Author |
Topic Search Topic Options
|
The_Jester
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 29 2010
Status: Offline
Points: 741
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 20:04 |
Well, I guess everyone can be converted to prog. It could be a matter of time.
|
La victoire est éphémère mais la gloire est éternelle!
- Napoléon Bonaparte
|
|
The_Jester
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 29 2010
Status: Offline
Points: 741
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 20:09 |
Have you ever converted someone to prog music? I've got a theory in wich I could say that everyone could become a progger in a matter of time if you know what to make him try. For an exemple, I converted a metalhead into a proggy by making him hear some Gentle Giant (I didn't know where to begin at this time) but he now listens to a lot of progressive music.
|
La victoire est éphémère mais la gloire est éternelle!
- Napoléon Bonaparte
|
|
VanVanVan
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 08 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 756
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 20:11 |
I've never converted anyone, but I've tried and failed many times.
|
"The meaning of life is to give life meaning."-Arjen Lucassen
|
|
Triceratopsoil
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 03 2010
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 18016
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 20:31 |
Prog's not Christianity, why do you need to convert people to it?
|
|
AllP0werToSlaves
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 29 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 249
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 21:00 |
I never force any of my personal beliefs on anyone, but I got my girlfriend into Camel recently; she loves "The Snow Goose"
|
|
samdelrussi
Forum Newbie
Joined: July 29 2010
Location: Taos New Mexico
Status: Offline
Points: 22
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 21:33 |
Among the people who matter,Prog is popular.
|
Sam Del Russi
|
|
rogerthat
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 21:58 |
I agree with TODDLER that the implications of rejecting improvisation as a valid means of musicial expression are serious. Perhaps, critics in heartily joining the punk brigade didn't anticipate that jazz too would move off the limelight while still remaining a serious and respected musical form because of this wholly illusory projection that improvisation is pretentious. Just because you can't improvise doesn't mean those who do are pretentious! With regard to timburlane's point regarding a "say it brilliantly, say it in three minutes and make sure you can dance to it" approach, Gentle Giant and Jethro Tull were both capable of writing short and smart songs. Even Genesis on occasion, I mean if somebody would really rather listen to Sweet Home Alabama than I know what I like or Counting Out Time, that's more a matter of taste and not the prog musician's inability to write interesting music in a short song format. But the media defined prog by stuff like Karn Evil 9 and TFTO and people completely bought into that. To an extent, it is also true that a lot of prog listeners subscribe to a "longer is better" approach which I'd personally hesitate to concur with and this lends some 'credibility' to the myth. I have always looked at prog as more an approach to writing music, which doesn't necessarily depend on a certain minimum length, and not necessarily as indiscriminate license to sprawl but the latter is what prog is often taken to be. As for nerdiness, again, no smoke without fire. A lot of prog listeners do buy into the "Pink Floyd is awesome because they don't write love songs" kind of thinking. There's no reason why a love song is in itself such a bad thing. Why should expression of one of the vital human emotions, one that arguably keeps the world going, be deemed invalid? It is just the often cliched and cheesy treatment of love in mainstream pop/rock that people react to but the reaction seems to push people to 'cold', 'intellectual' subjects (read sci fi). I think nerdiness may be at work if a group of people honestly believe that interpretation of normal but profound human emotions is somehow inferior and commonplace and only subjects like winged elephants dancing in the air should be the subject matter of prog.
Edited by rogerthat - January 21 2011 at 21:59
|
|
Majesty
Forum Newbie
Joined: October 16 2010
Location: Mexico
Status: Offline
Points: 16
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 22:02 |
VanVanVan wrote:
I've never converted anyone, but I've tried and failed many times. |
Same here. Mainstream people are waaaaay too close minded when it comes to other genres.
|
|
Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 22:05 |
I don't even try to convert people to my religion, why should I convert somebody to Prog?
