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The Sleepwalker
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 03 2009
Location: The Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 15141
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Posted: December 07 2009 at 04:38 |
I don't think "new prog" would be a good genre to search nd discover new bands in a certain style. For example, if I'm looking for a band like Radiohead I don't want to find a band like Opeth. Many of these bands don't have much in common.
I think this whole thing unnecessary as most of these bands are fine in the subgenre where they are now in my opinion. Opeth obviously is very technical music which combines death metal with 70's prog influences. What's wrong with them being in tech/extreme prog metal? Radiohead has made some pretty experimental and innovative music, but also have a clear mainstream influence, What's wrong with them being in crossover prog? Riverside plays a very original and progressive form of metal. What's wrong with them being prog metal?\
Some bands are a bit more difficult to label due to changes in style or whatever. Porcupine Tree for example is heavy prog now. IMO they would be fine in crossover prog, due to the mainstream influences, but I'm not wanting to get off-topic here. My point is that all existing subgenres offer bands a place that nearly always suits them pretty good.
We're not going to delete all existing subgenres to create a subgenre called "classic prog" or something either, are we?
Oh by the way, I don't see how Coldplay are experimental. They are among the most unoriginal bands I've ever heard, and to me most of there music sounds pretty much the same. Viva La Vida might have an orchestra, but how is that experimental? They are just another pop band in my opinion.
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Citizen Erased
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 25 2009
Location: Scotland
Status: Offline
Points: 192
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Posted: December 07 2009 at 17:42 |
Come on guys.
The subject of how experimental Coldplay are wasn't the topic. I agreed that perhaps an alternative name to New Prog might be needed but looking at how so many bands are structured on here, something needs to be done to group a lot of these bands.
People ask how "Opeth and Radiohead" can be in the same group for example. On the other hand, look at Prog Related. It's the exact same problem.
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Henry Plainview
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 26 2008
Location: Declined
Status: Offline
Points: 16715
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Posted: December 07 2009 at 17:58 |
Citizen Erased wrote:
People ask how "Opeth and Radiohead" can be in the same group for example. On the other hand, look at Prog Related. It's the exact same problem. |
And your solution is to make the problem larger?
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if you own a sodastream i hate you
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The Sleepwalker
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 03 2009
Location: The Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 15141
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Posted: December 08 2009 at 09:05 |
Citizen Erased wrote:
Come on guys.
The subject of how experimental Coldplay are wasn't the topic. I agreed that perhaps an alternative name to New Prog might be needed but looking at how so many bands are structured on here, something needs to be done to group a lot of these bands.
I don't see what's wrong with the active structure. Like I said before, I think many bands are good where they are now, though there are a few exceptions. A subgenre for "new prog" or whatever it should be called is not going to solve that. In fact, I think it's actually going to create new problems instead of solving problems.
When I'm looking for a death metal band like Opeth, my first idea where to look is Tech/extreme prog metal, with Radiohead it's crossover and riverside prog metal (or maybe heavy). Why would you want to throw all these bands with totally different musical styles on one big heap? It would make things a LOT messier in my opinion.
People ask how "Opeth and Radiohead" can be in the same group for example. On the other hand, look at Prog Related. It's the exact same problem. Opeth and Radiohead are two different kinds of prog bands.
Tech prog metal is very different from crossover prog. Prog related is not an actual subgenre of prog, but a bunch of bands that are related to prog. The bands in prog related are related to prog and might show small similarities with actual prog bands, but in the end aren't prog bands.
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Desoc
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 12 2006
Location: Oslo, Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 216
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Posted: December 08 2009 at 09:15 |
First of all: Mixing Opeth into this was clearly a mistake. The list suggested by the original poster should be taken as just that - a suggestion, not the definite answer. If this should be a reality now or in the future, let's stick to the old formula: Create a genre team of competent people and allow them to make decisions after having had their discussions. The difference between Opeth and Radiohead is not what this is about.
I think it's more about the difference between i.e. Rush and Uriah Heep on one side, and The Mars Volta and Porcupine Tree on the other side, who all are lumped into Heavy Prog although clearly belonging to quite different traditions. More names and genres could be mentioned, and many already have.
Henry Plainview wrote:
Citizen Erased wrote:
People ask how "Opeth and Radiohead" can be in the same group for example. On the other hand, look at Prog Related. It's the exact same problem. | And your solution is to make the problem larger? |
No, you're using strawmen. It's a question of a different kind of organization, taking into account that the world does in fact evolve.
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The Sleepwalker
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 03 2009
Location: The Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 15141
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Posted: December 08 2009 at 09:24 |
Desoc wrote:
First of all: Mixing Opeth into this was clearly a mistake. The list suggested by the original poster should be taken as just that - a suggestion, not the definite answer. If this should be a reality now or in the future, let's stick to the old formula: Create a genre team of competent people and allow them to make decisions after having had their discussions. The difference between Opeth and Radiohead is not what this is about.
