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Topic ClosedExclusionsist or Inclusivist?

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Poll Question: Does Contemporary Progressive in 2014 still constitute Prog?
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
46 [83.64%]
9 [16.36%]
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Tom Ozric View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 12 2014 at 22:07
Up until the late-90's, I was strictly a 70's Prog-Snob, maybe into the 80's with Marillion. Then I was introduced to Porcupine Tree and things looked very interesting. Now, I am totally immersed in modern Prog, with the whole 'retro' thing for good measure, and subsequently/consequently spend more time with the here-and-now, with nostalgic re-visitations to the 70's faves. Those who say Prog died in '79 obviously have a different perception of Prog/Progressive music, to myself.

Edited by Tom Ozric - April 12 2014 at 22:08
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 12 2014 at 22:58
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:






Originally posted by Man With Hat Man With Hat wrote:

A bit of a loaded poll really.

Obviously the second choice is stupid. But that doesn't mean we should add every piece of music or band that is slightly odd or quirky, even to go so far as to include non rock acts just because they may be progressive. For the site, I believe we should be more exclusionist, but that doesn't mean I believe prog died in '79.
Interesting perception of how the poll is deemed to be 'loaded' given that its creator voted for option 2 presumably on the basis of either his sincere belief or sincere stupidity.LOL I notice however that you mix the use of Prog and progressive in your post which might go some way towards explaining this confusion but certainly helps identify one of the misconceptions the poll was created in the first place to highlight. I mean it would be very difficult to make an argument that Krautrock, RPI, Canterbury, Zeuhl or Neo prog (OK this flourished for a while in the 80's) etc were actually still evolving to qualify as contemporary in 2014? You say we should be more exclusionist but don't state how we can bring this about i.e. do we continue to use sub genre definitions that are a measure of a historical bygone Prog or should we reevaluate the sub genre definitions to assimilate contemporary developments in progressive rock/ progressive music?. Do people think the existing definitions are wide enough to accommodate modern trends etc That's the sort of debate I wanted to stimulate.






Hey man, I only used your terminology.

And perhaps I misunderstood the poll then. When reading the question, I didn't think this was a prog vs progressive discussion. For the record, I think there is plenty of room on PA for both the style and the spirit of prog/progressive (assuming it's still rock/rock based of course).

And since you asked, I like the subgenres the way they are (for the most part...I certainly wouldn't sack them...except prog-related ).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 12 2014 at 23:19
Hmmm, 'prog related' is questionable, though Wishbone Ash fit the bill perfectly, and I think they deserve to be here - could always be shifted to Crossover ??
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 12 2014 at 23:33
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Although I voted for option 1, I think the changes in prog since the 70s are more in terms of sound or maybe the domination of guitar rather than keyboard. The 70s already covered a very wide gamut and even if that alone formed the basis of deciding what bands today could be called prog, it would still be a very inclusive term because it would include symph, avant prog, prog metal (basis the inclusion of Rush), jazz rock, etc. While I am from the younger brigade, I am sympathetic to what it is that those who think prog died in 1979 are grappling with. Prog as a concentrated scene of music seems to have collapsed by the end of the 70s.   Today it's more about new bands with members who grew up listening to prog wanting to make some prog of their own and these bands are scattered across the globe catering to smaller fanbases.
Progressive rock does not cease to exist in 1979. All that happened then was that the greatest bands of British progressive rock movement (scene) lost their compass, shamelessly released a number of too commercial albums, although they still to be progressive rock in some way. However, that was not the case in the rest of the world; e.g. Zappa at the end of seventies and in the eighties was released the masterpieces:
Quote 1979
May      Orchestral Favorities      
Sep      Joe's Garage Act I
Nov      Joe's Garage Acts II & II
          
1981      May      Tinsel Town Rebellion           
Shut Up 'n Play Yer Guitar                 
Shut Up 'n Play Yer Guitar Some More             
Return of the Son of Shut Up 'n Play Yer Guitar                  
Sep      You Are What You Is
           
1982      May      Ship Arriving Too Late to Save a Drowning Witch            
1983      Mar      The Man from Utopia             
Jun      London Symphony Orchestra, Vol. I       
1984      Aug      Boulez Conducts Zappa: The Perfect Stranger      
Oct      Them or Us      
Nov      Thing-Fish       
      
1986   Jazz from Hell
     
1987      Jun      London Symphony Orchestra, Vol. II                  
Broadway the Hard Way


Once again, the history of progressive rock can not and should not be viewed only from the perspective of the British progressive rock movement (scene).

