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ken4musiq View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 10:40
Originally posted by grandoleopry grandoleopry wrote:

Originally posted by mithrandir mithrandir wrote:

Originally posted by grandoleopry grandoleopry wrote:

Elitist, populist. This doesn't sound to socialistic to me. In fact critics hate prog because it does not reflect the us against the man mentality, the haves against the have nots,the the proletariat against the bourgeoisie They felt that rock was first and foremost a political tool for Marxist Ideal isms and that prog led people away from all the inequality and the injustice. This is why punk was praised as reviving the spirit of rock. The early prog bands were observationalists for the most part and madingley apolitical. Sorry, but in my view the absents of socialism in music was the reason prog was scorned, not embraced.


hmm, I guess you're not very familiar with Henry Cow, Faust and Area then are you?


Just a theory, why else then? The music is too complicated after downing a couple six packs of Bud?
I've really never understood the hatred amongst the rock critics for prog and this was about the most applicable explanation I've run into considering that most journalists get a very liberal education. It would seem naive to dismiss the great influence Marxism holds on young journalists. That's not to say that prog is conservative at all it's just may be perceived that way for the statements I quoted earlier. Remember, Marxist ideals permeate most universities and some political correct pundits would find a fascist under every toilet seat. If you got a better theory then lets hear it, I'm open...

I think early prog is romantic in its leaning and gets its ideology from that rather than politics. I really don't think it has a Marxist bent other than the fact that Marx was a Nineteenth Century romantic figure. Marxism has wavered from universities since the faiing of the Berlin wall and is really no longer a viable discourse although many older professors will still harken back to '60s liberalism.  As someone said earlier, it is really problematic to see politics in a liberal v conservative dichotomy that really says nothing about reality.

I think there may be some truth in what you are saying about jounalists who villlified prog as elitist  and exalted punk as truly rock n roll.  If you read reviews of prog from the '70s in Time Magazine, the New York Times and other mainstream, non-musical press, you will find that there is not this bias against prog that existed in Rolling Stone, Creem and the NME.

Prog was a working class music. Emerson and both Andersons, came from very meager backgrounds. As a matter of fact, it is the public school kids: Bruford, Gabriel, Waters and Sinfield that have always stood out without people questioning the classist bias in that. Ian Anderson is a much better song writer than any of them.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 10:53
How can you love a president who has been proven to be a blatant liar? They could have got rid of Saddam by using a sniper, they didn´t have to start a full scale war.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 11:00
Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:

Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:

Originally posted by BestFreak BestFreak wrote:

If we look at the political spectrum back in the 1950's and 1960's, we will find that most political parties which named themselves "progressive" were socialist/left-wing in nature. In a way, socialim provided the political spectrum with an alternative to the then-outdated nationalist/conservative movements, which ultimately resulted in two world wars. Bearing this in mind, I think we can say that "socialism" (as a new way of main-stream political thinking) paved the way for "progressive music" (as a new way of writing music).

Also, quite remarkable is the fact that "capitalism" (as a means to maximize profits) lead to the emergence of consumerism in all aspects of life, including arts (and particularly the music industry). How else can we explain the myriad of bands who emerge everyday, to sell one rubbish album to today's teenagers? In that sense, "progressive music" does not have "profit maximization" as a target, and therefore is far from being "capitalist" in nature. It is safe, therefore, to claim that Progressive Rock does have some conceptual similarities with "Socialism".

Am I making any sense at all?

But, to paraphrase Ayn Rand, communism controls people by force and socialism controls them with the vote. Capitalism allows people free expression.

Isn't that what "Prog" should be about? Choice! For good or for bad we get to choose.

 

Capitalism only offers the illusion of choice - when Pravda printed statements like that about communism in the Soviet Union nobody believed them. Why so many people swallow the enormous untruths about US consumer capitalism without a moment's pause for critical reflection is one of the great mysteries of our age.

Ayn Rand's half baked merging of Adam Smith economics and a 3rd Reich style misreading of Nietszche is intellectually bankrupt and morally vacuous. If you're going to try to back up your arguments, try citing a source that has at least an iota of credibility.

