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Sasquamo View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 29 2007 at 19:36
Normal rock?  I would think most people on this site would think of rock that's not prog, such as Led Zeppelin, The Who, The Beatles, etc.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2007 at 03:30
In that case, I'd just like to point out that the techniques as well as the mindsets are completely different in Prog Rock: For example, the bands you mention all used standard song structure and short, repetitive phrases in non modulating, steady-beat songs utilising catchy melodies, with lyrics about boy-girl relationships or modern life as the basis of their careers - with few exceptions.
 
Prog Rock does not - the techniques used are the opposite of those I listed.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2007 at 16:22
But they are still both rock.  A drum beat that works in stereotypical rock will most likely work in prog too.  It's not as if a rock drummer is jamming with a jazz band, where the way everything is played is entirely differently.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2007 at 21:12
I was lucky enough to find a drummer who is really into prog and a keyboardist who is a big Yes fan who I can almost definately convert to a full-fledged prog fan.  

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2007 at 21:40
    Honestly, one of the places this sucks the most is where I'm currently stuck.  The Ninth CIrcle of Hell, a.k.a high school.  You really don't want to know the massive amount of people who are little sheep to the ever-churning-out-crap modern music industry. Fall Out Boy, Nickelback, "gangsta" rap artists, essentially everyone who makes massive amounts of money from doing nothing original.  Even the kids in band, which there is actually a great band at my school, lots of talent, they still insist on drowning their ears in bad music like Incubus, Underoath and Slipknot.
    The only people I know who consistently listen to prog are myself, one friend of mine who I've been bringing over to The Prog Side (away from what he used to listen to, Staind), and two guys who used to live here but moved to a different place in the state (one being Schwang Schwinga, if you've seen him around the forums).  Honestly I can say I blame the fact that so many people at my school have not grown up to the extent I have.  Not to toot my own horn, but some of these football players cannot manage a single coherent thought. Even a blind squirrel occasionally finds an acorn, you know?
    So now that my ranting is done, I'd just say that I feel for you man.  The only half-decent drummer at my school listens to nothing but old punk.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 01 2007 at 06:46
Originally posted by Sasquamo Sasquamo wrote:

But they are still both rock.  A drum beat that works in stereotypical rock will most likely work in prog too.  It's not as if a rock drummer is jamming with a jazz band, where the way everything is played is entirely differently.
 
That's a very broad generalisation - and in fact, I would posit that the opposite generalisation is true - Prog Rock is notable for NOT utilising basic rock beats, and, in the best prog, the drummer has to interact more closely with the musicians as a jazz drummer would. Phil Collins, Barriemore Barlowe, Robert Wyatt, Pierre Moerlen and Pip Pyle spring to mind.
 
 
Prog Rock is reasonably close to jazz in principle, hence the fusion/prog crossovers.
Since Prog Rock rarely usese 4/4, it is highly unlikely that a drum beat that works in "normal" rock will work in Prog - I thought that much was obvious to any Prog fan.


Edited by Certif1ed - May 01 2007 at 06:47
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 01 2007 at 12:36
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by Sasquamo Sasquamo wrote:

But they are still both rock.  A drum beat that works in stereotypical rock will most likely work in prog too.  It's not as if a rock drummer is jamming with a jazz band, where the way everything is played is entirely differently.
 
That's a very broad generalisation - and in fact, I would posit that the opposite generalisation is true - Prog Rock is notable for NOT utilising basic rock beats, and, in the best prog, the drummer has to interact more closely with the musicians as a jazz drummer would. Phil Collins, Barriemore Barlowe, Robert Wyatt, Pierre Moerlen and Pip Pyle spring to mind.
 
 
Prog Rock is reasonably close to jazz in principle, hence the fusion/prog crossovers.
Since Prog Rock rarely usese 4/4, it is highly unlikely that a drum beat that works in "normal" rock will work in Prog - I thought that much was obvious to any Prog fan.


That's what I was feebly trying to say earlier but did not have enough knowledge (or correct terms) to express this. Thanks for explaining the differences properly, Certif1ed!Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 01 2007 at 13:33
Originally posted by Sasquamo Sasquamo wrote:

Getting someone that's into "normal" rock to play prog doesn't seem like it would be that much of a stretch.  If you think about it, prog's not that much different, it's not like you're asking them to play a completely different style from what they're comfortable with.


Sasquamo, it may not seem like it, but the problem is often someone who likes mainstream music doesn't like what they hear when they hear prog... so asking them to play something that's progressive or even just prog-related can be like pulling teeth.  They try to change it to make it sound "better" in their opinion, which means making it sound like mainstream rock.  So the band either loses one member or the other, or at least one member is unhappy with the music.

