Even though I'm a massive ELP fanboy it's only
Brain Salad Surgery that got 5 stars from me.
Trilogy is very close to that status but for me
The Endless Enigma is less than the sum of its three parts. Similarly,
Tarkus is sullied by
Are You Ready Eddy ? (If only the answer had been... No ?)
Pictures at an Exhibition is also damn close to 5 sparklies but Keith's whinge that the classics are bowdlerised by Rock is shot to flames by the inclusion of
Nutrocker. The debut album is very patchy i.e.
Take a Pebble outstays its welcome and the guitar solo is padding,
the Three Fates appears to be just Emerson (until the end when percussion appears) and
Lucky man is Greg fluff. (notwithstanding the famous Moog solo which Emerson is on record as stating he thinks is sh*t)
I agree that it's practically impossible to imagine Prog's lineage without ELP (who were the genre's biggest draw for many years and a template for much of RPI) They were a band that had a healthy respect for the past wedded to an insatiable desire to take rock into areas it had never hitherto dared to set a Beatle boot. Their avowed inspiration was not american i.e. the blues/rock'n'roll, but the western European classical tradition. Blimey guvnor ! is there a parochial aesthetic agenda afoot ?
Conclusion: ELP are deemed to embody all the negative aspects of prog (pompous, long winded, pretentious, decadent, self-indulgent, ostentatious show-offs etc) and given that the biggest targets are the easiest ones, it takes the heat off most of their contemporaries whose crimes in this area dwarf that of ELP)
It must be only a matter of time before some half-wit intellectual starts a thread poll (with venn diagrams and pie charts of course) that posits
'Were ELP Really Progressive Rock ?The three headed dog that everyone loves to kick ?.
Apologies (I'm really grumpy tonight for reasons as yet unknown)
Edited by ExittheLemming - March 13 2010 at 06:41