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SteveG
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Posted: September 18 2014 at 09:59 |
Dean wrote:
Svetonio wrote:
SteveG wrote:
Interrstingly, website Prog Rock.Com has it's own 'proto' like catogry called "Progressive Roots" and lists their following top 5 from the oldest to the newest as such:
1. Pet Sounds-Beach Boys 2. Good Vibrations-Beach Boys 3. Surrealistic Pillow-Jefferson Airplane 4. Sgt. Pepper's-The Beatles 5. Piper At The Gates of Dawn-Pink Floyd
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No Strawberry Fields Forever / Penny Lane in the top five?! | It is not a top-5 chart but a chronology or timeline. SteveG was being a very misleading in numbering this list and in calling it a "top 5". And the list compiler, Proc Rock Dot Carm, (a little unknown radio channel) is being very selective. But whatever it takes to make a point is fair game, what he really needs to do is find well known Prog website with some provenance and gravitas that supports the assertion... something like Progears, Proggnosis, the New Gibraltar Encyclopaedia of Prog Rock (GEPR) or ProgressoR (just kidding about with the last one)... except none of them do.
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...being very misleading? For what evil purose was I doing that? Do you even think before you type? (Sigh) My short numbered list was done for the sake of expediency and no other reason. This
list that is not numbered but put out Progrock.com (http:/ /
www.rockprog.com) is in their "Progressive Roots" write up is not just
for fun and is chrononlogical. It is not numbered but in an effort not
to mislead the gullible public I will present it chronoligically without
numbering just as they have under "Important Albums" without omissions: The Beach Boys: Pet Sounds. released may 16, 1968 (with track listing) Good Vibrations. No release date. Jefferson Airplane: Surrealistic Pillow. released Feb,1967 The Beatles: Sgt. Pepper, Magical Mystery Tour (sic?) released Jun. 1, 1967 Pink Floyd: Piper At the Gates of Dawn. Moody Blues: Days Of Future Past. released. Nov. 1967 Frank Zappa: We're Only In it For The Money. released Sep, 1968 The Nice: Ars Longa Vita Brevis. released Cec, 1968 King Crimson: In the Court of the Crimson King. released Oct, 1969 Frank Zappa: Hot Rats. released Oct, 1969 Soft Machine: Third. Rekeased Jun,1970 ELP: Emerson, Lake And Palmer. released 1970 This is the is the completion of the list un-numbered for the conspiracy therorist in the crowd. Note what a complete and balanced picture it presents to rock music before the term Progressive Rock came into vogue.
Edited by SteveG - September 18 2014 at 11:42
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Padraic
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Posted: September 18 2014 at 10:02 |
It is a much more balanced "prog roots" picture than what you presented via omission.
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SteveG
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Posted: September 18 2014 at 10:03 |
Dean wrote:
If early Progressive Rock (1969-7?) had developed solely from those 5 releases it would be an entirely different genre to the one we know today.
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Correct. Note the list from Rockprog,com in the post above. That is a more balanced view of "Proto Prog" than I've seen in many sources. The Swedes do know Prog.
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SteveG
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Posted: September 18 2014 at 10:06 |
Padraic wrote:
It is a much more balanced "prog roots" picture than what you presented via omission.
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True, I've learned that being expedient is a negative exercise and that only hurt my argument. The whole story does the Rockprog.com post and the album Pet Sounds the justice it deserves as well.
Edited by SteveG - September 18 2014 at 10:23
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Dean
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Posted: September 18 2014 at 10:45 |
SteveG wrote:
Dean wrote:
Svetonio wrote:
SteveG wrote:
Interrstingly, website Prog Rock.Com has it's own 'proto' like catogry called "Progressive Roots" and lists their following top 5 from the oldest to the newest as such:
1. Pet Sounds-Beach Boys 2. Good Vibrations-Beach Boys 3. Surrealistic Pillow-Jefferson Airplane 4. Sgt. Pepper's-The Beatles 5. Piper At The Gates of Dawn-Pink Floyd
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No Strawberry Fields Forever / Penny Lane in the top five?! | It is not a top-5 chart but a chronology or timeline. SteveG was being a very misleading in numbering this list and in calling it a "top 5". And the list compiler, Proc Rock Dot Carm, (a little unknown radio channel) is being very selective. But whatever it takes to make a point is fair game, what he really needs to do is find well known Prog website with some provenance and gravitas that supports the assertion... something like Progears, Proggnosis, the New Gibraltar Encyclopaedia of Prog Rock (GEPR) or ProgressoR (just kidding about with the last one)... except none of them do.
