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Topic ClosedThe fathers of Prog Metal

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Poll Question: Which band would you call the fathers of Prog Metal
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 16 2013 at 18:01
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

^^^ I guess a few of us have watched Sam Dun's Metal Evolution. Lol

Nope. never watched, not interested, most of these types of programme are one man's opinion and they're seldom factual. I picked the geneology chart at random from Google Image search - any one of them would have served my purposes just as well.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

When I watched that 10 part series, Dunn went through a variety of sub-genres and with his background in anthropology ended up listing Prog-Metal as its own separate genre, but still just filing under metal. Did this make sense to me? Sure. Did I agree with it? No. No I did not. Ok. I'll use another insane analogy. Human beings and animals, reptiles and mammals all carry similar things that make them up in general...heart, lungs, blood etc but outside are they the same? No. Certainly not, but you argue that humans, reptiles and other animals all come from or are a part of the same 'fix' which in this case would be 'metal.' So, what we have are all these degrees of difference and wouldn't it be important to be a able classify and separate things to make it less confusing for all of us?

Analogies should only be used to illustrate a point and thus make it easier to understand, never to prove one. Producing a bad analogy to replace an adequate one is not making the point you are making any less wrong, especially as you are mixing taxonomic ranks in such a random fashion (humans are a species, mammals and reptiles are classes and animals are a kingdom) - in that taxonomy Sound is a Kingdom, Man-made Sound is a Phylum, Music is a Class, Popular Music is an Order, Rock Music is a Family, Metal is a Genus and Prog Metal a Species. There is no confusion here that needs to be simplified further. Prog Metal without the Metal element would be Prog Rock, the Prog Metal subgenre would disappear altogether - those bands that could be absorbed into Prog Rock would be, those that don't would be discarded.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Wait...I'll try to make things easier to understand. If you had a record store and a good one at that, would you file 'MY Dying Bride' in the same category as 'motely Crüe'? Come on. No way you would because both those bands carry a way different sound. Actually, the other day i was in a record store and found 'Pink Floyd' filed under the pop/rock section. Totally wrong classification, and it bothered me because there is no attention to detail or sophistication for correct genre filing. It's insulting and insulting to music in general. It's like going into a book store and just filing all the books under 'fiction' in alphabetical order. My point is I think it shows laziness to through everything under metal and just leave it as point blank as that. Than again, sometimes people (namely in the media) have to classify things more simply for things they don't understand. Actually in Sam's Chart, I see that NIN are once again filed under Industrail and that to me is a giant joke, but then again you have to 'classify' things in order to convince yourself you have an understanding of what your listening to. The media does this all the time and this 'lack of education' leads to a lot of pitfalls for how we, as humans, classify the various types of music for our own understanding.

I'm happy to find a record store that has a Metal section at all. Hell, I'm happy to find a record store these days, I'd be effing delirious to find a record store with a My Dying Bride CD. The book shops here file fiction alphabetically by author name - what do you suggest? Colour? Size?

 

And of course NIИ are filed under "Industrial", you are rapidly losing me here as your classifications do not seem to agree with anything.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

I will say one more thing. Using these broad, generic terms like 'Metal' gets you into trouble where by Mis representation Of the music itself is largely in effect. I will give an example and a serious one at that. Many people have asked me in my lifetime 'hey Nick, what kind of music do you listen to and love?' If I say broadly, 'Metal' you know what happens 90% of the time people say to me 'oh you like that yelling and screaming bullsh*t?? You don't seem like the type?' lol I can't tell you how many times I've shaken my head in frustration because obviously metal is not just death growls and really fast guitar playing. Now a days, when someone asks me that same question I say ' well. I listen to a lot of Progressive Metal.' now this raises an eyebrow ;) The person will usually ask me ' well, what the hell is that?' then of course i have a fun time explaining everything cause it's different classification/genre of music. You see, if we classify things properly we through away or at least limit stereo types or other common generalities that are often used to view and describe music. If someone asked me, 'hey nick, what's your favorite band these days' I may say ' well I love Saviour Machine.' ' oh cool Nick, what are they?' Do you think I'm gonna say to this person, ' eh they are a metal band.' No way! It doesn't make sense and it's a mis representation for the music I like. To illustrate and be fair to my point, Saviour Machine are Dark-Gothic Progressive Metal. Certainly, correctly describing the music you listen to will lead to a more proper understanding and education for others.

So what you are actually objecting to is stereotyping by people who don't actually know anything... I don't see the logic in seperating out Prog Metal as something special just to save your embarrassment.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Overall, a lot of what DEAN said is correct from a more concise and logical standpoint figuratively speaking, but over simplication leads to misrepresentation. Let's give the art of music the respect and character it deserves just like how books are treated. 'Metal' and 'Prog Metal' should be in a separate class of music period.

I'm still not getting this "books" analogy (how are books treated? What differentiates Thomas Pynchon from Jane Austen or Arthur Conan Doyle?) or why calling Prog Metal "metal" is a disparaging term - that's more than a little demeaning to the whole Metal genre if you ask me and smacks of elitism.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

I don't believe going into a record store and finding 'Anathema' next to Anthrax in the metal section is right and sadly I've seen it before and it made me want to scream almost because it just shows so much laziness and lack of respect for music's diverse character in general.

Anathema have changed styles and genres several times in the past twenty and are no longer a metal band per sey - when bands do that putting them in one category is always going to piss someone off. If Serenades, The Silent Enigma, Eternity, Alternative 4 and Judgement are not Metal then what the hell are they?

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

I obviously would love to hear more from all of you on this subject, and I do apologize for the long winded response to this matter. Lol

 


I guess my analogies did not measure up to illustrate my point very well, however I think you know where I'm coming from. But, I tell ya Dean, you make a pretty convincing argument for all of this. As for Analogies. Yup. You picked them a part pretty well and certainly venturing into the 7 classes of taxonomy for living things isn't gonna make things easier to understand, so my humans and reptiles comparison can take a back seat.
As for how I feel about books. When I go into book store i usually see books neatly classified and separated into proper genres and sub genres a like. My point is that music is not given the same attention to detail as books with regards to proper separation of genres and subject matter. That's all.
As for the NIN comment. It's as you said, you spotted a generic chart of google and used it as an example. Those 'generic' classifications are not definitive and that is how I feel about NIN's placement in that chart. Industrial? NIN classified mainly as Industrail? That's all on that point.
But overall, I hope you can see where I stand and where I am coming from. The last thing I want is a misunderstanding. Actually, I honestly think a lot of what you said is very truthful but I think we may be at a crossroads cause it's coming down to a matter of opinion and subjectivity. I just want to say though, weather you think I'm right or wrong, is that it comes down to what you've actually listened to or explored in the metal world of things. I feel the way I feel cause as you know I feel their is a massive difference. Lastly, I cannot just through everything under 'metal' and by doing so it has saved me from a few headaches when discussing music with others. Less embarrassment as you listed. ;)

I all respect to and for music, I think that a separate classification for metal and Prog metal is necessary as you already know. Calling a spade a spade is prosaic and lacks detail. Simple logics don't always prevail and work mainly in this case of course. In all accounts though. I've appreciated this discussion. Thank you. :)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 16 2013 at 18:22
Originally posted by The.Crimson.King The.Crimson.King wrote:


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Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The.Crimson.King The.Crimson.King wrote:

You're allowed to be wrong as well.  Posting Sam Dunn's chart is hardly indisputable evidence as far as I'm concerned and I stand by my opinion.  This is agree to disagree time.
I'm male, so to half the population I'm always wrong. People thinking I am wrong is the reason I get into these discussions, so of course I am allowed to be wrong, the onus on proving that to be the case falls on other people, simply disagreeing proves nothing.
 
