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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 05 2006 at 09:46
Originally posted by Nuke Nuke wrote:


       
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Nuke Nuke wrote:

Umm, someone mentioned a band with 14 minute rap songs a while back. I'll check it out. I have heard two hip-hop Cds, things falling apart by the roots and The low end theory by a tribe called quest. They were both good and proof that "underground rap"   
 
Funny, all who call us close minded talk about one or two real Rap or Hip Hop albums, face it, that's not representative of the genre, that's an exception and probablńy a hybrid.
 
 (just like King crimson is underground prog)
 
NO KING CRIMSON IS NOT UNDERGROUND PROG, every Proghead in the world knows of have heard about King Crimson so it can't be underground, you go to any chain store (even the most commercial) and you'll foind a King Crinmson colection, so it's not underground.
 
But not even 1% of the rap fans in the world (Which are hundreed of millions more than Progheads) have ever heard about this mysterious great Progressive rappers.
 
is good stuff. THe low end theory especially. It is from the heyday of real hip-hop (I use the word real instead of underground from now on) and it is about blending be-bop with rap. I lost it and only heard the CD once, but I remember it being totally mind-opening.
 
You like it, it's ok, but this is a Progressive Rock forum and essentially the Progressive Rock Lounge, so there's no place for rap here.
 
I would call it progressive in the sense of the word being an ajective, not a noun, if you know what I mean.
 
Well, Michael Jackson's videos were progressive as an adjective, probably a lot of mainstream bands are progressive in comparison with most of what's being played in the radios, but this is a PROGRESSIVE ROCK FORUM (AS A GENRE).
 
The roots one was in odd time sigs, had interesting beats, was live (organic), and unique but powerful. I lost that one too, this is a long story, but I basically lost my entire CD collection. I restored my most important albums illegally, but I forgot a bunch of them. I heard it several times, and the stuff is still in my head, I haven't forgotten how it sounds.
 
Good for you [IMG>height=17 alt="Thumbs Up" src="http://www.progarchives.com/forum/smileys/smiley20.gif" width=23 align=absMiddle>
 
 I once heard a really great jazz saxophonist, playing live. He had a fifteen minute long jam. Well, more like he soloed for fifteen minutes. But, it was freaking amazing, he just soared higher and stronger then anyone except coltrane (cut me some slack, because I don't know much saxophonists other then him and coltrane who like to solo for 15+ minutes).
 
Nobody said anything about Jazz, that'sreal music IMO, even when free jazz went too far sometuimes, but that's only my taste.
 
The crowd was screaming for an encore, and he pulled out a hiphop song. This was a guy much more talented then your average prog artist.
 
I wonder why if people insist that musicians from other genres are so much more talented than Progressive Rock artists, they waste their time coming here?
 
The saxophonist even tried freestyle, but it wasn't very good. The drummer was going all out, just like any progressive or jazz drummer would. The keyboardist in the back was evoking all of this spooky stuff in the back, and he even had a solo. The sax guy turned to the audience and is like "yo, whats tha?, whats tha?". So, it owned mostly. The drummer, by the way, was one of the best I've seen, and was formerly a hip hop drummer.
 
For what I read they were not playing rap or hip hop, but some other kind of fusion of different genres, the fact that the drummer was once a hip hop musicians says nothing about his skills when playing real music.So, in conclusion, progressive hip hop already exists. Progressive rock hip-hop doesn't, most likely. Hip hop isn't bad at all. In fact, it is one of the best artforms, once you get past your predjudices.
 
I haven't passed my prejudices, maybe that's why I don't go to hip hop forums to talk about how great Van Der Graff Generator or Echolyn are.
 
 You all talk about how a good singer is important to prog, and rapers are just rappers, right? Rapping is very diffucult, and I could never acheive a timbre like some rappers. I guess I am white though, so it might be some racial thing.
 
They speak fast, that's all!!!! At least 99.99% of the millions of rappers out there, not talking about those strange real underground rappers.
 
And no it's not racial, in my country you can find thousand of Peruvian rappers most of them closer to native Peruvian ethnia doing exactly the same thing that all the Gangstas I seen do, and none of them is black.
 
Please!!!!!! I know I'm not nice sometimes maybe even a basNOTANICEPERSONtard, but I'm here because of Prog Rock.
 
Iván
 


I'll be black and you be blue,I suppose. Please don't dissect my posts. It takes everything out of context and misses the big point.
First off, I was being sarcastic when I called KC "underground". Anyone who is actually into rap the same way we are into prog will know those two. As a matter of fact, if you go into a record store, you almost guaranteed to find those albums. More likely then finding a king crimson album (which I have trouble with in chain stores, imo. You are lucky, I have to order mine). The low end theory, apparently, is considered a "classic" the same way rock fans consider Led zepplin IV a classic. Neither album is an exception, except to today's sh*tty gangsta' rap, which has nothing to do with real rap, except as a hyperbole from real rap. Judging Hip-hop from bands like 50-cent is like judging prog from bands like pink floyd. Neither is what the genre is really like. Lets go back a little, okay? So, there is this revolution somewhat like the white punk revolution, but for blacks. So, it is real genuine music, and lots of the classics like low end theory are released. Some guys make a record about crime in the city and stuff, and it sells like mad, so the record companies encourage artists to go that route. All of a sudden, hip hop is the new thing, just like punk. And, just like punk getting compromised by bands like good charloette, rap got compromised by bands like ludacris. So, is good charloette real punk? No, it is a commercial genre. Just like gangsta rap. They are commercial genres, not real genres. People who were with hip hop from the beginning will tell you that what is on the radio now is not what they would consider hip hop. Just like you guys don't consider SOAD prog. The fact is, a few bands sell almost all of the records. So, they sell the majority of records, so you might say that the majority of hip hop is that sh*t. But, if you look in terms of artists, the majority of artists are not like that at all. So, I consider it the mojority of hip hop released is not the sh*t you call hip hop on the radio. This isn't strange or mysterious in any way. As a matter of fact, the sales rank is about the same as in the court of the crimson king. So much for being this great exception that no ones heard of.

About the prog thing. Some people think of prog as a descriptive word. THen some people think of prog as a genre. Radiohead is not really related to the prog genre, but a ton of people call them progressive. Same thing about progressive hip-hop. Some people consider artistic and innovative to be prog rock. If you are that type of person, progressive hip hop exists. If you are a genre type, then it doesn't exist. It falls on the person.

