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Why is Anglo-American prog so white?

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Topic: Why is Anglo-American prog so white?
Posted By: jude111
Subject: Why is Anglo-American prog so white?
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 21:08
Why is Anglo-American prog so white? Other than jazz fusion, prog tended/tends to be lily-white. I think this is a shame, since I really love the sounds of funk and soul, and can only imagine how great black prog could've been. And maybe we should think about adding some black bands to PA? I mean, P-Funk could be pretty proggy and/or spacey at times (e.g. MAGGOT BRAIN).




Replies:
Posted By: Epignosis
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 21:09
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Why is Anglo-American prog so white?


I'm going to think about this one for a minute.


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Posted By: Ambient Hurricanes
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 21:31
Prog was so far removed from black culture in the 70's that I wouldn't have expected to see many black prog bands.  Rock was based on blues music, a predominantly black genre (originally) but once you got down the line to progressive rock you had something that wasn't anything like the rootsy, groovy, soulful music prominent among black Americans at the time.  It was just a completely different aesthetic than that of black culture.

I do wish there were more minorities in Western prog, though, and I'm always glad to see American/European prog bands that have black or latino members.  The Mars Volta is an obvious example.  Here's the http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=7664" rel="nofollow - PA page for an excellent African-American progressive metal band


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Posted By: Sumdeus
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 21:36
i've never understood why people ever get concerned with race when it comes to music.

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Posted By: Epignosis
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 21:36
Originally posted by Ambient Hurricanes Ambient Hurricanes wrote:

Here's the http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=7664" rel="nofollow - PA page for an excellent African-American progressive metal band


I don't care what color they are- they are on bandcamp.  I look forward to checking this out!


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Posted By: Dellinger
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 21:54
I wonder if Jimi Hendrix had lived his natural life, if he might have become one of the prog icons?


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 21:55
Originally posted by Sumdeus Sumdeus wrote:

i've never understood why people ever get concerned with race when it comes to music.


African-Americans were at the center of pioneering great music in the 60s and 70s, from rock and roll to blues to jazz and fusion to soul and funk. Western popular music as we know it would not exist at all if it weren't for black musicians. Even the white bands like Cream and the Rolling Stones wouldn't have existed, if there had been no blues music, no Chuck Berry...

When you think of it this way, it's rather very curious, the lack of black prog bands and musicians in the 70s.

Perhaps it's because prog was largely European, rather than American? Just thought of this...


Posted By: Horizons
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 22:01
Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

I wonder if Jimi Hendrix had lived his natural life, if he might have become one of the prog icons?

Unless he actually joined ELP, then i can just see him having an unending blues career. 


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Crushed like a rose in the riverflow.


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 22:04
Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

I wonder if Jimi Hendrix had lived his natural life, if he might have become one of the prog icons?

This is how I imagine Hendrix would have sounded were he doing prog:





Posted By: Ambient Hurricanes
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 22:09
Originally posted by Horizons Horizons wrote:

Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

I wonder if Jimi Hendrix had lived his natural life, if he might have become one of the prog icons?

Unless he actually joined ELP, then i can just see him having an unending blues career. 


As incredible a musician as Hendrix was, I think he would have explored multiple genres and styles of playing.  Maybe not a prog icon, but probably an influential player in the progressive rock movement.


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Posted By: Sumdeus
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 22:30
Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

I wonder if Jimi Hendrix had lived his natural life, if he might have become one of the prog icons?


I've heard he liked Hawkwind... and he wanted to move away from the traditional bass-drums-guitar set up towards the end of his life and into more experimental territory. I've read he even almost had a jam session with MIles Davis but Davis' management asked way too much money for it. So yeah if he didn't die I think the sky would be the limit as far as where his ambitions would take him. Hell, he was already pretty much experimenting with progressive elements a bit, 1983 A Mermaid I Shall Be is certainly early prog.


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http://sumdeus.bandcamp.com/" rel="nofollow - Sumdeus - surreal space/psych/prog journeys


Posted By: Wafflesyrup
Date Posted: January 07 2013 at 23:12
Jimi Hendrix was quoted by Robert Fripp's sister as stating that Crimson was "The best band ever" at a live show. Just a thought.


Posted By: ProgressiveAttic
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 00:24
This thread just reminded me of this:


Some counterexamples:







I think the best expression of what you'd call african-american prog lies in jazz-rock/fusion:



I think that there's no shortage of african-american proggers, they are just concentrated in the jazzier side of the prog spectrum...

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Posted By: lucas
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 01:00
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Why is Anglo-American prog so white? Other than jazz fusion, prog tended/tends to be lily-white. I think this is a shame, since I really love the sounds of funk and soul, and can only imagine how great black prog could've been. And maybe we should think about adding some black bands to PA? I mean, P-Funk could be pretty proggy and/or spacey at times (e.g. MAGGOT BRAIN).



Proof that black guys are not scarce in rock music and that they might even had an impact on future generations of musicians :
Allman Brothers Band
Buddy Miles
Randy Jackson and two guys from the excellent short-lived band Dostance (AOR)
Death (the proto-punk band)
post-punk and ska-rock bands : Furyo, Simple Minds, The Cure (cf their live shows around 1984), The Selecter, The Specials, the Beat, producer Dennis Bovell (Pop Group, The Slits)
In metal, Mike Smith from Suffocation (who popularized the blast beats), Rocky George with Suicidal Tendencies, Carley Coma of Candiria uses both rap and hardcore vocals in his metalcore project Candiria, Bodycount was an all-black metal project...

There are lot more.


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"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 01:43
Stevie Wonder was quite progressive in the early seventies especially on Living For The City. He used the Yamaha GX1 very well ,an instrument also used by ELP and Led Zep.
Interesting comments about Hendrix who certainly was interested in prog and watched The Nice when they toured together in America (there were also other bands on the tour inc King Crimson I think).
 
What about Carlos Santana?


Posted By: smartpatrol
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 01:54
Originally posted by Ambient Hurricanes Ambient Hurricanes wrote:

Prog was so far removed from black culture in the 70's that I wouldn't have expected to see many black prog bands.  Rock was based on blues music, a predominantly black genre (originally) but once you got down the line to progressive rock you had something that wasn't anything like the rootsy, groovy, soulful music prominent among black Americans at the time.  It was just a completely different aesthetic than that of black culture.





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Posted By: Sagichim
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 02:05
Originally posted by Sumdeus Sumdeus wrote:

Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

I wonder if Jimi Hendrix had lived his natural life, if he might have become one of the prog icons?


I've heard he liked Hawkwind... and he wanted to move away from the traditional bass-drums-guitar set up towards the end of his life and into more experimental territory. I've read he even almost had a jam session with MIles Davis but Davis' management asked way too much money for it. So yeah if he didn't die I think the sky would be the limit as far as where his ambitions would take him. Hell, he was already pretty much experimenting with progressive elements a bit, 1983 A Mermaid I Shall Be is certainly early prog.

I never considered him prog, on the other hand he was experimenting for sure. Also he had a routine of taking his 3 minutes songs and turning them into 15 minutes and jam the crap out of 'em, but it was never prog. One aspect of him that is closer to prog is the fact that (most notable in his 69, 70 songs) he would write songs that he could strip bare the night after, and simply make a totally different version of them, and by that I mean he would improvise and actually replace his guitar role completely. Examples: Power Of Soul, Hear My Train a Comin', Machine Gun, Who Knows?, Stepping Stone, Message to Love.

