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What prog band did you recently discover?

Printed From: Progarchives.com
Category: Progressive Music Lounges
Forum Name: Prog Bands, Artists and Genres Appreciation
Forum Description: Discuss specific prog bands and their members or a specific sub-genre
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=132835
Printed Date: November 26 2024 at 08:29
Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com


Topic: What prog band did you recently discover?
Posted By: Gnik Nosmirc
Subject: What prog band did you recently discover?
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 06:11
For me, it's Eloy. I was totally convinced by Time to Turn. Frank Bornemann has a great voice.



Replies:
Posted By: Grumpyprogfan
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 07:17
Rubber Tea


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 07:52
Hi,

Hint ... not listed in the monthly list at all ... or yearly list of 2023!


-------------
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


Posted By: Nogbad_The_Bad
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 08:43
Always discovering so tough to narrow down, here's three

Extra Life
Axiom
Sprain

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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/


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 09:15
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Hi,

Hint ... not listed in the monthly list at all ... or yearly list of 2023!


Why keep it a secret?


Posted By: Hrychu
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 09:30
Viima

-------------
“On the day of my creation, I fell in love with education. And overcoming all frustration, a teacher I became.”
— Ernest Vong


Posted By: Big Sky
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 10:17
Infinien


Posted By: Gentle and Giant
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 10:50
Rubber Tea

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Oh, for the wings of any bird, other than a battery hen


Posted By: Boojieboy
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 11:19
Finally started listening to Happy the Man. I've had their music on hand for a few years (mp3 save), but just now getting around to listening. I plan to check out Kit Watkin's solo music too, afterwards.


Posted By: miamiscot
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 13:31
Viima!!!

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The Prog Corner


Posted By: Zappastolethetowels
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 14:47
Zappa and The Mothers!

Listening 2 years and still discovering something new every time!


Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 15:24
Nospūn
Ra's Dawn
A Secret River
Faveravola
Marco Sfogli
Mangrove

All in late 2023 and early 2024.



Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 15:27
Originally posted by Archisorcerus Archisorcerus wrote:


Ra's Dawn

Good band, I discovered them recently as well.  Smile


Posted By: mellotronwave
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 15:50
Chronicle of father Robin


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 15 2024 at 17:58
Originally posted by Gnik Nosmirc Gnik Nosmirc wrote:

For me, it's Eloy. I was totally convinced by Time to Turn. Frank Bornemann has a great voice.

Definitely a favourite band of mine and you've named one of my top 3 albums by them (the others being Planets and Colours)

My favourite recent discovery is electronic duo Zombi.
In general most of my recent discoveries seem to be in the heavy prog scene with the likes of Monkey3, Slift, Ovrfwrd, Night Verses and Turbulence who have all put out excellent albums this year.


Posted By: Valdez1
Date Posted: April 21 2024 at 09:59
A band called “Water” from 1976 . The name of the album is dambreak. harmonica infused Prog with some great guitar and vocals.


Posted By: Valdez1
Date Posted: April 21 2024 at 10:00
A band called “Water” from 1976 . The name of the album is damburst. harmonica infused Prog (done nicely) with some great guitar and vocals.


Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: April 21 2024 at 11:02
Zephyr (they're proggy enough for me)
2nd and 3rd album


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https://www.youtube.com/c/LoyalOpposition

https://www.scribd.com/document/382737647/MortSahlFan-Song-List


Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: April 21 2024 at 12:16
I discovered my first prog band way back in the Renaissance era. Yes, I really am that old. Wink


Posted By: Octopus II
Date Posted: April 21 2024 at 12:43
Thanks to Scot of 'The Prog Corner'. Smile

Reissue Of Mirthrandir – For You The Old Women - Progressive Rock Music  Forum


Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: April 22 2024 at 08:11
Yokono is a four-piece instrumental experimental rock band from Belgrade (Serbia).
Since its beginning in 2011, the band has been interested in true sound through live studio recording sessions, which has altogether affected the improvement of the band's music fashion as well as its approach to live exhibitions.
I just recently discovered Yokono, thanks to Svetonio from the Steve Hoffman forum. His instructive topic, "Ambient Rock Appreciation Thread," is actually where I dig this rather good Serbian underground group.
Here are two instrumentals taken from their debut album, "Bigz Live Studio Sessions," which was recorded in Bigz and released on Bandcamp in December 2018. 
There is a story behind it. Bigz was a government-owned but abandoned printing house and has served for years as a unique alternative cultural centre in downtown Belgrade, located in an originally beautiful Bauhaus-designed building built before World War II (see picture).
 
