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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 16 2010 at 03:44
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Originally posted by <BR>I will say that, as uneven as ELP could be, I still consider them to be far superior to Transatlantic, to whom I was recently introduced through a friend.  Perhaps I haven't heard their best albums yet, but neither Stolt/Morse/Portnoy/Trewavas nor The Whirlwind have impressed me nearly as much as early ELP.  Yes, they are great musicians, and the music is easy to get into, but that is also part of its weakness - there simply doesn't seem to be as much substance here, and some of the heart seems to have gone missing as well.  I'll have to hear more of their music before I'm willing to write the band off, as I love Mike Portnoy's drums, and their recent concert video was a blast, but so far I am far less impressed than I expected to be.  <BR></td></tr></table> 
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<DIV><img src=http://www.progarchives.com/forum/smileys/smiley32.gif height=17 width=18 border=0 alt=Clap title=Clap /></DIV>[/QUOTE
I will say that, as uneven as ELP could be, I still consider them to be far superior to Transatlantic, to whom I was recently introduced through a friend.  Perhaps I haven't heard their best albums yet, but neither Stolt/Morse/Portnoy/Trewavas nor The Whirlwind have impressed me nearly as much as early ELP.  Yes, they are great musicians, and the music is easy to get into, but that is also part of its weakness - there simply doesn't seem to be as much substance here, and some of the heart seems to have gone missing as well.  I'll have to hear more of their music before I'm willing to write the band off, as I love Mike Portnoy's drums, and their recent concert video was a blast, but so far I am far less impressed than I expected to be. 
Clap
[/QUOTE wrote:

Er. thats just your opinion....Transatlantic, three studio productions all showcasing breathtaking virtuosity! the year 2009 - and they produce a SEVENTY EIGHT minute epic (and thats trumping even ELP) - Morse's dodgy religious lyrics only slightly detract from a marvellously crafted progressive rock symphony. When I listened to it for the first spin, several times the hairs on the back of my neck stood up as the music took my brain into "prog space"....You selected an unfortunate band to compare ELP with I think LOL
Er. thats just your opinion....Transatlantic, three studio productions all showcasing breathtaking virtuosity! the year 2009 - and they produce a SEVENTY EIGHT minute epic (and thats trumping even ELP) - Morse's dodgy religious lyrics only slightly detract from a marvellously crafted progressive rock symphony. When I listened to it for the first spin, several times the hairs on the back of my neck stood up as the music took my brain into "prog space"....You selected an unfortunate band to compare ELP with I think LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 16 2010 at 03:43
Originally posted by uduwudu uduwudu wrote:

the hypocrisy is bretataking but the lack of ironic self awareness just plain annoying.
 
Contrivance and pretentious? You can't get that more so with Johnny Rotten and his blasted Sex Pistols. The class dunce rules ok.  These people had the nerve to tell people not only what to listen to but to what not listen to. The art rock brigade did not hold a gun to the audience's head; freedom to choose and respect for the individual (KE 9, 2112, Awaken) gave way to punk totalatarianism.


 
Hmm... many punks also did not really "get" what McClaren, Lydon & Co were trying to do either.
 
Lydon/Pistols was no more contrived than any other band - that was one of the points. At least the Sex PIstols actually told people exactly what they were doing - "The Great Rock and Roll Swindle" is testament to this, as it jeers the Record companies that the Pistols ripped off (the same record companies that have rippied off so many artists over the generations - I think the Pistols deserve applause for their success here).
 
They made the rules while preaching anarchy - ie, the point should have been NOT to follow the rules but to do your own thing, but most punks were, as you put it, "class dunces" (Rotten/Lydon was an Art College dropout - not a dunce, as the dunce wouldn't have made it into college in the first place. On the contrary, Lydon can be scarily clever).
 
This aggressive blast of punk was what the music industry needed, though - it made it wake up and get into the 20th Century at long last - bands became more energetic, less likely to put up with rubbish from record companies, and more keen to do their own thing rather than follow the formulaic pattern - ironically, following in the shadow of the Prog Greats.
 
The Stranglers are an excellent example - although the Stranglers were worse than The Pistols when it came to pretending to being something they weren't.
 
They were so far away from being dumb punks it's not funny - but they behaved like them.
 
Then they released astonishing albums like "The Raven" and "Aural Sculpture".
 
The Sex PIstols can be seen as real artists (and I understand that some of the original members played previously in Prog or Prog-related bands or as session musicians - can't remember which). Lydon was famous as being a Hammill fan, and probably did not, as his T-Shirt boldly proclaimed, hate Pink Floyd. It was all part of the image - you had to "be there".
 