His later period saw him returning to his roots and even replacing the Experience crew with 2 blacks, playing more earthy, bluesy songs, he was where he wanted to be. So no I don't think he would go towards progressive Rock as we know it.


Posted By: 3RDegree
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 02:17
Possibly to our detriment with some prog reviewers is our soulful, jazzy approach seen best here-check out about 2 minutes into this 3RDegree song from ProgArchives' #54 (today) prog album of 2012:
 
http://soundcloud.com/3rdegreeonline/the-socio-economic-petri-dish" rel="nofollow - http://soundcloud.com/3rdegreeonline/the-socio-economic-petri-dish
 
or
 
http://www.reverbnation.com/3rdegree/song/15166359-the-socio-economic-petri-dish" rel="nofollow - http://www.reverbnation.com/3rdegree/song/15166359-the-socio-economic-petri-dish
 
3RDegree fun fact: we used to play Stevie Wonder's "Living For The City" live in 1995-6.


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Posted By: HarbouringTheSoul
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 04:35
The answer is simple: Because prog was British, not American.


Posted By: Gerinski
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 05:19
Some previous thread about the subject

http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=82273&PID=4327205#4327205" rel="nofollow - http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=82273&PID=4327205#4327205




Posted By: Hercules
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 07:01
Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???


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A TVR is not a car. It's a way of life.


Posted By: punxycpa
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 07:24
No one mentioned Doug Pinnick from King's X. (who I just wiki-ed and I see that he's 62...holy crap!)
 
And whoever posted the link to The Great Gamble...THANK YOU! THANK YOU! THANK YOU! LOVE IT!


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 12:01
Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???


We're not the same. Our histories and our cultures have been very, very different. Whites did not invent blues - they could not have invented it. Robert Johnson was black; no white person could have sounded or played like him. (The best a white person could do is imitate it, years later.) Ella Fitzgerald's voice, Sarah Vaughan's voice, carries within it their experience and culture as African-Americans living in a racist environment, emerging from slavery and fighting against an  Apartheid-like segregation. The style and playing of Satchmo and Coltrane, and polyrhythmic swing of bebop, wow, man, whites didn't invent that. So, no, not the same.

Even today, whites have made great contributions to hip-hop - but they didn't invent it, rap didn't emerge out of white culture, it came directly out of black culture.



Posted By: Moogtron III
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 13:13
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Stevie Wonder was quite progressive in the early seventies especially on Living For The City. 
 

I love that song Heart


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 14:03
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Why is Anglo-American prog so white? Other than jazz fusion, prog tended/tends to be lily-white. I think this is a shame, since I really love the sounds of funk and soul, and can only imagine how great black prog could've been. And maybe we should think about adding some black bands to PA? I mean, P-Funk could be pretty proggy and/or spacey at times (e.g. MAGGOT BRAIN).

 
Ohhh boy ... don't get me started ... because the answer would be ... all them imperialists ... you know they killed all the colors and stole history to make sure they lasted longer. Not sure they did that in prog, or progressive, but I will grant that they had the better MEDIA (in print) to help define it and bring it alive.
 
In America, the majority of music was killed, and was just like the movie studios killing black music in the 50's and 60's because their stars were more important ... like Elvis! Same thing in the 60's when the media made sure it told everyone that we were dirty, filthy, and left garbage behind and we were not intelligent enough to appreciate meaningful music, in one of the most insane documents of our time! On top of it, the player was black!
 
Need to know any more why I marched wiht Martin Luther King in Madison? And why the prog thing in London bugs me to no end?
 
Funny addon to this ... Steve Hillage interview when he said that they wanted to come to America and play all that funk and far out stuff, and that folks coming to their concerts were getting disappointed because they were not playing "progressive" music! Yeah!


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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!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 14:05
Originally posted by Ambient Hurricanes Ambient Hurricanes wrote:

Prog was so far removed from black culture in the 70's that I wouldn't have expected to see many black prog bands.  Rock was based on blues music, a predominantly black genre (originally) but once you got down the line to progressive rock you had something that wasn't anything like the rootsy, groovy, soulful music prominent among black Americans at the time.  It was just a completely different aesthetic than that of black culture.
...
 
NOT according to Tom Dowd ... you need to see that DVD! It will change your perception of the history of music in America and how much was killed and never heard!


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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!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 14:19
Originally posted by Sumdeus Sumdeus wrote:

i've never understood why people ever get concerned with race when it comes to music.
 
Because American history is a massive, filthy, ugly and vitriolic story of racism, complete with bullets and other very sad moments. You can say that the English had their woman hater and killer, but that was easier to deal with, when you were not killing all the scots and irish or anyone else. In America, these things were hidden for years, and even the end of the slave days by Lincoln, did not stop and Alabama and Georgia and other areas in America still have issues with it. The segregation thing in the 50's and 60's was an attempt to put these people back together again ... and sadly .. with schools like Notre Dame now putting together their own Catholic Belt ... and pretty soon, we have the Black Belt again, and then the Blah Blah belt ... and the separation continues ... instead of the integration.
 
The very fabric of American life has been "separation" ... and I'm not sure that American wants to deal with this ... until one day in the future, America becomes two or three other countries, because it can not support the integration and this means that the arts and the music ... will .. .again ... undergo a change, but maybe the black music and other arts will be way more visible beyond one style a pop something or other.


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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!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Hercules
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 14:56
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???


We're not the same. Our histories and our cultures have been very, very different. Whites did not invent blues - they could not have invented it. Robert Johnson was black; no white person could have sounded or played like him. (The best a white person could do is imitate it, years later.) Ella Fitzgerald's voice, Sarah Vaughan's voice, carries within it their experience and culture as African-Americans living in a racist environment, emerging from slavery and fighting against an  Apartheid-like segregation. The style and playing of Satchmo and Coltrane, and polyrhythmic swing of bebop, wow, man, whites didn't invent that. So, no, not the same.
 
Even today, whites have made great contributions to hip-hop - but they didn't invent it, rap didn't emerge out of white culture, it came directly out of black culture.

I understand what you are saying, but in some places, such as the USA, saying that "we're all the same" can often sound like a white-wash - minimizing black contribution to culture and art, and at the same time making it seem that whites could have invented it.

You're in England, right? If we are going to talk about English cuisine, and we start talking about curry, and someone points out the valuable contribution that Indians and Pakistanis have made to British cuisine, would you start saying, "Hey, man, leave them out. White, black, we're all the same"? No, of course not, that would be absurd.
 
I was referring to our genetic make up being almost identical. We are genetically almost identical irrespective of our race since we are all descended from the same common group of ancestors, except for a few Neanderthal genes that got into everyone's make up except Sub-Saharan Africans.
 
Culturally, of course there are differences. The abomination that was the slave trade (one of my proudest claims is that I went to the same school as William Wilberforce, who abolished the trade in Britain) undoubtedly left indelible marks on those who survived, but it's the differing cultural influences that make our music different, not our genetics. All racial groups have contributed to the culture of the US; to denigrate what any of them have achieved is exactly what racists do. I suspect prog evolved before the civil rights movement in the States had achieved any real degree of progress in freeing black people from the almost endemic discrimination and segregation they had suffered, meaning that they were mainly exposed to the music of their communities, which was jazz, blues, soul and rock.
 