 
 
The recordings were made there. Many young Belgrade's bands practiced there, some very good recording analogue studios were there owned by enthusiasts, and many visual artists had their studios in the Bigz as well; it was something like a hippy commune, hence Bigz even brought a so-called New Belgrade scene of experimental rock, but the investment-urbanism-oriented mayor kicked them all out and sold the building to some private clinic from abroad, which will most likely tear it down and build more of a mockery of glass and steel.
 
However, the recordings and videos from Bigz, like these, will remain. Yokono stuff is available on Bandcamp, and I highly recommend it.






Posted By: AFlowerKingCrimson
Date Posted: April 24 2024 at 12:03
Some newer bands:

Nospun (traditional prog metal)
Squeaky Feet
The Twenty Committee
The Foundation
Z Machine
K'Mono
Regna 
The Chronicles of Father Robin




Posted By: Floydoid
Date Posted: April 24 2024 at 13:01
In recent years my best discovery was Catherine Ribiero + Alpes... their albums never made it to the UK back in the 70's so they had passed me by till just a few years ago.

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'We're going to need a bigger swear jar.'


Posted By: miamiscot
Date Posted: April 25 2024 at 07:42
Originally posted by Octopus II Octopus II wrote:

Thanks to Scot of 'The Prog Corner'. Smile

Reissue Of Mirthrandir – For You The Old Women - Progressive Rock Music  Forum

This makes my day!!!


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The Prog Corner


Posted By: AJ Junior
Date Posted: April 25 2024 at 09:56
September- A Yugoslavian prog band from the 70's with two killer albums

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"Together We Stand, Divided We Fall"


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 25 2024 at 22:28
UK band The Bardic Depths. Only 3 albums so far and they've only been around a short time. They released their debut in March 2020 just as the pandemic was hitting hard but have continued on to their credit. The recent album 'What We Really Like in Stories' is a nice tightly written piece featuring Peter Jones and front man David Bandana. For fans of Big Big Train and The Tangent I would suggest.


Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: May 25 2024 at 09:44
Gilgamesh
Nucleus
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-------------
https://www.youtube.com/c/LoyalOpposition

https://www.scribd.com/document/382737647/MortSahlFan-Song-List


Posted By: Jeffro
Date Posted: May 25 2024 at 10:26
Utopia (Todd Rundgren)
Them Moose Rush
Shamblemaths
Mercury Tree


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We all dwell in an amber subdomain, amber subdomain, amber subdomain.

My face IS a maserati


Posted By: UnderGround
Date Posted: May 25 2024 at 11:41
Methexis.
We have many nice rock/metal prog band here in Hellas.


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https://antonisadelfidis.bandcamp.com/album/zantea-chronicles-the-nightmare-awakens


Posted By: Prog-jester
Date Posted: May 25 2024 at 13:49
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

heavy prog scene with the likes of Monkey3, Slift
please tell me do I need to recommend you my band or have you heard it already?

on topic:
Gojira (phenomenal, but I have this feeling this is the first AND the last time I'm listening to these albums)
Mansun (phenomenal, but only debut; the second one is so misguided and directionless, I barely stand it)
Toto (reading the book about Jeff Porcaro, so decided why not - good stuff!)
Wishbone Ash (surprisingly enjoying the late 70s-early 80s albums more than the classic ones)
Deyss (not as awful as everybody thinks they were, just dated)
PTS (really good but extremely unknown Dutch neo-prog from the mid-90s)


Posted By: projeKct
Date Posted: May 25 2024 at 15:23
I just discovered THE VERY BIG EXPERIMENTAL TOUBIFRI ORCHESTRA, a pretty crazy band from France.

Here is a fun video from 2021.



We really have to add them to the Archives !!!


Posted By: Grumpyprogfan
Date Posted: May 25 2024 at 17:20
Monobody- Atala




Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: May 25 2024 at 23:23
Originally posted by Prog-jester Prog-jester wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

heavy prog scene with the likes of Monkey3, Slift
please tell me do I need to recommend you my band or have you heard it already?


you seem to have a few so I've added the 2 Arlekin albums as they are more likely to be up my street Thumbs Up

I'm always doscovering new bands and thinking 'why haven't I heard of these guys before?!'. Anyway thanks for the recommendation.
 

