Is Italian prog epigonic? |
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Frenetic Zetetic
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 09 2017 Location: Now Status: Offline Points: 9233 |
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It's all starting to blend for me, and I just know what I enjoy hearing. I lean naturally toward jazz fusion and symphonic most days. RIO. I find myself enjoying more dissonant, abstract pieces as I get older.
Edited by Frenetic Zetetic - June 01 2022 at 01:28 |
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"I am so prog, I listen to concept albums on shuffle." -KMac2021 |
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Awesoreno
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 07 2019 Location: Culver City, CA Status: Offline Points: 3036 |
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Well I guess on this site there was just a need to come up with some of the sub-genres for organizational harmony or whatever. I'd say a third of the ones on here are usually recognized outside here as sub-genres. Another third are sort of accepted elsewhere, but are often sort of just lumped in under a larger umbrella sub-genre. And then the last third is just the grab-bag ones where we're just like "whelp... guess it goes here." See eclectic, heavy, crossover, etc. And while I think there was certainly a neo movement in the 80s, I don't think any site or publication will truly agree on how it continued to develop, if at all, and what "counts." I always just take this site's listings with a grain of salt. Or six.
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Offline Points: 11621 |
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-In another hundred years, do we really care if PFM debuted two years later than ELP, when we know that the latter bands debut is so much more endearing (a slight joke, with a lot of truth to it:)?
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14728 |
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@Saperlipopette: But as far as I see it, neither what Merlin nor what jamesbaldwin wrote has any implications on what you or anyone "should" like. What you say makes sense but misses the point. You can't mean that one should stop discussing historical importance just because historical importance is separate from taste. Generally (that goes more to others than to you) I get annoyed by the flood of "this shouldn't be discussed" postings that many threads that in one sense or another discuss "quality" (or also genre definitions) attract. Anyone who doesn't like the topic can stay away of course but that seems very difficult...
Edited by Lewian - June 01 2022 at 03:38 |
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Offline Points: 11621 |
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siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic Joined: October 05 2013 Location: SFcaUsA Status: Online Points: 15243 |
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Is there a list of the artists available? I can't find anything doing a quick search. I suppose i'd have to order the book, huh? |
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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I dont find a complete list on the web. I've tried to write some list for you:
There are some artists to whom Merlin has dedicated at least 4 albums. He identified them on the basis of the fact that they have pursued a continuous creative research, they have been able to provide many stimuli for the evolution of musical language, greatly influencing the music of their contemporaries. They are: 1) C. Debussy 2) A. Schoenberg 3) A, Webern 4) B. Bartok 5) I. Stravinskij 6) D. Ellington 7) F. Sinatra 8) T. Monk 9) J. Cage 10) M. Davis 11) K. Stockhausen 12) C. Mingus 13) S. Rollins 14) Sun Ra 15) J. Coltrane 16) O. Coleman 17) B. Evans 18) B. Dylan 19) The Beatles 20) The Rolling Stones 21) W. Shorter (+ W. Report) 22) F. Zappa 23) J. Hendrix 24) Pink Floyd 25) N. Young 26) R. Fripp (+ King Crimson) 27) J. McLaughlin (+ M. Orchestra) 28) J. Zawinul (+ W. Report) 29) B. Eno 30) R. Cooder 31) P. Gabriel (+ Genesis) 32) K. Jarrett 33) P. Metheny 34) J. Zorn. |
