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rogerthat View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: The 80s..the worst era for prog.
    Posted: August 11 2012 at 05:34
While the mainstream face of the 80s has been thrashed in this thread, it was arguably some of the best of the pop epoch.   Michael Jackson, Prince, Police, INXS to name just a few is not a platter I could really complain about.  In the 80s, the rock sound was fully embraced by pop music and while this made for some very boring bands trying to be rock and still wanting a bite of the commercial pie, it also made for some very lively pop music.  Jackson in the 80s was to a good extent liberated from disco/dance influences and so was Prince.  So I guess I don't really understand what exactly is anti-80s all about, barring the production (which I cannot defend Dead).  Even AC DC released one of their most popular albums in the 80s - Back in Black.

Sure, you could highlight the really bad bands and albums or those of your 70s favourites that fared badly in the 80s to make out how terrible the 80s was, but you could do that for just about every era.   Music as an entertainment medium peaked in the 80s, or at least the album sales say so.  

Edited by rogerthat - August 11 2012 at 05:36
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 11 2012 at 03:12
Floyd's Momentary Lapse of Reason is so seriously good, yeah its really kinda put together by Gilmour and Bob Ezrin but ends up a very coherent and musically innovative work!!  i love the 80s synths and production, very intricate!!  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2012 at 18:38
Er... Discipline? Beat? It was a great period for KC that's for sure.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2012 at 00:30
I think perhaps prog in the 80's became at one at the event horizon
with Magma's Merci, becoming the first (and last) Prog Disco album.

Prog Disco was the apex point of prog.
--
Robert Pearson
Regenerative Music http://www.regenerativemusic.net
Telical Books http://www.telicalbooks.com
ParaMind Brainstorming Software http://www.paramind.net


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2012 at 23:54
Originally posted by Argonaught Argonaught wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

U2 was one of the things about the 80's I really hated. 

I am glad I am not alone. I have 48-minute long compilation of U2, mostly plucked out of Achtung Baby and All That You Can't Leave Behind. A good dozen of excellent songs. But, I find the remainder of their music irritating. They kind of went from "primitive" to "pompous/pretentious" too fast. 
 
Achtung! Baby was the final marker for when I could no longer stand hearing U2 on the radio, anymore. The Joshua Tree and Rattle And Hum suffered from (intentional) overexposure, but some of the Zooropa stuff was the prelude to ruin. About the only song I might not mind hearing nowadays is "A Sort Of Homecoming," which opens The Unforgettable Fire. At least by that point, U2 were extremely popular but they weren't yet the Irish Rolling Stones.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 02 2012 at 14:17
Originally posted by tamijo tamijo wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Originally posted by tamijo tamijo wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

U2 was one of the things about the 80's I really hated.
 
Im crazy about the way ENO works, walking around on the dump, finding interesting pieces amongst the waste, and turning it into new forms of art.
I can only assume that either that is a deliberately enigmatic (baffling) post or someone has hacked your account
It was a deliberately enigmatic post.
What i was saying in more direct form was, that i love the way ENO has picked up U2, Talking Heads, Bowie (he was not total waste, but still reformed into the better). And turned them into something very interesting, not actualy prog. but more complicated than what they did before.
 
If you listen to what they did before, in contrast to how they evolve while ENO is there, its amasing what he is able to do. 
 
 
Eno is not exactly one of my favourite musicians so this could represent some kind of musical hell for me
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 02 2012 at 02:46
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Originally posted by tamijo tamijo wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

U2 was one of the things about the 80's I really hated.
 
Im crazy about the way ENO works, walking around on the dump, finding interesting pieces amongst the waste, and turning it into new forms of art.
I can only assume that either that is a deliberately enigmatic (baffling) post or someone has hacked your account
It was a deliberately enigmatic post.
What i was saying in more direct form was, that i love the way ENO has picked up U2, Talking Heads, Bowie (he was not total waste, but still reformed into the better). And turned them into something very interesting, not actualy prog. but more complicated than what they did before.
 
If you listen to what they did before, in contrast to how they evolve while ENO is there, its amasing what he is able to do. 
 
 
Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 01 2012 at 15:14
Originally posted by tamijo tamijo wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

U2 was one of the things about the 80's I really hated.
 
Im crazy about the way ENO works, walking around on the dump, finding interesting pieces amongst the waste, and turning it into new forms of art.
I can only assume that either that is a deliberately enigmatic (baffling) post or someone has hacked your account
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 01 2012 at 14:13
Originally posted by Argonaught Argonaught wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

U2 was one of the things about the 80's I really hated. 

I am glad I am not alone. I have 48-minute long compilation of U2, mostly plucked out of Achtung Baby and All That You Can't Leave Behind. A good dozen of excellent songs. But, I find the remainder of their music irritating. They kind of went from "primitive" to "pompous/pretentious" too fast. 

Yeah, I'll sign onto this one!  I was in a band briefly that covered "Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," it was a nice little song to play....the guitar part (with its extreme digital delay) was a real screamer!   Lots o' fluff with U2.  

Another exceptional release from the early 1980's was "Keep On Doing" by The Roche sisters.....essentially, Discipline-era KC with female vocals.  

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 01 2012 at 12:56
Originally posted by kole kole wrote:

The 80's may have been a bad decade for the retro prog rock with that iconic 70's sound, but in the terms of progressive music, the 80's were great.


Yes, I agree with this statement. Most of the posts in this thread telling us about the horrors that were the 80s, keep talking about the kind of symph prog that fuelled the preceding decade. Most of the old dinosaurs were going off in some obscure plastic pop tangent, and looking back at it, they probably should have stuck to their guns. Allright, I am glad we finally got that out of the way, so as we can better focus on all the other riveting progressive rock music that was produced. 

