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CPicard
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 03 2008
Location: Là, sui monti.
Status: Offline
Points: 10841
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Topic: Prog & Politics Posted: April 09 2012 at 16:32 |
But I believed that Obama was part of the Hawaiian Conspiracy!
On the other hand, I've never seen him wearing an Hawaiian shirt...
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer
Joined: June 22 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 16130
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 16:17 |
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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IMPF
Forum Groupie
Joined: February 15 2012
Status: Offline
Points: 73
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 15:38 |
.
Edited by IMPF - August 04 2012 at 11:56
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JJLehto
Prog Reviewer
Joined: April 05 2006
Location: Tallahassee, FL
Status: Offline
Points: 34550
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 15:29 |
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CPicard
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 03 2008
Location: Là, sui monti.
Status: Offline
Points: 10841
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 13:58 |
Well, in France, it's what we are told about British cooking: boiled meat, mint everywhere, flavoured jelly as dessert, etc... Yet, if I remember well my only trip to London, I may have eaten fish & chips, but no boiled meat. I have been greatly disappointed to see that this was a myth.
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 13:45 |
CPicard wrote:
The French quite British??? A moi, au secours! I don't eat boiled meat with mint, sacrebleu!
On the other hand, I'm drinking Green Mint Tea...
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Boiled meat with mint WTF is that?!?!? Sacre-bloody-bleu indeed mon ami, that est une abomination dans any cuisine - fortunately it n'est pas British...
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What?
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CPicard
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 03 2008
Location: Là, sui monti.
Status: Offline
Points: 10841
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 13:35 |
Dean wrote:
CPicard wrote:
@Dean: I was just joking! Remember, I'm French! |
I know
There is nothing like stretching a joke to see how far you can take it before it breaks, the French are after all, quite British, or the British quite French - we are only separated by 10 leagues (lieue ancienne) of salty water and have in the course of history shared each others lands and peoples; the Bretons, Celts and Normans can be found on both sides of La Manche; what is custard to us and crème anglaise to you is still just eggs, milk and sugar no matter what it is called and it tastes the same wherever it is made. So we wave our flags of red, white and blue along the boulevards and we're not so different.
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The French quite British??? A moi, au secours! I don't eat boiled meat with mint, sacrebleu! On the other hand, I'm drinking Green Mint Tea...
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dennismoore
Forum Senior Member
VIP Member
Joined: April 19 2011
Location: America
Status: Offline
Points: 877
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 12:11 |
frippism wrote:
I have nothing against symphonic, but I will say that yes, the stuff is somewhat more derivative. I don't mind influences- what the f**k am I saying? All music is influences! There's no real thing as creativity in art. It's the taking of one's ideas and morphing them into a shape that is yours.
dennismoore wrote:
By the way... Have you ever heard The Flower Kings - The Chicken Farmer Song? |
I just did- pretty good tune. But again- didn't blow my mind :)
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Yeah, that is my only argument I have with people here when they criticize a band for not being original. All artists
create from how other artists have already influenced them! Though some bands go too far like Starcastle did by trying to imitate YES, the result showed it.
A warning about Glass Hammer, older works of theirs did seem a bit copy-catish. Glass Hammer - If is the one to check out if you are even remotely so inclined. It is full of high-pitched vocals, if that puts you off then you still have all those deep groans on your Beardfish records.
Beardfish to me suffers from cut & paste fatigue. Back in the day, an artist needed to compose music by actually writing it from nothing. Now with all the cut & paste digitizers and samplers it is so easy for anybody to "staple" together a piece of music. Beardfish throws in so many diferent styles that I am not sure go together if you sat down and wrote it out. But with modern techniques to "borrow" so much into a song, that is the result. I guess if I grew up in that generation I would be more friendly to the cut & paste motif. I learned music with a guitar in my lap and a piano at my fingertips. Not all the "groove boxes" and samplers that musicians have today. Nothing wrong with that, just a generational thing.