The chart isn't evidence it is mere illustration - I could have picked one of dozens of similar charts, again merely as illustration, just as you picked My Dying Bride and Mötley Crüe as illustrations not evidence. We could do a survey of all the metal family trees out there and analyse them to see if Doom Metal and Progressive Metal appeared as a subgenres of the metal genre by consensus of those chart compilers, that would be closer to what I would regard as evidence.
 
If you can demonstrate to me (using Nicholas's own example) that apples and oranges are not fruit, then I will think about considering the logic of the argument as being partway to possibly not being wrong. Your argument appears to be based upon the premise that oranges are the only fruit and apples are a different classification of vegetable seed production. Now, if he'd chosen berries instead of fruit it would have been a different story: grapes, blueberries, peppers, oranges, pumpkins and bananas are all berries whereas strawberries and apples are not. The botanical reasons why apples and strawberries (and figs) are fruits but not berries is based upon the how and where the fleshy part of the fruit is formed and that is the common defining characteristic of strawberries, apples and figs (botanically they are called accessory fruit). {good grief Penfold, it comes to something when I have to create my own straw[berry]man argument in an attempt prove myself wrong}.
 
If you believe that Black Sabbath, Mötley Crüe and Motörhead are "true" Metal then all the subgenres of Metal are separate genres not subgenres, but that ignores the defining common characteristic of those subgenres - which is that they are Metal (Prog Metal without the Metal is just Prog Rock is it not? Symphonic Metal without Metal is just Symphonic Rock, Folk Metal without Metal is just Folk, Thrash Metal without Metal is just Punk Rock, etc. etc.).
 
Is this a disagreeing or just contradicting? Anyway, I never agree to disagree.
I rather enjoyed your fruit and vegetable illustration - and I learned a few things about botany -  but let me illustrate my opinion with another family of the food kingdom.  When I was a kid, I discovered I was allergic to nuts.  My throat would swell up and I had trouble breathing (same as today).  I was told to avoid nuts at all cost, so I did.  However, being a kid, occasionally breaking the rules was a prerequisite, so I found myself devouring an Almond Joy.  Allergic reaction?  None.  Then I tried a Payday bar loaded with peanuts.  Allergic reaction?  None.  Then I tried a Sees Candy walnut bar.  Allergic reaction?  You betcha!  When my handlers discovered I was experimenting with nut filled candies they freaked so I was put back on the wagon.
Fast forward 20 years.  Almond Joy, Payday, Heath Bar, Baby Ruth all were occasional treats and still no allergic reaction.  How in the world can you be allergic to nuts and able to eat almonds and peanuts?  A little research and the answer made perfect sense.  Almonds are not nuts, they are a member of the peach family.  Peanuts are not nuts, they are legumes (beans).    
Metal = nuts.  Doom metal = almonds.  Prog metal = peanuts.  Are almonds a subgenre of nuts?  No, but 99% of the population believes they are.  Does that make it true?  No.  Does someone with a nut allergy have an allergic reaction to almonds just because they "think" they're eating a nut?  No.  What about peanuts?  Surely something with the word "nut" in it's name must be a member of the nut family?  <span ="apple-style-span"="" style="-webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba26, 26, 26, 0.292969; -webkit-com-fill-color: rgba175, 192, 227, 0.230469; -webkit-com--color: rgba77, 128, 180, 0.230469; ">If "prog-metal" must be a form of metal simply by virtue of it's name, then aren't "pea-nuts" surely nuts?  No.  <span ="apple-style-span"="" style="-webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba26, 26, 26, 0.292969; -webkit-com-fill-color: rgba175, 192, 227, 0.230469; -webkit-com--color: rgba77, 128, 180, 0.230469; ">Do musical subgenres really have anything to do with fruits, vegetables, or nuts?  You say tomayto I say tomahto.</span></span>
<span ="Apple-style-span" style="-webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba26, 26, 26, 0.296875; -webkit-com-fill-color: rgba175, 192, 227, 0.230469; -webkit-com--color: rgba77, 128, 180, 0.230469; ">Just because those around me (doctors, parents, etc) were convinced that almonds and peanuts were dangerous and would trigger my allergic response, my direct experience told me otherwise.  Just because others are convinced that prog metal/doom metal/etc = metal, my direct experience tells me otherwise.  If that is not the definition of a subjective opinion where different views from my own aren't "wrong" but simply "different", I don't know what is.</span>



I really like the way you put this and it makes a lot of sense actually. We simply cannot label things contrary to popular belief. I tried to explain this like you did, but failed. Lol. This is a great analogy and I can agree with it.
Nuts...almonds...peanuts. Not the same. Nuts(Metal) almonds (Prog metal)...you can look at this way and the seed classification of what constitutes being a nut in the first place can be co related to metal's evolutionary process. Evolution breeds difference and sometimes refinement in most cases, and it certainly applies to what we have been talking about here. Very interesting.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 16 2013 at 18:29
In fact, Prog Metal isn't part of the Metal genre, it's nothing but badly executed Sympho Prog with a lot of distorted guitars and rolling drums to hide the technical errors.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 16 2013 at 18:58
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

I guess my analogies did not measure up to illustrate my point very well, however I think you know where I'm coming from. But, I tell ya Dean, you make a pretty convincing argument for all of this. As for Analogies. Yup. You picked them a part pretty well and certainly venturing into the 7 classes of taxonomy for living things isn't gonna make things easier to understand, so my humans and reptiles comparison can take a back seat.
I have a bit of a one-man crusade regarding analogies because they are just supposed to be illustrations and they are supposed to make the thing they are analoguous to easier to understand and/or explain. That's it. Period (as you American's say). Picking apart an analogy does not win an argument - proving the analogy wrong does not prove the argument wrong, it just show that the analogy is flawed in someway, all I did was correct the flaws and in doing so showed them to be a better analogy for illustrating my argument than they were for yours. 7 levels of taxonomy is perhaps over the top, but that's because you picked "animals" to compare with "humans" in your analogy - you set the seven levels not I.
 