Morbix - I know what you mean... but I wouldn't exactly call Incubus, Underoath and Slipknot bad music... there's certainly a lot of music out there that's less complex and interesting.  For example... the dreaded boy-bands. :)

Actually, avoiding ordinary, boring drummers is part of the reason why I don't listen to a lot of non-progressive rock.  I can't stand it when a drummer is just slamming on his snare drum every beat, or every other beat... or... even worse... every 1/2 or 1/4 beat.  Aaargh!  The sound cuts right through me.  I enjoy complex drumbeats that accentuate the song rather than just keep time.

This is why I actually loved the drummer from my band that I was talking about earlier.  He almost never played a straight rock beat - he took his cues from the music.  But if the time signature wasn't 4/4 he had trouble, and he didn't like time signature changes, tempo changes, or long songs.  The reason that didn't work therefore was because he didn't like what I was doing, not because I thought what he was doing was bad (I actually thought he grew to be quite an excellent drummer... as long as he was in 4/4). ;)


Edited by StarsongAgeless - May 01 2007 at 13:46
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 01 2007 at 17:33
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by Sasquamo Sasquamo wrote:

But they are still both rock.  A drum beat that works in stereotypical rock will most likely work in prog too.  It's not as if a rock drummer is jamming with a jazz band, where the way everything is played is entirely differently.
 
That's a very broad generalisation - and in fact, I would posit that the opposite generalisation is true - Prog Rock is notable for NOT utilising basic rock beats, and, in the best prog, the drummer has to interact more closely with the musicians as a jazz drummer would. Phil Collins, Barriemore Barlowe, Robert Wyatt, Pierre Moerlen and Pip Pyle spring to mind.
 
 
Prog Rock is reasonably close to jazz in principle, hence the fusion/prog crossovers.
Since Prog Rock rarely usese 4/4, it is highly unlikely that a drum beat that works in "normal" rock will work in Prog - I thought that much was obvious to any Prog fan.


Prog uses 4/4 a great deal, and while prog drummers might listen and interact "like" jazz, playing rock is still a lot different than playing jazz.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 01 2007 at 17:59
Originally posted by Sasquamo Sasquamo wrote:

But they are still both rock.  A drum beat that works in stereotypical rock will most likely work in prog too.  It's not as if a rock drummer is jamming with a jazz band, where the way everything is played is entirely differently.


Drumming has actually become a highly specialized thing.  Many are only good at one style.  You have fusion drummers, prog drummers, pop drummers, punk drummers, metal drummers, etc., and they often don't cross styles very well. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2007 at 16:16
Originally posted by Sasquamo Sasquamo wrote:


Prog uses 4/4 a great deal, and while prog drummers might listen and interact "like" jazz, playing rock is still a lot different than playing jazz.


While a lot of prog does indeed use 4/4, much of it does not stick with that time signature during the whole song.  I realize this is a generalization, but in order to play progressive rock, a drummer needs to be able to do time signatures other than 4/4 and 3/4, which are the only beats used in the vast majority of pop and rock music.  Yes, playing rock is different from playing jazz... and playing progressive rock is different from both those things.  It may combine elements of both, but it is its own entitiy.

Also, a lot of people who listen to prog are listening partially for the musicians' skill or virtuosity.  If a drummer is just playing a basic rock beat throughout entire songs, a lot of prog-fans may write off either the drummer or the band as unskilled.  Then again, fans of mainstream rock might worship that drummer as long as the beat is perfectly timed.

Again, yes I realize this is a generalization.  It depends a lot on what someone is looking for in a song.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2007 at 20:28
Originally posted by StarsongAgeless StarsongAgeless wrote:


Morbix - I know what you mean... but I wouldn't exactly call Incubus, Underoath and Slipknot bad music... there's certainly a lot of music out there that's less complex and interesting.  For example... the dreaded boy-bands. :)


Those words sting my nose and throat like ammonia.  But the point is that yeah, I went a little overboard. It's not so much the music (hell, Jordy Jordison is a psycho drummer), but the people that listen to it. It just seems like if you can't express any emotion but anger, it just feels like they're a little locked up and alienate themselves except for other miserable people.  Gets to you after a while. Cry
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 08 2007 at 14:39
Morbix - The sad thing is, this doesn't change too much when you're out of high school either... although at least you have a little more freedom to move around and find people that you enjoy playing music with. I say a little more because most people, including me, are held in one place by their job.

The internet seems to be the best way around this... short of, you know, not having a job. ;)  Although if music IS your job that should work pretty well! Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 08 2007 at 14:56
Originally posted by Sasquamo Sasquamo wrote:

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by Sasquamo Sasquamo wrote:

But they are still both rock.  A drum beat that works in stereotypical rock will most likely work in prog too.  It's not as if a rock drummer is jamming with a jazz band, where the way everything is played is entirely differently.
 