I know what I heard the jazz guy play, and it was definatly hip hop. Hip hop descended from jazz, so don't give me sh*t about how jazz is real music and hip hop isn't. Now, about "the fact that the drummer was once a hip hop musicians says nothing about his skills when playing real music." What I am implying is that he was a talented drummer at jazz, and I assume he was talented at hip-hop, since you don't change skill levels when you switch genres. that means there are talented hip-hop musicians.

Now, please don't stick me with comments like this is a prog forum, and anything else is unwelcome. I didn't start this thread, but since it is about rap, I can talk about rap if I want. And if I insist that artists from other genres like jazz can be better then prog artists, that has no impact on my appreciation of prog. I am a prog head, but I know that that great jazz artists are indeed superior to the great prog artists. I come here because I love prog. Please don't make me unwelcome merely because I like other genres.

I think I covered all bases.
 
 
 
 
 
 
ClapClapClap
 
Pity few people are likely to read your post at this point, Nuke.
 
EDIT- the forum software is going haywireAngry.


Edited by Visitor13 - May 05 2006 at 09:48
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 05 2006 at 12:04

Nuke wrote:

Quote I'll be black and you be blue,I suppose. Please don't dissect my posts. It takes everything out of context and misses the big point.

 

Well, that’s the way I do it without cutting sentences or ideas, if  you like it OK if not, I can’t do it on another way because  you’re making a hell of a long post.


First off, I was being sarcastic when I called KC "underground". Anyone who is actually into rap the same way we are into prog will know those two. As a matter of fact, if you go into a record store, you almost guaranteed to find those albums. More likely then finding a king crimson album (which I have trouble with in chain stores, imo. You are lucky, I have to order mine).

 

That “You are lucky, I have to order mine” is or sarcasm or you live in Tibet, as a fact I live in Perú and find almost any King Crimson album in any record store, also bought a lot of albums outside my country, specially in USA and never had any problem buying anything I searched for except Triumvirat which is very hard to find being a German release.

 

But if you go to any store, you find any 50 cents Rap or Hip Hop album, to be honest for me not any Rap or Hip Hop album is worth those 50 cents, but each time somebody talks me about a supposedly “great rap artist” I manage to get something and find the same crap, probably in a nicer package, but the same sh!t IMO.

 

This is an interesting point 50 cents rap…… Have you ever heard of 50 cents Prog? I haven’t, you know why? Because Prog is a genre that search for excellence, some achieve this, some fail in the attempt, but those bands that play Prog’ know from the start they are going to have a hard time, because Prog is not commercial, they don’t search for the easy formula, they search for the harder one.

 

 

The low end theory, apparently, is considered a "classic" the same way rock fans consider Led zepplin IV a classic. Neither album is an exception, except to today's sh*tty gangsta' rap, which has nothing to do with real rap, except as a hyperbole from real rap.

 

That sh*tty Gangsta Rap as you call it (Well all Rap is sh!tty for me) is the real Rap born in the streets, the “so called” elegant or classic or good or talented Rap is oly a hybrid mixed of different sounds and genres that lost all his rap essence.

 

Judging Hip-hop from bands like 50-cent is like judging prog from bands like pink floyd.

 

Pink Floyd is an excellent band and I wish more bands sounded like them, it’s a classic and more precisely is one of the cornerstones of the genre, a band that evolved dramatically from British Psychedelia (Very original expression of it) to something absolutely new with a very elaborate atmospheric sound excellent guitar (virtuoso to say the less) by Dave Gilmour and dramatic lyrics by both Dave and Roger (Not the crappy stuff most rappers play).

 

Neither is what the genre is really like. Lets go back a little, okay? So, there is this revolution somewhat like the white punk revolution, but for blacks. So, it is real genuine music, and lots of the classics like low end theory are released.

 

No, it’s not a revolution, it’s not something that appeared from the nothingness, rap was a process, but inverse to Prog, while Prog is the evolution (In a Darwinian sense) of simple Rock getting ore elaborate and complex, Rap is the over simplification of  lets say a b*****d son of Jazz and R&B that abandons real music (with the excuse that the instruments are too expensive) to create a form of poetry backgrounded by a couple of chords in many cases ripped from real artists.

 

You know who made a real intelligent predecessor of Rap, Bob Dylan but he blended Country elements like in Suberranean Homesick Blues

 

 Some guys make a record about crime in the city and stuff, and it sells like mad, so the record companies encourage artists to go that route. All of a sudden, hip hop is the new thing, just like punk. And, just like punk getting compromised by bands like good charloette, rap got compromised by bands like ludacris. So, is good charloette real punk? No, it is a commercial genre. Just like gangsta rap. They are commercial genres, not real genres. People who were with hip hop from the beginning will tell you that what is on the radio now is not what they would consider hip hop. Just like you guys don't consider SOAD prog. The fact is, a few bands sell almost all of the records. So, they sell the majority of records, so you might say that the majority of hip hop is that sh*t. But, if you look in terms of artists, the majority of artists are not like that at all. So, I consider it the mojority of hip hop released is not the sh*t you call hip hop on the radio. This isn't strange or mysterious in any way. As a matter of fact, the sales rank is about the same as in the court of the crimson king. So much for being this great exception that no ones heard of.

 

Haven’t touched the whole paragraph so you don’t say I cut your ideas, but that nonsense of a few guys talking about crimes in the sitt7y is ignoring the essence of Rap. Rap is not at invented word, is described buy any dictionary:

 

Rap: 2 a : a sharp rebuke or criticism b : a negative and often undeserved reputation or charge -- usually used with bum or bad <given a bum rap by the press

 

And that’s the reason of Rap, to criticize, of course it’s ridiculous to see a lot of guys rapping about oppression and poverty with enough gold in their bodies to feed a small country for months. Their essence is to criticize everything, throw the blame on society of crime, violence and everything that is wrong but not assuming any share of that blame, so don’t come me with the cr*p that rap was perverted by a bunch of idiots that found the magic formula, the truth is that Rap was born perverted.

 

Please don’t come with that sad story that only a few artists play all the bad rap and the vast majority plays the sh!tty one, that’s as false as a US$ 2.25 coin

About the prog thing. Some people think of prog as a descriptive word. THen some people think of prog as a genre. Radiohead is not really related to the prog genre, but a ton of people call them progressive. Same thing about progressive hip-hop. Some people consider artistic and innovative to be prog rock. If you are that type of person, progressive hip hop exists. If you are a genre type, then it doesn't exist. It falls on the person.

 

Well, what those persons think is not transcendental at all, Progressive Rock is a genre, there’s no way to deny that, people included here Radiohead because they believe this band use some Progressive Rock elements (I believe that’s partially truth but still they are not a Prog band) they even compare them with Pink Floyd.