Pl read what I actually wrote rather than use something that is said to forward a pet agenda.  I never said that prog died in 1979.  I said I can sympathise with the viewpoint of those who think so because the scene as such collapsed.  There is a significant difference between the words 'collapsed' and 'died' and I don't like to see these nuances being ignored and reduced to oversimplified positions just to make it convenient to argue against.  The prog scene is much more scattered today than in the 70s and this has a lot of implications for the amount of influence it is able to exert (which is limited) on music culture as such compared to the 70s.  To acknowledge this does not imply that there were no prog artists working in the 80s or subsequent decades. Thank you for assuming I do not know what Zappa did in the 80s when it was I who had pointed to Zappa's role in shaping prog as a genre in the 60s in the other thread.


Edited by rogerthat - April 12 2014 at 23:33
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 12 2014 at 23:39
Originally posted by Man With Hat Man With Hat wrote:

Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:






Originally posted by Man With Hat Man With Hat wrote:

A bit of a loaded poll really.

Obviously the second choice is stupid. But that doesn't mean we should add every piece of music or band that is slightly odd or quirky, even to go so far as to include non rock acts just because they may be progressive. For the site, I believe we should be more exclusionist, but that doesn't mean I believe prog died in '79.
Interesting perception of how the poll is deemed to be 'loaded' given that its creator voted for option 2 presumably on the basis of either his sincere belief or sincere stupidity.LOL I notice however that you mix the use of Prog and progressive in your post which might go some way towards explaining this confusion but certainly helps identify one of the misconceptions the poll was created in the first place to highlight. I mean it would be very difficult to make an argument that Krautrock, RPI, Canterbury, Zeuhl or Neo prog (OK this flourished for a while in the 80's) etc were actually still evolving to qualify as contemporary in 2014? You say we should be more exclusionist but don't state how we can bring this about i.e. do we continue to use sub genre definitions that are a measure of a historical bygone Prog or should we reevaluate the sub genre definitions to assimilate contemporary developments in progressive rock/ progressive music?. Do people think the existing definitions are wide enough to accommodate modern trends etc That's the sort of debate I wanted to stimulate.






Hey man, I only used your terminology.

And perhaps I misunderstood the poll then. When reading the question, I didn't think this was a prog vs progressive discussion. For the record, I think there is plenty of room on PA for both the style and the spirit of prog/progressive (assuming it's still rock/rock based of course).

And since you asked, I like the subgenres the way they are (for the most part...I certainly wouldn't sack them...except prog-related ).


Fair enough and thanks for the feedback. I could have framed the question better perhaps but it's not really a Prog v progressive debate, although that's maybe a part of it. I just wanted people to ask themselves if the avowed aim of the site had changed over time i.e. is Prog still extant as an evolving phenomenon now or is it merely indicative of the sort of music being created now that was inspired by the Prog bands of the 70's?


Edited by ExittheLemming - April 12 2014 at 23:41
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 12 2014 at 23:52
If prog died in 79'  then what are all those "prog" bands since are playing?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 12 2014 at 23:53
Originally posted by Tom Ozric Tom Ozric wrote:

Up until the late-90's, I was strictly a 70's Prog-Snob, maybe into the 80's with Marillion. Then I was introduced to Porcupine Tree and things looked very interesting. Now, I am totally immersed in modern Prog, with the whole 'retro' thing for good measure, and subsequently/consequently spend more time with the here-and-now, with nostalgic re-visitations to the 70's faves. Those who say Prog died in '79 obviously have a different perception of Prog/Progressive music, to myself.


That's interesting. I also enjoy much of the so-called modern Prog but would ask if you consider the likes of Transatlantic, Wobbler, Areknames Big Big Train and say Black Bonzo to be Prog? as you could make a very cogent argument that the foregoing for all their unimpeachable talent and skill are tantamount to a very affectionate and brilliant homage or even pastiche of vintage 70's Prog. I'm not denigrating these bands as I have bought and enjoyed many of their albums but I couldn't help but echo the sentiments posted by The Dark Elf

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:


Sometimes, I'll listen to a band like Big Big Train (with wonderful albums like Underfall Yard and English Electric I & II), and I begin to wonder if I like the albums because they are very reminiscent to what I listened to as a teenager (and I would suggest that English Electric I would probably be an album I would have listened to in 1976 or 77). 