So Pravda is your credible source?????????????????????????????????????

My point:

  1. Pravda, the state owned Soviet newspaper (the name means 'Truth' in Russian) used to print blatant propaganda about the Soviet system
  2. This was believed by almost nobody in the West, and apparently by a vanishingly small number of people in the Soviet Union as well
  3. Pravda was not a credible source.

Moving on:

  1. Media owned by huge multinational corporations with a vested interest in scorched earth consumer capitalism print blatant propaganda about consumer capitalism
  2. This is believed by worryingly large numbers of people
  3. News International et al are not credible sources

Now go and read Manufacturing Consent by Noam Chomsky, in which every argument is backed up with checkable and verifiable citations. His prose style is highly readable, which is more than can be said for Ayn Rand.

But what prog group ever thanked Noam Chomsky?

Rush thanked Ayn Rand.

If this site was devoted to political discussion it might -- might -- be worth the time. But since we are talking about Prog music, again what prog group ever thanked Noam Chomsky? Has any other group sighted a political/economic figure?

It would be interesting to know.

 

“Great things are not accomplished by those who yield to trends and fads and popular opinion.”

~Jack Kerouac
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 12:23
Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:

Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:


Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:

Originally posted by BestFreak BestFreak wrote:


If we look at the political spectrum back in the 1950's and 1960's, we
will find that most political parties which named themselves "progressive"
were socialist/left-wing in nature. In a way, socialim provided the political
spectrum with an alternative to the then-outdated nationalist/
conservative movements, which ultimately resulted in two world wars.
Bearing this in mind, I think we can say that "socialism" (as a new way of
main-stream political thinking) paved the way for "progressive music" (as
a new way of writing music).


Also, quite remarkable is the fact that "capitalism" (as a means to
maximize profits) lead to the emergence of consumerism in all aspects of
life, including arts (and particularly the music industry). How else can we
explain the myriad of bands who emerge everyday, to sell one rubbish
album to today's teenagers? In that sense, "progressive music" does not
have "profit maximization" as a target, and therefore is far from being
"capitalist" in nature. It is safe, therefore, to claim that Progressive Rock
does have some conceptual similarities with "Socialism".


Am I making any sense at all?



<SPAN style="FONT-SIZE: 9pt; COLOR: #111111; FONT-FAMILY:
Tahoma">But, to paraphrase Ayn Rand, communism controls people by
force and socialism controls them with the vote. Capitalism allows people
free expression. <?:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-
com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p></SPAN>


<SPAN style="FONT-SIZE: 9pt; COLOR: #111111; FONT-FAMILY:
Tahoma">Isn't that what "Prog" should be about? Choice! For good or for
bad we get to choose.</SPAN>


 



Capitalism only offers the illusion of choice - when Pravda printed
statements like that about communism in the Soviet Union nobody
believed them. Why so many people swallow the enormous untruths
about US consumer capitalism without a moment's pause for critical
reflection is one of the great mysteries of our age.


Ayn Rand's half baked merging of Adam Smith economics and a 3rd
Reich style misreading of Nietszche is intellectually bankrupt and morally
vacuous. If you're going to try to back up your arguments, try citing a
source that has at least an iota of credibility.



So Pravda is your credible source?????????????????????????????????????



My point:



  1. Pravda, the state owned Soviet newspaper (the name means 'Truth' in
    Russian) used to print blatant propaganda about the Soviet system
  2. This was believed by almost nobody in the West, and apparently by a
    vanishingly small number of people in the Soviet Union as well
  3. Pravda was not a credible source.

Moving on:



  1. Media owned by huge multinational corporations with a vested interest
    in scorched earth consumer capitalism print blatant propaganda about
    consumer capitalism
  2. This is believed by worryingly large numbers of people
  3. News International et al are not credible sources

Now go and read Manufacturing Consent by Noam Chomsky, in which
every argument is backed up with checkable and verifiable citations. His
prose style is highly readable, which is more than can be said for Ayn
Rand.