 

Progressive Hip Hop as an adjective, well….for some people maybe, I still haven’t heard something so revolutionary and essential that makes a strong difference, at the end it’s only the repetition of one or two chords with a strong rhythm pattern.

 

And no it doesn’t fall in the person. Progressive Rock is a genre, like or not, get it or not, understand it or not, you can’t change that.

I know what I heard the jazz guy play, and it was definatly hip hop. Hip hop descended from jazz, so don't give me sh*t about how jazz is real music and hip hop isn't. Now, about "the fact that the drummer was once a hip hop musicians says nothing about his skills when playing real music." What I am implying is that he was a talented drummer at jazz, and I assume he was talented at hip-hop, since you don't change skill levels when you switch genres. that means there are talented hip-hop musicians.

 

There’s not such thing as Prog or Hip Hop musicians, Genesis is the best example, the same band that played really complex and essential Prog played POP albums at the end of their career. Look at Randy “The Emperor” Jackson, he once played with Journey, Jean Luc Ponty and Jazz Icons as Aretha Franklin and Billy Cobham, but he found later that it was more profitable to play with Madonna and N’Sync and landed as judge of a Karaoke contest as American Idol instead of making great music.

 

There are musicians that play Prog, Jazz or Hip Hop, you’re talking about a drummer that can play Jazz and Hip Hop´, nothing else.

Now, please don't stick me with comments like this is a prog forum, and anything else is unwelcome. I didn't start this thread, but since it is about rap, I can talk about rap if I want.

 

Yeah, you can talk about what you want, but there’s a non Prog Music Lounge where this thread should be, I can’t understand why it wasn’t already changed, maybe because it has the word Progressive.

 

And if I insist that artists from other genres like jazz can be better then prog artists, that has no impact on my appreciation of prog. I am a prog head, but I know that that great jazz artists are indeed superior to the great prog artists. I come here because I love prog. Please don't make me unwelcome merely because I like other genres.

 

You may like other genres, I love some POP, a lot of classic Rock, metal, Latin Music, Folk music, Jazz, etc but don’t come here with he fairytale of Progressive Rap, because that’s absolutely ridiculous. Both genres express the opposite points of the musical spectrum, while Prog searches for the most complex expression and orchestration, Rap tends to the suppression of melody and harmony basing most of their sound in fast talking backgrounded by a couple of chords and strong but repetiive Rhythm patterns.

Btw: Don't feel unwelcomed, I only answer those posts I believe that deserve to be answered, those guys who say "Genesis rules because they are the best" (And despite I'm a Genesis fan) don't deserve such a long reply, because dogmas are for church, arguiments are for debate.


I think I covered all bases.

 

Me too

 

Iván

 



Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - May 05 2006 at 12:08
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 05 2006 at 16:29
Close to the edge, down by the river...bitch!!!LOLLOLLOLLOLLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 05 2006 at 20:50
my dick get up and my dick get down with these bitches n ho's suckin mah dick

hip hop version of ctte


Edited by Rashikal - May 05 2006 at 20:50

listen to Hella
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 05 2006 at 22:54
It would be very good I think (Confused
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 06 2006 at 00:02
I do agree with what Ivan is saying. I am completely open to the genre of progressive rap, but I just haven't heard anything remotely progressive about any rap, underground and so called progressive rap artists included (if it would exist it would have to be instrumental with an actual band, but than would it still be called rap?)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 06 2006 at 00:44
Originally posted by el böthy el böthy wrote:

Close to the edge, down by the river...bitch!!!LOLLOLLOLLOLLOL


ShockedLOLLOLLOL

LOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 06 2006 at 07:27
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Nuke wrote:

Quote I'll be black and you be blue,I suppose. Please don't dissect my posts. It takes everything out of context and misses the big point.

 

Well, that’s the way I do it without cutting sentences or ideas, if  you like it OK if not, I can’t do it on another way because  you’re making a hell of a long post.

 
I'll be red, then...


First off, I was being sarcastic when I called KC "underground". Anyone who is actually into rap the same way we are into prog will know those two. As a matter of fact, if you go into a record store, you almost guaranteed to find those albums. More likely then finding a king crimson album (which I have trouble with in chain stores, imo. You are lucky, I have to order mine).

 

That “You are lucky, I have to order mine” is or sarcasm or you live in Tibet, as a fact I live in Perú and find almost any King Crimson album in any record store, also bought a lot of albums outside my country, specially in USA and never had any problem buying anything I searched for except Triumvirat which is very hard to find being a German release.

 

But if you go to any store, you find any 50 cents Rap or Hip Hop album, to be honest for me not any Rap or Hip Hop album is worth those 50 cents, but each time somebody talks me about a supposedly “great rap artist” I manage to get something and find the same crap, probably in a nicer package, but the same sh!t IMO.

 
You're simply not listening.

 

This is an interesting point 50 cents rap…… Have you ever heard of 50 cents Prog? I haven’t, you know why? Because Prog is a genre that search for excellence, some achieve this, some fail in the attempt, but those bands that play Prog’ know from the start they are going to have a hard time, because Prog is not commercial, they don’t search for the easy formula, they search for the harder one.

 
If they really search for the harder formula, why do they play what is, despite its unpopularity, popular music? Why don't they play art music?
 

The low end theory, apparently, is considered a "classic" the same way rock fans consider Led zepplin IV a classic. Neither album is an exception, except to today's sh*tty gangsta' rap, which has nothing to do with real rap, except as a hyperbole from real rap.

 

That sh*tty Gangsta Rap as you call it (Well all Rap is sh!tty for me) is the real Rap born in the streets, the “so called” elegant or classic or good or talented Rap is oly a hybrid mixed of different sounds and genres that lost all his rap essence.

 
Sorry to say this, but this is just ridiculous. It's like saying that if you weren't born a slave on the southern plantations, you can't sing the blues, that your blues lost all of its essence. Or that you can't sing gospel choires if you're white. Or that white men can't play basketball. Or that to be a successful rock artist you have to shag groupies left and right. Or that if you haven't graduated from the conservatory, don't wear a cape and don't sing about dragons you can't be prog. If you don't wear a cape your prog is devoid of its essence, it's not prog. Rap was born when someone discovered a musical (sic) quality to his/her speech when they accentuated certain rhythmic patterns, found this quality pleasing and passed his/her discovery on to other people. I don't even want to guess when and where that occurred, but I'm pretty sure it goes a LONG way back. And even if it doesn't, even if it was born in the ghettoes, so what? I don't remember ever getting stabbed, raped or becoming addicted to crack as a result of listening to the few rap artists that I sometimes listen to.
 
