What was it like in the 60's and 70's? |
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Svetonio
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 20 2010 Location: Serbia Status: Offline Points: 10213 |
Topic: What was it like in the 60's and 70's? Posted: November 19 2013 at 06:34 |
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This was 60s in Yugoslavia, the country where I was born.
timeless. ma fav Yugoslav song from 60s.
Give Sunshine from Hair, the Yugoslav version (played in "Atelje 212" theater, Belgrade 1969)
engl. transl. The Morning Will Change Everything by Indexi, a nice proto-prog song from 1969
Edited by Svetonio - November 19 2013 at 09:17 |
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: October 18 2013 at 15:40 | |||
I have never believed in the supernatural. I have never believed in demons or the devil. I believe that anyone who trusts their life to a ritual in a book is delusional. I've just never believed in any of those things. When my first wife worked roots on me and I became sick..it made perfect sense. If a person who doesn't claim to be a witch were to put roots in your food, you would feel sick or in a trance. Because it is logical that any kind of medicine will affect your mental/physical state. But a person who is working roots on you and believes it revolves around a spell or has power over you is full of it. Trust me on this one...it's just the affect of the roots and that's it.
When people dressed in black cloaks hang you upside down and taunt you...it's physically the same as the local street gang hanging you upside down and throwing darts at you in a pool hall. Only they believe it serves Satan and gains power in their life. Physically it does not differ from any other form of torture or crime. They are just using the darkside to feel important and that is it! They surely exist and they definitely dress in black cloaks...but all the B.S. that goes along with that culture is farce and a bit delusional. Do you understand my meaning? Where I'm coming from? Sorry to overload everyone..it was simply my experiences in the 70's.
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: October 18 2013 at 11:26 | |||
Unpublished and currently unavailable evidence is still evidence. The problem with such evidence from a rational, investigative examination is that it is primarily anecdotal (even when published in a newspaper ... especially so when the newspaper published a pop-vox quote or hearsay), there is nothing wrong with anecdotal evidence per sey, it is just difficult or impossible to corroborate even from first-hand witnesses. This does not imply that it is false-memory or mass-hysteria or subjected to later embellishment (though all those can be present in some cases), it means that cause-and-effect may not be as at first assumed. Interesting. [/QUOTE]
Edited by TODDLER - October 18 2013 at 11:31 |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: October 18 2013 at 08:58 | |||
Sorry, you've confused me: Are you saying that members of the Chestnut Assembly of God were behind this secret satanic cult and their pastor deprogrammed 90 teenage devil worshippers...?
Now my sceptic ears prick-up. When investigations like this start chasing their own tail I get curious, was/is this church part of the charismatic movement? Cults are created on fear and by spreading fear - in order to defeat a demon you have to first create one - satan is a creation of the christian religion. In the 70s I had direct contact with a christian commune affiliated with the charismatic movement and know how they operate - there was no physical abuse but a lot of psychological "pressure".
Unpublished and currently unavailable evidence is still evidence. The problem with such evidence from a rational, investigative examination is that it is primarily anecdotal (even when published in a newspaper ... especially so when the newspaper published a pop-vox quote or hearsay), there is nothing wrong with anecdotal evidence per sey, it is just difficult or impossible to corroborate even from first-hand witnesses. This does not imply that it is false-memory or mass-hysteria or subjected to later embellishment (though all those can be present in some cases), it means that cause-and-effect may not be as at first assumed.
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What?
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: October 18 2013 at 07:36 | |||
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: October 18 2013 at 07:33 | |||
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: October 18 2013 at 06:58 | |||
Here is a list of bands played regularly on the old Diaspera show.
