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BaldJean View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 05:20
there are still ways of doing highly original things. interestingly it is mostly some of the old heroes who still can do it. I highly recommend to listen to the new album of Guru Guru ("PSY"). they show the possibilities that are still in the genre. and why is it that they still sound fresh? because they are willing to explore new territory instead of sticking to formulas. but if you go out and form a new band with the aim "we are going to play prog" then you are most likely to fail. prog is NOT a formula which can be used, prog has to invent itself new every day


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 06:55
^ See - in saying that prog has to invent itself new every day, and talking about 'exploring new territory' instead of 'sticking to formulas', one side of the equation - ritual - is ignored in favour of progression and experimentation. I still contend that BOTH are a necessary part of human life. Why disparage one while advocating the other? If you want to recommend 'fresh' music, why do it by belittling others? (bands with the aim "we are going to play prog").
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 07:01
I think the best music (in my opinion of course) is music that takes conventional elements and experiments with them. TMV are good at this, for example. Also, at the risk of much controversy, prog metal does this a lot. Take Tool. Most of their musical conventions come from alternative metal, but they experiment with the boundaries of this genre to create something new. It is not entirely cutting edge/out of this world/structureless, but it is definitely not retrogressive.
 
The issue at hand is, of course, not exclusive to prog music. It is not even exclusive to rock in general. In the 50s and 60s jazz was split between the traditionalists such as Duke Ellington an Louis Armstrong, and the purveyors of free jazz such as Ornette Coleman. In my opinion the best jazz musicians followed some conventions, but were not afraid to experiment. John Coltrane's 'A Love Supreme' is a perfect example of this.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 07:38
^ I think you'd be hard-pressed to find a musician that did not follow any conventions, jazz or otherwise.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 08:21
Originally posted by russellk russellk wrote:

^ See - in saying that prog has to invent itself new every day, and talking about 'exploring new territory' instead of 'sticking to formulas', one side of the equation - ritual - is ignored in favour of progression and experimentation. I still contend that BOTH are a necessary part of human life. Why disparage one while advocating the other? If you want to recommend 'fresh' music, why do it by belittling others? (bands with the aim "we are going to play prog").

that goes without saying. no-one starts from scratch.
I am not belittling these bands, I just think this is the wrong approach to music. play music, do YOUR thing, no matter what it is called. but sticking to a formula won't make you original at all. who wants to hear the 250th Genesis clone?


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 10:27
Originally posted by Toaster Mantis Toaster Mantis wrote:

Originally posted by Pnoom! Pnoom! wrote:

Quote It's just interesting to see where people's conceptions of originality comes from.


For many people I think it subconsciously comes from a need to justify listening to derivative music ("nuh-uh, TFK really are inventive!"), when the appropriate response is simply to like it for what it is.


But sometimes a rather derivative band can be original in a sense, if their music may not be remotely groundbreaking but have a lot of quirks that make it unique and distinctive.Wink


Not really.  "Quirks" do not make a band original.  Distinct, maybe, but original, no.  The structure and format of the music makes a band original.

Otherwise, everything is original because it's not the same notes in exactly the same sequence, and then the word means nothing.  I could play any song written by anybody at a different tempo, and suddenly, it would be original by that definition.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 10:50
Originally posted by Henry Plainview Henry Plainview wrote:

I'm just wondering what exactly is the purpose of something that conveys no meaning. I don't consider that question pedantic.


for the lulz


Edited by Pnoom! - June 29 2008 at 10:50
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 12:23
Ah, excellent points everyone!

Originally posted by Russellk Russellk wrote:

Like it or not, the prog genre – as evidenced by this site – is an uneasy amalgam of PROGRESSIVE music, designed to stretch or break convention, and RETRO-PROG, music designed to evoke the CLASSIC PROG period of the 70s. One ought not to be privileged over the other, and both are a part of human experience. The big mistake, in my opinion, is to disregard one or the other because of what it is. Adopting an inflexible position (“I hate avant-garde rubbish”, or “I hate derivative pap”) is to deprive oneself (and those who might be influenced by your point of view) of so many pleasurable experiences. Why on earth would you do it? Why not be a little more flexible, and enjoy everything in its season?