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...being very misleading? For what evil purose was I doing that? Do you even think before you type? (Sigh)
::snip::
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I never accused you of a nefarious purpose or even a deliberate intent. To do that would be an assumption on my part and as I have told you countless times, I assume nothing. You numbered the list and referred to it as their top 5 - that is misleading. [snide remark yet again ignored] (sigh indeed).
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Dean
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Posted: September 18 2014 at 11:19 |
SteveG wrote:
Dean wrote:
If early Progressive Rock (1969-7?) had developed solely from those 5 releases it would be an entirely different genre to the one we know today.
| Correct. Note the list from Rockprog,com in the post above. That is a more balanced view of "Proto Prog" than I've seen in many sources. The Swedes do know Prog.
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Our Proto Prog category lists 18 British artists, 16 American, 1 Canadian, 1 Australian, 1 Dutch, 1 Slovakian and 2 Spanish, and since we are multinational and have Swedish members here who know their Prog, we also list 2 Swedish artists for good measure. I would call that as balanced a view as anyone's.
We are not an encyclopaedia, we are a review site. If we were to formally document the history and development of Progressive Rock then the Beach Boys would most certainly be mentioned along with other bands and artists from that era and earlier that we don't list in the PP category, but we don't have that - the category description on the Proto Prog page is not an essay on the history of the formative years of Progressive Rock.
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SteveG
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Posted: September 18 2014 at 11:23 |
^Go Sweden! Eight pages on the Beach Boys. Who would have thought that?
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Svetonio
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Posted: September 18 2014 at 17:22 |
SteveG wrote:
(...)
The Beach Boys: Pet Sounds. released may 16, 1968 (with track listing) Good Vibrations. No release date.
Jefferson Airplane: Surrealistic Pillow. released Feb,1967
The Beatles: Sgt. Pepper, Magical Mystery Tour (sic?) released Jun. 1, 1967
Pink Floyd: Piper At the Gates of Dawn.
Moody Blues: Days Of Future Past. released. Nov. 1967
Frank Zappa: We're Only In it For The Money. released Sep, 1968
The Nice: Ars Longa Vita Brevis. released Cec, 1968
King Crimson: In the Court of the Crimson King. released Oct, 1969
Frank Zappa: Hot Rats. released Oct, 1969
Soft Machine: Third. Rekeased Jun,1970
ELP: Emerson, Lake And Palmer. released 1970
(...)
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No Freak Out by The Mothers ? No Children of the Future and Sailor by The Steve Miller Band? No Music In A Doll's House by Family? That list is not valid.
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SteveG
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Posted: September 18 2014 at 19:10 |
^ I spoke with Sven Youarealwaysspacedoutson at Rockprog.com and he said that "Serbs that don't eat Swedish meatballs are not valid" and then hung up on me. Well, I tried.
Edited by SteveG - September 19 2014 at 14:47
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Svetonio
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Posted: September 19 2014 at 01:25 |
SteveG wrote:
^ I spoke with Sven Yruarealwaysspacedoutson at Rockprog.com and he said that "Serbs that don't eat Swedish meatballs are not valid" and then hung up on me. Well, I tried.
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Also, what ELP's debut doing at "progressive roots" list? Progressive rock was already the most fashionable thing in the moment when ELP's debut was released, and ELP was the first prog supergroup. Put ELP's debut on a "roots" list, it's silly as if someone made e.g. punk roots list with London Calling on it.
Edited by Svetonio - September 19 2014 at 01:28
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Atavachron
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Posted: September 19 2014 at 02:07 |
^ Maybe because whoever compiled that list thinks of ELP's debut as a pop album, which of course it was. But I tend to agree with you.
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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Dean
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Posted: September 19 2014 at 02:21 |
^ & ^^ The more I look at that list the more it appears to be a list of favourites rather than anything meaningful.