Bill Bruford left YES and complained that CTTE was a nightmare to make. He said YES fought "over every single note".
Well I dare say that is why to this day, Close To The Edge is a masterpiece and is being discovered by generation after generation. Weightlifters say: "No Pain - No Gain!" I don't think the current cut & pasting generation of music will have quite a lasting legacy, obviously we'll see.. Perghaps I am just some old crumudgen, that thought has occured to me.
Very kind of you to give The Chicken Farmer Song a listen. It is a light tune with sweet harmonies and is just fun.
That is why I use that song as an example. Prog music and prog bands don't need to make every piece an epic
with a thousand complex intervals. Sometimes its nice to just have fun with a song. The Chicken Farmer Song is an example of a lighter & simpler song but still done proggishly. A nice balance of progressive music and simple musical enjoyment.
Edited by dennismoore - April 09 2012 at 12:13
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"Yeah, people are unhappy about that - but you know what, it's still Yes." - Chris Squire
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frippism
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 27 2010
Location: Tel Aviv
Status: Offline
Points: 4160
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 10:49 |
dennismoore wrote:
Ok, dude, just don't tell me that you prefer Trevor Rabin, over classic YES. or you and I will make the Arabs & Jews
look like giddy school girls at a Brintney Spears concert. |
LOL. No. nononononono
dennismoore wrote:
I agree with what you say about hearing the same stuff, though I don't think it is applied consistently by people. There is nothing good about an imitation in any decade or genre, but I do think that symphonic prog has been crucified by the younger generation while that same generation fails to see all the "influences" and "borrowing of ideas" in their music. Each generation needs to have their music which they can declare "undeniably hip" while they proudly trash prior generations of music cause that is how it works through the generations in pop culture. I think classic prog is exceptional, not because it came from my generation, but because it was basically the first to smash that generational formula. Classic prog said, "we are gonna have a harp or bagpipes or a flute cause it works and not because some real popular rocker just did it". Some newer stuff is good, but highly derivatave as well. I don't think an even standard gets applied to all music. |
I have nothing against symphonic, but I will say that yes, the stuff is somewhat more derivative. I don't mind influences- what the f**k am I saying? All music is influences! There's no real thing as creativity in art. It's the taking of one's ideas and morphing them into a shape that is yours.
With that, I feel as if an interesting artist can the sound his own angle to the music he has absorbed. I feel that such bands such as the Flower Kings, and Glass Hammer (though my exposure to Glass Hammer is very limited and it's not very fair of me to judge them just yet), is that for me they don't offer a new look of things. I can think of an example- Beardfish are pretty retro-sounding, but I feel like they've real added their own twist with the arrangements, the variety, and the production. I just don't feel it with many other symph bands.
dennismoore wrote:
Yet, many metal bands make the top 2 or 3 of the year record here on PA. I listen to these prog metal recordes and it is clear they are playing the same head bobbing down strumming on the guitar of a thousand metal bands before! |
There's so much derivative metal it's not even funny- but yet it remains when of the more open minded, and boundary pushing cultures/genres today- particularly when it comes to experimental metal.
dennismoore wrote:
By the way... Have you ever heard The Flower Kings - The Chicken Farmer Song? |
I just did- pretty good tune. But again- didn't blow my mind :)
Edited by frippism - April 09 2012 at 10:50
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There be dragons
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dennismoore
Forum Senior Member
VIP Member
Joined: April 19 2011
Location: America
Status: Offline
Points: 877
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 10:20 |
frippism wrote:
Hey! Well yeah I'm not TFTO's biggest fan, but I love Yes.
The only problem I have with a lot of today's symph/neo blaaa is that I've heard stuff along the lines of it so many times. The tunes aren't the problem, it's just the retro-sound.