They weren't top-notch musicians, but were no slouches either, until Sid Vicious got signed up and things got out of hand.
 
The Pistols lied to everybody about everything - that was one of the core ideas of the band - to spread anarchy and chaos - and they did.
 
 
Much like ELP did in their music... (and I don't necessarily mean that in a bad way Wink).
The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 16 2010 at 03:31
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Originally posted by Keyspoet Keyspoet wrote:



Is the music self-indulgent?  Yes, in fact, all great music must be to some extent, as any songwriter who is writing for the fans rather than to please him- or herself has already lost much of the passion needed to really shine.  Steven Wilson is a good example of this, as is Mariusz Duda, of the Porcupine Tree - influenced projects Riverside and Lunatic Soul.  A songwriter - or any kind of writer, really - has first and foremost to please him- or herself, and only then, after that is accomplished, to try to put it together in such a way as to please the fan base.  Otherwise it can only be derivative.

Little indulgences, such as Are You Ready Eddie or Lucky Man, can serve the albums well, rather than detract, if only to serve as a radical change of pace.  I, for one, cannot imagine Jethro Tull's brilliant Passion Play absent The Hare Who Lost His Spectacles.  And Pictures at an Exhibition was a milestone, up to and including Nutrocker - what's the big deal about letting the band have a little fun?  It is their album, after all.  ;-) 

Clap


, fun. A bit like with Zappa Mother's 1971 Fillmore East album. The build up and release with the fun performance of Happy Togther was superb timing. Fun, amongst all that serious comedy (sic.) Good album to go with mildly intoxicating refreshments (IMHO!) I thought Nut rocker was one of those perfect moments. The virtuosity is there but te context changed. After the serious Pictures comes a superbly played bit of fun with a certain sense of self irony. And ELP were a 1995 warm up act for Tull.

So there's nothing wrong with self indulgence, etc, it's just that certain media types imply there is something suspect.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 16 2010 at 03:24
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Originally posted by uduwudu uduwudu wrote:

The thing with all the criticisms of punk vs prog are a bit ridiculous. As we are forever being reminded rock is supposed to be young persons' (teen) rebellion music, re write the rules and be new. So in 1967 - 69 rock exploded in crativity and in 1976 - 1977 certain self important wind bags (the hypocrisy is bretataking but the lack of ironic self awareness just plain annoying.) They (media especially) clamped down on on rock. It had to be 3 chords 'n' the truth. While it's easier to review punk and focus on safety pins and not be too worried about time signatures it made for damned boring rock. Punk wasn't that fast, it certainly was not good generally. Funny - a bit.

But the irony. Rock is only supposed to re write the rules but only in a very restrictive format and little or no deviations. Rewrite the rules but only if they have been set out before hand.

Contrivance and pretentious? You can't get that more so with Johnny Rotten and his blasted Sex Pistols. The class dunce rules ok.  These people had the nerve to tell people not only what to listen to but to what not listen to. The art rock brigade did not hold a gun to the audience's head; freedom to choose and respect for the individual (KE 9, 2112, Awaken) gave way to punk totalatarianism.

You might think this was a long time ago and is irrelevant. But only a few years ago my Zeppelin T shirt got look of bitter hatred from a SEx Pistols T shirt (wearer obviously.) Or just lok at te tensions arising when at a Cancer Benefit concert  by Pplant, Who, Paul Weller (whose band backed, poorly, Jimmy Page)

Be careful of those imposing their views. They are entitled to express - I had no problem with that but when they sneer at ELP etc for being what they are, or for not being what others think they should be we have to be careful.

Oh yes, I recall an interview with someone...Bill Bruford? Not sure but he was at an awards show and spotted Johnny Rotten getting on very well with Phil Collins. The interviewee remarked that sight was "not ... quite right" after all the torture punk exerted.

Fact is The Nice (very important to ELP) then ELP made some of the most innovative non guitar rock and classical music at a time when hindsight was still ahead. They made great albums, displayed a sense of humour (very dangerous) when mosty rock fans seem very serious and especialy with punk rective and reactionary.

ELP developed music. They created and were innovative technically - electronically. They could expand on stated themes and get incredibly intricate and still play with energy. t a  great concert band.

This was a very fertile period of rock - only over  but the past 10 years has it been allowed to quietly (nothing too overt) grow.

