Disappointing follow-up albums
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Forum Name: Prog Recommendations/Featured albums
Forum Description: Make or seek recommendations and discuss specific prog albums
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=133267
Printed Date: November 22 2024 at 22:44 Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com
Topic: Disappointing follow-up albums
Posted By: Steve Wyzard
Subject: Disappointing follow-up albums
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 12:23
You know how it goes (or should I say: how it went?). One of your favorite bands/artists releases an album that exceeds all expectations or returns them to the media spotlight. You wait/waited with baited breath for the follow-up (or sequel), only to be...well, if not dumbstruck, at the very least disappointed with the drop in quality. How could they let you down like this, when you just knew one more outstanding album would surely lead to world domination? Then, when asked about it, the band/artist says something like, "The producer ruined it/You have to try 'new things'/We decided to go 'back to basics'."
If this has happened to you, please list the albums you loved and the disappointing follow-ups. Off the top of my head, here's mine:
1. YES - 90125/Big Generator 2. YES - Going for the One/Tormato 3. RUSH - Signals/Grace Under Pressure 4. E.L.P. - Black Moon/In the Hot Seat 5. LED ZEPPELIN - Physical Graffiti/Presence 6. QUEEN - News of the World/Jazz 7. STYX - Pieces of Eight/Cornerstone 8. ALAN PARSONS PROJECT - Eye in the Sky/Ammonia Avenue 9. PETER GABRIEL - I (Car)/II (Scratch) 10. SAGA - Heads or Tales/Behaviour 11. BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST - Ring of Changes/Victims of Circumstance 12. THE WHO - Quadrophenia/By Numbers
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Replies:
Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 12:25
Oh, I wrongly assumed you were looking for examples of those difficult second albums until I saw your list.
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Posted By: omphaloskepsis
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 12:41
Steve Wyzard wrote:
You know how it goes (or should I say: how it went?). One of your favorite bands/artists releases an album that exceeds all expectations or returns them to the media spotlight. You wait/waited with baited breath for the follow-up (or sequel), only to be...well, if not dumbstruck, at the very least disappointed with the drop in quality. How could they let you down like this, when you just knew one more outstanding album would surely lead to world domination? Then, when asked about it, the band/artist says something like, "The producer ruined it/You have to try 'new things'/We decided to go 'back to basics'."
If this has happened to you, please list the albums you loved and the disappointing follow-ups. Off the top of my head, here's mine:
1. YES - 90125/Big Generator 2. YES - Going for the One/Tormato 3. RUSH - Signals/Grace Under Pressure 4. E.L.P. - Black Moon/In the Hot Seat 5. LED ZEPPELIN - Physical Graffiti/Presence 6. QUEEN - News of the World/Jazz 7. STYX - Pieces of Eight/Cornerstone 8. ALAN PARSONS PROJECT - Eye in the Sky/Ammonia Avenue 9. PETER GABRIEL - I (Car)/II (Scratch) 10. SAGA - Heads or Tales/Behaviour 11. BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST - Ring of Changes/Victims of Circumstance 12. THE WHO - Quadrophenia/By Numbers |
I agree with most of your choices. However, I like the Big Generator more than 90125. I like Jazz more than News of the World.
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 12:43
Focus: Hamburger / Mother Focus Curved Air: Air Cut / Midnight Wire Camel: Nude / Single Factor Tull: Broadsword / Under Wraps Oldfield: Amarok / Heaven's Open TD: Tyger / Optical Race Beggar's Opera: Pathfinder / GYDOM! Hawkwind: Warrior / Astonishing Sounds Styx: Paradise Theater / Kilroy Was Here Yes: KeyStudio Sessions / Open Your Eyes
There you go Steve, something to have a chew on...
------------- 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
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Posted By: Saperlipopette!
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 13:13
1. Dedalus: Dedalus/Materiale Per Tre Esecutori E Nastro Magnetico (those who know, know) 2. Comus: First Utterance/To Keep From Crying 3. Captain Beefheart and The Magic Band: Clear Spot/Unconditionally Guaranteed
4. Nektar: Recycled/Magic Is a Child 5. Swans: Children of God/The Burning World 6. Robert Wyatt: Rock Bottom/Ruth Is Stranger Than Richard 7. Curved Air: Air Cut/Midnight Wire 8. Blue Öyster Cult: Fire of Unknown Origin/The Revölution by Night 9. Klaus Schuze: "X"/Dune 10. Tangerine Dream: Force Majeure/Tangram (sorry, it just bores me)
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Posted By: Saperlipopette!
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 13:15
Jared wrote:
Beggar's Opera: Pathfinder / GYDOM! | Good one - or a bad one. Would have been in my top five had I remembered it:)
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Posted By: someone_else
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 13:24
Yes: Close to the Edge / Tales from Topograpic Oceans, Going for the One / Tormato Jethro Tull: Thick as a Brick / A Passion Play, A Passion Play / Warchild Rush: Hold Your Fire / Presto Van der Graaf Generator: A Grounding in Numbers / Alt
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Posted By: progaardvark
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 13:40
I agree with Yes' 90125/Big Generator and Keys to Ascension/Open Your Eyes. The latter was really, really disappointing. The former was kind of expected.
Some more that come to mind: Spock's Beard: Snow/Feel Euphoria Present: Le poison qui rend fou/C.O.D. Performance Eloy: Retromania/Ra Rush: Counterparts/Test For Echo Anima Mundi: I Me Myself/Insomnia Arena: Pepper's Ghost/The Seventh Degree of Separation Atoll: Tertio/Rock Puzzle Mike Rutherford: Smallcreep's Day/Acting Very Strange David Bowie: Scary Monsters/Let's Dance Cairo: Conflict and Dreams/Time of Legends Crucible: Tall Tales/Curtains Easter Island: Easter Island/Mother Sun ELO: Out of the Blue/Discovery ELP: Brain Salad Surgery/Works Voume 1 David Gilmour: About Face/On an Island IQ: The Wake/Nomzamo Moon Safari: Blomljud/Lover's End Neal Morse: Neal Morse/It's Not Too Late (his first two before he left SB) Le Orme: Contrappunti/Smogmagica Pendragon: Not of This World/Believe Renaissance: Azure d'Or/Camera Camera Supertramp: Brother Where You Bound/Free as a Bird Van der Graaf Generator: A Grounding in Numbers/Alt Zen Rock and Roll: The Birthright Circle/Undone
------------- ---------- i'm shopping for a new oil-cured sinus bag that's a happy bag of lettuce this car smells like cartilage nothing beats a good video about fractions
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 13:46
Saperlipopette! wrote:
Nektar: Recycled/Magic Is a Child |
It had also crossed my mind, but for some reason I have bit of a soft spot for it.. I've never understood why it scores less than Man In The Moon, which is plain uninspired 1980 AOR
------------- 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
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 13:49
progaardvark wrote:
Arena: Pepper's Ghost/The Seventh Degree of Separation Pendragon: Not of This World/Believe Supertramp: Brother Where You Bound/Free as a Bird Van der Graaf Generator: A Grounding in Numbers/Alt
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I'd agree with all of those..
