).
Haven't heard it - at least not as closely that I could remember it now. It seems peculiar to me though that you would name this early Death album and not one of the later releases like Symbolic or The Sound of Perseverance.
In short, I'd need to review a Progressive Metal album that had Progressive music on it, and, many times bitten, er... many times plus one shy...
I'll gladly compile a list of albums which might intrigue you.
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
I do try to reason this out in my reviews - and I do give credit for where I hear Prog (I am carefully using this neutral term so you know I'm not getting mixed up with Prog Rock) - but if it's not clear, then a thread on Prog in Prog Metal would be a useful discussion. |
There is no difference between the terms "Prog" and "Prog Rock" ... unless you're adding your definitions of the terms to every post which contains them, people are bound to misunderstand. |
Yes there is - Prog is short for Progressive and is used to prefix -Rock and -Metal (not to mention Jazz, Trance and a number of other Progressive genres). It means the same in all cases.
I do not make definitions up.
You might not be making them up, but IMO you're wrong in assuming that these definitions are widely used by everyone. For most people "Prog" is merely a contraction of "Prog Rock" ... and IMO both labels describe a style rather than an attitude. The Flower Kings are Prog Rock through and through for example, although 95% of their discography is neither innovative nor experimental. As far as I'm concerned I'd rather use the word "progressive" to reference the attribute which you usually mean by "Prog".
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
Finally (for this post!), I simply do not hear Watershed as a Prog album in any way, shape or form - it's so run-of-the mill and like so many other rock/metal albums I've heard recently that it's not funny. I feel like the little boy in the crowd shouting "The King's got no clothes on!!!". |
I don't hear any Nickelback or Creed on Watershed. So far you appear to be the only one who got the impression that this is just an arbitrary rock/metal album ... |
It's not just me - look further up this very thread.
And that is EXACTLY the impression I have.
What is so radical about this album?
Acoustic guitar intros?
(painted your post blue in order to avoid confusion) There's absolutely nothing radical about Watershed. Still, it doesn't sound like Nickelback or Creed. Like I said in the other thread: There can be different levels of prog, and like I said above: "Prog" can also mean a stylistic similarity ("sounds like Camel") which neither implies that the band is on the same artistic level than the band they sound alike, nor does it imply that the band is trying to compete with that band. Mikael is a big fan of 70s bands like Camel and Nektar, but if you asked him to compare Opeth to these bands I'm sure he would be eager to point out that there can be no competition. Likewise, Steve Wilson coming here and praising Jethro Tull - Thick as a Brick doesn't mean that his albums have something to do with that classic album ... rather the reverse.
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
People have picked me up on the grounds of credibility, yet it is the large number of "Masterpiece of Progressive Music" ratings that damage this site's credibility, IMO, not a 1-star rating from a Collaborator. It is a masterpiece of progressive music ... it all depends on how you define "progressive music". |
Nickelback?
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
[QUOTE=Certif1ed]
Imagine a dyed-in-the-wool proghead coming to this site, seeing a vast swathe of 5-star Masterpiece ratings for this album - and there is a warning when you select this, so really, you should think about this and decide whether it's a Masterpiece of Progressive Music or whether you just like it a lot - there IS a difference, and I have rated wonderful albums down simply because they're not Prog.
I don't care about "progheads who have become that rigid and inflexible over the years. And about your strategy to reduce the rating of albums who you think aren't prog: Of course you can do that, but you should be aware that the rating is used to calculate an overal average rating which people use as a reference without taking into considerations the "directions" which you include in your review. So in effect it may be misguiding to many people.
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My "strategy" as you call it (and until now I had never considered) seems perfectly legitimate - if it's not Prog it can't be a masterpiece of Prog, can it?
That's the whole point ... only a small minority thinks that it isn't prog.
Not caring about people that come to this site shows me where your heart is at - and it's misleading to brand stuff as something it is not.
I care a lot! It is because I care that I'm taking the time to write this post.