Keith Emerson reformed the Nice, now it's ELP's turn. Maybe a last hurrah but hopefully people will get to hear ELP as they heard Zeppelin at O2. How so many people said they had not heard music like that!

There we have my periodic anti punk post prog rant. ELP made mainly great albums, some lesser moments but maintaining consistent greatness is very difficult in the face of so much (just see P.A.'s Ray Bennett, Flash) interview for what that can really mean.

Bless their artistry.





ClapClapClapClap


I was going to make a long post, but you've pretty much said most of it more eloquently than I could. Just to add that The Stranglers - the most adventurous UK 'punk' band - said that for a movement which was supposed to be about freedom, punk had an awful lot of rules. Needless to say they were not very popular with their peers.



Edited by Cactus Choir - March 16 2010 at 03:25
"And now...on the drums...Mick Underwooooooooood!!!"

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 16 2010 at 02:39
Originally posted by Keyspoet Keyspoet wrote:

Growing up in L.A., my first ELP album was Tarkus, and came by way of a record review club in existence at the time - they sent you two or three albums a month, you sent them your reviews, and they would send you more albums.  Most of the albums were unreleased generic presses in plain white cardboard sleeves, some good and some pretty abysmal, but occasionally they would send out a recently released album by a recognized artist, such as Tarkus.  Too bad I no longer have most of the albums.  ;-)

Both of my parents were pianists, my father specializing in jazz and my mother in classical, and so I was blown away by the album since it had such strong jazz and classical influences.  I was already a fan of Greg Lake's voice, probably because of The Court of the Crimson King, and quickly became a huge fan of Keith Emerson, since I am also a synth junkie (another favorite album of the period was Switched on Bach by Walter /Wendy Carlos).  And Carl Palmer on drums was a masterstroke - driving, understated, or all out rocking, he ranks among the best.

The problem with ELP in the early 70s is the same as that with Porcupine Tree and Steven Wilson's other projects today - the music has so many references, musical and otherwise, that it takes intelligence and effort to really get it fully, and the majority of listeners simply won't bother taking the time.  I often find it a rather accurate intelligence test when people "don't get" bands such as ELP, King Crimson or Porcupine Tree, as their comments often betray.  Then again, perhaps they simply have yet to really listen intently.

Is the music self-indulgent?  Yes, in fact, all great music must be to some extent, as any songwriter who is writing for the fans rather than to please him- or herself has already lost much of the passion needed to really shine.  Steven Wilson is a good example of this, as is Mariusz Duda, of the Porcupine Tree - influenced projects Riverside and Lunatic Soul.  A songwriter - or any kind of writer, really - has first and foremost to please him- or herself, and only then, after that is accomplished, to try to put it together in such a way as to please the fan base.  Otherwise it can only be derivative.

Little indulgences, such as Are You Ready Eddie or Lucky Man, can serve the albums well, rather than detract, if only to serve as a radical change of pace.  I, for one, cannot imagine Jethro Tull's brilliant Passion Play absent The Hare Who Lost His Spectacles.  And Pictures at an Exhibition was a milestone, up to and including Nutrocker - what's the big deal about letting the band have a little fun?  It is their album, after all.  ;-) 

I am also a Yes fan, but although they put out a number of albums and pieces I absolutely love, I do not consider them to be in the same class musically speaking as ELP.  As arguably the first supergroup, ELP really were in a class by themselves, and it is too bad that they weren't able to overcome their differences sufficiently to keep it going.  Than again, that is only my wish as a fan, which speaks not at all to their own aspirations, then or now.

I will say that, as uneven as ELP could be, I still consider them to be far superior to Transatlantic, to whom I was recently introduced through a friend.  Perhaps I haven't heard their best albums yet, but neither Stolt/Morse/Portnoy/Trewavas nor The Whirlwind have impressed me nearly as much as early ELP.  Yes, they are great musicians, and the music is easy to get into, but that is also part of its weakness - there simply doesn't seem to be as much substance here, and some of the heart seems to have gone missing as well.  I'll have to hear more of their music before I'm willing to write the band off, as I love Mike Portnoy's drums, and their recent concert video was a blast, but so far I am far less impressed than I expected to be. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 16 2010 at 02:37
The thing with all the criticisms of punk vs prog are a bit ridiculous. As we are forever being reminded rock is supposed to be young persons' (teen) rebellion music, re write the rules and be new. So in 1967 - 69 rock exploded in crativity and in 1976 - 1977 certain self important wind bags (the hypocrisy is bretataking but the lack of ironic self awareness just plain annoying.) They (media especially) clamped down on on rock. It had to be 3 chords 'n' the truth. While it's easier to review punk and focus on safety pins and not be too worried about time signatures it made for damned boring rock. Punk wasn't that fast, it certainly was not good generally. Funny - a bit.