------------- 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
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Posted By: Saperlipopette!
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 13:58
Jared wrote:
Saperlipopette! wrote:
Nektar: Recycled/Magic Is a Child |
It had also crossed my mind, but for some reason I have bit of a soft spot for it. | I don't think that it's horrible, but Recycled is a such a ride packed with memorable moments and so much fun (in a "Proggy-ELO" sort of way). While Ifind Magic is a Child completely forgettable. Never heard the 1980 album of theirs.
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 14:12
Steve Wyzard wrote:
3. RUSH - Signals/Grace Under Pressure |
IMO, that's one of Rush's strongest double-punches. Diff'rent strokes!
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 14:33
ALAN PARSONS PROJECT – Pyramid / Eve BLUE ÖYSTER CULT – The Revölution by Night / Club Ninja CAMEL – Nude / The Single Factor GOBLIN – Contamination / Volo HAWKWIND – Electric Tepee / It is the Business of the Future to Be Dangerous JEAN-MICHEL JARRE – Rendez-Vous / Révolutions KANSAS – Point of Know Return / Monolith
With an asterisk (*)
EMERSON, LAKE & POWELL / 3 – To the Power of Three
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: Sean Trane
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 14:34
Steve Wyzard wrote:
6. QUEEN - News of the World/Jazz 12. THE WHO - Quadrophenia/By Numbers |
TBH, I think Jazz is probably Queen's hottest since Night. I found NOTW rather tedious
Of course, BN simply could not compete with QuadroWho Are You is so much better, IMHO
Saperlipopette! wrote:
10. Tangerine Dream: Force Majeure/Tangram (sorry, it just bores me) |
I'd place the cursor on Tangram (which is still good, despite Schmoelling's presence) and its follow-up
------------- let's just stay above the moral melee prefer the sink to the gutter keep our sand-castle virtues content to be a doer as well as a thinker, prefer lifting our pen rather than un-sheath our sword
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 15:03
Sean Trane wrote:
I'd place the cursor on Tangram (which is still good, despite Schmoelling's presence) and its follow-up |
TD circa 1980-1985 is amazing. Team Schmoelling!
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 15:05
verslibre wrote:
JEAN-MICHEL JARRE – Rendez-Vous / Révolutions
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Now that's an interesting one... is it because of the variable quality of the later pieces or the mechanical nature of the former?
------------- 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
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 15:08
verslibre wrote:
Sean Trane wrote:
I'd place the cursor on Tangram (which is still good, despite Schmoelling's presence) and its follow-up |
TD circa 1980-1985 is amazing. Team Schmoelling!
|
I have no qualms about TD up to Poland, they are then a little more inconsistent through to Live Miles, but still very enjoyable... thereafter, not so much...
------------- 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
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 15:13
Jared wrote:
verslibre wrote:
JEAN-MICHEL JARRE – Rendez-Vous / Révolutions
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Now that's an interesting one... is it because of the variable quality of the later pieces or the mechanical nature of the former? |
Mechanical pertaining to Rendez-Vous? Interesting take, I never thought of it that way. It feels much more organic and a return to formula after the (very interesting, admittedly) detour that was Zoolook. (Les Chants Magnétique ended up being my overall favorite.)
Revolutions has its moments but, like you say, the variance is too steep. It feels like a backslide compositionally.
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: Steve Wyzard
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 15:14
verslibre wrote:
Steve Wyzard wrote:
3. RUSH - Signals/Grace Under Pressure |
IMO, that's one of Rush's strongest double-punches. Diff'rent strokes! |
From the day it came out, I always found Grace Under Pressure to be a gloomy/morose album. It has some good moments, and it's still in my collection, but I rarely listen to it. My favorite Rush double-punch is Hemispheres/Permanent Waves.
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 15:20
Jared wrote:
verslibre wrote:
Sean Trane wrote:
I'd place the cursor on Tangram (which is still good, despite Schmoelling's presence) and its follow-up |
TD circa 1980-1985 is amazing. Team Schmoelling!
|
I have no qualms about TD up to Poland, they are then a little more inconsistent through to Live Miles, but still very enjoyable... thereafter, not so much... |
The departure of Christopher Franke was a critical blow that took the band nearly twenty years to fully recover from, with some flashes of brilliance along the way (Miracle Mile, Goblins Club, The Seven Letters from Tibet).
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 15:28
Yeah, Grace is tonally meaner, gloomier and tougher than its post-'70s predecessors. The lyrical themes are darker, Alex's guitar sounds like a buzzsaw, Geddy's PPG sounds are futuristic if colder. Songs like "Afterimage," "Red Sector A" and "Between the Wheels" are dark and compelling. It all coalesces into one of my favorite rock albums by any band. It's perfect. There's not one thing they could do to improve it, and that's hard for me to say about any album by any band. They were at the top of their game.
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 15:31
verslibre wrote:
Yeah, Grace is tonally meaner, gloomier and tougher than its post-'70s predecessors. The lyrical themes are darker, Alex's guitar sounds like a buzzsaw, Geddy's PPG sounds are futuristic if colder. Songs like "Afterimage," "Red Sector A" and "Between the Wheels" are dark and compelling. It all coalesces into one of my favorite rock albums by any band. It's perfect. There's not one thing they could do to improve it, and that's hard for me to say about any album by any band. They were at the top of their game. |
I see the evolution from Signals to GUP to be similar to that from Performance to Metromania... same year, too.
------------- 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
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Posted By: Jeffro
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 15:34
I'm with you. I enjoy Signals far far more then GuP and rarely listen to it these days. It is rather gloomy. Its sound is a bit jarring to me. Other than Between The Wheels, I've never connected with that album. It's not like I hate the songs or anything, it just doesn't work for me. Thankfully, they followed that up with their best post-MP record, Power Windows.
------------- We all dwell in an amber subdomain, amber subdomain, amber subdomain.
My face IS a maserati
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 15:35
verslibre wrote:
Mechanical pertaining to Rendez-Vous? Interesting take, I never thought of it that way. It feels much more organic and a return to formula after the (very interesting, admittedly) detour that was Zoolook. (Les Chants Magnétique ended up being my overall favorite.)