<SPAN style="COLOR: #111111; FONT-FAMILY: Tahoma">But
what prog group ever thanked Noam Chomsky?<?:namespace prefix = o
ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p>

</SPAN>


<SPAN style="COLOR: #111111; FONT-FAMILY: Tahoma">
Rush thanked Ayn Rand. <o:p></o:p>
</SPAN>


<SPAN style="COLOR: #111111; FONT-FAMILY: Tahoma">If
this site was devoted to political discussion it might -- might -- be worth
the time. But since we are talking about Prog music, again what prog
group ever thanked Noam Chomsky? Has any other group sighted a
political/economic figure? <o:p></o:p>
</SPAN>


<SPAN style="COLOR: #111111; FONT-FAMILY: Tahoma">It
would be interesting to know.<o:p></o:p>
</SPAN>


 



You don't need to site political figures to write songs that include political
meanings. All anti-war songs have political meaning and name me a prog
band that doesn't have one (slight exaggeration.) Gabriel has had some
political basis in his music (not much, but hints) and Neil Peart ALWAYS
has something to say politically. While not naming a figure, the majority
of his songs are about economics and politics. Same with Pink Floyd.
One likes to believe
In the freedom of music
But glittering prizes
And endless Compromises
Shatter the illusion
Of integrity
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 12:49
Personally i think that this issue is down to personal issue...

Some progger might be socialist, while the others are not..

maybe even punk rockers a socialists... I don't know..

But i don't think this issue can be generalized and labelled that all proggers are socialists, its pretty unfair to those ain't.

For me, I am ignorant towards socialism... Yes i do read them on the newspaper, but hardly even think of it other than that.. =)
<<Dark side of Z' Drummination>>
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 13:05
Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:

Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:

Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:

Originally posted by BestFreak BestFreak wrote:

If we look at the political spectrum back in the 1950's and 1960's, we will find that most political parties which named themselves "progressive" were socialist/left-wing in nature. In a way, socialim provided the political spectrum with an alternative to the then-outdated nationalist/conservative movements, which ultimately resulted in two world wars. Bearing this in mind, I think we can say that "socialism" (as a new way of main-stream political thinking) paved the way for "progressive music" (as a new way of writing music).

Also, quite remarkable is the fact that "capitalism" (as a means to maximize profits) lead to the emergence of consumerism in all aspects of life, including arts (and particularly the music industry). How else can we explain the myriad of bands who emerge everyday, to sell one rubbish album to today's teenagers? In that sense, "progressive music" does not have "profit maximization" as a target, and therefore is far from being "capitalist" in nature. It is safe, therefore, to claim that Progressive Rock does have some conceptual similarities with "Socialism".

Am I making any sense at all?

But, to paraphrase Ayn Rand, communism controls people by force and socialism controls them with the vote. Capitalism allows people free expression.

Isn't that what "Prog" should be about? Choice! For good or for bad we get to choose.

 

Capitalism only offers the illusion of choice - when Pravda printed statements like that about communism in the Soviet Union nobody believed them. Why so many people swallow the enormous untruths about US consumer capitalism without a moment's pause for critical reflection is one of the great mysteries of our age.

Ayn Rand's half baked merging of Adam Smith economics and a 3rd Reich style misreading of Nietszche is intellectually bankrupt and morally vacuous. If you're going to try to back up your arguments, try citing a source that has at least an iota of credibility.

So Pravda is your credible source?????????????????????????????????????

My point:

  1. Pravda, the state owned Soviet newspaper (the name means 'Truth' in Russian) used to print blatant propaganda about the Soviet system
  2. This was believed by almost nobody in the West, and apparently by a vanishingly small number of people in the Soviet Union as well
  3. Pravda was not a credible source.

Moving on:

  1. Media owned by huge multinational corporations with a vested interest in scorched earth consumer capitalism print blatant propaganda about consumer capitalism
  2. This is believed by worryingly large numbers of people
  3. News International et al are not credible sources

Now go and read Manufacturing Consent by Noam Chomsky, in which every argument is backed up with checkable and verifiable citations. His prose style is highly readable, which is more than can be said for Ayn Rand.