But the irony. Rock is only supposed to re write the rules but only in a very restrictive format and little or no deviations. Rewrite the rules but only if they have been set out before hand.

Contrivance and pretentious? You can't get that more so with Johnny Rotten and his blasted Sex Pistols. The class dunce rules ok.  These people had the nerve to tell people not only what to listen to but to what not listen to. The art rock brigade did not hold a gun to the audience's head; freedom to choose and respect for the individual (KE 9, 2112, Awaken) gave way to punk totalatarianism.

You might think this was a long time ago and is irrelevant. But only a few years ago my Zeppelin T shirt got look of bitter hatred from a SEx Pistols T shirt (wearer obviously.) Or just lok at te tensions arising when at a Cancer Benefit concert  by Pplant, Who, Paul Weller (whose band backed, poorly, Jimmy Page)

Be careful of those imposing their views. They are entitled to express - I had no problem with that but when they sneer at ELP etc for being what they are, or for not being what others think they should be we have to be careful.

Oh yes, I recall an interview with someone...Bill Bruford? Not sure but he was at an awards show and spotted Johnny Rotten getting on very well with Phil Collins. The interviewee remarked that sight was "not ... quite right" after all the torture punk exerted.

Fact is The Nice (very important to ELP) then ELP made some of the most innovative non guitar rock and classical music at a time when hindsight was still ahead. They made great albums, displayed a sense of humour (very dangerous) when mosty rock fans seem very serious and especialy with punk rective and reactionary.

ELP developed music. They created and were innovative technically - electronically. They could expand on stated themes and get incredibly intricate and still play with energy. t a  great concert band.

This was a very fertile period of rock - only over  but the past 10 years has it been allowed to quietly (nothing too overt) grow.

Keith Emerson reformed the Nice, now it's ELP's turn. Maybe a last hurrah but hopefully people will get to hear ELP as they heard Zeppelin at O2. How so many people said they had not heard music like that!

There we have my periodic anti punk post prog rant. ELP made mainly great albums, some lesser moments but maintaining consistent greatness is very difficult in the face of so much (just see P.A.'s Ray Bennett, Flash) interview for what that can really mean.

Bless their artistry.



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 16 2010 at 01:53
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Brain Salad Surgery is yay
Trilogy is okay
Tarkus is first
The debut is worst
Pictures at an Exhibition is grand
Almost everything else is bland


I nominate Epignosis as our Poet Laureate. Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 16 2010 at 01:40

ELP rocks, and were undeniably the best prog band of the classic era for one plain and simple reason: they said they were. 

While I must admit, their best album (Brain Salad (in my opinion)) is not as good as the best of, say, Genesis, Crimso, and that flute playing band I'm so fond of, ELP just had the pure stones to do whatever the crap they felt like, call it art, and put it on an album. They were the KINGS of one-up-man-ship in the business. 

"How long is your longest track? A side? HA! WE wrote a song that's a side and a half long. And how many cartoon armadillos do your lyrics reference? What? Only two? Ours reference SEVEN. And how many orchestras did you take on tour to cripple your budget? Hmm? What's that? Losersaywhat?"

Yeah. Thought so.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 16 2010 at 00:58
Originally posted by Tursake Tursake wrote:

Originally posted by Blacksword Blacksword wrote:

For me personally, I dont rate ELP very highly for the following simple reasons:

Lack of guitar, inadequately compensated for by the other instruments.

They massacre classical music in a way which should be punishable in law!



For me lack of guitar is just a nice change of pace, I'm getting tired of modern bands never using something as awesome as Hammond organs, and they certainly don't massacre classical music. They make it much more interesting, I can't imagine myself listening to the original of version of The Nutcracker, Nutrocker is way better Big smile
You can't see it, but I'm crying tears of blood. If you're serious, I hope one day you are embarrassed to have said that.


Edited by Henry Plainview - March 16 2010 at 01:11
if you own a sodastream i hate you
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 16 2010 at 00:52
I posted the text below in the other "ELP appreciation thread" but allow me to copy it here which is where it belongs. Apologies for the duplication.
 
