Your 'Big Six' of Prog |
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Steve Wyzard
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1. Yes
2. Genesis 3. Saga 4. Alan Parsons Project 5. Moody Blues 6. Rush
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Boojieboy
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Genesis Gentle Giant Camel Curved Air Moody Blues Renaissance |
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Jaketejas
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 27 2018 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 1988 |
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I’ve attempted this several times and got it trimmed to less than 20. The problem is that I appreciate different types of Prog. These are very rough wobbly categories. Some bands morphed into various forms.
Great songwriting: Yes, Rush, Alan Parsons Project, Kansas, Saga Highly technical venturing into jazz: UK and Allan Holdsworth Pushing boundaries: ELP, King Crimson, and anything Ron Jarzombek Weaving in the old with the new: Jethro Tull and Caravan Takes time to breathe: Pink Floyd and Camel Sophisticated textures: Genesis, Peter Gabriel, Kate Bush, Tori Amos, and Dead Can Dance Today’s Big Six: Yes Rush Alan Parsons Project Allan Holdsworth Camel ELP |
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14691 |
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Very nice categories! I don't necessarily agree with all listed bands, and I can imagine qualities to add (mysterious, hypnotic, sharp energy), but it's a great approach, and the "takes time to breathe" category is just wonderful capturing a quality that is all too often neglected, and that I treasure a lot also in post rock and electronic.
Of course the approach would work better in a big 30 than in a big 6 thread... Edited by Lewian - January 26 2024 at 03:47 |
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Jaketejas
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 27 2018 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 1988 |
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^ Thank you! 😊 I’m sure my list will change tomorrow as I gravitate here and there and my music tastes morph. I’ve really been on a Camel kick lately. I mean I wasn’t kicked in the head by a camel, but rather I’ve been enjoying their highly organic style. It is a little jazzy at times … or sometimes spacey. But, they are very tasteful in what they’ve done. I like their slow build approach, almost like the music is telling a story. I think they are underrated and should’ve made it to the Big 6. The Snow Goose (based on an interesting book) and Moonmadness are top notch. As I strive to improve my own guitar phrasing, I’m looking more at artists like Andrew Latimer. He doesn’t rush things, and he puts a great deal of complexity in even the slow solos that he plays. I think of Pink Floyd with David Gilmour in a similar way, while their earlier work was more experimental (Syd Barrett). Also great, but different. Piper at the Gates of Dawn is something I listen to when I want something more chaotic.
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Dellinger
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For me it would be five. Pink Floyd, Yes, Dream Theater, Rick Wakeman, and Mike Oldfield.
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enigmatic
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Gentle Giant
King Crimson Van der Graaf Generator Pink Floyd Yes Genesis (up to W&W) HM: ELP, Jethro Tull, Rush, Camel, Soft Machine |
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Error Code 864G
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Van der Graaf Generator
King Crimson Anekdoten Pink Floyd Bubu Yes |
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A Human Being, Existing.
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TheGazzardian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 11 2009 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 8667 |
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I'd argue they probably made sense at time of inclusion when '...and the glass handed kites' was their newest album. It was the fact that they were included here that even made me aware they existed / want to check them out, so whether they are prog or not, their inclusion here directly lead to me enjoying them as much as I have :)
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Dapper~Blueberries
Prog Reviewer Joined: November 06 2021 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 352 |
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This is a great list of bands! I love Mew and The Dear Hunter! As for me I would say 1. King Crimson 2. Genesis 3. Marillion 4. Between The Buried and Me 5. Magma 6. Motorpsycho |
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D~B
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Big Sky
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 24 2022 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 526 |
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Here are three separate lists and based on different reasons. First one is obvious and kind of boring as it includes your typical 8-10 bands that typically makes up these type of lists. Therefore, I added a second and third list for a Big 6 tackling the OP thread question from a different angle.
Personal All Time Big 6: 1) Yes 2) Genesis 3) Rush 4) Gentle Giant 5) Emerson Lake and Palmer 6) King Crimson More Modern List: 1) Steven Wilson 2) Big Big Train 3) Spocks Beard 4) Porcupine Tree 5) Pure Reason Revolution 6) Plini Big 6 based on popularity and making Prog a significant genre instead of an asterisk in Rock history: 1) Pink Floyd 2) Yes 3) Rush 4) Jethro Tull 5) Emerson Lake and Palmer 6) Kansas * Genesis outside of Pink Floyd sold more albums than any of the other bands in the Prog category. The vast majority of those albums sold, however, came during their 80s pop-rock period. The other bands had most of their significant success during their Prog Rock heyday with albums going Gold, Platinum or Multi-platinum within few years or less of their release and packed arenas and stadiums wherever they toured. |
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AJ Junior
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1) Genesis
2) Pink Floyd 3) ELP 4) King Crimson 5) Yes 6) Rush |
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"Together We Stand, Divided We Fall"
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TenYearsAfter
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1) Rush
2) 70-77 Genesis 3) Yes 4) ELP 5) Pink Floyd 6) Camel
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dr wu23
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King Crimson Yes Genesis ELP Pink Floyd Jethro Tull (These have always been influential for me though for the last 25 years or so I could easily put in Porcupine Tree/Wilson to replace Floyd)
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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin |
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 27956 |
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Thanks for the explanation about Genesis although they did become one of the biggest bands in Europe in the late seventies (not sure about the States at that time) when I would argue they will still a prog band. I know many argue they stopped being that after W&W but they still easily fit what we call Crossover nowadays and someone like Jem Godfrey takes his cues more from Duke than other Genesis albums (just check out Frost*- Falling Satellites where there is some serious Duke homaging going on!). I would still be inclined to put Genesis above Kansas at 6) but it's close. Also if we are trying to be anywhere near objective then Dream Theater should be popping up in lists a lot more!
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LAM-SGC
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1. Kate Bush
2. Cardiacs 3. Arena 4. Mike Oldfield 5. Camel 6. Mike Batt 7. Jethro Tull Edited by LAM-SGC - February 04 2024 at 10:12 |
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Big Sky
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Richard, In the late 70s Genesis was gaining a fair bit of popularity in the Northeast of the U.S. Beginning with And Then There were Three, Genesis, because of the song "Follow You Follow Me" began to expand their base in the US. Probably with Duke and certainly by Abacab, they were a National act in the US. I always saw ATTWT and Duke as Prog albums. Abacab straddles the fence or just falls on the side of the fence of not being Prog. I still like Abacab though. I wished they would have done the Dodo / Lurker suite by including Naminanu and Submarine. That would have made for a nice 16 minute suite. Certainly would have been a Prog album then and allowed them to jettison the awful Who Dunnit? |
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