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Topic ClosedHow can metal be prog?

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The T View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 23:36
Originally posted by explodingjosh explodingjosh wrote:

The title of this thread implies that prog has limits....

............I disagree...Hug
 
Simple and wise post Clap
 
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Mr ProgFreak View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 01:34
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

we are talking about the tendency of Prog Metal fanboys to create distorsion of Prog history


Again, I don't think that this is a specific problem of prog metal. It's not even a specific problem for prog ... any historic event will become distorted sooner or later. Even if it's carefully documented, a few generations later people might doubt that it actually happened that way.

In any case, I firmly believe that nobody in the PMT believes that CttE is prog metal ... Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 01:40
I'll state as a member of the Prog Metal Team, that I don't think CTTE is prog metalWink
Can't see any of my other team members arguing with thatTongue
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 01:43
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

 ^ hey Mr ProgFreak, if that is your real name, take your pompous attitude and...  

oh hi Mike, just kidding Clown ..  I wish I'd heard many more things from '08 but I'm terribly broke right now, lucky to get a few new CDs a month and when I do it's usually from a backlist of things I'm looking for, most not from this year



Of course I'm familiar with that problem ... maybe eMusic.com can help you:

http://progfreak.com/home/charts.xhtml?src=emusic

This should list the top albums from the current year which I've also found on eMusic.com - for each album there's a link to the appropriate page at eMusic.com (in the per user lists one of the note symbols next to the album name will link there).

I think that even if you don't really like mp3s and prefer CDs instead, eMusic.com can be a good solution for expanding your collection.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 01:56
Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

I'll state as a member of the Prog Metal Team, that I don't think CTTE is prog metalWink
Can't see any of my other team members arguing with thatTongue
 
Angry
 
Jon Anderson is the father of growling! Better believe it!!!!
 
 
 
 
 
 
(actually... maybe... after all, after listening to his voice, I'm sure many musicians just said "Oh man... we really have to try not to sound like that guy"...Tongue)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 02:10
Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

I'll state as a member of the Prog Metal Team, that I don't think CTTE is prog metalWink
Can't see any of my other team members arguing with thatTongue
 
Angry
 
Jon Anderson is the father of growling! Better believe it!!!!
 
 
 
 
 
 
(actually... maybe... after all, after listening to his voice, I'm sure many musicians just said "Oh man... we really have to try not to sound like that guy"...Tongue)
 
heh.. No arguing for me... LOL
 
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

 ^ hey Mr ProgFreak, if that is your real name, take your pompous attitude and...  

oh hi Mike, just kidding Clown ..  I wish I'd heard many more things from '08 but I'm terribly broke right now, lucky to get a few new CDs a month and when I do it's usually from a backlist of things I'm looking for, most not from this year



Of course I'm familiar with that problem ... maybe eMusic.com can help you:

http://progfreak.com/home/charts.xhtml?src=emusic

This should list the top albums from the current year which I've also found on eMusic.com - for each album there's a link to the appropriate page at eMusic.com (in the per user lists one of the note symbols next to the album name will link there).

I think that even if you don't really like mp3s and prefer CDs instead, eMusic.com can be a good solution for expanding your collection.
 
dam, only have 15 of those top 50, grrr...
 
EDIT: recount shows 18... TongueAngry


Edited by Plankowner - December 12 2008 at 02:16
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 02:32
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:


And did I mention that there are borderline cases in prog rock too? Wink   As I said, it would clear a lot of confusion if a majority of users on this website understood prog metal but that is not possible without first understanding metal and that, dear me, is a hard road unless you are a metalhead.  
 
Good point Rogerthat, as a fact, I believe Prog Metal is the only sub-genre in which a fan doesn't need to be a Proghead to like and understand a band.
 
I believe that fans of Metal will like many Prog Metal bands even if they don't heard the word Progressive Rock before, in comparison with albums as Foxtrot, Close to the Edge or Thick as a Brick, in which you need to be a Proghead to really love them as we do.
 
