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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 11:21
Originally posted by mrcozdude mrcozdude wrote:

Is it possible to do a selected discography for Davis or is that to half assed?
 
 
M@X made it clear that the entire discography (at least the studio and live historic recordings) had to be entered.
 
But I'd prefer to see Miles in JR/F than in PR, should he be included.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 12:15
I repeat my position/admonition. I think it is just an effort to try and somehow add some "hipness" to PA by including a great & legendary musician. As a previous poster mentioned - next do we add Coltrane ? Brubeck's imprint is big, does he fit in here. How about Duke Ellington?  I believe he wrote a few pieces named with "classical music terms". The Louis Armstrong back catalogue could fuel an all night riff reverie, for the musicologist interested in seeing how many musicians copped his riffs, tempos & solos. And yes, that would include blues, jazz AND rock players, proggers amongst them.
Thelonius Monk, Ornette Coleman, Sun Ra ... anyone off the beaten path in Jazz could be crowbarred in if we consider that they may have been even the smallest of influences on prog. Yet, many of those 70s prog guys got off on Elvis, right. So we get Elvis in, 'cause his melding of various american musiques showed the white people what could come about when you put music from various sources - ethnic, genre, period, style, era etc ...
And if we really want to pay ultimate homages to those who contributed to prog history, well , how about Oohg, who invented the 7/4, 13/5, 3/2 and various other strange & exotic meters that get thrown about on these hallowed (digital) pages.
It seems like we sometimes try to incorporate musical acts that have a legendary status or massive hip appeal so as to point out how cool we are.
Judas Priest ? One album that might qualify as proto-prog metal, maybe. Miles Davis, he's got like what , 100 albums, and because 3-4 were jazz fusion, even if Bitches Brew is the only one that gets mentioned most of the time, we should automatically say, YES THIS IS A PROG GUY.
David Bowie ? Maybe, but even then , what a few albums mid-career that were somewhat experimental ...
Hell, BTO had a few jazz tunes scattered through their oeuvre. But it would be a stretch to even begin to say that they were jazz rock (and that's what those tunes were referred to as)
And even some prog folkers are questionable if only because they seem to here due to having put out only one or two albums that happened to have multi-part compositions, with no parts that strayed too far from the folk genre mode. Can we get Dylan in here ? Seems he wrote a few long song poems in the 60s. Proto-prog-folk, any one ?
Please, let's rein in our enthusiasm for certain acts enough to see that they need not be here to be artistically valid.
And while we're at it, let's tell this Debrewguy to rein in the unraveling rants on refusing revered riff meisters entry....

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 12:21
well, it's a strong position but plenty feel that electric Miles Davis should have been considered and included as prog all along. I know it can only be a retroactive addition now, but if we were paying attention from the start then he'd long have been in the archives.

this is also my argument for expanding in other directions; once certain bands are in we'll wonder why they weren't always so. ;P
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 12:22
deleted double post.


Edited by debrewguy - May 04 2008 at 20:38
"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 12:24
zomg debrewguy sandwich ;P I read your post the first time but you can't use your opinion as a barricade to so many others
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 13:32
the guy is great, correct me if i wrong but its jazz, pure jazz. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 13:47
Originally posted by bluesynight bluesynight wrote:

the guy is great, correct me if i wrong but its jazz, pure jazz. 


Starting definitively with In a Silent Way (though Miles in the Sky should also be included as well), Miles Davis essentially created jazz fusion, not to mention that he recorded some of its best albums. This continued mainly through the mid-70s, although his 80s comeback has progressive qualities all its own (with loops, synths, and electronica). If we could only add his post '68 material, I imagine he'd have been on the site long before now, but the policy is "all or nothing," which is fine and dandy for bands who start out with one or three straightforward albums before progressing, but Miles has somewhere in the area of a (and I'm using the official term) crapload of albums before his fusion output.


Edited by 1800iareyay - April 30 2008 at 13:53
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 14:04
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

I repeat my position/admonition. I think it is just an effort to try and somehow add some "hipness" to PA by including a great & legendary musician.

I have seen Miles Davis on pretty much every progressive rock site but this one. Sites that people mention whenever a group like Sabbath or The Who are added. Sites that some fear would mock such inclusions. And yet there he is, mainly because we are the only one with an all or nothing addition policy, so the rest can just cherry pick.

Quote As a previous poster mentioned - next do we add Coltrane ? Brubeck's imprint is big, does he fit in here. How about Duke Ellington?  I believe he wrote a few pieces named with "classical music terms". The Louis Armstrong back catalogue could fuel an all night riff reverie, for the musicologist interested in seeing how many musicians copped his riffs, tempos & solos. And yes, that would include blues, jazz AND rock players, proggers amongst them.
Thelonius Monk, Ornette Coleman, Sun Ra ... anyone off the beaten path in Jazz could be crowbarred in if we consider that they may have been even the smallest of influences on prog. Yet, many of those 70s prog guys got off on Elvis, right. So we get Elvis in, 'cause his melding of various american musiques showed the white people what could come about when you put music from various sources - ethnic, genre, period, style, era etc ...