Iván
|
|
|
The Quiet One
Prog Reviewer
Joined: January 16 2008
Location: Argentina
Status: Offline
Points: 15745
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 22:19 |
Well, when I meet people who actually like music and start to know their tastes (which are few), I do give them recommendations, be it Prog or not, but mainly stuff he wouldn't have dreamed to listen. I'm not trying to convert anyone to anything, just want some people who enjoy art to appreciate some other kinds of art and expand their mind, just like they do with me with other stuff.
I did manage, somehow, to make a friend liste to Gates of Delirium among other Prog epics. But I "failed", fortunately though it made him see, at least, that their's much more music than he thinks there is.
There's a friend of mine who's very into acoustic stuff and I recommended him Jethro Tull, he loved them. He probably doesn't listen to them in the same I do (or "we" do), but still it's an accomplishment, he even says that Baker St. Muse is one of the greatest songs he has ever heard.
Edited by The Quiet One - January 21 2011 at 22:24
|
|
Earendil
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 17 2008
Location: Indiana, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 1584
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 22:21 |
Maybe I've "sewn some seeds" as the saying goes, and the prog will do the rest
|
|
Anthony H.
Prog Reviewer
Joined: April 11 2010
Location: Virginia
Status: Offline
Points: 6088
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 22:41 |
If they're a metalhead, Opeth is the best way to go.
|
|
|
Earendil
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 17 2008
Location: Indiana, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 1584
|
Posted: January 21 2011 at 23:04 |
Isn't it popular on this site, therefore it's popular?
|
|
Billy Pilgrim
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 28 2010
Location: Austin
Status: Offline
Points: 1505
|
Posted: January 22 2011 at 02:52 |
Why would record labels push music that enhances thought, is emotional, is spiritual. Music that makes you think, and music that helps you grow as a human being. Record labels want you to keep shakin that thing! They want you to keep listening to music that makes you violent, and that pushes drugs and sexism. Aka rap.
|
|
Bonnek
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: September 01 2009
Location: Belgium
Status: Offline
Points: 4515
|
Posted: January 22 2011 at 03:28 |
Most people aren't looking for music but for "entertainment", for a quick musical snack that sounds exactly as they want it. No problem at all with that, I don't have much of a clue about painting or literature neither.
The people that are looking for music as a form of artistic expression are a minority. And that minority has to be further spread over the many available options: classical, jazz, blues, rock, world, indie, singer songwriters, some of the music featuring on PA and much more...
So it's simple logic, low demand and many many options. Nothing to do with intellectual superiority, better taste or whatever.
Edited by Bonnek - January 22 2011 at 03:29
|
|
JS19
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 10 2010
Location: Lancaster, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 1321
|
Posted: January 22 2011 at 04:08 |
Bonnek wrote:
. And that minority has to be further spread over the many available options: classical, jazz, blues, rock, world, indie, singer songwriters, some of the music featuring on PA and much more...
|
Indie has always fascinated me. People who enjoy indie do so because they want to be different from the mainstream, but evidently don't care about the music. What confuses me, is that i've often seen some of the best new prog bands labeled as indie, which I simply do not understand.
|
|
|
Harold-The-Barrel
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 05 2010
Location: Dublin, Ireland
Status: Offline
Points: 659
|
Posted: January 22 2011 at 04:24 |
Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:
I don't even try to convert people to my religion, why should I convert somebody to Prog?
Iván |
Because Prog is far more important
|
You must be joking.....Take a running jump......
|
|
daslaf
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 03 2009
Location: Chile
Status: Offline
Points: 290
|
Posted: January 22 2011 at 05:52 |
JS19 wrote:
Bonnek wrote:
. And that minority has to be further spread over the many available options: classical, jazz, blues, rock, world, indie, singer songwriters, some of the music featuring on PA and much more...