On the other hand, many Progheads (I would dare to say the vast majority) may like any sub-genre except Prog Metal, because the metal elements are so obvious and preeminent, that the Prog component is hidden for us.
 
Understanding Metal is hard, I admit that ourside lets say Led Zeppelin, Iron Maiden and AC/DC, I heard very little Metal, I don't care for growls of so extended solos, I'm not a metal man.
 
Iván


"Good point Rogerthat, as a fact, I believe Prog Metal is the only sub-genre in which a fan doesn't need to be a Proghead to like and understand a band".

I'd comfortably say you can get into Jazz Rock/Fusion without having heard a single second of 'prog' (in the sense of what constitutes classic prog).
You can quite comfortably get into many of the Heavy Prog bands without having heard 'prog'.
Go to a metal forum and you'll see many many Porcupine Tree fans there are and yet, don't care for classic prog at all.
You can comfortably get into RIO/Avant prog without having heard a single second of 'prog.
I was a fan of Mr Bungle before I even knew this site existed, and never consciously thought of them as prog (although certainly understood it was more complex than run of the mill rock music.
You can get into math rock  (which btw, I still believe is a misnomer and is in many cases more correctly called mathcore, while what is called mathcore is more technically 'technical metalcore') and never have heard a 'prog' band in your life.
Many math rock fans came from the punk scene and couldn't care less about Yes, Genesis etc, although more so from the sub genre Post Hardcore than 'straight' punk.
You can like Post Rock and not care one iota about classic prog.
Many Post Rock fans came from it from the punk angle (there isn't a great deal of musical connection of Post Rock to punk, but it's still there to some degree and certainly as music scene, Post Rock has somewhat of tendency to align themselves with punk to at least a fair extent).



"I believe that fans of Metal will like many Prog Metal bands even if they don't heard the word Progressive Rock before, in comparison with albums as Foxtrot, Close to the Edge or Thick as a Brick, in which you need to be a Proghead to really love them as we do"

Yes, that may be the case and is the case in many circumstances and yes, on many metal forum boards, you will come across fans of prog metal that couldn't care less about 'classic' prog.
Regardless, these people still have a strong appreciation for prog metal, but they may not ncessarily approach it directly from the 'prog' angle.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 02:34
Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

I'll state as a member of the Prog Metal Team, that I don't think CTTE is prog metalWink
Can't see any of my other team members arguing with thatTongue
 
Angry
 
Jon Anderson is the father of growling! Better believe it!!!!
 
 
 
 
 
 
(actually... maybe... after all, after listening to his voice, I'm sure many musicians just said "Oh man... we really have to try not to sound like that guy"...Tongue)


Nearly had me there T.....but I saw the fine printLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 02:44
Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:




I'd comfortably say you can get into Jazz Rock/Fusion without having heard a single second of 'prog' (in the sense of what constitutes classic prog).
You can quite comfortably get into many of the Heavy Prog bands without having heard 'prog'.
Go to a metal forum and you'll see many many Porcupine Tree fans there are and yet, don't care for classic prog at all.
You can comfortably get into RIO/Avant prog without having heard a single second of 'prog.
I was a fan of Mr Bungle before I even knew this site existed, and never consciously thought of them as prog (although certainly understood it was more complex than run of the mill rock music.
You can get into math rock  (which btw, I still believe is a misnomer and is in many cases more correctly called mathcore, while what is called mathcore is more technically 'technical metalcore') and never have heard a 'prog' band in your life.
Many math rock fans came from the punk scene and couldn't care less about Yes, Genesis etc, although more so from the sub genre Post Hardcore than 'straight' punk.
You can like Post Rock and not care one iota about classic prog.
Many Post Rock fans came from it from the punk angle (there isn't a great deal of musical connection of Post Rock to punk, but it's still there to some degree and certainly as music scene, Post Rock has somewhat of tendency to align themselves with punk to at least a fair extent).



