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Why is prog rock always called "snooty"?

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M27Barney View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote M27Barney Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2019 at 01:56
Originally posted by Davesax1965 Davesax1965 wrote:

Hang on, quick PS. Not "baleful light", I just feel sorry for them that they're missing out, but we can't all be the same. 

Different strokes for different folks. 

What I really dislike is when someone tells me I should be listening to this or that or doing X or Y or I'm not part of the club. Stuff the club, I'm old enough to think for myself and have my own opinions. 

Yo dave sax what your birthdate? Mine is 10/05/1965...
And to reiterate my position. The internet has highlighted just how generally pig-ignorant most of the suppossedly named sapiens are. Opinions are like arseholes, everybody has them...and on matters of subjectivity thats ok...but today, the liberals claim that all objective opinion is equal...which is clearly bullsh*t...

Edited by M27Barney - December 17 2019 at 01:57
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Davesax1965 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2019 at 03:46
Well, I don't know if it's "liberals", M27Barney. ;-) (But that's just my opinion. ;-) )

August 65 here. ;-)

The problem with the internet is that people form an opinion and then go off and find evidence which supports that opinion, rather than get a proper overall view. No matter how deluded your opinion, you can also find other people who share your view, so,there being strength in numbers, that makes you correct and with the ability to shout down anyone who disagrees with you. 

When you look at music: music is something which inspires and moves most people. The problem is that music can't really be easily measured - football inspires people and you can measure that (to an extent) with scores and statistics, but music is more difficult. Especially if you're a non musician, and let's face it, most people aren't musicians. 

As a musician, I used to think that music COULD be measured - based on technical expertise, creativity - arrogant of me as a musician, it can't. Music evokes feelings and emotions: if I get off on a Ginger Baker drum solo and someone gets off on Boney M, it doesn't make Ginger Baker better than Boney M. It just appeals to me more. I can argue that I've heard more accomplished and complicated music than Boney M, but it's not, at the end of the day, a technical exercise. It's just that some people prefer prog rock and some people prefer country and western. There you go. 

Prog rock. Prog rock is - like all other musical terms - a manufactured term. Someone does something different, music press labels it as "progressive" - before long, other bands get the idea that if you have a Mellotron or do a ten minute drum solo in a weird time signature, it can be marketed as "progressive rock". It's pitched as being a new form of musical art which must be listened to to be appreciated - "musician's music" - hence for the elite or the cognoscenti. If you can't sink that amount of time into appreciating it, go off and listen to Marc Bolan / Slade etc etc. 

So it's sort of viewed as a kind of wine snob music. "Oh, this might be a bit complicated for you." Hence snooty.

Matter of fact, if your brain works that way and you like it, well. Your brain works that way and you like it. It's music hence art, there are a few rules to music and they can be broken, if you know what you're doing. 

But. Someone elses' opinion is of no interest to me whatsoever. I know what art I like, music I like, it's my personal taste, I'm really not interested in anyone elses' opinion, they're entitled to it, if our opinions coincide, fine, if not, not really important.

I'm not going to tell them what to like, I expect the same back, but welcome to the internet, which is how people think in private (but can now harp on about it in public under internet anonymity) - that seems to be how the internet works, leave your manners at the door. 







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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote M27Barney Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2019 at 03:55
Oooh I have a beer-shed aquaintance whose favorite artist us Marc Bolan....He does like a lot of old prog too though...
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2019 at 04:15
Originally posted by Davesax1965 Davesax1965 wrote:

Well, I don't know if it's "liberals", M27Barney. ;-) (But that's just my opinion. ;-) )

August 65 here. ;-)

The problem with the internet is that people form an opinion and then go off and find evidence which supports that opinion, rather than get a proper overall view. No matter how deluded your opinion, you can also find other people who share your view, so,there being strength in numbers, that makes you correct and with the ability to shout down anyone who disagrees with you. 

When you look at music: music is something which inspires and moves most people. The problem is that music can't really be easily measured - football inspires people and you can measure that (to an extent) with scores and statistics, but music is more difficult. Especially if you're a non musician, and let's face it, most people aren't musicians. 