|
People who enjoy indie do so because they want to be different from the mainstream, but evidently don't care about the music. |
I totally disagree with that
|
But now my branches suffer
And my leaves don't bear the glow
They did so long ago
|
|
ExittheLemming
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 19 2007
Location: Penal Colony
Status: Offline
Points: 11415
|
Posted: January 22 2011 at 06:16 |
The Self Flagellation of the Minority Interest Enthusiast: If Prog were popular mainstream music a significant number of you wouldn't listen to it any longer. The smart money would be on you defecting to the outer reaches of the avant garde (or whatever other genre you deem esoteric enough) Just because the herd you belong to is smaller than the biggest one doesn't make you immune to the herd instinct. I see most of these types of thread as being either disingenuous ( the lady doth protest too much) or carry transparently rhetorical questions which only serve to reveal the respondents dearth of life experience. (e.g. people who dislike Prog are dumb, unthinking conformists, shallow, reactionary, gullible, materialistic, lack patience and sensitivity, terminally trendy and so hopelessly conditioned that they cannot form their own opinions etc) Of those people I consider close to me, not one has the slightest affection or interest in Prog and would represent the polar opposite of the lazily depicted 'masses' quoted above. My loved ones know full well that I would never attempt to 'convert the heathen' (As this would result in the perfectly justifiable reaction everyone should reserve for front door evangelists everywhere - WHAACCKKK ). I also love soccer even more than Prog, but don't go around thinking that baseball, basketball, tennis, ice hockey, rugby or cricket are the sport of choice for plankton with learning difficulties. Similarly, I adore the music of the Velvet Underground, Wall of Voodoo, Cure, Banshees, Magazine, Television, Patti Smith, PIL, Bob Dylan, The Smiths, Bunnymen etc but do not consider such to be at some lower rung on the evolutionary ladder than Yes, ELP, Genesis, Crimson et al. Too many bulls-eyes being awarded for merely hitting the wall round here...
|
|
TODDLER
Forum Senior Member
VIP Member
Joined: August 28 2009
Location: Vineland, N.J.
Status: Offline
Points: 3126
|
Posted: January 22 2011 at 06:26 |
rogerthat wrote:
I agree with TODDLER that the implications of rejecting improvisation as a valid means of musicial expression are serious. Perhaps, critics in heartily joining the punk brigade didn't anticipate that jazz too would move off the limelight while still remaining a serious and respected musical form because of this wholly illusory projection that improvisation is pretentious. Just because you can't improvise doesn't mean those who do are pretentious!
With regard to timburlane's point regarding a "say it brilliantly, say it in three minutes and make sure you can dance to it" approach, Gentle Giant and Jethro Tull were both capable of writing short and smart songs. Even Genesis on occasion, I mean if somebody would really rather listen to Sweet Home Alabama than I know what I like or Counting Out Time, that's more a matter of taste and not the prog musician's inability to write interesting music in a short song format. But the media defined prog by stuff like Karn Evil 9 and TFTO and people completely bought into that. To an extent, it is also true that a lot of prog listeners subscribe to a "longer is better" approach which I'd personally hesitate to concur with and this lends some 'credibility' to the myth. I have always looked at prog as more an approach to writing music, which doesn't necessarily depend on a certain minimum length, and not necessarily as indiscriminate license to sprawl but the latter is what prog is often taken to be.
As for nerdiness, again, no smoke without fire. A lot of prog listeners do buy into the "Pink Floyd is awesome because they don't write love songs" kind of thinking. There's no reason why a love song is in itself such a bad thing. Why should expression of one of the vital human emotions, one that arguably keeps the world going, be deemed invalid? It is just the often cliched and cheesy treatment of love in mainstream pop/rock that people react to but the reaction seems to push people to 'cold', 'intellectual' subjects (read sci fi). I think nerdiness may be at work if a group of people honestly believe that interpretation of normal but profound human emotions is somehow inferior and commonplace and only subjects like winged elephants dancing in the air should be the subject matter of prog.
|
I am printing out a copy of your post reply. I know I will forget these interesting points you have made due to my busy home life and I want to bring these points out to a couple of old friends. I am very impressed with your truthful statements.
|
|
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.