Meh, I just don't know. But I do know what I like (in my wardrobe and through my speakers).Wink




Liking something should be sufficient so I guess we needn't beat ourselves up about justifying our enjoyment of this stuff but just how forward thinking is backwards looking music?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 00:24
Wobbler, Black Bonzo, Transatlantic, Big Big Train etc. I do have many of their albums - 'Prog' - indeed, 'Progressive', in the true sense, probably not. This is the PROG archives, as opposed to Progressive Rock Archives, even though it's the 'definitive resource for Progressive Rock'.   Go figure ???
It comes back to that tough one - Prog vs Progressive.
Radiohead seem to be Progressive, but I wouldn't call them a Prog band......(man, this is doing my head in.....) where does one draw the line ??
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 01:48
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Although I voted for option 1, I think the changes in prog since the 70s are more in terms of sound or maybe the domination of guitar rather than keyboard. The 70s already covered a very wide gamut and even if that alone formed the basis of deciding what bands today could be called prog, it would still be a very inclusive term because it would include symph, avant prog, prog metal (basis the inclusion of Rush), jazz rock, etc. While I am from the younger brigade, I am sympathetic to what it is that those who think prog died in 1979 are grappling with. Prog as a concentrated scene of music seems to have collapsed by the end of the 70s.   Today it's more about new bands with members who grew up listening to prog wanting to make some prog of their own and these bands are scattered across the globe catering to smaller fanbases.
Progressive rock does not cease to exist in 1979. All that happened then was that the greatest bands of British progressive rock movement (scene) lost their compass, shamelessly released a number of too commercial albums, although they still to be progressive rock in some way. However, that was not the case in the rest of the world; e.g. Zappa at the end of seventies and in the eighties was released the masterpieces:
Quote 1979
May      Orchestral Favorities      
Sep      Joe's Garage Act I
Nov      Joe's Garage Acts II & II
          
1981      May      Tinsel Town Rebellion           
Shut Up 'n Play Yer Guitar                 
Shut Up 'n Play Yer Guitar Some More             
Return of the Son of Shut Up 'n Play Yer Guitar                  
Sep      You Are What You Is
           
1982      May      Ship Arriving Too Late to Save a Drowning Witch            
1983      Mar      The Man from Utopia             
Jun      London Symphony Orchestra, Vol. I       
1984      Aug      Boulez Conducts Zappa: The Perfect Stranger      
Oct      Them or Us      
Nov      Thing-Fish       
      
1986   Jazz from Hell
     
1987      Jun      London Symphony Orchestra, Vol. II                  
Broadway the Hard Way


Once again, the history of progressive rock can not and should not be viewed only from the perspective of the British progressive rock movement (scene).

Pl read what I actually wrote rather than use something that is said to forward a pet agenda.  I never said that prog died in 1979.  I said I can sympathise with the viewpoint of those who think so because the scene as such collapsed.  There is a significant difference between the words 'collapsed' and 'died' and I don't like to see these nuances being ignored and reduced to oversimplified positions just to make it convenient to argue against.  The prog scene is much more scattered today than in the 70s and this has a lot of implications for the amount of influence it is able to exert (which is limited) on music culture as such compared to the 70s.  To acknowledge this does not imply that there were no prog artists working in the 80s or subsequent decades. Thank you for assuming I do not know what Zappa did in the 80s when it was I who had pointed to Zappa's role in shaping prog as a genre in the 60s in the other thread.

I did not mean to say that you said that it's progressive rock died collapsed in 1979. I wanted to point out that the theory that says the British progressive rock collapsed in 1979 (some say 1978, 1977, even 1976 is mentioned few times here as the year of that "tragedy") is actually a false theory. British progressive rock bands in 1979 and later were continued to fill up concert halls and to release albums, & to sell them in a huge numbers of copies. 
A small problem there was that the British progressive bands could not sounds fresh and innovative anymore, as many of them went to a commercial prog style. To this day, many of old British prog rockers are still in business, and some of them done some good things recently. So I have no sympathy for the claim that we need to say "Prog is ceased in 1979" just because some of British progressive bands in the late seventies began to seriously cashing their brand names, and due to one's desires to reject almost all of the new, contemporary progressive rock bands who are coming from all over the globe.






