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Have you ever heard of:

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Category: Progressive Music Lounges
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Printed Date: November 29 2024 at 17:35
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Topic: Have you ever heard of:
Posted By: mikedevilsfan
Subject: Have you ever heard of:
Date Posted: December 12 2004 at 00:18

Hey all I realize this is a bit self serving, but I am curious to know if you have ever heard of either Ed's Book or Band.

I have never been able to get any real data on it.

Michael




Replies:
Posted By: Angeliqué
Date Posted: December 12 2004 at 06:25
Hey Michael

Some links I found using Google:

http://www.us.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/Music/Pop ularMusic/PopRockPopularCulture/~~/c2Y9YWxsJnNzPWF1dGhvci5hc 2Mmc2Q9YXNjJnBmPTIwJnZpZXc9dXNhJnByPTEwJmJvb2tDb3ZlcnM9eWVzJ mNpPTAxOTUwOTg4NzA

http://www.hermeticscience.com/specialnewsflash.html

Hope this helps!!!





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Just take a pebble, and cast it to the sea....

Angeliqué


Posted By: mikedevilsfan
Date Posted: December 12 2004 at 06:33

THanks for the info Angelique.

Ed is a friend of mine, and I was the Drummer on the first CD. I was just curious if anyone had heard of them.

Bye the way Keith Emerson commented that Ed's book was the quitesential book on prog. He has a new ELP book at the publisher as we speak.

Michael



Posted By: Dick Heath
Date Posted: December 12 2004 at 10:43
Originally posted by mikedevilsfan mikedevilsfan wrote:

Bye the way Keith Emerson commented that Ed's book was the quitesential book on prog. He has a new ELP book at the publisher as we speak.

Michael



Is that 'quite essential' or 'quintessential'???? The former is more apt.

Rocking The Classics is one of the better (or to put it another way: less worst, cf. Jerry Lucky's) books on the subject. Well written, reasonably but not exhaustively researched (bit it does reads like a masters thesis) , it concentrates on 5 albums Macan thinks are 'classic', in developing a number of theses about progressive rock, e.g. it is music that came from the S.E. of England for certain reasons..... Being strongly opinionated (at least I grew up directly with early prog), I allow myself to get cross at several things he states, reflecting that incomplete research, the worst being "Allan Holdsworth is a typical Canterbury guitarist".

I found his e.mail address several years ago, and cheekily begged the Hermetic Science CDs, and Ed very kindly sent me them for radio play. They contain a number of self-composed tunes, and lots of rearranged covers - which indicate a fair degree of musical compedence, although there is a hint of amateurness. My favourite is Tarkus (I'm sure ELP is Macan's favourite band and may give a clue to Emerson's regard for the book), transcribed for solo grand piano. Macan recorded this live at a college in CA, and has a cicada accompanying him for part of the piece. The book is worth getting and the album with Tarkus on board.


Posted By: greenback
Date Posted: December 12 2004 at 10:51
i've heard (read) of Hermetic science in the "Exposé" fanzine.

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[HEADPINS - LINE OF FIRE: THE RECORD HAVING THE MOST POWERFUL GUITAR SOUND IN THE WHOLE HISTORY OF MUSIC!>


Posted By: mikedevilsfan
Date Posted: December 12 2004 at 17:19
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

[QUOTE=mikedevilsfan]

Bye the way Keith Emerson commented that Ed's book was the quitesential book on prog. He has a new ELP book at the publisher as we speak.

Michael



Is that 'quite essential' or 'quintessential'???? The former is more apt.
No Emerson called it the quintessential on the back cover.


Rocking The Classics is one of the better (or to put it another way: less worst, cf. Jerry Lucky's) books on the subject. Well written, reasonably but not exhaustively researched (bit it does reads like a masters thesis) ,

Or a dissertation. Ed has a PhD in Musicolgy.

 

it concentrates on 5 albums Macan thinks are 'classic', in developing a number of

Actually its only 4 pieces Firth of Fifth, Close to the Edge, Wish you were here and Tarkus. This is only one chapter in the book, so the whole work is not dedicated to this study. I don't think Ed thiks these are any more "classic' than many others, he just chose to delve a bit deeper into some of the music itself, rhather than just writing about it.

 theses about progressive rock, e.g. it is music that came from the S.E. of England for certain reasons..... Being strongly opinionated (at least I grew up directly with early prog), I allow myself to get cross at several things he states, reflecting that incomplete research, the worst being "Allan Holdsworth is a typical Canterbury guitarist".

To be sure. Ed is opinionated and he also grew up with prog. He doesn't see Rush as a prog band and him and I have had quite a few talks. He also doesn't recognize Dream Theater as Prog. I gave him a tape to listen to and he just thought it was metal. Ed is classicaly trained, so his perspective is a bit different than most of us here. When we compare Dream Theater to the Rolling Stones, there is a pretty big gap. But when he compares DT to ELP's adaptation of Ginistera, there is an even bigger gap. As far as Alan Holdsworth, he may not have heard anything but very early stuff. I don't think he is too interested in exploring the aftermath of mid 70's prog. Although he is quite familiar with the big names Crimson, UK, later Yes etc. 

I found his e.mail address several years ago, and cheekily begged the Hermetic Science CDs, and Ed very kindly sent me them for radio play. They contain a number of self-composed tunes, and lots of rearranged covers - which indicate a fair degree of musical compedence, although there is a hint of amateurness.

I'm not sure what you mean by amatuer. Very rarely have I seen anything written on this music with anykind of real understanding of what his influences are. Everything you heard on the first CD was originally scored and performed in concert halls as solo pieces. We adapted them to a band format. THey are neo-classical in format and their isn't one repeating bar I don't think on the entire album (with the exception of Mars). American critics were pretty luke warm but Europe pretty much loved it. Bill Bruford called the first album "intricate and interesting", I'm glad he didn't say the drums sucked!

 I would say ED is anything but an amateur though. I would say he is in the top five rock vibes players in the country. His Jazz playing is incredible also, as he leads the Jazz orchestra at the college he is the director at.

 

My favourite is Tarkus (I'm sure ELP is Macan's favourite band and may give a clue to Emerson's regard for the book), transcribed for solo grand piano. Macan recorded this live at a college in CA, and has a cicada accompanying him for part of the piece. The book is worth getting and the album with Tarkus on board.
Yeah it's pretty  cool. He played it in Music appreciation the first day of class (not all of it). That's where I met him. And yeah I can tell you first hand that he is an ELP head, as am I.

 




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