 

Judging Hip-hop from bands like 50-cent is like judging prog from bands like pink floyd.

 

Pink Floyd is an excellent band and I wish more bands sounded like them, it’s a classic and more precisely is one of the cornerstones of the genre, a band that evolved dramatically from British Psychedelia (Very original expression of it) to something absolutely new with a very elaborate atmospheric sound excellent guitar (virtuoso to say the less) by Dave Gilmour and dramatic lyrics by both Dave and Roger (Not the crappy stuff most rappers play).

 

Pink Floyd's superiority over 50 cent isn't important here - what is important is the fact that you have no idea about prog if you've only heard Pink Floyd and no idea about rap if you've only heard 50 cent.
 

Neither is what the genre is really like. Lets go back a little, okay? So, there is this revolution somewhat like the white punk revolution, but for blacks. So, it is real genuine music, and lots of the classics like low end theory are released.

 

No, it’s not a revolution, it’s not something that appeared from the nothingness, rap was a process, but inverse to Prog, while Prog is the evolution (In a Darwinian sense) of simple Rock getting ore elaborate and complex, Rap is the over simplification of  lets say a b*****d son of Jazz and R&B that abandons real music (with the excuse that the instruments are too expensive) to create a form of poetry backgrounded by a couple of chords in many cases ripped from real artists.

 
IMO evolution is about making things work, not about making them more complex. If complexity doesn't work, nature doesn't hesitate to simplify.
But let's assume that more complex = better. Where does that leave prog? Somewhere boring, if Frank Zappa's and Robert Fripp's opinions are anything to go by. Let's face it, prog isn't anything as complex and/or ambitious as classical, some jazz, avant garde and traditional music. Zappa and Fripp knew this, so they held prog low. And I'm sure they aren't the only HIGHLY accomplished composers/musicians who think this waz. I'm sure Bartok would consider prog crude as well, if he were still alive. So ultimately that leaves prog in the position akin to that of a small town businessman, who may want to be treated by his fellow townspeople (whom he holds in contempt because of his house and two cars) as a Rockefeller, but who wouldn't be able to offer the least resistance if a real Rockefeller came to his town and bought him out. Pathetic little creature, really. If he had shown sympathy to his fellows, he would have stood a chance of keeping his dignity at least, but since he didn't... So ultimately you can only go so far with complexity as an indicator of quality.
 
that abandons real music (with the excuse that the instruments are too expensive)
 
 
Another ridiculous statement here. Following this logic one could also say that practitioners of Gregorian chants, the music of the African Wolof people, the Charlie Parker-influenced jazz artists, people playing the music of the far East, people who solo on their instruments without any backing, and drummers in general abandoned real music, or never created it in the first place.
 
to create a form of poetry backgrounded by a couple of chords in many cases ripped from real artists.
 
 
If they quoted those artists without permission, they are definitely guilty of a crime. But that hardly disqualifies them as artists - Jean Genet and Richard Wagner were also thieves; Carlo Gesualdo was a murderer; Sir Thomas Malory was all of this and more. And the act of quoting doesn't disqualify them as artists, either. It probably would if that was all they did - but that isn't very likely, IMO.
 
 
 You know who made a real intelligent predecessor of Rap, Bob Dylan but he blended Country elements like in Suberranean Homesick Blues

 

 Some guys make a record about crime in the city and stuff, and it sells like mad, so the record companies encourage artists to go that route. All of a sudden, hip hop is the new thing, just like punk. And, just like punk getting compromised by bands like good charloette, rap got compromised by bands like ludacris. So, is good charloette real punk? No, it is a commercial genre. Just like gangsta rap. They are commercial genres, not real genres. People who were with hip hop from the beginning will tell you that what is on the radio now is not what they would consider hip hop. Just like you guys don't consider SOAD prog. The fact is, a few bands sell almost all of the records. So, they sell the majority of records, so you might say that the majority of hip hop is that sh*t. But, if you look in terms of artists, the majority of artists are not like that at all. So, I consider it the mojority of hip hop released is not the sh*t you call hip hop on the radio. This isn't strange or mysterious in any way. As a matter of fact, the sales rank is about the same as in the court of the crimson king. So much for being this great exception that no ones heard of.

 

Haven’t touched the whole paragraph so you don’t say I cut your ideas, but that nonsense of a few guys talking about crimes in the sitt7y is ignoring the essence of Rap. Rap is not at invented word, is described buy any dictionary:

 

Rap: 2 a : a sharp rebuke or criticism b : a negative and often undeserved reputation or charge -- usually used with bum or bad <given a bum rap by the press

 

 
And that’s the reason of Rap, to criticize, of course it’s ridiculous to see a lot of guys rapping about oppression and poverty with enough gold in their bodies to feed a small country for months. Their essence is to criticize everything, throw the blame on society of crime, violence and everything that is wrong but not assuming any share of that blame,
so don’t come me with the cr*p that rap was perverted by a bunch of idiots that found the magic formula, the truth is that Rap was born perverted.
 
... the truth is that rock was spawned by the devil, classical was born snobbish, vain and arrogant, jazz was created by Wynton Marsalis , prog is about wearing a cape...
 

 Please don’t come with that sad story that only a few artists play all the bad rap and the vast majority plays the sh!tty one, that’s as false as a US$ 2.25 coin


You didn't like Nuke's story, how about the BBC's then?

World hip-hop questions US rap

A recent international hip-hop festival which brought together rap artists from around the world has raised the question of why non-US rap is so political - whereas mainstream American rap appears frivolous
.

Many of the performers at the three-day Trinity International Hip-Hop Festival in Hartford, Connecticut, were critical of the way that US rap - which is by far the best-selling - appears concerned mostly with money, drugs and sex, and has little to do with its roots in the angry political expression of groups like Public Enemy or KRS One.

"There's this negative perception of hip-hop as being a criminal artform, as being the home of the uneducated and non-thinking people," said Nigerian MC Oke.

"When you go across the continents of the Earth, people are embracing hip-hop as the force to change and transform the world."

'Sex, money and drugs'

The artists, who came form countries as diverse as Brazil, Kenya, and Iraq, were brought together by the record label Nomadic Wax, in collaboration with a group of Hartford students and American non-governmental organisation World Up.

The festival was designed to promote international understanding and community development through hip-hop.

Rolando Brown, of event sponsors the Hip-hop Association, said the festival highlighted there was "more of a focus on positive community development" outside the US.

