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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Grateful Dead?
    Posted: January 09 2008 at 10:12
The Dead has three albums which could be valid in PA had the "whole discography" policy not been in force. >> Wake Of The Flood, Blues For Allah and Terrapin Station.
 
 
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

as much as I love Jefferson Airplane.. they should have never been included here.  As I much as I hate saying this.. because good music does not equal prog... since JA is here... no reason in the world other than 'sterotypes' and labels.. why the Dead shouldn't.

in fact neither should be here... but can't have one.. and not the other.  In fact.. it can be argued that the Dead were in fact more progressive.. than JA.


wrong place for this thread by the way....
 
C'm on micky, you were all for itTongueWink if I rememlber it.
 
And Jefferson Airplane is in proto-prog (mostly because they paved the way for many 70's traits by being "the first ones to "....) and dabbled in electronics back in 67, something that wouldn't fit the Dead. The two groups were vastly different, IMHO!! The Dead were definitely a jam band, something that only Casady and Kaukonen were friendly with in JA.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 08 2008 at 19:49
Yeah, now it sounds familiar. I have some Cardew stuff off of a radio show that probably included some AMM stuff. Back in the late 60s avant garde artists like Cardew would do gigs with experimental rock bands. There were also a few performers who had their feet in both worlds like Fred Frith and John Cale.

Edited by Easy Money - January 09 2008 at 11:35
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 08 2008 at 17:21
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Thanks for the info, I have books on Floyd and Soft Machine that probably mention them, seems like an interesting band that needs to be checked out. Does the AMM stand for anything?


AMM stands for AMM; there's no documented explanation for those cryptic initials.  I recall reading in an interview that the members of the group (Keith Rowe, Eddie Prevost, Lou Gare, Cornelius Cardew, John Tilbury) intentionally left the acronym undefined as a commentary of sorts on how the listener should approach the music.

Two major influences on the group were John Cage and abstract expressionist art.  Jackson Pollock's placement of his canvases on the floor directly influenced Rowe's "tabletop guitar" technique; the prepared piano techniques of Cage and others were among the catalysts for Rowe's experiments with preparing his guitar and using foreign objects to produce sound. 

Their early material is probably the best place to start; look for AMMusic or Live at the Crypt 1968.
[/thread derail]


Edited by nightlamp - January 08 2008 at 17:21
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 08 2008 at 15:30
I've had another listen to Live/Dead, Anthem of the Sun and Aoxomoxoa. My opinion hasn't changed much.

Live/Dead is the best of these three - Dark Star especially had a few interesting moments, and Feedback actually reminded me of AMM. I'll probably listen to Live/Dead again but there really wasn't anything on the other two albums that grabbed my attention.

 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 06 2008 at 11:00
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Does the AMM stand for anything?
 
It probably does but I've never been able to find out.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 06 2008 at 09:47
Thanks for the info, I have books on Floyd and Soft Machine that probably mention them, seems like an interesting band that needs to be checked out. Does the AMM stand for anything?
There is a definite difference between Syd's sort of deconstuctionist approach to soloing than the more macho displays of jazz-rock technique that came from Ratledge and Hendrix.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 06 2008 at 06:45
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Hey AB Negative, Who is AMM ? Probably someone I know but I am drawing a blank right now.
I would have thought Floyd's improvs would have been influenced by their regular gig mates; Soft Machine and Hendrix.
Also maybe Vevet Underground or avant-garde composers.
 
AMM was (and I think still is) a group playing totally improvised music. They played with the Floyd a couple of times (October 1966 and April 1967, both times with a Beatle in the audience). Their guitarist Keith Rowe's unconventional style was very influential on Syd Barrett's guitar playing (for example, using a Zippo lighter as a slide on See Emily Play).
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 06 2008 at 04:12
I think you're dancing around the really important question which is: is Jerry Garcia grateful now that he is dead?
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 05 2008 at 22:47
I definitley agree with you, I don't listen to the Dead much, but they definitely deserve credit for being one of the first rock bands to really start expanding what a rock band could do.
Who knows who influenced who, due to the experimental nature of the times I'm sure a lot of people were willing to take some chances.
I'm still trying to figure out who AMM is.

Edited by Easy Money - January 05 2008 at 22:49
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 05 2008 at 21:47
^that's probably true...I'm assuming there was a trickle down effect:  bands like Soft Machine and definately Hendrix heard the Dead when they were doing something new and experimental...it's more about the novelty of long songs and weird effects than a direct compositional influence.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 05 2008 at 15:56
Hey AB Negative, Who is AMM ? Probably someone I know but I am drawing a blank right now.
I would have thought Floyd's improvs would have been influenced by their regular gig mates; Soft Machine and Hendrix.
Also maybe Vevet Underground or avant-garde composers.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 05 2008 at 15:03
Originally posted by jimmy_row jimmy_row wrote:

Originally posted by A B Negative A B Negative wrote:

Originally posted by jimmy_row jimmy_row wrote:

Pink Floyd were a prog band, and surely they were influenced by the Dead. 
 