And as far as Asian cuisine is concerned, it's so engrained in British culture that noone really thinks of it as "foreign" any more.


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A TVR is not a car. It's a way of life.


Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 15:00
You forgot to mention country music which really grew up side by side with blues music and even sometimes overlapped.


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 15:12
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

You forgot to mention country music which really grew up side by side with blues music and even sometimes overlapped.
 
Bingo ... yet another country in America!
 
As I've stated before, America is like 4 or 5 countries ... heck, in the space that you have America, how many countries do you have in Europe? It's really hard to discuss music in America when the differences are so varied ... and many times not appreciated in their own country's other areas!


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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!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: lazland
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 15:21
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

You forgot to mention country music which really grew up side by side with blues music and even sometimes overlapped.

Please excuse an ignorant Brit, but I always thought that country music was roots played by white settlers, whilst blues was created by descendants of black slaves, before being usurped by rebellious white teens in the fifties. In other words, from completely different traditions.

As to the original question, prog was born in England in the late sixties by a bunch of artie middle class college students. At the time, black members of that class would have been rare than sightings of Christ in the past 2000 years. Also, they would not have been too well disposed towards symphonic music or jazzy noodlings, and I should stress here that I am not a racist (I am a member of Amnesty and a former trade union activist).

Actually, without meaning this as a personal insult, it is rather a silly question.


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Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 15:31
^ well, just google "country music or rockabilly and the blues". You should get a wealth of info, some of it very surprising.  One little tidbit. In the 1920s and 1930 there were white people who painted their faces and travelled around playing blues and country music. I am not saying though that the blues was not invented by blacks.


Posted By: Hercules
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 15:32
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

You forgot to mention country music which really grew up side by side with blues music and even sometimes overlapped.
 
I try to forget country music whenever possible.


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A TVR is not a car. It's a way of life.


Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 15:33
As long as you don't forget rock owes as much to country music as it does to the blues.


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 15:36
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

As long as you don't forget rock owes as much to country music as it does to the blues.

I generally have an allergic reaction to country music. It's the only genre of music I can think of that I cannot stand to listen to. Having said that, I've met people the world over who love American country music, even Middle Eastern friends and Chinese friends. (It's surprising how far country music has traveled.) Also, country music is not as white as is often presumed to be - there are many black country music musicians and fans. (Ray Charles recorded country music, as has Lionel Richie.)


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 15:45
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Why is Anglo-American prog so white? Other than jazz fusion, prog tended/tends to be lily-white. I think this is a shame, since I really love the sounds of funk and soul, and can only imagine how great black prog could've been. And maybe we should think about adding some black bands to PA? I mean, P-Funk could be pretty proggy and/or spacey at times (e.g. MAGGOT BRAIN).


Why are African Percussion Ensembles coal black? Likewise, virtually all Hip-Hop artists? 
Why doesn't anyone demand "diversity" for the above? 
Can't whites have their own art form(s)?


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 15:55
Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???

So we're all essentially identical twins with just a different paint job? There's absolutely no difference between an Australian Aboriginal and a Japanese? 

Culture is a manifestation of race. Culture does not exist independent of race. Cultures are racial constructs.

Who, in their right mind, likes it in Africa? Blacks did not invent blues. Who invented the instruments? What were blacks dissatisfied with? Being the most prosperous blacks of any in the world? Where would they have been better off?

Why are there so few women? Why are there no female composers? Why are there no women in the NFL? Sexism, of course.


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 16:04
Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???

So we're all essentially identical twins with just a different paint job? There's absolutely no difference between an Australian Aboriginal and a Japanese? 

Culture is a manifestation of race. Culture does not exist independent of race. Cultures are racial constructs.

Who, in their right mind, likes it in Africa? Blacks did not invent blues. Who invented the instruments? What were blacks dissatisfied with? Being the most prosperous blacks of any in the world? Where would they have been better off?

Why are there so few women? Why are there no female composers? Why are there no women in the NFL? Sexism, of course.


I see you joined today, to make 2 posts promulgating racist hate. Troll.


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 16:14
Eldridge says he's superior. I guess Eldridge can sing better than Marvin Gaye, can play the sax better than Charlie Parker, write better piano compositions than Thelonious Monk, play better guitar than Wes Montgomery, compose better jazz standards than Duke Ellington. LOL. On a *music* site, Eldridge is going to try to convince us that whites are superior!!! Hahahaha.

Eldridge also says he invented blues and instruments that Africans play. Did you invent the kora, Eldridge?: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DEKQjj6Ga0" rel="nofollow - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DEKQjj6Ga0


Posted By: HarbouringTheSoul
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 16:38
Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Why are there so few women?

LOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOL

The best question I have heard today.


Posted By: Hercules
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 17:00
Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???

So we're all essentially identical twins with just a different paint job? There's absolutely no difference between an Australian Aboriginal and a Japanese? 

Not absolutely identical, but the variation is less than 0.25% of our genome. That's why all humans can interbreed successfully as we're genetically so similar. Those of us whose ancestors migrated to Northern Europe evolved slightly differently, losing our skin pigmentation (all our ancient ancestors had dark skin) so that we could synthesise vitamin D better in the relatively weak sunlight. Those who migrated to the East and settled in the Indian subcontinent kept it to protect them against UV.
 
Most differences between us are essentially cultural and it's cultural issues that seems to provoke racial friction in Britain. I don't get it; I don't like it. I prefer to celebrate the rich, varied culture that people from all backgrounds have brought to my country, not just the indigenous white traditions.


-------------
A TVR is not a car. It's a way of life.


Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 17:02
Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???

So we're all essentially identical twins with just a different paint job? There's absolutely no difference between an Australian Aboriginal and a Japanese? 

Culture is a manifestation of race. Culture does not exist independent of race. Cultures are racial constructs.

Who, in their right mind, likes it in Africa? Blacks did not invent blues. Who invented the instruments? What were blacks dissatisfied with? Being the most prosperous blacks of any in the world? Where would they have been better off?

Why are there so few women? Why are there no female composers? Why are there no women in the NFL? Sexism, of course.
Why not give us your answers to the questions you posed. The blues were invented by the blacks and the original instruments of the blues were their voices.


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:19
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???

So we're all essentially identical twins with just a different paint job? There's absolutely no difference between an Australian Aboriginal and a Japanese? 

Culture is a manifestation of race. Culture does not exist independent of race. Cultures are racial constructs.

Who, in their right mind, likes it in Africa? Blacks did not invent blues. Who invented the instruments? What were blacks dissatisfied with? Being the most prosperous blacks of any in the world? Where would they have been better off?

Why are there so few women? Why are there no female composers? Why are there no women in the NFL? Sexism, of course.


I see you joined today, to make 2 posts promulgating racist hate. Troll.
Jude111,  Do you mind if I ask where you live? Only because it may be relevant to the discussion. "Racist" is a weasel word and an epithet. Please just respond to what I say. True, I joined today. I often respond to provocative topics. I often regret it. I can have musical conversations too.


