Exclusionsist or Inclusivist? |
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Hercules
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 14 2007 Location: Near York UK Status: Offline Points: 7024 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 10:58 | |
Hear hear!!
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presdoug
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 24 2010 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 8628 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 11:25 | |
I picked option #1.
I don't like modern prog, but I would never say that prog ended in 1979, it's still developing and evolving. |
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akamaisondufromage
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: May 16 2009 Location: Blighty Status: Offline Points: 6797 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 11:29 | |
Prog ended in 1978. (Voice from the past) lol
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Help me I'm falling!
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sleeper
Prog Reviewer Joined: October 09 2005 Location: Entropia Status: Offline Points: 16449 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 11:32 | |
The real question is how many of the 70's bands would call themselves "Prog", I'm sure any one of us could find plenty that said they weren't. |
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Spending more than I should on Prog since 2005
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genbanks
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 08 2010 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 956 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 11:42 | |
I think that this is a good point. Prog rock seems to be a wide definition. For us (unless for me), the listeners, we feel it (the new "prog" bands) as progressive rock, and I feel ok by this way, but the bands? I don't know. But the music is there and if it fits with the basic parameters that define the genre, so they are. With the seventies the prog rock stopped as a massive thing, but the spirit of this kind of music continues on all this new bands till present, and even in more sophisticated formats sometimes. So the spirit of the prog music is even there, and so the prog rock too. Of course Option 1. |
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Wanorak
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 09 2006 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 4574 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 12:30 | |
Yes!!
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A GREAT YEAR FOR PROG!!!
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Svetonio
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 20 2010 Location: Serbia Status: Offline Points: 10213 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 12:50 | |
Progressive rock maybe does not evolve, but for sure it multiplies in the dozens of new styles now. Or to put it this way - once you had e.g. one Fripp, one Hillage (as great English prog innovators in their heydays) and so on, now you have a number of them; one can say - more innovators than the listeners. Of course, some of them will not pass the test of time and those who remain will be great masters at their own progland and they will be evegreens, same as the old ones.
Edited by Svetonio - April 12 2014 at 13:20 |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 13:58 | |
I doubt that.
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What?
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The Dark Elf
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: February 01 2011 Location: Michigan Status: Offline Points: 13065 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 14:22 | |
In the 70s, nearly every great rock band with any interest in musicianship had its prog moments, such as The Who and Led Zeppelin, and even folks like Alice Cooper, Bowie, Elton John, Roxy Music and Billy Joel (for Christ's sake!). Other bands, such as Tull, Floyd and Genesis bounced in and out, chameleon-like. I am not sure the interest is on the same level currently. Certainly, great swathes of the listening public do not listen to what we old farts would consider rock music with the same interest as in that bygone era. Rock music is really not the Billboard juggernaut it once was.
Sometimes, I'll listen to a band like Big Big Train (with wonderful albums like Underfall Yard and English Electric I & II), and I begin to wonder if I like the albums because they are very reminiscent to what I listened to as a teenager (and I would suggest that English Electric I would probably be an album I would have listened to in 1976 or 77). Meh, I just don't know. But I do know what I like (in my wardrobe and through my speakers). |
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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology... |
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Rick Robson
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 03 2013 Location: Rio de Janeiro Status: Offline Points: 1607 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 14:54 | |
This.
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"Music is a higher revelation than all wisdom and philosophy." LvB |
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Man With Hat
Collaborator Jazz-Rock/Fusion/Canterbury Team Joined: March 12 2005 Location: Neurotica Status: Offline Points: 166178 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 16:31 | |
A bit of a loaded poll really.
