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Topic ClosedThe fathers of Prog Metal

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Poll Question: Which band would you call the fathers of Prog Metal
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
28 [41.79%]
20 [29.85%]
19 [28.36%]
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 21 2013 at 01:22
I'd agree that Progmetal simply progressed and probably did not have a single father; the problem is that Rush was not Metal by any stretch nor Sabbath progressive (small 'p') by any equal stretch.   I'm comfortable with Maiden being claimed as the first true progressive metal band, but would share that honor somewhat with what Ozzy & Randy were doing at the same time.  

I also agree that Progmetal was more a spawn of metal than prog, but in a more subtle way.   Maiden's music was wholly original and the energy of the circa 1980 line-up was coming from a fresh place.   Maiden's sound and approach was new, and that was clear to anyone who heard them.   This was not Priest or Sabbath or Zeppelin or Queen or the Scorps or Rush.   Heavy?   Absolutely.   Progressive?   You bet.   Harris, Murray, Di'Anno were fine musicians all, and they wanted to show what they could do with a tight unit that could do very heavy and very complex at the same time.   That was unusual, and it got them a strong following early on.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 21 2013 at 00:26
IF there can be just one father.  It's never that linear in music.  Obv, prog metal was influenced by lots of bands that may not have been metal or may not have had prog elements even.   Uli Roth, Michael Schenker and, a little after them, Eddie Van Halen popularised shred metal and that is a very important part of prog metal.   The prog elements are derived more from Rush rather than Iron Maiden.   Iron Maiden too internalised some elements of Rush's music but say the prog part of DT derives much more from Rush than IM.   IM was a bigger influence on early prog metal acts like Queensryche or Fates Warning.  By the time DT arrived, the metal elements were derived more from Metallica.  What was NWOBHM at the beginning of the 80s was already just hard rock by the end of that decade.  

Edited by rogerthat - September 21 2013 at 00:26
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 21 2013 at 00:04
I thought that Rogerthat and Dean already decided the fathers of prog metal are Iron Maiden.
We can all go home now.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2013 at 23:16
Sabbath is a bit confusing.  They became 'just' metal (rather than early/proto-metal) once Dio joined as the frontman.  They tried to go back to their 70s sound with Gillian but thereafter, the Tony Martin albums again stuck to 80s metal.   Sabbath, JP, Scorpions actually became heavier in the 80s (JP were already metal and just crossed over even more to the speed metal side of things) while DP and Rainbow mellowed down a bit.   I don't know much about UFO post Michael Schenker but I guess they too fell over to the hard rock side in the 80s rather than the proto metal of Lights Out?  Another thing about Sabbath is the 70s albums, especially Sabbath Bloody Sabbath/Sabotage were more prog-related while the full on metal albums of the 80s were much more straight up.   I tend to agree with Dean that Dio-Sabbath influenced power metal rather than prog metal.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2013 at 20:44
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Jbird Jbird wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Unfortunately Wikipedia wasn't alive in the 1970 so cannot be regarded as the definitive reference.

Regardless of what we decide to call those rock dinosaurs now, they were never call metal back then.

I was in school in the '70s, we certainly called Black Sabbath 'heavy metal', at least by the latter half of the '70s.

Even back then there were arguments on whether Rush, Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Aerosmith, etc were heavy metal....at least me and my friends had those discussions when we were in high school (again, late '70s).

To the best of my memory (which can fail me at times), my circle of friends would've said bands like Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, Scorpions, Motorhead, maybe even early Kiss were heavy metal, bands like LZ, Rush, Deep Purple, Thin Lizzy, etc were not.


Again, I'm talking about mid-late '70s and not early '70s like Dean, but I've always thought that albums like Black Sabbath's self-titled, 'Paranoid', & 'Master Of Reality' were heavy metal. I never thought of them in any way as being prog, though.
Since I use the precident that I knew of the term Prog Rock in Britain back in the early 70s as proof that it wasn't a terminology that was invented in the mid 80s, then I concede the point that Heavy Metal existed as a terminology in the Mid to Late 70s in the USA and it was possibly used as a synonym for Heavy Rock and Hard Rock, just as Prog Rock was a synonym for Art Rock, Avant Garde Rock and even (I kid you not) Techno-Rock back then. As is the case today, the propencity for bands to resist labels and pigeonholling tends to make musicology an inexact science, even some 70s Glam Rock bands resisted the "Glam" tag (while wholeheartedly leaping upon the lucrative bandwagon)..
 
