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Joined: April 05 2006
Location: Vancouver, BC
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Points: 35804
Posted: December 14 2016 at 12:10
I personally think that Rush's Permant Waves makes more sense for the topic since he's asking for post 70s, and Permanent Waves was released on January 1st, 1980. I wonder if he means bands that debuted post 70s, though. The OP combined with topic title is rather ambiguous to me even with the explanation.
Joined: December 23 2009
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Posted: December 14 2016 at 15:03
Logan wrote:
I personally think that Rush's Permant Waves makes more sense for the topic since he's asking for post 70s, and Permanent Waves was released on January 1st, 1980. I wonder if he means bands that debuted post 70s, though. The OP combined with topic title is rather ambiguous to me even with the explanation.
Agree...confusing. Was the topic title changed? I thought it read something like first band to have prog metal elements. Because to me the first prog band to have metal elements (post 70's) would be Rush.....(pre 70's) would be King Crimson.
Joined: June 18 2009
Location: Mexico
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Posted: December 14 2016 at 20:44
BaldFriede wrote:
Dellinger wrote:
I would throw in "I Want You (She's so Heavy)", from The Beatles. As for 80's songs, "Machine Messiah" by Yes.
How about "Helter Skelter"?
I have read often about people considering Helter Skelter metal sounding, but I just can't hear it. For me it's just a heavy and crazy song, but doesn't have the distorted guitars that for me make the music metal... on the other hand, that ending on I Want You is much closer to what sounds like metal to me.
I personally think that Rush's Permant Waves makes more sense for the topic since he's asking for post 70s, and Permanent Waves was released on January 1st, 1980. I wonder if he means bands that debuted post 70s, though. The OP combined with topic title is rather ambiguous to me even with the explanation.
Yes, I did. I was interested in hearing about bands post seventies at the minimum. I guess I wasn't too clear about that and I also wasn't clear in the title(but there's only so much room). I apologize for the confusion.
In my mind however there wasn't really any metal elements in prog until the 90's. There were proto metal elements(Uriah Heep, Rush and King Crimson for example)but I don't necessarily consider them metal enough and even if I did they were pre 80's. Unlike many on here I never really considered Rush to be a metal band anyway. Does singing about ancient greek culture and technology and wearing Kimonos scream metal to you? To me it sure doesn't. Maybe if there is such a thing as geek metal but to me that would be an oxymoron. Metal is suppose to be about blood and death and sex and throwing the horns. Isn't it? It's interesting to me that Rainbow hasn't been mentioned. Wouldn't they be just as valid as Rush? Or were they not prog enough? Not really sure. I only have their first album and need to listen to it again.
Since you guys mentioned it and since my title didn't say post seventies I'm ok with exploring pre 80's.
For me the best examples of songs that combined prog metal or early metal with prog(or by bands who were more prog) would be :
Genesis- The Knife (maybe the musical box too)
King Crimson- 21st century Schizoid man, pictures of a city, larks tongues in aspic part one, red
Pink Floyd- The Nile song
Deep Purple- Child in Time
Uriah Heep (first album)
Black Sabbath (well I hear prog elements in there although I admit the prog elements were stronger on later albums)
Also, the band High Tide were apparently the first(or at least one of the first)to combine prog with metal(or metallish elements or at least or heavy/hard rock)
Edited by AFlowerKingCrimson - December 15 2016 at 05:07
I would throw in "I Want You (She's so Heavy)", from The Beatles. As for 80's songs, "Machine Messiah" by Yes.
How about "Helter Skelter"?
I have read often about people considering Helter Skelter metal sounding, but I just can't hear it. For me it's just a heavy and crazy song, but doesn't have the distorted guitars that for me make the music metal... on the other hand, that ending on I Want You is much closer to what sounds like metal to me.
Tell you what. Go to youtube and look for the live Paul McCartney version. That just might change your mind. I agree about the guitars though. I think there are heavier sounding guitars on other songs on the white album actually.
Joined: April 05 2006
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Posted: December 15 2016 at 07:31
Mike: Sorry not directly quoting, but I get walls of code when I quote which need cleaning up, and then I don't like to lose any context by not quoting in full.
As for the topic title, it's no big deal. It's not always easy to come up with an adequately descriptive title in few words (phrasing the title in the form of a question tends to require more words.... I often resort to ellipses at the end, but that rarely looks good to me). Sorry, totally unimportant point to start with but I just woke up.
I don't consider Rush to be metal, I call it hard rock, but it does have elements of what I consider to be metal (or classic heavy metal qualities). For me there were metal elements in Progressive Rock going back to the late 60s, but I guess it depends upon how broadly one defines metal, Prog, and what particular elements one considers characteristic of metal music. I've known some who don't consider classic heavy metal to be metal, but I'm not one of them. There are lots of styles of metal with varying expressions and themes such as death metal, thrash metal, speed metal, aluminum, Christian metal, and of course kimono metal which traditionally should be played by geisha girls that look like Geddy Lee. ;)
I would consider Rainbow to be more metal than Rush. A valid band to mention from what I know, which is only the band's 70's output. I only know Rainbow's first two albums, but those are on the heavy metal spectrum -- rainbow, spectrum, get it? -- and I would consider Rainbow Rising as Prog enough. But yes if talking earlier than 80's albums, then certainly.
