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Australian View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Outcast Monsters
    Posted: September 17 2006 at 23:39

It has come to my attention that many people dislike Kansas and/or Emerson, Lake and Palmer. To all of you who dislike one/both of these bands, what do you dislike about them? Please be honest, I’m asking you’re opinion. Smile

 

I love both bands.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2006 at 23:49
ELP: The keyboards are way too....(can't find appropriate word)....flashy, I suppose. That and the sounds Emerson uses I find too cheeky sometimes.
 
I generally like ELP, just not a whole lot.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2006 at 23:50
I'm not familiar with Kansas and cannot speak about them. But ELP -- once I liked them. Then became indifferent. Now I can't stand them. Why? I would like to know it not less than you do. The only thing that comes to my mind is that it's the manner of Emerson's playing which irritates me (because I'm still able to listen to Lake's songs, like "From the Beginning", for example).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 00:14
Australian I`m a little interested in what you think of Kansas and ELP ? ... I love em both , sure I can find faults with them but that's OK both bands have produced so much brilliant stuff that the bad stuff is forgivable.   I know you are asking people who don`t like these bands for their reason but I just had to make a comment  Wink


Edited by Masque - September 18 2006 at 00:18
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 00:19
Love ELP, haven't heard enough of Kansas yet.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 03:48
0i love kansas great band and i like elp [the first couple of albums are great!!!]but after love beach they lost the plot
Nothing can last
there are no second chances.
Never give a day away.
Always live for today.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 05:29
From both bands I only have one album (Brain Salad Surgery, Leftoverture). With ELP I like the multipart Karn Evil 9, its a damn good prog epic, but the rest of the songs on the album leaveme completely indifferent. Toccata really does sound like arcade music and seems to lack any real direction, the other songs were just forgetable to me.

With Leftoverture, their wasnt anything that really grabed me. They are good musicians (though I find it impossible to hear the violin player, no matter how hard I try) and not bad at song writing, its just that it sounds too much like simple AOR to me, its not as dynamic as the English bands have proven to be.
Spending more than I should on Prog since 2005

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 07:02
ELP is amazing, I love 'em. While the filler tracks on many albums like Tarkus or BSS are usually skipable, the epics more than make up for them.

Its funny you bring up Kansas. I am (once again) giving them another chance by listening to my copy of Leftoverture. This is the 3rd or 4th attempt to enjoy them. I absolutely love the music but I HATE the vocals (both the lyrics and the sound).  Sounds too AOR to me (this discussion has been done to death here, and I'm sure the vocals is what 99% of Kansas haters will cite).

I was realizing today, that if Walsh had a british accent, perhaps I would like them!! Now isn't that silly? I guess I'm accustomed to my prog having British accents.  (athough I do like Glass Hammer, Yezda Urfa, and Belew in KC....)


Edited by mickstafa - September 18 2006 at 07:07
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 08:36
Originally posted by sleeper sleeper wrote:

not bad at song writing
 
Carry On Wayward Son Dead
 
"On a stormy sea of moving emotion
Tossed about I'm like a ship on the ocean"
LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 08:52
Carry on Wayward Son has excellent lyrics IMO, the song is a classic and will be remembered long after 99.9% of any Progressive band listed on this site. (As will "Dust in the wind")
Thats a fact.


Edited by WaywardSon - September 18 2006 at 09:01
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 09:07
Originally posted by mickstafa mickstafa wrote:



I was realizing today, that if Walsh had a british accent, perhaps I would like them!! Now isn't that silly? I guess I'm accustomed to my prog having British accents.  (athough I do like Glass Hammer, Yezda Urfa, and Belew in KC....)


Interesting - I just made a similar comment the other day on a thread about bands "you'll never get into"....


    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 20:12

So it’s the vocals that cause problems for some people. I’ve never had a problem with the vocals of any band. I guess it must be the same argument for some people who dislike Jon Anderson’s voice.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 20:15
Originally posted by Australian Australian wrote:

So it’s the vocals that cause problems for some people. I’ve never had a problem with the vocals of any band. I guess it must be the same argument for some people who dislike Jon Anderson’s voice.