Where are the Grateful Dead influences in Pink Floyd's music?
Saucerful of Secrets, More, Meddle, Dark Side of the Moon...
 
a lot of these bands had to have heard the acid tests and then Live/Dead, Anthem of the Sun, Aoxomoxoa.  The live stuff was important for jam-based stuff and extending compostions, combining improv with compositions.  But the studio albums were important too because The Dead were doing a lot of experimenting with recording techniques and sounds, etc. Albums like Dark Side of the Moon are known for the experimentation that bands like The Dead pioneered in the studio in the mid-late sixties.


I'm not sure if many (if any) UK musicians heard the acid tests, and I think Floyd's improvisations owe more to AMM than to the Dead. But, I'll give another listen to the Dead albums you've mentioned.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 05 2008 at 12:06
Originally posted by A B Negative A B Negative wrote:

Originally posted by jimmy_row jimmy_row wrote:

Pink Floyd were a prog band, and surely they were influenced by the Dead. 
 
Where are the Grateful Dead influences in Pink Floyd's music?
Saucerful of Secrets, More, Meddle, Dark Side of the Moon...
 
a lot of these bands had to have heard the acid tests and then Live/Dead, Anthem of the Sun, Aoxomoxoa.  The live stuff was important for jam-based stuff and extending compostions, combining improv with compositions.  But the studio albums were important too because The Dead were doing a lot of experimenting with recording techniques and sounds, etc. Albums like Dark Side of the Moon are known for the experimentation that bands like The Dead pioneered in the studio in the mid-late sixties.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 05 2008 at 07:14
I think the Airplane got on here because a certain PA member campaigned very dilligently for their inclusion.

I think we all have an "x" and a "y" list, I know I do. There are certainly bands on here that I don't think belong and one's that should be added. Personally I'm more partial to bands that layed the groundwork for progressive rock to happen then bands that came a long later and copied an already established formula, but I try not to be too annoying about it out of respect for all the people who have put so much work into building this nice resource.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 05 2008 at 07:06
Originally posted by jimmy_row jimmy_row wrote:

Pink Floyd were a prog band, and surely they were influenced by the Dead. 
 
Where are the Grateful Dead influences in Pink Floyd's music?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 05 2008 at 00:48
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

if you all feel strong enough about it.... talk to the admins about it... man alive... if they found JA to be worthy of PP... you all should have no problem showing the admins ..by making a case ..that they belong. As I said before... they are probably more worthy than JA... but not touching this since I think neither belong here.  But I don't buy the idea that  'if x then y' doesn't apply... it does when talking about these kind of additions... if JA is here... then the Dead should be here... they were as influential.. if not more.

My problem is simply that prog.. in those early days was an English.. an European movement... not as one that grew up on the left coast... this time and effort might be best served pushing the Velvet Underground who really did have an impact on prog... on those European artists.  Extended jamming and psychedelia was exactly what prog was NOT about.  The bare bones essense of prog is one thing. .and one thing only...structure.

my two cents
those x and y arguments are the main reason I avoid these discussions.  I'm a huge fan of the Dead, obviously, and I think their influence on psycadelia, the early experimental and jam-based groups, and krautrock is very important...but I don't know if it's worth the time and effort to add them - it will only cause controversy and there and tons and tons of unknown bands the deserve inclusion.  IMO if we repetitively use the "if x then y" logic, then we could slowly lower the standards over time to allow almost anyone in who had an impact on rock music:  if The Dead are in...why not Cream, and why not Dylan, etc...they all had influence on progressive music.  Perhaps that's why I like your second point...at least the symphonic style of prog was based on structure (but then again, I've heard experts say that this structure was developed through jamming in the first place...remember KC and Schizoid Man...Moonchild), and Pink Floyd were a prog band, and surely they were influenced by the Dead.  So maybe what I'm saying is that influence isn't enough, and that's why these bands go to PR, which IMO is almost a waste of time...why not focus on the 100 % grade A certified prog.
 
*hopefully that made a litte sense....and now I'm confused to boot UnhappyLOL
 
 
btw Micky, I forgot to say earlier, I hope that PA's first man and first lady had a good holiday season, hopefully '08 will be a good one, hang in there...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 04 2008 at 23:38
Haven't even scratched the surface when it comes to demonstrating the progressive nature of the Dead...it'd just take too long song....in concert they would cover numbers from Motown, trad folk and country, bop and post-bop jazz, gospel, Brit pop, jug band and bluegrass, blues, rockabilly....and then groove into "Space" by incorporating the whole stew into a forty minute improv.  Progressive?  Oh, yeah!
 