Just in case it wasn't clear, I mentioned that Rush album (Permanent Waves) particularly due its release date, January 1, 1980 as I wanted to think of something Prog that was released as soon after the 1970's as possible that has a heavy metal quality without necessarily being metal. It's a progressive hard rock album that I would not define as metal but still has elements that I associate with metal. In a sense, all rock can be associated with metal, though.
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Posted: December 15 2016 at 07:47
There were metal bands influenced by prog in the '80s, but they were considered metal and not prog. Since the 80s there has been a growing metal influence in some prog. So, from my view, the OP is looking for a metal band from the 80s that was influenced by prog, not a prog band from the 90s influenced by metal.
Joined: December 23 2009
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Posted: December 15 2016 at 10:00
zravkapt wrote:
There were metal bands influenced by prog in the '80s, but they were considered metal and not prog. Since the 80s there has been a growing metal influence in some prog. So, from my view, the OP is looking for ametal band from the 80s that was influenced by prog, not a prog band from the 90s influenced by metal.
[So, from my view, the OP is looking for a metal band from the 80s that was influenced by prog, not a prog band from the 90s influenced by metal. ]
Actually, you have it backwards. I was looking for prog bands influenced by metal(but without being full blown metal themselves(ie prog metal). Also, they didn't necessarily have to be from the eighties.
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Posted: December 15 2016 at 10:57
Maybe i'm terrible wrong, but i can fell a dense atmosphere from this album only recreated in some black metal albums, and it's pretty heavy sometimes too
^Oh yeah, that's the album that was listed(on here and on gnosis)as being from 1969 which it is most clearly not. Lol. I checked discogs and the actual release date of that Jacula is 2001. It's possible the material was written and conceived in 1969 but listen to the guitars, the drum sound and the over all production. Other than the guitar it's not really that metallish imo.
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Posted: December 15 2016 at 15:39
If the 70s are ruled out, so lets have a look at the 80s.
Progressive Rock and Hard Rock where children of the same mother in the 70s, so where Heavy Metal
and Neo Prog in the 80s.
Actually there wasn't a difference between the New Wave of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM) and the New Wave of British Progressive Rock (NWOBPR) at all. The Neo Prog bands where considered as part of the HM revival.
Some bands where clearly part of both worlds like
Omega (who also performed as Metal band Apocalypse)
Well, they didn't introduce metal elements until 2002. I would say hard rock before that but maybe not quite metal. In 2000 the band Arena put out "Immortal?" which had metal elements but I think there were bands before them.
Joined: June 18 2009
Location: Mexico
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Points: 12732
Posted: December 15 2016 at 21:16
AFlowerKingCrimson wrote:
Logan wrote:
I personally think that Rush's Permant Waves makes more sense for the topic since he's asking for post 70s, and Permanent Waves was released on January 1st, 1980. I wonder if he means bands that debuted post 70s, though. The OP combined with topic title is rather ambiguous to me even with the explanation.
Yes, I did. I was interested in hearing about bands post seventies at the minimum. I guess I wasn't too clear about that and I also wasn't clear in the title(but there's only so much room). I apologize for the confusion.
In my mind however there wasn't really any metal elements in prog until the 90's. There were proto metal elements(Uriah Heep, Rush and King Crimson for example)but I don't necessarily consider them metal enough and even if I did they were pre 80's. Unlike many on here I never really considered Rush to be a metal band anyway. Does singing about ancient greek culture and technology and wearing Kimonos scream metal to you? To me it sure doesn't. Maybe if there is such a thing as geek metal but to me that would be an oxymoron. Metal is suppose to be about blood and death and sex and throwing the horns. Isn't it? It's interesting to me that Rainbow hasn't been mentioned. Wouldn't they be just as valid as Rush? Or were they not prog enough? Not really sure. I only have their first album and need to listen to it again.
Since you guys mentioned it and since my title didn't say post seventies I'm ok with exploring pre 80's.
For me the best examples of songs that combined prog metal or early metal with prog(or by bands who were more prog) would be :
Genesis- The Knife (maybe the musical box too)
King Crimson- 21st century Schizoid man, pictures of a city, larks tongues in aspic part one, red
Pink Floyd- The Nile song
Deep Purple- Child in Time
Uriah Heep (first album)
Black Sabbath (well I hear prog elements in there although I admit the prog elements were stronger on later albums)
Also, the band High Tide were apparently the first(or at least one of the first)to combine prog with metal(or metallish elements or at least or heavy/hard rock)
From Rainbow you should check out Rising... and the live album On Stage. I just got the first one recently, and I found it very enjoyable, but Rising is better, and "Watcher of the Skies" is my favourite song from them... plus perhaps a perfect example of what you want as an early mix of prog and metal. On Stage has some songs from the first one, and for me they are much better.
Joined: June 18 2009
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Posted: December 15 2016 at 21:30
I was just checking out Mike Oldfields apreciation thread, and someone mentioning Hergest Ridge just reminded me of a very distorted guitar section at the middle of side two that could actually be considered to sound something near metal, so I might dare consider that one has both prog and metal elements.
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