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Guldbamsen ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin Joined: January 22 2009 Location: Magic Theatre Status: Offline Points: 23104 |
![]() Posted: June 15 2016 at 06:52 |
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^ I kinda get the gist of what you're saying, but it only really goes for fans of mainstream radio - folks who like music when it's on yet at the same time don't actively pursue new sonic avenues and such.
Then again, I know a lot of music fans into the progressive stuff. People with much the same mindset as the old school proggers, yet they tend to listen to pop, hip hop, electronic, jazz, metal, freeform, darkwave and so forth. These may all sound like plastic throw-away genres that perpetuate the conform, but the fact of the matter is most of em produce artists that are about as cutting edge as any recent artist featured on PA. See Animal Collective, Death Grips, Flying Lotus, Liars, Joanna Newsom, F*ck Buttons, Autechre, Dälek, Kamasi Washington, Chelsea Wolfe, Lil Ugly Mane and Oneohtrix Point Never for proof - all of which are doing pretty good in today's market. Just like you encounter in most prog you'll hear complex rhythm changes, angular difficult riffs, unusual instrumentation and melodies, strange musical meetings between fx modern classical, avantguarde hip hop, jazz and modern electronic. On top of this you get a whole new generation of musicians experimenting with a wide array of new instruments and technologies, which again rather mimics a certain time and place oh so long ago. The fact that most old school prog fans don't like these new kids on the block is rather to be expected, but then again that only reflects how different tastebuds work. It's all subjective. Sure you'll struggle to find an experimental hip hop artist able to perform Foxtrot, but I'd bet my spare ankle that it would be equally difficult getting Genesis to cover MF Doom's Madvillain successfully. Progressive music doesn't exist in a prog rock vacuum - never has. Edited by Guldbamsen - June 15 2016 at 06:57 |
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“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams |
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Sardonite Calamity ![]() Forum Newbie ![]() ![]() Joined: June 09 2016 Location: Ottawa, Canada Status: Offline Points: 31 |
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Why do people love pop music? There is no talent whatsoever that goes into pop, they can't even sing so they use autotune. The answer is that people have gotten dumber. They are no longer able to follow a song that changes, they need something repetitive. Prog keeps changing and the people can't follow because they have such a short attention span. One cannot simply listen to an extract of prog rock because prog is an experience more that a song. I can tell that people who listen to rap tend to be a lot dumber that people who listen to rock. Prog is just too smart for them, and like most other things, when something is too smart for them they just laugh about it.
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I used to have a really good signature but I forgot it...
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HackettFan ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: June 20 2012 Location: Oklahoma Status: Offline Points: 7951 |
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Elsewhere in other posts big arena rock was also implicated. I see no basis for that either. Arena shows were commonplace with Metal bands in particular throughout the late 70s and 80s. Edited by HackettFan - June 12 2016 at 19:27 |
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A curse upon the heads of those who seek their fortunes in a lie. The truth is always waiting when there's nothing left to try. - Colin Henson, Jade Warrior (Now)
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cstack3 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() VIP Member Joined: July 20 2009 Location: Tucson, AZ USA Status: Offline Points: 7411 |
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Yeah, that's what I always thought!! ![]() The band had some amazing talent....the guitarist, Todd, was a blazing-fast jazz-rock guy at heart, he could play anything. If I had stayed on, I might have been able to force them in a new direction. However, I never regretted turning down the bassist chair and staying in graduate school!! Cheap Trick's "Live At Budokan" came out and destroyed all of the Chicago semi-punk, power-pop posers like the Marquis, Off Broadway, Pezband and many others. p.s. I can't imagine myself jammed into tight leather pants!! Gawd!!
![]() Edited by cstack3 - June 09 2016 at 21:04 |
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KingCrInuYasha ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 26 2010 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 1281 |
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It doesn't help that the guy on the right looks like Art Garfunkel. ![]()
And, if you want to go further back, there's always "Sister Ray" by The Velvet Underground.