Edited by Svetonio - April 13 2014 at 02:29
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 01:58
I have read very detailed recollections of forum member TODDLER capturing how prog got relegated to a sideshow in the 80s, of how it became difficult to play Zappa songs in clubs...in America, mind, not just Britain.  The album sales figures speak for themselves and I don't need to reiterate it.  Only Marillion achieved telling success on that front and they still could not approach the success of Floyd or Tull.  Moving Pictures would appear to be the last blockbuster prog rock album for a very long time, to be beaten only by OK Computer nearly two decades later.  I am not convinced the collapse was restricted only to Britain.  The scene began to dwindle in Italy as well.  What prog was left in Europe was mainly the avant/RIO groups. A parallel development was the relegation of jazz in America.  So it wasn't just prog, long winded improvisational music generally began to face a tough time.  To believe that prog was as healthy and robust a music scene in the 80s as in the 70s is to deny this seismic cultural shift in music happened at all.  None of this is to support an overly British centric view of prog, especially the one that holds symph prog as the basis of all prog.  I am making neutral observations based on various articles and reflections such as TODDLER's that I have read about the time.

Edited by rogerthat - April 13 2014 at 02:00
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 03:01
^ I think everyone thought it would just keep getting better;  more great music, more progressive, more innovations.   I mean why would things become less creative?   It didn't seem possible music would revert to the pablum of previous years.   And then suddenly Duran Duran was the high standard in popular music.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 03:05
Ha ha ha, well said.  From my local perspective, I have similar views on the Ilayaraja phenomenon; never looked like he would be knocked off his perch and so he was. Happens everywhere.  I have learnt that people can in fact ultimately get tired of very innovative, very challenging, demanding music in copious quantities, though logically it seems impossible.   And then, they will develop pangs of nostalgia for the very thing that they had started shunning but by then, it's too late.  Reversing it back to complex seems to be harder than introducing simplicity under the "breath of fresh air" pretext. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 03:09

Fortunately all the music now seems to be in top form and continuing the upward trend, the way I see it! There's a lot of great stuff out there, and more innovative options are always coming into being. I'm definitely feeling blessed to be alive in this decade where I can appreciate prog both old and new, and it both be awesome!

I'll say the progressive idiom is not dead, as I continue to hear stuff that's never been done before in the modern days. And the stuff that is inspired from prog groups of old, in reality that's just a realistic expectation to have. After all, there's no music that didn't come from some past inspiration. Much like the evolution from Bach to Mozart to Beethoven to Chopin to Liszt to Scriabin to Prokofiev to many modern composers whose works sound nothing like the past masters but still shares a common starting place up the family tree, we can see prog has a similar tendency. And since the dawn of creation and the first musical traditions on the planet, there's been nothing but advancement and sharing of ideas that has only become more concrete and developed as time has gone by. So it's a pretty unrealistic idea to say that a group of bands got together to create something unrelated to all musical traditions of the past and then killed it off within the span of roughly one decade, give or take a couple years on either side. That would be completely counterintuitive to the way music has developed in the time humanity has occupied the earth and shared, cultivated, and elaborately developed musical traditions.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 03:20
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

I have read very detailed recollections of forum member TODDLER capturing how prog got relegated to a sideshow in the 80s, of how it became difficult to play Zappa songs in clubs...in America, mind, not just Britain.  The album sales figures speak for themselves and I don't need to reiterate it.  Only Marillion achieved telling success on that front and they still could not approach the success of Floyd or Tull.  Moving Pictures would appear to be the last blockbuster prog rock album for a very long time, to be beaten only by OK Computer nearly two decades later.  I am not convinced the collapse was restricted only to Britain.  The scene began to dwindle in Italy as well.  What prog was left in Europe was mainly the avant/RIO groups. A parallel development was the relegation of jazz in America.  So it wasn't just prog, long winded improvisational music generally began to face a tough time.  To believe that prog was as healthy and robust a music scene in the 80s as in the 70s is to deny this seismic cultural shift in music happened at all.  None of this is to support an overly British centric view of prog, especially the one that holds symph prog as the basis of all prog.  I am making neutral observations based on various articles and reflections such as TODDLER's that I have read about the time.


