How to define and classify "Progressive Rock"? |
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Jaketejas
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 27 2018 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 1990 |
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You did a great job tying them together! If you have not done so, you might enjoy reading some of the comments in the “Where is Prog going?” thread. There is optimism and pessimism there, but also some excellent reflections. One mentions how in one direction, some are pushing the frontiers of music to the point that, at some point in time it may not sound like music at all. Others have taken the retro path to try to write in the style of the 1970s (and you can throw the 80s in there too), but at some point they may run out of songs for that style. Some think that Prog will bind with other forms of music and morph into new subgenres. There are many other suggestions, and it is a fascinating read. |
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Atavachron
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I'm unfamiliar with wibbly wobbly and/or timey wimey prog, but I want some. |
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15122 |
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thank you!
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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The Dark Elf
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I think they are available at a Mongolian barbecue.
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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology... |
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15122 |
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But I must say, too, that much has happened the last 15 years, so it's certainly not easy today to describe what Progressive Rock most commonly is considered to be. There's for instance a big difference between PA's and RYM's understanding of Prog.
Edited by David_D - January 23 2022 at 12:42 |
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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Jaketejas
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 27 2018 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 1990 |
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15122 |
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I might even agree on that it's very difficult today to draw the line between Prog and non-Prog. I would consider, though, RYM's way to do it being most representative as RYM is the database with far the most Prog ratings.
Edited by David_D - January 24 2022 at 14:38 |
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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Jaketejas
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 27 2018 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 1990 |
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That’s right. One person’s trash is another person’s Prog.
Uh … That didn’t come out quite right. Don’t forget the ADD Prog people. They can’t focus for 45 min on an epic concept album with 10 different movements and 5 different opuses, those having intros and outros that last longer than the song itself. That’s why the Crossover Prog subgenre was invented. It is for on-the-go people who want to be hit with Prog within a 3 min song. It’s Prog after it has been edited to its most minimal form. All the Prog with none of the fluff. It was a course correction after Tales from Topographic Oceans. |
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15122 |
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Yes, in my opinion it's best to call Progressive Rock "a meta-genre", due to it must have Rock as a very important, unifying element for all the sub-genres - right Jaketejas? Otherwise, we must talk about "Progressive Music".
Edited by David_D - February 12 2022 at 09:42 |
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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David_D
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An interesting question is whether it's good to consider and call Progressive Rock "a third stream", a term Edward Macan already used as a possible one in his book Rocking the Classics from 1997, even his definition of Prog was much less including than the one I've proposed (as I mentioned in my OP article). The term "a third stream" would be very appropriate if to consider Prog not just as a part of the Rock genre but including as well parts of the other "main genres" included in my definition. I guess that is the best choice, and it fits very well with using the term "meta-genre".
Edited by David_D - February 12 2022 at 04:01 |
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moshkito
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Hi, Should punish those folks with the 12 second version of "Light My Fire" ... several times in a row! Only available on Space Pirate Radio, of course! Otherwise you get the MONO version from the AM radio! That should perk up some ears! That has always been my biggest concern, that many folks are not patiently listening to the music enough to be able to pick up a good understanding. IF THEY DID, they would say a lot more than just like or dislike! Which for me, has really been the biggest signal of all. If those folks had heard what they did not like a few more times, like they did their favorite donut, they might find some music in there!
Edited by moshkito - February 12 2022 at 19:09 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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David_D
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Even I find the word/term "meta-genre" to be most appropriate in relation to the Progressive Rock definition I've proposed, I'd say that the word/term "umbrella" is the best one to use when talking about how PA defines and uses the term Prog/Progressive Rock.