 
Without the levelling nature of the Internet, these terminologies were very parochial and oft specific to one particular music magazine or weekly newspaper - in the UK we knew of the existance of Rolling Stone, but we read NME and Melody Maker, Cream was practically unheard of and never seen on the magazine shelves in the local newsagent. Even so, to call Masters of Reality or Paranoid Heavy Metal in 1977 or 2013 is a hindsight back-definition, in 1970/71 it was Heavy Rock


I have a completely different experience, Dean. In the States, particularly where I grew up (the Detroit area), the term "heavy metal" was used interchangeably with "hard rock" to describe early 70s bands like Sabbath, Mountain, certain  Zeppelin songs, Grand Funk, and earlier bands like Electric Flag, Savage Grace and the Amboy Dukes (particularly the albums just prior to Ted Nugent going solo) -- although "hard rock" was used most often; whereas the term "prog rock" was never used that I can recall. We read Creem and Rolling Stone back then, and many reviews used the term "heavy metal" (taken, or so I believed, from Steppenwolf's "Born to be Wild"), but never prog or progressive.
Confused that's what I said.


I was referencing the fact that the term "heavy metal" was used where I grew up, but never prog (not in the 70s at least). I was merely reiterating the differences in parlance due to geography (and/or culture), even though you and I are referring to the same damn thing.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2013 at 19:59
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Jbird Jbird wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Unfortunately Wikipedia wasn't alive in the 1970 so cannot be regarded as the definitive reference.

Regardless of what we decide to call those rock dinosaurs now, they were never call metal back then.

I was in school in the '70s, we certainly called Black Sabbath 'heavy metal', at least by the latter half of the '70s.

Even back then there were arguments on whether Rush, Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Aerosmith, etc were heavy metal....at least me and my friends had those discussions when we were in high school (again, late '70s).

To the best of my memory (which can fail me at times), my circle of friends would've said bands like Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, Scorpions, Motorhead, maybe even early Kiss were heavy metal, bands like LZ, Rush, Deep Purple, Thin Lizzy, etc were not.


Again, I'm talking about mid-late '70s and not early '70s like Dean, but I've always thought that albums like Black Sabbath's self-titled, 'Paranoid', & 'Master Of Reality' were heavy metal. I never thought of them in any way as being prog, though.
Since I use the precident that I knew of the term Prog Rock in Britain back in the early 70s as proof that it wasn't a terminology that was invented in the mid 80s, then I concede the point that Heavy Metal existed as a terminology in the Mid to Late 70s in the USA and it was possibly used as a synonym for Heavy Rock and Hard Rock, just as Prog Rock was a synonym for Art Rock, Avant Garde Rock and even (I kid you not) Techno-Rock back then. As is the case today, the propencity for bands to resist labels and pigeonholling tends to make musicology an inexact science, even some 70s Glam Rock bands resisted the "Glam" tag (while wholeheartedly leaping upon the lucrative bandwagon)..
 
 
Without the levelling nature of the Internet, these terminologies were very parochial and oft specific to one particular music magazine or weekly newspaper - in the UK we knew of the existance of Rolling Stone, but we read NME and Melody Maker, Cream was practically unheard of and never seen on the magazine shelves in the local newsagent. Even so, to call Masters of Reality or Paranoid Heavy Metal in 1977 or 2013 is a hindsight back-definition, in 1970/71 it was Heavy Rock


I have a completely different experience, Dean. In the States, particularly where I grew up (the Detroit area), the term "heavy metal" was used interchangeably with "hard rock" to describe early 70s bands like Sabbath, Mountain, certain  Zeppelin songs, Grand Funk, and earlier bands like Electric Flag, Savage Grace and the Amboy Dukes (particularly the albums just prior to Ted Nugent going solo) -- although "hard rock" was used most often; whereas the term "prog rock" was never used that I can recall. We read Creem and Rolling Stone back then, and many reviews used the term "heavy metal" (taken, or so I believed, from Steppenwolf's "Born to be Wild"), but never prog or progressive.
Confused that's what I said.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2013 at 19:54
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Jbird Jbird wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Unfortunately Wikipedia wasn't alive in the 1970 so cannot be regarded as the definitive reference.