That's a very broad generalisation - and in fact, I would posit that the opposite generalisation is true - Prog Rock is notable for NOT utilising basic rock beats, and, in the best prog, the drummer has to interact more closely with the musicians as a jazz drummer would. Phil Collins, Barriemore Barlowe, Robert Wyatt, Pierre Moerlen and Pip Pyle spring to mind.
 
 
Prog Rock is reasonably close to jazz in principle, hence the fusion/prog crossovers.
Since Prog Rock rarely usese 4/4, it is highly unlikely that a drum beat that works in "normal" rock will work in Prog - I thought that much was obvious to any Prog fan.


Prog uses 4/4 a great deal, and while prog drummers might listen and interact "like" jazz, playing rock is still a lot different than playing jazz.
 
Genesis and Jethro Tull regularly used non 4/4 signatures - and that's just two off the top of my head.
 
The point is, that 4/4 is used much less in Prog than standard rock - and this is just one simple reason (of many) that you cannot just tart up regular rock and call it Prog.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 08 2007 at 15:17
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Prog Rock is reasonably close to jazz in principle, hence the fusion/prog crossovers.
Since Prog Rock rarely usese 4/4, it is highly unlikely that a drum beat that works in "normal" rock will work in Prog - I thought that much was obvious to any Prog fan.


Any 8/8 (C) or 6/8 drum beat that works in normal rock would most likely work in any comparable Prog section.  Chances are the drummer would dress it up a bit for good effect-- ghosting on the snare, creating a more intricate ride/hihat pattern, etc.-- but the underlying beat would be the same.  Collins, Moerlen and Barlowe each did quite a bit of this; while their more over-the-top stuff is certainly more memorable (and, arguably, complex), it's important to recognize that they weren't just going off in odd meters all the time.  Just remember-- for every "Apocalypse in 9/8" there's an "Afterglow"! Wink


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 08 2007 at 15:26
Originally posted by rileydog22 rileydog22 wrote:

Drumming has actually become a highly specialized thing.  Many are only good at one style.  You have fusion drummers, prog drummers, pop drummers, punk drummers, metal drummers, etc., and they often don't cross styles very well. 


That's pretty sad, but true in a way.  While it seems that any drummer worth their salt is familiar (on one level or another) with drumming styles/techniques outside their "preferred" genre, very few drummers will actually play something other than what they're into-- unless it pays, of course!   LOL

On a somewhat related note, I can't help but notice that two genres which were originally notable for their flexibility and assimilation of disparate stylistic and musical characteristics-- Prog and Fusion-- have crystallized into their own little spheres, each with its fairly rigid conventions and expectations...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2007 at 22:00
I 've always been able to jam proficiently with anyone. I do have a diverse musical background though and I do have proficient skill in my instrument (guitar). Usually, the people I play with cannot keep up with me. I reach for lofty, technically perfect heights. I can play whith anyone, anywhere, anytime!
for those about to prog, we salute you.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 20 2007 at 12:50
Lost Chord, it sounds to me like you don't want to play with a band, you want a band to play for you. That's fine, but you have to make sure the other players all know it, and most of the time you'll have to pay them. You can't just dictate to other musicians how to play if you're not clearly the leader of the group.
Also keep in mind that some of the best bands in history came from very different musical backgrounds and it was because of that that they were able to create something unique and wonderful.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2007 at 14:03
^ It's never much fun when one member of a band doesn't give other members artistic freedom, or tries to tell another band member how to play his/her instrument.  On the other hand, it's just as frustrating when one band member writes a song, and the other band members, rather than write their own parts for the song, decide the song needs to be changed to fit their needs.  It works both ways.  With the band I was in, I was the only one who actually wrote songs before hand, so this was always happening to me.  It bothered me a lot when the other band members took out anything that wasn't in 4/4, and changed a lot of the basic structure.  It went way beyond their artistic freedom, into stamping out my freedom to write a song that I liked  (well, I could still write them, but if I wanted the structure to be the same I'd have to do it by myself).   I think this is why our jam sessions turned out better... because my feelings didn't get hurt because I hadn't done any work beforehand.  We'd just play some chords or something in 4/4 for a few minutes, and it sometimes turned out pretty or psychedelic-sounding in some cases.

Apparently I needed to rant. :)

Anyway, I think what I was trying to get at with all that, is all the band members need to give each other the freedom to experiment, play, and have fun.  I wouldn't be surprised if it works better when all the band members compose their own songs, so it's more balanced and varied.  Freedom and staying relatively relaxed are important. :)


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 27 2007 at 23:49
i completely agree with u SA, nice word!
international bitch master, thats the all thing i known about IBM.
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