As a musician, I used to think that music COULD be measured - based on technical expertise, creativity - arrogant of me as a musician, it can't. Music evokes feelings and emotions: if I get off on a Ginger Baker drum solo and someone gets off on Boney M, it doesn't make Ginger Baker better than Boney M. It just appeals to me more. I can argue that I've heard more accomplished and complicated music than Boney M, but it's not, at the end of the day, a technical exercise. It's just that some people prefer prog rock and some people prefer country and western. There you go. 

Prog rock. Prog rock is - like all other musical terms - a manufactured term. Someone does something different, music press labels it as "progressive" - before long, other bands get the idea that if you have a Mellotron or do a ten minute drum solo in a weird time signature, it can be marketed as "progressive rock". It's pitched as being a new form of musical art which must be listened to to be appreciated - "musician's music" - hence for the elite or the cognoscenti. If you can't sink that amount of time into appreciating it, go off and listen to Marc Bolan / Slade etc etc. 

So it's sort of viewed as a kind of wine snob music. "Oh, this might be a bit complicated for you." Hence snooty.

Matter of fact, if your brain works that way and you like it, well. Your brain works that way and you like it. It's music hence art, there are a few rules to music and they can be broken, if you know what you're doing. 

But. Someone elses' opinion is of no interest to me whatsoever. I know what art I like, music I like, it's my personal taste, I'm really not interested in anyone elses' opinion, they're entitled to it, if our opinions coincide, fine, if not, not really important.

I'm not going to tell them what to like, I expect the same back, but welcome to the internet, which is how people think in private (but can now harp on about it in public under internet anonymity) - that seems to be how the internet works, leave your manners at the door. 






yeah, I have to agree. My feeling is that whatever I'm listening to and enjoying is such a private experience that anyone else liking or disliking my choice of music is quite inconsequential. Ditto for my opinions on what others enjoy. We're generally not listening to music together in a pub, for Christ's sake. LOL
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2019 at 04:20
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Most people that I know that don't like prog have actually made a concerted effort to like it but it just didn't click with them. And I'm talking about some very gifted rock musicians. That's all fine and well with me. It's only the people that dismiss prog out of hand that annoy me and, generally, very few of them are musicians or have any kind of familiarity with music such as recording engineers, etc. But as you said, to each his own.

This is not directed at you, but I do think it's foolish to laugh at their musical choices because they garner the same level of appreciation from listening to their choice of music as we do from listening to prog. And that's what some really foolish people have a hard time understanding.

Btw Dave, you look quite distinguished with your pipe. A true progger if ever there was one!



Do tell, though, how does NO prog click at all with them?  Prog is very vast and diverse.  Those who like more improvisational stuff may dig Krautrock, those who would rather not go beyond hard rock with some complex instrumentation may still like Kansas, those who just want some metal muscle will find something to like in prog metal.  I am not saying that such people are trying to be dismissive but I do wonder sometimes if the years of propaganda against prog has resulted in a lot of baggage being associated with it, with the result that some people can't truly give it a fair shake anymore. When I first heard some of the classic prog rock songs like Firth of the fifth or Karn Evil 9, I really didn't know much about these negative stereotypes of prog. So I just listened and ended up liking it.  And this was within a year or so of getting into rock music, having grown up on mostly Indian music with only a few bands/artists like Beatles/ABBA/Santana making up my 'Western' collection at that point.   So it's not like I had a lot of prior exposure to rock music at that.  Sometimes I wonder if that helped. LOL
It's just a matter of taste Madan. It's easier for someone with a purist blues background to gravitate toward 70s hard rock
which had a firm foot in the blues before it morphed into the various riff metal genres. So, these types of musos were not really enthralled with the music of ELP, Genesis, et al., regardless of how much they admired the musicianship. Oddly enough, many of these blues types that I've known have gravitated toward Indian and World Music. Go figure. LOL

Well, I hope it is something like Indian classical or our qawali/ghazal traditions, even Old Bollywood. Not like, you know, dawn of Ananda (yikes!! )
Omg, you just ruined Psychedelic Paul's day! LOL
 
I'm not sure what type of Indian music these people gravitated to but it always featured sitar, sarangi and tablas. It must have been related to Ravi Shanker due to the George Harrison connection. They may not have really enjoyed it but I'm sure they thought that it was sooo cool! LOL
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rogerthat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2019 at 09:02
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