Elvis chiefly mixed gospel, blues, and R&B, three genres which already went kind of hand in hand. No one will ever ask him to be added. You're just being difficult.

Quote Miles Davis, he's got like what , 100 albums, and because 3-4 were jazz fusion, even if Bitches Brew is the only one that gets mentioned most of the time, we should automatically say, YES THIS IS A PROG GUY.

After the briefest of searches, I found 15 full-fledged jazz fusion albums (live and studio) not counting his 80s electronica experimentations, which would also likely count. Throw those in, and you've got around 20. Add in what films you can find and you've got a more than qualified entry (the only qualification is one full prog album, which he has 20-fold).


Quote Please, let's rein in our enthusiasm for certain acts enough to see that they need not be here to be artistically valid.

But why deny someone who by all accounts should have been here from the start just because it would take work?

Quote And while we're at it, let's tell this Debrewguy to rein in the unraveling rants on refusing revered riff meisters entry....

It would be nice if you wouldn't use bands that have already been voted down and have nothing to do with Miles Davis to support your argument, yes.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 14:05
Albums like Agharta, Get Up With It, Big Fun and Pangaea contain some of the finest progressive psychedelic ROCK ever made.

If you are not familiar with those albums then you should listen to them before you comment on what Miles did or did not do.

In Miles' own words, he referred to his band on Bitches Brew as the "best rock band in the world".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 14:20
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

Miles Davis is nothing more than an attempt to try to cash in on his inherent coolness cache.


He was very important to cool jazz.

Quote The rock n roll hall of fame would include him , just the same as some here would - for little more than a few albums where he kind of almost nearly played a type of music that sort of fit in with whatever genre the "wanting to be seen as cool fools" are part of. Or for simpler reasoning - count the number of albums Davis put out. Then count how many, i.e. the percentage/ratio etc ..., actually would meet the clearly loose requirements posited by the wanna be cool by association crowd.
give it up, he's a jazz guy.


He is a jazz guy, but he's also a  jazz guy who was very important to jazz fusion/ jazz-rock.  His music is cool, but I'd rather see him in the archives because he's relevant.

I think he should be included in fusion.  I thought he'd been okayed before.

He had  along career, but I think he has more than enough appropriate albums to make him worthy of addition.


Edited by Logan - April 30 2008 at 14:21
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 15:44
Originally posted by 1800iareyay 1800iareyay wrote:

Originally posted by bluesynight bluesynight wrote:

the guy is great, correct me if i wrong but its jazz, pure jazz. 


Starting definitively with In a Silent Way (though Miles in the Sky should also be included as well), Miles Davis essentially created jazz fusion, not to mention that he recorded some of its best albums. This continued mainly through the mid-70s, although his 80s comeback has progressive qualities all its own (with loops, synths, and electronica). If we could only add his post '68 material, I imagine he'd have been on the site long before now, but the policy is "all or nothing," which is fine and dandy for bands who start out with one or three straightforward albums before progressing, but Miles has somewhere in the area of a (and I'm using the official term) crapload of albums before his fusion output.


but it's ok for bands who were once prog years and years ago to release new albums all the time consisting of generally bad and/or boring music or not progressive music and flooding the database with these useless albums that we dont need on this site. that's ok.

but we cant put music made by a man who never cared about the status quo and was ALWAYS progressing up till his very last days. Every album of his, even his not-so-good ones have progressive elements.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 15:49
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

I repeat my position/admonition. I think it is just an effort to try and somehow add some "hipness" to PA by including a great & legendary musician. As a previous poster mentioned - next do we add Coltrane ? Brubeck's imprint is big, does he fit in here. How about Duke Ellington?  I believe he wrote a few pieces named with "classical music terms". The Louis Armstrong back catalogue could fuel an all night riff reverie, for the musicologist interested in seeing how many musicians copped his riffs, tempos & solos. And yes, that would include blues, jazz AND rock players, proggers amongst them.
Thelonius Monk, Ornette Coleman, Sun Ra ...
anyone off the beaten path in Jazz could be crowbarred in if we consider that they may have been even the smallest of influences on prog. 



yea but these guys didnt do rock, or at least not progressive rock. all those guys are strictly jazz (though i dont like using the term 'strictly') Miles is the only one who did.

Coltrane might have had he lived on into the 70's, but that's another discussion for another day.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 15:57
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:


Miles Davis, he's got like what , 100 albums, and because 3-4 were jazz fusion, even if Bitches Brew is the only one that gets mentioned most of the time, we should automatically say, YES THIS IS A PROG GUY.