But what prog group ever thanked Noam Chomsky?

Rush thanked Ayn Rand.

If this site was devoted to political discussion it might -- might -- be worth the time. But since we are talking about Prog music, again what prog group ever thanked Noam Chomsky? Has any other group sighted a political/economic figure?

It would be interesting to know.

 

Robert Wyatt namechecks and quotes Noam Chomsky in the lyrics to Alliance off Old Rottenhat:

http://www.strongcomet.com/wyatt/lyrics/lyrics2.htm#Alliance

His political views were also made explicit on Matching Mole's Little Red Record, on the cover of which the band members are portrayed in the Socialist Realism style as left wing revolutionaries. Then there's his cover version of Stalin Wasn't Stallin' on Nothing Can Stop Us and his versions of songs by Victor Jara, a Chilean dissident murdered by the Pinochet regime.

Henry Cow were also explicitly political, and quoted the left wing film maker John Grierson on the cover of In Praise Of Learning - "Art is not A mirror; it is a hammer". This engagement continued with post Henry Cow projects like Art Bears and News From Babel.

The majority of RIO/Avant Prog bands are also left wing, some more explicitly than others.

Aside from that scene, Nick Mason refers to Pink Floyd's left wing sympathies several times in Inside Out, although the irony of such a successful group performing 'Money" isn't touched upon at all.

 

'Like so many of you
I've got my doubts about how much to contribute
to the already rich among us...'

Robert Wyatt, Gloria Gloom


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 13:09
Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:

Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:

Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:

Originally posted by BestFreak BestFreak wrote:

If we look at the political spectrum back in the 1950's and 1960's, we will find that most political parties which named themselves "progressive" were socialist/left-wing in nature. In a way, socialim provided the political spectrum with an alternative to the then-outdated nationalist/conservative movements, which ultimately resulted in two world wars. Bearing this in mind, I think we can say that "socialism" (as a new way of main-stream political thinking) paved the way for "progressive music" (as a new way of writing music).

Also, quite remarkable is the fact that "capitalism" (as a means to maximize profits) lead to the emergence of consumerism in all aspects of life, including arts (and particularly the music industry). How else can we explain the myriad of bands who emerge everyday, to sell one rubbish album to today's teenagers? In that sense, "progressive music" does not have "profit maximization" as a target, and therefore is far from being "capitalist" in nature. It is safe, therefore, to claim that Progressive Rock does have some conceptual similarities with "Socialism".

Am I making any sense at all?

But, to paraphrase Ayn Rand, communism controls people by force and socialism controls them with the vote. Capitalism allows people free expression.

Isn't that what "Prog" should be about? Choice! For good or for bad we get to choose.

 

Capitalism only offers the illusion of choice - when Pravda printed statements like that about communism in the Soviet Union nobody believed them. Why so many people swallow the enormous untruths about US consumer capitalism without a moment's pause for critical reflection is one of the great mysteries of our age.

Ayn Rand's half baked merging of Adam Smith economics and a 3rd Reich style misreading of Nietszche is intellectually bankrupt and morally vacuous. If you're going to try to back up your arguments, try citing a source that has at least an iota of credibility.

So Pravda is your credible source?????????????????????????????????????

My point:

  1. Pravda, the state owned Soviet newspaper (the name means 'Truth' in Russian) used to print blatant propaganda about the Soviet system
  2. This was believed by almost nobody in the West, and apparently by a vanishingly small number of people in the Soviet Union as well
  3. Pravda was not a credible source.

Moving on:

  1. Media owned by huge multinational corporations with a vested interest in scorched earth consumer capitalism print blatant propaganda about consumer capitalism
  2. This is believed by worryingly large numbers of people
  3. News International et al are not credible sources

Now go and read Manufacturing Consent by Noam Chomsky, in which every argument is backed up with checkable and verifiable citations. His prose style is highly readable, which is more than can be said for Ayn Rand.

But what prog group ever thanked Noam Chomsky?

Rush thanked Ayn Rand.