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:


As for how I feel about books. When I go into book store i usually see books neatly classified and separated into proper genres and sub genres a like. My point is that music is not given the same attention to detail as books with regards to proper separation of genres and subject matter. That's all.
I see less classification in a book store than I do in a record store - I don't see dozens of sections for all the subgenres of fiction - General Fiction, Sci-Fi and Fantasy, Horror, Romance, Crime and Humour - and that's about it - there may be a Historical Fiction section if you are lucky, but you don't find Gothic Romance or Speculative Fiction sections, you selom see Sci-Fi and Fantasy seperated, so you certainly don't see the Fantasy section subdivided into High and Low Fantasy, Medieval Fantasy, Science Fantasy, Heroic Fantasy, Dark Fantasy, Swords and Sorcery Fantasy, Mythic Fantasy or Contempory Fantasy. And nor would you seriously expect a book shop to go into that level of detail in all realistic honesty.
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:



As for the NIN comment. It's as you said, you spotted a generic chart of google and used it as an example. Those 'generic' classifications are not definitive and that is how I feel about NIN's placement in that chart. Industrial? NIN classified mainly as Industrail? That's all on that point.
And of course NIИ are filed under "Industrial", (where else would they be? In the special Reznor section?) you are rapidly losing me here as your classifications do not seem to agree with anything, let alone some random genre chart culled from a random google search.
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:



But overall, I hope you can see where I stand and where I am coming from. The last thing I want is a misunderstanding. Actually, I honestly think a lot of what you said is very truthful but I think we may be at a crossroads cause it's coming down to a matter of opinion and subjectivity. I just want to say though, weather you think I'm right or wrong, is that it comes down to what you've actually listened to or explored in the metal world of things. I feel the way I feel cause as you know I feel their is a massive difference. Lastly, I cannot just through everything under 'metal' and by doing so it has saved me from a few headaches when discussing music with others. Less embarrassment as you listed. ;)
Of course I can see where you are coming from, I simply see that as being completely wonky-thinking. I have been a fan of metal since it began and I have sampled practically every subgenre of metal that exists (meh, I tend to get a little brain-numbed by the plethora of ---core subgenres, they seem to proliferate like rabbits dependant on which key the band farts in, but I can live with that by simply ignoring them), so I am aware that one subgenre (generally) sounds massively different to another - even between Power Metal, Symphonic Metal, Progressive Metal and Battle Metal.... I cannot for the life of me say that Traditional Progressive Metal is even remotely similar to Technical Progressive Metal or Post Metal, but they are all still Metal no matter how I dice them. There is a massive difference between Punk Rock and Prog Rock, and there is a degree of animosity between some fans, but we can still throw them under Rock. If you are ashamed of Metal then you have no case to answer - I tell people I like metal and they can take that or eff-off. (I'm 56 years old and look like Gandalf on a bad hair day, do you think I care what people think?)
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:


I all respect to and for music, I think that a separate classification for metal and Prog metal is necessary as you already know. Calling a spade a spade is prosaic and lacks detail. Simple logics don't always prevail and work mainly in this case of course. In all accounts though. I've appreciated this discussion. Thank you. :)
We don't call Prog Metal a spade, we call it Prog Metal and that is as seperate and as detailed as it needs to be. I struggle to see how you would describe Progressive Metal without using the word "Metal"


Edited by Dean - September 16 2013 at 19:01
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 16 2013 at 19:26
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

I really like the way you put this and it makes a lot of sense actually. We simply cannot label things contrary to popular belief. I tried to explain this like you did, but failed. Lol. This is a great analogy and I can agree with it.
Nuts...almonds...peanuts. Not the same. Nuts(Metal) almonds (Prog metal)...you can look at this way and the seed classification of what constitutes being a nut in the first place can be co related to metal's evolutionary process. Evolution breeds difference and sometimes refinement in most cases, and it certainly applies to what we have been talking about here. Very interesting.

Nope, if you are bringing evolution of Metal into the analogy then it really does not fit - almonds are not an evolutionary development of "nuts" so cannot be analogous to Prog Metal. Analogies only work at the level they are first described, if you have to bend them to fit they are bad analogies, if you try to bend them to fit they will break. Prog Metal was not called Prog Metal by consensus, it was called Prog Metal because it was Metal influenced by Progressive Rock.
 
We all know those genre genealogy charts are inaccurate. The reason they are inaccurate is because they suggest that all those subgenres developed independently and in isolation, which we know is not the case. Prog Metal did not develop independently to Power Metal or Thrash, or Black Metal, nor did it develop in isolation from all other subgenres of metal and rock music. Just as (as I said a million pages back) Dream Theatre did not develop in isolation from Queensr˙che, Savatage and Fates Warning. All those metal subgenres and all those metal bands influenced each other ether directly or indirectly by virtue of existing. You can neither ignore nor discard that legacy.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 16 2013 at 20:13
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


I see less classification in a book store than I do in a record store - I don't see dozens of sections for all the subgenres of fiction - General Fiction, Sci-Fi and Fantasy, Horror, Romance, Crime and Humour - and that's about it - there may be a Historical Fiction section if you are lucky, but you don't find Gothic Romance or Speculative Fiction sections, you selom see Sci-Fi and Fantasy seperated, so you certainly don't see the Fantasy section subdivided into High and Low Fantasy, Medieval Fantasy, Science Fantasy, Heroic Fantasy, Dark Fantasy, Swords and Sorcery Fantasy, Mythic Fantasy or Contempory Fantasy. And nor would you seriously expect a book shop to go into that level of detail in all realistic honesty.

To be honest, I have never been to any music store that breaks down classification in that detail either (guess things must be different down there).  It's just WCM, jazz/blues, rock/pop and a small metal section.  Nor do I think it hampers the purchasing experience significantly.  People are way too fussy about classification and sub classification in music and this thread is a prime example.  It's really not that important.  All I want is that the artists are arranged alphabetically in the store.  Then I'll know where to look, thanks. 


Edited by rogerthat - September 16 2013 at 20:13
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 16 2013 at 21:14
I wonder if you, progbethyname, want a separate classification for Dream Theater specifically rather than prog metal in general.  Symphony X has very prominent power metal elements, Opeth used to have a lot of death metal in their style though they are veering towards prog rock now.  Bands like Atheist are metal through and through.  It's just that DT are very noticeable influenced by jazz rock and use it in a kind of softer way (while Atheist/Cynic can be very abrasive).  

And a simple solution to your problem would be to just identify yourself as a prog metal listener.  If the only metal sub genre you like is prog metal, where's the need to say you listen to metal?


Edited by rogerthat - September 16 2013 at 21:16
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 16 2013 at 23:40
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

I guess my analogies did not measure up to illustrate my point very well, however I think you know where I'm coming from. But, I tell ya Dean, you make a pretty convincing argument for all of this. As for Analogies. Yup. You picked them a part pretty well and certainly venturing into the 7 classes of taxonomy for living things isn't gonna make things easier to understand, so my humans and reptiles comparison can take a back seat.

I have a bit of a one-man crusade regarding analogies because they are just supposed to be illustrations and they are supposed to make the thing they are analoguous to easier to understand and/or explain. That's it. Period (as you American's say). Picking apart an analogy does not win an argument - proving the analogy wrong does not prove the argument wrong, it just show that the analogy is flawed in someway, all I did was correct the flaws and in doing so showed them to be a better analogy for illustrating my argument than they were for yours. 7 levels of taxonomy is perhaps over the top, but that's because you picked "animals" to compare with "humans" in your analogy - you set the seven levels not I.

 

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

As for how I feel about books. When I go into book store i usually see books neatly classified and separated into proper genres and sub genres a like. My point is that music is not given the same attention to detail as books with regards to proper separation of genres and subject matter. That's all.

