Can Retro Prog be Progressive? |
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 06:22 | |
By the time you wrote that, even Ivan had packed his things and gone to sleep, only awake at...lets see....6 am...because I'm having insomnia after a couple of nightmers of Michael Jackson singing "Dancing with the Moonlit Knight"
Well, back to bed.
Ivñan
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Petrovsk Mizinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: December 24 2007 Location: Ukraine Status: Offline Points: 25210 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 06:50 | |
Even Rush called be called Retro for the heavy blues rock stuff they had in their sound We're equal now Mike! MWAHAHA. Betcha you didn't see that coming from a mile away Edited by HughesJB4 - November 15 2008 at 06:51 |
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Petrovsk Mizinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: December 24 2007 Location: Ukraine Status: Offline Points: 25210 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 07:04 | |
But anyway, let me put in a more serious 2 cents worth to this discussion.
Retro prog can be prog rock. Prog and Progressive are two different terms really. Retro prog can be prog, but not 'progressive' in the true sense of the word. If music that was actually progressive was 'prog' we would have a very different set of bands in the PA database. Bands like Black Sabbath would be considered progressive instead of prog related just for an example. Prog and progressive rock can mean the same thing if we are talking about it in the same context. But when we are talking about music that is 'progressing' music, we are using another defintiion, the 'more usual' definition as such. Everyday I listen to bands with retro elements in them, and arguably, probably almost all, if not all music today is in someway 'retro' depending on how deeply we are willing to breakdown the music and analyse it and look for things that have been done already. It's more a case of, and a question of, to what extent is something 'retro' prog? |
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Petrovsk Mizinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: December 24 2007 Location: Ukraine Status: Offline Points: 25210 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 07:30 | |
In fact, I'm not done yet
Now for the bigger crunch coming up: Prepare to have your faces melted off and put in a pot to be cooked i.e post with more musically academic content warning Non-musicians, be warned Well, okay, it's not that bad. What is considered progressive? Let's discuss some musical devices that have been used for quite a while in music's history. Let's take counter and polyphony for instance. Two musical devices favored by many of the Baroque era composers. Now, let's take these into a more modern context. Say if a prog rock band, hypothetically speaking and thinking more along late 60s/early 70s for the first time, uses counterpoint and polyphony in their music. Is it progressive? (in the sense of actual progression, not in terms of it being 'prog rock') Or is it just 'retro? These devices have been used for hundreds of years before the people in x band have been born. One side of the argument says "What is new about this? Bach was all over it by the 1700s at least, if not even earlier, and chances are, people used these musical devices before him". If we choose to look at it from a more historical point of view, and take all music, not just rock, into account, then, nothing was really innovated, hence it's retro really. But now, let's leave music before 1965 out often equation, and better yet, let's pretend classical music in the vein of the Baroque style or whatever, is not being written at all. What we have now, is progression, in the true definition of the word. We have seen someone incorporate elements in rock music never done before. And then we have the first guys started to take it to another level and use Fifth Species counterpoint instead of merely just the first species, for the first time etc. Still, progression is happening And now, we can apply this to other later periods of prog music (although we no longer need to say it's necessarily about counterpoint or polyphony anymore, it can be a whole multitude of things, like other musical devices, genre mish-mashing etc). Let's prog metal for example. Retro if we view as metal and elements we consider prog already having been done. Progressive if we recognize metal was never played in such a complex way before. So, it's a matter of perspective/what angle we approach it, the historical context we chose to see it in, and even more I can't be bothered to think of at the top of my head as I really need sleep. Edited by HughesJB4 - November 15 2008 at 07:30 |
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32552 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 07:46 | |
Not that I wish to jump head first into this melee, I just want to point out (from the sidelines!) that I go to lots of record stores, in many different cities and states, and I think I've only ever seen Selling England by the Pound about three or four times, including the time I bought it. Most of the Genesis I see is the post-Hackett material.
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el böthy
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 27 2005 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 6336 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 10:07 | |
That´s just your way of seeing things. And from what I understand you don´t really listen to more experimental or non symphonic/neo bands, so it´s obvious you will think that way. |
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"You want me to play what, Robert?"
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 36859 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 12:47 | |
Retro can be Prog (noun), but retro (regressive) is not progressive (adjective). I find "retro" a useful term to describe music that sounds like it is of, harkens back to, a past era/ time. I commonly say, "it has a retro aesthetic" or "it has retro elements" when evaluating music.
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crimson87
Prog Reviewer Joined: January 03 2008 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 1818 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 13:32 | |
As simple as that , retro prog sounds progressive but it suffers from stagnation. And stagnation is not a main characteristic of prog rock.
But to some of us (the younger ones) it's great for a band that had it's prime more than 35 years ago to release an album that reminds us of it's days of old. (VDGG)
Besides there ain't a perfect "progressive" band King Crimson produced great music in the 80's 90's and 00's but it was formulaic. one formula in the 80's other different later.