"Some will argue that it's because of a lack of an economy, others would say it's because the international market has always been a little bit more conducive to development than the US has," he added.

MC Dola, a Tanzanian rapper who is one of the biggest-selling artists in East Africa, said that outside of the US, stars maximise their appeal by talking about social issues and rapping in their own language.

"We have been able to filter out the elements of sex, money and drugs - you don't get that in Tanzania," he explained.

"You don't get airplay if you talk about these things in your music. Over 99% of the rap in Tanzania is in Swahili - and it actually has a political message to it.

"They are the records that sell and appeal to a wider demographic of people than any type of music."

Changing market

However, many artists in Hartford blamed the current preoccupations of US hip-hop on the music industry, and stressed they believe record labels and radio conglomerates are actively promoting negative stereotypes to bury rap with a positive or political message.

"Being sensational about violence or sex or drugs is a huge part of it," said Chee Malabar, a rapper with Asian-American act The Himalayan Project.

"It's easier for Americans to buy into that than it is to look in the mirror and say, 'some of the social policies and institutional hierarchies are messed up'.

"That's hard to sell, and ultimately it's about selling."

But Jacqueline Springer, of the BBC's urban music station 1Xtra, said that she strongly disagreed with this opinion.

"People haven't appreciated that although rap is the biggest-selling genre now, it's layered, so there are people who are underground, who have more of a political voice," she said.

She also pointed out that the age of the average rap fan has decreased, which has transformed what rap artists produce.

"They don't really want to hear about your opposition to George Bush - they'd much rather hear about what you want to do with George Bush's wife," she said.

"They don't want too much politics or too much sociological content rammed down their throats, because they're looking at rap as a fantasy - 'if I can famous, I can get iced-out teeth as well'."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4950692.stm

About the prog thing. Some people think of prog as a descriptive word. THen some people think of prog as a genre. Radiohead is not really related to the prog genre, but a ton of people call them progressive. Same thing about progressive hip-hop. Some people consider artistic and innovative to be prog rock. If you are that type of person, progressive hip hop exists. If you are a genre type, then it doesn't exist. It falls on the person.

 

Well, what those persons think is not transcendental at all, Progressive Rock is a genre, there’s no way to deny that, people included here Radiohead because they believe this band use some Progressive Rock elements (I believe that’s partially truth but still they are not a Prog band) they even compare them with Pink Floyd.

 

Progressive Hip Hop as an adjective, well….for some people maybe, I still haven’t heard something so revolutionary and essential that makes a strong difference, at the end it’s only the repetition of one or two chords with a strong rhythm pattern.

 

And no it doesn’t fall in the person. Progressive Rock is a genre, like or not, get it or not, understand it or not, you can’t change that.


First you accuse rap of being by definition limited and crude and rap artists of not being creative because they adhere to the confines of rap. And then you say prog is great and that it is a GENRE. If it is indeed a genre and you advocate staying true to it, then you're also advocating limiting oneself to the confines of this genre. Therefore you're advocating the lack of progress.  Respectfully, you are contradicting yourself.

I know what I heard the jazz guy play, and it was definatly hip hop. Hip hop descended from jazz, so don't give me sh*t about how jazz is real music and hip hop isn't. Now, about "the fact that the drummer was once a hip hop musicians says nothing about his skills when playing real music." What I am implying is that he was a talented drummer at jazz, and I assume he was talented at hip-hop, since you don't change skill levels when you switch genres. that means there are talented hip-hop musicians.

 

There’s not such thing as Prog or Hip Hop musicians, Genesis is the best example, the same band that played really complex and essential Prog played POP albums at the end of their career. Look at Randy “The Emperor” Jackson, he once played with Journey, Jean Luc Ponty and Jazz Icons as Aretha Franklin and Billy Cobham, but he found later that it was more profitable to play with Madonna and N’Sync and landed as judge of a Karaoke contest as American Idol instead of making great music.

 

There are musicians that play Prog, Jazz or Hip Hop, you’re talking about a drummer that can play Jazz and Hip Hop´, nothing else.

Now, please don't stick me with comments like this is a prog forum, and anything else is unwelcome. I didn't start this thread, but since it is about rap, I can talk about rap if I want.

Yeah, you can talk about what you want, but there’s a non Prog Music Lounge where this thread should be, I can’t understand why it wasn’t already changed, maybe because it has the word Progressive.

 

And if I insist that artists from other genres like jazz can be better then prog artists, that has no impact on my appreciation of prog. I am a prog head, but I know that that great jazz artists are indeed superior to the great prog artists. I come here because I love prog. Please don't make me unwelcome merely because I like other genres.

 

You may like other genres, I love some POP, a lot of classic Rock, metal, Latin Music, Folk music, Jazz, etc but don’t come here with he fairytale of Progressive Rap, because that’s absolutely ridiculous. Both genres express the opposite points of the musical spectrum, while Prog searches for the most complex expression and orchestration, Rap tends to the suppression of melody and harmony basing most of their sound in fast talking backgrounded by a couple of chords and strong but repetiive Rhythm patterns

 
Again, let's face it, prog isn't anything as complex and/or ambitious as classical, some jazz, avant garde or traditional music, so it cannot be searching for the most complex expression and orchestration. It is simply out of its reach, IMO. It's no wonder that, to make their music more complex than the average rock song, prog artists had to resort to techniques and strategies that had LONG been discovered and probably done to death by artists from the 'genres' I've named. And, I think, this is why Zappa, Fripp and some others rejected prog. It's simply not very progressive. It may be progressive for rock, but on the whole, it's nothing groundbreaking. Same goes for what one could call progressive rap; it isn't any better or any worse in that respect. 
 
Or is it? Anthony Braxton respects rap and says that, at its best, it has many levels. Steve Coleman and Matthew Shipp actively cooperate with rap artists. Braxton's creativity and knowledge is legendary. His works are astoundingly complex and energetic. Shipp is one of the most interesting pianists of the younger generation, probably the one who will take over from Cecil Taylor. Steve Coleman is a highly accomplished and intelligent musician, as well. They are careful with words and choosy about who they play with - rightfully so. They only pick the best; those whom they consider creative and progressive.
 
 
Btw: Don't feel unwelcomed, I only answer those posts I believe that deserve to be answered, those guys who say "Genesis rules because they are the best" (And despite I'm a Genesis fan) don't deserve such a long reply, because dogmas are for church, arguiments are for debate.

I think I covered all bases.

