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dennismoore
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Posted: February 10 2012 at 11:26 |
Textbook wrote:
. Some of this "dad-rock prog" is about as progressive as Coldplay.
Or someone like Opeth, chiefly responsible for bringing what had a been a largely ostracised genre (death metal) in from the cold. Doing something new. |
Hi Textbook,
"dad-rock prog" Ouch!!!! I don't think I have ever felt as old as you just made me feel.
Progressive music should have in it "progress" . How that is calculated, well that is where all the yelling & screaming starts.
You had a very strong argument, up until you mentioned Opeth. Something new??? I have seen them in concert. They are the poster children for cliche & music recycling, down to Opeth's, "We dedicate tonight's show to our lord & savior, Satan!" Yeah, uh Black Sabbath did all that crap about 50 years ago...
All music has influences, bands from ANY era have to struggle to stand out from their contemporaries and come across original or progressive. In addition being progressive doesn't preclude using modes from the past. Its all about how
it is pulled off. The 70's had unoriginal copycat prog acts as well. Starcastle comes to mind.
What is Progressive Rock/Music? Maybe it is like the Supreme Court's definition of Pornography. "I can't describe it,
but I know it when I see it.
Progressive Music?
I can't describe it but I know it when I hear it.
Cheers!
DM
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"Yeah, people are unhappy about that - but you know what, it's still Yes." - Chris Squire
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dennismoore
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Joined: April 19 2011
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Posted: February 10 2012 at 11:27 |
dennismoore wrote:
Textbook wrote:
. Some of this "dad-rock prog" is about as progressive as Coldplay.
Or someone like Opeth, chiefly responsible for bringing what had a been a largely ostracised genre (death metal) in from the cold. Doing something new. |
Hi Textbook,
"dad-rock prog" Ouch!!!! I don't think I have ever felt as old as you just made me feel.
Progressive music should have in it "progress" . How that is calculated, well that is where all the yelling & screaming starts.
You had a very strong argument, up until you mentioned Opeth. Something new??? I have seen them in concert. They are the poster children for cliche & music recycling, down to Opeth's, "We dedicate tonight's show to our lord & savior, Satan!" Yeah, uh Black Sabbath did all that crap about 50 years ago...
All music has influences, bands from ANY era have to struggle to stand out from their contemporaries and come across original or progressive. In addition being progressive doesn't preclude using modes from the past. Its all about how it is pulled off. The 70's had unoriginal copycat prog acts as well. Starcastle comes to mind.
What is Progressive Rock/Music? Maybe it is like the Supreme Court's definition of Pornography. "I can't describe it,
but I know it when I see it.
Progressive Music?
I can't describe it but I know it when I hear it.
Cheers!
DM |
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"Yeah, people are unhappy about that - but you know what, it's still Yes." - Chris Squire
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Ivan_Melgar_M
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Posted: February 10 2012 at 11:34 |
When Prog started, there was little to be inspired to in the genre, so pioneer Prog bands were influenced by "Classical" music, Jazz and Rock, that was something logical, you can't be inspired in something that doesn't exist.
40 something years later, there are thousands of Prog bands, it¿'s more than natural that the guys that grew listening YES, GENESIS and KING CRIMSON, feel in the right to take something from this bands and add something from their own imagination.
Probably in 10 years, there will be bands using Phideaux and The Flower Kings as their main influence.
Now, this has happened always, I'm sure Baroque composers took something of their predecessors and adapted it to a new reality, this is what modern Prog bands are doing, and is as Prog as GENESIS was in 1972.
Iván
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 03 2006
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Posted: February 10 2012 at 20:01 |
^^^ It's not natural, Ivan, that is what inventiveness is about. Those bands pulled together diverse elements and found their own unique styles to express themselves.
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The Quiet One
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Joined: January 16 2008
Location: Argentina
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Posted: February 10 2012 at 20:12 |
With the exact same words of Ivan, that for me is the reason why "classic prog" (70s) is geniune prog, while the retro stuff from today, which I like part of it, is not really much inventive, since their objective is pretty much recreate that ol' style, yes, 'style', it turned from an idea of composing, to simply a style.
From that we can analyse the reason of many people's taste or something like that. I can see why some detest this 'retro' prog music, and look elsewhere for a rather geniune modern prog music which is rather inspired by 90s and contemporary music, and it can also be inspired by the same things that inspired the original prog bands: jazz, classical, avant-garde music, etc.