I'm not sure what type of Indian music these people gravitated to but it always featured sitar, sarangi and tablas. It must have been related to Ravi Shanker due to the George Harrison connection. They may not have really enjoyed it but I'm sure they thought that it was sooo cool! LOL

Yeah, the Beatles-Shankar thing is what makes me apprehensive about what kind of music it would be.  I mean I greatly respect the Beatles for their open mindedness in reaching out and attempting to assimilate such a different music and appropriate it into their own style.  But all Indian music isn't dreamy, tranquil or meditative like Love You To; in fact a lot of it isn't.  It too can be intense (albeit not heavy metal intense), playful or melancholic, covering a whole gamut of emotions.  We don't all dress in loose fitting towels, grow long beards and meditate under trees. LOL
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2019 at 09:28
Yes, and that's what's wrong when only a select type of music is appropriated or popularized. it would be as if someone thought that all rock music sounded like an Elvis record. Very disproportionate.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2019 at 10:42
Did someone mention Annie Haslam's "Dawn of Ananda"? Great album! Thumbs Up
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2019 at 11:13
Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

Did someone mention Annie Haslam's "Dawn of Ananda"?
Nope, you're just imagining things again.

Edited by SteveG - December 17 2019 at 11:13
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2019 at 11:51
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

Did someone mention Annie Haslam's "Dawn of Ananda"?
Nope, you're just imagining things again.
Okay, I'll go back to sleep again then. Wink
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rdenney Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 18 2019 at 12:53
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Spacegod87 Spacegod87 wrote:

In the words of my prog hating brother: "I get that they're good in a technical sense, but it sounds so pretentious and noodly."

I mean, I can understand him to a certain point, even I've been listening to a 20+ minute song that I've loved for years and will find myself sometimes thinking, "God, these lyrics are a bit long-winded and bizarre.."

I can definitely overlook the pretentiousness to appreciate the structure and emotions (you heard me) of a prog song, but it's understandable that others might not. Especially if you don't hear that kind of music a lot, it hits you hard in the beginning.

I think sometimes the prog world fetishes the 20 min epics rather much.  I personally prefer 'long pieces' running up to 10-12 min.  Enough to go well beyond the confines of regular rock and roll and not so long that it overstays its welcome.  I may well be in the minority here but other than a few like CTTE/Echoes/Supper's Ready, my all time favourite prog tracks wouldn't be the epics but rather tracks like Starless, Cinema Show, South Side of Sky, Script for a Jester's Tear and, yeah, Natural Science since there's a poll going on with that track as one of the options. Wink
 
Hmmm. In the classical world, a 20-minute work would be average. I think of the usual 3-minute pop song as having one thing to say. I think a song of 10 or 12 minutes ought to say more than one thing, or say one thing in interestingly various ways. An epic of 20+ minutes (which would not be epic at all in the classical world) should say several things, each with their own interesting variations.
 
The trend in modern classical music has been towards shorter forms, but I listen and think that the composer didn't have much to say, even if he said that little bit well. I find myself being unsatisfied by these short-form works.
 
What makes a work "noodly" is solo improvisation. Some of it is exciting, some not so much. But we can't blame a whole genre for poor execution thereof. But Johnny Ramone specifically said (in the excellent Ramones documentary) that they couldn't play those big guitar solos so they didn't. He also said that they just wanted to play music people could dance to. That's similar to the difference between a swing band, which specifically plays for dancing, and, say, a Dixieland band, that doesn't, even though both are jazz in the traditional sense. Or between ballet music and symphonic music, and they are quite different, even though the unfamiliar listener might not be able to distinguish the two.
 
What makes a work pretentious is when the artist obviously attributes greater meaning to the expression than the listener gleans from it. By that definition, prog has no corner on the pretentiousness market. For me, though, it's about the music, and I have a hard time understanding the words (the words themselves, not what they mean) so I don't even try. My wife sings along, but as an instrumentalist I never know the words so I hum along. So, if the words are pretentious, I don't know it. But I listen to many groups, and clearly they intend their words to have meaning on a deep philosophical plane. Usually, no matter what the genre, the words are the work of professional musicians who are nevertheless amateur philosophers and writers. This is as true for grand opera as it is for prog rock, etc. I mean, can anyone really take the mythology in Wagner's Der Ring die Nibelungen seriously? (Anna Russell had it right. And Peter Schickele.) That some listeners do find deep meaning in those words is fine, I suppose, and I'm probably being snooty when I roll my eyes (inwardly, of course). But I roll my eyes equally for those who apply deep meaning to Wagner's Ring and Anderson's Olias. Or any song by the Ramones, or Black Sabbath, or the Beatles, or even---yes even---Ian Anderson (whose words I do sing along to).
 