I see less classification in a book store than I do in a record store - I don't see dozens of sections for all the subgenres of fiction - General Fiction, Sci-Fi and Fantasy, Horror, Romance, Crime and Humour - and that's about it - there may be a Historical Fiction section if you are lucky, but you don't find Gothic Romance or Speculative Fiction sections, you selom see Sci-Fi and Fantasy seperated, so you certainly don't see the Fantasy section subdivided into High and Low Fantasy, Medieval Fantasy, Science Fantasy, Heroic Fantasy, Dark Fantasy, Swords and Sorcery Fantasy, Mythic Fantasy or Contempory Fantasy. And nor would you seriously expect a book shop to go into that level of detail in all realistic honesty.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

As for the NIN comment. It's as you said, you spotted a generic chart of google and used it as an example. Those 'generic' classifications are not definitive and that is how I feel about NIN's placement in that chart. Industrial? NIN classified mainly as Industrail? That's all on that point.

And of course NIИ are filed under "Industrial", (where else would they be? In the special Reznor section?) you are rapidly losing me here as your classifications do not seem to agree with anything, let alone some random genre chart culled from a random google search.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

But overall, I hope you can see where I stand and where I am coming from. The last thing I want is a misunderstanding. Actually, I honestly think a lot of what you said is very truthful but I think we may be at a crossroads cause it's coming down to a matter of opinion and subjectivity. I just want to say though, weather you think I'm right or wrong, is that it comes down to what you've actually listened to or explored in the metal world of things. I feel the way I feel cause as you know I feel their is a massive difference. Lastly, I cannot just through everything under 'metal' and by doing so it has saved me from a few headaches when discussing music with others. Less embarrassment as you listed. ;)

Of course I can see where you are coming from, I simply see that as being completely wonky-thinking. I have been a fan of metal since it began and I have sampled practically every subgenre of metal that exists (meh, I tend to get a little brain-numbed by the plethora of ---core subgenres, they seem to proliferate like rabbits dependant on which key the band farts in, but I can live with that by simply ignoring them), so I am aware that one subgenre (generally) sounds massively different to another - even between Power Metal, Symphonic Metal, Progressive Metal and Battle Metal.... I cannot for the life of me say that Traditional Progressive Metal is even remotely similar to Technical Progressive Metal or Post Metal, but they are all still Metal no matter how I dice them. There is a massive difference between Punk Rock and Prog Rock, and there is a degree of animosity between some fans, but we can still throw them under Rock. If you are ashamed of Metal then you have no case to answer - I tell people I like metal and they can take that or eff-off. (I'm 56 years old and look like Gandalf on a bad hair day, do you think I care what people think?)

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

I all respect to and for music, I think that a separate classification for metal and Prog metal is necessary as you already know. Calling a spade a spade is prosaic and lacks detail. Simple logics don't always prevail and work mainly in this case of course. In all accounts though. I've appreciated this discussion. Thank you. :)

We don't call Prog Metal a spade, we call it Prog Metal and that is as seperate and as detailed as it needs to be. I struggle to see how you would describe Progressive Metal without using the word "Metal"


I think so as well in regards to the use of analogies in a discussion. Also, not a good idea to get anal about the detail of them sometimes cause it does create a major deflection from the main points in the discussion that even we are having right now. But, it is important to be accurate and in a few cases I was not.
Continuing on, my point about books getting a better treatment as far as headings/classification still stands meaning my view has not changed because its just what I've experienced personally living here in Canada. I bet things may be different where you are and I gotta say that is good to hear. I hope your music stores have at least some structure similar to well run book store. ;)
And yeah, the NIN wall of sound does carry trace amounts of some Industrail, but of course to label NIN strictly as industrial in my opinion is incorrect. Industrial music is known as machine music or a metal on metal factory sound.
Bands like Combichrist, Fear Factory and Frontline assembly are Industrail purely speaking. Not NIN. If anything, NIN are far more electronic than anything else. Actually, to be fair, this was the point I was trying to make with how the media will just label things they don't understand. Reznor has even openly said he does not consider himself at all to be an industrial artist, and to be honest there is no 1 genre or sub genre you can definitively place NIN. NIN are a collection of sub genres electronic/goth rock/metal and industrial. Nowadays you can even throw in tech house and dance into his art. This is evident on his latest album if you care to listen to it. ;) But, as you said in a witty manner 'should we file Reznor in the special Reznor section of music?' I am actually for that lol! Then again, that would be ridiculas so the fair thing to do is just stick NIN somewhere so we can classify them...ok Industrail it is.

Lastly, and to very clear, I'm am not ashamed of Metal at all. It's evolutionary process has been incredibly interesting to me and I love it to death. Also, the sub-genres of metal (and there are tons) have been accurately classified. I just think at this point it's starting to get quite bloated and some separation would be best, especially if one were to go to a music store. Bunching everything under metal is gonna get real confusing and people are gonna start thinking its all the same sh*t...oh hell most people already do! Hey, you pointed out some metal sounds that are vastly different sounding and sifting through a metal 'chain of being' I believe left you feeling 'Brain numbed' and I do not blame you. It's like venturing through a series of cosmic worm holes now. Lol you may choose to 'ignore' the bloated-plethora that is metal planet, but I do not. Things can be easier...it's just time to not be lazy and start separating. Think of how much better Music stores would fair from this. Dumping everything that is somewhat metal oriented into one big-bloated pile in alphabetical order is not a good idea, but it won't change. Noway it won't. Logic is logic ergo metal simply has to be metal regardless of difference. Agh you know what my main problem with all of this is that dumping everything under 'Metal' specifically is gonna lead to a lot of misconceptions about 'Metal' in general. People are gonna think its all one kind of sound and that is a problem in my eyes. That is what bugs me the most and you have to admit Prog metal as a subgenre of metal while having say post/tech extreme metal as a sub genre of Prog metal is a little ridiculas I think. Sheesh...time for a change.
Time to elimate these silly worm holes. It's getting to be 'footnote' central. Lol
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2013 at 00:02
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:


I wonder if you, progbethyname, want a separate classification for Dream Theater specifically rather than prog metal in general.  Symphony X has very prominent power metal elements, Opeth used to have a lot of death metal in their style though they are veering towards prog rock now.  Bands like Atheist are metal through and through.  It's just that DT are very noticeable influenced by jazz rock and use it in a kind of softer way (while Atheist/Cynic can be very abrasive).  <div id="LCS_FE1DEEEA_DB6D_44b8_83F0_34FC0F9D1052_communicationDiv">
And a simple solution to your problem would be to just identify yourself as a prog metal listener.  If the only metal sub genre you like is prog metal, where's the need to say you listen to metal?

<div id="LCS_FE1DEEEA_DB6D_44b8_83F0_34FC0F9D1052_communicationDiv">


Hey man. Nope. Dream theater belong right where they are...Prog metal because as you know by now during my whole discussion with maestro Dean, that Prog metal is its own entity and is nothing like traditional or generic Metal and I think classifying metal and Prog metal under 2 different family trees may be a good idea cause it's starting to get a little nuts by shoving everything that is remotely metal oriented into one big main heading 'metal' is not right, but it's just my opinion.
Dean brought up a good point where if you take away the metal from Prog metal it just becomes Prog rock. Logically he is right and the same thing will apply whereby in this case, if something is neo Prog like say Knight Area and something that is symphonic Prog like Genesis it will just get tossed under 'progressive Rock' period....we Americans say lol.