But yeah most of the stuff I really listen to is 00s and beyond. But the fact that a thing is old doesn't mean its bad! If a thing is bad, then it's bad. |
Ok, dude, just don't tell me that you prefer Trevor Rabin, over classic YES. or you and I will make the Arabs & Jews
look like giddy school girls at a Brintney Spears concert.
I agree with what you say about hearing the same stuff, though I don't think it is applied consistently by people.
There is nothing good about an imitation in any decade or genre, but I do think that symphonic prog has been crucified by the younger generation while that same generation fails to see all the "influences" and "borrowing of ideas" in their music. Each generation needs to have their music which they can declare "undeniably hip" while they proudly trash prior generations of music cause that is how it works through the generations in pop culture. I think classic prog is exceptional, not because it came from my generation, but because it was basically the first to smash that generational formula. Classic prog said, "we are gonna have a harp or bagpipes or a flute cause it works and not because some real popular rocker just did it". Some newer stuff is good, but highly derivative as well. I don't think an even standard gets applied to all music.
Example:
Glass Hammer - If gets dismissed around here for being considered a copy of YES. I don't see that and I would despise
a copy of YES such as the horribly derivative Starcastle.
Yet, many metal bands make the top 2 or 3 of the year record here on PA. I listen to these prog metal recordes and it is clear they are playing the same head bobbing down strumming on the guitar of a thousand metal bands before!
By the way... Have you ever heard The Flower Kings - The Chicken Farmer Song?
Edited by dennismoore - April 09 2012 at 11:07
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"Yeah, people are unhappy about that - but you know what, it's still Yes." - Chris Squire
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frippism
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 27 2010
Location: Tel Aviv
Status: Offline
Points: 4160
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 08:52 |
dennismoore wrote:
PyramidMeetsTheEye wrote:
thanks for the info will change the avatar to something more nice,is this better? When i joined the forum there were only an option for 64-64 pixels so yea the image got a bit muddy.
Ok back to topic,hm so the chaps name on this forum is frippism is this correct? |
Dude!
Your new Avatar is awesome!!!!!
I do think it may be the coolset one here that I have seen, no lie.
Where did you get that picture?
Yeah frippism is the guy, though he appears to be a bit "youngish" in his prog tastes, not a lad to have tea with over a session of Tales From Topographic Oceans. |
Hey! Well yeah I'm not TFTO's biggest fan, but I love Yes. The only problem I have with a lot of today's symph/neo blaaa is that I've heard stuff along the lines of it so many times. The tunes aren't the problem, it's just the retro-sound.
But yeah most of the stuff I really listen to is 00s and beyond. But the fact that a thing is old doesn't mean its bad! If a thing is bad, then it's bad.
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There be dragons
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dennismoore
Forum Senior Member
VIP Member
Joined: April 19 2011
Location: America
Status: Offline
Points: 877
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 08:20 |
Dean wrote:
What about Mercia independance?
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Mercia???
In Mercia?! The coconut's tropical!
King Arthur: What do you mean?
1st soldier: Well, this is a temperate zone.
King Arthur: The swallow may fly south with the sun or the house martin or the plover may seek warmer climes in winter, yet these are not strangers to our land?
1st soldier: Are you suggesting that coconuts migrate?
King Arthur: Not at all. They could be carried.
1st soldier: What? A swallow carrying a coconut?
King Arthur: It could grip it by the husk!
1st soldier: It's not a question of where he grips it! It's a simple question of weight ratios! A five ounce bird could not carry a one pound coconut.
King Arthur: Well, it doesn't matter. Will you go and tell your master that Arthur from the Court of Camelot is here?
1st soldier: Listen. In order to maintain air-speed velocity, a swallow needs to beat its wings forty-three times every second, right?
King Arthur: Please!
1st soldier: Am I right?
Edited by dennismoore - April 09 2012 at 12:15
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"Yeah, people are unhappy about that - but you know what, it's still Yes." - Chris Squire
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dennismoore
Forum Senior Member
VIP Member
Joined: April 19 2011
Location: America
Status: Offline
Points: 877
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 08:13 |
PyramidMeetsTheEye wrote:
thanks for the info will change the avatar to something more nice,is this better? When i joined the forum there were only an option for 64-64 pixels so yea the image got a bit muddy.