But, at heart, I don't really support their inclusion....I think they could only marginally be called prog rock, and only in the most literal sense of the term.  Progressive, yes (in everything they ever did, even when they were covering Hank Williams tunes).  Prog rock, probably not (they really didn't set out to make proggy albums.....though in the mid 70s they landed on it and moved on....it just didn't stick to them like the whole "psychadelic jazzy country-blues space rock" thing). 
 
So, yeah, I understand why they're not here....but I just can't understand how Phish and the Airplane(man, I dig the Airplane, even their later boozy albums) are here and the Dead aren't....so I guess I AM for their inclusion....but I understand why they're not here....but I just can't understand how Phish and the Airplane...."wheel is turning and it can't slow down/can't go back and you can't stand still".
 
Now I'm going to dust off my copy of "Grand Illusion" and thrown it on the turntable, just to appease the Great Prog Spirit.
 
 
I like to feel the suspense when you're certain you know I am there.....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 04 2008 at 20:58
Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by Intruder Intruder wrote:

 
But I've beaten at this door before and have been told the same old "no room for folk-country jam bands" excuse.  All I'd like to do is open more people up to the Dead....a great American progressive rock band....Styx?  Rush?  Kansas?  Recycled prog.  The Dead are the real things!


What have you been smoking?  Oh, wait, Deadhead.  Enough said. LOL




he may be smoking something but he's also quite right

I don't support their inclusion, but they were (barring Zappa as a solo artist) easily the most progressive U.S. rock band...




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 04 2008 at 20:37
Originally posted by Intruder Intruder wrote:

 
But I've beaten at this door before and have been told the same old "no room for folk-country jam bands" excuse.  All I'd like to do is open more people up to the Dead....a great American progressive rock band....Styx?  Rush?  Kansas?  Recycled prog.  The Dead are the real things!


What have you been smoking?  Oh, wait, Deadhead.  Enough said. LOL


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 04 2008 at 19:59
Originally posted by Intruder Intruder wrote:

Yeah, bad form - to make a point I belittled Styx, Rush and Kansas....I actually had "2112" on last night while cooking dinner and have been trying to track down the first Journey album ever since I sold my first copy a few years back.  Sorry to offend, but such is my passion for the Dead.  They were my first....you know, that gateway band that opens up all kids of doors. 

I've been a lurker on this site since its beginnings and have been introduced to so much great stuff.  That's why I love the site....it opens eyes to bands/genres that had before been hidden.  And I'd like to do the same with the Dead...it seems the fanbase is petrifiying into just what Micky mentioned....zoned out pothead music (nothing wrong with it if it's your thing).  I'd love for Al DiMeola and Shakti McLaughlin fans to turn on to Jerry.....for Gong and Clearlight fans to see the kinship....for Ash Ra fans to freak out to one of those early Fillmore shows.  
 
Now as for this, "The bare bones essense of prog is one thing. .and one thing only...structure."  Well, I'm sure the majority would disagree with such a narrow view....and where would PA be if this were even remotely accurate?  Amon Duul fans would disagee and, hell, so would Crismon fans (what the hell else were they doing with live shows in '69?)....to define prog as such would turn PA into a strictly symph and Italian prog site (and, though I love Genesis, I always wish they'd let Hackett loose during live shows...let him Jerry it up a bit....all those damn Genesis bootlegs I have sound exactly like the records, so I don't play 'em).
 
But, I hear you Marky....prog SEEMS to be a Brit/Euro thing, but where did those ideas come from?  Free-jazz, maybe?  Would the Stones/Beatles/Mayall be anywhere without Muddy Waters, Little Richard and Elmore James....the evolution is very clear and the Dead are right there at the heart.  Still, I understand those who think the Dead don't belong.....they weren't ELP and the gap is obvious, but by turning over a few stones you'd see the connection....Emerson was highly influenced by modal jazz and that third wave movement, so was Jerry; Emerson saw his music as an electrified classical music fusion and Jerry understoon this dynamic as well (though he only dabbled in it in his later music with the Dead -Flood/Allah/Terrapin - but it always had its influence, if not so overt.  I'm not trying to say that the Dead were a symophonic prog band, and if the site is solely for that type of music, then, yes, the Dead have not place here.  But this site represents so much more....
 
BTW, did you ever hear get into side two of Jerry's first solo album?  It could be mistaken for anyone from early Tangerine Dream to mid-70s Eno!
 
Sorry again for running down second generation American prog....but somehow I don't think Dennis DeYoung is losing any sleep over it.


well....  I'm going to bump an old Grateful Dead thread in the suggest new artists thread...  have fun...  you make good points... try to sell them to the admins for addition...and those who... won't agree with the idea of adding them. LOL
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