There's a big bulk of prog fans that find Radiohead not prog at all, but I'm pretty sure a big bunch of these listen to the 'retro' prog of today. And I'm not really criticising here, just stating some possiblities of what people consider prog or not.
*sigh* I ramble..
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Atavachron
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Posted: February 10 2012 at 20:32 |
Well trad jazz fans may like Wynton Marsalis and classic rock fans may like The Black Crowes and early metal fans may like Metallica, right? Those artists do what they do, don't compromise or worry about whether their stuff is "old fashioned", and people love them for it. Same with prog.
Edited by Atavachron - February 10 2012 at 21:02
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Ivan_Melgar_M
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 00:11 |
rogerthat wrote:
^^^ It's not natural, Ivan, that is what inventiveness is about. Those bands pulled together diverse elements and found their own unique styles to express themselves.
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They took what was before them. for example, Wagner took from Mendelssohn and nobody calls him a copyist.
Yes, Genesis, King Crimson took from The Beatles, Simon & Garfunkel and who was before them...Actual bands take from Yes and Genesis.
Iván
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 03 2006
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Points: 9869
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 00:19 |
Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:
rogerthat wrote:
^^^ It's not natural, Ivan, that is what inventiveness is about. Those bands pulled together diverse elements and found their own unique styles to express themselves.
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They took what was before them. for example, Wagner took from Mendelssohn and nobody calls him a copyist.
Yes, Genesis, King Crimson took from The Beatles, Simon & Garfunkel and who was before them...Actual bands take from Yes and Genesis.
Iván |
And Wagner, just like KC for that matter, took what came before him to create what was not only unmistakably his own but which influenced generations of musicians, spreading even outside the confines of classical music. What is it that Mostly Autumn do that is not roundly covered by classic prog rock? I am sorry but both the cases are simply not the same, qualitatively. Wagner would not be held in such high regard just for what he took from Mendelssohn, it is what he did with what he took from his influences that counts. Beatles may have influenced Pink Floyd but Beatles nevertheless did not write Astronomy Domine or Set The Controls for the Heart of the Sun. David Allen may have been influenced by Sun Ra but his very imprint on music lives on through the work of Ozric Tentacles. I have not claimed in any case that all modern prog artists only do what Mostly Autumn does but there definitely is a clutch of bands like MA who seem to operate with very different goals from that of the likes of KC or Yes.
Edited by rogerthat - February 11 2012 at 00:22
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tamijo
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 01:21 |
Genesis isnt prog, admittetly Gabriel was listning to In the Court, and tryed to copy the concept.
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Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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rogerthat
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 02:06 |
tamijo wrote:
Genesis isnt prog, admittetly Gabriel was listning to In the Court, and tryed to copy the concept.
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I think this point too was brought up in the argument a few pages back but anyway, if Genesis had never made SEBTP and Lamb, I'd have had to take them to be a stodgy kind of band, even though I do love Nursery Cryme and Foxtrot as well. I know they relied on ITCOTCK to make Trespass and that is really not a very progressive idea. We don't call Oasis very progressive for trying to be a 90s Beatles. It is fortunate that Genesis gained confidence to do a few things of their own in subsequent albums.
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tamijo
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 02:20 |
Nevermind - I was just joking.
I agree that off-course prog is no longer prog after 40 years - just like modernism is no longer modern, so you could say that seen in a retrospective light, those styles would be better of with another "tag", to avoid meningless debates like this one.
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Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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rogerthat
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 02:47 |
I don't really have a problem with bands doing what they want to. If they want to tribute the classics, go ahead. In one sense, it is also an admirable purpose because why should music necessarily die out after a couple of decades? If pouring old wine in a new bottle is one way of keeping it alive, fine. But I have seen that this leads to a tendency to tag only that as prog which sounds like prog we already know and that, to my mind, is not the ideal approach. Prog started out as an approach and if the prog community, if there is such a thing, doesn't embrace artists who are stylistically a little out of bounds but are progressive in approach, it can get too exclusive and ultimately cater to too narrow a demographic in terms of tastes.
Let's see, last year was a good one for prog...as long as more daring artists keep coming out with the more popular albums in prog, it will thrive. A situation where albums of old and reunited bands or tribute bands are consistently voted top prog album of the year is not very ideal, with due respect to the bands in question. Last year's output suggests prog is alive and well.
Edited by rogerthat - February 11 2012 at 02:47
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silverpot
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 07:43 |
tamijo wrote:
Genesis isnt prog, admittetly Gabriel was listning to In the Court, and tryed to copy the concept.
