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Topic ClosedMost avant-garde prog band?

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lucas View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 29 2004 at 13:16
Originally posted by Paco Fox Paco Fox wrote:

Anyway, I really don't like avant garde.

 

Me too. And I don't understand how one can "listen" to it. It is so boring and has nothing to do with the ideals of music. Zappa, Varèse, Ligeti, Boulez and other contemporary composers created a "music" that only snobbish people can appreciate. 

"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 29 2004 at 13:30
Originally posted by lucas lucas wrote:

Originally posted by Paco Fox Paco Fox wrote:

Anyway, I really don't like avant garde.

 

Me too. And I don't understand how one can "listen" to it. It is so boring and has nothing to do with the ideals of music. Zappa, Varèse, Ligeti, Boulez and other contemporary composers created a "music" that only snobbish people can appreciate. 

Instant gratification is great, but not the only way to get some enjoyment. Sometimes it takes a certain amount of mental participation from the listener to achieve a degree of entertainment rather than having it spoon fed to you.

Do you prefer to slowly enjoy your meal, taking time to savor the flavors and enjoy the smells, converse and luxuriate in the atmoshere or.... chow down and run? Many approach music in the same way. Give me something complex to breakdown with each listen, Mental Medication. MMMM

Please define "snobbish?" Is it anything like PROGHOLE?

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Hammar View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 29 2004 at 14:06

Lucas wrote:

Me too. And I don't understand how one can "listen" to it. It is so boring and has nothing to do with the ideals of music. Zappa, Varèse, Ligeti, Boulez and other contemporary composers created a "music" that only snobbish people can appreciate. 

Where did snobbish people come into context? Hehe, Zappa fans are either freaks or "progholes" (accepted and understood Danbo).

Listening to Ceux du Dehors is everything but boring. It's some of the most entertaining and thrilling music ever made. Not all avant-garde is interesting (some is boring), however, you have brought albums like King Crimson's Larks' Tongues in Aspic to question.  



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Alexander View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 29 2004 at 18:53
Snobbish? Why do you say that?
On A Dilemmia Between What I Need & What I Just Want

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2004 at 02:33

OK : music has to be a pleasure for your ears and not a pain, so if I say that only snob people can listen to avant-garde, that's because they belong to a minority that listens to a music that they only can appreciate (in spite of themselves and their ears I suppose). But maybe it's not the right word to qualify these people.

To Danbo : snob here can be assimilated to "proghole".

"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2004 at 02:34
Originally posted by danbo danbo wrote:

Originally posted by lucas lucas wrote:

Originally posted by Paco Fox Paco Fox wrote:

Anyway, I really don't like avant garde.

 

Me too. And I don't understand how one can "listen" to it. It is so boring and has nothing to do with the ideals of music. Zappa, Varèse, Ligeti, Boulez and other contemporary composers created a "music" that only snobbish people can appreciate. 

Instant gratification is great, but not the only way to get some enjoyment. Sometimes it takes a certain amount of mental participation from the listener to achieve a degree of entertainment rather than having it spoon fed to you.

Mmm... but, for me, it lacks emotional appeal. It's like conceptual art. I can understand it in its complex layers of meaning, but it fails to move me. I understand what Duchamp meant when he put that toilet at an exposition, but that doesn't move me a bit. One thing is mental participation and attention to what it's being said (Close to the Edge) and another is trying to listen to a dodecaphonic composition or a Battiato one chord album.

Avant Garde was the musical manifestation of the vanguards of the 20th century, and, as all other forms of vanguards, it ended up failing when they took thiings to a dead end (I repeat, a one note album, a 'classical' compoosition with only silence), losing the audience on their way of expanding the boundaries of art.

That's not saying it was useless. Great aesthetic ideas were born and adopted. Take some avant-garde, for instance, and how it developed into, for example, film music. There will no be music for The Silence of the Lambs without the works of avant garde composers. And no Lair of Shelob either!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2004 at 04:44
Sorry Lucas bur I think that too structured songs tend to be boring after several listenings...it's not the case with Zappa, Parmeggiani, Conrad and others...each listening is new...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2004 at 11:08

Originally posted by philippe philippe wrote:

Sorry Lucas bur I think that too structured songs tend to be boring after several listenings...it's not the case with Zappa, Parmeggiani, Conrad and others...each listening is new...

 

Amen

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2004 at 14:52
Originally posted by Hammar Hammar wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

There's some avante garde ideas on Aphrodite's Child album '666' particularly the track 'infinity' (the ''orgasm song'').Also some of the 'self sampling' on the finale to the album was unusual for it's time. 

Yes! Never thought about that one. A few tracks on both sides I will consider as avant-garde! It's not a very consistent album, but there are some great moments! Haven't heard the other ones, how are they like?

'666' was their only remotely prog sounding album.Before that they were just a conventional sixties 'pop' group that for some reason was big on the continent.It's strange to think that Demis Rousos essentially became just the bass player on '666' as he only sang on a couple of tracks!

BTW It was the strength of this album that nearly got Vangelis the 'gig' in Yes to replace Rick Wakeman around about 1974.