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:25
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Eldridge says he's superior. I guess Eldridge can sing better than Marvin Gaye, can play the sax better than Charlie Parker, write better piano compositions than Thelonious Monk, play better guitar than Wes Montgomery, compose better jazz standards than Duke Ellington. LOL. On a *music* site, Eldridge is going to try to convince us that whites are superior!!! Hahahaha.

Eldridge also says he invented blues and instruments that Africans play. Did you invent the kora, Eldridge?: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DEKQjj6Ga0" rel="nofollow - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DEKQjj6Ga0
Not once did I say I was superior. They're are no racial hierarchies. I simply acknowledge racial differences. All the musicians you sited are very talented. The only one I really like is Marvin Gaye but I acknowledge the skill of the others. All well and good. Talented musicians alone do not build civilizations. Whites and NorthEast Asians( Japanese, Chinese, Koreans) have built the most advanced civilizations. This is no accident. Nonwhites from all over the world want to come in live white countries, not viceversa.


Posted By: Sumdeus
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:27
this thread just took a really sharp turn...


-------------
http://sumdeus.bandcamp.com/" rel="nofollow - Sumdeus - surreal space/psych/prog journeys


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:32
Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???

So we're all essentially identical twins with just a different paint job? There's absolutely no difference between an Australian Aboriginal and a Japanese? 

Not absolutely identical, but the variation is less than 0.25% of our genome. That's why all humans can interbreed successfully as we're genetically so similar. Those of us whose ancestors migrated to Northern Europe evolved slightly differently, losing our skin pigmentation (all our ancient ancestors had dark skin) so that we could synthesise vitamin D better in the relatively weak sunlight. Those who migrated to the East and settled in the Indian subcontinent kept it to protect them against UV.
 
Most differences between us are essentially cultural and it's cultural issues that seems to provoke racial friction in Britain. I don't get it; I don't like it. I prefer to celebrate the rich, varied culture that people from all backgrounds have brought to my country, not just the indigenous white traditions.
Hercules, thanks for responding in a civil manner. Yes, the differences are small but they are substantial. Take dogs, for example. What is the genetic variation between say, a cocker spaniel and a German shepherd? I don't know actually but I'm sure it's slight. They're both dogs, but clearly they're different in temperament and behavior. I dont believe we all came from the same place, if that's what you're saying. The Japanese are clearly distinct from the African.
 
Do you really celebrate diversity though? Maybe you do. What is the racial makeup of your community, neighborhood? I've found that diversity creates tension and hostility. Japan is an example of a racially homogeneous country which is quite harmonious.


Posted By: kjprogger
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:32
OK I'll take the bait. 
The Prog tent is open to everyone, but non-Anglo cultures are not drawn to the genre.  If there were any Black or Chinese Prog bands making interesting music, I would enthusiastically support it. But (to my knowledge), those groups don't exist.  Perhaps Prog is not as evolved as it could be because of the lack outside influences through the past 40 years. 
 
For example, intricate rhythms:  I know al ot of people here enjoy those drum duets between Chester and Phil.  Prog with compelling rhythms is exciting and I don't think it is as developed as it could be.  I think Neal Morse has done some good stuff with rhythms lately and prog intertwines perfectly with it.  I think it could be developed further from an outside culture and we would all be better for it.
 
However, I am not advocating Country-Prog.  That is where I draw the line!  LOL


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:32
Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

They're are no racial hierarchies... Whites and NorthEast Asians( Japanese, Chinese, Koreans) have built the most advanced civilizations. This is no accident. Nonwhites from all over the world want to come in live white countries, not viceversa.


Can we get this troll out of here?


Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:33
If Eldridge truly regrets getting involved in provocative topics maybe he should do a 180 degree turn.


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:35
Originally posted by kjprogger kjprogger wrote:

OK I'll take the bait. 
The Prog tent is open to everyone, but non-Anglo cultures are not drawn to the genre.  If there were any Black or Chinese Prog bands making interesting music, I would enthusiastically support it. But (to my knowledge), those groups don't exist.  ...


Hey, slow down: There's plenty of non-Anglo prog bands: Italian prog, German prog, French prog, Scandinavian prog, Eastern European prog; South American prog, Indonesian prog, Japanese prog. I know of 2 Chinese prog bands. We could go on and on.


Posted By: Sumdeus
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:36
Originally posted by kjprogger kjprogger wrote:

OK I'll take the bait. 
The Prog tent is open to everyone, but non-Anglo cultures are not drawn to the genre.  If there were any Black or Chinese Prog bands making interesting music, I would enthusiastically support it. But (to my knowledge), those groups don't exist.


the Japanese dig prog and psych quite a bit though and there have been some fantastic bands from there.


-------------
http://sumdeus.bandcamp.com/" rel="nofollow - Sumdeus - surreal space/psych/prog journeys


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:38
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???

So we're all essentially identical twins with just a different paint job? There's absolutely no difference between an Australian Aboriginal and a Japanese? 

Culture is a manifestation of race. Culture does not exist independent of race. Cultures are racial constructs.

Who, in their right mind, likes it in Africa? Blacks did not invent blues. Who invented the instruments? What were blacks dissatisfied with? Being the most prosperous blacks of any in the world? Where would they have been better off?

Why are there so few women? Why are there no female composers? Why are there no women in the NFL? Sexism, of course.
Why not give us your answers to the questions you posed. The blues were invented by the blacks and the original instruments of the blues were their voices.
It's true blacks put their unique stamp on blues. In any case, music styles aren't invented, they evolve over time. Blacks were, admittedly, pivotal in this development.
Oh, well I asked who invented the instruments rhetorically but it was whites, along with the silicon chip, airplanes, computers, penicillin. I'll leave it at that for now.
 


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:43
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

They're are no racial hierarchies... Whites and NorthEast Asians( Japanese, Chinese, Koreans) have built the most advanced civilizations. This is no accident. Nonwhites from all over the world want to come in live white countries, not viceversa.


Can we get this troll out of here?
Could you please stop referring to me as a troll? I assure you, I'm not here to stir things up. Of course, I realize I probably have. What exactly do you find fault with in my statement?  I ask you to prove me wrong.


Posted By: Dayvenkirq
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:43
And that's why having a discussion on a topic associated with race is a dangerous idea.


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:44
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

If Eldridge truly regrets getting involved in provocative topics maybe he should do a 180 degree turn.
Yeah, I see your point. Tongue


Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:45
And to name it Anglo American prog is very narrow to begin with.


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:45
.


Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:49
Perhaps your topic was a little inflammatory


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:51
Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

They're are no racial hierarchies... Whites and NorthEast Asians( Japanese, Chinese, Koreans) have built the most advanced civilizations. This is no accident. Nonwhites from all over the world want to come in live white countries, not viceversa.


Can we get this troll out of here?
Could you please stop referring to me as a troll? I assure you, I'm not here to stir things up. Of course, I realize I probably have. What exactly do you find fault with in my statement?  I ask you to prove me wrong.

Easily. We're talking about prog music. You aren't.


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:52



Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 18:58
okay I found it to be narrow. Prog is not American.Perhaps you are an American who hates America, I do not have a problem with that. Eldridge i am not sure about, I am willing to give him the benefit of the doubt . So yes, as an American I do not care for the title of your thread. 