 

Me too

 

Iván

 
Me three

 



Edited by Visitor13 - May 06 2006 at 08:33
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 06 2006 at 07:55
[QUOTE=FragileDT]I do agree with what Ivan is saying. I am completely open to the genre of progressive rap, but I just haven't heard anything remotely progressive about any rap, underground and so called progressive rap artists included (if it would exist it would have to be instrumental with an actual band, but than would it still be called rap?)[/QUOTE]
 
So solo electronic projects can't be progressiveConfused?
 
So the late Derek Bailey playing his guitar by himself, with no band, wasn't progressiveConfusedConfused
 
 
 


Edited by Visitor13 - May 06 2006 at 07:58
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 06 2006 at 09:13
If neo prog exists, why can't progressive rap?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 06 2006 at 09:50
Originally posted by goose goose wrote:

If neo prog exists, why can't progressive rap?
Hug
 
@ the thread: I'm the worst guy when it comes to express what I'm thinking, but the whole situation is the same as with threads about progressive electronica, with Ivan as the main man in opposition.
 
The whole prblem is that p-word, prog which could be understood as progressiove approach to music, and as a rock genre with pseudo classical melodies and arrangements.
 
So it can be changed to experimental, complex, innovative or whatever. A few artists have been suggested. It is pretty popular today, so you can ask for this stuff easily in a specialised record store.
 
And rap, without theexperimental attitude is still pretty fun(not funny!!) to listen to, and some fine songs in this genre do exist.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 06 2006 at 13:24
Originally posted by Visitor13 Visitor13 wrote:

 
You're simply not listening.
 
Funny,. when you have no arguments you reply with a 4 word srntence and avoid further discussion

 

 

If they really search for the harder formula, why do they play what is, despite its unpopularity, popular music? Why don't they play art music?
 
Please translate, I was saying that there's no 50 cents Prog but most of Rap is defined by yourslf as 50 cents reap, this means something no? A genre in which 99% of their production if 50 cents crap is in general terms a 50 cents genre. 
 

The 

Sorry to say this, but this is just ridiculous. It's like saying that if you weren't born a slave on the southern plantations, you can't sing the blues, that your blues lost all of its essence.
 
By the contrary, my point is that almost anybodfy can sing Rap, if not ask Mr Van Winkle (or whatever his last name is) called Vanilla Ice, who ripped Queen's music and then was forced to transfer the rights to Suge Knight with tyhe cannon of a gun and being almost gthrown from a balcony.
 
Or Mr.  EMINEM, I'm not talking about races, this is simply stupid. I'm talking about the essense of a genre. About a month ago UI heard a Muzak (AKA elevator music) version of ELP songs, that is so blended with crap that is not Prog anymore. If you blend Rap with coplex music then oit ceases to be rap, Rap is mainly vocal and spoken, the music is secondary.
 
Or that you can't sing gospel choires if you're white. Or that white men can't play basketball. Or that to be a successful rock artist you have to shag groupies left and right.
 
Again you're talking incoherences, white men can play Basketbal and sing Gospel, but if you make a sport in which you have to throw a ball to a ring using a Beisball bat or playing with your feet, then it ceases to be Basketball, doesn't matter if you throw the ball to a basket. The same if you add complex music to Rap it ceases to be rap.
 
 Or that if you haven't graduated from the conservatory, don't wear a cape and don't sing about dragons you can't be prog. If you don't wear a cape your prog is devoid of its essence, it's not prog.
 
Sorry, but now you're wrong, the cape is just showbiz Tony Banks plays with jeans and is as Prog as you can get.
 
But IF YOU DON'T HAVE MUSICAL STUDIES, BETTER IF IN A COBNSERVATORY YOU CAN'T WRITE JOURNEY SO THE CENTRE OF THE EARTH OR WIX WIVES OF HENRY THE WII.
 
If you check each and every Prog band you´ll find at least one member who has formal classical music studies, in order to create so elaborate music YOU NEED THE FORMAL EDUCATION, THAT'S A FACT.
 
Of course that's not the case of Rap. 
 
 
Rap was born when someone discovered a musical (sic) quality to his/her speech when they accentuated certain rhythmic patterns, found this quality pleasing and passed his/her discovery on to other people. I don't even want to guess when and where that occurred, but I'm pretty sure it goes a LONG way back. And even if it doesn't, even if it was born in the ghettoes, so what? I don't remember ever getting stabbed, raped or becoming addicted to crack as a result of listening to the few rap artists that I sometimes listen to.
Again you're escaping from the discussion with silly cliches, most of the Rap lyrics are crap, but thois doesn't mean you will change into a Gangasta for just listening it, as you won't become a bnew born Christian for listening Testimony.
 
But violent and revolutionary lyrics sell, that's why they do it, stupid kids who only care for how cool the music makes you look and won't even care for lyrics
 
Pink Floyd's superiority over 50 cent isn't important here - what is important is the fact that you have no idea about prog if you've only heard Pink Floyd and no idea about rap if you've only heard 50 cent.
 
You brought the issue, but if you listen Pink Floyd you have an idea of Prog if you listen any Prog band you have an idea about Prog, maybe you won't know about sub-genres, but it's Prog Music, in the sae way that Gangsta crap is Rap.
 
 
IMO evolution is about making things work, not about making them more complex. If complexity doesn't work, nature doesn't hesitate to simplify.

Sorry, but have you ever read Darwin "The Evolucion of the Species"? Nature works the opposite way unicelular beings evolved into sea creatures, anphibious, mamals, monlewys, proto hominids and hominids before reaching to the Homo Sapiens.

Evolution works from extremely siple to extremely complex, not otherwise.

But let's assume that more complex = better. Where does that leave prog? Somewhere boring, if Frank Zappa's and Robert Fripp's opinions are anything to go by. Let's face it, prog isn't anything as complex and/or ambitious as classical, some jazz, avant garde and traditional music.
 
Sorry but Zappa had very particular ideas and Fripp speaks crap as often as he does great works,. Classical can be as complex as Rachmaninoff and as simple as Lullaby by Brahms.
 
Prog can be as simple as Prog Related as Styx, more complex as Pendragoon or almust as impossible to listen as Rio. Alberto Ginastera, the creator "Objective Nationalism" (1934–-1948), "Subjective Nationalism" (1948--1958), and "Neo-Expressionism" (1958--1983) and one of the most complex musicians ever said when he heard ELP's version of Tocatta "Diabolic...This is the only way my usic has to be performed".
 
And he was a Modern Classical and acclaimed musician, so nothing is true even if Fripp says it, after he produced his wife's albums, I don't know if his arrogance is not just a cover.
 
