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Topic ClosedAmerican Proto-Prog

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Poll Question: Which of these do you prefer?
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: American Proto-Prog
    Posted: January 02 2016 at 20:27

The Doors "L.A. Woman" is their definitive masterpiece that transcends time.


- Music is Life, that's why our hearts have beats -
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2015 at 13:29
Jimi Hendrix would get my vote on any list of American bands.
Several would compete for second place but none would even tie Hendrix for the top slot.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2015 at 12:44
Originally posted by Intruder Intruder wrote:

Where are the Grateful Dead?  Man, the anti-Dead backlash on PA is inexplicable....Jefferson Airplane and the Doors as progressive but no Dead?  Sweetwater?  I think maybe those who aren't from the US have a skewered idea of what the Grateful Dead are.
 
Wake up and put on the Dead!

I like the Dead...have all the early stuff (Aoxomoxoa being my favorite...) ,but I'm not sure they qualify as proto-prog which was the thread title.
Your thoughts....?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2015 at 09:05
Where are the Grateful Dead?  Man, the anti-Dead backlash on PA is inexplicable....Jefferson Airplane and the Doors as progressive but no Dead?  Sweetwater?  I think maybe those who aren't from the US have a skewered idea of what the Grateful Dead are.
 
Wake up and put on the Dead!
I like to feel the suspense when you're certain you know I am there.....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2015 at 00:17
Jimi is my single fave musician on the list, but the Doors get my vote as the best band Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2015 at 20:16
Hmm, was listening to some old stuff that I had transfered to CD years ago abnd ran accross The Advancement "Painful Struggle" . Google lead me here and found band members and track list. Pretty cool for 1969, got the album at a cutout bin at Zayers discount for .49. one of my best purchases.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2015 at 14:25
The Doors!!!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2015 at 07:47
What a song!
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 28 2015 at 17:53
Oh! Move over Rover, and let Jimi take over! Yeah, you know what I'm talking 'bout.
There is no dark side in the moon, really... Matter of fact, it's all dark...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 28 2015 at 17:42
Iron Butterfly
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 27 2015 at 14:19
^My opinions on music's origins are obviously influenced by the social and cultural conditions that existed at a specific location and time of any music genre's formation and development.
 
I've often wondered how Spirit's debut album would have been received if Spirit had been a British band instead of an American one. Would it have fallen into the Progressive Music zeitgeist of other heady British bands? Or would it have had the same critical reaction in the U.K. as it had in the U.S.?
 
As some wise person once said "you have to be in the right place at the right time."


Edited by SteveG - February 27 2015 at 14:20
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 27 2015 at 12:06
Just an idle thought about Spirit, seeing as we have a "spirited" convo going here.  Thinking back to 1968, when Spirit's first album came out, at that time there were very few (if any) precedents for the combination of elements they employed on that album.  Progressive Rock as a genre didn't "really" exist yet (ok, maybe you think it did... but it certainly didn't have a lot of adherents yet if it did).  I think of Progressive Rock, in historical terms, as really "taking off" when King Crimson wowed everyone with their album in 1969.  That seemed to open the floodgates. 

Now imagine for a moment: what if Spirit's first album had "taken off" in a similar fashion?  What if lots of "Spirit wannabes" had come out of the woodwork and Prog with a Capital P had evolved from there?  Right now we would likely be talking about Spirit's first album the way we talk about ITCHCOCK.

My point is that what we generally agree here about what is "Prog" or "not Prog" is HIGHLY influenced by historical factors - how it actually went down in the old days.  Love them or not, Spirit kind of fell through the cracks and they arguably missed their chance to really shape the future of rock music, simply because they failed to capture the imagination of enough people.  But that is not the same as saying that their music wasn't progressive, or that they "shouldn't be" prog - indeed, they should have, if I could only go back in time and change history so that Spirit makes a bigger dent in our collective culture.  Their music remains as daring and original as ever - but the masses have spoken, and who are we to rewrite that history?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 27 2015 at 11:47
Iron Butterfly.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 27 2015 at 11:43
^Ok, I have no clue at the moment what you are saying Sventonio, so it's time for me to check out of this discussion Thumbs Up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 27 2015 at 11:41
Originally posted by earlyprog earlyprog wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by earlyprog earlyprog wrote:

I don't find any of the songs on Spirit 's s/t full-blown prog, sections of them perhaps. (Revision: not even sections are full-blown prog.)