Regardless of what we decide to call those rock dinosaurs now, they were never call metal back then.

I was in school in the '70s, we certainly called Black Sabbath 'heavy metal', at least by the latter half of the '70s.

Even back then there were arguments on whether Rush, Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Aerosmith, etc were heavy metal....at least me and my friends had those discussions when we were in high school (again, late '70s).

To the best of my memory (which can fail me at times), my circle of friends would've said bands like Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, Scorpions, Motorhead, maybe even early Kiss were heavy metal, bands like LZ, Rush, Deep Purple, Thin Lizzy, etc were not.


Again, I'm talking about mid-late '70s and not early '70s like Dean, but I've always thought that albums like Black Sabbath's self-titled, 'Paranoid', & 'Master Of Reality' were heavy metal. I never thought of them in any way as being prog, though.
Since I use the precident that I knew of the term Prog Rock in Britain back in the early 70s as proof that it wasn't a terminology that was invented in the mid 80s, then I concede the point that Heavy Metal existed as a terminology in the Mid to Late 70s in the USA and it was possibly used as a synonym for Heavy Rock and Hard Rock, just as Prog Rock was a synonym for Art Rock, Avant Garde Rock and even (I kid you not) Techno-Rock back then. As is the case today, the propencity for bands to resist labels and pigeonholling tends to make musicology an inexact science, even some 70s Glam Rock bands resisted the "Glam" tag (while wholeheartedly leaping upon the lucrative bandwagon)..
 
 
Without the levelling nature of the Internet, these terminologies were very parochial and oft specific to one particular music magazine or weekly newspaper - in the UK we knew of the existance of Rolling Stone, but we read NME and Melody Maker, Cream was practically unheard of and never seen on the magazine shelves in the local newsagent. Even so, to call Masters of Reality or Paranoid Heavy Metal in 1977 or 2013 is a hindsight back-definition, in 1970/71 it was Heavy Rock


I have a completely different experience, Dean. In the States, particularly where I grew up (the Detroit area), the term "heavy metal" was used interchangeably with "hard rock" to describe early 70s bands like Sabbath, Mountain, certain  Zeppelin songs, Grand Funk, and earlier bands like Electric Flag, Savage Grace and the Amboy Dukes (particularly the albums just prior to Ted Nugent going solo) -- although "hard rock" was used most often; whereas the term "prog rock" was never used that I can recall. We read Creem and Rolling Stone back then, and many reviews used the term "heavy metal" (taken, or so I believed, from Steppenwolf's "Born to be Wild"), but never prog or progressive.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2013 at 10:52
Originally posted by Jbird Jbird wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Unfortunately Wikipedia wasn't alive in the 1970 so cannot be regarded as the definitive reference.

Regardless of what we decide to call those rock dinosaurs now, they were never call metal back then.

I was in school in the '70s, we certainly called Black Sabbath 'heavy metal', at least by the latter half of the '70s.

Even back then there were arguments on whether Rush, Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Aerosmith, etc were heavy metal....at least me and my friends had those discussions when we were in high school (again, late '70s).

To the best of my memory (which can fail me at times), my circle of friends would've said bands like Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, Scorpions, Motorhead, maybe even early Kiss were heavy metal, bands like LZ, Rush, Deep Purple, Thin Lizzy, etc were not.


Again, I'm talking about mid-late '70s and not early '70s like Dean, but I've always thought that albums like Black Sabbath's self-titled, 'Paranoid', & 'Master Of Reality' were heavy metal. I never thought of them in any way as being prog, though.
Since I use the precident that I knew of the term Prog Rock in Britain back in the early 70s as proof that it wasn't a terminology that was invented in the mid 80s, then I concede the point that Heavy Metal existed as a terminology in the Mid to Late 70s in the USA and it was possibly used as a synonym for Heavy Rock and Hard Rock, just as Prog Rock was a synonym for Art Rock, Avant Garde Rock and even (I kid you not) Techno-Rock back then. As is the case today, the propencity for bands to resist labels and pigeonholling tends to make musicology an inexact science, even some 70s Glam Rock bands resisted the "Glam" tag (while wholeheartedly leaping upon the lucrative bandwagon)..
 