Originally posted by Prog-jester Prog-jester wrote:

 

on topic:

Mansun (phenomenal, but only debut; the second one is so misguided and directionless, I barely stand it)


I actually like their last album the best Kleptomania. It was a belated release that was only finished after the band split up . It's closer to the alt rock sound of early 00's Porcupine Tree and could have been a small influence on Steven Wilson I suspect.
The album you refer to is Six. Quite a unique album I think but not for everyone. Little Kix (their 3rd) is by far their weakest album and would fit your description better I believe.


Posted By: Prog-jester
Date Posted: May 26 2024 at 05:58
hmm actually I checked and it's Six that I didn't like; Attack of the Grey Lantern is basically flawless for me though. Thanks for further Mansun recommendations!
Quote you seem to have a few
I do, I do hehe - but I was referring to https://open.spotify.com/artist/23lyMLxYNPS15hpVvFNptR" rel="nofollow - my main band since you've mentioned our former labelmates (Monkey3) and our future tourmates (Slift)


Posted By: Floydoid
Date Posted: May 26 2024 at 10:51
Brainticket

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'We're going to need a bigger swear jar.'


Posted By: miamiscot
Date Posted: May 30 2024 at 07:33
Originally posted by Octopus II Octopus II wrote:

Thanks to Scot of 'The Prog Corner'. Smile

Reissue Of Mirthrandir – For You The Old Women - Progressive Rock Music  Forum

YOU ARE WELCOME!!!


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The Prog Corner


Posted By: looktowindward
Date Posted: June 04 2024 at 04:51
Amskray - kinda prog-indie.
Catchy, fun and intricate stuff.

https://amskray.bandcamp.com/album/die-happy


Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: June 04 2024 at 05:09
Too many to mention, but I've discovered numerous great Italian bands recently, including Premiata Forneria Marconi, Le Orme and Banco del Mutuo Scorsese - which sounds like an Italian bank run by the mafia, who'll make you an offer of a loan you can't refuse. Smile


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: June 04 2024 at 07:13
Hi,

Strange thought for me ... music is everywhere, and it's always about my recognizing it or not ... I can't exactly listen to it all, but some seems easier than others for me, but in the end, I have never, in 55 years, thought of it as discovering a band ... as much as it was about  how I related to the music itself, and how it affected me ... and some of these details you remember a lifetime. I can still remember the first minute I heard TD and how it scared me senseless ... I went right back to my headphones and Space Ritual. And later how so many bands confused my sense of organization in my head ... and that, in the end, was my greatest teacher of all in studying directing for theater and film. It wasn't about something that was designed ... it was about the experience of the moment, as free as possible from anything that was the rule of the design. 

And a lot of music, ended up doing things that film had been doing for over 10 years in terms of experiments ... but it in the past 20 years, it's like no one knows film, theater or any of the arts, consequently everything is just a song with a number attached to it.

It's not about me discovering it ... in the end, I say that it discovers me, as I wonder all over the universe and things hit me on the left, or the right ... or in the front and back .... but my "mental" acknowledgement of the music, art, or event, is often a lot less important than the experience itself ... 

Take the Bardo, ... you gonna tell me that you have to discover the doors, before you get to them? That's not how it's written ... the doors are there the whole time, but are you ready to see them and go through them? That's how I look at many of these things ... aside from the fact that I tend to say that there are no doors or dragons ... it's our imagination that creates "challenges" so we can feel like we are using our smarts and intelligence!

How can I discover, something that is already there?


-------------
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


Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: June 04 2024 at 07:27
^ I don't now if you're trying to be sarcastic or you really do not understand the simple question in the thread title... Confused


Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: June 04 2024 at 08:07
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Hi,


How can I discover, something that is already there?
The Americas were already there, but Gerard Depardeau still managed to discover them in 1492, just as I discovered Vangelis' soundtrack album in 1992. Smile




Posted By: Valdez1
Date Posted: June 04 2024 at 10:42
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Hi,

Strange thought for me ... music is everywhere, and it's always about my recognizing it or not ... I can't exactly listen to it all, but some seems easier than others for me, but in the end, I have never, in 55 years, thought of it as discovering a band ... as much as it was about  how I related to the music itself, and how it affected me ... and some of these details you remember a lifetime. I can still remember the first minute I heard TD and how it scared me senseless ... I went right back to my headphones and Space Ritual. And later how so many bands confused my sense of organization in my head ... and that, in the end, was my greatest teacher of all in studying directing for theater and film. It wasn't about something that was designed ... it was about the experience of the moment, as free as possible from anything that was the rule of the design. 