 
Me neither, really, except for Rush. But that was for about 3 days. Keep in mind I was about 11 at the time. But now, they're in my Top 3. Tastes change. (Before Prog saved me from madness, I'd been listening to Christian punk and rap metal Dead)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 21:40
Steve Walsh had "the voice" probably the best voice I`ve ever heard in prog Smile 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 21:43
ELP: I really like some of there songs, but some of it is atrocious. They were bombastic for the sake of being bombastic, and there albums were full of filler, whether they were lame comedy songs or endless piano solos. They were also very weak songwriters, soloing away instead of finding good melodies.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 22:07
Originally posted by Masque Masque wrote:

Steve Walsh had "the voice" probably the best voice I`ve ever heard in prog Smile 
 
I agree, and Steinhardt has a very unique voice as well (although admittedly not as talented vocally as Walsh).
 
I wonder if there is anything to the thought that tonsil-flaring, from-the-gut vocals are something that are an acquired taste.  It seems to me that whenever someone comments in a negative way about Kansas vocals (i.e., Steve Walsh), there is often a comment that the band is "too AOR", and usually comparisons to Journey, Boston, even Foreigner.  These are all bands that also had very strong vocalists who stretched the bounds of credible with their force, power, and range. 
 
I would have to say that the more 'traditional' prog bands have tended to have vocalists that were either more reserved, or were just weird.  Or both....
 
"Peace is the only battle worth waging."

Albert Camus
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 22:19

For me, vocalists either sound like Roger Waters (just like Andy Latimer, Dad Gilmour, Greg Lake and so on), or like Steve Walsh (all southern Rock bands). And there are the unique vocalists like Jon Anderson, Geddy Lee, Robert Plant. Just my opinion.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 22:21
Originally posted by Australian Australian wrote:

For me, vocalists either sound like Roger Waters (just like Andy Latimer, Dad Gilmour, Greg Lake and so on), or like Steve Walsh (all southern Rock bands). And there are the unique vocalists like Jon Anderson, Geddy Lee, Robert Plant. Just my opinion.

 
I think Greg Lake's in a class of his own.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 22:44
I like ELP, have an enormous amount of respect for them, but they are not at the top of my list. I have the debut, "Brain Salad Surgery," and "Trilogy."

Kansas is O.K. I enjoy their music to a point. I gave "Leftoverture" another chance recently, but they just don't interest me that much. If I had more albums, I know they wouldn't get played.
    

Edited by bhikkhu - September 18 2006 at 22:45
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 22:50
Originally posted by Australian Australian wrote:

For me, vocalists either sound like Roger Waters (just like Andy Latimer, Dad Gilmour, Greg Lake and so on), or like Steve Walsh (all southern Rock bands). And there are the unique vocalists like Jon Anderson, Geddy Lee, Robert Plant. Just my opinion.

 
Hmmmm...  I have to disagree about 'all Southern Rock bands'.  For one, not too many people consider Kansas to be a southern state.  And most of the better-known southern bands were coming into their own around the same time Kansas was, so I don't think Walsh was all that influenced by them.
 
And I don't think most of these guys sounded at all like Walsh:
 

.38 Special - Florida

Allman Brothers - Georgia

Amazing Rhythm Aces -Tennessee

Atlanta Rhythm Section -Georgia

Black Oak Arkansas - Arkansas

Blackfoot - Florida

Charlie Daniels Band – Tennessee

Dixie Dregs – Florida

Doc Holliday - Georgia

Edgar Winter’s White Trash – Texas

Elvin Bishop – Oklahoma

Foghat – [J]

Georgia Satellites – Georgia

Gov’t Mule – Florida

Johnny Winter Band - Texas

Le Roux – Louisiana

Little River Band – Australia (really deep south!)

Lynyrd Skynyrd - Florida

Marshall Tucker Band - South Carolina

Molly Hatchet – Florida

Rossington Collins Band - Florida

Salem Hill – Tennessee

Stevie Ray Vaughan - Texas

Wet Willie - Alabama

ZZ Top – Texas

 

Walsh doesn't even have a southern accent, for goodness sakes.  Even his Streets and solo stuff is closer to midwest power rock than it is to southern rock.  Sure, they did a couple boogy tunes back in the day, but heck - I've heard both Yes and Phil Collins do reggae, that doesn't make them Jamaican!

 

I dunno', I just don't see him sounding southern-rock to me at all. 

 

 

 

 

 

"Peace is the only battle worth waging."

Albert Camus
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