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YESESIS View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2017 at 19:35
Originally posted by verslibre verslibre wrote:

Originally posted by YESESIS YESESIS wrote:

Cool! I don't need singing. I really like albums like The Snow Goose by Camel or Nouveau Calls by Wishbone Ash. Now I HAVE to check these out. Thanks again.
 
Good to hear! Most of the albums in the list are posted yesterday are instrumental and contain incendiary playing.
 
Let me add two more by Rick Wakeman: Retro and Retro 2. They were recorded entirely with vintage keyboards (Moog, Mellotron, etc.) that were pulled out of storage or borrowed for the sessions. Both songs and instrumentals populate the two, but Retro 2 has less vocals. (I had hoped for a Retro 3  where he went 70/30 or 75/25 with the instrumentals/songs, but it didn't happen.)

Awesome, thanks again for all the recommendations. Yeah, even sometimes on an album I'll be jamming out to the music and then singing starts and I'll like, "oh no come on.. don't ruin it!" 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2017 at 21:45
Originally posted by YESESIS YESESIS wrote:

Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

Originally posted by YESESIS YESESIS wrote:


Rick %$#^ Wakeman.. now you're speaking my language! Thanks a lot for the suggestions.


If you want some input on Rick Wakeman, I might be able to help you there too. He's one of my very favourite artists (along with Yes, Pink Floyd, Mike Oldfield, and Dream Theater).


I appreciate it buddy. I used to be into Floyd but are they truly considered prog? Dream Theater I keep hearing mentioned but don't know anything by them, and this Mike person same thing. I already know a lot about Yes(them and Genesis are literally my favorite prog bands). LOVE ELP and Gentle Giant too though! 

My man Wakeman, does this Six Wives of Henry VIII and Criminal Record sound like classic Yes? If so then I might really have to check them out. I love everyone from the Anderson, Howe, Squire, Wakeman, Bruford lineup of Yes. 


No, I would say Wakeman's music is very much his own thing, not really so similar to Yes... except that they are both Symphonic prog, and that give them enough resemblance. Plus, if you check out Rick's keyboard solos on Yes music you can get a bit more of an idea of how his albums will sound. As said, Six Wives and Criminal Record are mostly instrumental, and both among his best (for me, specially 6 Wives). The opener of that album (Catherine of Aragon) is actually performed almost by the Yes line-up from CttE, so that one sounds a bit more Yes-like (mostly for the bass opening the song)... and Rick wanted it his solo contribution for Fragile, but for record labels contractual reasons he couldn't contribute song-writing with Yes, so he had to use that Brahms thing (I believe it would have benefitted Fragile a lot to have had that piece instead... but then it would have been missing from 6 Wives, which is just perfect the way it was released).There are some other contributions from Yes men on other songs of the album. Criminal Record actually features Squire and White on the first 3 songs, but the focus is on the keyboards anyway... the final (Judas Iscariot) song features prominently a church organ and choir, and is just a fantastic piece of music. As for other albums, besides 6 Wives, my other favourite is Myths and Legends from King Arthur, though this one is even more different from Yes: orchestra and choirs are the key words here, besides the keyboards, of course (and the bad singers, but they don't bother me anymore)... and if this album were to be your thing, then you would need to get Journey to the Centre of the Earth too. Besides this ones, the already mentioned "Out There" is really great too, and to a lesser extent, but still with great music included, the Retro albums (also already mentioned).

As for Floyd, they are mostly accepted as prog around here, and if you have polls including them, they will usually win or do very well, even against the other top bands (Yes, Genesis, King Crimson). And as far as I'm concerned they are perfectly prog. Dream Theater are prog metal, so liking metal is a must to get into them. I guess I could describe them as a metal version of Yes. If you like instrumental music and classic Genesis (the soft side of it), then you should like Mike Oldfield. His first 4 70's albums are pure instrumental magic, 2 songs per album (1 per side, of course)... except Incantations, a double album with 4 songs. Some other great albums after that too... but in particular his latest (return to Ommadawn) really brought him back to the great music he created in the 70's.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2017 at 21:50
Originally posted by YESESIS YESESIS wrote:

Originally posted by verslibre verslibre wrote:

Those albums are entirely instrumental, which is why I love them so much.