If this site was devoted to political discussion it might -- might -- be worth the time. But since we are talking about Prog music, again what prog group ever thanked Noam Chomsky? Has any other group sighted a political/economic figure?

It would be interesting to know.

 

Robert Wyatt namechecks and quotes Noam Chomsky in the lyrics to Alliance off Old Rottenhat:

http://www.strongcomet.com/wyatt/lyrics/lyrics2.htm#Alliance

His political views were also made explicit on Matching Mole's Little Red Record, on the cover of which the band members are portrayed in the Socialist Realism style as left wing revolutionaries. Then there's his cover version of Stalin Wasn't Stallin' on Nothing Can Stop Us and his versions of songs by Victor Jara, a Chilean dissident murdered by the Pinochet regime.

Henry Cow were also explicitly political, and quoted the left wing film maker John Grierson on the cover of In Praise Of Learning - "Art is not A mirror; it is a hammer". This engagement continued with post Henry Cow projects like Art Bears and News From Babel.

The majority of RIO/Avant Prog bands are also left wing, some more explicitly than others.

Aside from that scene, Nick Mason refers to Pink Floyd's left wing sympathies several times in Inside Out, although the irony of such a successful group performing 'Money" isn't touched upon at all.

 

Thank you for the information. I appreciate you sharing it.

“Great things are not accomplished by those who yield to trends and fads and popular opinion.”

~Jack Kerouac
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 13:18

And you may find this snippet interesting as well:

"Pop music pioneer Brian Eno and anthropologist Noam Chomsky" will be collaborating on Punctum. The plan for the piece, "to be broadcast in 30 three-minute slots on Radio Lincolnshire", is "to compose a musical score by imagining the rhythm or emotional emphasis given to punctuation marks in specific pieces of great literature" -- starting with something by Tennyson. But when EnoWeb went looking for more information, it transpired that the main-man artist creating Punctum is Gary Wood, with Noam advising on the language and Brian overseeing the music side.

'Like so many of you
I've got my doubts about how much to contribute
to the already rich among us...'

Robert Wyatt, Gloria Gloom


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 14:06
Politics are so bad in my country that conservators, liberals, socialists, populists, people that support dictatorships, anarchists, religious conservators, radicals, violents, etc all of them only want to steal the monetary resources, include all their friends and relatives in the governamental jobs to earn lots of money without working and keeping most of the population ignorant and poor to buy their votes in election.

The situation here in Brazil is very sad because most of the people have such a bad culture of justice and honesty that they have good jobs, good houses, one car per family member, expensive tv sets, computers, home-theaters, etc and they admit they would rob if they had a job in the government. Bad habits are spread among all country, from the poorest to the richest. So it´s hard to believe in politics here.

But in my viewpoint, I think the capitalism is better if we could grant everybody to have the opportunity of study and work. If this was possible, those who had merits would be rich, those who were common people that made their work reasonable could maintain their family and those who didn´t do anything because they didn´t want would have problems, but only because they don´t want to work. That would be fair. I think this view is kinda left-central (welfare state, freedom of beliefs if they´re not harmful to others, ecological care, benefits to people who deserve them)


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 14:26

You are right akin, Brazil is pretty corrupt.

But there is some good news. I was reading in the paper that there are 88 million men and 93 million women in Brazil. That gives us five million more women than men!Big smile

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 14:31
Originally posted by Dr Know Dr Know wrote:

You are right akin, Brazil is pretty corrupt.

But there is some good news. I was reading in the paper that there are 88 million men and 93 million women in Brazil. That gives us five million more women than men!Big smile

There's always a silver lining!

“Great things are not accomplished by those who yield to trends and fads and popular opinion.”

~Jack Kerouac
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 15:01

In a way, socialism provided the political spectrum with an alternative to the then-outdated nationalist/ conservative movements, which ultimately resulted in two world wars.
Bearing this in mind, I think we can say that "socialism" (as a new way of
main-stream political thinking) paved the way for "progressive music" (as
a new way of writing music).>>

What do you mean by this statement?