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 19:00
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

What is the racial makeup of your community, neighborhood? I've found that diversity creates tension and hostility. Japan is an example of a racially homogeneous country which is quite harmonious.


I've found that racism creates tension and hostility. I'm American but have have lived in France and then China for a decade. I've been all over the world. I personally *love* Africa, and there are many great cities and villages and UNESCO World Heritage sites in Africa and Asia. People love their hometowns, their home countries, their cultures and foods. You're living in a fantasy world, imagining everyone wants to live in the USA. I am quite sure you've never been outside the USA on your own. The place I've felt least safe in the world wasn't traveling through Laos and Cambodia or Ethiopia or Turkey or Algeria - it was America. Only in America have I had guns stuck in my face. I can and have walked through Paris at 3 am, Rome, Shanghai, Hanoi, Bangkok. But I wouldn't dare do it in an American city.

Thanks for getting us way off the topic of prog. PA is one of the few sanctuaries on the Net that doesn't have the rightwing crazies, but the first zombie has broken through the barricade.
The part about people loving their hometowns, countries, cultures and foods is absolutely true. Yet, that is an example of homogeneity, not diversity. Do whites have a right to their own hometowns, countries and cultures? No, but everybody is in the world does.  I wouldn't walk through an American city either. The most dangerous cities in America are East St. Louis, Camden, NJ, Detroit, Oakland and Atlanta. Paris and Rome are European, the other three are Asian. Of course, they're safe.
 
Not everyone wants to live in the USA but many do. Mostly from the Third World.


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 19:06
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

Perhaps your topic was a little inflammatory

I don't think so. The members here posted reasonable and interesting opinions. But this Eldridge has said nothing about prog music; he only joined to promulgate his racist ideology.
How is my view not reasonable and interesting? True, I haven't said anything about prog but I responded to the topic. I have not said anything "racist". It's just that standard orthodoxy demands that people say certain things about race. I see it differently. And I don't "hate" anyone.


Posted By: Horizons
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 19:08
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

Perhaps your topic was a little inflammatory

I don't think so. The members here posted reasonable and interesting opinions. But this Eldridge has said nothing about prog music; he only joined to promulgate his racist ideology.

Irrelevent but i think i just noticed who your avatar is - David Mitchell and Robert Webb?


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Crushed like a rose in the riverflow.


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 19:12
Originally posted by Horizons Horizons wrote:

Irrelevent but i think i just noticed who your avatar is - David Mitchell and Robert Webb?


Clap

Yes, it's from "That Michell and Webb Look." Their "Peep Show" is one of my favorite shows ever, LOL



Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 19:20
In the midst of his rambling through tangents, Pedro has done justice to the topic.   In the 60s and 70s, blacks in America had a distinct music culture and one that couldn't be sold effectively to white audiences unless they crossed over.  Jimi Hendrix was not the first blues guitarist by any stretch of imagination but he rocked the blues and thereby became acceptable to listeners who expected to hear a 'white' sound.   For a long time, actually even today, commercial success of black musicians was reflected in the R&B charts, not the Billboard.   A genius like Wonder crossed over because his music absorbed eclectic influences and, even while retaining its black identity, appealed to those outside the community.   It backfired for Minnie Riperton - not R&B enough for blacks and not rock enough for whites, and such. 

We cannot underestimate the impact of cultural barriers.  I am not saying they should be there, just that they are more powerful in influencing opinions than we might believe them to be.    If you start a conversation about Indian music with Ravi Shankar, what sort of a reaction do you think an Indian would have to it?  You may even be well versed in the history of Indian music, but the frame of reference to begin with creates some negative perceptions at the other end.   Because he might reflect the starting point of the Western world's engagement with Indian music but he is not where it started for us.   Indian music was alive and well long before him and hopefully will be long after his sad demise too.  And please don't get me wrong, it's not a knock on his legendary status.   No doubt he is a virtuoso and one of the best there is; all I mean is when you start with his name, it MIGHT suggest you are simply name dropping Indian musicians and don't really appreciate it deeply (even if you actually do).

I don't want to ramble on further in that direction before some of my statements become a target for dangerous racist assaults, but it is my view that cultural barriers associated with race unconsciously influence our choices in music.   For blacks to play prog, we have to accept it performed in their own terms, reflecting their culture...it would be unreasonable to expect them to merge with more 'white' sounds in order that they appeal to larger audiences.   That would be a bit like how men often relate better to women singing more aggressively to violent music because that is closer to traditional 'male music' notions.   Whether you like it or not, that already suggests the effect that stereotypes have had in shaping your tastes.   After all, just because it doesn't sound white/black/brown or manly/womanly doesn't mean it's no good.  

It is not only the musicians who need to reach out to audiences, we also have to step out beyond the 'four walls' of our comfort zone.   But if we deny that such a comfort zone exists, we have already given up the endeavour.    I am sorry I didn't attempt to give a list of musicians to 'refute' the OP but I believe the question was why it is so and not whether there are any Afro American musicians in prog.  


Posted By: Horizons
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 19:24
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Originally posted by Horizons Horizons wrote:

Irrelevent but i think i just noticed who your avatar is - David Mitchell and Robert Webb?


Clap

Yes, it's from "That Michell and Webb Look." Their "Peep Show" is one of my favorite shows ever, LOL


Haha brilliant. I just never realized who was in the background. 


-------------
Crushed like a rose in the riverflow.


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 20:40
Originally posted by Dayvenkirq Dayvenkirq wrote:

And that's why having a discussion on a topic associated with race is a dangerous idea.


I think you're right. I looked for ways to delete this thread, I'm sorry I ever started it. It went off in directions I never wanted it to go. Sigh. :-)


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 20:41
Originally posted by Horizons Horizons wrote:

Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:

Originally posted by Horizons Horizons wrote:

Irrelevent but i think i just noticed who your avatar is - David Mitchell and Robert Webb?


Clap

Yes, it's from "That Michell and Webb Look." Their "Peep Show" is one of my favorite shows ever, LOL


Haha brilliant. I just never realized who was in the background. 

If you have some pull with the powers that be, I hope we can get Flaming Lips into PA! Clap


Posted By: Dellinger
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 22:12
Originally posted by jude111 jude111 wrote:



Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

As long as you don't forget rock owes as much to country music as it does to the blues.
I generally have an allergic reaction to country music. It's the only genre of music I can think of that I cannot stand to listen to. Having said that, I've met people the world over who love American country music, even Middle Eastern friends and Chinese friends. (It's surprising how far country music has traveled.) Also, country music is not as white as is often presumed to be - there are many black country music musicians and fans. (Ray Charles recorded country music, as has Lionel Richie.)


It's interesting, this thing about Country Music. I happen to like it, a bit really, not a fan, but it doesn't bother me at all. However, the equivalent here in Mexico, I guess it would have to be "banda" and "ranchera", I really hate it (specially banda); of course, there is "Mariachi" too, which I don't particularly like, but have better respect to it as a music genre (though I came to dislike it more given the tradition of "serenata" here in mexico, where a boyfriend would bring the music to his girlfriend in the middle of the night to court her, completley disregarding if he wakes up the rest of the block too, which I find a extremeley distasteful and a complete lack of respect for other people). However, the thing is, I feel like Country Music might sound more distasteful for people from it's original country, just as Banda sounds distasteful to me (and I've heard, for example, that "Flamenco" is considered distasteful in Spain, while I particularly like it).