I have previously run through some fantastic avant releases, but hey, if classic prog n fusion is your bag, then by all means check out some of these:

Progres 2 - Dialog s vesmirem
Blue Effect - 33
Spinetta Jade - Alma de Diamande
Rahmann - selftitled
Cai - Noche Abierta
Ain Soph - A Story of mysterious Forest
Anyone's Daughter - selftitled
Prazsky Vyber - selftitled
Laurie Anderson - Big Science
David Torn - Cloud About Mercury
Synkopy - Slunecni Hodiny
Hugh Hopper - Two Rainbows Daily
Kultivator - Barndomens Stigar
Sky - Sky2
Exodus - The Most Beautiful Day
The Enid - Six Pieces
Richard Pinhas - Iceland
Phil Miller - Cutting Both Ways
Djam Karet - Reflections from the Firepool
Osiris - selftitled
Steve Tibbetts - Yr
Pablo Enterrador - selftitled
Jaco Pastorius - Word of Mouth

Ok, I'll stop now - but this thread has a way of getting back under my skin with preposterous claims from posters that hate the 80s with a vengeance. Usually people who claim to be fans of progressive music, and then only listen to stuff that sounds like the produce of 1973-1974 symphonic style... 

“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 01 2012 at 12:29
The 80's may have been a bad decade for the retro prog rock with that iconic 70's sound, but in the terms of progressive music, the 80's were great.


Edited by kole - August 01 2012 at 12:30
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 01 2012 at 09:01
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

U2 was one of the things about the 80's I really hated.
 
Im crazy about the way ENO works, walking around on the dump, finding interesting pieces amongst the waste, and turning it into new forms of art.
Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 01 2012 at 01:18
Originally posted by Argonaught Argonaught wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

U2 was one of the things about the 80's I really hated. 

I am glad I am not alone. I have 48-minute long compilation of U2, mostly plucked out of Achtung Baby and All That You Can't Leave Behind. A good dozen of excellent songs. But, I find the remainder of their music irritating. They kind of went from "primitive" to "pompous/pretentious" too fast. 
I tried Joshua Tree and its one of the few occasions I couldn't get through a whole record
 
I'll admit to quite liking Sunday Bloody Sunday but even thats mainly  for the fiddle work.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 31 2012 at 20:51
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

U2 was one of the things about the 80's I really hated. 

I am glad I am not alone. I have 48-minute long compilation of U2, mostly plucked out of Achtung Baby and All That You Can't Leave Behind. A good dozen of excellent songs. But, I find the remainder of their music irritating. They kind of went from "primitive" to "pompous/pretentious" too fast. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 31 2012 at 11:11
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

No one is convincing me that the 80s were not the worst decade for Prog. I am convinced that the 80s were not completely worthless (better than the fifties). The several examples people have given do not make the decade shine. I do not think that KC Beat and Three of a Perfect Pair are great examples to use, and are simply a case in point of what I'm talking about. These were very commercial albums by Crimson standards. Fripp himself talked about trading three years for one really good year (Discipline). The whole problem was not the musicians themselves, but the corporate environment that they had to deal with, which was altogether different from the Prog period (Check out Prog Brittania on You Tube for some historical perspective on the open-mindedness of the music labels of that period, or at least a tendency toward non-interference in the music). I acknowledge that you can find some pretty outlandish things in the 80s. Henry Kaiser's stuff comes to mind. I don't know about anyone else, though, but I did not find any Henry Kaiser stuff anywhere in any record store. I got that and other stuff like it through a rather obscure mail order company.


If prog simply means symph prog or its 80s cousin neo prog, then yes, 80s was probably the worst decade for prog.  I would not venture to compare ALL prog in the 80s to 90s and 00s prog simply because I haven't and can never get around to hearing all the albums.   Basically, all you are doing is deriving a generalized perception from the sample of albums that you are familiar with (and in that case, enumerating some great artists or albums from the 80s seems to be a valid response).  What about Art Zoyd, Diamanda Galas, Pat Metheny, Holdsworth, Talk Talk just to name a few artists/bands who were productive in the 80s?  And if we are talking about 'progressive' music from the 80s (since you cite a purported lack of open mindedness in that era), there are still many more artists and bands who would have to be reckoned with.  Not all such adventurous artists had a rough time in the 80s.  Kate Bush, Cocteau Twins, Metallica, Talking Heads enjoyed commercial success at different junctures in that decade and they all brought something that was new to rock and pop music.   Even Bobby McFerrin managed to chart.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 31 2012 at 05:13
Bigger on the inside.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 31 2012 at 05:13
Holy crap, my last post on this topic was in 2005 - time flies. Shocked 

Anyway, since then, a lot of 80's prog blessed these ears, and I can assuredly say that, albeit shorter in quantity than the 70's, qualitywise both decades are equivalent.
Bigger on the inside.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 31 2012 at 03:09
My ranking would go as this...
70s (dont state the obvious. Tongue)
90s (again, don't state the obvious. Tongue)
60s
80s
00s (much of my favorite music comes from this generation, but theres just not much of it. i can think of Transatlantic, Haken, Neal Morse, Riverside, Threshold, Echolyn, and thats 'bout it.)
EATTTT YOUURRR BEEEEEETTTSSSSS!!!!!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 31 2012 at 01:02
Originally posted by tszirmay tszirmay wrote:

went fishing and found these:
 

Al Stewart- Last Days of the Century

   

only just noticed that in your list. Tends to be an overlooked album but would easily come near the top of my list of 80's albums
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 31 2012 at 00:57
U2 was one of the things about the 80's I really hated.
I didn't mind Simple Minds though. Waterfront was a mighty track. Some definite prog elements in their music.
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