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Losendos
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Joined: June 03 2005
Location: Australia
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Topic: Real 5 star albums Posted: August 13 2005 at 18:45 |
My essential kit bag would have
1 Foxtrot by Genesis
2 Dark Side of the Moon Pink Floyd
3 Tubular Bells Mike Oldfield
4 Brain Salad Surgery Emerson Lake and Palmer
5 Fragile Yes
6 Thick As a brick Jethro Tull
7 Days of future passed Moody Blues
8 Crime of the century Supertramp
9 Scenes from a memory metropolis part 2 Dream Theatre
10 Abbey Road Beatles
I think if someone had those 10 albums they would know what prog was all about and could persue the style of prog that appeals to them
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How wonderful to be so profound
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Posted: August 13 2005 at 18:29 |
To give an album 5 stars means that it is perfect in every way and every track is outstanding.....STOP......take a step back and let reality kick in. There is no perfect album in this world nor will there ever be......every album has its flaws of that there is no doubt. Dark Side of the Moon or Wish you Were Here are probably the closest to perfect......but not quite. Much as i love ELP there is not one album that really deserves more than 3 and a half stars. Sorry for the honesty...but i believe it's true....but then again what do i know?
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The Hemulen
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Posted: August 13 2005 at 04:21 |
Dragon Phoenix wrote:
Btw, I found Free Hand way down the top100 list, by Gentle Giant. I
have Octopus, which I regard as a decent album but not one that
inspires me to seek out more of their works.
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Give it time... And get Free Hand whilst you're at it.
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Dragon Phoenix
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Posted: August 13 2005 at 03:54 |
Btw, I found Free Hand way down the top100 list, by Gentle Giant. I
have Octopus, which I regard as a decent album but not one that
inspires me to seek out more of their works.
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Blog this:
http://artrock2006.blogspot.com
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Dragon Phoenix
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Posted: August 13 2005 at 03:16 |
greenback wrote:
any true progger should have these ones:
- free hand
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Wow, not only do I not have this one, but I don't even know who made it.
I also don't see why many here find it necessary to post remarks like
this. So I don't have an album you think is essential - that makes me
not a true progger?
Aside: if a true progger is the type I also have encountered here, who
thinks that only prog music is worth while, then I am proud to be a
non-true progger.
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Blog this:
http://artrock2006.blogspot.com
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BigDee
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Joined: July 16 2005
Location: United States
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Posted: August 13 2005 at 02:04 |
Ok. I
couldn't resist posting a reply. I decided to go with what I
really listen to most often and here are the results:
Genesis: Selling England by the Pound
I think The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway had a bigger impact on the Prog music scene, but I don't play it that often.
Rush: Exit...Stage Left
This album kicks ass.
Yes: Relayer
Sure, Close to the Edge has Bill and there is lots of atmospheric stuff
and terrific time changes, but Relayer has more emotion and it is a
spectacular intro to Patrick Moraz (who incidentally does not get the
props he deserves in the Prog world).
King Crimson: Discipline
KC meets the funk. They'll never do it again, but this effort was perfect. Many KC fans still don't get it.
Spocks Beard: V
The Great Nothing is sublime.
Just for general principles, my "classical" selection is the minimalist masterpiece by Steve Reich "Music for 18 Musicians."
Thanks to all who have contributed to this thread. I have found
it most interesting and informative. I look forward to listening
to your recommendations that I am not acquainted with.
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"War is not the answer, only love can conquer hate..." Marvin Gaye
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greenback
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 23:38 |
any true progger should have these ones:
- selling england by the pound
- scheherazade
- free hand
- thick as a brick
- red queen to gryphone 3
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[HEADPINS - LINE OF FIRE: THE RECORD HAVING THE MOST POWERFUL GUITAR SOUND IN THE WHOLE HISTORY OF MUSIC!>
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el böthy
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Joined: April 27 2005
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 22:03 |
Close to the Edge
In the court of the Crimson King
Foxtrot
Thick as a brick
The dark Side of the Moon
...thouse are it more or less...its very dificult to say just 5!
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"You want me to play what, Robert?"