Ok back to topic,hm so the chaps name on this forum is frippism is this correct? |
Dude!
Your new Avatar is awesome!!!!!
I do think it may be the coolset one here that I have seen, no lie.
Where did you get that picture?
Yeah frippism is the guy, though he appears to be a bit "youngish" in his prog tastes, not a lad to have tea with over a session of Tales From Topographic Oceans.
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"Yeah, people are unhappy about that - but you know what, it's still Yes." - Chris Squire
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam
Joined: April 29 2006
Location: Atlantais
Status: Offline
Points: 29630
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 07:36 |
stonebeard wrote:
I don't know about politics much, but I do know I never really agreed with Hitler, if that's any help. |
Some people do though.
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 07:29 |
Epignosis wrote:
Dean wrote:
...yeah, I'm a Liberal. |
Fixed.
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Fixed.
I am a social liberal if you want to be picky.
Edited by Dean - April 09 2012 at 07:30
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What?
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: December 30 2007
Location: Raeford, NC
Status: Offline
Points: 32524
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 07:16 |
Dean wrote:
What about Wessex independance?
What about Danelaw independance?
What about Mercia independance?
What about Independance for Albion?
Boundaries are just lines on a map, people migrate and intermarry, blood dilutes and the genes pool diversifies, no one is truly native and indigenous no matter where they live or where they come from (all the peoples of Britain come from somewhere else). I live in southern Kingdom of Wessex, I was born in the Saxon Kingdom of Ēastseaxe to the east, yet I am a blue-eyed blond of Viking heritage, my family roots are from the northern Kingdom of Eoforwic (called Jórvík by the Danes), I consider myself to be British first and European second, though at times I think I live in the 51st State of the Union (would you like fries with that?), in reality I am just a lowly Human Being living on a lump of rock orbiting a nondescript star in a backwater of a spiral galaxy adrift in the vastness of the Universe. Which part of that do I need to be independent of?
Pull down the borders, tear up treaties, allow people to move freely without the constraints of arbitrary land-divisions and the political and religious dissection of continents into artificial countries and proclaimed nations.
Let's occupy Planet Earth and make a World fit for Humans.
...yeah, I'm a Libertarian. | Fixed.
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 06:28 |
CPicard wrote:
@Dean: I was just joking! Remember, I'm French! |
I know
There is nothing like stretching a joke to see how far you can take it before it breaks, the French are after all, quite British, or the British quite French - we are only separated by 10 leagues (lieue ancienne) of salty water and have in the course of history shared each others lands and peoples; the Bretons, Celts and Normans can be found on both sides of La Manche; what is custard to us and crème anglaise to you is still just eggs, milk and sugar no matter what it is called and it tastes the same wherever it is made. So we wave our flags of red, white and blue along the boulevards and we're not so different.
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What?
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PyramidMeetsTheEye
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 02 2012
Location: Slovenia
Status: Offline
Points: 118
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 06:03 |
thanks for the info will change the avatar to something more nice,is this better? When i joined the forum there were only an option for 64-64 pixels so yea the image got a bit muddy. Ok back to topic,hm so the chaps name on this forum is frippism is this correct?
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CPicard
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 03 2008
Location: Là, sui monti.
Status: Offline
Points: 10841
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 05:55 |
@Dean: I was just joking! Remember, I'm French!
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Snow Dog
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: March 23 2005
Location: Caerdydd
Status: Offline
Points: 32995
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Posted: April 09 2012 at 04:53 |
lazland wrote:
Left - bloody Tories
And just to get a thumbs down from my mate, Snow Dog, Welsh independence. |
I won't down thumb you. At least you live in Wales. But you are correct. I am definitely against.
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