Cool! I don't need singing. I really like albums like The Snow Goose by Camel or <span>Nouveau Calls by Wishbone Ash. Now I HAVE to check these out. Thanks again. </span>



If you like instrumental, then you should check out Focus too. Hamburger Concerto is an awsome album, as well as Moving Waves. Mostly instrumental, with some medieval themes at times... or jazzy sections, and a good amount of flute. Plus, the guitar player is awsome too. Another piece for instrumental lovers would be the song "Histoires Sans Paroles" from Harmonium... total instrumental beauty... once again for lovers of the pastoral side of Genesis (as a matter of fact, the whole album would do fine for pastoral tastes, though the rest is not instrumental, and is sung in french). And then I guess another one you might like to check out is "The Geese and the Ghost" by Anthony Phillips (the original guitar player of Genesis)... once again a bit of Genesis resemblance in a soft way.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2017 at 21:52
Originally posted by AFlowerKingCrimson AFlowerKingCrimson wrote:

I just looked it up and "Criminal Record" is not entirely instrumental. There's vocals on one track and a choir on others. Six wives which I am familiar with has vocals but no singing per se just "oohs and ahhs" from some of the same singers who were on Pink Floyd's dark side of the moon which explains why the background wordless vocals sound similar. Still I suppose we could call Six wives instrumental. 

If you do a search on here I believe you can still find some good threads on instrumental prog. 



I hadn't noticed that thing about shared singers on 6 Wives and Dark Side... I'll have to check it out. It's a nice anecdotes (good for the Obscure Prog Facts that was around for a good time a while ago).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2017 at 21:56
Oh yeah, one more thing, for the Genesis loving part, you might want to check out Big Big Train's English Electric albums. I really loved those ones, and they had that feel from Genesis, without ripping them off. Though, actually, given the sound they achieved, I would love if they would make a tribute album of classic Genesis.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2017 at 22:04
Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

Originally posted by AFlowerKingCrimson AFlowerKingCrimson wrote:

I just looked it up and "Criminal Record" is not entirely instrumental. There's vocals on one track and a choir on others. Six wives which I am familiar with has vocals but no singing per se just "oohs and ahhs" from some of the same singers who were on Pink Floyd's dark side of the moon which explains why the background wordless vocals sound similar. Still I suppose we could call Six wives instrumental. 

If you do a search on here I believe you can still find some good threads on instrumental prog. 



I hadn't noticed that thing about shared singers on 6 Wives and Dark Side... I'll have to check it out. It's a nice anecdotes (good for the Obscure Prog Facts that was around for a good time a while ago).

Well only two singers were the same for both sessions(Liza Strike and Barry St. John)but you can still hear strong similarities in the backing vocals nonetheless. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2017 at 22:57
Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

Oh yeah, one more thing, for the Genesis loving part, you might want to check out Big Big Train's English Electric albums. I really loved those ones, and they had that feel from Genesis, without ripping them off. Though, actually, given the sound they achieved, I would love if they would make a tribute album of classic Genesis.

I do love my classic Genesis.. ANY Genesis tbh.  Yeah wow, thanks a lot for all of these great suggestions in all these posts tonight. A lot to digest lol. And that Mike guy sounds great.. 4 albums in a row of pure instrumental magic. Mercy, that sounds fantastic to me. And that Catherine of Aragon performed by almost the CTTE lineup.. anything done by that version of Yes has to be good! So thanks again for all your suggestions.. looks like a whole lot of terrific stuff here for me to discover.. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2017 at 23:06
I just listened to the whole Brain Salad Surgery again from start to finish and man what an album! Yeah, it has some 'silliness' if you want to call it that with Benny the Bouncer.. but man Karn Evil 9(the whole of it) just so kick ass. Keith Emerson doing magic those keyboards, and really the whole band just on fire! For me that album, Selling England by the Pound, and Close to the Edge are simply prog at it's best. There's those three albums and then everything else. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 05:04
I never was an ELP fan. They have top skills and I like Lake as a singer a lot; I respect them, but very often they don't touch me. I have the impression that often there's too much showing off in their music, doing something in order to show that they can, complexity for complexity's sake, and then sometimes doing something ridiculous because "yes, we can do that, too". Of course this is personal, if you feel touched by their music, fine by me.