 Zappa and Fripp knew this, so they held prog low. And I'm sure they aren't the only HIGHLY accomplished composers/musicians who think this waz. I'm sure Bartok would consider prog crude as well, if he were still alive.
 
Wrell, we can only talk about what we know, and the only classical compoiser thattalked about Prog was Ginastera, and as I said, he was exited with this.
 
 So ultimately that leaves prog in the position akin to that of a small town businessman, who may want to be treated by his fellow townspeople (whom he holds in contempt because of his house and two cars) as a Rockefeller, but who wouldn't be able to offer the least resistance if a real Rockefeller came to his town and bought him out. Pathetic little creature, really. If he had shown sympathy to his fellows, he would have stood a chance of keeping his dignity at least, but since he didn't... So ultimately you can only go so far with complexity as an indicator of quality.
 
Translate please, that parabole has no feet or head, who are Prog townspeople? The rappers? I don't think so.
 
And no, complexity alone means nothing, you need quality, originalitry, imagination, dexterity and even charisma.
 
Another ridiculous statement here. Following this logic one could also say that practitioners of Gregorian chants, the music of the African Wolof people, the Charlie Parker-influenced jazz artists, people playing the music of the far East, people who solo on their instruments without any backing, and drummers in general abandoned real music, or never created it in the first place.
 
Again you don't have the slightest idea what you're talking about, Gregorian Chant is pre-orchestral Canonic music (Pre meaninf BEFORE) from 800 to 1000 AD
 
It is the music of the Roman Rite of the Mass, also known as the Gregorian rite or Tridentine rite, and the reason is that St Gregoruy the Great (the Pope) didn't allowed the use of instruments during the celebration of mass, oin the late Gothic era the organ was allowed and then the church admitted the use of some instruments....THAT'S CALLED EVOLUTION, FROM SIMPLE (Monophonic human voice a capella) TO THE COMPLEX (First organ and then Orchestras and polyphonic choirs).
 
Don't talk me about Ethnic chants, because most are based in ancient rituals and religious laws, for example Yussuf Islam (Formerly known as Cat Stevens) refused to use guitar anymore because one Moslem Sacred text said that you shal praise Allah with your voice and only with drums, but this is only because of their strong compromise with their faith, and you can't compare this with comon music.
 
 
If they quoted those artists without permission, they are definitely guilty of a crime. But that hardly disqualifies them as artists - Jean Genet and Richard Wagner were also thieves; Carlo Gesualdo was a murderer; Sir Thomas Malory was all of this and more. And the act of quoting doesn't disqualify them as artists, either. It probably would if that was all they did - but that isn't very likely, IMO.
 
 
Well Wagner QUOTED some music but he was skilled enough to create the 15 hours original Opera known as Der Ring De Nibelungen that lasts 15 or 16 hours or the magnifiscent Tanheusser, so don't dare to compare him with any Rap musician, most of whom can hardly play an instrument, read a note or make anything remotely original.
 
BTW: You're again kicking the board and inventing subjects, I don't care if any musician is a crook or a drug addict, as a fact Gary Thain died of heroin OD and I still consider him the best bass player ever, the same goes with Hendrix (even when I fdon't like his music). Alex Lifeson hadrecently a legal problem becaudse of violence, but that's not the general rule in Prog.
 
Even if it was, the musical problem with copying the music is not the legal one but THEIR LACK OF ORIGINALITY, and that's a different issue only musical.
 

 

  

... the truth is that rock was spawned by the devil, classical was born snobbish, vain and arrogant, jazz was created by Wynton Marsalis , prog is about wearing a cape...
 

Rock was ACCUSED but becauise people didn't wanted heir status quo to change, Classical wasn't born snobbish, Classical was born RELIGIOUS!!!!!!! but 90% of the lyrics of Rap talk about crimes, drugs, ganstas, sexism and violence


You didn't like Nuke's story, how about the BBC's then?

World hip-hop questions US rap

A recent international hip-hop festival which brought together rap artists from around the world has raised the question of why non-US rap is so political - whereas mainstream American rap appears frivolous
.

Many of the performers at the three-day Trinity International Hip-Hop Festival in Hartford, Connecticut, were critical of the way that US rap - which is by far the best-selling - appears concerned mostly with money, drugs and sex, and has little to do with its roots in the angry political expression of groups like Public Enemy or KRS One.

"There's this negative perception of hip-hop as being a criminal artform, as being the home of the uneducated and non-thinking people," said Nigerian MC Oke.

"When you go across the continents of the Earth, people are embracing hip-hop as the force to change and transform the world."

'Sex, money and drugs'

The artists, who came form countries as diverse as Brazil, Kenya, and Iraq, were brought together by the record label Nomadic Wax, in collaboration with a group of Hartford students and American non-governmental organisation World Up.

The festival was designed to promote international understanding and community development through hip-hop.

Rolando Brown, of event sponsors the Hip-hop Association, said the festival highlighted there was "more of a focus on positive community development" outside the US.

"Some will argue that it's because of a lack of an economy, others would say it's because the international market has always been a little bit more conducive to development than the US has," he added.

MC Dola, a Tanzanian rapper who is one of the biggest-selling artists in East Africa, said that outside of the US, stars maximise their appeal by talking about social issues and rapping in their own language.

"We have been able to filter out the elements of sex, money and drugs - you don't get that in Tanzania," he explained.

"You don't get airplay if you talk about these things in your music. Over 99% of the rap in Tanzania is in Swahili - and it actually has a political message to it.

"They are the records that sell and appeal to a wider demographic of people than any type of music."

Changing market

However, many artists in Hartford blamed the current preoccupations of US hip-hop on the music industry, and stressed they believe record labels and radio conglomerates are actively promoting negative stereotypes to bury rap with a positive or political message.

"Being sensational about violence or sex or drugs is a huge part of it," said Chee Malabar, a rapper with Asian-American act The Himalayan Project.

"It's easier for Americans to buy into that than it is to look in the mirror and say, 'some of the social policies and institutional hierarchies are messed up'.

"That's hard to sell, and ultimately it's about selling."

But Jacqueline Springer, of the BBC's urban music station 1Xtra, said that she strongly disagreed with this opinion.

"People haven't appreciated that although rap is the biggest-selling genre now, it's layered, so there are people who are underground, who have more of a political voice," she said.

She also pointed out that the age of the average rap fan has decreased, which has transformed what rap artists produce.

"They don't really want to hear about your opposition to George Bush - they'd much rather hear about what you want to do with George Bush's wife," she said.

"They don't want too much politics or too much sociological content rammed down their throats, because they're looking at rap as a fantasy - 'if I can famous, I can get iced-out teeth as well'."
 