Agharta
At Fillmore-Live at the Fillmore East
Big Fun
Bitches Brew
Dark Magus
Filles De Kilimanjaro
Get Up With It
In A Silent Way
It's About That Time
Live at Philharmonic Hall
Live At The Fillmore West
Live Evil
The Man With The Horn
Miles In The Sky
On The Corner
Pangea
Star People
A Tribute To Jack Johnson
Waterbabies
We Want Miles


that's a lot of jazz-fusion albums. all are jazz fusion. and dont be thrown off by some of the live ones, most of them have original material as well. that's more progressive albums than most of the classic prog bands on this site have. i dont even think i listed them all. 3-4 jazz fusion albums is a bit of an understatement.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 16:01
Why would Miles be in Prog Related??? that makes no sense!

the genre of Jazz-Rock/Fusion would not exist the way it does were it not for Miles Davis. I cant believe people would think he'd be put anywhere BUT jazz-fusion section. im going to stop and let other people post now.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2008 at 16:44
I think anyone would agree that Miles belongs in fusion, the original post that suggested proto-prog was from a newbie who may have been unaware of the different categories and their definitions.

I know it took me long enough to understand the different genres.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2008 at 12:14
Our problem - and has always been a problem - is while being carried away  with too many genres and sub-genres (several made up here and meaningless outside PA), a band or artist gets lumbered with a single genre tag. Yet again I call for each and every artist to to be tagged with more than one genre tag , and best of all, specifically tag an artist's albums, hence we could happily and more precisely indicate, for instance, Kind Of  Blue was 'jazz', Bitches Brew was 'jazz funk' We Want Miles was 'jazz rock', others 'be bop', 'post bop', 'cool jazz', etc. 
 
Sorry to say,  to label Miles Davis 'proto-prog' is (to borrow from the late John Peel): bollocks, absolute bollocks.


Edited by Dick Heath - May 02 2008 at 12:15
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2008 at 12:19
Miles Davis doesn't belong on this site.  He is a jazz musician, plain and simple.  If we include him, we might as well include Beethoven because prog uses classical music.  The point of the jazz-fusion section is for jazz-fusion bands/artists who played songs that are proggy as well.  Miles Davis is clearly jazz-fusion (at times), but in no way is he prog.
 
That said, The Velvet Underground is long overdue for proto.


Edited by Pnoom! - May 02 2008 at 12:20
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2008 at 12:58
Originally posted by Pnoom! Pnoom! wrote:

Miles Davis doesn't belong on this site.  He is a jazz musician, plain and simple.  If we include him, we might as well include Beethoven because prog uses classical music.  The point of the jazz-fusion section is for jazz-fusion bands/artists who played songs that are proggy as well.  Miles Davis is clearly jazz-fusion (at times), but in no way is he prog.
 
That said, The Velvet Underground is long overdue for proto.
 
Point of information. As one of the main driving forces for jazz rock fusion to be here originally, I have to say your definition/reasoning is two thirds right and one third wrong.
 
The fusion of rock with jazz in the early days of progressive MUSIC was there from at least 1967/68. especially where a rock tune took on board a jazzy solo - check out Timebox, BST, Chicago, Soft Machine (and their reference was more likely to be John Coltrane than Davis), Nice (and their reference was more likely to be the Dave Brubeck Quartet than Davis) - and Tasavallan Presidentti were doing this into the 70's (e.g. Lambertland). The underground jazzmen such as Charles Lloyd, Larry Coryell, Herbie Mann, the young Breckers, were trying merge rock from the jazz direction - 1966  liner notes for the  Free Spirits album (Coryell's earliest recording) talked about playing music which was a hybrid of the Beatles and John Coltrane - whilst Roger McGuinn was attempting to achieve a Coltrane-like stream of notes in his Rickenbacker solos with the Byrds (e.g the RCA studio recording of 8 Miles High). Simply(??), whilst more clear cut main stream progressive bands were creating underground music/artrock/progressive rock, there were rockplayers who were evolving into jazzers and concommitently the jazzers who were taking on board rock instrumentation, amplification and rhythms, and both of these were part of the underground music scene and progressive music-makers. Jazz rock fusion both can stand alone, be a sub-section of jazz or a main subsection of progressive music.
 
I trust you've noted my subtle use and so the slight differences between what was called 'progressive music '(look at the title and the contents of one of the first ever progressive samplers listed in PA) and what is called (and the more limited) 'progressive rock'. So some and perhaps a significant proportion of jazz rock fusion may meets your definition 100%, but not all the jazz rock fusion bands nor all their albums do this fully. Therefore part of Davis's discography is most relevant and compliementary to what is here already, but the recordings and what he performed live from the 40's to the mid 60's are clealry outside the scope of PA. If we can't include part discographies (which I relatively supportive of), why can't we tag individual albums with precise genre tags, which in turn would prevent reviews of those albums which are not "prog" - something I would dearly like to do to a number of bands here already who IMHO discographies only include a few prog albums?
 