It still does not fit into my head that this amazing band has got  NOT EVEN ONE album with 5 stars at PA, I find it unbelievable.
When I see for example that Arena's Contagion, or Mike Oldfield's Amarok to name a couple have 5 stars... sure they are good albums and all my respect to Arena and Oldfield, but... that they can be rated higher than ELP debut, Pictures, Tarkus, Trilogy, Brain Salad or Welcome Back ???  sorry I still do not get it Shocked
 
Some people say they would not rate ELPs albums with 5 stars because of Are You Ready Eddy, or of Lucky Man or of Benny the Bouncer... well I think that's very cruel, 'More fool me' is not a masterpiece and 'I know what I like' neither in my opinion, but I still give 5 stars to Selling England by the Pound (as most others do, seen that it's got the 5 star average).
 
I do not put ELP on the altar as demi-gods or whatever, they made some really weak songs and after Welcome Back they became bland and at times even pathetic, and I'm the first one to say so. But their good music... my god it belongs to the 'creme-de-la-creme' without question!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 15 2010 at 18:40
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by Tursake Tursake wrote:

  I can't imagine myself listening to the original of version of The Nutcracker, Nutrocker is way better Big smile
 
"Nutrocker" was originally by B Bumble and the Stingers in 1962, wasn't it?
Correct - Kim Fowley plays Tchaickovsky and manages a respectable draw.
'Like so many of you
I've got my doubts about how much to contribute
to the already rich among us...'

Robert Wyatt, Gloria Gloom


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 15 2010 at 18:32
and that masterpiece would be their first album, just because of the drum solo aloneQuestion

assume the power 1586/14.3
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 15 2010 at 18:24
Originally posted by Petrovsk Mizinski Petrovsk Mizinski wrote:

ELP  = Elephants Love Penis.

or something like that

That resumes the band quite perfectly. A guy with egos inflated to the maximum, writing music as big and pretentious and ostentatious and elephantistic as possible, in what amounts to the ultimate in rock masturbation, hence the genitalia reference. 

Or: a mammoth that stepped in classical music pieces that should have been left well alone. 

Or: A band that released ONE great masterpiece where their dreams or aiming higher actually paid off. 


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 15 2010 at 17:51
I could never ridicule or hate ELP's music, it is too intelligent for that. Their classical music connections are neither pretentious or "off the mark"-i find that aspect really cool, as i have a love affair with classical music itself, as well. I can listen to their Pictures At An Exhibition, and also appreciate the purely orchestral version (would recommend the Toscanini and the NBC Symphony version) and both are justified. The jazz element is also interesting, and worthwhile. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 15 2010 at 16:59
Growing up in L.A., my first ELP album was Tarkus, and came by way of a record review club in existence at the time - they sent you two or three albums a month, you sent them your reviews, and they would send you more albums.  Most of the albums were unreleased generic presses in plain white cardboard sleeves, some good and some pretty abysmal, but occasionally they would send out a recently released album by a recognized artist, such as Tarkus.  Too bad I no longer have most of the albums.  ;-)

Both of my parents were pianists, my father specializing in jazz and my mother in classical, and so I was blown away by the album since it had such strong jazz and classical influences.  I was already a fan of Greg Lake's voice, probably because of The Court of the Crimson King, and quickly became a huge fan of Keith Emerson, since I am also a synth junkie (another favorite album of the period was Switched on Bach by Walter /Wendy Carlos).  And Carl Palmer on drums was a masterstroke - driving, understated, or all out rocking, he ranks among the best.

The problem with ELP in the early 70s is the same as that with Porcupine Tree and Steven Wilson's other projects today - the music has so many references, musical and otherwise, that it takes intelligence and effort to really get it fully, and the majority of listeners simply won't bother taking the time.  I often find it a rather accurate intelligence test when people "don't get" bands such as ELP, King Crimson or Porcupine Tree, as their comments often betray.  Then again, perhaps they simply have yet to really listen intently.

Is the music self-indulgent?  Yes, in fact, all great music must be to some extent, as any songwriter who is writing for the fans rather than to please him- or herself has already lost much of the passion needed to really shine.  Steven Wilson is a good example of this, as is Mariusz Duda, of the Porcupine Tree - influenced projects Riverside and Lunatic Soul.  A songwriter - or any kind of writer, really - has first and foremost to please him- or herself, and only then, after that is accomplished, to try to put it together in such a way as to please the fan base.  Otherwise it can only be derivative.