Posted By: The T
Date Posted: January 08 2013 at 23:05
And if it is so white, what is the problem? Does it HAVE to be made more diverse? Time will take care of that, don't worry, it's already way advanced, and many good things have come out of it. But I don't see a problem really. Why does rap have to be so black? Should we forcibly make it whiter? (not that I love rap or anything remotely close but it's an example).

Damn, so few caucasians playing salsa!

-------------


Posted By: Neelus
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 02:52
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

That would be a bit like how men often relate better to women singing more aggressively to violent music because that is closer to traditional 'male music' notions.   Whether you like it or not, that already suggests the effect that stereotypes have had in shaping your tastes. 


Jon Anderson? LOLBig smile


Posted By: Hercules
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 07:39
Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???

So we're all essentially identical twins with just a different paint job? There's absolutely no difference between an Australian Aboriginal and a Japanese? 

Not absolutely identical, but the variation is less than 0.25% of our genome. That's why all humans can interbreed successfully as we're genetically so similar. Those of us whose ancestors migrated to Northern Europe evolved slightly differently, losing our skin pigmentation (all our ancient ancestors had dark skin) so that we could synthesise vitamin D better in the relatively weak sunlight. Those who migrated to the East and settled in the Indian subcontinent kept it to protect them against UV.
 
Most differences between us are essentially cultural and it's cultural issues that seems to provoke racial friction in Britain. I don't get it; I don't like it. I prefer to celebrate the rich, varied culture that people from all backgrounds have brought to my country, not just the indigenous white traditions.
Hercules, thanks for responding in a civil manner. Yes, the differences are small but they are substantial. Take dogs, for example. What is the genetic variation between say, a cocker spaniel and a German shepherd? I don't know actually but I'm sure it's slight. They're both dogs, but clearly they're different in temperament and behavior. I dont believe we all came from the same place, if that's what you're saying. The Japanese are clearly distinct from the African.
 
Do you really celebrate diversity though? Maybe you do. What is the racial makeup of your community, neighborhood? I've found that diversity creates tension and hostility. Japan is an example of a racially homogeneous country which is quite harmonious.
 
No - it's racism that causes tension and hostility. Racial diversity can happen quite happily so long as people accept everyone as a human being and forget where they came from.
 
And I'm afraid some of your comments suggest that you have white supremacist views which I wholly disassociate myself from.


-------------
A TVR is not a car. It's a way of life.


Posted By: Pietro Otello Romano
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 08:25
Frankly I haven't red all the post of this topic, and maybe I am writing nothing new about the topicEmbarrassed, but I am living in London, in a multiethnical society; several blacks are among my friends and/or aquaintances, and none of them like prog music, and by the way I dislike most of the black music too. Maybe is just the way that the two ethnic group approach music. I quote in advance that I have totally not clues to how to play an instrument at all, and so I am not fashinated by incredible skills and virtuosism. I think that the way a black compose is basically more focussed on the instruments, and on the contrary a white composer is more focussed on the composition, that have its roots in the idea, in other words, a black works in order to get a song from something he/she got playng with the instruments, while a white, must works on the idea he got on his mind in order to arrange the instruments for the song.

Probably is more a feeling than even an opinion, but is just the feeling I got... Big smile

-------------
"We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful

what we pretend to be."



Mother Night - Kurt Vonnegut


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 09:06
Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Black? White? Any other colour in between?
 
What does it matter?
 
My ancestors went for a walk about 70000 years ago and turned left when they left Africa. My friend Vijay's ancestors turned right instead. Some people's ancestors didn't feel the need to go for a walk because they liked it in Africa.
 
I really don't see the need to get hung up on race when we all came from the same ancestors and we're all really the same except for varying amounts of skin pigment. Maybe where we ended up affected us more from a cultural standpoint; perhaps African Americans got exposed to Country music which is possibly why they invented the blues to express their dissatisfaction and I totally understand!
 
I'd ask a different question - why are so few women involved in prog except as singers???

So we're all essentially identical twins with just a different paint job? There's absolutely no difference between an Australian Aboriginal and a Japanese? 

Not absolutely identical, but the variation is less than 0.25% of our genome. That's why all humans can interbreed successfully as we're genetically so similar. Those of us whose ancestors migrated to Northern Europe evolved slightly differently, losing our skin pigmentation (all our ancient ancestors had dark skin) so that we could synthesise vitamin D better in the relatively weak sunlight. Those who migrated to the East and settled in the Indian subcontinent kept it to protect them against UV.
 
Most differences between us are essentially cultural and it's cultural issues that seems to provoke racial friction in Britain. I don't get it; I don't like it. I prefer to celebrate the rich, varied culture that people from all backgrounds have brought to my country, not just the indigenous white traditions.
Hercules, thanks for responding in a civil manner. Yes, the differences are small but they are substantial. Take dogs, for example. What is the genetic variation between say, a cocker spaniel and a German shepherd? I don't know actually but I'm sure it's slight. They're both dogs, but clearly they're different in temperament and behavior. I dont believe we all came from the same place, if that's what you're saying. The Japanese are clearly distinct from the African.
 
Do you really celebrate diversity though? Maybe you do. What is the racial makeup of your community, neighborhood? I've found that diversity creates tension and hostility. Japan is an example of a racially homogeneous country which is quite harmonious.
 
No - it's racism that causes tension and hostility. Racial diversity can happen quite happily so long as people accept everyone as a human being and forget where they came from.
 
And I'm afraid some of your comments suggest that you have white supremacist views which I wholly disassociate myself from.
When most people are free to choose who they associate with, they choose people like themselves. If diversity were a source of strength, people would seek it out naturally. They don't. It is only within the past 50 years or so that diversity, all of a sudden, became a great source of strength.

The Japanese don't like diversity and have an immigration policy which reflects that. I don't here anybody seeing Japan needs to import more Sikhs, Guatamalans etc.

Israel kicked out hundreds of blacks a few months ago with nary a peep from anyone. "Israel is for the white man" said a high Israeli official. Why is it okay for Israel to do that?

A few months, Mexico kicked out a number of illegal Central Americans, saying "Mexico is for Mexicans". 
So the Japanese are yellow supremacists, The Israelis are Jewish supremacists and Mexicans are brown supremacists. You say I am a white supremacist. What's the difference between my views and the above examples?

It is white countries, and only white countries, which are forced to accept diversity, and ultimately the displacement of white people themselves.



Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 10:15
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

And to name it Anglo American prog is very narrow to begin with.
 
And down right xenophobic and ethnocentric!
 
As I say ... the yanks and brits invented the world ... and the rest? ... no one noticed because they had no media or tv's or radio's ... !!!
 