Edited by David_D - March 02 2022 at 08:52 |
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David_D
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(written in the thread "Eclectic Prog Friends' Imaginative Club", 12 May 2022) Thank you very much again, Logan, for this very informative description of your view regarding the definition of Progressive Rock. I'm afraid to say that I find this way of defining Prog far too including, too colonializing, and I'm worry about that it may even be a potential danger to the very existence of Progressive Rock. |
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Logan
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My views are variable, but that excerpt from a much longer post of mine was in response to your comment about Swans not fitting your Prog definition and was tailored to the conversation and past posts and does lose some of my intent herein the migration of the excerpt. That grew out a of a little side-comment I made about Swans as part of a much more detailed and longer post. Then you commented on listening to Swans. I then mentioned my favourite albums, thinking you might want to consider them, and then you posted your Prog definition saying that you don't think Swans fits, and then I wrote a post which grew out of that
A point of mine is that there are different approaches to look at Prog, I can look at it in different ways (have many definitions). As I said too, Prog is a term I don't really like and don't use much outside of this site. For what site work I have done, I am more interested in the parameters of the categories we have at PA than some overarching definitions of Prog. Anyway, nomenclature is the bane of the archivist. I was planning to mention, depending on how you responded to my post in the other thread, that I tend to favour music that I consider only on the peripheries of prog and an awful lot of what I like in Prog Archives I don't consider to be Prog-genre proper. I don't consider myself to be a fan of Prog, but I like an awful of music that may be labeled or identified with Prog (and with categories under PA's Prog umbrella). Here's the post you took that from, which was part of a longer conversation and related to my earlier comments about Eclectic Prog (and here is the link to where this aside got started for more context, why I tend to quote in full here in case any context or nuance is lost, CLICK ):
Probably would have been better just to talk about such things in that thread rather than migrate it over here, but I wouldn't want that side-rout to hijack the other thread. I would be interested to hear details on how such a perspective "may even be a potential danger to the very existence of Progressive Rock" from your perspective. That might be an interesting thing to debate, but I would want to understand your ideas/ thinking better first. Edited by Logan - May 13 2022 at 08:50 |
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David_D
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This is difficult stuff to me due to different reasons, and I'll get back to it when I'm ready. - Actually, this discussion comes rather unexpected for myself, even I can see some very good reasons for it.
Edited by David_D - May 14 2022 at 09:11 |
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David_D
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^^To begin with though, I can quote what I have written about it before:
"When I wrote my Prog defining article about 12 years ago, (as it can be read of it) it was with the very purpose to contribute to make Prog definitions more including. Today, I'm much more concerned with that the understandig of what Prog is can be so including that Progressive Rock becomes difficult to distinguish from mainstream Rock - and that would be a pity for us, Prog lovers. " "Prog can only be something distinctive from mainstream Rock, if it's really considered so, otherwise, I'm afraid it will drown in mainstream - like it can be difficult to distinguish between light grey and white. Edit: What I mean, is for instance, if you say to plain music fans about OK Computer "this is Progressive Rock", will they understand what you mean, will they be able to see it as something different from mainstream Rock?" (written in the thread "Your Top 10 Favourite Prog Albums of 1997", November 2021)
Edited by David_D - May 14 2022 at 10:51 |
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suitkees
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Out of curiosity, and just because I don't understand it, but can you explain how a genre label influences your music appreciation?
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The razamataz is a pain in the bum |
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Logan
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While I am happy to have Radiohead included in PA, and if this site hadn't been broad with its approach to Prog and its categories I would have lost interest many years ago, I would not tend to describe to the band or even the album to someone as Prog. Of course some will visit this site with little understanding of the history of progressive rock, and the history of Prog Archives and how our categories work, may get confused. And with Prog fans, especially the "purists" here, I might defend the notion that OK Computer can be considered progressive rock even if I don't really think of it as Prog "genre". An issue I would have is that calling OK Computer Prog is not very descriptive and could be misleading. I would be more likely to call it progressive than Prog. It is more of an Art Rock and Alternative Rock album than what is traditionally thought of as Prog. I would rather be more specific when describing the qualities of an album, use plenty of adjectives, and I would try to compare it to similar music. Some oversimply, and I may overcomplicate things. Some would call Radiohead NuProg, which is basically a label intended for many modern bands with experimental qualities that might be described as Alternative Rock. I would much sooner associate Swans with a band like Radiohead than traditional Prog, and I would sooner throw a band not recognised as Prog here, Portishead (love to name drop my favourites but there are connections), in to that sort of mix sooner than modern ones that I do consider more Prog as genre like The Flower Kings..