It's clear that I'm now being accused of making stuff up and holding my own opinions.
If anything, I'm accusing you of misleading people into thinking that your definition of prog (and how you apply it to Opeth) is the one which is commonly used. But I'd rather not use the word "accuse". I would never ask you to change your review or to quit what you're doing ... I've learned from my mistakes, at least I hope so.
Whatever.
YOU decide, and I'll keep listening and reviewing.
You're all different
I'm not!
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Vince
Forum Groupie
Joined: March 24 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 95
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 13:51 |
Did I mention I miss Martin Lopez?...
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"The mind is like a parachute: it doesn't work until it's opened"... Frank Zappa.
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Demonoid
Forum Groupie
Joined: May 10 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 50
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 15:20 |
Well from your(certif1ed's) profile- Dream Theater - Images And Words - 3 stars Pain Of Salvation - Remedy Lane - 3 stars Opeth - Blackwater Park - 2 stars Queensryche - Operation: Mindcrime - 2 stars Dream Theater - Scenes From A Memory Metropolis Part II - 2 stars All these albums are top-notch....definitely 4 stars in my book.
I'm not trying to attack you or something...just that some of your reasoning seems absurd. I mean, how is being influenced by other artists but creating a new sound bad in anyway?
Also, even I'd like to know your definition of prog, as very often you mention in these reviews that they are not progressive.
The T wrote:
Damn! This is something else... We're now discussing one
review as if that review (or any review for that matter) was really
important in the big scheme of things... It's one guy's opinion! Whether he's right or wrong, knows a lot or knows sh*t, hates the music or loves it, it's one guy's review.
Suddenly we are giving a review much more importance than it really
has... Do you think that because of that review Akerfeldt will become
depressed and suddenly stop making music? Do you think it makes the
album any good, if you think it is (I think so) or any bad if you think
the albus is bad? Does it really matter THAT much to you?
Hell, the reviewer in question has written many reviews that I
disagree 200% with... and you know what... do you think I suddenly sold
all my cds because of his negative reviews? I still like the music? The
same goes opposite: do you think i love everything he gives 5 stars to?
Of course not. The same with anybody's reviews! They're just opinions.
If everyone is so concerned about that review, is because for some
it may say some uncomfortable truths... maybe some of you started to
doubt that OPETH is really that glorious because of that review...
don't let that insecurity about your tastes make you denounce a single
review... If you like OPETH, (like I do), read reviews, agree or
disagree, and, well, go listen to the album! Or sell it! But because YOU like it or dislike it!
Damn is so ridiculous.... Writing 1-star reviews of albums everybody praises to the heavens is dangerous, believe me I know. |
Well, we are on a discussion board rite....seems fine with me as long as its civil and productive. Any uncivilized post can be moderated.
Edited by Demonoid - June 12 2008 at 15:22
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KeleCableII
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 30 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 275
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 15:45 |
Demonoid wrote:
Well from your(certif1ed's) profile-
Dream Theater - Images And Words - 3 stars Pain Of Salvation - Remedy Lane - 3 stars Opeth - Blackwater Park - 2 stars Queensryche - Operation: Mindcrime - 2 stars Dream Theater - Scenes From A Memory Metropolis Part II - 2 stars
All these albums are top-notch....definitely 4 stars in my book.
I'm not trying to attack you or something...just that some of your reasoning seems absurd. I mean, how is being influenced by other artists but creating a new sound bad in anyway?
Also, even I'd like to know your definition of prog, as very often you mention in these reviews that they are not progressive. |
In his defense, as someone who doesn't mind prog metal, the only album on that list I would give 4+ stars is Remedy Lane (I haven't gotten into Blackwater Park so I'll withhold judgment there).
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Pnoom!
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 02 2006
Location: OH
Status: Offline
Points: 4981
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Posted: June 12 2008 at 15:55 |
Watershed is significantly below Blackwater Park and Ghost Reveries. 3 or 3.5 stars from me.
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