I would add that progressive music meant a fusion of musics before it became codified as some sort of virtuosic, epic song writing form. Perhaps wth ELP and later Rush it became more identified with individualism and the unique spirit of excellence the individual can achieve. Where as earlier it was conceived as a communal relationship between band members, audience and music.  Of course, most of these bands had tremendous conflicts within.  Close to the Edge was named because the band was almost ready to break up, not because the music was at the precipice of the real and unreal/ spiritual and material. So in a sense, (innocence) Rush and ELP broke with the romantic ideal of the music by creatiing something mechanistic, metallic, intellectual, dissonant and often quite modern in that respect.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 16:03
Originally posted by ken4musiq ken4musiq wrote:

Originally posted by grandoleopry grandoleopry wrote:

Originally posted by mithrandir mithrandir wrote:


Originally posted by grandoleopry grandoleopry wrote:

Elitist, populist. This doesn't sound to socialistic to me. In fact critics hate prog because it does not reflect the us against the man mentality, the haves against the have nots,the the proletariat against the bourgeoisie They felt that rock was first and foremost a political tool for Marxist Ideal isms and that prog led people away from all the inequality and the injustice. This is why punk was praised as reviving the spirit of rock. The early prog bands were observationalists for the most part and madingley apolitical. Sorry, but in my view the absents of socialism in music was the reason prog was scorned, not embraced.


hmm, I guess you're not very familiar with Henry Cow, Faust and Area then are you?


Just a theory, why else then? The music is too complicated after downing a couple six packs of Bud? I've really never understood the hatred amongst the rock critics for prog and this was about the most applicable explanation I've run into considering that most journalists get a very liberal education. It would seem naive to dismiss the great influence Marxism holds on young journalists. That's not to say that prog is conservative at all it's just may be perceived that way for the statements I quoted earlier. Remember, Marxist ideals permeate most universities and some political correct pundits would find a fascist under every toilet seat. If you got a better theory then lets hear it, I'm open...


I think early prog is romantic in its leaning and gets its ideology from that rather than politics. I really don't think it has a Marxist bent other than the fact that Marx was a Nineteenth Century romantic figure. Marxism has wavered from universities since the faiing of the Berlin wall and is really no longer a viable discourse although many older professors will still harken back to '60s liberalism.  As someone said earlier, it is really problematic to see politics in a liberal v conservative dichotomy that really says nothing about reality.


I think there may be some truth in what you are saying about jounalists who villlified prog as elitist  and exalted punk as truly rock n roll.  If you read reviews of prog from the '70s in Time Magazine, the New York Times and other mainstream, non-musical press, you will find that there is not this bias against prog that existed in Rolling Stone, Creem and the NME.


Prog was a working class music. Emerson and both Andersons, came from very meager backgrounds. As a matter of fact, it is the public school kids: Bruford, Gabriel, Waters and Sinfield that have always stood out without people questioning the classist bias in that. Ian Anderson is a much better song writer than any of them.



I think Ian Anderson's dad was the president of a boiler company or something like that. I don't think he was filthy rich, but pretty well off. And I agree with you about Ian's skills being better then those other guys too. Thanks for the post, you've given me more to ponder as usual...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 16:26
Originally posted by grandoleopry grandoleopry wrote:

Originally posted by mithrandir mithrandir wrote:

Originally posted by grandoleopry grandoleopry wrote:

Elitist, populist. This doesn't sound to socialistic to me. In fact critics hate prog because it does not reflect the us against the man mentality, the haves against the have nots,the the proletariat against the bourgeoisie They felt that rock was first and foremost a political tool for Marxist Ideal isms and that prog led people away from all the inequality and the injustice. This is why punk was praised as reviving the spirit of rock. The early prog bands were observationalists for the most part and madingley apolitical. Sorry, but in my view the absents of socialism in music was the reason prog was scorned, not embraced.


hmm, I guess you're not very familiar with Henry Cow, Faust and Area then are you?