That said, I love the whole first album and there's quite a bit of material on the next few that I like, too. They could actually write really good melodies, and also generate a lot of energy and power, and you can find a lot of musicality - just top musicians. Still... too often something's missing for me.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 05:07
KE9. First Impression is as good as it gets for ELP...shortly behind is PAAE and Tarkus (title track)....A lot of the other stuff is very poor by comparison. I'm not too keen on the stuff before Tarkus.... nor any stuff after BSS.
Yes & genesis 1970-1977 have far more quality and consistency.
I would recommend - The Par Lindh project - Gothic Impressions - thats very ELP in parts and It's a brilliant CD!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 05:42
Just been Capcha'd several times this eve for posting extended responses. Captcha can get f**ked. I'm not bothering with nothing but few word replies......(dirty c**ts.......)


Edited by Tom Ozric - August 04 2017 at 05:42
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 05:45
ELP are great. Their Works albums and Love Beach were on the cheezy side, but still had some great material.
Love Black Moon !!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 05:50
Originally posted by Cosmiclawnmower Cosmiclawnmower wrote:


My Favourite ELP lp (by miles) is the self titled first lp, vinyl on the original pink Island label.. and I really like Tarkus. I like Trilogy too but to a slightly lesser extent. My main problem with Brain salad surgery is the production; its very tinny and harsh with limited mid range and an odd metallic sheen over the whole thing.. I understand that perhaps that was intentional for Karn Evil 9 and fits into the futuristic theme but it just makes it almost unlistenable to my ears.. I admit, this is listening to original vinyl on a reasonable spec set up, not a re-mastered version. I briefly worked with a guy who in a previous position worked for ELP in logistics in the 70's and we went to see them on the Black Moon tour and it was a seriously good show and re-kindled my interest in their early lps. And, yes, I thought some of the Emerson, Lake and Powell lp was very good too..


I also don't like the production on BSS. It sounds like a transistor radio turned up loud. It baffles me that some people think it sounds great. It has no balls.

As for ELPowell. I have a 'complex' relationship with that album. There are some dynamite tracks on ELPowell; The Score, Touch & Go and The Miracle, but then they also butchered Holst and for some wierd reason recorded a version of The Locomotion.. I guess they were just having fun.
Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 06:20
I think the old U.S. Cotillion vinyl pressings had a much 'beefier' and heavy sound to them. Could be my overactive imagination though.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 07:21
All that is wonderful and utterly deplorable about Prog is manifest in ELP (and that's why they should be a salutary deterrent to anyone even attempting 'earnest' on this site) : Unimpeachable virtuosity wedded to musical substance, grandiose musical structures, unfettered musical ambition, faux symphonic rigour, pyrotechnical panto theatrics, supply teacher lyricism, tongue in cheek bombast, 'everything louder than everything else' dynamics and a huge slice of 'devil may care' chutzpah. I love 'em to bits and hope that Lester Bangs continues to relish their work from whatever corner of Hell he is consigned, shackled in front of a PA system blasting out their entire discography for eternity (with In the Hot Seat repeated twice each time for ironic emphasis)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 09:40
Originally posted by M27Barney M27Barney wrote:

I would recommend - The Par Lindh project - Gothic Impressions - thats very ELP in parts and It's a brilliant CD!
 
I concur, and the next two are even better: Mundus Incompertus, and Veni Vidi Vici.
 
A decade later, Par Lindh returned with a new album and line-up for Time Mirror, which is also good.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 11:54
^ Also, try the Agentinian band Nexus. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 14:25
C'mon, Japanese trio of beautiful ladies, Ars Nova, are a great substitute for ELP. Throw in a bit of Goblin and Balletto Di Bronzo and there you have it !!

Edited by Tom Ozric - August 04 2017 at 14:26
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 14:50
Occasionally i Try to listen to Love Beach hoping that there is something that I might have missed . I always start with side two but when I flip it over I just can't get even halfway through the title track Love Beach so I just skip to Canario and say to myself, " Yep, still sh*t".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2017 at 15:29
Originally posted by Tom Ozric Tom Ozric wrote:

C'mon, Japanese trio of beautiful ladies, Ars Nova, are a great substitute for ELP. Throw in a bit of Goblin and Balletto Di Bronzo and there you have it !!
 
Check my big list of recommends in this thread. Wink
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