"I believe that fans of Metal will like many Prog Metal bands even if they don't heard the word Progressive Rock before, in comparison with albums as Foxtrot, Close to the Edge or Thick as a Brick, in which you need to be a Proghead to really love them as we do"

Yes, that may be the case and is the case in many circumstances and yes, on many metal forum boards, you will come across fans of prog metal that couldn't care less about 'classic' prog.
Regardless, these people still have a strong appreciation for prog metal, but they may not ncessarily approach it directly from the 'prog' angle.


Makes sense because the subgenres you mentioned aren't so tied to the prog element as well, classic prog itself.  To put it another way, you can only like classic prog for the sake of prog. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 03:22

Metal can be prog when it is Symphony X! (and, sometimes, Dream Theater is good too...)

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 03:57
Originally posted by prog4evr prog4evr wrote:

Metal can be prog when it is Symphony X! (and, sometimes, Dream Theater is good too...)



Er, it's not supposed to be about whether you think a band is good or not, is it not?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 04:07
Your forgetting the two most common fallacies of prog. All music that I like is Prog, and all music I dislike isn't. I think the logic goes something like this-- I like Prog; I like band X; band x is prog-- I dislike non-prog; I dislike band y; band y is not prog. The problem with these statements it that like Prog is not mutex with liking some non-prog. Neither is disliking non-Prog mutex to dislikin some prog. Even if one was brazen enough to make such assertions as, "I like only prog" or "I dislike only non-prog", I know of no mathematical or inductive way of proving such an assertion. The obvious brute force solution is to listen to the set of all music, but for empirical reasons that's quite impossible. I guess what I'm trying to say is that people should get their head out of their ass and quit elevating stuff they like and demonizing stuff they don't.

Edited by Deathrabbit - December 12 2008 at 04:08
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 04:20
Originally posted by Deathrabbit Deathrabbit wrote:

  I guess what I'm trying to say is that people should get their head out of their ass and quit elevating stuff they like and demonizing stuff they don't.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 04:49
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Deathrabbit Deathrabbit wrote:

  I guess what I'm trying to say is that people should get their head out of their ass and quit elevating stuff they like and demonizing stuff they don't.


Clap
 
Ditto.
 
Well said! Clap
 
Please, can we be just a happy family that enjoys Prog music together and let individuals decide which sub-genres they prefer and enjoy?
 
After all, isn't that the reason why we are here in the first place?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 05:21
^ exactly ... this is what I meant by "live and let live" in another recent post.Thumbs Up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 06:13
Originally posted by Deathrabbit Deathrabbit wrote:

  I guess what I'm trying to say is that people should get their head out of their ass and quit elevating stuff they like and demonizing stuff they don't.


Everyone draws the line somewhere. Even you progmetallers says no to suggested metalbands at times.

On the other side there's people wanting to include freejazz legends like Ornette Coleman, Albert Ayler, John Coltrane etc here. I actively listen to all of them, so not agreeing, is not about me being closeminded or any of that crap. Its ProgArchives your ultimate prog rock resource not Progressive Music Archives (where most progmetal would have an even tougher job at getting included).

Disagreeing that something is prog, is not demonizing.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 06:38
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

Originally posted by Deathrabbit Deathrabbit wrote:

  I guess what I'm trying to say is that people should get their head out of their ass and quit elevating stuff they like and demonizing stuff they don't.


Everyone draws the line somewhere. Even you progmetallers says no to suggested metalbands at times.

On the other side there's people wanting to include freejazz legends like Ornette Coleman, Albert Ayler, John Coltrane etc here. I actively listen to all of them, so not agreeing, is not about me being closeminded or any of that crap. Its ProgArchives your ultimate prog rock resource not Progressive Music Archives (where most progmetal would have an even tougher job at getting included).

Disagreeing that something is prog, is not demonizing.