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And In the Court leaned heavily on The Moody Blues.
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Ludjak
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 09:57 |
I'm keen to agree with the topic title, but I'd also like to add that, except what is here classified as Avant-Prog and Zeuhl (with the inclusion of free jazz), music is not going forward in any way. The problem isn't exclusive to the progressive rock label, it is relevant to pop music in general (and the "mainstream" serious music), and it's not a new problem at all (the Second Viennese School wrestled with it back in the 1920s). This period of music history has depleted all of its novelty, and I'm not sure if it will ever be succeeded by a next one, at least not with the technology that is presently available. We'll see.
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JS19
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 10:02 |
But the Second Viennese School made music that was painful to listen to. Forward thinking yes, but enjoyable? No. Music can progress and try new things, but in an era when music is listened to by the paying public, actual progress is stifled because there's absolutely no money in say, 'atonal drone' or whatever could be considered as 'progressive' these days.
Edited by JS19 - February 11 2012 at 10:02
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Ivan_Melgar_M
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 10:23 |
rogerthat wrote:
I don't really have a problem with bands doing what they want to. If they want to tribute the classics, go ahead. In one sense, it is also an admirable purpose because why should music necessarily die out after a couple of decades? If pouring old wine in a new bottle is one way of keeping it alive, fine. But I have seen that this leads to a tendency to tag only that as prog which sounds like prog we already know and that, to my mind, is not the ideal approach. Prog started out as an approach and if the prog community, if there is such a thing, doesn't embrace artists who are stylistically a little out of bounds but are progressive in approach, it can get too exclusive and ultimately cater to too narrow a demographic in terms of tastes.
Let's see, last year was a good one for prog...as long as more daring artists keep coming out with the more popular albums in prog, it will thrive. A situation where albums of old and reunited bands or tribute bands are consistently voted top prog album of the year is not very ideal, with due respect to the bands in question. Last year's output suggests prog is alive and well.
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The problem is that we are used to the Pop spans of life.
A POP album is old and dated after 2 or 3 months, because it was elaborated for that purpose, to capture fans immediately and to cease being fashion in a couple of months in order to leave an open door for other product.
Classical eras lasted even centuries and it was OK, for example Bach was composing Baroque music in 1700, the same genre in which Monteverdi composed around 1600, but today we say "horo" if somebody writes the same style of music than 20 or 30 years ago.
Luckily some Prog bands are still popular after 40 years and of course will have followers, but his is not a crime, it's great.
Iván
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rogerthat
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 11:06 |
Baroque music as a whole is as broad as one single strand of 'light' or 'non classical/jazz' music, like rock. So that does make sense. Prog is already a sub genre within rock, which is already, how should I put it, post modern music, pulling from sources rather than being the source. What rock would we have without blues, country and folk anyway? Rock to begin with is essentially synthesis and prog is a more elaborate, complex approach to that synthesis. Its boundaries necessarily are smaller and therefore less room for repetition. The only way for any modern music genre to remain interesting is to be "with it" and assimilate contemporary influences. Old gets old very fast now.
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rogerthat
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Posted: February 11 2012 at 11:11 |
I don't think the question being addressed here is of the level of the problems faced by modernist composers. I don't really know if any classical or serious composer's work has widely penetrated and influenced mainstream music since Stockhausen but there has been original music in a more modest sense all these years. I don't even think prog has run out of ideas in general. But there seem to be more takers for the Wolfmothers of prog (relative to the size of the prog listening populace) than there are for the actual Wolfmothers themselves.
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Ludjak
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Posted: February 12 2012 at 09:23 |
JS19 wrote:
But the Second Viennese School made music that was painful to listen to. Forward thinking yes, but enjoyable? No. Music can progress and try new things, but in an era when music is listened to by the paying public, actual progress is stifled because there's absolutely no money in say, 'atonal drone' or whatever could be considered as 'progressive' these days.
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My point exactly (although I love Alban Berg, but that's not the question). This is not a question of influence, but of capability, since there can be no real progress made with the present musical knowledge (which still doesn't mean that new music is not worth hearing). Most artists make music similar to older music not because they want to sound like their influences, but because they have little (or nowhere) else to go. I believe that the next big progression in music won't be achieved without the help of new technology.
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Slartibartfast
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Posted: February 12 2012 at 11:10 |
Emulating great food is not food...
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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