One word I see a lot here that I don't understand is "pompous". It is used variously has a pejorative, as a loving chide, or as a bona fide mark of quality. Is all music that uses orchestral forms "pompous"? Is all music with church organ pompous? To me, pompous describes music suitable for occasions of (perhaps artificially) high ritual and ceremony, and I rather doubt I would play many prog works on such occasions, but that's me.
 
Rick "preferring longer forms if they have a musical story to tell" Denney


Edited by rdenney - December 18 2019 at 13:26
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote ExittheLemming Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 19 2019 at 09:03
Originally posted by rdenney rdenney wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Spacegod87 Spacegod87 wrote:

In the words of my prog hating brother: "I get that they're good in a technical sense, but it sounds so pretentious and noodly."

I mean, I can understand him to a certain point, even I've been listening to a 20+ minute song that I've loved for years and will find myself sometimes thinking, "God, these lyrics are a bit long-winded and bizarre.."

I can definitely overlook the pretentiousness to appreciate the structure and emotions (you heard me) of a prog song, but it's understandable that others might not. Especially if you don't hear that kind of music a lot, it hits you hard in the beginning.

I think sometimes the prog world fetishes the 20 min epics rather much.  I personally prefer 'long pieces' running up to 10-12 min.  Enough to go well beyond the confines of regular rock and roll and not so long that it overstays its welcome.  I may well be in the minority here but other than a few like CTTE/Echoes/Supper's Ready, my all time favourite prog tracks wouldn't be the epics but rather tracks like Starless, Cinema Show, South Side of Sky, Script for a Jester's Tear and, yeah, Natural Science since there's a poll going on with that track as one of the options. Wink
 
Hmmm. In the classical world, a 20-minute work would be average. I think of the usual 3-minute pop song as having one thing to say. I think a song of 10 or 12 minutes ought to say more than one thing, or say one thing in interestingly various ways. An epic of 20+ minutes (which would not be epic at all in the classical world) should say several things, each with their own interesting variations.
 
The trend in modern classical music has been towards shorter forms, but I listen and think that the composer didn't have much to say, even if he said that little bit well. I find myself being unsatisfied by these short-form works.
 
What makes a work "noodly" is solo improvisation. Some of it is exciting, some not so much. But we can't blame a whole genre for poor execution thereof. But Johnny Ramone specifically said (in the excellent Ramones documentary) that they couldn't play those big guitar solos so they didn't. He also said that they just wanted to play music people could dance to. That's similar to the difference between a swing band, which specifically plays for dancing, and, say, a Dixieland band, that doesn't, even though both are jazz in the traditional sense. Or between ballet music and symphonic music, and they are quite different, even though the unfamiliar listener might not be able to distinguish the two.
 
What makes a work pretentious is when the artist obviously attributes greater meaning to the expression than the listener gleans from it. By that definition, prog has no corner on the pretentiousness market. For me, though, it's about the music, and I have a hard time understanding the words (the words themselves, not what they mean) so I don't even try. My wife sings along, but as an instrumentalist I never know the words so I hum along. So, if the words are pretentious, I don't know it. But I listen to many groups, and clearly they intend their words to have meaning on a deep philosophical plane. Usually, no matter what the genre, the words are the work of professional musicians who are nevertheless amateur philosophers and writers. This is as true for grand opera as it is for prog rock, etc. I mean, can anyone really take the mythology in Wagner's Der Ring die Nibelungen seriously? (Anna Russell had it right. And Peter Schickele.) That some listeners do find deep meaning in those words is fine, I suppose, and I'm probably being snooty when I roll my eyes (inwardly, of course). But I roll my eyes equally for those who apply deep meaning to Wagner's Ring and Anderson's Olias. Or any song by the Ramones, or Black Sabbath, or the Beatles, or even---yes even---Ian Anderson (whose words I do sing along to).
 