Also Mr. Catch, I love metal. Straight up metal and Prog metal are easily my favorite genres of music, but it seems that nowadays if I say I just listen metal people think of 'Death Metal.' Growling vocals..speedy guitar etc.
It's like I just listen to 'Angry music' to some people and that isn't right. Metal and Prog metal as you know very well have so many different sounds and feelings under the base of what constitutes a metal sound.
For the record though, Judas Priest are one of my very favorite metal bands of all time. What's not love..right? :)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2013 at 00:25
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

I really like the way you put this and it makes a lot of sense actually. We simply cannot label things contrary to popular belief. I tried to explain this like you did, but failed. Lol. This is a great analogy and I can agree with it. Nuts...almonds...peanuts. Not the same. Nuts(Metal) almonds (Prog metal)...you can look at this way and the seed classification of what constitutes being a nut in the first place can be co related to metal's evolutionary process. Evolution breeds difference and sometimes refinement in most cases, and it certainly applies to what we have been talking about here. Very interesting.

Nope, if you are bringing evolution of Metal into the analogy then it really does not fit - almonds are not an evolutionary development of "nuts" so cannot be analogous to Prog Metal. Analogies only work at the level they are first described, if you have to bend them to fit they are bad analogies, if you try to bend them to fit they will break. Prog Metal was not called Prog Metal by consensus, it was called Prog Metal because it was Metal influenced by Progressive Rock.
 

We all know those genre genealogy charts are inaccurate. The reason they are inaccurate is because they suggest that all those subgenres developed independently and in isolation, which we know is not the case. Prog Metal did not develop independently to Power Metal or Thrash, or Black Metal, nor did it develop in isolation from all other subgenres of metal and rock music. Just as (as I said a million pages back) Dream Theatre did not develop in isolation from <SPAN =st>Queensr˙che, Savatage and Fates Warning. All those metal subgenres and all those metal bands influenced each other ether directly or indirectly by virtue of existing. </SPAN><SPAN =st>You can neither ignore nor discard that legacy.</SPAN>

<SPAN =st> </SPAN>


Well Almonds are the big misconception because they taste and look like a nut, but in fact they are not a Nut.
So 'Almond' could represent some misrepresentations in the whole genology metal...like certain classifications that are in the metal tree, but aren't supposed to be. Overall though, I see your point but I think this analogy still works on level where Misrepresentation and classification errors are in 'Metal.' I mean it is an absolutely huge amount where by so many people are led to believe that an almond is a nut just people think metal is just metal (typically the yelling and screaming sort.) I think that is why The Almond is is quite significante here, but botanically speaking it doesn't fit into the genealogy, but the 'Almond' can serve as a very useful lesson to learn proper classification. :)

Ok Dean. Level with me in regards to the main topic of this forum. Who, in your opinion, can be counted as a father of Prog metal. Actually, plural would be better. I would like to hear what you think if you haven't listed it already...I might have missed that. ;)
Also, to comment on your age related feelings. Yeah being 56 and having a good appreciation for metal is a rare thing nowadays...well at least in my world....but I do understand your 'I don't give a f**k' attitude what others may think. I'm 24 years younger than you and I already don't give a f**k either, except when people misrepresent my music tastes like whole metal is just metal deal. In any case, it's great to have another metal/Prog Metal appreciator, Gandolf appearance or not. :)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2013 at 04:20
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:



I think so as well in regards to the use of analogies in a discussion. Also, not a good idea to get anal about the detail of them sometimes cause it does create a major deflection from the main points in the discussion that even we are having right now. But, it is important to be accurate and in a few cases I was not. 
Continuing on, my point about books getting a better treatment as far as headings/classification still stands meaning my view has not changed because its just what I've experienced personally living here in Canada. I bet things may be different where you are and I gotta say that is good to hear. I hope your music stores have at least some structure similar to well run book store. ;)
I've been in book and record stores in many different countries and they all pretty much follow the same format. If your general book stores are laid-out with the same multiple subgenres of fantasy fiction that I previously described then I would be more than a little surprised. Sure, if I went to a book store that specialised in SF & Fantasy I would expect to see more sub-sections, but never in Borders (RIP) or Barnes & Noble. Your point does not stand, it wobbles like a pickled penguin and topples onto its face in the snow.
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:


And yeah, the NIN wall of sound does carry trace amounts of some Industrail, but of course to label NIN strictly as industrial in my opinion is incorrect. Industrial music is known as machine music or a metal on metal factory sound.
Bands like Combichrist, Fear Factory and Frontline assembly are Industrail purely speaking. Not NIN. If anything, NIN are far more electronic than anything else. Actually, to be fair, this was the point I was trying to make with how the media will just label things they don't understand. Reznor has even openly said he does not consider himself at all to be an industrial artist, and to be honest there is no 1 genre or sub genre you can definitively place NIN. NIN are a collection of sub genres electronic/goth rock/metal and industrial. Nowadays you can even throw in tech house and dance into his art. This is evident on his latest album if you care to listen to it. ;) But, as you said in a witty manner 'should we file Reznor in the special Reznor section of music?' I am actually for that lol! Then again, that would be ridiculas so the fair thing to do is just stick NIN somewhere so we can classify them...ok Industrail it is.
NIИ where not labelled as Industrial by a media that didn't understand, they were labelled as Industrial by the fans that did understand. The nature of music is constantly shifting (but not necessarily evolving or developing), sure NIИ is not the same Industrial Metal as FLA or Ministry and they are not the same Industrial Rock as Skinny Puppy, Test Department or Throbbing Gristle, but they are all related.

This prevailing misconception that subgenres are invented by ill-informed media types is misleading and inaccurate - the bands and fans create the subgenres and their names - changing that after the event is Revisionist.
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:


Lastly, and to very clear, I'm am not ashamed of Metal at all. It's evolutionary process has been incredibly interesting to me and I love it to death. Also, the sub-genres of metal (and there are tons) have been accurately classified. I just think at this point it's starting to get quite bloated and some separation would be best, especially if one were to go to a music store. Bunching everything under metal is gonna get real confusing and people are gonna start thinking its all the same sh*t...oh hell most people already do! Hey, you pointed out some metal sounds that are vastly different sounding and sifting through a metal 'chain of being' I believe left you feeling 'Brain numbed' and I do not blame you. It's like venturing through a series of cosmic worm holes now. Lol you may choose to 'ignore' the bloated-plethora that is metal planet, but I do not. Things can be easier...it's just time to not be lazy and start separating. Think of how much better Music stores would fair from this. Dumping everything that is somewhat metal oriented into one big-bloated pile in alphabetical order is not a good idea, but it won't change. Noway it won't. Logic is logic ergo metal simply has to be metal regardless of difference. Agh you know what my main problem with all of this is that dumping everything under 'Metal' specifically is gonna lead to a lot of misconceptions about 'Metal' in general. People are gonna think its all one kind of sound and that is a problem in my eyes. That is what bugs me the most and you have to admit Prog metal as a subgenre of metal while having say post/tech extreme metal as a sub genre of Prog metal is a little ridiculas I think. Sheesh...time for a change. 
Time to elimate these silly worm holes. It's getting to be 'footnote' central. Lol 
Who cares whether a bunch of people with zero interest in Metal thinks it's all the same, (they certainly don't care) - I don't see how pretending that Prog Metal is a separate and unrelated genre from Metal is ever going to change that. They're not going to suddenly start liking Dream Theatre, Threshold, Pain Of Salvation, or that well known Danish band  - Ayreon, just because we're pretending they're not really Metal and never were.