Have to agree with almost all of this. Of course many prog bands who had been hugely successful in the 70's were forced to jump ship when the topographic oceans got a bit choppy and played a stripped down, mainstream Pop/AOR music. Some were very good at this (Genesis and Yes) while some sucked heinously at it (ELP and Gentle Giant) The point being that by say 1979 or 1980 no-one was playing undiluted Prog fresh from the source any longer and given that any sub genre of Rock is a product of it's time, Prog's shelf life had clearly expired. This is why some of us (precisely 4 at this junctureWink) feel that Prog ceased to exist circa 1979. The set  of circumstances that led to the creation of so much daring, experimental and innovative music in the late 60's and early 70's was a conflation of social and cultural events that are unlikely to be ever repeated again. I don't think someone like Yes even knew what they were really doing when they created Close to the Edge or that ELP thought Karn Evil 9 was Prog or not, they just went ahead and did it because the market was receptive to that sort of ambition and could support it financially. Compare that with say Transatlantic, who deliberately write bespoke Prog Rock epics clearly inspired by the likes of the two examples I've provided. I enjoy Transatlantic hugely but how can what is a stylistic tribute band qualify as original Prog or a continuation of Prog in 2014? Similarly, there are loads of great Punk, bands still plying their trade, many composers writing excellent neoclassical, Gregorian chant and baroque compositions and millions of trad and big band jazz ensembles all producing music that are valuable additions to their respective oeuvre (but just don't try telling me that any of this is innovative, forward thinking or progressive.Wink Art is a product of history and it stands to reason that stripped of the history, the resultant Art is merely a replica)

If push came to shove and someone were to ask me how I would classify the newer end of bands like the Mars Volta, Radiohead, Porcupine Tree/Steven Wilson, Coheed and Cambria etc I'd probably say they were highly original and skilled purveyors of progressive rock. That might come across as damning with faint praise or pedantic but it's NOT the intention, I just don't think of such as being Prog



Edited by ExittheLemming - April 13 2014 at 04:16
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 03:33
^^^  Nail on the head.  We basically have a menu of time tested, carefully chosen favourite flavours (and I mean what generally passes for rock and pop music, not just prog).  Most of it is not stuff that really challenges established perceptions of what is possible within a given genre.  Here and there, there may be artists who still take risks, say a Fiona Apple experimenting within the boundaries of American songwriting traditions, but it's not a wave anymore.

Edited by rogerthat - April 13 2014 at 03:36
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 03:33
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

I have read very detailed recollections of forum member TODDLER capturing how prog got relegated to a sideshow in the 80s, of how it became difficult to play Zappa songs in clubs...in America, mind, not just Britain.  The album sales figures speak for themselves and I don't need to reiterate it.  Only Marillion achieved telling success on that front and they still could not approach the success of Floyd or Tull.  Moving Pictures would appear to be the last blockbuster prog rock album for a very long time, to be beaten only by OK Computer nearly two decades later.  I am not convinced the collapse was restricted only to Britain.  The scene began to dwindle in Italy as well.  What prog was left in Europe was mainly the avant/RIO groups. A parallel development was the relegation of jazz in America.  So it wasn't just prog, long winded improvisational music generally began to face a tough time.  To believe that prog was as healthy and robust a music scene in the 80s as in the 70s is to deny this seismic cultural shift in music happened at all.  None of this is to support an overly British centric view of prog, especially the one that holds symph prog as the basis of all prog.  I am making neutral observations based on various articles and reflections such as TODDLER's that I have read about the time.
You can not measure the popularity of someone like Frank Zappa with regard to the fact that obscure clubs in the early eighties were playing post-punk (or whatever, I did not read TODDLER's post). Actually, Zappa was filled up the arenas from LA to Paris at that time. Pink Floyd released The Wall In 1979; Jethro Tull released Stormwatch; Bill Bruford released  One of a Kind; a ticket for a concert of "proto-prog" act The Who was a hot ticket in 1979, and so on. There was no collapse of the classic bands in 1979. It's a concoction that was later created to celebrate the British punk & new wave movement at the first place, but it can be useful for other things too, as you can see.
Nobody was collapsed but there was a huge commercialization of British (symphonic) progressive rock e.g. Genesis.


Edited by Svetonio - April 13 2014 at 03:48
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 03:38
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Ha ha ha, well said.  From my local perspective, I have similar views on the Ilayaraja phenomenon; never looked like he would be knocked off his perch and so he was. Happens everywhere.  I have learnt that people can in fact ultimately get tired of very innovative, very challenging, demanding music in copious quantities, though logically it seems impossible.   And then, they will develop pangs of nostalgia for the very thing that they had started shunning but by then, it's too late.  Reversing it back to complex seems to be harder than introducing simplicity under the "breath of fresh air" pretext. 

Yep

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 03:44
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:

The set  of circumstances that led to the creation of so much daring, experimental and innovative music in the late 60's and early 70's was a conflation of social and cultural events that are unlikely to be ever repeated again. I don't think someone like Yes even knew what they were really doing when they created Close to the Edge or that ELP thought Karn Evil 9 was Prog or not, they just went ahead and did it because the market was receptive to that sort of ambition and could support it financially.

