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Topic ClosedMy lesser known and unknown new prog bands thread

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Apsalar View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 20:46
Originally posted by erik neuteboom erik neuteboom wrote:

Thanks, Aussie but I have not very much Zeuhl, Rio and Avant-garde to offer, I have explored that music in the past but it's too complex/adventurous for me, at some moments even a bit nerve-racking Wacko In fact this is the place where opposites meet, aren't we LOL ?!


LOL maybe we are opposites, but I think we can both agree on the quality of Maldoror's sole album (plus many others)!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 20:29
Erik !!!   you are probably my all time favourite prog reviewer you really give it 100% and I love the way in which you are so up with things ... keep up the excellent work I hope to read many more enlightening and informative reviews from you in the future Smile Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 19:41
Wow, very impressive Erik my friend. I really enjoy these things that you do. I just don't know HOW you find the time to listen to AND review all this music. I buy about 5 cd's a month and keeping up with just those is tough. If you look at the amount of reviews I have, you see I don't have much time to review either. I am sad about that. I wish I could review them all. I am like you in that I LOVE to discover new bands. I too have my own list but it's not even close to as big as yours. Embarrassed Of the bands I have heard, I agree with almost all your ratings. I would give Zenit 4 stars though and also Viima. Great stuff! Are you going to include Black Bonzo in your list?
Best of 2006 that I've heard:
PFM-Stati Di Immaginazione
Zenit-Surrender (Best "unknown" album)
Oaksenham - Conquest of Pacific
2007:
Phideaux - Doomsday Afternoon
La Torre Del Alchimista - Neo
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 19:35
@MajesterX, good explanation, maybe i read more negativity  in your first post than there really was anyway.

I still like the Flower kings a lot though i don't listen to them as often as i used to mainly because of other bands that i find to be interesting. Generally though,  the lesser known symphonic  bands that i know  in this database don´t resemble the Flower Kings or Spock´s Beard and they differ considerably amongst each other too.

From Erik´s recommendations to you i know Nemo, Karfagen and  William Grey. Love all three of them they´re hugely different from each other but none of them try to  recreate a 70´s atmosphere. I´d say Nemo and Karfagen are the most innovative of these 3.

I can listen to Nemo and William Gray anytime, i have to be in the mood to appreciate  Karfagen´s  music fully, if you´re interested in them I´d suggest you listen to a sample of  their music first , it might not be everyone´s taste,
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 18:10
Kudos my good sir. very impressive.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 17:46
Thanks, Aussie but I have not very much Zeuhl, Rio and Avant-garde to offer, I have explored that music in the past but it's too complex/adventurous for me, at some moments even a bit nerve-racking Wacko In fact this is the place where opposites meet, aren't we LOL ?!

Edited by erik neuteboom - August 10 2007 at 18:00
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 17:42
Damn, Erik, some fine work Clap

While I'm not the biggest fan of the symph this is an irrefutable guide to a decent slice of modern prog.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 17:38
Well Firefly, when I attended an Anekdoten gig a few years ago (one of my progrock dreams: Anna Sofi and the Mellotron M400, you cannot beg for more Approve), I could witness his drumming skills, he is the backbone of Anekdoten their dynamic and atmospheric sound Clap
 
By the way, fellow reviewer Rob Palmen (Background Magazine) has become Anekdoten their manager, if you know Rob send him my kind regards Thumbs%20Up


Edited by erik neuteboom - August 10 2007 at 17:39
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 17:32

Originally posted by erik neuteboom erik neuteboom wrote:

ANEKDOTEN — A Time Of Day (****)

- My first musical encounter with Anekdoten their compelling and captivating music was when I started to write for Dutch progrock paper SI Magazine in the early Nineties. I was very lucky that in this era the Mellotron drenched Skandinavian prog had just started to florish with as good examples Anglagard, White Willow, Landberk and ... Anekdoten. I was blown away by their debut CD entitled Vemod (even more on the re- release that contains the wonderful bonus track Sad Rain). On that album they sounded very similar to King Crimson (Anekdoten began as a King Crimson cover band) but gradually their music turned into more original and quite distinctive prog with the CD From Within as my personal favorite. I was a bit disappointed about the successor Gravity so what to expect from the this new CD?

During my first listening session I got very excited, it sounds more as a succesor to From Within than Gravity featuring the distinctive melancholical vocals, the dynamic-rhythm-section and the huge tension between the mellow, compelling, propulsive and bombastic parts. Of course I am delighted about the unsurpassed sound of the omni-present Mellotron, what a moving waves! Other keyboards on this album are the Farfisa organ (especially in the captivating 30 Pieces in great interplay with the Mellotron along propulsive guitar riffs and a wonderful final part with delicate flute and lush Mellotron) and synthesizer in Stardust An Sand (mellow with twanging guitars) and Prince Of The Ocean (dreamy with soft organ waves and a beautiful closing section with Mellotron). The guitar work sounds very alternating: fiery in the poweful opener The Great Unknown, propulsive in 30 Pieces and A Sky About To Rain, sensitive in King Of Oblivion and In For A Ride and mellow acoustic twanging in Stardust And Sand. My highlight is the long composition (almost 7 minutes) In For A Ride: it starts very compelling and bombastic, then a powerful bass and a lush Mellotron sound join and halfway we can enjoy a sensitive guitar solo. The climate ranges from dreamy to bombastic featuring a bit ominous undertone, almost psychedelic and very captivating, this is Anekdoten at their best!