 

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2004 at 15:46
Originally posted by lucas lucas wrote:

OK : music has to be a pleasure for your ears and not a pain, so if I say that only snob people can listen to avant-garde, that's because they belong to a minority that listens to a music that they only can appreciate (in spite of themselves and their ears I suppose). But maybe it's not the right word to qualify these people.

To Danbo : snob here can be assimilated to "proghole".

I don't enjoy ALL avant-garde, probably not even a majority of the genre. The bits I do like, intrigue me. There is a fine line between art and trash and it's all about individual taste.

Now there are those who like, or pretend to like, something avant-garde, because they are think they will be percieved as "hip" or chic or whatever.

Have you heard David Torn's "Best Laid Plans"? I would classify that as avant-garde. Totally improvised with no real song structure, but it appeals to me. I can't really explain why or what it touches in me, but..... it does.

PROGHOLES UNITE!!!!!!!!!!!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2004 at 07:06
HENRY COW
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2004 at 11:28

Avant Bands of Note for this Owl:

Thinking Plague

Bone

Shubb Niggurath

Skeleton Key

Zappa/Mothers

No Secrets In The Family

Present

Univers Zero

Area

Miriodor

Cartoon

Sleepytime Gorilla Museum

PFS279

RUINS

Happy Family

Captain Beefheart

People are puzzled why I don't dig the Stones, well, I listened to the Stones, I tried, and I tried, and I tried, and--I Can't Get No Satisfaction!

www.myspace.com/theowlsmusic
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2004 at 17:44
I have always had a sort of fetish with kraut rock. the music sounds so improvised, and yet so emotional(sometimes). Can is a very interesting group, and would probably be my choice for best avant-garde band. Tago-Mago is their greatest album.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 02 2004 at 12:59

Well this clown sure is a snob, I even listen to the Kronos Quartet...Out demons out !!!!

 

Zappa, Univers Zero and Miriodor...WOW what a bunch



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 02 2004 at 13:03
Originally posted by Velvetclown Velvetclown wrote:

Well this clown sure is a snob, I even listen to the Kronos Quartet...Out demons out !!!!

 

Zappa, Univers Zero and Miriodor...WOW what a bunch

 

AGREED. Cheers snobs.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 04 2004 at 15:31
Originally posted by danbo danbo wrote:

Originally posted by lucas lucas wrote:

OK : music has to be a pleasure for your ears and not a pain, so if I say that only snob people can listen to avant-garde, that's because they belong to a minority that listens to a music that they only can appreciate (in spite of themselves and their ears I suppose). But maybe it's not the right word to qualify these people.

To Danbo : snob here can be assimilated to "proghole".

I don't enjoy ALL avant-garde, probably not even a majority of the genre. The bits I do like, intrigue me. There is a fine line between art and trash and it's all about individual taste.

Now there are those who like, or pretend to like, something avant-garde, because they are think they will be percieved as "hip" or chic or whatever.

Have you heard David Torn's "Best Laid Plans"? I would classify that as avant-garde. Totally improvised with no real song structure, but it appeals to me. I can't really explain why or what it touches in me, but..... it does.

PROGHOLES UNITE!!!!!!!!!!!

I hate David Torn's playing, and can't understand why he is seen as such a great artist. "Best laid plans" reminds me of the title of a song by the late Kevin Gilbert (a great vocalist), but there is surely no link between the two titles.

"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2004 at 21:21

Whether one loves or hates them, surely Deus Ex Machina has to be one of the most avant-garde prog bands? Both in terms of the structure of the music and the fact that many of their songs are in Latin?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2004 at 23:04
Originally posted by lucas lucas wrote:

 

I hate David Torn's playing, and can't understand why he is seen as such a great artist. "Best laid plans" reminds me of the title of a song by the late Kevin Gilbert (a great vocalist), but there is surely no link between the two titles.

"The best laid schemes o' mice and men gang aft a-gley:"  Robbie BurnsClap

Stern Smile(The best laid plans of mice and men often go awry.")

(Later quoted in the Steinbeck novel title.... Some of these old musicians read great literature.)



Edited by Peter Rideout
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Come to my arms, my beamish boy!
O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!'
He chortled in his joy.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2004 at 23:20

Re David Torn, I saw him live in a great venue with David Sylvian. The guy is a monster abstract expressionist on the trumpet!Thumbs Up

Check out the extended live version of Bruford, Levin & Torn - "Original Sin." Absolutely scary-killer jazz fusion! Mind-blowing! ClapBig smileCool

ShockedYou can't just write off Torn, or avant garde.  The genre is rather broad (and, like prog, undefined), and quite important to the history of music!Stern Smile



Edited by Peter Rideout
"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock?
Come to my arms, my beamish boy!
O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!'
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2004 at 06:51

I would guess AG depends on the year. What was avant in 1967 or 1976 is not quite so avant no, or a dead end.

1966: Beatles and Beach Boys (not joking)

1967: Beatles, Zappa and Vanilla Fudge

1968: Beatles and The Nice.

1969: Beatles, Led Zeppelin and King Crimson

1970: Beatles, Gentle Giant and ELP

.......

2004: Mars Volta? No, not really.

The best of the still strange sounding AG-bands?

Well, not really sure, at least I would mention Henry Cow, 5uu, Van der Graaf and Hatfield and the North.

 

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