Revolutions has its moments but, like you say, the variance is too steep. It feels like a backslide compositionally. |
No! the 'Mechanical' is in the early part of Revolutions, to give the idea of mechanisation and the Industrial Rev.. Rendez-Vous is much more organic, as you say and is one of favourites of his.
------------- 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
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Posted By: Hrychu
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 15:57
Budka Suflera - Przechodniem Byłem Między Wami -> Na Brzegu Światła. The latter album was in fact a state-commissioned tie in with the Summer Olympic Games in Moscow. The concept as well as the lyrics were all pure pro-USSR blurb.
------------- “On the day of my creation, I fell in love with education. And overcoming all frustration, a teacher I became.” — Ernest Vong
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 16:14
Jared wrote:
verslibre wrote:
Mechanical pertaining to Rendez-Vous? Interesting take, I never thought of it that way. It feels much more organic and a return to formula after the (very interesting, admittedly) detour that was Zoolook. (Les Chants Magnétique ended up being my overall favorite.)
Revolutions has its moments but, like you say, the variance is too steep. It feels like a backslide compositionally. |
No! the 'Mechanical' is in the early part of Revolutions, to give the idea of mechanisation and the Industrial Rev.. Rendez-Vous is much more organic, as you say and is one of favourites of his. |
Oh, right! I do like the first side, the "Révolution Industrielle" suite and "London Kid." I really must revisit it because the second side didn't grab me. But you never know, listening with a different ear years later does things. The whole affair does rely heavily on the Roland D-50, and TD did the same that year with Optical Race.
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 16:17
Jeffro wrote:
I'm with you. I enjoy Signals far far more then GuP and rarely listen to it these days. It is rather gloomy. It's sound is a bit jarring to me. Other than Between The Wheels, I've never connected with that album. It's not like I hate the songs or anything, it just doesn't work for me. Thankfully, they followed that up with their best post-MP record, Power Windows.
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Power Windows is likewise perfect to my ears. I see that as the second chapter of an unofficial "digital" trilogy, sitting between P/G and Hold Your Fire.
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 24 2024 at 23:21
verslibre wrote:
Oh, right! I do like the first side, the "Révolution Industrielle" suite and "London Kid." I really must revisit it because the second side didn't grab me. But you never know, listening with a different ear years later does things. The whole affair does rely heavily on the Roland D-50, and TD did the same that year with Optical Race. |
Now that's interesting. I'm afraid I'm not technically adept enough to have drawn the parallels between Revolutions and Optical Race in terms of the equipment used. Side 2 of Revolutions never did much for me (although I haven't revisited it in a while), while OR, Lily and Melrose also left me fairly cold... I'd put this down partly to the sound, lack of inspiration in the compositions and the fact that their music doesn't work as well for short, stand alone compositions as it does for longer suites?
------------- 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
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Posted By: essexboyinwales
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 01:33
IQ - Road Of Bones/Resistance
------------- Heaven is waiting but waiting is Hell
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Posted By: cstack3
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 09:40
King Crimson: In The Wake of Poseidon/Lizard/Islands
------------- I am not a Robot, I'm a FREE MAN!!
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 09:50
cstack3 wrote:
King Crimson: In The Wake of Poseidon/Lizard/Islands
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all three are very good, especially Lizard...
------------- 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
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Posted By: Hrychu
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 10:06
I think Lizard is as good as "Court" in terms of songwriting, performance, arrangement experimentation, Mellotron use etc. It's just not as iconic.
------------- “On the day of my creation, I fell in love with education. And overcoming all frustration, a teacher I became.” — Ernest Vong
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 10:44
Jared wrote:
verslibre wrote:
Oh, right! I do like the first side, the "Révolution Industrielle" suite and "London Kid." I really must revisit it because the second side didn't grab me. But you never know, listening with a different ear years later does things. The whole affair does rely heavily on the Roland D-50, and TD did the same that year with Optical Race. |
Now that's interesting. I'm afraid I'm not technically adept enough to have drawn the parallels between Revolutions and Optical Race in terms of the equipment used. Side 2 of Revolutions never did much for me (although I haven't revisited it in a while), while OR, Lily and Melrose also left me fairly cold... I'd put this down partly to the sound, lack of inspiration in the compositions and the fact that their music doesn't work as well for short, stand alone compositions as it does for longer suites? |
I really like roughly half the compositions on Optical Race. "Mothers of Rain" is a dynamite track, but it's the only one composed while Franke was still in the group. The rest of the album was largely done by Haslinger, though Froese's presence is most apparent on "Sun Gate" with that fantastic guitar lead, "Turning Off the Wheel," and his unmistakable chord progression on "The Midnight Trail."
Optical Race is a showcase for multiple D-50/550 units, and Yamaha DX/TX tech. There's presumably a Matrix 6 (owned by Wadephul) on "Sun Gate," but I couldn't tell you which sound comes from it.
I've no idea what was added for Lily on the Beach except for the Korg M1, which replaced the D-50 as the synth du jour. For reasons, Miracle Mile emerged the clear winner in terms of both the music and the overall sound and it's terrific.
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: Steve Wyzard
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 11:13
Hrychu wrote:
I think Lizard is as good as "Court" in terms of songwriting, performance, arrangement experimentation, Mellotron use etc. It's just not as iconic. |
It's all about the ALBUM COVERS!!!
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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 11:30
Hi,
I can't say I ever thought a band lost its track or ideas ... people change and tomorrow they will do and say things differently ... it's to be expected, or it will sound the same the whole time.
But there are some things I kinda stopped purchasing anything, because a lot of the European scene was better and more enjoyable for me. These would include Jethro Tull, Moody Blues, Santana, Chicago, Yes, Genesis, and a handful of others ... not because the music was not as good, but because my money was now being spent on imports of Tangerine Dream, Klaus Schulze, Guru Guru, Banco, Le Orme, and many other things that to my ear were much nicer than the well known stuff, some of which many folks think it went downhill. Some I did not specifically listen to, and that happened with Bill Bruford, and most of it was not his work in KC, but the money was limited so I did not get KC stuff, despite all of it being really nice to listen to and not repetitive, and formatted like so many bands that stopped being creative.
------------- 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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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 11:31
verslibre wrote:
I really like roughly half the compositions on Optical Race. "Mothers of Rain" is a dynamite track, but it's the only one composed while Franke was still in the group. The rest of the album was largely done by Haslinger, though Froese's presence is most apparent on "Sun Gate" with that fantastic guitar lead, "Turning Off the Wheel," and his unmistakable chord progression on "The Midnight Trail."
Optical Race is a showcase for multiple D-50/550 units, and Yamaha DX/TX tech. There's presumably a Matrix 6 (owned by Wadephul) on "Sun Gate," but I couldn't tell you which sound comes from it.