When I have used the Prog term with people, particularly with people who I know off the internet, I have used it in a more narrow way. It refers to a lot of what is called Symphonic Prog and Eclectic ones commonly -- the usual suspects like ELP, Yes, "classic" Genesis, King Crimson, Gentle Giant, VdGG, and it works for lesser known ones like Magma etc. That is already quite disparate. The kind of Prog that I tend to dislike is sometimes called Prog-by-numbers or cookie-cutter Prog. There are too many artists for my tastes who have tried to sound Prog, and end up become like pale imitations if not parodies. We have had threads with musicians asking "How can I sound more Prog?" That is at odds with the spirt of what I think of as progressive music and how the early innovators were making what we now think of as progressive rock , before it was deemed a genre - that was more of an open approach to making music. I have suggested to said people that you should follow your musical bliss and that if you try to sound Prog then you are less likely to be truly progressive -- you'll just be another imitator rather than an innovator. This leads to retro-Prog, which I have called "Regressive Progressive Music". That's about looking backwards, not forwards. I commonly would rather truly progressive rock than just generic Prog rock (I do love lots of retro music, mind you). If my dangerous to the prog genre speak has maybe led to a little less generic prog, less Prog-by-numbers, I'm not ashamed of that. If we narrowly typecast Prog as a specific kind of music, and that's what as Prog fans demand and so that's the product we get, well, I would find that boring, and I think it is at odds with the kind of creativity that has been the hallmark of progressive music generally. I also tend not to be into the Symph Prog derivatives and commonly prefer the more experimental and out-there ones to the melodic rock ones. I'm more into the Krautrock, kinds of psychedelic and spacey ones (Radiohead has those qualities), and RIO/Avant and related ones than Symphonic Prog, Neo Prog, melodic Prog Metal etc. I consider my tastes generally to be more prog-adjacent, even with some of the ones deemed prog that I love. I know that an awful lot of what I love in PA is both not considered Prog by various people who have narrow definitions of it, and maybe more traditional views (more conservative than me), and actually is openly despised/ loathed by some. Mainstream rock and progressive rock can overlap and I think a band like Radiohead is good example of that (not Prog genre so much but progressive and rock). The Beatles brought a certain experimentation and more avant-garde stylings to the mainstream. Bands like ELP were pretty mainstream. What matters to me are the qualities of the music and if I enjoy it, and if my favourite Prog becomes mainstream, I won't shun it. Prog is loosely a kind of pop music. I have come across quite a few Proggers who wish that Prog did become mainstream. Despite how much time I have spent talking about, the label doesn't matter that much to me, what matters if the qualities of the music, the approach to making the music, and mostly how it affects me. Lots of my favourite music I d not consider to be Prog, while I think of it as very loosely under some greater progressive umbrella, but if someone else wants to think think of it that way, and if PA decides to adopt it, fine by me. Edited by Logan - May 14 2022 at 07:10 |
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Jaketejas
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I love retro prog. The reason might be generational. Generally speaking (with the usual disclaimers and exceptions), I don't like many of the sounds that prog took on after about 1989. But, when I listen to the prog of my generation, I'm as happy as a clam. One can still write new songs in a retro-prog genre. I say "More please!" (as long as it is before 1990).
Think about it. There are an infinite number of numbers between 2 and 3, so I can remain right there and enjoy my brand of prog and the infinity of possible songs that remain to be written in the vein of that era. I don't need to go to 4 or 5 just to "remain proggy" or keep up with the Joneses. For me, the grass is much greener prior 1990. I still venture out into post 1989 sounds from time to time to discover rare gems. But, kind of like my cat who can only remain outside for so long, I eventually run back to the music of my generation, shut the door, and breathe a sigh of relief. Phew. I'm home! |
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David_D
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I haven't read yet the last posts, and neither yours, Jaketejas, but I'm very happy to see you around here again, and my very welcome to you back "home". Edited by David_D - May 15 2022 at 02:51 |
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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