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He looks at this world and wants it all... so he strikes, like Thunderball!
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Rednight ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 18 2014 Location: Mar Vista, CA Status: Offline Points: 4812 |
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"It just has none of the qualities of your work that I find interesting. Abandon [?] it." - Eno
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zravkapt ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 12 2010 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 6446 |
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Don't forget some punk bands had epics of their own.
This whole album was made as one track: |
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Magma America Great Make Again
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altaeria ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: March 05 2004 Location: Philadelphia Status: Offline Points: 178 |
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I always thought that the studio version of "Phantom of the Opera" by Iron Maiden was the perfect example of a Prog and Punk combination... Edited by altaeria - June 08 2016 at 11:43 |
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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![]() However, it could be argued that John Lydon redeemed himself once he dropped the Johnny Rotten moniker and formed Public Image Limited, and there is no denying that his aim with PiL was to push music forward. Was Rotten a real rock'n'roller? - Possibly not, but is Lydon? Indubitably so. Not a musician himself as such, (though he is classed as a singer/songwriter and credited with co-writing most PiL songs), he was able to attract some top-class musicians to band that had no designs on commercial success (Steve Vai and Ginger Baker to name but two) - ex-Magazine and Banshees guitarist John McGeoch (probably the finest guitarist ever to come out of Punk) would not have joined a band he had no respect for. With (full) artistic control over what he was doing (which is something he didn't have in the Pistols with McLaren in charge) he was able to put into action everything he had been saying as Johnny Rotten, which was not an attack on Prog but on the music establishment and pretentiousness, which at the time he thought Pink Floyd were the personification of, because like everyone else at the time he believed all that he read in the media: [In person, Pink Floyd are "not [pretentious] at all", Lydon admitted. "There was kind of a misreading and a misrepresentation in the press and they're not holier than thou ... Dave Gilmour I've met a few times and I just think he's an all right bloke." ~ The Guardian, Feb 2010 www.theguardian.com/music/2010/feb/18/john-lydon-pink-floyd ] Lydon's biggest criticism of mainstream music (in whatever guise that was, whether Prog or Disco) was it was boring and safe. On a lighter note, from the same interview:
and from elsewhere (2006): "But the biggest fun of the night was meeting Keith Emerson, of Emerson Lake & Palmer (laughs), I really got on well with him! It’s amazing how this music industry wants us to be enemies, and we’re not." ![]() |
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Gentle Yes ![]() Forum Groupie ![]() ![]() Joined: July 07 2015 Location: greece Status: Offline Points: 65 |
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Well my opinion is that there are many factors which led to that demise. To begin with, in the late 70s most prog bands changed their sound (and not for the best). I could say that before that they were hated for their theatrics, the dress-ups, the concepts of their music (both lyrically and musically) but personally I believe that punks and ''generic'' audiences consider prog to be elitist exactly because prog artists succeeded in what punks failed. Prog artists have absolutely no regard towards the audience, they will play whatever they want, i mean listen to Starless and Bible black, with the exception of The great Deceiver, all the rest of the songs are pure Fripp craziness, he definitely didn't aim for the audiences approval. And many of these bands , which initially didn't care about fame fortune but worked to bring music a step ahead, are now considered as the ''musical authority'' concerning rock. I guess that's what makes em mad, that prog is a different notion, a part of music that is different from all the others and that lives autonomously without having much in common with other genres. Basically i guess prog actually succeeded into being different and original but based only on the music ( i mean , i'm 22 and i've seen many dvds, lives and whatever of prog bands, and yeah, the theatrics and dress ups are ridiculous, but i listen to the music, who cares how they dress or behave?). Punks tried to be different by simplifying their music, (i mean, what's so different and revolutionary about a 4/4 track with heavy distortion guitars, not tuned right for the ''i dont care about rules'' effect, and a blast beat?) and actually a lot of theatrics. Like the braking of guitars, the clothes, the alcohol, the drugs.. what? isn't that all marketing? Well acting like a monkey on and off stage definitely doesn't make you a real rock n roller Johnny rotten . I don't know what makes you a rock n roller, but i know what makes you a musician, hard work, decades of practice, infinite musical stimuli, and the desire to push music forward.
