Prog in the 1990's: The Year 1991 |
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Nogbad_The_Bad
Forum & Site Admin Group RIO/Avant/Zeuhl & Eclectic Team Joined: March 16 2007 Location: Boston Status: Offline Points: 20880 |
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Talk Talk > Ozrics > Mr Bungle > Miriodor
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Ian
Host of the Post-Avant Jazzcore Happy Hour on Progrock.com https://podcasts.progrock.com/post-avant-jazzcore-happy-hour/ |
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siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic Joined: October 05 2013 Location: SFcaUsA Status: Offline Points: 15254 |
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Lots of good selections here however MR BUNGLE was and still is one of the most creative and mind-blowing musical forces in all of music history so ride the Carosoul and Squeeze Your Macaroni, it's Bungle time.
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https://rateyourmusic.com/~siLLy_puPPy |
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Progmind
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 29 2010 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 3453 |
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Many great albums!!
Voted Talk Talk, but i really loved these albums Sieges Even: "A sense of Change" shows the evolution of this great band, great vocals by Jogi Kaiser, their debut and sophomore albums are tech thrash a la Watchtower, this album its different, for me a cornerstone of progmetal genre. Fates Warning: "Paralllels" Another great album if you like prog metal. Mr Bungle: Love Mike Patton Voivod: excellent album, different and far away of their previous releases. Slint: A must if you like Post Rock Camel: Great comeback album Atheist, Death, Nocturnus, Pestilence and Focus are great and technical bands Love Pendragon and Echolyn. What a great year!!!
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dougmcauliffe
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Voting for slint, that album just melts me. When it came out it was incredibly groundbreaking and they wrote and recorded this stuff as teenagers.
Edited by dougmcauliffe - August 20 2020 at 11:40 |
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dougmcauliffe
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Also, I’ll add Death is second for me. I love everything Camel, but the live version of Dust and Dreams off Never Let Go shatters the studio version for me.
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Awesoreno
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Dream Theater's Images & Words was released 1992.
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verslibre
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 01 2004 Location: CA Status: Offline Points: 17223 |
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First vote for Djam Karet!
Burning the Hard City is a hugely important album to me. It was my introduction to them, and I played the effin' hell out of that disc in my college daze. Practically on a daily basis. Even the roomies were impressed by it, and they didn't know wtf "prog" was! There are many albums in this poll I love: Strangeitude, Streets, Yume No Oka, Parallels...! The World isn't one of Pendragon's better albums. It's okay. Nothing special. I don't regard Canyon Dreams as a 1991 album. Miramar packaged it as a "video album" (remember VHS?) in 1987, with all the music that showed up on the CD. And if you listen to it, its sound is very much of the '80s. A friend and me used to visit this hole-in-the-wall indie shop, and he happened to have it! Being rabid TD fans, we couldn't wait to pop that in the player and hear the "new" album that wasn't released on the usual format. And I really think Mastermind's Brainstorm should be a part of this poll. Weird how they're practically forgotten now...
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Jaketejas
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 27 2018 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 1991 |
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Thus began the Dark Ages of prog for me ... the post 1980s. But, Tori Amos was about to come out with Little Earthquakes, so it wasn't all bad!
I must've been spinning Soundgarden's Bad Motorfinger in 1991. Rusty Cage and Outshined and Slaves & Bulldozers ... Good, wholesome, depressing songs all. Didn't Roll the Bones by Rush come out at this time? (Come on you Rush fanatics!) I didn't really like that album as a whole, although Dreamline is a great song that made up for all the bunk. Imagine spinning one song off of an entire Rush album for two years from a CD that probably costed $18. That Neurotica song was neurosis-inducing, as was the cheesy rapping. (Counterparts would soon be redeeming.) Speaking of cheese, Tommy the Cat is quite funky on Sailing the Seas of Cheese, although Tales from the Punchbowl is to me the whackiest album from Primus. |
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questionsneverknown
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Went with Legendary Pink Dots--since Maria Dimension was one of my favourite albums at that time.
Close second would be Slint, which is honestly the more important album in the long run. Man what a re-inventor that one was.
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The damage that we do is just so powerfully strong we call it love
The damage that we do just goes on and on and on but not long enough. --Robyn Hitchcock |
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kenethlevine
Special Collaborator Prog-Folk Team Joined: December 06 2006 Location: New England Status: Offline Points: 8955 |
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I voted Camel but my favourite from this year, and one of my top 10 favourites of all time is ERIS PLUVIA "Rings of Earthly Light". It gets some credit for helping to spark revival in the Italian prog scene though it's really more symphonic folk than RPI. Should definitely be on this list
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Frenetic Zetetic
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Highly suggested to give Death and Atheist another chance. You own arguably the most controversial Death record vocally, so that doesn't help you LOL. Once you "hear" these bands you stop concerning with vocals, which is backwards to what we learn w music. You hear past it and it's basically a third guitar. Extremely rewarding because you can hear the intricacies and nuances in the riffing, which rivals a lot of 70's arrangements, let alone riffs. OP - definitely include Nocturnus Thresholds in 1992!!!
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"I am so prog, I listen to concept albums on shuffle." -KMac2021 |
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Hercules
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 14 2007 Location: Near York UK Status: Offline Points: 7024 |
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Camel, with Pendragon a close second.
I used to think Dust and Dreams was not one of their best, but seeing them play some of it live, I gave it another listen and it's an excellent album.
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A TVR is not a car. It's a way of life.
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Sean Trane
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Joined: April 29 2004 Location: Heart of Europe Status: Offline Points: 20251 |
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that wasn't really the point. The poll is missing Shadow Gallery and Magellan's respective debut, which are generally considered highlights of the Magna Carta label. (not that I like either)
Edited by Sean Trane - August 23 2020 at 02:34 |
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Psychedelic Paul
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The only Magna Carta I know are the English Prog-Folk band from the 1970's.
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Dopeydoc
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Easy choice: Talk Talk.
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judahbenkenobi
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Rush's Roll the Bones by a long shot. But since it isn't here, I'll vote for Camel although D&D is not one of my favorites
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FatherChristmas
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Where's We Can't Dance?
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"Music is the wine that fills the cup of silence" - Robert Fripp
"I am an anti-Christ" - Johnny Rotten |
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tempest_77
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We Can't Dance is better than Invisible Touch or their self-titled album, but it's still extremely mediocre at best IMO.
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digdug
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 4707 |
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Ozrics for me
or Rush if it was there
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Prog On!
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essexboyinwales
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 27 2015 Location: Bridgend Status: Offline Points: 4993 |
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Couldn't vote for any of these. Don't know them. Was listening to rock back then, and since really discovering prog in later life, I've filled in a lot of gaps. But 1991 has kind of passed me by...
Albums I do love from that year - Ten (Pearl Jam), Temple Of The Dog (self-titled), Nevermind, Badmotorfinger... |
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