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 13:40 | |
Of course it is my way of seeing things, would be at least silly to pretend I express your opinions or the opinions of other person appart than me.
But seems by the reaction of the posters, that my opinion has some supporters.
Please refresh my memory:
Otherwise I don't see how you pretend to know what I listen or what I don't listen. Of course you haven't checked the bands I added, out of the 150 (More or less), the vast majority is non Symphonic. As a fact I have recently added or in process of addition, 5 bands from your country (Factor Burzaco - Avant/RIO; Andres Ruiz - Eclectic; Antihéroe - Jazz Fusion; Panza - Rio - Crossover; UBU - Prog Folk) which maybe you haven't even heard, none of them Symphonic. Probably you have checked my reviews....But wait, out of my last 20 reviews, only 5 are Symphonic and 4 are Avant - RIO. So please. if you don't know what I listen or not or what are my motivations, don't try to guess. Now back to the point, if you believe my opinion is wrong, What is your solution? Maybe sending a PM to the members of Glass Hammer, Magenta, Spock's Beard, Anekdoten, Par Lindh Project, Anglagard, Anton Roolaart, Iacintus, Shadow Circus (You can find John Fontana as JPlanet in this forum), etc, and tell them "Hey you better start exploring or we will remove you from Prog Archives because I decided you are not progressive". I never said that Prog must not evolve, I said a band may or may not evolve and still be part of the Progressive Rock genre. Iván Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - November 15 2008 at 13:43 |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 36859 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 13:47 | |
In defence of Matias, he did say "from what I understand...."
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 13:49 | |
Please, when you will get it..Progressive Rock is the name of a musical genre, as Modern is the name of music from 1820 to 1899.
There will be many more contemporary composers, but Wagner or Chopin or Dvorak will always be MODERN MUSICIANS, even in the XXX Century, because MODERN IS JUST A NAME.
In the same way Progressive Rock is just a term, call it Art Rock or whatever but a band that was part of the Progressive Rock genre in 1971, will be a Progressive Rock band in 2099.
There's not a genre or sub-genre called Regressive or retro Prog, only progressive Rock, and things wion't change, because you can't change history
Is this so hard to understand?
Iván Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - November 15 2008 at 14:18 |
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 13:50 | |
But from where he understands?
That's a wiold guess only, and a wild guess used to reach a conclusion.
Ivñan
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 36859 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 14:15 | |
I can't say why he got that specific impression -- I won't speak for him -- and I know you listen to more than symph, and symph related music. Yes, it's an assumption that leads to an invalid conclusion. I think it was poorly phrased. It might have been stated as "Assuming you prefer symph and symph-related bands when it comes to Prog, rather than experimental, avant garde bands, then it is not surprising that you think this way because...."
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 14:17 | |
I take my hat for your diplomatic abbilities Mister Henry Kissinger Logan
Iván
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32552 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 14:34 | |
I can guess. Your motivations are to be right and be heard. |
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Moogtron III
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 26 2005 Location: Belgium Status: Offline Points: 10616 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 14:39 | |
Wonderful, what a breath of fresh air. Thanks, Iván!
I agree, but still I'm just thinking about Ed Macan, who says in his book about progressive rock two things that stick in my head:
- that progressive rock has used most of its possibilities between 1970 - 1975, and that there are only a few creative bands which give the genre some extra mileage, and nothing more
- that any music exists through a relation within society; I wonder if it's just the record companies who are guilty of making prog obscure (and DJ's/ music critics), or, on top of that, is modern man just easily bored?
Still, I agree, because I do see the need for a lot of people to stay with the genre, explore it further, listen to it over and over again. Like me. Seems like a more natural thing. Prog should be fresh until 2130, and a neo prog revival should come about 100 years later
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 14:39 | |
No, my motivations are to debate in search for the closest approach to truth, through research not guessing.
Iván
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russellk
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 28 2005 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 782 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 14:47 | |
Really? There wasn't a genre or sub-genre called crossover prog until recently. We're changing history at this site all the time. If we want to have a genre called retro-prog, then we will. For the record, I do NOT want such a genre. I think the word 'retro' applies to an attitude, not a genre. But shouting the same argument time and again doesn't make it right, Ivan. There's an established genre called retro-rock, in which artists evoke the rock of the 1970s. I personally think - as do some others here - that some contemporary prog bands do this too. It's a way of referring to a broad group of artists, to distinguish them from other contemporary prog artists who are pushing musical boundaries. I'm still yet to hear an ARGUMENT against this idea, just some repeated assertions. |
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 15:16 | |
Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - November 15 2008 at 15:22 |
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32552 |
Posted: November 15 2008 at 15:17 | |
Hey, hey- note the smiley! |
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