I've no idea what was added for Lily on the Beach except for the Korg M1, which replaced the D-50 as the synth du jour. For reasons, Miracle Mile emerged the clear winner in terms of both the music and the overall sound and it's terrific. |
An interesting read... thanks for the info
------------- 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
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Posted By: presdoug
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 12:27
Le Orme-Contrappunti/Smogmagica Beggar's Opera-Pathfinder/GYDOM Banco-Banco '75/As In A Last Supper Terje Rypdal-What Comes After/Odyssey Eloy-Inside/Floating Soft Machine-Seven/Softs Solution-Cordon Blue/Fully Interlocking Tangerine Dream-Encore/Cyclone
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Posted By: I prophesy disaster
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 14:23
someone_else wrote:
Van der Graaf Generator: A Grounding in Numbers / Alt |
I was going to say that. But perhaps also:
Van der Graaf Generator: Pawn Hearts / Godbluff or even: Van der Graaf Generator: Godbluff / Still Life
------------- No, I know how to behave in the restaurant now, I don't tear at the meat with my hands. If I've become a man of the world somehow, that's not necessarily to say I'm a worldly man.
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Posted By: someone_else
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 15:26
^I'd prefer Godbluff over Pawn Hearts and Still Life is my favourite VdGG album. Pawn Hearts just escapes being mentioned after H to He in my book .
Still Life / World Record could be an interesting option.
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Posted By: I prophesy disaster
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 16:21
^ Well, at least we agree on Van der Graaf Generator: A Grounding in Numbers / Alt
------------- No, I know how to behave in the restaurant now, I don't tear at the meat with my hands. If I've become a man of the world somehow, that's not necessarily to say I'm a worldly man.
|
Posted By: cstack3
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 21:51
Jared wrote:
cstack3 wrote:
King Crimson: In The Wake of Poseidon/Lizard/Islands
|
all three are very good, especially Lizard... |
Not as good as the debut album, nor as good as LTIA. I found them all to be very inconsistent, and Fripp seems to agree about Lizard at least.
------------- I am not a Robot, I'm a FREE MAN!!
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Posted By: Hrychu
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 23:02
I found them all to be very inconsistent, and Fripp seems to agree about Lizard at least. | Lizard is a very polarizing album. And I think the debut isn't that much more consistent. People keep forgetting about the countless filler noodling sections in Schizoid Man, Moonchild and the title track that go on for too long. Especially Moonchild.
------------- “On the day of my creation, I fell in love with education. And overcoming all frustration, a teacher I became.” — Ernest Vong
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Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 23:14
verslibre wrote:
Sean Trane wrote:
I'd place the cursor on Tangram (which is still good, despite Schmoelling's presence) and its follow-up |
TD circa 1980-1985 is amazing. Team Schmoelling!
|
agreed. I love that period of TD.
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Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 23:15
essexboyinwales wrote:
IQ - Road Of Bones/Resistance |
what's that song from Frozen, oh yes 'Let it go let it go let it go''
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Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 23:27
Steve Wyzard wrote:
You know how it goes (or should I say: how it went?). One of your favorite bands/artists releases an album that exceeds all expectations or returns them to the media spotlight. You wait/waited with baited breath for the follow-up (or sequel), only to be...well, if not dumbstruck, at the very least disappointed with the drop in quality. How could they let you down like this, when you just knew one more outstanding album would surely lead to world domination? Then, when asked about it, the band/artist says something like, "The producer ruined it/You have to try 'new things'/We decided to go 'back to basics'."
If this has happened to you, please list the albums you loved and the disappointing follow-ups. Off the top of my head, here's mine:
1. YES - 90125/Big Generator 2. YES - Going for the One/Tormato 3. RUSH - Signals/Grace Under Pressure 4. E.L.P. - Black Moon/In the Hot Seat 5. LED ZEPPELIN - Physical Graffiti/Presence 6. QUEEN - News of the World/Jazz 7. STYX - Pieces of Eight/Cornerstone 8. ALAN PARSONS PROJECT - Eye in the Sky/Ammonia Avenue 9. PETER GABRIEL - I (Car)/II (Scratch) 10. SAGA - Heads or Tales/Behaviour 11. BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST - Ring of Changes/Victims of Circumstance 12. THE WHO - Quadrophenia/By Numbers |
1. Never liked 90125 personally 2. Kinda agree but both albums come across as patchy compared to the classic run of albums they did prior. 3. I listened to GUP recently and expected to not like it. Wrong I loved it. Probably the last of their great albums. 4. ELP - at the time I had waited ages for new ELP and loved Black Moon. Then ITHS was as you say a massive disappointment. Nowadays I hardly listen to either but probably the only track that is a keeper across both is Hand Of Truth. That said Daddy could well be the worst thing they ever did. 5. Presence has Achilles Last Stand. Maybe the birth of prog metal. Nuff said. 6. Jazz is highly rated by some but I'm not that bothered about any Queen albums in truth. Like them but they were all over the place musically. 7. Don't know 8. My favourite APP is Pyramid but I find there are decent tracks across all his albums, nothing is earthn shattering though. 9. Yep perhaps. Scratch wasn't a massive come down though. It still is very much PG. 10. Don't know 11. Don't Know 12. By Numbers is my favourite Who record but it does come across a bit as a Peter Townsend solo record. ''How Many Friends'', ''Blue, Red and Grey'', ''Slip Kid'' are bone fide Who classic tracks in my book. No real bad ones , even Squeeze Box is okay.
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Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: July 25 2024 at 23:41
Gary Numan - Replicas/ The Pleasure Principle. Nowadays I like both about equal but for some reason the electo pop stylings of TPP grated on me at the time compared to the new prog brilliance of Replicas. Admittedly they are very different sounding. He was almost the gatekeeper to the 80's electro pop thing.
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Posted By: Saperlipopette!
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 01:51
richardh wrote:
5. Presence has Achilles Last Stand. Maybe the birth of prog metal. Nuff said. | Maybe it is and maybe it's not. It's ten minutes of fantastic music, that's for sure. I personally count Nobody's Fault but Mine
among Led Zeppelin's classics as well. So while all in all Presence may be my least favorite studio album of theirs (excluding Coda), it's
still essential and not to be missed. As far as I'm concerned all of their albums are. I do understand where
Steve Wyzard is coming from, but I happen to think that Physical
Grafitti is kind of patchy as well. The highs on the that album would
make for an absolutely perfect two (or three) sided LP, but I'm rarely do I feel
like spinning the D-side, and spoil the mood after Ten Years Gone is over.