Little indulgences, such as Are You Ready Eddie or Lucky Man, can serve the albums well, rather than detract, if only to serve as a radical change of pace.  I, for one, cannot imagine Jethro Tull's brilliant Passion Play absent The Hare Who Lost His Spectacles.  And Pictures at an Exhibition was a milestone, up to and including Nutrocker - what's the big deal about letting the band have a little fun?  It is their album, after all.  ;-) 

I am also a Yes fan, but although they put out a number of albums and pieces I absolutely love, I do not consider them to be in the same class musically speaking as ELP.  As arguably the first supergroup, ELP really were in a class by themselves, and it is too bad that they weren't able to overcome their differences sufficiently to keep it going.  Than again, that is only my wish as a fan, which speaks not at all to their own aspirations, then or now.

I will say that, as uneven as ELP could be, I still consider them to be far superior to Transatlantic, to whom I was recently introduced through a friend.  Perhaps I haven't heard their best albums yet, but neither Stolt/Morse/Portnoy/Trewavas nor The Whirlwind have impressed me nearly as much as early ELP.  Yes, they are great musicians, and the music is easy to get into, but that is also part of its weakness - there simply doesn't seem to be as much substance here, and some of the heart seems to have gone missing as well.  I'll have to hear more of their music before I'm willing to write the band off, as I love Mike Portnoy's drums, and their recent concert video was a blast, but so far I am far less impressed than I expected to be. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 15 2010 at 16:10
Originally posted by Tursake Tursake wrote:


Originally posted by Blacksword Blacksword wrote:

For me personally, I dont rate ELP very highly for the
following simple reasons:

Lack of guitar, inadequately compensated for by the other
instruments.

They massacre classical music in a way which should be punishable in
law!

For me lack of guitar is just a nice change of pace, I'm getting tired of modern bands never using something as awesome as Hammond organs, and they certainly don't massacre classical music. They make it much more interesting, I can't imagine myself listening to the original of version of The Nutcracker, Nutrocker is way better Big smile


It actually sounds like there is something missing, whereas in VDGG - also noted for lack of guitar - the sax, and general cacophony ( ) seems to fill in the gaps.

For me, ELP are three excellent musicans who make valiant attempts to hit the target, but on most occassions, simply miss.

With regard to classical music, I find their Pictures at an Exhibition almost unlistenable, surpassed only their toe curling rendition of 'Mars. The Bringer of war' with Cozy Powell.

I'm a prog fan, and will give anything a go, and over the years I've acquired 5 ELP albums, including ELPowell. They have come up with some gems in their time. I like the Tarkus suite a lot. Lucky Man also moves me. There's even tracks on ELPowell and Black Moon I like, but alongside the other prog heavy weights of the 70's, I think they were too inconsistent.

I'm going to see them - hopefully - at the High Voltage festival this summer. I'm sure I'll enjoy them. They have a well deserved reputation as great showman.
Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 15 2010 at 16:03
Originally posted by himtroy himtroy wrote:

I place Pictures at An Exhibition, Self Titled, and Tarkus (Song not album) pretty high up, the rest I don't really care for except a song or two off of Trilogy.

And if we're going to bring up Egg....Egg at their worst is better than ELP at their best.  Except Egg was far too consistent to have a worst.
From what I've heard of Egg they are actually more comparable to The Nice. Personally I find Egg to be not very interesting. My love of ELP was never based on any classical appreciation but more Carl Palmers sheer force and speed on the drumkit and the inventiveness of the music. It took a while for me to get to appreciate the classical aspects of their music.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 15 2010 at 15:57
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by Tursake Tursake wrote:

  I can't imagine myself listening to the original of version of The Nutcracker, Nutrocker is way better Big smile
 
"Nutrocker" was originally by B Bumble and the Stingers in 1962, wasn't it?
Yes and then I think rereleased on the back of ELP's version
Nutrocker is also the only ELP track my Dad ever likedBig smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 15 2010 at 15:09
Originally posted by Tursake Tursake wrote:

  I can't imagine myself listening to the original of version of The Nutcracker, Nutrocker is way better Big smile
 
"Nutrocker" was originally by B Bumble and the Stingers in 1962, wasn't it?
The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 15 2010 at 12:44
Originally posted by Blacksword Blacksword wrote:

For me personally, I dont rate ELP very highly for the following simple reasons:

Lack of guitar, inadequately compensated for by the other instruments.

They massacre classical music in a way which should be punishable in law!



For me lack of guitar is just a nice change of pace, I'm getting tired of modern bands never using something as awesome as Hammond organs, and they certainly don't massacre classical music. They make it much more interesting, I can't imagine myself listening to the original of version of The Nutcracker, Nutrocker is way better Big smile

Edited by Tursake - March 15 2010 at 12:46

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