Yes there may be political Rap even in the states, you have Inmortal Technique who promotes criminal terrorism in Perú while earning a lot of money in the safety of USA. I may admit that there can be SOME good lyrics, but still not ,music to me.

BTW: This is just an article mostly quoting what this rappers and hip hoppers have to say about their own music and how poor rappers blame USA rap because they are poor and USA pays millions, that's all.

They are blaming against USA Rap just because their market doesn't provide them the same comfort that USA market can afford. Give them a couple millions and you'll find how they change instantly.


First you accuse rap of being by definition limited and crude and rap artists of not being creative because they adhere to the confines of rap.

No I accuse rap of being a crude and mediocre musical "genre" (if you loike it more) because music is not important, oit's a secondary elemsnt to enhance the lyrics, asa I said it may be a form of street poetry but music not.
 
And then you say prog is great and that it is a GENRE. If it is indeed a genre and you advocate staying true to it, then you're also advocating limiting oneself to the confines of this genre.
 
If you paid more attention to Prog, you will know that Prog is probably the widest genre ever existed because it blends Rock with  Classical. Jazz. Folk - Ethnic, Avant Garde, Minimalistic, etc influences. We have more than ten sub-genres and we find we need sometimes an extra sub-genre to defuine just one band as Gentle Giant, King Crimson or VDGG that doiesn't perfectly fit in any categoruization, so you're comparing apples with oranges.
 
Therefore you're advocating the lack of progress.  Respectfully, you are contradicting yourself.
 
No I feel thesame pleassurelistening a Prog band from 1971 than a good Prog band from 2006.
 
Again, let's face it, prog isn't anything as complex and/or ambitious as classical, some jazz, avant garde or traditional music, so it cannot be searching for the most complex expression and orchestration. It is simply out of its reach, IMO.
 
You said it, IN YOUR OPINION, which I don't share, I believe you shall always try to reacgh the excelence.
 
It's no wonder that, to make their music more complex than the average rock song, prog artists had to resort to techniques and strategies that had LONG been discovered and probably done to death by artists from the 'genres' I've named. And, I think, this is why Zappa, Fripp and some others rejected prog. It's simply not very progressive.
 
Zappa rejected Prog (If he did) because he wanted to be cotroversial, mabny Prog musicians play prog but reject it because it's not profitable, and I can expect anything from Fripp, because the guy is a genius but also a jerk according to most people who know him. Fripp believes his music is ober anything because he has an ego as big as the Mracana Stadium.
 
It may be progressive for rock, but on the whole, it's nothing groundbreaking. Same goes for what one could call progressive rap; it isn't any better or any worse in that respect. 
 
There's just a slight thing you have forgotten....PROGRESSIVE RAP DOEN'T EXIST YET.
 
Or is it? Anthony Braxton respects rap and says that, at its best, it has many levels. Steve Coleman and Matthew Shipp actively cooperate with rap artists. Braxton's creativity and knowledge is legendary. His works are astoundingly complex and energetic. Shipp is one of the most interesting pianists of the younger generation, probably the one who will take over from Cecil Taylor. Steve Coleman is a highly accomplished and intelligent musician, as well. They are careful with words and choosy about who they play with - rightfully so. They only pick the best; those whom they consider creative and progressive.
 
Well, I base yb taste and opinions in my own appreciation, I don't care for what people say. Rick Wakeman said TFTO is just a pile of crap, Phil Collins said that he thanked that Punk killed Prog but later changed his version to "I was always a proghead". I believe in what I see and hear.
 
BTW: Monsieurs Braxton, Coleman and Snipp may buy all the rap they want if they respect it so much, it's their problem and have enough money to do it, I won't use a rap CD as a coaster because it would kill my apetite. LOL
 
Iván
 

 
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 06 2006 at 14:27

Thumbs Down

Is this a prog forum?

Man Overboard has gone a bit overboard on this oneLOL

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 06 2006 at 19:12
Originally posted by RycheMan RycheMan wrote:

Thumbs Down

Is this a prog forum?

Man Overboard has gone a bit overboard on this oneLOL

 
Thanks Heavens and some Adm, who sent this band from the Prog Lounge to Non Prog music.
 
At least it won't bother there.
 
Iván
 
 


Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - May 06 2006 at 19:13
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 07 2006 at 08:48
I don't see how Pink Floyd's place in prog relates to Fifty Cent's place in rap. Since prog is a subgenre of rock, and we're talking about progressive rap (or at least some of us are ), surely we should be comparing Fifty Cent's place in rap to the big rock bands of today. No, I can't name any but nearly everything I've heard on the radio/elsewhere in public sounds absolutely dire. If these bands... uh, the Arctic Monkeys I guess... can belong to the same genre (not sub-genre, of course) as bands like King Crimson, why can't there be progressive rappers?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 08 2006 at 00:31
Originally posted by The Doctor The Doctor wrote:

No.  We do not need progressive rap.  That would lead to prog gangstas, turf wars between the artists.  Could you imagine Jon Anderson doing a drive-by of Peter Gabriel's house?  The lyrics would become nothing more than talking about what a great band they are, the sexual prowess of its members, and how the other bands suck and are gonna get shot up.  Let's not forget the anger directed toward the police for just doing their job and arresting scumbags.  No, progressive rap would lead to a massive deterioration of the art form into nothing more than a feeding ground for the bottom feeders of the world.


This is an unbelievably narrow-minded statement, but I burst out laughing at it anyways. Jon Anderson doing a drive-by of Peter Gabriel's place........LOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 12 2006 at 11:22
This conversation goes on and on.. Losers
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 12 2006 at 13:57
I pray to God that progressive rock may stay a mighty fortress against rap.  It has invaded every other crevice of society, it would seem, and that should be enough for the gangstas.  I have the right to refuse musical service to anyone in my own ears.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 12 2006 at 14:31
Originally posted by el böthy el böthy wrote:

Close to the edge, down by the river...bitch!!!LOLLOLLOLLOLLOL
 
Paperlate, say da be-itch in da crowd.LOL
Fire up the flux capacitor ! We're taking this Delorean through all four dimensions.

What is the future of prog ? Genesis reunion ? I'm not telling!That could upset the thyme/space continuum.
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Ivan_Melgar_M View Drop Down
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Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 13 2006 at 00:01
Originally posted by yeppp yeppp wrote:

This conversation goes on and on.. Losers
 
Great paradox, who is worst, the loser who writes something because honestly believes in what he's/she's saying or the loser that wastes his/her time reading it even when he believes it's crap?
 
Iván
            
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