With this album Anekdoten has prooved again to be a current top progrock band, every song is a wonderful painting delivering exciting and colourful landscapes, as if Turner and Constable have translated their paintings into prog music, a big hand for the new Anekdoten, not to be missed!

You just made the drummer smile.  Wink


Edited by Firefly - August 10 2007 at 17:33
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erik neuteboom View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 17:13
OK Majester X, your explanation tells a lot and I am happy with it , now let's focus on the interestings bands for you because in my Symphonic Prog Appreciation thread the focus is more on bands that are/were inspired by the Classic Prog but here you can find many bands that succeeded to sound more original and modern, like Nemo, William Gray, Kotobel, Osada Vida, Karfagen, Combination Head and Ashada Thumbs%20Up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 15:33
Originally posted by Tuzvihar Tuzvihar wrote:

Originally posted by schizoid_man77 schizoid_man77 wrote:

^Get your own name!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


He joined the forum almost two years before you so you are the one who should find a new name. Stern%20Smile
 
SNAP!! Shocked
 
Looks like someone just got pwned. Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 15:27
Originally posted by schizoid_man77 schizoid_man77 wrote:

^Get your own name!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


He joined the forum almost two years before you so you are the one who should find a new name. Stern%20Smile
"Music is much like f**king, but some composers can't climax and others climax too often, leaving themselves and the listener jaded and spent."

Charles Bukowski
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 15:13
Originally posted by Dirk Dirk wrote:

^^You're quite right about Nemo and probably also about After Crying ( i don't know  them so well, I know  that other well known hungary band Solaris  better and they're certainly innovative). Still there certainly are some bands being discussed in the symphonic threads and in this database too that indeed intentionally try to recreate a 70's atmosphere or at least build upon these influences to create a modern symphonic sound, imo there's nothing wrong with that. This music is obviously not interesting to MajesterX  but why should i or others here care? I see that MajesterX likes Dream theater a lot, i like them too but certainly not as much as he does. So i generally  stay out of DT threads and polls or approach them in a mildy positive tone.I suggest to MajesterX  to do the same in regard to modern symph, to each his own.



I apologize for the generalization about modern prog bands. I guess I really don't know much about modern prog that is more obscure, so my comments were rightfully tossed aside.
I suppose I'm just sort of grudging of modern prog due to my experiences with bands like Spock's Beard and The Flower Kings, which I personally don't find original or interesting after a while of listening.

Just to clear things up, I'm not so much of a DT fan as much as I was, their new album was kind of another nail in a coffin for me. I'm not so much uninterested in modern prog (albeit it's in some way original) as I am annoyed with modern bands that exist only to provide a nostalgia trip back to the 70's.
I feel a bit idiotic now, as I've never really listened to any of the bands on the list. Exclamation
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erik neuteboom View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 14:00
As I told earlier, Glass House, I never received a single compliment from my father during my childhood so the overwhelming reactions in this thread are a perfect compensation ApproveApproveApproveApprove !
 
Honganji, thanks for your recommendations, I hope to check out the bands you mentioned Thumbs%20Up
 
Dirk, I will send your regards to Hans on Monday.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 13:55
Give him my regards Erik.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 13:46
 
 
                     I have just updated this thread with the following bands:
 
Zen Carnival/David O'Loghlen & Cotters Bequest/Hamadryad Live/Magic Pie/The Gourishankar/Karfagen/Wicked Minds Live/Infront
 
                                             Soon more will follow Thumbs%20Up
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 13:15
Well, andYouandI45, as a psychiatric nurse I need moments to relax so all those extensive listening sessions are a way to relax, I am carried away to Progheaven Approve
 
Prog-jester, you are stealing the show and my compliments with your acclaimed Ancestry review Angry ........................ LOL !
 
Norbert, I have added bands that are not on Prog Archives, like Szkitia, Random Deeds and Yesterdays from ... Hungary Wink
 
Lelnsomniac, that sounds good: Lesser And Unknown New Progrock Bands Expert, thanks Thumbs%20Up
 
Glass House and Dirk, tomorrow Hans from Progwalhalla will be back from his holiday in Spain, I hope to meet him Monday in Amsterdam, I am sure he has lots of new and interesting lesser and unknown progrock bands for me to borrow Approve
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glass house View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 13:08
Well Erik, a lot of praise here. Look at you gloat. Big%20smile LOL
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 13:04
Great job, you did!! Smile
 
By the way, how about Sound Horizon, (famous in Japan, but only anime-fans?!), Vantasma (new comer from Indonesia), Imanissimo (outstanding Indonesian progressive band), Ovni (no.1 band from El Salvador) etc.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 12:43
How did you listen to all of that with out your head exploding?
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