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Sean Trane View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 02 2007 at 08:18
Originally posted by Kid-A Kid-A wrote:

I love Led Zeppelin but their inclusion is rediculous. They are blues-rock and sometimes folk-rock.
 
This is prog-archives not thingswhichinspiredprog-archives so I see no reason for them to be included.
 
Generally I'd agree with you. I fought against their inclusion too, (ans as Micky says in hios opening post, he did as well)  but hey!!!!!!!! they won their inclusion
 
So please get over it (I did!!Wink , I even reviewed their albums in roughly three hours time to legitimize their inclusion)
 
Stop yourself from growing an ulcer because Zep is included in the PÄ. Just not worth it.
let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter
keep our sand-castle virtues
content to be a doer
as well as a thinker,
prefer lifting our pen
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 02 2007 at 13:21
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

Interesting, but I strongly disagree about Zep not being genuinely innovative-- sometimes it's forgotten what an astoundingly deep impact the first two albums had. Remeber, both Zep 1 and 2 came out in 1969, and they weren't like anything ever heard before-- sure Page took from everyone (especially Hendrix, Jeff Beck & Rod Stewart, CSN, etc.), but the result was a masterful, concentrated version of the rock of the 60s. They showed what could be done with real musicianship and form before most prog bands had developed a style.


Of course, they were certainly innovative in a rock context, but i would like to think you need more than that to be concidered 'progressive'. Think of Miles Davis. he did alot for jazz but he also did alot for music in general and that makes him truley innovative. I not sure what Led Zep did for anything other than hard rock. Thats not to say the band didnt make some very enjoyable music. Tangerine and the Rain Song are favourites of mine.
 
by the way i agree with that other guy. The Who have far more right be here than Zep


Edited by Froth - February 02 2007 at 18:33
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2007 at 06:11
LZ were Prog to the generation that grew up on their contribution and nothing will take that away. Try to find a comparable band today with a similar, versatile approach.
 
Blues, Rock, Prog were all there influencing and educating millions in music.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2007 at 07:03
Originally posted by S Lang S Lang wrote:

LZ were Prog to the generation that grew up on their contribution and nothing will take that away.


Not in my neck of the woods they weren't! Zep were known as a heavy-blues-hard-rock band, hugely inventive and influential, but never were they considered to be Prog.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2007 at 08:14
@Joolz: you're right from this perspective. Also, most of their fans really were "heavy-blues-hard-rock" fans. However, I think they way Zeppelin is considered must change, at least now and here; if at the time the fans didn't feel much of a difference when Zeppelin started making more complex music (with many prog sides) because the band perfectly integrated it in their normal sound, that doesn't mean this side didn't exist and shouldn't be acknowledged by us. How many "heavy-blues-hard-rock" bands could have done No Quarter, Kashmir, Achilles Last Stand, The Song Remains the Same, In My Time of Dying, Rain Song, Carouselambra, Trampled Under Foot or In the Light?
@Froth - indeed the music of Zepp wasn't seminal for the prog area but for the larger rock genre; maybe they had some influence in some cases of prog bands getting rockier. Their contribution from prog comes from them being influenced by the major prog acts (like Yes, imo). The fact that they were rather influenced to get proggier than were themselves seminal for prog doesn't throw any shadow on their proggier material, however. It would, if it would be praised as prog's eight wonder, but up till now it hasn't been. Myself I don't think all prog's hotspots needed to be innovative in order to be accepted as progressive, and actually many weren't - and they were still both progressive and great.
@Avatachron: I second your last post, but I have a nuance to bring. You say Zepp took what was best from 60s rock and and made an essential compilation of it. I think the essential 60s rock with a masterful guitar lead and a hard-edge rock approach was to be found not in Zepp I, but on Beck's albums (like Beck-ola and Truth). To my ears, what Zepp I brought was a new, different (than that of the 60s) way to write and play rock. It had in it what was the big difference, and that was more important than what it in common to 60s rock. I'm basing these comments on Dazed and Confused and How Many More Times on one side, for more complex rock, and on Good Times, Bad Times and Communication Breakdown on the other, for hard rock. Also one more thing - Zepp I is a sample of the way they related to rock in 68, not in 69. The album was released in the US in January 69 but it was recorded in October 68 if I'm not wrong, and Page  was already playing parts of the material while still with the Yardbirds.