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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I start with the leaders of PA Top 100 of all time. YES: 1) The Yes Album 2) Close to the Edge 3) 90125 PINK FLOYD: 1) The Piper at the Gates of Dawn 2) Ummagumma 3) Meddle 4) The Dark Side 5) The Wall + SYD BARRETT: The Madcap Laughs GENESIS: 1) Selling England + PETER GABRIEL: 1) III 2) So 3) Passion KING CRIMSON: 1) In the Court of.... 2) Larks Tongues in Aspic 3) Discipline 4) Thrak FRIPP + ENO: No Pussyfooting FRIPP: A Blessing.. Vol II JETHRO TULL: 1) Aqualung 2) Heavy Horses VAN DER GRAAF GENERATOR: 1) The Least We Can Do PETER HAMMILL: / PFM: / BANCO DEL MUTUO SOCCORSO: / MUSEO ROSENBACH:/ ORME:/ mAXOOPHONE:/ CAMEL: / Rush: 1) 2112 FRANK ZAPPA: 1) Lumpy Gravy 2) Hot Rats 3) Lather 4) Joe's Garage 5) Shut Up 6) London Orchestra 7) Jazz from Hell 8) Civilization Phaze III MCLAUGHLIN: Extrapolation My Goals Beyond Shakti MAHAVSHNU ORCHESTRA The Inner Mountain Flame MIKE OLDFIELD: 1) Tubular Bells MILES DAVIS: 1) Round About Midnight 2) Ascensour 3) Kind of Blue 4) My Funny... 5) Miles Smiles 6) Bitches Brew 7) On the Corner 8) We Want Miles + GIL EVANS: Skethes of SPain GONG: 1) Camembert Electrique GENTLE GIANT: 1) Octopus CARAVAN: 1) In The Land of Grey and Pink ROBERT WYATT: Rock Bottom + SOFT MACHINE: 1) Vol I and II (box) 2) Vol. III KEVIN AYERS: 1) Whatevershebringswesing MATCHING MOLE: Matching Mole ALLAN HOLDSWORTH: Road Games NATIONAL HEALTH: Of Queues EL&P: 1) Tarkus 2) Pictures AREA: 1) Arbeit Macht Frei SANTANA: 1) Abraxas 2) Caravanserrai SUPERTRAMP: 1) Breakfast in America TOOL Aenima OPETH: Still Life BACAMARTE:/ HARMONIUM:/ HACKETT:/ HAMMILL:/ MAGMA:/ RENAISSANCE:/ BUBU:/ AL DI MEOLA:/ HATFIELD:/ ANGLAGARD: / WOBBLER:/ ALL TRAPS ON EARTH:/ MARILLION: / IQ:/ STEVEN WILSON: / PORCUPINE TREE:/ CARDIACS:/ DREAM THEATER: / RIVERSIDE: / ESKATON: / GORGOUTS: / DEATH:/ RETURN TO FOREVER:/ BILLY COBHAM:/ EDGE OF SANITY:/ RIVERSIDE:/ PAIN OF SALVATION:/ QUEENSRYCHE:/ |
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 17511 |
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Hi, It's a really tough area, but if you do not take a good look at the history behind a lot of music, too much of it becomes just another song out there ... whose totality is meaningless. The sad thing, is that too much, for example, of the 60's ends up being totally meaningless to many listeners today. A great example is Iron Butterfly, and while I was not getting stoned like so many at the time, the long piece was very valuable as a far out example of what a TRIP really was. Nowadays, no one trips or has any idea what it was or meant, since the "experience" of music, these days is just about ALL OF IT about the numbers and the fans that shout too loud about it. And there were a lot of things ... just like saying that a lot of the Jefferson Airplane was meaningless, and it is simply not true. And of course, the one that folks still like/don'tlike would be The Doors, that are still considered an acquired taste. The work of these, and many other bands, was incredible, and very important. And their place within the history of the times, is even more so ... so I guess that Country Joe MacDonald is just another a****le complaining about the war, or John Sebastian is just another stoned idiot out there. Heck, like saying that Woody Guthrie was an a****le, too! (Ought to tell you who supports commercialism, and who doesn't care!!!) All it shows is the lack of appreciation for the time and place and WHAT MADE THE MUSIC in the first place, something that the commercial atmosphere has made a point of hiding to ensure that they can keep the sales going ... it will be a cold day in heck that we will see another artistic movement like we did starting in the 60's which morphed into the 70's ... in the next 50/75 years ... because the fans these days, don't believe in it, and worse ... don't bother reading about it, and think that being a trumpista is as important as their Starbux ... and who cares what everything else meant? Considering the artistic, literary and specially the film stories in ALL of Europe, would tell you very quickly that it is very likely that the majority of Italian music that we love was NEVER EPIGONIC. No one will ever say that Antonioni, Fellini, Pasolini, De Sica ... were EPIGONIC ... and they were a major influence in the arts of the country and the attitudes towards a lot of new music ... but we refuse to look at the elements around it, as if all rock musicians in Europe were too stupid to go to a movie, a play, or read a book, which is the case in many areas in America and even England, where the advertising it boss and no one realizes they are being "controlled" to buy the product, and not bother listening to anything else. I say ... LOCK THIS THREAD. It is INSULTING to all the arts in each and every country, and certainly doesn't say much for one Italian band doing theater stuff and then finding themselves doing a few gigs with Genesis, and they were ripped off and no one talks about other French, German and Spanish bands that did the same thing, albeit a bit different. And the discussion, and some "authoritarianism" given the topic is bizarre. As folks that love progressive music, we found out about most of the music without the Internet and the fans ... and what do folks do? The opposite, because they might not have enough to say about the subject! James, I appreciate your ability to intellectualize a lot of this stuff, but it is falling into the wrong ears and hands, that (sometimes) can not show an artistic appreciation beyond saying that everything is a copy of some London bullsh*t!