Obviously the second choice is stupid. But that doesn't mean we should add every piece of music or band that is slightly odd or quirky, even to go so far as to include non rock acts just because they may be progressive. For the site, I believe we should be more exclusionist, but that doesn't mean I believe prog died in '79. |
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Dig me...But don't...Bury me
I'm running still, I shall until, one day, I hope that I'll arrive Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect. |
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Polymorphia
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 06 2012 Location: here Status: Offline Points: 8856 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 16:40 | |
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ExittheLemming
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 19 2007 Location: Penal Colony Status: Offline Points: 11415 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 16:53 | |
Interesting perception of how the poll is deemed to be 'loaded' given that its creator voted for option 2 presumably on the basis of either his sincere belief or sincere stupidity. I notice however that you mix the use of Prog and progressive in your post which might go some way towards explaining this confusion but certainly helps identify one of the misconceptions the poll was created in the first place to highlight. I mean it would be very difficult to make an argument that Krautrock, RPI, Canterbury, Zeuhl or Neo prog (OK this flourished for a while in the 80's) etc were actually still evolving to qualify as contemporary in 2014? You say we should be more exclusionist but don't state how we can bring this about i.e. do we continue to use sub genre definitions that are a measure of a historical bygone Prog or should we reevaluate the sub genre definitions to assimilate contemporary developments in progressive rock/ progressive music?. Do people think the existing definitions are wide enough to accommodate modern trends etc That's the sort of debate I wanted to stimulate. Edited by ExittheLemming - April 12 2014 at 21:17 |
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Svetonio
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 20 2010 Location: Serbia Status: Offline Points: 10213 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 20:13 | |
Exactomundo Be Archives and Museum are to be two different things; i.e. an archivist is not a museum's curator. An (prog) archivist collects, acquires, edit, review, evaluate, inventory, categorize archival material. It prepares for the use of interested parties: researchers, fans, young musicians, and others. A museum's curator is strictly oriented to the things that belong to a particular time. The primary role of the archivist is to enable and facilitate access to archival material, to bring closer various categories of users. About how much quality, responsible and conscientious archivists do their job depends largely on how many kinds of resources will be available, and what the future generation to know everything about, in this case, progressive rock of yesterday, today and tomorrow. Edited by Svetonio - April 12 2014 at 21:14 |
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 20:20 | |
Although I voted for option 1, I think the changes in prog since the 70s are more in terms of sound or maybe the domination of guitar rather than keyboard. The 70s already covered a very wide gamut and even if that alone formed the basis of deciding what bands today could be called prog, it would still be a very inclusive term because it would include symph, avant prog, prog metal (basis the inclusion of Rush), jazz rock, etc. While I am from the younger brigade, I am sympathetic to what it is that those who think prog died in 1979 are grappling with. Prog as a concentrated scene of music seems to have collapsed by the end of the 70s. Today it's more about new bands with members who grew up listening to prog wanting to make some prog of their own and these bands are scattered across the globe catering to smaller fanbases.
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Atavachron
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Offline Points: 65269 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 20:47 | |
There are almost as many as yet undiscovered prog bands from the '70s
and '80s as there are modern ones, and every time I think we've found
every dusty old group no one cared about then or now, yet another one
floats to the surface. There's plenty new & old to keep us all
busy for a long, long time.
Should PA consider new rock bands that are progressive? Sure we should. But we'll also continue looking behind us because without that history, we're nothing. |
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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Svetonio
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 20 2010 Location: Serbia Status: Offline Points: 10213 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 21:04 | |
Once again, the history of progressive rock can not and should not be viewed only from the perspective of the British progressive rock movement (scene). Edited by Svetonio - April 12 2014 at 21:08 |
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ExittheLemming
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 19 2007 Location: Penal Colony Status: Offline Points: 11415 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 21:14 | |
Has anyone made that argument or even implied same throughout the entire thread so far? |
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Svetonio
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 20 2010 Location: Serbia Status: Offline Points: 10213 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 21:36 | |
IMO, if someone say that progressive rock died in 1979, that one can have in mind that creative disaster of the bands who belong to British progressive rock movement only. Btw, I prefer to call it 'British' coz of Ian Anderson who is Scottish, however probably I'll not call it 'British' after 18th September 2014.
Edited by Svetonio - April 12 2014 at 21:39 |
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Atavachron
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Offline Points: 65269 |
Posted: April 12 2014 at 21:58 | |
I hear bagpipes...
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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