I know it's not all about the difference between Opeth and Radiohead, but it's a nice example of showing that many bands here don't have much in common with each other.
I think it's more about the difference between i.e. Rush and Uriah Heep on one side, and The Mars Volta and Porcupine Tree on the other side, who all are lumped into Heavy Prog although clearly belonging to quite different traditions. More names and genres could be mentioned, and many already have.
They are lumped into Heavy prog because according to many they belong there. (Porcupine Tree is tough example though, as they have went through many different musical styles) If you put several bands with quite different musical styles together in a "new prog" subgenre, it's not going to solve anything I think.
Henry Plainview wrote:
Citizen Erased wrote:
People ask how "Opeth and Radiohead" can be in the same group for example. On the other hand, look at Prog Related. It's the exact same problem. | And your solution is to make the problem larger? |
No, you're using strawmen. It's a question of a different kind of organization, taking into account that the world does in fact evolve. |
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Citizen Erased
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 25 2009
Location: Scotland
Status: Offline
Points: 192
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Posted: December 08 2009 at 10:57 |
Henry Plainview wrote:
Citizen Erased wrote:
People ask how "Opeth and Radiohead" can be in the same group for example. On the other hand, look at Prog Related. It's the exact same problem. |
And your solution is to make the problem larger? |
As specified in the opening post, New Prog (or whatever we shall call it), refers specifically to alt bands with progressive structures in modern music.
Opeth are obviously and clearly prog metal.
Desoc wrote:
I
think it's more about the difference between i.e. Rush and Uriah Heep
on one side, and The Mars Volta and Porcupine Tree on the other side,
who all are lumped into Heavy Prog although clearly belonging to quite
different traditions. More names and genres could be mentioned, and
many already have. |
Cheers, precisely.
floydispink wrote:
Prog related is not an actual subgenre of prog, but a bunch of bands that are related to prog. |
Exactly, it's something I'm suggesting this sub-genre could solve.
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And lo, the mighty riffage was played and it was good
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The Sleepwalker
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 03 2009
Location: The Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 15141
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Posted: December 08 2009 at 11:56 |
Citizen Erased wrote:
floydispink wrote:
Prog related is not an actual subgenre of prog, but a bunch of bands that are related to prog. |
Exactly, it's something I'm suggesting this sub-genre could solve.
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What do you want to solve? 
Prog related bands aren't prog, but are related to prog. This could be either influential to prog bands or influenced by prog bands, but in the end they're not prog. Do you mean that you want prog related to disappear and combine prog and prog related bands into one subgenre?
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progkidjoel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: March 02 2009
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 19643
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Posted: December 08 2009 at 15:01 |
floydispink wrote:
Citizen Erased wrote:
<span style="font-family: Times; font-size: medium; line-height: normal;">[quote=floydispink]</span><span style="font-weight: normal;">Prog related is not an actual subgenre of prog, but a bunch of bands that are related to prog. [/quote>Exactly, it's something I'm suggesting this sub-genre could solve.</span> |
What do you want to solve?  Prog related bands aren't prog, but are related to prog. This could be either influential to prog bands or influenced by prog bands, but in the end they're not prog. Do you mean that you want prog related to disappear and combine prog and prog related bands into one subgenre? |
I don't get it. Like Henry said before, you want to solve the problem of prog-related (IE, the problem of having a load of bands who receive small prog influences or have some prog overtones, etc) by pushing all of those bands into a genre called new prog?
That doesn't seem like its solving the problem in the slightest, but rather clumping it into another sub genre, and, by doing so, removing pretty much all of the musical placement association and replacing it with something based on time...
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Desoc
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 12 2006
Location: Oslo, Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 216
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Posted: December 08 2009 at 15:16 |
I'm sure people could discuss forever which bands deserve to be in Prog Related and which deserve to be either further in or further out, but just for the reference: "solving the problem of Prog Related" was never my agenda, and I don't think I've read many other people who are calling for a new genre and who argues that loads of Prog Related bands should be "inside". My issue is mainly with bands already "inside" the ordinary prog categories as a whole but "outside" in terms of their place in the category in question.
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Citizen Erased
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 25 2009
Location: Scotland
Status: Offline
Points: 192
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Posted: December 09 2009 at 16:01 |
This is sort of heading on a tangent. I didn't say I think that ALL Prog Related bands should be in New Prog.
I posted a list in the first post of at least 50 bands that would automatically be considered for this genre though. It's not a bad basis for a start. These are all suggestions guys of course.
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And lo, the mighty riffage was played and it was good
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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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Posted: December 09 2009 at 16:28 |
Citizen Erased wrote:
This is sort of heading on a tangent. I didn't say I think that ALL Prog Related bands should be in New Prog.
I posted a list in the first post of at least 50 bands that would automatically be considered for this genre though. It's not a bad basis for a start. These are all suggestions guys of course.