Edited by moshkito - June 01 2022 at 08:39 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Offline Points: 11621 |
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-I also know what a TRIP really is. It's not something invented by Iron Butterfly (not implying that you think it is) but basically trance-music, and has existed for thousands of years all over the planet. Possibly the first music - and the transcendental potential of music is still its main attraction. Anyway, I've long decided I won't approach art the same way most of my professors over the years presented it to me. Let me assure you that its got nothing to do with dismissing late 1960's counterculture/rock. Its more about asking questions, being honest and truthful to myself. Ideally allowing and accepting any expression from anyplace anywhere anytime and being open minded (which does not equal embracing everything). Never having to check the who, where or when before I decide whether it's for me or not. Many so-called experts do, and I really don't like it.
Edited by Saperlipopette! - June 01 2022 at 15:20 |
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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The Merlin's prog selection.
I write the records recorded in the years 1968/1976 that we can consider prog. 1968: - Corea: Now He sings... - Soft Machine voll I & II - Tim Buckley: Happy Sad 1969: - McLaughlin: Extrapolation - Amoon Duul: Phallus Dei - Chicago - Beefheart: Trout - Colosseum - PF: Ummagumma - King Crimson - Zappa: Hot Rats - Davis: Bitches - VdGG: The Least 1970: - Soft Machine III - Traffica: John - Third Ear Band - Santana: Abraxas - Tim Buckley: Starsailor - The Yes Album - Can: Tago Mago - Caravan: In the Land - JT: Aqualung 1971: Popol Vuh: In Den - EL&P: Tarkus - PF: Meddle - Mclaughlin: My Goals - Ayers: Whatever.. -EL&P: Pictures - Gong: Camembert -MO: The Inner - Rundgren: Something - Wm Report: I Sing Neu - Matching Mole 1972: - Popol Vuh: Hosianna - Corea: Return - Santana: Caravan - Heep: Demons - Roxy Music - Schulze: Irrlicht - Yes Close... - Perigeo: Azimut Davis: On The Corner PF The Dark Side GG: Octopus - Can Futyre Days - Eno and Fripp - Tubular Bells Sun Ra: Space - Hawkwind: Space 1973: - Area - KC: Larks - Faust IV - Genensis: Selling - Eno: Here Come - Hancock: Head - Tangerine Drea; Phaedra 1974: - Henry Cow: Unrest - Residents: Not - Wyatt - Jarreett: Treasure and Belonging - Mingus: Changes 1975: - Parliament: Mothership - Jarrett: The Koln Davis: Agharta - Napoli Centrale - Eno: Another - McLaugklhin: Shakti - Queen: A Night - Metheny: Bright 1976: Gyorgy Ligeti: Drei Stucke... - Rush: 2112 - KraftwerK Trans - Weather Report: Heavy |
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic Joined: October 05 2013 Location: SFcaUsA Status: Online Points: 15243 |
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^ Thanks! That's interesting but it's obvious he hasn't heard every album! There were others much more creative and went unknown but not a bad selection for sure.
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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Together with Area, Demetrio Stratos soloist and Napoli Centrale,
Perigeo were the only truly original and innovative musical expression in Italy in the 1970s - with the exception of Nino Rota, Ennio Morricone, Piero Umiliani and a few artists in the academic sphere. It is sad and perhaps difficult to accept, but the facts tell this. Almost everything else is derivative, epigonic, strongly influenced by Anglo-American models. EDIT: Enrico Merlin wrote this.