Edited by andu - February 03 2007 at 08:27
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2007 at 10:24
Well why don't we just add Bach and Beethoven to the progarchives? They had more of an influence on symphonic prog, so why aren't they in the archives by the same logic?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2007 at 13:28
Originally posted by Kid-A Kid-A wrote:

Well why don't we just add Bach and Beethoven to the progarchives? They had more of an influence on symphonic prog, so why aren't they in the archives by the same logic?


I'm positive to the idea of adding Bach, Beethoven and a multitude of other composers to the Proto-Prog section. If we are going to have a Proto-Prog category, let's make it complete.


Edited by Philéas - February 03 2007 at 13:29
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2007 at 13:43
Originally posted by Kid-A Kid-A wrote:

Well why don't we just add Bach and Beethoven to the progarchives? They had more of an influence on symphonic prog, so why aren't they in the archives by the same logic?


I apologise for repeating myself, but I think that for some people a simple, basic fact is far from clear. This is not our website. The final decisions concerning site structure, subgenres, additions and such are made by the owners, Rony and M@x. Therefore, if none of us Admins or Special Collaborators has yet taken the initiative of adding Bach, Beethoven, Miles Davis or what not to the site's database, it is for this very simple reason. Like it or not, this is the way things are.

Personally, I wish that those people who like to criticise PA's current policy would write to the owners in order to present their suggestions to them. I keep on seeing people saying they are against Proto-Prog and Prog-Related, even when they've been told dozens of times that it is the owners' wish to have those two categories. Is it so difficult to be proactive instead of complaining all the time, or making snide remarks?Confused
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2007 at 13:45

The addition of classical composers would require a lot more though before it could even be considered.

The obvious issue is that they are not performers. The site structure is set up around the model of recording artists and their work. There are many different recordings of the works of the famous composers, some excellent, some very poor. If we were to list every recording of Beethoven's 9th alone, we would have a list of several hundred albums.
 
Perhaps a more practical approach would be to add an extended essay to the proto prog description detailing how classical music influenced prog.
 
Alternatively, how about a classical music section in the forum, with separate threads for each relevant composer?
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Atavachron View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2007 at 17:43
Originally posted by andu andu wrote:

@Avatachron: I second your last post, but I have a nuance to bring. You say Zepp took what was best from 60s rock and and made an essential compilation of it. I think the essential 60s rock with a masterful guitar lead and a hard-edge rock approach was to be found not in Zepp I, but on Beck's albums (like Beck-ola and Truth). To my ears, what Zepp I brought was a new, different (than that of the 60s) way to write and play rock. It had in it what was the big difference, and that was more important than what it in common to 60s rock. I'm basing these comments on Dazed and Confused and How Many More Times on one side, for more complex rock, and on Good Times, Bad Times and Communication Breakdown on the other, for hard rock. Also one more thing - Zepp I is a sample of the way they related to rock in 68, not in 69. The album was released in the US in January 69 but it was recorded in October 68 if I'm not wrong, and Page  was already playing parts of the material while still with the Yardbirds.


Well, there certainly was a major connection between Beck/Stewart and Zep, in fact Zep took much inspiration from Jeff Beck's hugely talented group and capitalized on the vacuum left by them and the death of Hendrix. Your correct that LZ l was written and recorded in 1968 but since it was released in '69, I consider its impact to have taken place in '69.






Edited by Atavachron - February 03 2007 at 18:43
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2007 at 17:51
Originally posted by Easy Livin Easy Livin wrote:

 
Alternatively, how about a classical music section in the forum, with separate threads for each relevant composer?


Sounds like a novel idea!

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Cheesecakemouse View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 07 2007 at 22:18
I see Led Zep a lot like ELP in their approach to expanding  thheir respective musical genres.
ELP progged up classical music &
Led Zep progged up blues



  
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