Clearly no one knew what they were really doing, and just went ahead and did it.   Maybe that's what was lost.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 03:44
Sventonio: So what about Gentle Giant, Renaissance, ELP (and many other bands actually that hit a dead end in the 80s)?  So they all sold out and therefore I must ignore them as examples and focus only on the few who managed to keep going?  The exact time, whether it is 1979 or 1980s proper, is not of essence here.  What is is the change in music culture in the 80s, some of which had begun to make an impact in the late 70s already.  If Yes wasn't making prog albums, what exactly stopped other bands from keeping symph prog not just alive but just as popular as it was in the 70s?  And symph prog was hardly the sole preserve of Britain.  There are very well regarded 70s bands from the rest of Europe as well as America in that genre.  What happened to that?  Why did it become necessary to identify a new niche as prog metal that was connected to Rush but not the first wave of prog (and, again, first wave here includes everything, not just British prog)?  As you would be aware, prog metal is primarily a metal genre though it has been slyly appropriated as part of the larger prog umbrella.  Would there have been any reason for any of this if nothing changed from the 1970s to 1980s?  Obviously a LOT changed, the bands that enjoyed popularity in the 80s vis a vis the 70s and the kind of music they played attests to this.

And you would do well to actually read TODDLER's comments carefully instead of going whatever on it.  He is obviously a passionate prog rock fan and a musician and is as appreciative of 60s psychedelic rock as he is of British prog (which you seem to view as the source of all problems? Wink).  He has produced first hand accounts of how the music scene changed in the 80s from the point of view of a disillusioned prog rock lover.  I am inclined to attach a little more weight to that than you seem to want to.


Edited by rogerthat - April 13 2014 at 03:47
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 04:20
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

I have read very detailed recollections of forum member TODDLER capturing how prog got relegated to a sideshow in the 80s, of how it became difficult to play Zappa songs in clubs...in America, mind, not just Britain.  The album sales figures speak for themselves and I don't need to reiterate it.  Only Marillion achieved telling success on that front and they still could not approach the success of Floyd or Tull.  Moving Pictures would appear to be the last blockbuster prog rock album for a very long time, to be beaten only by OK Computer nearly two decades later.  I am not convinced the collapse was restricted only to Britain.  The scene began to dwindle in Italy as well.  What prog was left in Europe was mainly the avant/RIO groups. A parallel development was the relegation of jazz in America.  So it wasn't just prog, long winded improvisational music generally began to face a tough time.  To believe that prog was as healthy and robust a music scene in the 80s as in the 70s is to deny this seismic cultural shift in music happened at all.  None of this is to support an overly British centric view of prog, especially the one that holds symph prog as the basis of all prog.  I am making neutral observations based on various articles and reflections such as TODDLER's that I have read about the time.
You can not measure the popularity of someone like Frank Zappa with regard to the fact that obscure clubs in the early eighties playing post-punk (or whatever, I did not read TODDLER's post). Actually, Zappa was filled up the arenas from LA to Paris at that time. Pink Floyd released The Wall In 1979; Jethro Tull released Stormwatch; Bill Bruford released  One of a Kind; a ticket for a concert of "proto-prog" act The Who was a hot ticket in 1979, and so on. There was no collapse of the classic bands in 1979. It's a concoction that was later created to celebrate the British punk & new wave movement at the first place, but it can be useful for other things too, as you can see.
Nobody was collapsed but there was a huge commercialization of British (symphonic) progressive rock i.e. Genesis.
Svetonio, I'll have to disagree, up to a point. Although one can't use the year 1979 as the end-all, be-all milestone for the death of prog, one can certainly see that rigor mortis set in around that year. Pink Floyd released The Wall in 1979, but went straight to hell after that. Tull released Stormwatch in 1979, but that was the last album of their classic releases, and the last of their classic lineup. ELP was already done by 1978 (can you say Love Beach?), Yes released Tormato in 1978 (and the equally dreadful Drama in 1980), Genesis was well on their way to being commercial shells of their former selves (Hackett left in `77). King Crimson would not return until 1981 with their Talking Heads tribute album Discipline, and Gentle Giant, VdGG and Camel were already irrelevant (if they ever were relevant).

You mention The Who, but from an album standpoint, their greatness as a band died with Keith Moon (Who Are You was released in 1978) as did sometime-proggy Led Zeppelin when John Bonham died (In Through the Out Door, 1979). As for Frank Zappa, his last gold-selling album (gold in Canada, mind) Joe's Garage, Part I was released in...you guessed it....1979.
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