I never said you left me brain-numbed - I said was brain-numbed by the overuse of subgenre classification in metalcore, not by the music contained within it:

When you reach the point where you have to create a new subgenre for each individual band then the value of music classification is reduced to the absurd. Basically - we have too many subgenres as it is, we do not need more.

Overuse of subgenres creates confusion and obfuscation - it actually makes music harder to find, not easier. 

And since we've pretty much established that the spotty and unwashed 17-yo hipsters that work in your typical music outlet cannot be trusted to stack the right albums in the limited number of sections they currently have without putting Pink Floyd in Pop and Anathema in Metal (LOL Stern Smile) then we're never going to trust them to file albums correctly if we over-proliferate the number of music subgenres. On the back of many of my Prog Rock, Heavy Rock and underground albums from the 60s and 70s it says "File under Popular" and that's close enough:

(back cover of Ummagumma)

As Roger said - if they can manage to file album alphabetically by artist we will be able to find what we're looking for. Any more than that is unnecessary complication that we don't have to burden them with.


Edited by Dean - September 17 2013 at 04:21
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2013 at 13:48
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:


Well Almonds are the big misconception because they taste and look like a nut, but in fact they are not a Nut.
So 'Almond' could represent some misrepresentations in the whole genology metal...like certain classifications that are in the metal tree, but aren't supposed to be. Overall though, I see your point but I think this analogy still works on level where Misrepresentation and classification errors are in 'Metal.' I mean it is an absolutely huge amount where by so many people are led to believe that an almond is a nut just people think metal is just metal (typically the yelling and screaming sort.) I think that is why The Almond is is quite significante here, but botanically speaking it doesn't fit into the genealogy, but the 'Almond' can serve as a very useful lesson to learn proper classification. :)
The nut analogy has run its course, any further stretching, twisting, bending and massaging is pointless, it's never going to work. If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, walks like a duck and swims like a duck, and if it has feathers and webbed feet and associates with ducks we have at least to consider the possibility that we have a small aquatic bird of the family Anatidae on our hands. We cannot define a genre by what ill-informed people who have no knowledge of the genre think it is - that's dumbness of the first order - if some dumbass people think metal is yelling and screaming then they are ill-informed, unknowledge, uneducated, ignorant (in the dictionary definition, not the playground definition) and nescient ..,.which can be summarised in one word: wrong. I don't see the logic in changing something to accommodate people who are not (and who will never be) interested in it.
 
The misconception or misunderstanding is not with the fans of the genre or with anyone who understands it.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:



Ok Dean. Level with me in regards to the main topic of this forum. Who, in your opinion, can be counted as a father of Prog metal. Actually, plural would be better. I would like to hear what you think if you haven't listed it already...I might have missed that. ;)
I said way back on Page 1 - Ironing Maiden.
 
For plural I'd add Metallica, but they would be playing second guitar.
 
The logic is simple.
 
1. It has to be a Metal band.
2. It has to be a Metal band that were not niche.
3. It has to be a Metal band that is not wholly Progressive Metal.
4. It has to be a Metal band that is widely regarded as influential on Metal and Progressive Metal.
5. It has to be a Metal band that is influenced by Progressive Rock.
6. It has to be a Metal band that used non-standard song structures.
7. It has to be a Metal band that experimented.
8. It has to be obvious. 
 
There is a ninth prerequisite, which is they have to been successful prior to Progressive Metal appearing as a subgenre, and for that I'd consider any date between 1987 and 1989 as being the period where Prog Metal emerged from the primordial Metal soup, so only bands that hit the big-time before 1987 would qualify. Several of the nascent Prog Metal bands (Queensr˙che, Fates Warning, Savatage, Voivod) released albums before this time but they were neither Prog Metal nor were they not well known enough to be influential at that time.
 
Lots of bands can tick three or four of those boxes, several can tick five or six. I believe that only Metallica can tick seven boxes and only The Irons can tick all eight. (Metallica only tick seven boxes if we take their whole discography into account - if we only consider their first four albums as being influential on Prog Metal then they'd only tick six boxes (IMO)). The two poll options don't tick all eight boxes.
 
 
Of course other's may disagree with that, and they are welcome to.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2013 at 14:36
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2013 at 21:41
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Well Almonds are the big misconception because they taste and look like a nut, but in fact they are not a Nut. So 'Almond' could represent some misrepresentations in the whole genology metal...like certain classifications that are in the metal tree, but aren't supposed to be. Overall though, I see your point but I think this analogy still works on level where Misrepresentation and classification errors are in 'Metal.' I mean it is an absolutely huge amount where by so many people are led to believe that an almond is a nut just people think metal is just metal (typically the yelling and screaming sort.) I think that is why The Almond is is quite significante here, but botanically speaking it doesn't fit into the genealogy, but the 'Almond' can serve as a very useful lesson to learn proper classification. :)

The nut analogy has run its course, any further stretching, twisting, bending and massaging is pointless, it's never going to work. If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, walks like a duck and swims like a duck, and if it has feathers and webbed feet and associates with ducks we have at least to consider the possibility that we have a small aquatic bird of the family Anatidae on our hands. We cannot define a genre by what ill-informed people who have no knowledge of the genre think it is - that's dumbness of the first order - if some dumbass people think metal is yelling and screaming then they are ill-informed, unknowledge, uneducated, ignorant (in the dictionary definition, not the playground definition) and nescient ..,.which can be summarised in one word: wrong. I don't see the logic in changing something to accommodate people who are not (and who will never be) interested in it.

 

The misconception or misunderstanding is not with the fans of the genre or with anyone who understands it.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Ok Dean. Level with me in regards to the main topic of this forum. Who, in your opinion, can be counted as a father of Prog metal. Actually, plural would be better. I would like to hear what you think if you haven't listed it already...I might have missed that. ;)

I said way back on Page 1 - Ironing Maiden.

 

For plural I'd add Metallica, but they would be playing second guitar.

 

The logic is simple.

 

1. It has to be a Metal band.


2. It has to be a Metal band that were not niche.
3. It has to be a Metal band that is not wholly Progressive Metal.

4. It has to be a Metal band that is widely regarded as influential on Metal and Progressive Metal.


5. It has to be a Metal band that is influenced by Progressive Rock.

6. It has to be a Metal band that used non-standard song structures.

7. It has to be a Metal band that experimented.
8. It has to be obvious. 

 

There is a ninth prerequisite, which is they have to been successful prior to Progressive Metal appearing as a subgenre, and for that I'd consider any date between 1987 and 1989 as being the period where Prog Metal emerged from the primordial Metal soup, so only bands that hit the big-time before 1987 would qualify. Several of the nascent Prog Metal bands (Queensr˙che, Fates Warning, Savatage, Voivod) released albums before this time but they were neither Prog Metal nor were they not well known enough to be influential at that time.

 

Lots of bands can tick three or four of those boxes, several can tick five or six. I believe that only Metallica can tick seven boxes and only The Irons can tick all eight. (Metallica only tick seven boxes if we take their whole discography into account - if we only consider their first four albums as being influential on Prog Metal then they'd only tick six boxes (IMO)). The two poll options don't tick all eight boxes.

