Why is prog rock always called "snooty"? |
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presdoug
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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It's always been my contention that this whole Prog Rock is Art Music crap is vastly overstated and fundamentally flawed. The relationship between Prog Rock and Classical Music is tenuous, borders on parody and decidedly in one direction only. Listening to the Nice blast out the Intermezzo from the 'Karelia Suite' isn't a patch on listening to all 44 glorious minutes of Sibelius's opus played by a full orchestra. To infer that what Emerson did, or Queen's Bo-Rap was "Classical" is akin to saying Kanye West is Prog because he sampled 21st Century Schizoid Man.
Sure the <insert your favourite symphonic orchestra here> will prostitute themselves releasing orchestral versions of Progressive Rock and Classic Rock tunes (e.g. Queen and Abba) [hey, even first violinists have mortgages to pay] and some jobbing orchestras have even provided orchestral backing to some well known Prog and nearly-Prog bands but neither of those undeniable facts elevates Pop and/or Rock (Prog or otherwise) music to Classical Music status. Musically and musicologically they are poles apart even when the rock tune has many "movements" or borrows heavily from classical music theory. As much as I dearly love The Enid (and have done since first seeing them back in 1975), they are a rock band. |
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Psychedelic Paul
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Online Points: 40224 |
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^^ Yes, there's a lot of mullocks and scurrilous gallimaufry talked by barbigerous bunbury's in the ultracrepidarianist world of prog.
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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Wallace.
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SteveG
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 11 2014 Location: Kyiv In Spirit Status: Offline Points: 20609 |
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Getting back to Dean's post, I've heard a couple of stories where young prog fans were "turned on" to classical music by first listening to albums like Days Of Future Passed and ItCotKC. They went on to advanced studies and when they listed back to the albums that inspired them they were like "what the f*ck is this?" There was little or no relationship at all to the classical music they were studying.
Edited by SteveG - December 02 2019 at 09:23 |
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SteveG
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M27Barney
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Ok. So who is grommet? |
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Ridgeback
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Depends who you talk to, I think. People are conditioned by the radio, by music videos, by you tube to like short, catchy songs. Pop, dance, country are the popular ones. Honestly, ask anyone under 30 about prog rock and you’d likely receive a blank look. Maybe even under 40, IDK. Hence that whole generation (s) wouldn’t call it snooty. Over 40ish (guessing) must be who you mean. To that, it was probably said years ago that prog is ‘better than you‘ music according to my older brother. Perhaps that was a typical statement from DJs at that time?
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28059 |
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I have very little interest in Classical Music beyond the obvious ones like Holst Planets Suite and Dvorak New Worls Symphony. Top of the classical pop charts stuff I suppose. Keith Emerson has long been my hero and without him I would have precious little interest in classical music. Even if I had time I doubt that I would bother to check it out. Rock Music is so much more interesting and rich in ideas. Drums is the single most important instrument to me that there is. You only need 2 guys , one with a keyboard and one with a drum kit an you can create pretty much anything and more than a massive orchestra can do. ELP didn't even need Lake but a few songs here and there didn't do any harm and maybe dragged a few girlies into their gigs!
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SteveG
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This is one for the social scientists and not me. There's always class conciseness, and it's resulting prejudice, in society that includes views on art. Sometimes the best we can do is ignore it.
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miamiscot
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Most Prog fans are music snobs. I know I am. But I'm actively seeking help for this.
Heavy doses of LIZZO seems to be working.
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SteveG
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rdenney
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I am a new member, and joined after much lurking to add to this thread.
Yes, in particular, was one of my favorite groups while I was in college. But I was into all kinds of music. The turntable or the cassette deck in the car might have had Carmina Burana, or a Borodin symphony, or even Elton John playing. By the time I left college, the albums I was buying were mostly all "classical" (by which I mean--traditionally orchestral). And while I continued to enjoy traditional forms of all genres in subsequent years, I also leaned decidedly avant garde. Pretentious? Not really--not long after that, I was playing beer-tent polkas in a tuba quartet, surely safe from any claim of pretensiousness, in addition to buying Steve Reich, or Koyanisqaatsi, or the Creative Opportunity Jazz Orchestra (you'll have to look that one up, I suspect). Clearly, prog bands intended their music as art, and just as clearly, their music was received as art and loved for its own sake by many, many listeners. That is all that art requires. Elitism on the artist's part appears when they don't care if any listeners receive their music as art. Elitism on the listener's part appears when they imagine only they are sensitive and sophisticated enough to understand it; they eschew the work of bands that bridge over into actual mass popularity, or those who are unable or unwilling to appreciate prog music as they do. But such elitism can be and often is expressed in all genres of music, even those that are not really even intended as anything more than a simple commercial product. These same discussions happen in the bluegrass world (I live near Appalachia and that is the native musical tongue in these parts), or string quartet music, or film scores, or country music, or beer-tent polka music, or church music, or choral music, or whatever. I am a fan of prog for two reasons: It takes me back to a time when music could hoist me to my feet without the option, and even today the best of it seems to me fresh and compelling. Familiarity has not (yet) robbed it of its effect, at least to my ears. But Old and In The Way has the same effect, as do really well-executed renditions of more than a few polkas. I recently heard a performance of Vaughan Williams's Sea Symphony--surely as elevated in its intention as any prog music--and the audience rose as one at its conclusion. They were not showing off their sophisticated appreciation--they were genuinely moved out of their chairs. The fact that prog is different from classical has no meaning for me. In the end, when music is good, it no longer matters. Music is validated by its effect on both performer and audience. But if having lofty aims is all takes to be pretentious, then I think they have a point. Rick "raise me up" Denney
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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well said, and welcome.
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HackettFan
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This is what I can’t figure out. Prog has always been an act of rebellion. Musicians who were tired of conventional cookie cutter stuff had the hutzpah to experiment a bit. They rebelled. That’s Rock. They rebelled with ideas. Too brainy a path for some, well tough. Even at that time Album Oriented Rock (AOR), not necessarily Prog, was rebelling against the single. Then reactionary forces swoop in to return to prior norms. Why aren’t they considered snooty or intolerant as opposed to those who favored and fostered the breaking down of genre distinctions. I don’t mind that others don’t like Prog, but not acknowledging that the motivation was to buck the trends is disingenuous.
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A curse upon the heads of those who seek their fortunes in a lie. The truth is always waiting when there's nothing left to try. - Colin Henson, Jade Warrior (Now)
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Atavachron
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^ When the inmates were running the asylum. Good times.
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28059 |
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In the UK something called 'punk' happened and music history was quickly revised so that the prog bands were part of the establishment. With that the flood gates opened and suddenly it was all pretentious. As Greg Lake said , back in 1973 he was being called a 'progressive revolutionary genius' . By 1977 it was just pretentious crap. It's just perspective at the end of the day.
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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The punks needed something to rebel against and rather than take on hard targets they rounded on ageing hippies for reasons known only to themselves.
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28059 |
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To be fair a lot of it was driven by the record companies and the punk bands didn't want to correct the narrative as it suited them. Money drives a lot of things and this was no different.
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Dean
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and the muso journalists and turncoat radio dj's like Anne Nightingale and John Peel were quick to jump on the Prog-bashing bandwagon.
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