And a lot of music, ended up doing things that film had been doing for over 10 years in terms of experiments ... but it in the past 20 years, it's like no one knows film, theater or any of the arts, consequently everything is just a song with a number attached to it.

It's not about me discovering it ... in the end, I say that it discovers me, as I wonder all over the universe and things hit me on the left, or the right ... or in the front and back .... but my "mental" acknowledgement of the music, art, or event, is often a lot less important than the experience itself ... 

Take the Bardo, ... you gonna tell me that you have to discover the doors, before you get to them? That's not how it's written ... the doors are there the whole time, but are you ready to see them and go through them? That's how I look at many of these things ... aside from the fact that I tend to say that there are no doors or dragons ... it's our imagination that creates "challenges" so we can feel like we are using our smarts and intelligence!

How can I discover, something that is already there?


errrrrrr... Exactly!!!   You sound like you've pretty much heard it all.  But have you really ever taken the time to 'Really Listen' to the Doors. You can only go on to Bardo with a good understanding of the song 'Peace Frog'.  And the hidden messages contained within. 


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https://bakullama1.bandcamp.com/


Posted By: enigmatic
Date Posted: June 06 2024 at 06:27
Zopp - both albums are excellent, "Dominion" from 2023 gets spun more often.


Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: June 06 2024 at 11:48
Originally posted by enigmatic enigmatic wrote:

Zopp - both albums are excellent, "Dominion" from 2023 gets spun more often.

This...
and thanks to whoever mentioned them here.
Thumbs Up


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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin


Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 06 2024 at 12:42
Present (Belgium)
Extra Life (The USA)
Nautilus (Germany)

All with their 2024 albums. Checked out some of their earlier works, also. Still much to discover in their discographies!


Posted By: Boojieboy
Date Posted: June 07 2024 at 12:41
I discovered Guru Guru (from Germany) today. Fun band. YouTube was the source, but PA has the details and goods.


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: June 07 2024 at 18:20
Originally posted by Valdez1 Valdez1 wrote:

...
errrrrrr... Exactly!!!   You sound like you've pretty much heard it all.  But have you really ever taken the time to 'Really Listen' to the Doors. You can only go on to Bardo with a good understanding of the song 'Peace Frog'.  And the hidden messages contained within. 

Hi,

Actually, I never thought of any of it as "secrets" ... the truth has a way to stand up that requires no special handling of anything, but our minds think that there is always a hidden meaning in our lives ... again, to me, "discoveries" are a sort of idea having to do with how much one sees, or doesn't see. 

I don't look at the arts, as something hidden at all ... you can't expect a human spirit to undress itself any more at all ... ... well, except when there is one names Mani, of course! Wink


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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


Posted By: Valdez
Date Posted: June 07 2024 at 19:30
Oh that Mani…. I was just goofin Moshkito. Don’t mind me.

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https://bakullama1.bandcamp.com/album/sleepers-2024



Posted By: MurderInc
Date Posted: June 19 2024 at 03:39
I'm recently rediscovering Satellite from Poland. Is there a thread for them?


Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: June 19 2024 at 03:54
Originally posted by MurderInc MurderInc wrote:

I'm recently rediscovering Satellite from Poland. Is there a thread for them?

Not that I'm aware, but you may find them orbiting the Top 120 Neo Prog Albums of All Time where they have no less than four entries in the chart. Thumbs Up

http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=129734" rel="nofollow - http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=129734


Posted By: Hrychu
Date Posted: June 19 2024 at 04:47
Originally posted by MurderInc MurderInc wrote:

I'm recently rediscovering Satellite from Poland. Is there a thread for them?
I dunno. Probably not. And even if there is a Satellite Apperciation thread here, it's probably locked by now.

It's a strangely overlooked band. Despite their solid output and Wojciech Szadkowski's creative genius, Satellite aren't very well known even here in Poland.

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“On the day of my creation, I fell in love with education. And overcoming all frustration, a teacher I became.”
— Ernest Vong


Posted By: AFlowerKingCrimson
Date Posted: June 24 2024 at 14:16
Tom Penaguin


Posted By: stegor
Date Posted: June 24 2024 at 19:57
I just recently stumbled on The Neutrons, an offshoot of Man from the early-mid '70s. They didn't last long, and I can find next to nothing about them. They made two albums, one of them is great (Black Hole Stars). I'm surprised I had no knowledge of them.

Also Kayak - I bought their Phantom of the Night album in the '70s and didn't like it. I tried several times over the years but always found it boring. Recently I heard Royal Bed Bouncer and couldn't believe it was the same group.