Univers Zero Art Zoyd
Van Der Graff Generator
Jade Warrior
Camel
Omega
King Crimson
Rare Bird
Curved Air
Happy the Man
Nektar
Guru, Guru
Amon Dull II
Can
Hawkwind
The Residents
Triumvirat
Pulsar
Ange
Goblin
PFM
.............and defintely more that I can't recall. WXPN plays tape recordings of the old shows on the weekend, possibly once a month. I actually called the station asking if they intended on playing Prog Rock/Space Rock/Chamber Rock on a regular basis and the DJ laughed saying...."Oh no, this is just once a month that we play the tapes of the old Diaspera show". I then said...maybe you should play this type of music more often, like you used to in the 70's and early 80's. He then stated...."Buddy , people don't listen to this kind of music anymore!" "It's dated and people don't want to hear it!". I said...."Dated? Univers Zero is dated?" "I though that was timeless music or music of the future?"
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: October 18 2013 at 04:37 | |||
Any sceptic who disregards the experiences you relate as tall-tales would be wrong because the events you have described most certainly happened: Patrick Michael Newell, the kid who was bound with duct tape and drowned in a pond by two of his friends in 1971 really did drown in a pond in what was described at the time as "an assisted suicide" and as "a Satanic Ritual". That's evidence and a sceptic would never disregard evidence. That Newell dabbled in the occult is also considered to be evidence and no sceptic would dispute that. Where sceptics draw the line is in any conclusions drawn from that event that are not evidence-based, such as the connecting of unrelated events as being symptomatic of a wider conspiracy (née secret) of systematic (satanic) ritual abuse. Sceptics also question the belief that these events are the work of a devil, demon or any other supernatural phenomenon (such as demonic possesion) since that also lacks any evidence - sadistic morons in black cloaks are sadistic morons in black cloaks - in true Scooby Doo fashion, the only factual evidence is they are the janitor or the park-keeper or a local business man in fancy dress. That does not make them any less sadistic (or moronic).
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What?
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Prog_Traveller
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 29 2005 Location: Bucks county PA Status: Offline Points: 1474 |
Posted: October 18 2013 at 00:53 | |||
[Progressive Rock stations like WXPN for example.]
XPN a progressive rock station? Hey, that's a good one. Back in the day they had a prog program called diaspera but I don't think it was ever a progressive rock station at least not the way we understand prog rock these days. Maybe it was a progressive station that played rock. These days they throw us prog fans a bone on the first weekend of the new year with a prog marathon but that's about it. It's the only time during the year you'll hear "obscure" prog bands on there like Van der Graaf Generator, Caravan, Gentle Giant, Camel, Strawbs or whoever but it's only seventies stuff they play. Edited by Prog_Traveller - October 18 2013 at 00:53 |
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presdoug
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 24 2010 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 8614 |
Posted: October 17 2013 at 21:40 | |||
^hey, Johnny, have you ever heard the seventies jazz-rock/krautrock band Dzyan? They are outasite!
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The.Crimson.King
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 29 2013 Location: WA Status: Offline Points: 4596 |
Posted: October 17 2013 at 19:55 | |||
Ya, this was supposedly one William Campbell who had won a Paul look-alike contest in '65. The short version is that Paul "blew his mind out in a car" crash on 11/9/66 and rather than fold up shop and lose billions of pounds, the record company and the boys conspired to bring in a replacement. Have a look at this and join in the fun |
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: October 17 2013 at 19:25 | |||
In the 70's it was difficult to obtain import albums. Even though ..you might take a trip to Philadelphia to browse through sections of Third Street Jazz & Rock for a Guru, Guru, or David Bedford album, it was a free for all and a contest of who got there first. Record stores in Philadelphia and N.Y.C. didn't usually carry more than 2 or 3 copies of the specific album of your choice. There would definitely be a section for bands like Camel, Gong, Passport, Jade Warrior, but the title you were searching for was sold out. DJ's would often buy them in the morning when the store opened and then later play them on after hours Progressive Rock stations like WXPN for example.