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Posted By: Grumpyprogfan
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 04:24
Genesis - Selling England... / The Lamb... Jethro Tull - Minstrel... / Too Old
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Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 05:09
Grumpyprogfan wrote:
Genesis - Selling England... / The Lamb... Jethro Tull - Minstrel... / Too Old
|
Totally agree with those two choices. Ideally, The overlong Lamb should have shorn down to a single album. Baa. https://emojipedia.org/ewe" rel="nofollow -
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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 07:22
Deep Purple "Made in Japan" - "Who do We Think We Are"
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 09:55
Psychedelic Paul wrote:
Grumpyprogfan wrote:
Genesis - Selling England... / The Lamb... Jethro Tull - Minstrel... / Too Old
|
Totally agree with those two choices. Ideally, The overlong Lamb should have shorn down to a single album. Baa. https://emojipedia.org/ewe" rel="nofollow -
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 10:01
Grumpyprogfan wrote:
Jethro Tull - Minstrel... / Too Old |
The timing of TOTRTYTD is unfortunate. Minstrel makes a wonderful lead-in to the "folk trilogy," but then this album that sounds a few years late pops up. I mean, I like it, but it sounds like it should've been released before WarChild, if that makes any sense.
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: Steve Wyzard
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 10:04
Saperlipopette! wrote:
richardh wrote:
5. Presence has Achilles Last Stand. Maybe the birth of prog metal. Nuff said. | Maybe it is and maybe it's not. It's ten minutes of fantastic music, that's for sure. I personally count Nobody's Fault but Mine
among Led Zeppelin's classics as well. So while all in all Presence may be my least favorite studio album of theirs (excluding Coda), it's
still essential and not to be missed. As far as I'm concerned all of their albums are. I do understand where
Steve Wyzard is coming from, but I happen to think that Physical
Grafitti is kind of patchy as well. The highs on the that album would
make for an absolutely perfect two (or three) sided LP, but I'm rarely do I feel
like spinning the D-side, and spoil the mood after Ten Years Gone is over.
|
Thanks for your thoughts on Led Zeppelin. I agree that "Achilles Last Stand" is one of the best things the band ever did. It's the rest of Presence ("Hots on for Nowhere" notwithstanding) that merited its inclusion on my original list. And while Physical Graffiti may be my second favorite Led Zep album, I agree that it's not perfect. I always skip over "In My Time of Dying" and "Sick Again" from that one.
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Posted By: Grumpyprogfan
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 10:51
verslibre wrote:
Grumpyprogfan wrote:
Jethro Tull - Minstrel... / Too Old |
The timing of TOTRTYTD is unfortunate. Minstrel makes a wonderful lead-in to the "folk trilogy," but then this album that sounds a few years late pops up. I mean, I like it, but it sounds like it should've been released before WarChild, if that makes any sense. | It does make sense, but I like Warchild much more than Too old.
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Posted By: Grumpyprogfan
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 10:53
Jared wrote:
Psychedelic Paul wrote:
Grumpyprogfan wrote:
Genesis - Selling England... / The Lamb... Jethro Tull - Minstrel... / Too Old
|
Totally agree with those two choices. Ideally, The overlong Lamb should have shorn down to a single album. Baa. [URL=https://emojipedia.org/ewe" rel="nofollow]<h3 ="lc20lb="" mbeuo="" dkv0md"="" style="font-weight: 400; margin: 18px 0px 3px; padding: 5px 0px 0px; font-size: 20px; line-height: 1.3; display: inline-block;]🐑</h3>[/URL] |
I often say about double albums, that they would have made more of an impact if they had been edited to a single disk (think: The Flower Kings)... but I can't agree here; the Lamb material holds up all the way through. | Nope. The Lamb is my least fave Genesis. I prefer the pop stuff to The Lamb.
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 11:49
Grumpyprogfan wrote:
Nope. The Lamb is my least fave Genesis. I prefer the pop stuff to The Lamb. |
As much as I find that thought truly excruciating Will, I'm sure we're not going to fall out over it...
------------- 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
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Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 13:56
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway is my favourite Genesis album, but to each their own tastes, of course. I find it satisfying all the way through.
There are some albums that I clearly think inferior follow-ups, but generally I was expecting that. I'm trying to think of something where I came in and was hoping for more based on loving past albums. *three seconds later* Oh yes, of course, Yes' Close to the Edge. The time is in the latter half of the 1980s, I'm a teenager in high school. My very good friend Rob introduced me to Fragile, and I adored it. Months later he introduced me to Close to the Edge as an even better album and it feel quite flat. I do actually like the first two tracks and it was "Siberian Khatru" that really made me want to replace the tape with Fragile.
More recently, I guess I was a little disappointed with Anna von Hausswolff's All Thoughts Fly at first. I was not expecting to like it as much as the three former albums being an instrumental (pipe organ) as i like the more eclectic approach of her earlier albums. Loved Persefone from the get-go. Now I like it much more for what it is. I've always liked the pipe organ, including solo, and the most beautiful concert I have been too was a viola and pipe organ concert in Osaka (the location makes it more sentimental to me).
------------- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IKuxIZkenfvukL_Y8VBqzK" rel="nofollow - Duos for fave acts
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Posted By: Awesoreno
Date Posted: July 26 2024 at 22:39
I think we finally found a topic on which our tastes do not align. Which is not very often, my grumpy friend.
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Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: July 28 2024 at 00:08
Interesting that according to Steve Hackett in a recent interview said that when they recorded it at the Grange , PG was writing the music in an entirely different room. He had already left the band it seemed. This is not anything new probably but it was interesting to hear it said. Does it make any difference? I tend to think of it as almost as being a solo album much like The Wall was the start of Roger Waters solo career and Floyd had become his backing band. Nowadays I like Lamb more than SEBTP but I can't say that about Animals and The Wall.
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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: July 30 2024 at 07:52
Hi,
I know this is not a popular view, but in many ways, I find this thread really sad ... if you were one of those bands, I doubt you would not stand up for your talent and creativity, but now, in the Internet Age we think the fan is the rule and screw the artist ... and I don't think that is right, and it smacks of disrespect, which is now centered on the enduser/fan's money for purchasing something ... when they could have gotten something else!
You can look at Picasso, and in the end, he had over thousands of paintings, or an insane number like that, and of course, some would seem better than the others ... but in the end, the artist went out in a massive blaze of glory for his work, and specially its quantity.
We're working on the process to hurt artists, is what it feel like to me ... so Ian's album is not as "great" in our estimation as some stuff he did before, but he's still the same artist, and he's still good, despite his advancing years. About the only one I dislike, is RW, because of his trashing of YES. I find it hypocritical, that he doesn't know music beyond his likes ... and thinks only his scales and composition matters in this world ... and he obviously has never heard any other music other than the English variety for the last 50 years ...