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: June 24 2024 at 22:14
Originally posted by stegor stegor wrote:


Also Kayak - I bought their Phantom of the Night album in the '70s and didn't like it. I tried several times over the years but always found it boring. Recently I heard Royal Bed Bouncer and couldn't believe it was the same group.

Their best albums (or the ones I like the best anyway) are the first 4 up to and including The Last Encore (1976). After that they became mostly AOR ish rock with some prog for the next run of albums. Merlin was their last album of their original album run and that's actually a bit better than the earlier 3 or 4 albums. A return to prog mainly but still a bit of a fudge between their older style and the newer 'commercial' style. They split up in 1982 then reformed in the late 90's to record an expanded version of Merlin called Merlin:Bard Of The Unseen. Their last 2 albums (probably 'ever' as the band seems finished now) are actually pretty decent rock/prog albums. I would love to have seen them pre pandemic when they were scheduled to support the Flower Kings in London. They had to pull out because Ton Scherpenzeel was ill. I think that his health issues has inevitably lead to a halt of the bands activities for good. A real shame. I'm very fond of them and they brought a lighter touch to prog compared to the English bombastic prog bands of the 70's.


Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: June 25 2024 at 06:16
eala craig

-------------
https://www.youtube.com/c/LoyalOpposition

https://www.scribd.com/document/382737647/MortSahlFan-Song-List


Posted By: presdoug
Date Posted: June 25 2024 at 06:26
I recently rediscovered the self titled debut album by jazz rock/krautrock band Dzyan, who hailed from Mannheim, Germany. 
                They have been one of my top groups for many a year, but the debut was kind of a hard sell for me, until now.
           I had mixed feelings about it for quite a while, but heard it again last nite, and it was a revelation! Mixed feelings, no more. What an amazing debut album, and it is a perfect companion to the other two records of theirs, and shines on it's own very nicely, as well.
                 Don't know whatever happened to band leader/founder Reinhard Karwatky....wish I knew.....


Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: June 25 2024 at 07:18
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Originally posted by stegor stegor wrote:


Also Kayak - I bought their Phantom of the Night album in the '70s and didn't like it. I tried several times over the years but always found it boring. Recently I heard Royal Bed Bouncer and couldn't believe it was the same group.

Their best albums (or the ones I like the best anyway) are the first 4 up to and including The Last Encore (1976). After that they became mostly AOR ish rock with some prog for the next run of albums. Merlin was their last album of their original album run and that's actually a bit better than the earlier 3 or 4 albums. A return to prog mainly but still a bit of a fudge between their older style and the newer 'commercial' style. They split up in 1982 then reformed in the late 90's to record an expanded version of Merlin called Merlin:Bard Of The Unseen. Their last 2 albums (probably 'ever' as the band seems finished now) are actually pretty decent rock/prog albums. I would love to have seen them pre pandemic when they were scheduled to support the Flower Kings in London. They had to pull out because Ton Scherpenzeel was ill. I think that his health issues has inevitably lead to a halt of the bands activities for good. A real shame. I'm very fond of them and they brought a lighter touch to prog compared to the English bombastic prog bands of the 70's.

I remember when I joined this site back in 2005, I splashed out on the Reissues of Bed Bouncer and Last Encore, thinking I'd really like them... but I just didn't. They kind of had the same effect on me as Pavlov's Dog; sickly sweet art rock without the invention of Supertramp at their best... maybe I was harsh and they should be given a re-appraisal in time?



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Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson


Posted By: Dellinger
Date Posted: June 25 2024 at 19:21
Not exactly discover, because I have known and been curious about them for several years, but I just finally got on listening to SBB, and downloaded a few albums (not many availavable physical, and rather expensive). Some albums didn't do much for me (the jazzier ones), but some others I did like (like the more symphonic, I guess), specially Wolanie I really liked a lot.


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: June 27 2024 at 21:06
Originally posted by Jared Jared wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Originally posted by stegor stegor wrote:


Also Kayak - I bought their Phantom of the Night album in the '70s and didn't like it. I tried several times over the years but always found it boring. Recently I heard Royal Bed Bouncer and couldn't believe it was the same group.