 

 

Of course other's may disagree with that, and they are welcome to.

 

 

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Well Almonds are the big misconception because they taste and look like a nut, but in fact they are not a Nut. So 'Almond' could represent some misrepresentations in the whole genology metal...like certain classifications that are in the metal tree, but aren't supposed to be. Overall though, I see your point but I think this analogy still works on level where Misrepresentation and classification errors are in 'Metal.' I mean it is an absolutely huge amount where by so many people are led to believe that an almond is a nut just people think metal is just metal (typically the yelling and screaming sort.) I think that is why The Almond is is quite significante here, but botanically speaking it doesn't fit into the genealogy, but the 'Almond' can serve as a very useful lesson to learn proper classification. :)

The nut analogy has run its course, any further stretching, twisting, bending and massaging is pointless, it's never going to work. If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, walks like a duck and swims like a duck, and if it has feathers and webbed feet and associates with ducks we have at least to consider the possibility that we have a small aquatic bird of the family Anatidae on our hands. We cannot define a genre by what ill-informed people who have no knowledge of the genre think it is - that's dumbness of the first order - if some dumbass people think metal is yelling and screaming then they are ill-informed, unknowledge, uneducated, ignorant (in the dictionary definition, not the playground definition) and nescient ..,.which can be summarised in one word: wrong. I don't see the logic in changing something to accommodate people who are not (and who will never be) interested in it.

 

The misconception or misunderstanding is not with the fans of the genre or with anyone who understands it.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Ok Dean. Level with me in regards to the main topic of this forum. Who, in your opinion, can be counted as a father of Prog metal. Actually, plural would be better. I would like to hear what you think if you haven't listed it already...I might have missed that. ;)

I said way back on Page 1 - Ironing Maiden.

 

For plural I'd add Metallica, but they would be playing second guitar.

 

The logic is simple.

 

1. It has to be a Metal band.


2. It has to be a Metal band that were not niche.
3. It has to be a Metal band that is not wholly Progressive Metal.

4. It has to be a Metal band that is widely regarded as influential on Metal and Progressive Metal.


5. It has to be a Metal band that is influenced by Progressive Rock.

6. It has to be a Metal band that used non-standard song structures.

7. It has to be a Metal band that experimented.
8. It has to be obvious. 

 

There is a ninth prerequisite, which is they have to been successful prior to Progressive Metal appearing as a subgenre, and for that I'd consider any date between 1987 and 1989 as being the period where Prog Metal emerged from the primordial Metal soup, so only bands that hit the big-time before 1987 would qualify. Several of the nascent Prog Metal bands (Queensr˙che, Fates Warning, Savatage, Voivod) released albums before this time but they were neither Prog Metal nor were they not well known enough to be influential at that time.

 

Lots of bands can tick three or four of those boxes, several can tick five or six. I believe that only Metallica can tick seven boxes and only The Irons can tick all eight. (Metallica only tick seven boxes if we take their whole discography into account - if we only consider their first four albums as being influential on Prog Metal then they'd only tick six boxes (IMO)). The two poll options don't tick all eight boxes.

 

 

Of course other's may disagree with that, and they are welcome to.

 

 


Well, I find your last point here very interesting about your opinion on 'the fathers of Prog' question that I asked you. I think the rest of what we spoke about can be put to bed, but I do appreciate all those other discussions.

As for your 8 point logic chart to illustrate your deductive reasoning for the fathers of Prog is interesting and I do agree with a lot of what you said except for your timeline 1987-1989 where prog metal became more refined from the beginnings of typical metal. I'd scale it back, and this is just my opinion cause I'm not gonna say your 'wrong', but consider between 1984-1986 as the obvious Prog metal evolving period. Look at albums like Queensr˙che's The Warning (1984) Rage for Order (1986) Fates Warning: Awaken The Guardian (1986) Metallica's Master of Puppets (1986) and lastly Ironic Maiden's Somewhere In Time (1986) :) I think all of these albums are albums that consistantly show an emergence of the metal primordial soup as you call it. So all in all, I think this would be the key time period of refined, consistent Prog metal emergence. Just an opinion of course.

Also, from your logics chart I think Queensr˙che hit 7 of 8 where by not being 'Niche' point 2 would fit the bill for the ryche cause they were pretty experimental from the get go and you can really get a good ear full of that on their 1983 ep Queen of The Ryche, but to be clear I'd put Queensryche a little before Maiden. Maiden started to get more experimental with 1982's Number of the Beast, but it wasn't a full on Prog album. 1983-1984 with the ryche's ep and first full length album was, in my opinion, the first major emergence of a different kind of Metal that was not anything like traditional metal. ie Black Sabbath, Priest etc. If by chance queensryche's The Warning álbum is not fresh in your head give it a spin...it might chance your mind, but I doubt it. Still a great listen though and would not be a waste of your time. Again, just an opinion though.

And lastly Sir Dean, this is a bit off topic though, for a man that greatly discredits philosophy you certainly have a love for Logic in the critical thinking manner of things. Surely you must see that. Take for example Aristotilian Logics like the use of the Syllogism. It's very similar to how you deduce your reasoning to ultimately gather a conclusion that is logical to your premise. You solve problems very similar to Aristotle. My opinion, and don't hate for this, but philosophy is with in you big-time. Come on...embrace the love. It's ok. Logic is good. I only bring that up cause I remember your distaste for philosophy on an academic level in secondlifesyndrome's forum 'The Prog Mind' or as you called The Prog Borg or something. Funny nonetheless. All in good fun though.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2013 at 13:48
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Well, I find your last point here very interesting about your opinion on 'the fathers of Prog' question that I asked you. I think the rest of what we spoke about can be put to bed, but I do appreciate all those other discussions.

As for your 8 point logic chart to illustrate your deductive reasoning for the fathers of Prog is interesting and I do agree with a lot of what you said except for your timeline 1987-1989 where prog metal became more refined from the beginnings of typical metal. I'd scale it back, and this is just my opinion cause I'm not gonna say your 'wrong', but consider between 1984-1986 as the obvious Prog metal evolving period. Look at albums like Queensr˙che's The Warning (1984) Rage for Order (1986) Fates Warning: Awaken The Guardian (1986) Metallica's Master of Puppets (1986) and lastly Ironic Maiden's Somewhere In Time (1986) :) I think all of these albums are albums that consistantly show an emergence of the metal primordial soup as you call it. So all in all, I think this would be the key time period of refined, consistent Prog metal emergence. Just an opinion of course.
'87-89 wasn't chosen without carefull consideration and with regard to what was happening at the time, as opposed to how we look at from the benefit of hindsight. As you must be aware by now, I doggedly resist revisionism and the rewritting of history by Johnny-come-lately's who apply genre definitions retrospectively.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:


And lastly Sir Dean, this is a bit off topic though, for a man that greatly discredits philosophy you certainly have a love for Logic in the critical thinking manner of things. Surely you must see that. Take for example Aristotilian Logics like the use of the Syllogism. It's very similar to how you deduce your reasoning to ultimately gather a conclusion that is logical to your premise. You solve problems very similar to Aristotle. My opinion, and don't hate for this, but philosophy is with in you big-time. Come on...embrace the love. It's ok. Logic is good. I only bring that up cause I remember your distaste for philosophy on an academic level in secondlifesyndrome's forum 'The Prog Mind' or as you called The Prog Borg or something. Funny nonetheless. All in good fun though.
I suspect you are oversimplifying my objections to philosophy and philosophers. Logic and problem solving is what I do for a living - you cannot solve problems just with knowledge, (ie a crib-sheet and a list of FAQs) or by random chance. I see this illogical approach everyday at work and it drives me to a place that is someway between despair and distraction - it's lucky charm engineering - the "it worked last time so I'll do it every time" approach (which is applying superstition not logic); it's the "Have you rebooted the modem?" school of IT (un)help-desk; it's the "clutching at straws" method to be used when thinking is too difficult. (Dragging this back on topic) it's picking a loud band from antiquity at random and calling them the "fathers of whatevs". If someone picks a particular artist as being the father of progressive metal then they must have applied some logical reasoning to arrive at that conclusion, because if it was simply gut-feel then that constitutes a guess.
 