One word I see a lot here that I don't understand is "pompous". It is used variously has a pejorative, as a loving chide, or as a bona fide mark of quality. Is all music that uses orchestral forms "pompous"? Is all music with church organ pompous? To me, pompous describes music suitable for occasions of (perhaps artificially) high ritual and ceremony, and I rather doubt I would play many prog works on such occasions, but that's me.
 
Rick "preferring longer forms if they have a musical story to tell" Denney


Most of Bach's etudes or fugues are short but clearly don't lack substance, innovation or enduring influence. We're not weighing bananas here so I'm not sure what you mean by the usual 3-minute pop song as having one thing to say  i.e do you mean that Beatles, Stones, Kinks, Who, Beach Boys, Abba are limited to being 'one dimensional' and therefore not worthy of serious musical analysis? With regards lyrics, Bob Dylan, Elvis Costello, Paddy McAloon, Robert Forster, Howard Devoto, Randy Newman, Harry Nilsson, Jimmy Webb, Lou Reed and Burt Bacharach (the list goes on) are ample evidence that Prog was maybe hindered by a lot a long winded instrumentalists with nothing much to say


Edited by ExittheLemming - December 19 2019 at 23:32
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rogerthat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 19 2019 at 23:48
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:

Originally posted by rdenney rdenney wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Spacegod87 Spacegod87 wrote:

In the words of my prog hating brother: "I get that they're good in a technical sense, but it sounds so pretentious and noodly."

I mean, I can understand him to a certain point, even I've been listening to a 20+ minute song that I've loved for years and will find myself sometimes thinking, "God, these lyrics are a bit long-winded and bizarre.."

I can definitely overlook the pretentiousness to appreciate the structure and emotions (you heard me) of a prog song, but it's understandable that others might not. Especially if you don't hear that kind of music a lot, it hits you hard in the beginning.


I think sometimes the prog world fetishes the 20 min epics rather much.  I personally prefer 'long pieces' running up to 10-12 min.  Enough to go well beyond the confines of regular rock and roll and not so long that it overstays its welcome.  I may well be in the minority here but other than a few like CTTE/Echoes/Supper's Ready, my all time favourite prog tracks wouldn't be the epics but rather tracks like Starless, Cinema Show, South Side of Sky, Script for a Jester's Tear and, yeah, Natural Science since there's a poll going on with that track as one of the options. Wink

 
Hmmm. In the classical world, a 20-minute work would be average. I think of the usual 3-minute pop song as having one thing to say. I think a song of 10 or 12 minutes ought to say more than one thing, or say one thing in interestingly various ways. An epic of 20+ minutes (which would not be epic at all in the classical world) should say several things, each with their own interesting variations.
 
The trend in modern classical music has been towards shorter forms, but I listen and think that the composer didn't have much to say, even if he said that little bit well. I find myself being unsatisfied by these short-form works.
 
What makes a work "noodly" is solo improvisation. Some of it is exciting, some not so much. But we can't blame a whole genre for poor execution thereof. But Johnny Ramone specifically said (in the excellent Ramones documentary) that they couldn't play those big guitar solos so they didn't. He also said that they just wanted to play music people could dance to. That's similar to the difference between a swing band, which specifically plays for dancing, and, say, a Dixieland band, that doesn't, even though both are jazz in the traditional sense. Or between ballet music and symphonic music, and they are quite different, even though the unfamiliar listener might not be able to distinguish the two.
 
What makes a work pretentious is when the artist obviously attributes greater meaning to the expression than the listener gleans from it. By that definition, prog has no corner on the pretentiousness market. For me, though, it's about the music, and I have a hard time understanding the words (the words themselves, not what they mean) so I don't even try. My wife sings along, but as an instrumentalist I never know the words so I hum along. So, if the words are pretentious, I don't know it. But I listen to many groups, and clearly they intend their words to have meaning on a deep philosophical plane. Usually, no matter what the genre, the words are the work of professional musicians who are nevertheless amateur philosophers and writers. This is as true for grand opera as it is for prog rock, etc. I mean, can anyone really take the mythology in Wagner's Der Ring die Nibelungen seriously? (Anna Russell had it right. And Peter Schickele.) That some listeners do find deep meaning in those words is fine, I suppose, and I'm probably being snooty when I roll my eyes (inwardly, of course). But I roll my eyes equally for those who apply deep meaning to Wagner's Ring and Anderson's Olias. Or any song by the Ramones, or Black Sabbath, or the Beatles, or even---yes even---Ian Anderson (whose words I do sing along to).
 