This is something I find myself asking a lot. Pnoom previously made the point that no one should dismiss a genre in and of itself, but for some reason I find a lot of people who consider themselves 'open minded' (but lets not turn this into an 'open minded'/'close minded' discussion) dismissing certain genres or saying 'this is everything I hate about gerne X' as though it has no redeeming qualities. Take everything as it is, regardless of genre, if you like it you like it!

Originally posted by Laplace Laplace wrote:

Looking through my collection I've found music which obviously copies previous music, so it's not like I can't be swung to the retro side. Prefering Crucis and Shingetsu to Camel and Genesis is probably just wrong if you're testing for originality, even in such a subjective area. o:)

avant-prog bands can be highly unoriginal and even predictable themselves. after all, there's a chamber rock scene (UZ/AZ), a post-punky stripped down avant scene (Skeleton Crew/some Etron Fou, etc.), more recently a form of the genre based on genre-mashing (Zappa/Zorn/Bungle)... it takes a close listener to work out a band's avant-"allegiance" but they certainly exist and are predictable forms of their own, at their worst.

Maybe that is obvious? All I see lately is avant dismissed as "generic unlistenable noise" so maybe not. I hope the people who were a little too uptight in this thread can identify their own retro tastes. o:)


I'm quite guilty of not being able to understand the RIO genre at times. I've tried listening to Residents samples on PA and I can't say I know what to think of them. Generic noise? No, not at all (although I think this was referring more towards different bands, or perhaps my poor wording on the first page coming back to haunt me Wink). Actually, the one RIO cd I actually mustered up the courage to buy was Sleepytime Gorilla Museum's 'Of Natural History' which was a HUGE eye opener for me. I love the cacophonistic riffs and beats in that album. It's a very unique album in my eyes. Maybe not to others who are more schooled in the subgenre, but to someone more used to pastoral and symphonic epics it was a big 'whoa'.

And no, I don't think it's inherently wrong to prefer so called retro prog over some of the classic bands. I'm sure over the last couple of weeks I've heard The Tangent or Spock's Beard playing out of my speakers much more often than I've heard Genesis or Pink Floyd. Not to say that I think the former are more talented or innovative, they just happen to scratch my itch at the moment.

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

and why is it that they still sound fresh? because they are willing to explore new territory instead of sticking to formulas. but if you go out and form a new band with the aim "we are going to play prog" then you are most likely to fail. prog is NOT a formula which can be used, prog has to invent itself new every day


Hence Porcupine Tree (who denies the prog tag) is far more popular than Glass Hammer!

It makes sense, because if your scope is one thing then you're going to have a very narrow musical pallet to pull from. But again, I'm not sure that prog has to reinvent itself in leaps and bounds all the time, but perhaps baby steps with the occasional band taking that giant leap for mankind. It's true that no band should really regress upon their own music, but I see no problems in using old ideas to develop new ones. So long as they're good ones I suppose.

Originally posted by Baldjean Baldjean wrote:

hat goes without saying. no-one starts from scratch.
I am not belittling these bands, I just think this is the wrong approach to music. play music, do YOUR thing, no matter what it is called. but sticking to a formula won't make you original at all. who wants to hear the 250th Genesis clone?


True no one wants to hear it that many times. Although, a decade after the band went sour their first (and I use this term very loosely) clone, Marillion was probably looking very attractive to Genesis and Prog fans. No doubt everyone has an influence, but they have to have their own style, which, retro or not, can always be seen as original in the most semantic sense of the word.

Originally posted by Pnoom! Pnoom! wrote:

Not really.  "Quirks" do not make a band original.  Distinct, maybe, but original, no.  The structure and format of the music makes a band original.

Otherwise, everything is original because it's not the same notes in exactly the same sequence, and then the word means nothing.  I could play any song written by anybody at a different tempo, and suddenly, it would be original by that definition.


I agree, a quirky band is not necessarily original because someone, somewhere, has probably used that same quirk. Quirks are still good and fun for a band to have though.