Aristotle is credited with formulating the scientific method that I will merrily quote as a mantra when it is applicable, it is not methodology that should be applied to non scientific matters for example. It is a robust methodology that has stood the test of time and it is a methodology not a philosophy. When in a playful frame of mind I put Aristotle in the Scientist camp (he called it "natural philosophy" because they didn't have a word for "science" in ancient Greece), not the Philosopher camp - I have no interest in his "opinion" or navel-gazing on politics, ethics, the meaning of life or the best place in Athens for baklava. If he had a logical way of solving problems then that is a general human trait and not something he invented - humans are naturally capable of solving problems and drawing conclusions - if there is a rustle in your hedgerow then logical reasoning is used to determine whether that is a threat or a source of food - the fight or flee response is resolved by rational thinking, not by assuming some lackey is dusting down the brambles for imminent inspection by the queen of May and thus is no cause of alarm, that is of little consolation if a wild boar takes a chunk out of your leg. If we achieve a rational conclusion by applying a deductive process that someone has called syllogistic deduction then we were doing that long before Aristotle.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2013 at 08:27
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:


Well Almonds are the big misconception because they taste and look like a nut, but in fact they are not a Nut.
So 'Almond' could represent some misrepresentations in the whole genology metal...like certain classifications that are in the metal tree, but aren't supposed to be. Overall though, I see your point but I think this analogy still works on level where Misrepresentation and classification errors are in 'Metal.' I mean it is an absolutely huge amount where by so many people are led to believe that an almond is a nut just people think metal is just metal (typically the yelling and screaming sort.) I think that is why The Almond is is quite significante here, but botanically speaking it doesn't fit into the genealogy, but the 'Almond' can serve as a very useful lesson to learn proper classification. :)
The nut analogy has run its course, any further stretching, twisting, bending and massaging is pointless, it's never going to work. If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, walks like a duck and swims like a duck, and if it has feathers and webbed feet and associates with ducks we have at least to consider the possibility that we have a small aquatic bird of the family Anatidae on our hands. We cannot define a genre by what ill-informed people who have no knowledge of the genre think it is - that's dumbness of the first order - if some dumbass people think metal is yelling and screaming then they are ill-informed, unknowledge, uneducated, ignorant (in the dictionary definition, not the playground definition) and nescient ..,.which can be summarised in one word: wrong. I don't see the logic in changing something to accommodate people who are not (and who will never be) interested in it.
 
The misconception or misunderstanding is not with the fans of the genre or with anyone who understands it.

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:



Ok Dean. Level with me in regards to the main topic of this forum. Who, in your opinion, can be counted as a father of Prog metal. Actually, plural would be better. I would like to hear what you think if you haven't listed it already...I might have missed that. ;)
I said way back on Page 1 - Ironing Maiden.
 
For plural I'd add Metallica, but they would be playing second guitar.
 
The logic is simple.
 
1. It has to be a Metal band.
2. It has to be a Metal band that were not niche.
3. It has to be a Metal band that is not wholly Progressive Metal.
4. It has to be a Metal band that is widely regarded as influential on Metal and Progressive Metal.
5. It has to be a Metal band that is influenced by Progressive Rock.
6. It has to be a Metal band that used non-standard song structures.
7. It has to be a Metal band that experimented.
8. It has to be obvious. 
 
There is a ninth prerequisite, which is they have to been successful prior to Progressive Metal appearing as a subgenre, and for that I'd consider any date between 1987 and 1989 as being the period where Prog Metal emerged from the primordial Metal soup, so only bands that hit the big-time before 1987 would qualify. Several of the nascent Prog Metal bands (Queensr˙che, Fates Warning, Savatage, Voivod) released albums before this time but they were neither Prog Metal nor were they not well known enough to be influential at that time.
 
Lots of bands can tick three or four of those boxes, several can tick five or six. I believe that only Metallica can tick seven boxes and only The Irons can tick all eight. (Metallica only tick seven boxes if we take their whole discography into account - if we only consider their first four albums as being influential on Prog Metal then they'd only tick six boxes (IMO)). The two poll options don't tick all eight boxes.
 
 
Of course other's may disagree with that, and they are welcome to.
 
 
Your logic may be technical correct, but on the other hand, it is pretty clear, that with the options given in the Poll, you reasoning to what check boxes was needed to answer the question, was not those the poll maker had in mind.
So, either the pool-maker did not understand his own question Wacko, or there is something about the definition of the term "father" of XX-genre. That differs between Your reasoning and what he had in mind.
 


Edited by tamijo - September 19 2013 at 08:28
Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2013 at 08:31
What i find the most interesting is that you all have those very concrete opinions to what is right and wrong, in cases like this. In my world i dubt the term Metal (or most other subgenre/scene names) is meaningful to describe music at all.  
Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2013 at 08:40
Originally posted by tamijo tamijo wrote:

Your logic may be technical correct, but on the other hand, it is pretty clear, that with the options given in the Poll, you reasoning to what check boxes was needed to answer the question, was not those the poll maker had in mind.
So, either the pool-maker did not understand his own question Wacko, or there is something about the definition of the term "father" of XX-genre. That differs between Your reasoning and what he had in mind.
 
Sure. I cannot read Stewart's mind so I don't know what his thinking was about picking these two specific bands for his poll and ignoring all the other possibilities. I was asked by Nicolas for my opinion of who can be counted as a father of Prog metal, which I had already given several pages back - so I elaborated on my reasoning behind my opinion and from those you can infer why I believe that the term "father of whatevs" has a very specific connotation and is not just some random honorific that we can glibly bestow on our "favourite" wrinkly old rock-farts. 

I quite clearly said:

Originally posted by dean dean wrote:

Of course other's may disagree with that, and they are welcome to.

peace off out. Stern Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2013 at 09:23
But the only bands I can think of basing on Dean's prerequirements are Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin, isn't it?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2013 at 09:33
Originally posted by octopus-4 octopus-4 wrote:

But the only bands I can think of basing on Dean's prerequirements are Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin, isn't it?
They all fail Option 1:  It has to be a Metal band

"Led Zeppelin were an English rock band formed in London in 1968."
"Deep Purple are an English rock band formed in Hertford in 1968."
"Black Sabbath are an English rock band, formed in Birmingham in 1968"

(Wikipedia)
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