One word I see a lot here that I don't understand is "pompous". It is used variously has a pejorative, as a loving chide, or as a bona fide mark of quality. Is all music that uses orchestral forms "pompous"? Is all music with church organ pompous? To me, pompous describes music suitable for occasions of (perhaps artificially) high ritual and ceremony, and I rather doubt I would play many prog works on such occasions, but that's me.
 
Rick "preferring longer forms if they have a musical story to tell" Denney



Most of Bach's etudes or fugues are short but clearly don't lack substance, innovation or enduring influence. We're not weighing bananas here so I'm not sure what you mean by the usual 3-minute pop song as having one thing to say  i.e do you mean that Beatles, Stones, Kinks, Who, Beach Boys, Abba are limited to being 'one dimensional' and therefore not worthy of serious musical analysis? With regards lyrics, Bob Dylan, Elvis Costello, Paddy McAloon, Robert Forster, Howard Devoto, Randy Newman, Harry Nilsson, Jimmy Webb, Lou Reed and Burt Bacharach (the list goes on) are ample evidence that Prog was maybe hindered by a lot a long winded instrumentalists with nothing much to say



Thanks. Didn't have time to write a response to that post. Yeah, substance is hardly just a function of length. Gentle Giant didn't write a single epic and I don't know anyone who regards them as lacking substance compared to Flower Kings or Transatlantic.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Atavachron Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 20 2019 at 01:16
Originally posted by Davesax1965 Davesax1965 wrote:

The problem with the internet is that people form an opinion and then go off and find evidence which supports that opinion, rather than get a proper overall view. No matter how deluded your opinion, you can also find other people who share your view, so,there being strength in numbers, that makes you correct and with the ability to shout down anyone who disagrees with you. 

When you look at music: music is something which inspires and moves most people. The problem is that music can't really be easily measured - football inspires people and you can measure that (to an extent) with scores and statistics, but music is more difficult. Especially if you're a non musician, and let's face it, most people aren't musicians. 

As a musician, I used to think that music COULD be measured - based on technical expertise, creativity - arrogant of me as a musician, it can't. Music evokes feelings and emotions: if I get off on a Ginger Baker drum solo and someone gets off on Boney M, it doesn't make Ginger Baker better than Boney M. It just appeals to me more. I can argue that I've heard more accomplished and complicated music than Boney M, but it's not, at the end of the day, a technical exercise. It's just that some people prefer prog rock and some people prefer country and western.

Great post.   It's more about the listener and where they are along their journey than the music itself.   A recording never changes -- People always do.


"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote rdenney Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 20 2019 at 08:23
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:

Originally posted by rdenney rdenney wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Spacegod87 Spacegod87 wrote:

In the words of my prog hating brother: "I get that they're good in a technical sense, but it sounds so pretentious and noodly."

I mean, I can understand him to a certain point, even I've been listening to a 20+ minute song that I've loved for years and will find myself sometimes thinking, "God, these lyrics are a bit long-winded and bizarre.."

I can definitely overlook the pretentiousness to appreciate the structure and emotions (you heard me) of a prog song, but it's understandable that others might not. Especially if you don't hear that kind of music a lot, it hits you hard in the beginning.


I think sometimes the prog world fetishes the 20 min epics rather much.  I personally prefer 'long pieces' running up to 10-12 min.  Enough to go well beyond the confines of regular rock and roll and not so long that it overstays its welcome.  I may well be in the minority here but other than a few like CTTE/Echoes/Supper's Ready, my all time favourite prog tracks wouldn't be the epics but rather tracks like Starless, Cinema Show, South Side of Sky, Script for a Jester's Tear and, yeah, Natural Science since there's a poll going on with that track as one of the options. Wink

 
Hmmm. In the classical world, a 20-minute work would be average. I think of the usual 3-minute pop song as having one thing to say. I think a song of 10 or 12 minutes ought to say more than one thing, or say one thing in interestingly various ways. An epic of 20+ minutes (which would not be epic at all in the classical world) should say several things, each with their own interesting variations.
 