Ever heard Porcupine Tree's 'Four Chords That Made A Million'? Well, you don't have to know the song really, the title says it all. A lot of people do almost exactly what you say in the second part of your post, they take chords from someone they like, play them in a different order and tempo and it's a whole other song. Four chords that made a million.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 12:34
Specifically regarding Marillion, since they've been mentioned, I think they're a good contrast to Spock's Beard.  Both bands show clear Genesis influence, but only one sounds like a Genesis clone (even early Marillion doesn't).  Marillion might not be the most original band on the planet, but they at least sound like their own band.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 12:45
What I find funny about this sometimes is that a lot of the prog fans are more inclined to listen to Marillion than some of the 80s new wave (which was the more contemporary and original genre at the time) and still call Marillion down for being unoriginal. It's like, well make up your minds people! LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 12:55
Originally posted by King By-Tor King By-Tor wrote:

What I find funny about this sometimes is that a lot of the prog fans are more inclined to listen to Marillion than some of the 80s new wave (which was the more contemporary and original genre at the time) and still call Marillion down for being unoriginal. It's like, well make up your minds people! LOL


The bigger problem is that they don't like 80s New Wave Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 13:01
Yeah, but it's like, "well, if you want 'original' music..." LOL


All us proggers shoudl consider the alternatives. Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 16:00
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Originally posted by russellk russellk wrote:

^ See - in saying that prog has to invent itself new every day, and talking about 'exploring new territory' instead of 'sticking to formulas', one side of the equation - ritual - is ignored in favour of progression and experimentation. I still contend that BOTH are a necessary part of human life. Why disparage one while advocating the other? If you want to recommend 'fresh' music, why do it by belittling others? (bands with the aim "we are going to play prog").

that goes without saying. no-one starts from scratch.
I am not belittling these bands, I just think this is the wrong approach to music. play music, do YOUR thing, no matter what it is called. but sticking to a formula won't make you original at all. who wants to hear the 250th Genesis clone?


I still think you may be missing the point, much as I respect your argument. I'm sure those you say are 'sticking to a formula' realise it 'won't make [them] original at all.' That is the point, surely? You still speak as though not being original is a bad thing. But your argument itself isn't original: who wants to hear the 250th claim that retro bands are Genesis clones?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 16:04
Not being original is only a bad thing if you're trying to make music that will be remembered and idolized and well-respected.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 16:47
Originally posted by Pnoom! Pnoom! wrote:

Not being original is only a bad thing if you're trying to make music that will be remembered and idolized and well-respected.


Being original for its own sake is only a bad thing if you're trying to make music that will be appreciated, will entertain and comfort people.

See how silly these games are? Both have a place. People criticise the 250th Genesis clone and say nothing about music that's like chewing gravel. Comparing the best of original music to the worst of derivative music is merely a way to justify one's position, and does not advance understanding. How about comparing the best to the best? How about explaining why, in your opinion, the BEST of neo-prog won't be remembered, idolised or respected?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 16:53
Originally posted by russellk russellk wrote:

Originally posted by Pnoom! Pnoom! wrote:

Not being original is only a bad thing if you're trying to make music that will be remembered and idolized and well-respected.


Being original for its own sake is only a bad thing if you're trying to make music that will be appreciated, will entertain and comfort people.


There are almost no artists who do this, so this is really a straw man argument.

Artists try to be original because, quite frankly, that's the vision they have for music.  And many, I'm sure, would rather challenge themselves to come up with something new that's good and fail than to do a good job at reproducing somebody else's work in snazzed up format.

Quote See how silly these games are? Both have a place. People criticise the 250th Genesis clone and say nothing about music that's like chewing gravel.


Actually, they will do both.  Just not in the same thread, usually, since the music you're talking about when you say "music that's like chewing gravel" is vastly different from music that qualifies as the "250th Genesis clone."

Quote Comparing the best of original music to the worst of derivative music is merely a way to justify one's position


Nobody is doing this.  We're comparing the best of original music to the derivative music presented in this thread.  And the same goes for any other thread in which this debate has arisen.

Quote How about comparing the best to the best? How about explaining why, in your opinion, the BEST of neo-prog won't be remembered, idolised or respected?


Outside of the prog world, it won't be, whereas, believe it or not, Yes, Genesis, and King Crimson are and will continue to be.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 16:58
Originally posted by King By-Tor King By-Tor wrote:



Ever heard Porcupine Tree's 'Four Chords That Made A Million'? Well, you don't have to know the song really, the title says it all. A lot of people do almost exactly what you say in the second part of your post, they take chords from someone they like, play them in a different order and tempo and it's a whole other song. Four chords that made a million.