Straight Arrow is perhaps best described as country music (with a jazzy section), Girl In Your Eye is a silly UK psyche thing, Gramophone Man is pop/R&B (with a jazzy section) and so is Topanga Windows, Water Woman is folk. This alone constitutes about half of the album. And then I'm not even mentioning the rest individually song by song which at best is 50 % prog per song.
It's that early, 60s prog. The same thing is with e.g. English prog band Family. However, If you search for "full-prog" 60s albums on that ridiculously wrong way then you will hardly find even In the Court of the Crimson King as an "full-prog" album because I Talk To The Wind is a pop song (a great pop, though). And also, following that pretzel logic, one can say that 21 Century Schizoid Man is "heavy psych, not prog".

If you believe 30% prog on an album makes it a prog album it's fine with me. (...)
It would be, because that specific weight of the quantity of prog is always higher than the specific weight of the amount of non-prog in a 60s prog album.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 27 2015 at 11:39
Steve, it's getting that time of the week where I cannot think clearly Wink

What I was tryng to say is that a 30 % prog album like Spirit's s/t is far from the 90 % prog of ItCotCK.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 27 2015 at 11:37
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

^Fair enough. LOL  Goodnight to you too, Sventonio. Smile
Cheers, Steve Thumbs Up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 27 2015 at 11:35
Originally posted by earlyprog earlyprog wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by earlyprog earlyprog wrote:

I don't find any of the songs on Spirit 's s/t full-blown prog, sections of them perhaps. (Revision: not even sections are full-blown prog.)

Straight Arrow is perhaps best described as country music (with a jazzy section), Girl In Your Eye is a silly UK psyche thing, Gramophone Man is pop/R&B (with a jazzy section) and so is Topanga Windows, Water Woman is folk. This alone constitutes about half of the album. And then I'm not even mentioning the rest individually song by song which at best is 50 % prog per song.
It's that early, 60s prog. The same thing is with e.g. English prog band Family. However, If you search for "full-prog" 60s albums on that ridiculously wrong way then you will hardly find even In the Court of the Crimson King as an "full-prog" album because I Talk To The Wind is a pop song (a great pop, though). And also, following that pretzel logic, one can say that 21 Century Schizoid Man is "heavy psych, not prog".
 

If you believe 30% prog on an album makes it a prog album it's fine with me. But there is a long way up say 90 % prog as on ItCotCK.
100%-30%=70%. No cheating now! LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 27 2015 at 11:31
Btw, It's A Beautiful Day deserves a shout out just for being ripped off so much! Great first album!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 27 2015 at 11:30
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by earlyprog earlyprog wrote:

I don't find any of the songs on Spirit 's s/t full-blown prog, sections of them perhaps. (Revision: not even sections are full-blown prog.)

Straight Arrow is perhaps best described as country music (with a jazzy section), Girl In Your Eye is a silly UK psyche thing, Gramophone Man is pop/R&B (with a jazzy section) and so is Topanga Windows, Water Woman is folk. This alone constitutes about half of the album. And then I'm not even mentioning the rest individually song by song which at best is 50 % prog per song.
It's that early, 60s prog. The same thing is with e.g. English prog band Family. However, If you search for "full-prog" 60s albums on that ridiculously wrong way then you will hardly find even In the Court of the Crimson King as an "full-prog" album because I Talk To The Wind is a pop song (a great pop, though). And also, following that pretzel logic, one can say that 21 Century Schizoid Man is "heavy psych, not prog".

If you believe 30% prog on an album makes it a prog album it's fine with me. But there is a long way up say 90 % prog as on ItCotCK.
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