 
Without the levelling nature of the Internet, these terminologies were very parochial and oft specific to one particular music magazine or weekly newspaper - in the UK we knew of the existance of Rolling Stone, but we read NME and Melody Maker, Cream was practically unheard of and never seen on the magazine shelves in the local newsagent. Even so, to call Masters of Reality or Paranoid Heavy Metal in 1977 or 2013 is a hindsight back-definition, in 1970/71 it was Heavy Rock
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2013 at 10:47
Since it seems difficult to find out who is the father of Prog Metal, maybe we should try to determinate who is the mother?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2013 at 10:26

Based on the poll....I still say Rush, but obviously the fact that Black Sabbath is not even mentioned in the PA portion of Progmetal, an amendment seems logical.

Did BS influence current progmetal bands? Who knows...ask the bands.....but I do feel they should be included in a list of early metal bands as influencial, to what degree, again who knows.
 
To me Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow had more prog attributes in their music than BS did....and I always considered Rainbow to be metal back in the day.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2013 at 09:39
Ah, this is back in the halcyon days when the biggest argument at our local rock club was whether bands were heavy metal, hard rock, or prog (plus the usual divisions over whether American or British was best - you couldn't like both!)

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2013 at 09:28
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Unfortunately Wikipedia wasn't alive in the 1970 so cannot be regarded as the definitive reference.

Regardless of what we decide to call those rock dinosaurs now, they were never call metal back then.

I was in school in the '70s, we certainly called Black Sabbath 'heavy metal', at least by the latter half of the '70s.

Even back then there were arguments on whether Rush, Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Aerosmith, etc were heavy metal....at least me and my friends had those discussions when we were in high school (again, late '70s).

To the best of my memory (which can fail me at times), my circle of friends would've said bands like Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, Scorpions, Motorhead, maybe even early Kiss were heavy metal, bands like LZ, Rush, Deep Purple, Thin Lizzy, etc were not.


Again, I'm talking about mid-late '70s and not early '70s like Dean, but I've always thought that albums like Black Sabbath's self-titled, 'Paranoid', & 'Master Of Reality' were heavy metal. I never thought of them in any way as being prog, though.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2013 at 06:34
Have not read the entire thread but Sabbath in the early 70's ( I was there) was commonly referred to as ' Underground'. I would definitely say they were the fathers of metal and prog metal for that matter. Rainbow, Judas Priest, Iron Maiden followed in their wake. IMHO of course.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2013 at 05:55
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

lol, how about that, wiki contradicting itself.  Anyway I don't agree with defining Sabbath in general as rock.  By the time of Heaven and Hell, they were certainly a metal band in the 80s sense of the word, notwithstanding the influence of their 70s work on metal.   By the way, Judas Priest is missing in this discussion.  The only real qualification Iron Maiden have over Judas Priest is they have a few more long tracks with non standard structures and also the occasional instrumentals.   But JP more or less tick all 8 boxes and, erm, embraced changes to their sound a lot more willingly than Iron Maiden imho.  Wink   There is also no doubt that Iron Maiden were and are a lot more popular than JP and influence goes hand in hand with that to some extent.
I would single out Judas Priest as the fathers of Power Metal rather than Prog Metal, and with them there is the triumvirate of Purple/Rainbow/Sabbath/Dio and Scorpions/UFO/MSB and practically everything from NWOBHM.
 
Speaking of triumvirates, there are three superficially similar (though not entirely unrelated) subgenres of Metal: Progressive Metal, Power Metal and Symphonic Metal, the origins of which are different but partly share a common pool of Metal and Heavy Rock influences. However, it is how those influences are used that differentiates them, which is why we haven't added Stratovarious into Prog Metal and Judas Priest into Prog Related for example (Nightwish are an annomoly here, an over-zealous adddition of a Symphonic Metal band from a time before we had a formal PMT as custodians of the subgenre here).


