Again I'm looking mainly for stuff that is more or less traditional prog sounding or at least it makes you think "hey that's definitely prog" and not something else when you hear it.
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Posted: March 22 2012 at 06:05
Prog_Traveller wrote:
I never heard of Toby Driver.
Really? On this forum thats quite shocking!
Right, get yourself Kayo Dot's Dowsing Anomone with Copper Tongue, Blue Lambency Downward, Coyote, Stained Glass and Gamma Knife (Choirs of the Eye is their best but it's from 2003) then download maudlin of the Well's Part the Second and finally move on to the two Tartar Lamb albums.
Oh, and White Willow's Terminla Tilight fits your original criteria perfectly.
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Posted: March 22 2012 at 07:02
These days I think seven years is a bit too early to judge. Hell, I can't even back further and label anything a true prog classic. Maybe I've just become to cynical in my old age. There's just good stuff and stuff I have no interest in.
Edited by Slartibartfast - March 22 2012 at 07:02
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
Too many to remember them all, but the bands that immediately come to mind who've released great prog since 2005 are Porcupine Tree, Steven Wilson, OSI, Haken, Discipline, Opeth, David Gilmour and Yes (yeah, actually do like the new one)
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Posted: March 22 2012 at 14:03
Nogbad_The_Bad wrote:
Guldbamsen wrote:
And I second what Logan said about Guapo, although I only have their Five Suns album.
I agree with you & with Logan in general on the Avant music comment, I could list quite a few but that's not in the spirit of the thread.
I'd go for :-
The Future Kings Of England - The Fate Of Old Mother Orvis
Aranis - II
Discipline - To Shatter All Accord
Nogbad: Aranis II is a modern fave of mine too, but I also love the first Aranis which has about the proggiest track from the first two albums with "Zilezi". I'm not keen on Aranis' Songs from Mirage.
Guldbamsen: Black Oni is definitely worth getting. That and five Suns are my favourite Guapo albums, but I also like Twisted Stems very much, as well as Elixirs. I don't have the early albums.
One modern one from the RIO/Avant category that I might recommend that the topic starter samples is Yugen's Labrinto d'Acqua. I used to love that album. I wasn't that keen on Iridule, but others like that Yugen album.
Cheer-Accident's Fear Draws Misfortune was a big disappointment for me, but that's still one that I think could be a very popular one from Avant Prog amongst Proggers generally since I think it very accessible. For me that album is too stereotypically Prog (noodly), but one that I think generally recommendable.
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Posted: March 22 2012 at 16:13
Triceratopsoil wrote:
Logan wrote:
I don't have the early albums.
They are all worth listening to, IMO. Pretty different, though.
I've been on youtube listening to music off earlier albums of theirs, and really enjoying the stuff. So yeah, one band that I'd like to get all of the albums of.
One modern one from the RIO/Avant category that I might recommend that the topic starter samples is Yugen's Labrinto d'Acqua. I used to love that album. I wasn't that keen on Iridule, but others like that Yugen album.
Cheer-Accident's Fear Draws Misfortune was a big disappointment for me, but that's still one that I think could be a very popular one from Avant Prog amongst Proggers generally since I think it very accessible. For me that album is too stereotypically Prog (noodly), but one that I think generally recommendable.
Well I agree with you on Yugen's first but I also love their third, it's only the second Stormy Six influenced one I'm less enamored with.
Also have to disagree on C-A's Fear Draws Misfortune, that was my first album by them and I adore it, I went off and bought Introducing Lemons and No If's And Or Dogs. Brilliant brilliant band.
Seeing as you opened the avant door I'm also going to recommend
Pikapika Teart - Moonberry - Siberian Chamber Rock Uz Jsme Doma - Caves - Czech Folk Pronk Polite Refusal - Geese & Swans - Russian Folk Edgy Rock Miriodor - Avanti! - Canadian Avant. Thinking Plague - Decline & Fall - stunningly good recent release Rational Diet - On Phenomena & Existences - Belarus Complex Chamber Rock
Guldbamsen: Black Oni is definitely worth getting. That and five Suns are my favourite Guapo albums, but I also like Twisted Stems very much, as well as Elixirs. I don't have the early albums.
One modern one from the RIO/Avant category that I might recommend that the topic starter samples is Yugen's Labrinto d'Acqua. I used to love that album. I wasn't that keen on Iridule, but others like that Yugen album.
I am going to order it Greg. You haven't steered me wrong as of yet, and don't worry I know how you feel about giving out recommendations, but I am still relishing in psych jazz heaven with the Mwandishi related projects you mentioned along with Sun Ra's Lanquidity and Donald Byrd. I especially adore Eddie Henderson's fantastic Realization.
About Yugen. I'm not that fond of Iridule either. For some reason it just feels too forced and prog for progs sake. If I want that warm and labyrinth-like sound in my Italian music, I'll pop on Picchio dal Pozzo's Abbiamo tutti...
On another note, and completely unrelated to this topic (sorry), but do you by any chance have any of The Taj Mahal Traveller's output? I seem to remember you liking Tangerine Dream's Zeit, and these Japanese guys echo those sentiments yet with their own style and ominous experimentations. I have 3 albums of theirs and they're all very good.