------------- 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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Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: July 30 2024 at 09:03
I notice many more generally positive threads about music than negative if such threads sadden/ bother you. Of course you are free to share your negative opinions on such things just as others are free to share their opinions. I might suggest, for some, focusing on those, and making one's own, than giving the negative threads more "legs". While I do like the idea of being sensitive to artists, it is to be expected that as a forum of music fans we do have these kinds of frank conversations about what we like, don't like, unexpected joys, disappointments..... Since you brought up Maddy Prior in this poll, https://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=133286&PID=6147104#6147104" rel="nofollow - Part 3 Female singers, this time of groups/collabs , I thought you might have some enthusiasm about her inclusion in this poll, https://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=133292" rel="nofollow - Pt. 4: Some Female Singers in PA Not Listed Before , that I made yesterday. When I make polls I hope that people will find something appreciative to say about any of the listed artists, but I am happy to hear about others too. I generally do prefer it when people focus on the positive, are more appreciative of artists, topics, posts and other forum members, than those that are disparaging, but for a fuller forum, I would expected a spectrum of perspectives and approaches.
------------- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IKuxIZkenfvukL_Y8VBqzK" rel="nofollow - Duos for fave acts
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: July 30 2024 at 09:32
I must admit, I had been thinking... wouldn't it be good if, rather than (or as well as) a thread on 'Disappointing follow-ups' we had a thread where we could think of bands who may have been on a slow downward curve of mediocrity, then maybe fresh blood or impetus causes them to make a surprisingly strong album, that no-one was expecting?
Just a thought... after the recent debacle on my 'underrated albums' thread, I certainly won't be starting another any time soon, but it might be an idea for some of the positivity Greg alludes to?
------------- 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
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Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: July 30 2024 at 10:36
^ That sounds like a great idea for a topic. I might take it on later today if no one else does in the meantime.
------------- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IKuxIZkenfvukL_Y8VBqzK" rel="nofollow - Duos for fave acts
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Posted By: Steve Wyzard
Date Posted: July 30 2024 at 11:19
One of the very best things about this site is the BRUTAL honesty of the reviewers/posters when it comes to music that is very well outside of the "mainstream" and is in no sense to be thought of as a status symbol. It shows that people really care about this music, to the point of being emotionally invested.
That being said, as the OP I'm a little bit stunned with the comments that this is a "disrespectful/negative" subject to be discussing. All I was thinking when I came up with the original idea was that sometimes the artists we enjoy record/release an album that doesn't live up to our expectations. Even if we take for granted that every album is going to be new and different from previous albums, is it wrong to expect that we will "once again" be pleasantly surprised, based on what they've given us previously?
As with any artistic endeavor, there are, of course, no guarantees, and we take for granted that ALL artists will change/grow with the passage of time. If anything, we have it MUCH easier today, because we can sample/stream albums before purchasing them, which would have been unthinkable back when much of this music was originally released. I just do not see how it is somehow "disrespectful/disparaging" to desire a return on our investment of time/money, even if we acknowledge from the beginning that the artists who have given us something we enjoy in the past will not/cannot always do so.
Or is the real issue here the DEIFICATION of the artist? Simply because someone creates a work of art does not make them infallible, or somehow a higher-grade of human being who is beyond error and accountability. It's actually rather refreshing to hear a recording artist say in an interview, "We did the best we could, but that album didn't turn out the way I liked." I'm not convinced that saying, "I didn't like Album B as much as Album A that preceded it" is somehow "hurtful" to the artist. Nor does it bring them "down to earth". It's just an acknowledgement that every album is different, and some we like more than others.
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Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: July 30 2024 at 11:29
I think this is a very good topic and have no problem with it, in case my comment directed towards Moshkito's post was taken differently. While I don't like to offend artists, and I think a certain level of tact commonly is advisable when talking about the artists themselves, honesty is important. I wouldn't like it if we were all a bunch of fanboys just drooling over the artists' oeuvres. It's normal to prefer some works by artists than others, the artists themselves commonly do, and some of them actually appreciate honest critiques of their works. When it come to negativity, it's the negativity over the perceived negativity of others that most commonly gets me down.
------------- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IKuxIZkenfvukL_Y8VBqzK" rel="nofollow - Duos for fave acts
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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: July 30 2024 at 11:46
Logan wrote:
I think this is a very good topic and have no problem with it, in case my comment directed towards Moshkito's post was taken differently. ... |
HI,
No worries there at all. As you well know, I have ALWAYS been on the side of the artist, regardless. Sure, it could be said that one album or other is not as good, but, for me, that's like saying I wanted more of the same as the previous album, and that is something I do not like, or enjo at all ... and that is my only bug about a lot of prog rock being so formulaic, but that is not a comment on the musicianship involved, even though it might seem that way. I still listen to them all ... regardless. Again, for me, Beethoven's 9 Symphonies are all great ... and there is no such thing as one is better than the other, and I look at a lot of rock music exactly the same ... I can put on those disks of classical music and love them dearly ... heck, I have 3 versions of Turandot ... or a couple of versions of Tosca because Gigli's voice in one is out of this world ...
There are a lot of things to find in those "lesser" albums, and in general, I tend not to comment on them much.
------------- 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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Posted By: Steve Wyzard
Date Posted: July 30 2024 at 12:35
Just thought of 2 more:
1. ANDY SUMMERS/ROBERT FRIPP - I Advance Masked/Bewitched 2. PETER GABRIEL - III (Melt)/IV (Security)
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Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: July 30 2024 at 12:38
^^ I for one really appreciate diversity coming from artists, Pedro. This can be from album to album or from track to track in an album. While many pan it, I really enjoy Comus' follow up to First Utterance, To Keep From Crying, partially because it is so different on the whole. I like the uniqueness of Merci in Magma's discography even if I don;t enjoy it nearly as much as the preceding Attahk, which also had been pretty unique to its discography. Swans is one of my favourite bands but I have not got much into its first few albums as I like the change of direction with Jarboe, and then later albums, but I appreciate the diversity and that elements of those early albums persisted despite becoming more melodic later. I appreciate contrast.
With Beethoven, I have a von Karajan box set of the none symphonies, which I prefer to other versions of those. I do gravitate more to the Ninth and the Seventh the most of those. While I was raised with classical music, a big part of my Beethoven fascination did come from the A Clockwork Orange and Zardoz films. And awesome use of the second movement of Beethoven in this favourite short film of mine (no doubt it resonate more because of the music).