Edited by Dean - September 20 2013 at 05:56
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2013 at 22:39
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_Maiden
Steve Harris, Iron Maiden's bassist and primary songwriter, has stated that his influences include Black Sabbath, Deep Purple,[241] Led Zeppelin,[241] Uriah Heep,[9] Pink Floyd,[241] Genesis,[241] Yes,[241] Jethro Tull,[241] Thin Lizzy,[242] UFO[243] and Wishbone Ash.[242] In 2010 Harris stated, "I think if anyone wants to understand Maiden’s early thing, in particular the harmony guitars, all they have to do is listen to Wishbone Ash’s Argus album. Thin Lizzy too, but not as much. And then we wanted to have a bit of a prog thing thrown in as well, because I was really into bands like Genesis and Jethro Tull. So you combine all that with the heavy riffs and the speed, and you’ve got it." 
 
 


Edited by dr wu23 - September 19 2013 at 22:41
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2013 at 18:28
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2013 at 18:03
^ There is no question that three of those four are the most important bands from the beginnings of Progressive Metal as a subgenre. No one can dispute that, even a long-suffering Savatage fan such as I. But they are not the fathers, they are the begotten sons. Sabbath and Rush are also very important and Sabbath in particular is a very influential band for the whole of metal, as I opinioned a so many pages back - the Grandfathers of Prog Metal even.
 
For amusement, here is a list of cover-versions by Fates Warning:
Closer to the Heart (Rush)
Die Young (Black Sabbath)
Flight of Icarus (Iron Maiden)
In Trance (Scorpions)
Saints in Hell (Judus Priest)
Under the Milky Way (The Cross)
...and now Queensrÿche:
Almost Cut my Hair (Crosby Stills Nash & Young)
Bullet the Blue Sky (U2)
For the Love of Money (O'Jays)
For what it's Worth (Buffalo Springfield)
Gonna get Close to You (Dalbello)
Heaven on their Minds (Andrew Lloyd Webber)
Innuendo (Queen)
Lady Jane(The Rolling Stones)
Neon Knights (Black Sabbath)
Red Rain (Peter Gabriel)
Running Free (Iron Maiden)
Synchronicity II (The Police)
Welcome to the Machine (Pink Floyd)
Wish You Were Here (Pink Floyd)
Wrathchild (Iron Maiden)
I'll not bother listing the Dream Theatre's achievements as the highest paid covers band in the history of Prog. Crimson Glory do not figure in this at all.
 
 
 
 
...look at it this way - if Black Sabbath was the father then Prog Metal then this is what Prog metal looks like:
 


Edited by Dean - September 20 2013 at 05:12
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2013 at 16:50
Some additonal links.....don't know how helpful they are but since I am not that up on metal and prog metal it helped me sort through the names.
 
When reading online at various places Sabbath and Rush do come up a lot as do these 4:


Edited by dr wu23 - September 19 2013 at 22:29
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2013 at 13:58
^ Power Chords doth not a genre make. Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2013 at 13:56
Originally posted by verslibre verslibre wrote:

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Originally posted by octopus-4 octopus-4 wrote:

True, but I've never heard the word "prog" before the 80s. Sabbath, Zeppelin and Deep Purple were actually labeled "Hard Rock" while for bands like Genesis and Gentle Giant, at least in Italy, they were referred to as generic "pop/rock" (very misleading)


This is quite truthful. Think about a band like 'Rainbow' who came into the fold around 1974 I believe and they are a band that I feel gave birth the genre 'Hard Rock' with the album RICHIE BLACKMORE's RAINBOW.
It wasn't quite Metal and it wasn't traditional(classic) rock music either...It was Hard Rock!
In 74' and a bit before that, Sabbath were creating music that was far more metal based and not Hard Rock, so yeah it took a while for the terms to be set correctly and I agree with you that it didn't start till the 80's. :)


Hard rock existed before Rainbow, i.e. Deep Purple.


You could argue that. Certainly a Guitar Riff like from Smoke On The water is definitely more edgey than traditional(classic) rock guitar playing in general, but let's think on a consistent level. Consider Rainbow's second album, RAINBOW RISING' and I think you can hear an album that was full-on a hard rock album through and through.
I would still to this day say that is was 1975's RAINBOW RISING that sparked the hardrock trend on a more consistent and refined level. None of Deep Purple's albums before 1975 were as edgy through and through as RAINBOW RISING.
Just my opinion of course. :)
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