Edited by jamesbaldwin - May 27 2023 at 03:54 |
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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The Dark Elf
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JETHRO TULL: 1) Aqualung 2) Heavy Horses Interesting that he didn't include what most folks consider Tull's two most progressive albums, Thick as a Brick and A Passion Play, and from the standpoint of prog-folk chose Heavy Horses over Songs from the Wood, which I would consider the better of the two albums and more groundbreaking in that specific genre. To each his own, I suppose.
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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology... |
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edefakiel
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I disagree with this advice. I think that prog precisely exists because some people overanalyzed and overthought music to the extreme.
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 17511 |
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Hi, The sad side of this comment is that almost ALL of the academic studies are "analysis" to a degree that is, for your mind and mine, ridiculous, but it "shows" the ability and intelect of the person doing it. The harsher side of it, is that PA, like so many boards out there, are FAN SITES, and FAN DRIVEN, and it has become quite clear that the rule has sort of come about/around that this "over analyses" is out of style and not necessary ... wait until these kids go to college and try to get to Graduate School, and then beyond! Their "idea" will dissolve itself bit by bit and the "preferences" will have a tendency to drop off in favor of the analyses. That is not to say that a lot of fans, can not handle the analyses. I think some can, but for the analyses to make sense, one would need to take up a collection, and knowledge of a lot of other comments that helped determine this article, and here is an area that fans don't like ... (10CC soap box!) ... how dare you think that and the music is not about that! It's about the grovel! Reading, recently, "Heretical Empiricism" and then re-reading this whole thread is scary ... we simply do not see the academic side of things and how they look at it all, even though Pasolini's look as more from a "linguistic" style than it is anything that academics can come up with. This is something that is difficult for modern listeners ... that little music was written, just like literature, and for hundreds of years, a lot of it survived by word of mouth, and his contention is that the place, the time, and the culture, determined the differences. We see that here, with so many bands from everywhere, and in their own way, but we can not look at them in this "linguistic" style, because our only concern, is ... right or wrong ... if it is "progressive" and worthy of mention! In the 70's at our house, dad was doing a lot of critical works on various literature, and his style is also highly academic and not defined by anything except what they had formulated. As an example, Fellini, Antonioni, Lean and others were "masters" and when I mentioned Roeg, Altman and others, I was given the sniff and the ignore and their conversation about the ridiculousness of the kiss was continued (you can see this later in "Cinema Paradiso"), and this is the side of "history" that fans, today, can not relate to or understand, I don't think, and an "analyses" is only going to make it worse. I think there is a place for the academic study, but it would be necessary for RYM and PA and other "progressive" websites to improve their stratosferic idea that a badly defined set of music is this or that ... it needs to be defined by the content, not the instruments, and the mandatory solo, or the stupid blue guitar, or the growl, or the loudness, which is the main reason why I say ... it has to be UNPLUGGED so that we can see ... that's not music, that's crap! Guess what is more epigonic than that article?
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Online Points: 15121 |
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The classic Italian Prog is just great.
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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The main criterion for its selection is innovation. Aqualung was definitely a watershed for JT's music. Thick as a brick more than anything else has the novelty of being a single suite, but musically it does not add much to Aqualung, in my opinion. On the other hand, on Heavy Horses I confess that I did not understand why Merlin selected it. It does not seem innovative to me. Incidentally, I also prefer Songs from the Wood, but even that album has very little that is innovative, in fact it is almost a return to folk. |
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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I like it very much. I consider a great merit that Progarchives has several albums by PFM and Banco in the top 30 (RYM, on the other hand, will never have Italian artists even in the top 100, by force of circumstance, no one in Italy follows it and the voters are not music connoisseurs like the PA forumists). Anyway, my favourite bands are Area and Stormy Six. Now I'm listening better to Perigeo and Napoli centrale. I recommend these four bands. |
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35804 |
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Italian Prog certainly makes this top RYM chart CLICK Said it before, but the value for me is the versatility in how you can customise the charts which make discovering new albums quite easy and I'm far more interested in discovering new-to-me albums through charts than finding things I already know well.
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