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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kenethlevine ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Prog-Folk Team Joined: December 06 2006 Location: New England Status: Offline Points: 9068 |
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The Monks were led by 2 former Strawbs Richard Hudson and John Ford, and were a punkish band from around 1980. They had a big hit single "Nice Legs shame about the face" in England that got kaiboshed on its way up the charts when somebody or other exposed them as having had non punk origins and therefore not legit. In the meantime, the album went multi platinum in Canada where most of their presumably very young fans had not heard of Strawbs, or they had but didn't care. When the Monks came over to Canada to tour, they got in on the act by kind of decrying what they had done in Strawbs as being less authentic, thereby siding with the very fashion that had limited their UK success.
Edited by kenethlevine - June 06 2016 at 12:27 |
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Son.of.Tiresias ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: October 23 2014 Location: Northern Hemisp Status: Offline Points: 441 |
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[QUOTE=rushfan4]
I watched the video only because of waiting for the skating lady to throw her cape & dress away. She never did. What a bloody waste of time ![]() Edited by Son.of.Tiresias - September 28 2016 at 10:35 |
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You may see a smile on Tony Banks´ face but that´s unlikely.
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BaldJean ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: May 28 2005 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 10387 |
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the music industry played a big part too. in the late 60s and early 70s record companies were looking for bands to add to their stack and left them their artistic freedom, which is why the music of that time is still so refreshing (though the deals the bands were given were highly exploitative). that's why albums like the only release of Arzachel were possible. later on the music industry took control. why, even the so-called "punk revolution" was nothing but a clever market stratagem, even if the early punk bands truly felt they were rebels
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![]() A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta |
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miamiscot ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: April 23 2014 Location: Ohio Status: Offline Points: 3608 |
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The two best genres of music ever: Punk and Prog.
It's a simple fact.
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enigma ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: October 12 2006 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 154 |
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What about The Stranglers? They were a band of punkish outsiders who could play their instruments very well. They were not really punk, but their first 2 albums had punk leanings.
Anyway, they had prog tendencies in their extended Doors like instrumental sections, and their first album had a superb 7 minute 'epic' with 4 sections - very prog for a so called punk band in 1977. Their third album Black and White even had a loose concept. They may have been considered outsiders to the punk genre and looked down on because of their musicianship, use of keyboards and longer songs, but they had the punk attitude. So whilst punk cleared tables of EPL etc, there was still a prog undercurrent (Stranglers, Television etc) in the punk/new wave music that replaced it. That's my take on it anyway. |
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cstack3 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() VIP Member Joined: July 20 2009 Location: Tucson, AZ USA Status: Offline Points: 7411 |
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^Good point....when DID punk curl up its toes and die?
I don't hear much these days that I would call "classic punk." The US punk movement followed the UK counterpart by five years or so....some cities like Minneapolis had very large & active punk communities, with mohawks etc. However, methinks these were disaffected, bored middle-class/upwards kids, not the real grimy Brit punks of the lower class. It was truly an interesting moment in musical history that influenced many, including Gabriel, Fripp, Belew, and many others. Authentic punk had as much raw energy as King Crimson did during their LTIA period. I'd take authentic punk any day over the glossed-up garbage being foisted on us by the media companies!! Stagefuls of dancers, elaborate light shows, and none of the good stuff (instrumental prowess, vocal harmonies) of prog. Edited by cstack3 - June 05 2016 at 16:49 |
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HackettFan ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: June 20 2012 Location: Oklahoma Status: Offline Points: 7951 |
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A curse upon the heads of those who seek their fortunes in a lie. The truth is always waiting when there's nothing left to try. - Colin Henson, Jade Warrior (Now)
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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What?
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lostrom ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: March 19 2014 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 122 |
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No.
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lostrom
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