Reminds me of this:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=8s13sASS5F4

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 17:08
Originally posted by Pnoom! Pnoom! wrote:

Originally posted by russellk russellk wrote:

Originally posted by Pnoom! Pnoom! wrote:

Not being original is only a bad thing if you're trying to make music that will be remembered and idolized and well-respected.


Being original for its own sake is only a bad thing if you're trying to make music that will be appreciated, will entertain and comfort people.


There are almost no artists who do this, so this is really a straw man argument.

Artists try to be original because, quite frankly, that's the vision they have for music.  And many, I'm sure, would rather challenge themselves to come up with something new that's good and fail than to do a good job at reproducing somebody else's work in snazzed up format.

Quote See how silly these games are? Both have a place. People criticise the 250th Genesis clone and say nothing about music that's like chewing gravel.


Actually, they will do both.  Just not in the same thread, usually, since the music you're talking about when you say "music that's like chewing gravel" is vastly different from music that qualifies as the "250th Genesis clone."

Quote Comparing the best of original music to the worst of derivative music is merely a way to justify one's position


Nobody is doing this.  We're comparing the best of original music to the derivative music presented in this thread.  And the same goes for any other thread in which this debate has arisen.

Quote How about comparing the best to the best? How about explaining why, in your opinion, the BEST of neo-prog won't be remembered, idolised or respected?


Outside of the prog world, it won't be, whereas, believe it or not, Yes, Genesis, and King Crimson are and will continue to be.


^Sorry, didn't follow any of that.

Almost no artists who do what? Originality for its own sake? How do you know that? In the literary field there are many writers who believe the pathway to being published is to be original for its own sake - many publishers will take a chance on something incomprehensible in case it turns out to be the 'breakthrough book'. I'm sure it's the same in music. So, no 'straw man' argument there.

See, again you talk about derivative work as though it's "reproducing somebody else's work in a snazzed up format." Now that's a 'straw man' argument. You know as well as I that derivative work is not a matter of reproduction. Just because you walk down the same beach doesn't mean you have to put your feet in someone else's footprints.

So people don't talk about both sides of the argument in the same thread? Whyever not? Don't people try to make sense? Or are they simply trying to justify their position? Only talking about one side of an argument sounds like foolishness to me.

Yes, Genesis and King Crimson remembered outside of the prog world? If you remember them, you're part of the prog world. That's what defines these 'worlds', after all. How about telling us WHY the best of neo-prog won't be remembered?

I reserve my respect for those willing to engage in both sides of an argument.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 17:20
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Originally posted by russellk russellk wrote:

^ See - in saying that prog has to invent itself new every day, and talking about 'exploring new territory' instead of 'sticking to formulas', one side of the equation - ritual - is ignored in favour of progression and experimentation. I still contend that BOTH are a necessary part of human life. Why disparage one while advocating the other? If you want to recommend 'fresh' music, why do it by belittling others? (bands with the aim "we are going to play prog").

that goes without saying. no-one starts from scratch.
I am not belittling these bands, I just think this is the wrong approach to music. play music, do YOUR thing, no matter what it is called. but sticking to a formula won't make you original at all. who wants to hear the 250th Genesis clone?


Depends, how good are they ?
All in all, overall, and to end it all ... isn't it really just whether the music is enjoyable to the listener ?
If listening to music becomes a sort of academic study, or somehow can be judged based on a mathematical equation, aren't we missing out on the important part - liking it ?Confused
"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 29 2008 at 17:28
Originally posted by russellk russellk wrote:




Almost no artists who do what? Originality for its own sake? How do you know that? In the literary field there are many writers who believe the pathway to being published is to be original for its own sake - many publishers will take a chance on something incomprehensible in case it turns out to be the 'breakthrough book'. I'm sure it's the same in music. So, no 'straw man' argument there.




Could you give any examples of such writers? And AFAIK in music recording a CD of 'incomprehensible' music is a surefire way of selling it in several hundred copies at most, not exactly a 'breakthrough'...
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