My solution was to contact Jem Records on Kennedy Blvd in North and South Plainfield N.J. It was a mail order distribution company that specialized in European underground Progressive Rock. It was a warehouse often visited by record store owners on the east coast. The first time I saw Lotus by Santana it was a Japanese import sold by Jem Records. Guru, Guru albums, Can, Man, Hawkwind, Robert Calvert, Amon Dull II, Ashra Tempel, Eloy and page after page of the Jem Records catalog listed just loads of bands/artists. Jem Records was originally pioneered by a chap named Marty who began his business by selling the import albums out of the back of his station wagon. On the west coast was Greenworld. Greenworld sold Progressive Rock and Electronic. Archie Patterson was one of the great pioneers who promoted this music and made every solid attempt for it to be readily available to Prog and Electronic fans of the world. He also interviewed Prog innovators, obscure Prog bands and Electronic artists of the day. His magazine Eurock was exceptionally interesting.
Andy Garbaldi wrote reviews on underground music and promoted Prog and Electronic for years. He forced vital information to surface for poor souls like us who had Stadium Rock and Disco in our face 24/7. Locating Progressive music of the underground during the 70's was a tedious task that was grinding endlessly to complete. Domestic releases of the more internationally known Progressive Rock bands were easily obtainable..but imports were another story. Can you imagine? no internet? ..and these guys practically gave up their life to push this music and make it available in America. In 1980..Wayside Music surfaced with a catalog listing bands from Belgium, France, and surprisingly enough...the U.S. Great bands from Mexico...where there was a progressive music scene. Sometimes you could locate their mail order address in the back of Goldmine magazine. It was a blessing that these guys helped us find great music during the analog age. If it hadn't been for the existence of Jem Records, I wouldn't have discovered Hatfield and the North, National Health, Robert Wyatt, or Camel. In the 70's ..research sources were limited to a telephone and a hand written or typed letter sent off to Brian Gatland in England. Time consuming.
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: October 17 2013 at 17:42 | |||
I remember someone pulling out the poster inside the White Album and pointing out a photo of a guy that looked like Paul, but according to friends wasn't..and a replacement for Paul. lol! This was a rumour spreading up and down the east coast of the U.S. I don't know if it was a rumour that went cross country, but it surely seemed quite foolish at the time.
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: October 17 2013 at 17:36 | |||
Very informative! I wasn't aware of Jon Anderson's statements. I know Ian Anderson credited Family as a influence over the music of Jethro Tull. Frank Zappa was/is like a musical God to me. I probably own close to 70 Zappa cd's and I am a fanatic.
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Prog_Traveller
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 29 2005 Location: Bucks county PA Status: Offline Points: 1474 |
Posted: October 17 2013 at 13:54 | |||
I am familiar with the first two Family albums which I think are both great especially "Music from a doll's house" which I consider to be a true classic. I'm not sure which song on that album you were referring to unless maybe it's the one with the screechy sound towards the end. I always thought that was a bit annoying but it doesn't really ruin the album for me.
Anyway, I think Family were mainly a British phenomena. They are even to this day barely known in the US and not even that widely known in prog circles. I think of them more as an art rock band(or proto prog) but like the Moody Blues they had an influence on later prog bands. How big was their influence? It's hard to say. I know that Jon Anderson mentioned them as a band that YES strived to become(as well as King Crimson). Jon said something like "as long as we can become as well known as Family we'll be happy(in regards to the early days of YES). Let's also not forget to mention Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention. Some of that stuff was ahead of the curve and pretty daring musically and lyrically. I know Frank isn't often thought of as being strictly prog and in all fairness he wasn't(he was more than that)but a lot of his stuff(with and without MOI)was certainly very progressive. Edited by Prog_Traveller - October 17 2013 at 13:55 |
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Prog_Traveller
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 29 2005 Location: Bucks county PA Status: Offline Points: 1474 |
Posted: October 17 2013 at 13:45 | |||
Not as interesting as yours. ;)
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: October 17 2013 at 13:44 | |||
Interesting how the band Family were touring in the late 60's prior to the 1968 release of Music In A Doll's House because that opens up a whole new point of view. Take into account that if they were in fact performing a lot of their oddball compositions in 66' and 67', then it's very possible they may have influenced musicians in the audience who formed Progressive Rock bands in 69' or 70' that became more internationally known than Family. The opening track of Music In A Doll's House is an obvious Genesis sound and style. One track in particular titled "Never Like This" written by Dave Mason is truly reminiscent of the early David Bowie. Other tracks are reminiscent of sections of music on Nursery Crime. There is another track which I fail to recall it's title, but it features violin surrounded by a vamping chord progression very reminiscent of Hawkwind's early style. It might be a freak of nature or something unexplainable, but the album certainly contains musical structures used by the early 70's Progressive Rock bands. Peter Gabriel was influenced by Roger Chapman vocal style...however the instrumentation like the style of the early Genesis. I've always been curious to know if any of the 70's Prog musicians openly admitted that Family were an influence or was this all very non intended?