Confused
 
Embarrassed


-------------
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Kati
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 10:30
Cooee!!!! All of you Back to topic maybe it's because African-American's are smarter and make a whole lot of money with rap/ RnB etc, meanwhile skilled musicians specifically in the prog industry can't even afford to fund their own cd's, they hold a daytime job to support their families, while often getting a lot of critique from reviewers philosophizing how the artist should play their own music and above all also having a hard time to break into this industry just to be heard because many progfans only take notice of big name bands.  Big smile
 


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 10:58
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

In the midst of his rambling through tangents, Pedro has done justice to the topic.   In the 60s and 70s, blacks in America had a distinct music culture and one that couldn't be sold effectively to white audiences unless they crossed over.  Jimi Hendrix was not the first blues guitarist by any stretch of imagination but he rocked the blues and thereby became acceptable to listeners who expected to hear a 'white' sound.   For a long time, actually even today, commercial success of black musicians was reflected in the R&B charts, not the Billboard.   A genius like Wonder crossed over because his music absorbed eclectic influences and, even while retaining its black identity, appealed to those outside the community.   It backfired for Minnie Riperton - not R&B enough for blacks and not rock enough for whites, and such. 
...
 
And one other person had an even bigger impact on this ... and he was far more progressive in his area than most ... but we would never consider him there, for those two albums, at least!
 
Goes like this in my early days of seeing black artists:
 
Chuck Berry -- (DJ's Madison) 95% black audience
Little Richard -- (DJ's Madison) 95% black audience
Earth Wind and Fire -- Santa Monica Civic -- 90% black audience
Blue Note All Stars -- in LA -- 100% black audience
Oscar Peterson -- in LA -- 100% black audience
Charles Musselwhite -- in SF -- 90% black audience
Mississipi Charles Bevel -- in Santa Barbara -- 90% black audience
Stevie Wonder -- Santa Monica Civic -- 95% black audience (like 72 or 73)
James Brown -- Santa Barbara -- 95% black audience
Michael Jackson (Bad Tour) - LA - 50% black audience
 
When it came to the "mixing" and getting people together, there is one person mentioned here that is never given that credit or appreciated for some of his work. Stevie Wonder, for some reason, was not as strong in the audience department as Michael was ... but it shows you ... that even without advertising ... some of these folks went to see their artists ... but it also showed a separation that is ... still visible.
 
It bothers me that when I went to see YES, the audience was 99% white. And when I saw Pink Floyd in 1972, it was 95% white. And when I saw it last year ... it was 90% white ... which is an improvement from 30 years ago ... I guess.
 
All in all, the day that ALL MUSIC BECOMES IMPORTANT, AND NOT THE RACE OR COLOR, is the day that we will ALL OF US, be color blind.
 
Sadly, when you look at the world and even some religious groups wanting to go their own separatist way ... I am not feeling too positive that the integration will happen ... and that we will hear some more mixes and far out music.
 
Which is really sad ... because a label like ECM has so many "blacks" ... but no one in America enjoys listening to them ... it's much easier to listen to the much more traditional "Blue Note" stuff and not anything else. And "Blue Note" has not, and probably never will, release the stuff that is not "traditional" that they think will confuse the fans about the artistry involved. A lot of it was experimental, free form and played far longer than 5 minutes -- which we are not hearing ... thus, we will not have a better, and more comprehensive, sense of history of music in America.
 
Again, America is about 4 or 5 countries, and some of them do not have the respect of others and vice versa ... and that means that it is really hard to have one area appreciate another, unless the media can get a top ten out of it ... so everyone thinks it's good!


-------------
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Dayvenkirq
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 12:57
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

And to name it Anglo American prog is very narrow to begin with.

And down right xenophobic and ethnocentric!

As I say ... the yanks and brits invented the world ... and the rest? ... no one noticed because they had no media or tv's or radio's ... !!!

Confused

Embarrassed
I did not see a single hint of xenophobia.


Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 13:27
I just wondered why it was Anglo American as opposed to Anglo in general. Americans are not the only 'Anglos" playing prog music.


Posted By: Dayvenkirq
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 13:30
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

I just wondered why it was Anglo American as opposed to Anglo in general. Americans are not the only 'Anglos" playing prog music.
I think he meant both Anglo and American.


Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 13:38
People should say what they mean. It came as no surprise to me when a racist chimed right in on the thread. 


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 13:47
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

I just wondered why it was Anglo American as opposed to Anglo in general. Americans are not the only 'Anglos" playing prog music.

Yes, there's a lot of misunderstanding here about why I named the topic "Anglo-American prog." Sorry for the confusion, perhaps I should've worded it better. The reason I named it thusly: I wanted to concentrate on prog coming from the USA and England. I *know* that prog is international, and there are many great prog bands all over Europe, South America, and Asia. What I found curious, however, was the lack of black involvement in prog music **IN THE USA and (to a lesser extent) the UK**, given how ubiquitous blacks were in popular music during prog's heyday in the 60s and 70s in every other conceivable genre, including funk, r&b, soul, jazz, blues, pop, disco, and even rock (e.g. Hendrix, Sly & Family Stone, Love, Thin Lizzy, etc.).


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 13:53
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

People should say what they mean. It came as no surprise to me when a racist chimed right in on the thread. 
 
Would that be me by any chance?Tongue Can you name one thing I've said that was "racist"?


Posted By: Dayvenkirq
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 13:57
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

People should say what they mean. It came as no surprise to me when a racist chimed right in on the thread.
Yeah ... because the world is so easy that we can change it ... . People will keep making mistakes and learn from them, and there's nothing we can do about it. We'll just have to get used to it.


Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 14:01
Hey, it is your topic and you can name it whatever you want. I certainly do not side with Eldridge's views but I am old enough to know the more you respond to him the more opportunity he has to deliver his warped message. Sometimes we write words and they are misunderstood. For instance, when i wrote the blues grew up alongside country music I started getting feedback about how people did not like country music. I was not referring to this modern country western drivel which we have today. I should have been more specific, of course they might not like old country music either. Both the blues and old country music came out of poverty. Old country music was the music of sharecroppers and Appalachian hillbillies, not what it has become today in country western music. Eldridge has never learned that "union differentiates".


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 14:08
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

Hey, it is your topic and you can name it whatever you want. I certainly do not side with Eldridge's views but I am old enough to know the more you respond to him the more opportunity he has to deliver his warped message. Sometimes we write words and they are misunderstood. For instance, when i wrote the blues grew up alongside country music I started getting feedback about how people did not like country music. I was not referring to this modern country western drivel which we have today. I should have been more specific, of course they might not like old country music either. Both the blues and old country music came out of poverty. Old country music was the music of sharecroppers and Appalachian hillbillies, not what it has become today in country western music. Eldridge has never learned that "union differentiates".
 
What have I said that is "warped"? Can someone refute one thing that I've said. All people have done is call me names, "racist", "supremacist". Calling someone names is a graceless way of admitting you have lost the argument.
 
Why do you use racial epithets like "hillbillies" in describing the Appalachian people?
 
 


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 14:12
For anyone who is interested in what I have to say, I invite you here, http://www.amren.com" rel="nofollow - www.amren.com


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 14:21
@Timothy Leary, I just checked the racial demographics for Lilliwaup, WA. It is 85.10% white, 0.21% black, 7.30% American Indian, 0.62% Asian, and 6.37% Hispanic. This proves the hypocrisy of white liberals. It diverstiy is so wonderful, why do you live in a lily-white community? You experience virtually no diversity at all. Why not buy a house in the black community? Detroit has really cheap real estate nowadays.


