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Are some Alan Parsons productions Prog related?

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Forum Name: Proto-Prog and Prog-Related Lounge
Forum Description: Discuss bands and albums classified as Proto-Prog and Prog-Related
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=124729
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Topic: Are some Alan Parsons productions Prog related?
Posted By: Heart of the Matter
Subject: Are some Alan Parsons productions Prog related?
Date Posted: November 30 2020 at 08:26
Let's say, albums like John Miles' Rebel or Al Stewart's Year Of The Cat.
Trivial cases: Dark Side, The Raven That Refused To Sing (already belonging to prog artists)



Replies:
Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: November 30 2020 at 08:39
No.

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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: November 30 2020 at 10:51
Hi,

I might consider/say, that in the early days, it may have helped the music be better attended to than the simplified and crappy recordings that many bands did for their albums.

So, in that sense, for the early days, Alan Parsons as an engineer would have been "progressive", but if we're talking about the music they did in the Project, I would say no.

But, one has to realize how many of the albums he put his fingerprints on, ended up being well attended to and heard ... which kinda says something for his work ... and it is still remembered fondly, even though many of us does not associate his name with the albums ... at all! 

(Hope this helps ... was not really sure what the OP wanted or was about!)


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Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: November 30 2020 at 12:34
 Parson's produced Modern Times,Year of the  Cat ,  and Time Passsages but tracks like  Nostradamus and Roads To Moscow fom Stewart ( Past, Present,) (not Parsons producing) cetainly can be called prog folk imho....to my ears they are as proggy as many songs called prog folk  on PA.
He also produced Ambrosia...Somewhere....and they are on PA as prog related.
Again that old subjectivity issue....Stern Smile



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Posted By: Steve Wyzard
Date Posted: December 09 2020 at 17:21
As a big fan of John Miles's Rebel album, I would not have any problem with his work being classified under "Prog-Related". Not only is the classic "Parsons sound" fully present from a production standpoint, but it also features the orchestral conducting/arrangements of Andrew Powell whose work appears on almost every Project album. 

On the other hand, Miles wears his many influences whole-heartedly on his sleeve: you can hear "shout-outs" to everyone from Paul McCartney to Elton John to Stevie Wonder. As much as I love the album, it is very derivative of early-1970s pop. Can I just add that I consider Miles to be one of the great rock'n'roll voices of all time?

Another group that might qualify for "Prog-Related" is the infamous Keats, who broke up before their Parsons-produced 1984 album was even released. It featured Colin Blunstone, Ian Bairnson, David Paton, and Stuart Elliott (all Project veterans) and Peter Bardens (Camel). I would describe the album as "ethereal pop".

As far as Al Stewart goes, consider this a resounding "NO".


Posted By: Heart of the Matter
Date Posted: December 09 2020 at 19:06
Definitely the "Andrew Powell factor" brings Rebel closer to Parsons' own signature sound than any other album. And there are even more, I think: the guitar solo on Pull The Damn Thing Down has the epic scope of a truly progressive passage, getting to a wonderful climax with the segue into the Music reprise.


Posted By: kenethlevine
Date Posted: December 09 2020 at 19:31
 we did try to get Al Stewart into prog related a while back, at the same time as Shawn Phillips.  Phillips got in, Stewart did not.  Al Stewart is certainly the type of artist that a prog fan tends to appreciate


Posted By: Heart of the Matter
Date Posted: December 09 2020 at 20:31
Originally posted by kenethlevine kenethlevine wrote:

 we did try to get Al Stewart into prog related a while back, at the same time as Shawn Phillips.  Phillips got in, Stewart did not.  Al Stewart is certainly the type of artist that a prog fan tends to appreciate


Sure, even in his early pre-Parsons albums. Orange is a record that I feel confident to play to prog-oriented people.



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