Just a theory, why else then? The music is too complicated after downing a couple six packs of Bud?
I've really never understood the hatred amongst the rock critics for prog and this was about the most applicable explanation I've run into considering that most journalists get a very liberal education. It would seem naive to dismiss the great influence Marxism holds on young journalists. That's not to say that prog is conservative at all it's just may be perceived that way for the statements I quoted earlier. Remember, Marxist ideals permeate most universities and some political correct pundits would find a fascist under every toilet seat. If you got a better theory then lets hear it, I'm open...

simply put, most music journalists assume that rock(or to a greater degee: pop music) can really be nothing more than just entertainment for adolescents and for those who wish to remain adolescent in their sensibility, (not to say that the immediacy of adolescent emotion doesn't have its placee in the creative process of making music either) the more creative and forward thinking musicians will never be swayed by the critics and will use an "any-means-necessary" approach to get their art recorded, with or without the coorporate backing of a major record label, the DIY ethic was around long before Punk, it always has been, so I don't necessarily think its the politics that gets a band accepted by rock critics, but more the attitude that rock critics think they know whats the best music for the rest of us, they assume the populous is dumb, (and who can blame them when music like the black eyed peas and pink contiue to top the charts?),

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2006 at 17:32
I'm quite the opposite of a socialist.  I'm a libertarian.  Not hardcore libertarian though.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2006 at 10:49
Originally posted by mithrandir mithrandir wrote:

Originally posted by grandoleopry grandoleopry wrote:

Originally posted by mithrandir mithrandir wrote:


Originally posted by grandoleopry grandoleopry wrote:

Elitist, populist. This doesn't sound to socialistic to me. In fact critics hate prog because it does not reflect the us against the man mentality, the haves against the have nots,the the proletariat against the bourgeoisie They felt that rock was first and foremost a political tool for Marxist Ideal isms and that prog led people away from all the inequality and the injustice. This is why punk was praised as reviving the spirit of rock. The early prog bands were observationalists for the most part and madingley apolitical. Sorry, but in my view the absents of socialism in music was the reason prog was scorned, not embraced.


hmm, I guess you're not very familiar with Henry Cow, Faust and Area then are you?


Just a theory, why else then? The music is too complicated after downing a couple six packs of Bud? I've really never understood the hatred amongst the rock critics for prog and this was about the most applicable explanation I've run into considering that most journalists get a very liberal education. It would seem naive to dismiss the great influence Marxism holds on young journalists. That's not to say that prog is conservative at all it's just may be perceived that way for the statements I quoted earlier. Remember, Marxist ideals permeate most universities and some political correct pundits would find a fascist under every toilet seat. If you got a better theory then lets hear it, I'm open...


simply put, most music journalists assume that rock(or to a greater degee: pop music) can really be nothing more than just entertainment for adolescents and for those who wish to remain adolescent in their sensibility, (not to say that the immediacy of adolescent emotion doesn't have its placee in the creative process of making music either) the more creative and forward thinking musicians will never be swayed by the critics and will use an "any-means-necessary" approach to get their art recorded, with or without the coorporate backing of a major record label, the DIY ethic was around long before Punk, it always has been, so I don't necessarily think its the politics that gets a band accepted by rock critics, but more the attitude that rock critics think they know whats the best music for the rest of us, they assume the populous is dumb, (and who can blame them when music like the black eyed peas and pink contiue to top the charts?),



Gee, I don't know Mith, politics is a big motivator and most journalists want to change the world somehow. But you're certainly right about Black Eyed Peas
Dreams. Gabor Szabo (1968)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2006 at 11:01
"His political views were also made explicit on Matching Mole's Little Red Record, on the cover of which the band members are portrayed in the Socialist Realism style as left wing revolutionaries. Then there's his cover version of Stalin Wasn't Stallin' on Nothing Can Stop Us and his versions of songs by Victor Jara, a Chilean dissident murdered by the Pinochet regime."

Stalin wasn't Stallin' eh? Here's a guy who some say was responsible for the deaths of 66 million in his thirty year reign of terror and they call that progressive. How chilling.