Posted By: Hercules
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 15:34
Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

Hey, it is your topic and you can name it whatever you want. I certainly do not side with Eldridge's views but I am old enough to know the more you respond to him the more opportunity he has to deliver his warped message. Sometimes we write words and they are misunderstood. For instance, when i wrote the blues grew up alongside country music I started getting feedback about how people did not like country music. I was not referring to this modern country western drivel which we have today. I should have been more specific, of course they might not like old country music either. Both the blues and old country music came out of poverty. Old country music was the music of sharecroppers and Appalachian hillbillies, not what it has become today in country western music. Eldridge has never learned that "union differentiates".
 
What have I said that is "warped"? Can someone refute one thing that I've said. All people have done is call me names, "racist", "supremacist". Calling someone names is a graceless way of admitting you have lost the argument.
 
I haven't "lost" the argument. It's just not one I want to engage in, actually.

-------------
A TVR is not a car. It's a way of life.


Posted By: eldridge
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 15:50
Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

Hey, it is your topic and you can name it whatever you want. I certainly do not side with Eldridge's views but I am old enough to know the more you respond to him the more opportunity he has to deliver his warped message. Sometimes we write words and they are misunderstood. For instance, when i wrote the blues grew up alongside country music I started getting feedback about how people did not like country music. I was not referring to this modern country western drivel which we have today. I should have been more specific, of course they might not like old country music either. Both the blues and old country music came out of poverty. Old country music was the music of sharecroppers and Appalachian hillbillies, not what it has become today in country western music. Eldridge has never learned that "union differentiates".
 
What have I said that is "warped"? Can someone refute one thing that I've said. All people have done is call me names, "racist", "supremacist". Calling someone names is a graceless way of admitting you have lost the argument.
 
I haven't "lost" the argument. It's just not one I want to engage in, actually.

Then why have you responded at all? I ask you, or anyone else, to refute anything that I've said.


Posted By: Snow Dog
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 17:36
^I never heard this Israel thing. Do  you have any info?

-------------
http://www.last.fm/user/Snow_Dog" rel="nofollow">


Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 18:05
Originally posted by eldridge eldridge wrote:

For anyone who is interested in what I have to say, I invite you here, http://www.amren.com" rel="nofollow - www.amren.com
Dead this is to racism what intelligent design is to creationism.


-------------
What?


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 18:47
Originally posted by Neelus Neelus wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

That would be a bit like how men often relate better to women singing more aggressively to violent music because that is closer to traditional 'male music' notions.   Whether you like it or not, that already suggests the effect that stereotypes have had in shaping your tastes. 


Jon Anderson? LOLBig smile

That is a good example.  It is women who are expected to sound 'naughty' or 'sexy' or whatever, not Jon.  Jon has full licence to sing the way he wants and sees fit, women aren't granted the right to be independent artists, they must conform to male notions of music.  


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 18:53
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:


And one other person had an even bigger impact on this ... and he was far more progressive in his area than most ... but we would never consider him there, for those two albums, at least!
 
Goes like this in my early days of seeing black artists:
 
Chuck Berry -- (DJ's Madison) 95% black audience
Little Richard -- (DJ's Madison) 95% black audience
Earth Wind and Fire -- Santa Monica Civic -- 90% black audience
Blue Note All Stars -- in LA -- 100% black audience
Oscar Peterson -- in LA -- 100% black audience
Charles Musselwhite -- in SF -- 90% black audience
Mississipi Charles Bevel -- in Santa Barbara -- 90% black audience
Stevie Wonder -- Santa Monica Civic -- 95% black audience (like 72 or 73)
James Brown -- Santa Barbara -- 95% black audience
Michael Jackson (Bad Tour) - LA - 50% black audience
 
When it came to the "mixing" and getting people together, there is one person mentioned here that is never given that credit or appreciated for some of his work. Stevie Wonder, for some reason, was not as strong in the audience department as Michael was ... but it shows you ... that even without advertising ... some of these folks went to see their artists ... but it also showed a separation that is ... still visible.
 
It bothers me that when I went to see YES, the audience was 99% white. And when I saw Pink Floyd in 1972, it was 95% white. And when I saw it last year ... it was 90% white ... which is an improvement from 30 years ago ... I guess.
 
All in all, the day that ALL MUSIC BECOMES IMPORTANT, AND NOT THE RACE OR COLOR, is the day that we will ALL OF US, be color blind.
 
Sadly, when you look at the world and even some religious groups wanting to go their own separatist way ... I am not feeling too positive that the integration will happen ... and that we will hear some more mixes and far out music.
 
Which is really sad ... because a label like ECM has so many "blacks" ... but no one in America enjoys listening to them ... it's much easier to listen to the much more traditional "Blue Note" stuff and not anything else. And "Blue Note" has not, and probably never will, release the stuff that is not "traditional" that they think will confuse the fans about the artistry involved. A lot of it was experimental, free form and played far longer than 5 minutes -- which we are not hearing ... thus, we will not have a better, and more comprehensive, sense of history of music in America.
 
Again, America is about 4 or 5 countries, and some of them do not have the respect of others and vice versa ... and that means that it is really hard to have one area appreciate another, unless the media can get a top ten out of it ... so everyone thinks it's good!

Thanks Pedro....your comments are at least still within the topic in this strange thread.   I agree that Michael Jackson was more successful in appealing to white, black audiences...actually, the whole world.   The closest to a Beatles-like phenomenon since their time.  Interestingly, that marks the point where black audiences began to push back and it may have ultimately spurred the popularity of hip-hop among them.   Sadly, we go only so far and no further in this regard, it seems.  


Posted By: The T
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 19:16
I still don't understand the point of this thread, if there's any. Not that there has to be one anyway. PA after all

-------------


Posted By: cstack3
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 19:32
My friend Mychael Pollard would take great exception to this thread!  (check out this video, I can't get https videos to open properly on this forum)

http://https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMw6UoMFKXQ" rel="nofollow - http://https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMw6UoMFKXQ


Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 19:44
Originally posted by cstack3 cstack3 wrote:

My friend Mychael Pollard would take great exception to this thread!  (check out this video, I can't get https videos to open properly on this forum)

http://https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMw6UoMFKXQ" rel="nofollow - http://https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMw6UoMFKXQ


your link would not open so I put this up.


Posted By: jude111
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 19:51
Originally posted by cstack3 cstack3 wrote:

My friend Mychael Pollard would take great exception to this thread!  (check out this video, I can't get https videos to open properly on this forum)

http://https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMw6UoMFKXQ" rel="nofollow - http://https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMw6UoMFKXQ

This sounds like jazz fusion to me...

 
1st post - "Why is Anglo-American prog so white? Other than jazz fusion, prog tended/tends to be lily-white. I think this is a shame, since I really love the sounds of funk and soul, and can only imagine how great black prog could've been. And maybe we should think about adding some black bands to PA? I mean, P-Funk could be pretty proggy and/or spacey at times (e.g. MAGGOT BRAIN)."


Posted By: dwill123
Date Posted: January 09 2013 at 20:40
I might have missed it but five pages of thread and not one mention of David Sancious???
 



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