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Ah, right, um, no. Very few of those 50 bands that were not already here would make it into the PA, regardless of what any new genre was called. If they could not get into an existing PA subgenre then the new genre is not for us - being nearly Prog Related is not enough.
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What?
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Desoc
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 12 2006
Location: Oslo, Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 216
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Posted: December 09 2009 at 16:52 |
Dean wrote:
Ah, right, um, no. Very few of those 50 bands that were not already here would make it into the PA, regardless of what any new genre was called. If they could not get into an existing PA subgenre then the new genre is not for us - being nearly Prog Related is not enough. |
Ah, right, um, no. The count is actually Crossover: 12 Eclectic: 1 Experimental/post: 6
Heavy prog: 6 Neo: 1 Post/math: 2 Prog folk: 1 Prog metal: 1 Psych/space: 5 Related: 2 Tech/Extreme: 1 Not in: 16 (Sorry, couldn't resist  ) In other words: In 36 - Related 2 - Out 16 The argument about this being a conspirative way of lumping loads of Related and Not Even Related bands inside, seems a bit blown up. Again, have anybody claimed this list to be the definite answer? (Also: I didn't do a search on this, but many of the "Not in" bands were completely new to me, and I usually try to pay attention to what bands are being discussed in the "Suggest new bands/artists" section...)
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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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Posted: December 09 2009 at 19:12 |
Desoc wrote:
Dean wrote:
Ah, right, um, no. Very few of those 50 bands that were not already here would make it into the PA, regardless of what any new genre was called. If they could not get into an existing PA subgenre then the new genre is not for us - being nearly Prog Related is not enough. |
Ah, right, um, no. The count is actually
Crossover: 12 Eclectic: 1 Experimental/post: 6 Heavy prog: 6 Neo: 1 Post/math: 2 Prog folk: 1 Prog metal: 1 Psych/space: 5 Related: 2 Tech/Extreme: 1 Not in: 16
(Sorry, couldn't resist )
In other words: In 36 - Related 2 - Out 16
The argument about this being a conspirative way of lumping loads of Related and Not Even Related bands inside, seems a bit blown up. Again, have anybody claimed this list to be the definite answer?
(Also: I didn't do a search on this, but many of the "Not in" bands were completely new to me, and I usually try to pay attention to what bands are being discussed in the "Suggest new bands/artists" section...)
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Thanks for that - I did the sums in my head - my point is unchanged. "of those 50 bands that were not already here" = 16 ... Very few of those 16 bands would make it into the PA.
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Citizen Erased
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 25 2009
Location: Scotland
Status: Offline
Points: 192
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Posted: December 18 2009 at 15:51 |
Dean wrote:
Citizen Erased wrote:
This is sort of heading on a tangent. I didn't say I think that ALL Prog Related bands should be in New Prog.
I posted a list in the first post of at least 50 bands that would automatically be considered for this genre though. It's not a bad basis for a start. These are all suggestions guys of course.
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Ah, right, um, no. Very few of those 50 bands that were not already here would make it into the PA, regardless of what any new genre was called. If they could not get into an existing PA subgenre then the new genre is not for us - being nearly Prog Related is not enough. |
Which bands among those mentioned are not progressive?  Surely we're not operating under the notion that prog is exclusively bands with 6 min+ songs. Many of the bands mentioned cram more into 4/5 minute songs than many do in 20 - messing about with structures, time signatures etc in the process.
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And lo, the mighty riffage was played and it was good
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progkidjoel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: March 02 2009
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 19643
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Posted: December 18 2009 at 16:33 |
This just isn't going to work and it's not needed.
I love Tool. Let's say I just got their first album and loved it, so I decide to check out some other bands in the new prog subgenre. My finger lands on The Decemberists, although they don't even sound slightly similiar. Next up I get The Fall of Troy. Same problem again.
Then The Mars Volta. Then Radiohead.
Do you see what I'm getting at?
Am I getting anywhere whatsoever with my search for similar artists, which, if they existed, should by all logic fall under the same sub-genre if they're considered to be progressive?
But then, Tool magically appear in a genre called Experimental / Post-metal  Whilst having a look through, I find a band called The Pax Cecilia, and although they aren't too similar as far as music goes, they're surely a lot more similar to Tool than 90% of the artists who've been pulled out of a carefully selected place and clumped into this new prog.
Also, are we now going to clump all 70's artists into one sub-genre, call it old prog and add a whole lot of 70's bands who wouldn't make the normal criteria for PA into this new genre?
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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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Posted: December 18 2009 at 17:07 |
Look through Crossover and tell me what notions of Progressive I'm operating under.
If any of the 16 bands in that list that are not already here can fit into an existing PA subgenre (excluding Prog Related and Proto Prog) then suggest them and we will put them on the list of 70+ bands we are currently evaluating for Crossover.
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What?
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