------------- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IKuxIZkenfvukL_Y8VBqzK" rel="nofollow - Duos for fave acts
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Posted By: Mornar Popaj
Date Posted: July 30 2024 at 14:01
Gentle Giant - Interview / The Missing Piece Smak - Zašto ne volim sneg / Smak 86
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 30 2024 at 14:09
moshkito wrote:
No worries there at all. As you well know, I have ALWAYS been on the side of the artist, regardless. Sure, it could be said that one album or other is not as good, but, for me, that's like saying I wanted more of the same as the previous album, and that is something I do not like, or enjo at all ... and that is my only bug about a lot of prog rock being so formulaic, but that is not a comment on the musicianship involved, even though it might seem that way. |
The musicianship isn't usually the problem. Choices are. When Twelfth Night lost their frontman-lyricist and replaced him and then they started sounding like a second-rate new wave band with an identity crisis, everything went downhill. That's not a criticism, that's an observation.
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: August 07 2024 at 02:16
someone_else wrote:
Rush: Hold Your Fire / Presto |
I think Hold Your Fire was a disappointing follow up to Power Windows. For me, presto was a return to form. Hot take, i know, but i think Presto is a better put together album than HYF.
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Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: August 07 2024 at 02:25
essexboyinwales wrote:
IQ - Road Of Bones/Resistance |
I agree.
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Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: August 07 2024 at 02:30
progaardvark wrote:
Some more that come to mind:
Eloy: Metromania/Ra Arena: Pepper's Ghost/The Seventh Degree of Separation Atoll: Tertio/Rock Puzzle Mike Rutherford: Smallcreep's Day/Acting Very Strange David Bowie: Scary Monsters/Let's Dance ELP: Brain Salad Surgery/Works Voume 1 David Gilmour: About Face/On an Island IQ: The Wake/Nomzamo Le Orme: Contrappunti/Smogmagica Pendragon: Not of This World/Believe Renaissance: Azure d'Or/Camera Camera Supertramp: Brother Where You Bound/Free as a Bird |
I agree with these ones.
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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: August 07 2024 at 06:25
Miles Davis studio albums: "Get Up With It" - "The Man with the Horn"
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Posted By: Saperlipopette!
Date Posted: August 07 2024 at 07:00
Easy Money wrote:
Miles Davis studio albums: "Get Up With It" - "The Man
with the Horn" | I thought about it. But as there's his famous
six year hiatus from music in between those two - to me it primarely
belongs in a "(most) disappointing comeback albums (of all time)"
discussion.
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Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: August 07 2024 at 07:12
Forget that one... already done it...
------------- 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
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Posted By: essexboyinwales
Date Posted: August 07 2024 at 10:03
Cristi wrote:
progaardvark wrote:
Some more that come to mind:
Eloy: Metromania/Ra Arena: Pepper's Ghost/The Seventh Degree of Separation Atoll: Tertio/Rock Puzzle Mike Rutherford: Smallcreep's Day/Acting Very Strange David Bowie: Scary Monsters/Let's Dance ELP: Brain Salad Surgery/Works Voume 1 David Gilmour: About Face/On an Island IQ: The Wake/Nomzamo Le Orme: Contrappunti/Smogmagica Pendragon: Not of This World/Believe Renaissance: Azure d'Or/Camera Camera Supertramp: Brother Where You Bound/Free as a Bird |
I agree with these ones. |
Re IQ, and Nomzamo following up The Wake - to me there is so much context here - my entry into IQ was the 2 Menel albums, which I adored so much (and still do). I only came to the earlier albums much later. So Nomzamo was embedded in my brain as a wonderful album, and never viewed as a follow up to The Wake. How would I feel if I’d known and loved the band from the start? It’s literally impossible to say. And the same thing happens with so many other bands….
Another for me is Dream Theater - to me, Awake was a poor follow-up to I&W, which I loved so much (and still do). I appreciate Awake now, but it’s nowhere near the brilliance of it’s predecessor, for me!
------------- Heaven is waiting but waiting is Hell
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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: August 07 2024 at 17:34
verslibre wrote:
... The musicianship isn't usually the problem. Choices are. When Twelfth Night lost their frontman-lyricist and replaced him and then they started sounding like a second-rate new wave band with an identity crisis, everything went downhill. That's not a criticism, that's an observation. |
Hi,
I would think that this seems like a lot more of a preference than a band issue. You liked the earlier stuff and musician, and the "replacement" is not good enough. Then we have the massive changes in a band like KC and all it does is send us all into a tiffy, because things are so different, and yet, they get played 30/40 years later in their shows ... and something of that nature would not be an observation of the whole thing going downhill but a change to something else. Again, I would look at this as an artist decision, and us, the fans, not liking it or thinking it is inferior is an external matter, not necessarily related to the band and its members ...
This is a scary part ... people thinking one thing is better than the other because it was better received, and not quite appreciated as it was before ... times change, folks change, and we're suggesting that our favorite bands can not change with the times, place, equipment, and such at all, because it won't be as good as what we liked?
I keep thinking that it is a fan problem. Not an artist problem! But heck, sometimes, it's difficult to not say something ... I mean, after BAD, how could anyone do better or be more interesting? So yeah, it's easy to say something, but again, we did not take into consideration the drive and the workmanship that the artist took to try and live to that next release, and fan reaction ... the question is, are you an artist, or just a crowd pleaser for the money?
------------- 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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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: August 07 2024 at 19:09
moshkito wrote:
verslibre wrote:
... The musicianship isn't usually the problem. Choices are. When Twelfth Night lost their frontman-lyricist and replaced him and then they started sounding like a second-rate new wave band with an identity crisis, everything went downhill. That's not a criticism, that's an observation. |
Hi,
I would think that this seems like a lot more of a preference than a band issue. You liked the earlier stuff and musician, and the "replacement" is not good enough. Then we have the massive changes in a band like KC and all it does is send us all into a tiffy, because things are so different, and yet, they get played 30/40 years later in their shows ... and something of that nature would not be an observation of the whole thing going downhill but a change to something else. Again, I would look at this as an artist decision, and us, the fans, not liking it or thinking it is inferior is an external matter, not necessarily related to the band and its members ...
This is a scary part ... people thinking one thing is better than the other because it was better received, and not quite appreciated as it was before ... times change, folks change, and we're suggesting that our favorite bands can not change with the times, place, equipment, and such at all, because it won't be as good as what we liked?
I keep thinking that it is a fan problem. Not an artist problem! But heck, sometimes, it's difficult to not say something ... I mean, after BAD, how could anyone do better or be more interesting? So yeah, it's easy to say something, but again, we did not take into consideration the drive and the workmanship that the artist took to try and live to that next release, and fan reaction ... the question is, are you an artist, or just a crowd pleaser for the money? |
It's hardly a fan problem. Remember when Peter Nicholls left IQ and went and formed an alt-rock band called Niadem's Ghost (mislabeled on this site as neo)? Believe it or not, I like that album. The reviews here, save one, aren't kind, and they aren't forgiving, though IQ themselves were trying on a different hat 'round the same time.