The trend in modern classical music has been towards shorter forms, but I listen and think that the composer didn't have much to say, even if he said that little bit well. I find myself being unsatisfied by these short-form works.
 
What makes a work "noodly" is solo improvisation. Some of it is exciting, some not so much. But we can't blame a whole genre for poor execution thereof. But Johnny Ramone specifically said (in the excellent Ramones documentary) that they couldn't play those big guitar solos so they didn't. He also said that they just wanted to play music people could dance to. That's similar to the difference between a swing band, which specifically plays for dancing, and, say, a Dixieland band, that doesn't, even though both are jazz in the traditional sense. Or between ballet music and symphonic music, and they are quite different, even though the unfamiliar listener might not be able to distinguish the two.
 
What makes a work pretentious is when the artist obviously attributes greater meaning to the expression than the listener gleans from it. By that definition, prog has no corner on the pretentiousness market. For me, though, it's about the music, and I have a hard time understanding the words (the words themselves, not what they mean) so I don't even try. My wife sings along, but as an instrumentalist I never know the words so I hum along. So, if the words are pretentious, I don't know it. But I listen to many groups, and clearly they intend their words to have meaning on a deep philosophical plane. Usually, no matter what the genre, the words are the work of professional musicians who are nevertheless amateur philosophers and writers. This is as true for grand opera as it is for prog rock, etc. I mean, can anyone really take the mythology in Wagner's Der Ring die Nibelungen seriously? (Anna Russell had it right. And Peter Schickele.) That some listeners do find deep meaning in those words is fine, I suppose, and I'm probably being snooty when I roll my eyes (inwardly, of course). But I roll my eyes equally for those who apply deep meaning to Wagner's Ring and Anderson's Olias. Or any song by the Ramones, or Black Sabbath, or the Beatles, or even---yes even---Ian Anderson (whose words I do sing along to).
 
One word I see a lot here that I don't understand is "pompous". It is used variously has a pejorative, as a loving chide, or as a bona fide mark of quality. Is all music that uses orchestral forms "pompous"? Is all music with church organ pompous? To me, pompous describes music suitable for occasions of (perhaps artificially) high ritual and ceremony, and I rather doubt I would play many prog works on such occasions, but that's me.
 
Rick "preferring longer forms if they have a musical story to tell" Denney



Most of Bach's etudes or fugues are short but clearly don't lack substance, innovation or enduring influence. We're not weighing bananas here so I'm not sure what you mean by the usual 3-minute pop song as having one thing to say  i.e do you mean that Beatles, Stones, Kinks, Who, Beach Boys, Abba are limited to being 'one dimensional' and therefore not worthy of serious musical analysis? With regards lyrics, Bob Dylan, Elvis Costello, Paddy McAloon, Robert Forster, Howard Devoto, Randy Newman, Harry Nilsson, Jimmy Webb, Lou Reed and Burt Bacharach (the list goes on) are ample evidence that Prog was maybe hindered by a lot a long winded instrumentalists with nothing much to say



I was not making a qualitative assessment, though I can see how the implication might have come across. Saying one thing well is a high art, without question.

When I play, say, the two bourrees from Bach’s cello suites, it takes about 3:15, and I think it has about two things to say, though it says them sublimely, or would if somebody better than me was playing them. But most etudes are about one thing, on purpose. Again, not a bad thing, but also not intended primarily for public performance, however beautiful.

Lots of recent classical music has a narrow focus, too. That doesn’t mean I don’t admire it. But I do miss the expansive ramble of much longer works, in the same way that epic poetry can tell an involved story in a way a single stanza cannot. It’s not about beauty, or even profundity. It’s about the desire to get lost in the story.

I made enough money to buy my instruments playing 3-minute beer-tent polkas, marches, and waltzes. One might get two complementary ideas out of one of those. A typical march has two strains, a trio, a dogfight, and and ending. None stand alone, but sometimes the trio can be separated from the rest. (example: Pomp and Circumstance). Usually not—nobody listens to the music during graduation ceremonies very long. Does that mean I dislike Elgar? Or even Pomp and Circumstance? Of course not. But I’d rather listen to The Enigma Variations, all 32 minutes of it.

Rick “having preferences is not being judgmental” Denney
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