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Atavachron
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Posted: September 19 2014 at 02:30 |
It's not a bad list but it does seem rather unedified
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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Dean
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Posted: September 19 2014 at 02:45 |
Aye, it's not a bad list by any stretch, it's just a little too selective, short of being definitive and far from being balanced to be be anything other than one man's opinion. I don't see that there is any need to pick-over it further, we can all suggest other bands and albums that we'd expect to see on it and some we'd prefer to see in place of some already listed.
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SteveG
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Posted: September 19 2014 at 08:12 |
Dean wrote:
Aye, it's not a bad list by any stretch, it's just a little too selective, short of being definitive and far from being balanced to be be anything other than one man's opinion. I don't see that there is any need to pick-over it further, we can all suggest other bands and albums that we'd expect to see on it and some we'd prefer to see in place of some already listed. |
Honestly, even I feel it's a narrow list, but it's a least a chance to see how other prog sites see the development of the early part of the genre. And that does not mean that they are always correct, just different.
Edited by SteveG - September 19 2014 at 08:14
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Dean
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Posted: September 19 2014 at 08:18 |
SteveG wrote:
Dean wrote:
Aye, it's not a bad list by any stretch, it's just a little too selective, short of being definitive and far from being balanced to be be anything other than one man's opinion. I don't see that there is any need to pick-over it further, we can all suggest other bands and albums that we'd expect to see on it and some we'd prefer to see in place of some already listed. | Honestly, even I feel it's a narrow list, but it's a least a chance to see how other prog sites see the development of the early part of the genre. And that does not mean that they are always correct, just different.
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Did you happen to chance upon any other prog sites in your trawl of the interwebs?
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Svetonio
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Posted: September 19 2014 at 08:22 |
Atavachron wrote:
It's not a bad list but it does seem rather unedified
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The author of that list showed a considerable dose of ignorance or even stupidity.
ELP's debut - prog roots? lol
Edited by Svetonio - September 19 2014 at 08:23
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SteveG
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Posted: September 19 2014 at 08:46 |
Yes indeed, they are generally quite similar to PA's which to me, believe or not, is a good thing. Again being different can be interesting as I stated in my original post, but that doesn't always mean correct. A topic for a discussion only.
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SteveG
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Posted: September 20 2014 at 10:22 |
Just for fun:
The combined PA/Rockprog/Sventonio Proto prog list, in no particular order, 1960's albums:
Pet Sounds, Good Vibrations (single), The Beach Boys
Revolver, The Beatles
Sgt. Pepper's, The Beatles
Magical Mystery Tour, The Beatles
Piper At the Gates of Dawn, Pink Floyd
Feakout!, Frank Zappa
Music In a Dolls House, Family
Are you Experienced?, Jimi Hendrix
Children Of The Future, Steve Miller Band
We're Only In it For the Money, Frank Zappa
The Doors, The Doors
Sailor, Steve Miller Band
Days of Future Past: The Moody Blues
Abbey Road, The Beatles
Surrealistic Pillow, Jefferson Airplane
Ars Longa Vita Brevis, The Nice
Tommy, The Who
Renaissance, Vanilla Fudge
In the Court of The Crimson King, King Crimson
This list has been compiled for entertainment purposes only. (but sensitive persons should keep Smelling Salts handy in cause of fainting)
Edited by SteveG - September 20 2014 at 10:31
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earlyprog
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Posted: September 22 2014 at 09:50 |
SteveG wrote:
Just for fun:
The combined PA/Rockprog/Sventonio Proto prog list, in no particular order, 1960's albums:
.............
This list has been compiled for entertainment purposes only. (but sensitive persons should keep Smelling Salts handy in cause of fainting) |
Ha, ha
How can you claim PA's contribution to the list with all the omissions? Do yourself and the rest of us a favor and use the search options on PA.
Instead of listing albums Steve, you ought to list Beach Boys songs that you believe are proto prog. And remember prog = progressive ROCK. After you realize that list is without entries, relax the ROCK criterion and list the songs that come closest to proto prog.
Thanks
I can get you started: Pet Sounds the title song is progish.
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