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Topic ClosedProg often Plagued by Poor Lyrics?

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cstack3 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 01:08
Originally posted by Harry Hood Harry Hood wrote:

"Oh, Stanley Snail. Beauty begins at the foot of you!"

Heh!  Speaking of Stanley Snail....

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 02:00
^^ Better Yes impersonation than Starcastle or Glass Hammer could ever pull off, lolz.
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prog058 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 03:25
At this point maybe the discussion has digressed from my original post to become a comparison between prog and pop lyrics.

Of course Pop lyrics are going to be bad. For one, they have to conform to a particular cultural mode of the time. The subject matter has to be a select number of topics, and they are probably not helped by simple melodic structuring that doesn't enable too many multisyllabic words for instance.

My forum topic was not to compare, but to take prog lyrics on their own, and by this I didn't just mean the lyrics of Yes, and Genesis, but of all prog bands, and to assess their literary value. By literary value I don't mean how many allusions to great literature they have, but from a critical standpoint, how poetic, or how effective are they?

In the case of Yes, the imaginative, wild lyrics work alongside the music, but lets take other bands into consideration perhaps.

I think apart from a few exceptions the large focus on musicality means that the lyrics often suffer.

Do you guys agree?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 03:29
There is no such thing as good lyrics.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 03:57
Agreed. In general terms, I think the reason for that imbalance is that this form of music is about musicians and musicianship more than it is about writing or composition.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 04:53
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

If you'd stick to instrumental prog this wouldn't be a problem. Tongue
 
This! ^^^^^^^^^^^ LOL
 
 
I do like Fish's lyrics on Clutching At Straws.
 
 
Originally posted by Alitare Alitare wrote:

Until he 'jumped the shark', so to speak, Ian Anderson was absolutely a brilliant lyricist in most rights.
 
Stormwatch, Songs From The Wood, TAAB, A...like them all as far as the lyrics go.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 05:27
Prog lyrics are usually bad. Not that i care, but that's true.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 05:35
Lots of questionning about music and lyrics this week!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 07:00
There are good and bad lyrics in every musical form, just as there is good & bad music. Prog is really no different.
Enhance your life. Get down to www.lazland.org

Now also broadcasting on www.progzilla.com Every Saturday, 4.00 p.m. UK time!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 07:58
Derek Shulman is my favourite lyracist if the rumour is true that he wrote most to all of Gentle Giants lyrics
it have meanings and are well articulated
 
A Cry For Everyone lyrics
Run, why should I run away
When at the end the only truth certain -
One day everyone dies -
If only to justify life.

Live, I've lived a thousand lives;
And anyone is the right, the just life.
If I could cry, I'd cry for everyone.

Doubts, no doubt, is all I know.
There is no fate, there's no luck,
what does
that show.
Showing is proof, but proving is nothing
but fear.

If I could cry, I'd cry then for everyone.

Hope, I've hoped two thousand years,
but
no one hears, so I've cried, crying
vain tears.
Always too late, too late to cry, cry
for everyone.


Edited by aginor - May 02 2011 at 08:00
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 08:49
Some 'prog' bands/artists with lyrics I enjoy:

Jethro Tull
VDGG
Peter Gabriel
Pink Floyd (From Dark Side through Final Cut)
Pain of Salvation

Some 'non-prog' artists with lyrics I enjoy:

Leonard Cohen
Tom Waits
Will Oldham/Bonnie "Prince" Billy
Bob Dylan
John Lennon
Cat Stevens
Tim Rice
Modest Mouse
Ween
Flaming Lips

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 13:12
Originally posted by prog058 prog058 wrote:

At this point maybe the discussion has digressed from my original post to become a comparison between prog and pop lyrics.

Of course Pop lyrics are going to be bad. For one, they have to conform to a particular cultural mode of the time. The subject matter has to be a select number of topics, and they are probably not helped by simple melodic structuring that doesn't enable too many multisyllabic words for instance.

My forum topic was not to compare, but to take prog lyrics on their own, and by this I didn't just mean the lyrics of Yes, and Genesis, but of all prog bands, and to assess their literary value. By literary value I don't mean how many allusions to great literature they have, but from a critical standpoint, how poetic, or how effective are they?

In the case of Yes, the imaginative, wild lyrics work alongside the music, but lets take other bands into consideration perhaps.

I think apart from a few exceptions the large focus on musicality means that the lyrics often suffer.

Do you guys agree?

That, and the fact that lyric-writing is about as easy as writing a killer novel!!  How many of us have ever done that, or even attempted to do it? 

It seems that, with very few exceptions, prog lyrics suffer when the writer attempts to be "too profound," or "too artsy."  

There are some remarkable lyrics in prog, I'm especially fond of lyrics on the Strawbs' albums "Hero and Heroine" and "Ghosts."  

However, some lyrics are just drivel....even though I knew the band Starcastle, I cannot defend the lyrics of the LP "Fountains of Light," which sounded like they were written by a Hallmark greeting card writer!!  

 I think that, many times, the lyrics are the "tail that wags the dog" = the band writes a fantastic composition, and then has to find lyrics that fit with the music.  Much harder than you might realize, I've done it with mixed results.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 14:06
I'm surprised that so many people have such strong opinions about good and bad lyrics. How can you tell the difference? I'm not sure I can although I have a degree in literature.
Roger Waters is universally hailed as one of the best lyricists but personally I can't stand his self pity, I very much prefer Joni Mitchell.
It's all about  what it is that speaks to you, not wether it's good or bad in a literary sense.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 14:19
Progressive rock doesn't have poor lyrics; I think that the lyrics on the albums "Crime of the Century" and "Pawn Hearts" are very insightful, and Pink Floyd has some great lyrics also.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 14:52
Bowtie begins at the foot of you.
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 14:56
Genesis
King Crimson (well, most)
VdGG
Jethro Tull
Gnidrolog
Fen
In the Woods...
Pain of Salvation
Opeth
Madder Mortem
Pendragon
Marillion (both Fish and H)
White Willow
Also Eden
Anekdoten
Between the Buried and Me
Black Widow
Burst
Ciccada
Cynic
Dark Suns
Disilliusion
Discipline
Drawn
Ebonylake
Ellipsis
The Fall of Efrafa
The Gathering
Gojira
Ihsahn
Intronaut
IQ
Isis
Kayo Dot
Mastodon
maudlin of the Well
The Opium Cartel
The Pax Cecilia
The Pentangle
The Reasoning
Riverside
Rolo Tomassi
Hookah the Fuzz
Sieges Even
Sikth
The Sound of Animals Fighting
Threshold
To-Mera
Tusk
Vanden Plas
Ved Buens Ende
Virgin Black
Yakuza

What does this long list of bands all have in common? All of them have strong lyricists that perfectly match the music, or in a few cases exceeds the music. I dont expect everyone to agree with me, but I find the comment that prog has crap lyricists to be rather uninformed. And I have to ask, compared to what?

Spending more than I should on Prog since 2005

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2011 at 20:33
Lyrics are human/societal. Music is universal. Humans are idiots. The universe... I dunno.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2011 at 01:49
Devin Townsend's writing style is similiar to Frank Zappa's, sometimes quite absurd or humourous, but generally quite fits and blends with his music, and very intelligent lyrics.
''Hope is the first step on the road to dissapointment.'' (Friedrich Nietzsche)

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2011 at 09:54

Just like every genre, there are good and bad lyrics (and good and bad lyricists)......

Now get over yourselves! LOL



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2011 at 09:59
The dude abides!
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