Dreams. Gabor Szabo (1968)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2006 at 11:02

Originally posted by Ghost Rider Ghost Rider wrote:

I think politics and music should not mix - the same as literature and politics. I've always had my own political views, but I think this is not the place to air them.

i disagree. i think that anyway you can express yourself and get your message through is great. without any politics music wouldnt have any conviction. music wouldnt be controversial. and that is what makes music great. just my opinion.

ask the dead kennedys

When the world is sick
Can't no one be well
But I dreamt we were all
beautiful and strong

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2006 at 12:33

Originally posted by grandoleopry grandoleopry wrote:

"His political views were also made explicit on Matching Mole's Little Red Record, on the cover of which the band members are portrayed in the Socialist Realism style as left wing revolutionaries. Then there's his cover version of Stalin Wasn't Stallin' on Nothing Can Stop Us and his versions of songs by Victor Jara, a Chilean dissident murdered by the Pinochet regime."

Stalin wasn't Stallin' eh? Here's a guy who some say was responsible for the deaths of 66 million in his thirty year reign of terror and they call that progressive. How chilling.

Read the lyrics first, then criticise them based on their content as opposed to your suppositions; this was an American response to the part that the Russian army played in the defeat of Adolf Hitler, and also celebrates the participation of American forces.

Stalin Wasn't Stallin' (Bill Johnson)

Stalin wasn't stallin'
when he told the beast of Berlin
that they'd never rest contented
till they had driven him from the land
So he called the Yanks and English
and proceeded to extinguish
the Fuhrer and its vermin
this is how it all began

Now, the Devil, he was reading
in the Good Book one day
how that Lord created Adam
to walk the righteous way
and it made the Devil jealous
he turned green up to his horns
and he swore by things unholy
and he made one of his own

So he packed two suitcases
full of greed and misery
and he caught the Midnight Special
going down to Germany
then he mixed his lies and hatred
with fire and brimstone
then the Devil sat upon it
that's how Adolf was born

Now Adolf got the notion
that he was the master race
and he swore he'd bring New Order
and put mankind in its place !
So he set a scheme in motion
and was winning everywhere
until he up and got the notion
for to kick that Russian bear

Stalin wasn't stallin'
when he told the Beast of Berlin
that they'd never rest contented
till they had driven him from the land
So he called the Yanks and English
and proceeded to extinguish
the Fuhrer and its vermin
this is how it all began

Yes he kicked that noble Russian
but it wasn't very long
before Adolf got suspicious
that he had done something wrong
Cause that bear grabbed the Fuhrer
and gave him an awful fright
seventeen months he scrapped the Fuhrer
tooth and claw, day and night

Then that bear smacked the Fuhrer
with a mighty armored paw
and Adolf broke all records
running backwards towards Krakaw
Then Goebbels sent a message
to the people everywhere
that if they couldn't hit the Fuhrer
Go down hit that Russian bear

Stalin wasn't stallin'
when he told the Beast of Berlin
that they'd never rest contented
till they had driven him from the land
So he called the Yanks and English
and proceeded to extinguish
the Fuhrer and its vermin
this is how it all began

Then this bear called on his buddy
the noble fighting Yank
and they sent the Fuhrer running
with their ships and planes and tanks
Now the Fuhrer's having nightmares
cause the Fuhrer knows damn well
that the Devil's done wrote "Welcome"
on his residence in Hell

'Like so many of you
I've got my doubts about how much to contribute
to the already rich among us...'

Robert Wyatt, Gloria Gloom


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2006 at 12:43
Originally posted by Gianthogweed Gianthogweed wrote:

I'm quite the opposite of a socialist.  I'm a libertarian.  Not hardcore libertarian though.


Those aren't exactly opposites, and I've never seen the merit in a system that lets a nation destroy itself without any government intervention. A Libertarian president would not have pulled America out of the Great Depression. A conservative economic stance hasn't gotten America very far; without coordinating our industries this country would have flopped a century ago.

Anyway, I think most prog is in fact centered around communist/socialist ideals.
RUSH, Genesis, Pink Floyd, Moody Blues --- there's way too many to count or list off but you know the ones I'm talking about. They were very outspoken, you just had to know what to look for.
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