Their best albums (or the ones I like the best anyway) are the first 4 up to and including The Last Encore (1976). After that they became mostly AOR ish rock with some prog for the next run of albums. Merlin was their last album of their original album run and that's actually a bit better than the earlier 3 or 4 albums. A return to prog mainly but still a bit of a fudge between their older style and the newer 'commercial' style. They split up in 1982 then reformed in the late 90's to record an expanded version of Merlin called Merlin:Bard Of The Unseen. Their last 2 albums (probably 'ever' as the band seems finished now) are actually pretty decent rock/prog albums. I would love to have seen them pre pandemic when they were scheduled to support the Flower Kings in London. They had to pull out because Ton Scherpenzeel was ill. I think that his health issues has inevitably lead to a halt of the bands activities for good. A real shame. I'm very fond of them and they brought a lighter touch to prog compared to the English bombastic prog bands of the 70's.

I remember when I joined this site back in 2005, I splashed out on the Reissues of Bed Bouncer and Last Encore, thinking I'd really like them... but I just didn't. They kind of had the same effect on me as Pavlov's Dog; sickly sweet art rock without the invention of Supertramp at their best... maybe I was harsh and they should be given a re-appraisal in time?


Their first 2 albums may be more interesting to you especially the second. They can be mildy 'camp' for want of a better word on some albums. RBB is a lot of fun and lacks the overarching seriousness of so much prog that was coming out at the time. However it's not an out and out prog album that the first couple are.


Posted By: stegor
Date Posted: June 28 2024 at 13:28
When I listen to good Kayak I detect hints of Supertramp, Triumvirat, and Split Enz, with occasional Elton John undertones and Yes overtones, and a bit of a Rick Wakeman aftertaste.


Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: June 28 2024 at 14:17
King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard have won me over with their exceptional 2017 release Polygondwanaland.

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https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay


Posted By: MikeEnRegalia
Date Posted: June 28 2024 at 15:03
Amskray Smile

album cover
https://awesomeprog.com/releases/69687" rel="nofollow - https://amskray.bandcamp.com/album/die-happy" rel="nofollow - https://open.spotify.com/album/4jMepIU5gUJrSxBzjZOTKJ" rel="nofollow - https://rateyourmusic.com/release/album/amskray/die-happy/" rel="nofollow -
Amskray
https://awesomeprog.com/releases/69687" rel="nofollow - - Die Happy  2024
Prog Alt Rock
"Unexpectedly fresh and energetic, this hits the sweet spot somewhere between Radiohead, King Gizzard and The Mars Volta. Really well played and recorded, and comes with hooks and substance." ( https://awesomeprog.com/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - Mike , , 24h ago)


Posted By: Valdez
Date Posted: June 28 2024 at 18:00
Enigmatic sound machines. hierarchies of angels. member Jeremie Arrobas was in men with hats long ago, and Thomas Szirmay used to be here on PA a lot. Good stuff.

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https://bakullama1.bandcamp.com/album/sleepers-2024



Posted By: cstack3
Date Posted: June 28 2024 at 20:37
This gent...."Steffe Sharpstrings" aka Stephen Lawry! 

https://www.discogs.com/artist/353215-Steffe-Sharpstrings" rel="nofollow - https://www.discogs.com/artist/353215-Steffe-Sharpstrings

I saw Gong in Chicago (10 March, 1996) and it was amazing!  Daevid Allen, Bloomdido, Mike Howlett, Babyloni Yoni, (not sure who was on drums), and guitar/synth was managed by Steffe!!  I'm a huge Steve Hillage fan, and he captured Hillage's role as well as High-T Moonweed's on synth!! 

This is new material, check it out!  Top-notch space rock!!  

https://steffesharpstrings.bandcamp.com/track/circumferance" rel="nofollow - https://steffesharpstrings.bandcamp.com/track/circumferance


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I am not a Robot, I'm a FREE MAN!!


Posted By: ThyroidGlands
Date Posted: June 29 2024 at 10:50
Dai Kaht and La Fabbrica dell'assoluto

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Bloody bloody racket and rumpus


Posted By: Dellinger
Date Posted: July 01 2024 at 18:37
Not exactly discover, but I finally gave a fair listen to some SBB. I really liked Wolanie and Memento. I'm listening to a bit of Ange now, but I have only given one listen to some selected albums.


Posted By: AFlowerKingCrimson
Date Posted: July 01 2024 at 18:47
Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

Not exactly discover, but I finally gave a fair listen to some SBB. I really liked Wolanie and Memento. I'm listening to a bit of Ange now, but I have only given one listen to some selected albums.

SBB I never really heard (except maybe a track here or there on internet prog radio). I've never owned any Ange either. I will have to correct this before too long. For Ange apparently Au Dela Du Delire is the one usually recommended to start with.



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