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Joined: September 29 2010
Status: Offline
Points: 741
Topic: Show me a prog David Bowie song Posted: December 24 2010 at 17:44
I'm certain that David Bowie isn't here for nothing but I never heard something from him that was close to prog. If you can show me it'll be appreciated.
La victoire est éphémère mais la gloire est éternelle!
Joined: April 05 2006
Location: Vancouver, BC
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Points: 36285
Posted: December 24 2010 at 18:04
As a Prog Related artist, I think he has a fair amount of material with a prog (music in prog categories such as Krautrock) relation (and I could see him in Crossover for the Berlin trilogy).
Joined: April 05 2006
Location: Vancouver, BC
Status: Offline
Points: 36285
Posted: December 24 2010 at 18:21
JJLehto wrote:
An artist added that makes no sense?
Never
Agreed, they all have some kind of sense behind them whether people agree or not, or understand the reasons behind the additions. Too often people have called additions nonsense without being familiar enough with the artist's music or without understanding the artist's relation to music/ categories in PA (or not being familiar enough with the music scenes/ idioms that one finds a relation to).
In his early material you can plainly hear the influence of Syd Barrett. He falls into the old and unique proggy singer songwriter a few years after Syd became a hermit or during that time. Space Oddity has that oddball English prog style which derived from that era. During the Berlin period when he worked with Fripp and Eno the music was perhaps more intense. The mystery for me is the un-released Glastonbury Fayre performance where he showed to the stage with an acoustic guitar. Supposedly he performed early versions of bizzare songs that later became classics but, more in a folk style.
Joined: April 29 2004
Location: Heart of Europe
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Points: 20298
Posted: January 03 2011 at 03:35
The_Jester wrote:
I'm certain that David Bowie isn't here for nothing but I never heard something from him that was close to prog. If you can show me it'll be appreciated.
I'd have to gree that it's not really obvious why the glam icon Bowie sits in prog-related at all when looking at its 7's material (except for maybe Space Oddity - the song)...... One of the main arguments was that Bowie's more progressive stuff was in his late 80's and early 90's albums (of which, outside a song here and there, I don't know much, I must admit) that were indeed a tad more experimental than his glam days.... and I believe that's the argument that clinched it for his inclusion.... but I never cared to find out about those albums.
Actually Bowie was quite a tough sell to many of us (yours truly included) and it took many months (probably over a year) to get him included by those who lobbied it.
Bowie's inclusion later altered the general outlook of prog-related and opened the door (dare I say floodgates) for many other ever-so-slightly-prog artistes to be included
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
Joined: November 07 2008
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Points: 1327
Posted: June 23 2011 at 06:08
I think his 1977 album Low had some subtle influence to Pink Floyd's Animals. The ambient/Krautrock-esque proto-industrial soundscape can be experienced in both.
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