Edited by Dick Heath - May 02 2008 at 13:00
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2008 at 13:02
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

The fusion of rock with jazz in the early days of progressive MUSIC was there from at least 1967/68. especially where a rock tune took on board a jazzy solo - check out Timebox, BST, Chicago, Soft Machine (and their reference was more likely to be John Coltrane than Davis), Nice (and their reference was more likely to be the Dave Brubeck Quartet than Davis) - and Tasavallan Presidentti were doing this into the 70's (e.g. Lambertland). The underground jazzmen such as Charles Lloyd, Larry Coryell, Herbie Mann, the young Breckers, were trying merge rock from the jazz direction - 1966  liner notes for the  Free Spirits album (Coryell's earliest recording) talked about playing music which was a hybrid of the Beatles and John Coltrane - whilst Roger McGuinn was attempting to achieve a Coltrane-like stream of notes in his Rickenbacker solos with the Byrds (e.g the RCA studio recording of 8 Miles High). Simply(??), whilst more clear cut main stream progressive bands were creating underground music/artrock/progressive rock, there were rockplayers who were evolving into jazzers and concommitently the jazzers who were taking on board rock instrumentation, amplification and rhythms, and both of these were part of the underground music scene and progressive music-makers. Jazz rock fusion both can stand alone, be a sub-section of jazz or a main subsection of progressive music.
 
I trust you've noted my subtle use and so the slight differences between what was called 'progressive music '(look at the title and the contents of one of the first ever progressive samplers listed in PA) and what is called (and the more limited) 'progressive rock'. So some and perhaps a significant proportion of jazz rock fusion may meets your definition 100%, but not all the jazz rock fusion bands nor all their albums do this fully. Therefore part of Davis's discography is most relevant and compliementary to what is here already, but the recordings and what he performed live from the 40's to the mid 60's are clealry outside the scope of PA. If we can't include part discographies (which I relatively supportive of), why can't we tag individual albums with precise genre tags, which in turn would prevent reviews of those albums which are not "prog" - something I would dearly like to do to a number of bands here already who IMHO discographies only include a few prog albums?
 
I guess I would say that this should be the defining characteristic for whether a jazz-fusion band is included.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2008 at 13:38

The mid to late 60's underground music scene evolved first in progressive music in the UK ('68-'69) . Initially  one of the main sub-genres was 'rock jazz' , which quickly and readily evolved/became 'jazz rock' with more jazz being played in tunes,  and to become 'jazz fusion' in the mid 70's. Zappa's music was 'avant garde rock', Soft Machine's intially and Pink Floyd's were 'psychedelia', and so on, represented  other component parts of 'progressive music'. When Bitches Brew hit the scene when Miles Davis had clearly shifted  to seek out the mass rock audiences by more fully adopting components of rock music, then we had no problem assimilating the album into progressive music. Think about Soft Machine who went from a soul rock band, to a psychedelic band, to an avant jazz rock fusion band in 3 years;they had become the epitomy of an really 'progressive '(music) band. It is that that part of underground music , which was originally limited to Nice/ELP, King Crimson, Renaissance, Yes, Genesis, Gentle Giant (and in that order), that came known by the preferred name 'progressive rock'. It was convenient for a band such as Roxy Music, that lacked some of the component parts of the mainstream prog bands in their music, to use the borrowed name 'artrock' - and because of the stage clothing Roxy Music would have also been part of the 'glam rock 'scene (e.g. Bowie, Sweet, even Gary Glitter, Be Bop Deluxe). 

 
Nobody had problems including the third  wave of jazz rock bands, e.g. Mahavishnu Orchestra, Weather port, Return To Forever under the heading of 'progressive rock'' as well as being  'jazz rock'  at the same time - i.e. back in the early to mid 70's these were equally weighted classifications. In deed for many straighter jazz rock fans,  RTF's Yes-influenced, Romantic Warrior is as close as you can get to mainstream (instrumental) 'progressive rock' without losing the 'jazz rock' tag.
 
What we take here as 'jazz rock fusion' are bands who play 'jazz rock' but in the literal sense have progressed the genre, without necessary having 'progressive rock' mainstream relevance. For example we have a current thread on Jonas Hellborg's music, and whilst approx half his discography has  distinct rock and jazz elements, the other half may frighten away those have gone no further than RTF's Romantic Warrior within the genre - but I hope not..


Edited by Dick Heath - May 02 2008 at 13:40
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