Edited by TODDLER - October 17 2013 at 13:46 |
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: October 17 2013 at 13:11 | |||
Interesting post!
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Prog_Traveller
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 29 2005 Location: Bucks county PA Status: Offline Points: 1474 |
Posted: October 17 2013 at 12:56 | |||
I see what you're saying. I have heard that the Moody Blues also influenced King Crimson. As for Genesis I think heard that Family and Fairport Convention were influences on them but their biggest influence was probably King Crimson. Apparently Genesis were on the verge of breaking up in the summer of 1969. They decided to retreat to a cottage before they made that decision just to see what would happen. Then bam all of a sudden "In the Court of the Crimson King" was released and it fired them up and motivated them to move on and the result was Trespass. Would Genesis have been as prog without that album? Who knows for sure. Was there prog before ITCOTCK? Well the term often used is "proto prog" which describes some of the bands you mentioned as well as the many English groups such as Cressida, Spring, Beggar's Opera, Gracious etc. There was also a band from the US called Touch who put out an album before KC's first that many feel strongly hinted at prog with long epic songs. Apparently most of the shorter pieces are more in the psych direction though. Crimson's first was certainly the band that officially started the prog genre though in part because it got a lot of attention. Prog wouldn't be the same without it. Before them the Nice might be the closest contender to a real prog band (imo). Art rock is a good term to use. However, a band can be art rock and not prog but since art rock is a more general term all prog is art rock. I think for the sixties "proto prog" is a more applicable term though especially since art rock has come to be known for 70's bands like Bebop Deluxe, 10 CC, Supertramp, and some of the artists associated with glam like David Bowie or Roxy Music. Edited by Prog_Traveller - October 17 2013 at 13:04 |
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 28 2009 Location: Vineland, N.J. Status: Offline Points: 3126 |
Posted: October 17 2013 at 12:29 | |||
I often have issues with sceptics who disregard my experiences as tall tales. Either you crossed paths with sadistic morons who wore black cloaks or you didn't...but that's absolutely no reason to insist they don't exist. I've told you this before...if you're jumped and tortured by black hoodies , are you suddenly suppose to believe you weren't because of some close minded person's view? Because so called victims are filmed , make up stories that are placed on youtube by money hungry shallow people, does that mean there are no victims of S.R.A.?....hERE'S a good one for ya: "Well, if this really happened to you, you wouldn't be talking about it. Bullsh-t! Everyone involved is either deceased or locked up in a mental ward, so what difference does it make? It's 40 or 45 years old. It occured during the 60's and 70's. What's the big secret? Who cares? It's just observation of the environment back then. Maybe there are victims on this site who care to elaborate on their experiences or maybe there are none at all which...is probably why it seems so farce to a majority of people anyway.
There is a film of The Rolling Stones from the 60's where they are performing "Have You Seen Your Mother Baby, Standing In the Shadow?" At the end , people rush the stage slamming into Jagger....Brian Jones places his hands over his mouth and begins to chuckle as he's being escorted away by a stage hand. That is one of the most hilarious scenes from a 60's concert film ever. It is so natural how he stands there and laughs at Jagger, I almost fall off my chair. I love watching 60's concert footage. It's very unique.
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