Deathrabbit can speak for himself, but I don't think it was directed at you, rather at the "how can you listen to growls, not music" posts.  You don't seem to be demonizing PM but you are looking at it from a prog fan's point of view rather than a metal fan's.  Which, honestly, is not so objectionable at all because I guess this is supposed to be a website for prog rock after all. LOL  But like I said, it's a Pandora's Box. What about Miles Davis, what about Prog-related then...it goes on and on. LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 07:25
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

this is supposed to be a website for prog rock after all.


Not really. I think that the classic prog rock albums of the 70s are this website's primary focus, but I think that most of us are glad that it doesn't stop there.Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 07:48
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

this is supposed to be a website for prog rock after all.


Not really. I think that the classic prog rock albums of the 70s are this website's primary focus, but I think that most of us are glad that it doesn't stop there.Smile


Oh I certainly see the rationale of including prog metal among other things here. Dream Theater was my first taste of any progressive music too, unless you count Santana's Supernatural album which is on this website.  Tongue But I am just talking about why a prog rock fan - as in one who does not listen to much metal  - would find some of the inclusions here hard to understand. And I have also said before in this thread that not all the classic prog inclusions are non controversial either...it's just that metal is not a much-maligned genre for nothing! LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 07:55
Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:


And did I mention that there are borderline cases in prog rock too? Wink   As I said, it would clear a lot of confusion if a majority of users on this website understood prog metal but that is not possible without first understanding metal and that, dear me, is a hard road unless you are a metalhead.  
 
Good point Rogerthat, as a fact, I believe Prog Metal is the only sub-genre in which a fan doesn't need to be a Proghead to like and understand a band.
 
I believe that fans of Metal will like many Prog Metal bands even if they don't heard the word Progressive Rock before, in comparison with albums as Foxtrot, Close to the Edge or Thick as a Brick, in which you need to be a Proghead to really love them as we do.
 
On the other hand, many Progheads (I would dare to say the vast majority) may like any sub-genre except Prog Metal, because the metal elements are so obvious and preeminent, that the Prog component is hidden for us.
 
Understanding Metal is hard, I admit that ourside lets say Led Zeppelin, Iron Maiden and AC/DC, I heard very little Metal, I don't care for growls of so extended solos, I'm not a metal man.
 
Iván


"Good point Rogerthat, as a fact, I believe Prog Metal is the only sub-genre in which a fan doesn't need to be a Proghead to like and understand a band".

I'd comfortably say you can get into Jazz Rock/Fusion without having heard a single second of 'prog' (in the sense of what constitutes classic prog).
You can quite comfortably get into many of the Heavy Prog bands without having heard 'prog'.
Go to a metal forum and you'll see many many Porcupine Tree fans there are and yet, don't care for classic prog at all.
You can comfortably get into RIO/Avant prog without having heard a single second of 'prog.
I was a fan of Mr Bungle before I even knew this site existed, and never consciously thought of them as prog (although certainly understood it was more complex than run of the mill rock music.
You can get into math rock  (which btw, I still believe is a misnomer and is in many cases more correctly called mathcore, while what is called mathcore is more technically 'technical metalcore') and never have heard a 'prog' band in your life.
Many math rock fans came from the punk scene and couldn't care less about Yes, Genesis etc, although more so from the sub genre Post Hardcore than 'straight' punk.
You can like Post Rock and not care one iota about classic prog.
Many Post Rock fans came from it from the punk angle (there isn't a great deal of musical connection of Post Rock to punk, but it's still there to some degree and certainly as music scene, Post Rock has somewhat of tendency to align themselves with punk to at least a fair extent).



"I believe that fans of Metal will like many Prog Metal bands even if they don't heard the word Progressive Rock before, in comparison with albums as Foxtrot, Close to the Edge or Thick as a Brick, in which you need to be a Proghead to really love them as we do"

Yes, that may be the case and is the case in many circumstances and yes, on many metal forum boards, you will come across fans of prog metal that couldn't care less about 'classic' prog.
Regardless, these people still have a strong appreciation for prog metal, but they may not ncessarily approach it directly from the 'prog' angle.



Something similar that happens with Floyd fans, not the ones from here, if not only Floyd.
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