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 17:46 |
I don't have a problem with that.![](smileys/smiley1.gif)
But my question (if you listened to these albums) was valid - I bet there are not many people on this forum that listened extensively to all the albums that I mentioned. I bet we all have at one point said something about an album without knowing it first hand - it happens, and it's a bad thing that must be avoided. I'm currently exploring Krautrock, Zeuhl and Neo-Prog - genres that never held much interest for me. I'll listen to the music, trying to really understand what some others find in it.
Don't fear the unknown, embrace it!![](smileys/smiley4.gif)
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Dick Heath
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Joined: April 19 2004
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 17:42 |
bumheed7 wrote:
close to the edge
selling england by the pound
brain salad surgery
the only essential albums
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To you, and not a huge number of others. IMHO
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transend
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Joined: May 15 2005
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 17:40 |
Mike, that is my whole point thought really!
WE ALL like DIFFERENT things, one persons masterpiece is another persons 'average album' or even something somebody else hates!
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 17:31 |
transend wrote:
Ina word...yes! Cannot stand 'Terria', sold 'Shaming of the true' and found 'Remedy lane' be be OK. 'Hydrophonia' is my fave of the four, cna't go wrong really with Mr. Stolt. |
Well, at least economically that wasn't a wise decision.![](https://www.progarchives.com/forum/smileys/smiley2.gif)
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BaldJean
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 17:31 |
OT Räihälä wrote:
BaldJean wrote:
best "Rite of Spring" version is by Leonard Bernstein and the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, in my opinion. there are a lot of faster versions, but none is that powerful. Bernstein really understood Stravinsky |
Even if I wouldn't say definitely the best, you could without hesitation add Bernstein to my list. I saw a TV documentary in the 80's of him rehearsing a youth orchestra with the Rite, and it was just hilarious. He knew the piece so inside out, and could lead every single musician by hand. Simply fantastic, end of.
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we saw that same documentary a few years ago. it was fantastic. Bernstein was a great teacher of music
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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transend
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 17:29 |
Ina word...yes! Cannot stand 'Terria', sold 'Shaming of the true' and found 'Remedy lane' be be OK. 'Hydrophonia' is my fave of the four, cna't go wrong really with Mr. Stolt.
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 17:26 |
transend wrote:
The previous post says it ALL to me...
Of all those CDs I would only rate CTTE as a 5 star, I would not give any of the others above 3.
So there you have it...WE ALL HAVE DIFFERENT TASTES, therefore, I see 'Paris' by supertramp as a 5 star CD, othere will only give it 2...with the amount of reviewers here, I fail to understand why people are upset by the amount of FIVE STAR reviews, we ALL think of a 'essential masterpiece' in a totally different way...
Surprised theres not more really...
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Have you really listened extensively to Terria, Remedy Lane, Shaming of the True or Hydrophonia?
Edited by MikeEnRegalia
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transend
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Joined: May 15 2005
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 17:21 |
The previous post says it ALL to me...
Of all those CDs I would only rate CTTE as a 5 star, I would not give any of the others above 3.
So there you have it...WE ALL HAVE DIFFERENT TASTES, therefore, I see 'Paris' by supertramp as a 5 star CD, othere will only give it 2...with the amount of reviewers here, I fail to understand why people are upset by the amount of FIVE STAR reviews, we ALL think of a 'essential masterpiece' in a totally different way...
Surprised theres not more really...
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Pseud0
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Joined: July 31 2005
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 17:17 |
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
- Devin Townsend - Terria
- Pain of Salvation - Remedy Lane
![](smileys/smiley4.gif)
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ah yes forgot those ![](smileys/smiley32.gif) ![](smileys/smiley32.gif) fantastic
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 17:16 |
- Devin Townsend - Terria
- Pain of Salvation - Remedy Lane
- Roine Stolt - Hydrophonia
- Kevin Gilbert - The Shaming of the True
- Yes - Close to the Edge
![](smileys/smiley4.gif)
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Pseud0
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 17:08 |
rush - moving pictures
yes - close to the edge
opeth - still life
comus - first uterrance
camel - mirage
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richardh
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Joined: February 18 2004
Location: United Kingdom
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Posted: August 12 2005 at 16:56 |
ELP - Brain Salad Surgery
Genesis - Foxtrot
Yes - Close To The Edge
Rush - Moving Pictures
Muse - Absolution
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