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Posted: March 22 2012 at 19:59
For me, The Whirlwind, by Transatlantic, and Originallis, by Cast. Perhaps Grace for Drowning too... I really liked it a lot, but I guess it's still growing; the thing is it's somewhat too ambient and I'm not sure I would go 5 stars with it yet. I also would put Wakeman's "Out There" among my 5 stars albums, but that one's a few years older (still, it's from the same decade, at least).
One modern one from the RIO/Avant category that I might recommend that the topic starter samples is Yugen's Labrinto d'Acqua. I used to love that album. I wasn't that keen on Iridule, but others like that Yugen album.
Cheer-Accident's Fear Draws Misfortune was a big disappointment for me, but that's still one that I think could be a very popular one from Avant Prog amongst Proggers generally since I think it very accessible. For me that album is too stereotypically Prog (noodly), but one that I think generally recommendable.
Well I agree with you on Yugen's first but I also love their third, it's only the second Stormy Six influenced one I'm less enamored with.
Also have to disagree on C-A's Fear Draws Misfortune, that was my first album by them and I adore it, I went off and bought Introducing Lemons and No If's And Or Dogs. Brilliant brilliant band.
Seeing as you opened the avant door I'm also going to recommend
Pikapika Teart - Moonberry - Siberian Chamber Rock Uz Jsme Doma - Caves - Czech Folk Pronk Polite Refusal - Geese & Swans - Russian Folk Edgy Rock Miriodor - Avanti! - Canadian Avant. Thinking Plague - Decline & Fall - stunningly good recent release Rational Diet - On Phenomena & Existences - Belarus Complex Chamber Rock
Like Guldbamsen, that Yugen album feels forced to me, but I don't dislike it, just wasn't wowed by it. And the same for much of that Cheer-Accident album. I like Yugen's second a lot.
I like the other C-A albums you mentioned more than Fear Draws.... I also love that Miriodor album. Incidentally, Miriodor is the band that really got me into modern (i.e. post 70s) labeled Prog music. I'd had some major disappointments with prurchasing a Spock's Beard and Flower Kings album when looking to update my tastes (those bands had been recommended to me -- I was a real noob to most Prog umbrella music then), but then I discovered 3rd Warning by Miriodor, which was far more to my tastes -- then quickly got the next two Miriodor albums.
I plan to get that Thinking Plague album ere long. Polite Refusal is a new one to me -- intrigued.
Another post 2005 fave of mine is Far Corner's Endangered.
Guldbamsen wrote:
I am going to order it Greg. You haven't steered
me wrong as of yet, and don't worry I know how you feel about giving out
recommendations, but I am still relishing in psych jazz heaven with the
Mwandishi related projects you mentioned along with Sun Ra's Lanquidity
and Donald Byrd. I especially adore Eddie Henderson's fantastic
Realization.
About Yugen. I'm not that fond of
Iridule either. For some reason it just feels too forced and prog for
progs sake. If I want that warm and labyrinth-like sound in my Italian
music, I'll pop on Picchio dal Pozzo's Abbiamo tutti...
On
another note, and completely unrelated to this topic (sorry), but do
you by any chance have any of The Taj Mahal Traveller's output? I seem
to remember you liking Tangerine Dream's Zeit, and these Japanese guys
echo those sentiments yet with their own style and ominous
experimentations. I have 3 albums of theirs and they're all very good.
Back on topic: Another one I could see as a future classic is Birds and Buildings' debut and up until now sole album.
Oh yeah and not to forget Cabezas de Cera's Metalmusica, although combined we are perhaps 8 people who have heard of these guys
Well, I hope you enjoy it. Picchio dal Pozzo, since you mentioned it, now there's a band I really love. I have that Taj-Mahal Travellers album, and love it. The first album I got from the band, and was my first from TMT, is July 15, 1972. Incidentally, an old fave of mine from Japan that you might check out if you don't know it is the Toshyuki Miyama and His New Herd: Masahiko Satoh album Yamataifu, and Masahiko Satoh and the Soundbeakers Amalgamation is also good.
Just the first part of each track, but you can find the rest on youtube.
The Japanese album I most want to find is called Osorezan Suite, not the Geinoh Yamashirogumi one which i, of course, have, but another with the same name by Minoru Muraoka.
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Posted: March 23 2012 at 13:36
sleeper wrote:
Prog_Traveller wrote:
I never heard of Toby Driver.
Really? On this forum thats quite shocking!
Right, get yourself Kayo Dot's Dowsing Anomone with Copper Tongue, Blue Lambency Downward, Coyote, Stained Glass and Gamma Knife (Choirs of the Eye is their best but it's from 2003) then download maudlin of the Well's Part the Second and finally move on to the two Tartar Lamb albums.
Oh, and White Willow's Terminla Tilight fits your original criteria perfectly.
Ok I have an answer. I presume he is in all those bands.
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Posted: March 23 2012 at 13:53
Classics is a difficult word, really, but there have been some absolute gems in these years. As you've said 2005 onwards, I haven't included Marillion Marbles or IQ Dark Matter, but they would certainly be there in a decade list:
Sylvan - Posthumous Silence
Karmakanic - Who's The Boss In The Factory
Marillion - HITR
Martin Orford - The Old Road
Decemberists - Hazards of Love
IQ - Frequency
David Minasian - Random Acts of Beauty
Edison's Children - In The Last Waking Moments
Introitus - Elements
Pendragon - Passion
There are more which come mighty close. This has been a golden new age of prog to these middle aged ears
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