Twelfth Night with Andy Sears (and then Martyn Watson) as their frontman sounded like an aspiring new wave band that tried, unsuccessfully, to have enough proggy flourishes to maintain their cult following. If you're unfamiliar with their repertoire, then I understand why we don't share the same perspective.
As the saying goes, I calls 'em like I sees 'em.
P.S. I've never heard anything King Crimson do send me "into a tiffy," whatever that may be.
------------- https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_ipg=50&_sop=1&_rdc=1&_ssn=musicosm" rel="nofollow - eBay
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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: August 08 2024 at 07:39
verslibre wrote:
... It's hardly a fan problem. Remember when Peter Nicholls left IQ and went and formed an alt-rock band called Niadem's Ghost (mislabeled on this site as neo)? Believe it or not, I like that album. The reviews here, save one, aren't kind, and they aren't forgiving, though IQ themselves were trying on a different hat 'round the same time. ... |
Hi,
My thoughts are that the artist has the option to do something else ... we, as fans, do not have the right to decide what the artist should do at all ... but sometimes, we think that as "critics" that we are more important than the artist and his/her output. This is one of the reasons why I do not do as many reviews of rock albums as I would like to ... I would love to see more folks separate their "favorites" for something else about the art of it all and how it grew in the past 500/700 years. It wasn't about the fans, all the way to the start of the 20th Century (more or less) when all of a sudden we got to see reviews of the new music, and Stravinsky threw people for loops, Debussy was booed ... and so on ... and to their credit they could fly a finger high, now ... they stood up for their work, although this might be different if there were no "changes" in the group ... but you and I know that different combinations yield different results, so it would be best to not expect the same thing.
I consider a "band" an artist ... and this might be the difference between our words ... Yes is still Yes despite the different keys, for example. However, it seems to me that the majority of folks simply discuss all the music as SONGS ... for which they drop their coins. That is not me as a music appreciation person, and one that has been close to many artists during my life, and some are much better, stronger and appreciated than how rock fans differ when they don't like something, which is the saddest side of this whole adventure ... no one that plays music for a living wants to hear that ... and they better be strong inside to be able to ignore the comments ... many of which have nothing to do with music or the artist whatsoever.
verslibre wrote:
... As the saying goes, I calls 'em like I sees 'em. ... |
But that is about you, not the artist! Heck, he/she might as well be a dishwasher in a restaurant for all that matters! ... just another dirty dish getting cleaned up!
------------- 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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Posted By: Steve Wyzard
Date Posted: August 08 2024 at 10:17
richardh wrote:
Interesting that according to Steve Hackett in a recent interview said that when they recorded it at the Grange , PG was writing the music in an entirely different room. He had already left the band it seemed. This is not anything new probably but it was interesting to hear it said. Does it make any difference? I tend to think of it as almost as being a solo album much like The Wall was the start of Roger Waters solo career and Floyd had become his backing band. Nowadays I like Lamb more than SEBTP but I can't say that about Animals and The Wall. |
I see Animals as the start of Roger Waters's solo career. Gilmour makes a powerful showing on that album, but Wright (except for his jazzy solo at the beginning of "Sheep") and Mason are relegated to being the backing/supporting group. Also, the lyrics/vocals become far too central to the entire package, rather than integrated into the music/performances.
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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: August 08 2024 at 12:44
Steve Wyzard wrote:
... I see Animals as the start of Roger Waters's solo career. Gilmour makes a powerful showing on that album, but Wright (except for his jazzy solo at the beginning of "Sheep") and Mason are relegated to being the backing/supporting group. Also, the lyrics/vocals become far too central to the entire package, rather than integrated into the music/performances. |
Hi,
Not sure about that at all ... the material for "Animals" was being played during the WYWH tour and it is in all the bootlegs. The 3 pieces were different, and the "space rock" piece (Sheep) was turned into a Roger Waters song, though the playing of it Live at the Anaheim Stadium was exceptional with Rick's keyboards literally dominating things.
I think they cleaned up the 3 pieces well, however, the original "Raving and Drooling" was to me, better than what Roger did with it ... this older version fit with "Astronomy Domine" and "Interstellar Overdrive", and other spacey far out stuff, that obviously Roger wanted to get rid of ... I doubt Nick didn't like it, since in his shows he has been doing the old stuff for us to enjoy ... something that both Dave and Roger have lost a taste for.
My take is, that both Dave and Roger are too set in their notes and chords and think that the compositions are better because they can screw around with a DAW and create something, and this would be a reason why they dislike the early stuff that had a lot of improvisation and undefined moments where they could do something different, which they obviously now feel that it was just kids screwing around, and not serious music ... and to me, that is very disrespectful to the other 2 members ... and I do not feel that Dave's solo work is anywhere near the quality of PF in its heyday ... and in fact, I find it "cheap" and just rock'n'roll (for lack of a better term) ... when compared to the moods, the creativity and the visuals that their older material carried, which their lyrics CURRENTLY do NOT. It's like their words are more important ... and honestly ... I don't need that any more than you do!
------------- 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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Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: August 10 2024 at 01:52
I love the 2018 remix of Animals (and the new artwork) more than just about anything at the moment. Wright's genius is still well evident in the music. Floyd had nowhere to go after that album which was the problem with a lot of prog in the seventies. One you've made your statement you've made it. At least ELP had the good 'sense' to just crash off the end of a cliff rather than drag us through decades of slow decline.
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Posted By: miamiscot
Date Posted: August 22 2024 at 07:25
The topic for this week's Live Sunday Progstream on The Prog Corner YouTube channel?
"AFTER THE MASTERPIECE"
This is something that has fascinated me ever since Andy Partridge talked about following up Skylarking. It was different now; they knew the music they were working on was actually going to be digested by a lot of people and it changed the vibe, the process, everything...
------------- The Prog Corner
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Posted By: Deadwing
Date Posted: August 22 2024 at 10:16
Believe is my favourite album from Pendragon
It's just a incredibly well balanced album, without the heaviness of Pure that would come and the massive walls of keyboards that was Not From this World... I really, really love it.
As for Rush, HYF would be a good example to me. Power Widows is a fantastic album and HYF is just so different, much more "romantic" (melody wise), lighter and with more filler tracks (it's a quite long album too). Also, the mixing quality is a lot worse and the drums don't sound good, especially when Power Windows gets a lot of this right.
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Posted By: AlanB
Date Posted: August 23 2024 at 12:56
Wishbone Ash: There's The Rub/Locked In (also Argus/Wishbone Four though in hindsight a lot of that was down to the production of the latter)
Transatlantic: Whirlwind/Kaleidoscope
Neal Morse: Sola Scriptura/Lifeline
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