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rushfan4
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Joined: May 22 2007
Location: Michigan, U.S.
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Posted: October 02 2007 at 19:20 |
That is funny you mention Lou Reed, I was listening to his greatest hits album last night, and the thought crossed my mind about him and Velvet Underground. I don't really think that either belong in PA but I thought that he was fairly experimental in a David Bowie type way.
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micky
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Joined: October 02 2005
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Posted: October 02 2007 at 19:29 |
Atavachron wrote:
yes, and also there's the other ugly little secret of
judging music.. and that is personal taste. It isn't suppose to
matter but, in fact, it does-- i.e. I would probably not support the
addition of, say, Lou Reed, but mostly because I don't care for his
music.. but is he progressive... and well, there you have it
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much like Steely Dan... artists like Reed progresive as they are
.. have absolutely no connection with prog. As Dean likes to
say... it is a fine line we walk. To balance judging upon the
music.. versus what public perception is.
The littlest things do make a difference... like origin..
to use your example, Reed was american and as I posted in the SD
thread, during those years prog was european. Bowie did spring
out of that same movement... he has a much stronger case
by association. What some people will never get through their
head is prog was a movement... to expand rock beyond it's boundries...
not a genre based on epic track lengths and sh*t like
that... I have found so damn funny, yet sad at the same
time, that many of fans of prog, are amoung the most close minded
of music fans. Whereas like the music and musicians of prog
themselves... had willingness to incorporate other styles and ways of
thinking and were quite open minded. Oh well.
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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Atavachron
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Joined: September 30 2006
Location: Pearland
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Posted: October 02 2007 at 19:34 |
that's a strong point on Bowie's side you raise.. region and background are highly significant
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micky
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Joined: October 02 2005
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Posted: October 02 2007 at 19:39 |
Atavachron wrote:
that's a strong point on Bowie's side you raise.. region and background are highly significant
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very significant..
ask yourself this David... do you think Steely Dan would be here if
they were English.. I'd bet my paycheck on
that... they would have, well before either of us had
joined.
Edited by micky - October 02 2007 at 19:43
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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Atavachron
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Joined: September 30 2006
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Posted: October 02 2007 at 19:44 |
well I don't know, but if true, that's points for Bowie
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micky
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Posted: October 02 2007 at 19:51 |
Atavachron wrote:
well I don't know, but if true, that's points for Bowie 
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it does... but we'll deal with that down the road.
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
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Posted: October 02 2007 at 20:41 |
For many Bowie typifies what has been descibed in the Progressive vs. Prog thread as a progressive artist who is not Prog. Almost everything he does is simultaneously eclectic and progressive - his albums generally arrive from the leftfield and land slap bang in the middle of the mainstream. And that's where the problem lies.
He produced some Prog songs, but maybe not whole Prog albums, he did Concept albums (albeit within fairly a standard rock format) and even ventured into the realm of Art Rock and Art School Rock. He has created fusions of every school of music you can care to imagine: minimalism, krautrock, jazz, soul, hip-hop, electronic, hard-rock, folk... and of course prog... (He is also pretty unique in suceeding in influencing some of the people he was influenced by - the only other artist to do that I can think of is Trent Reznor...) yet he remains a mainstream performer in the eyes of the world, even when producing non-mainstream albums.
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What?
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micky
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Joined: October 02 2005
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Posted: October 02 2007 at 20:45 |
darqdean wrote:
For many Bowie typifies what has been descibed in the Progressive vs. Prog thread as a progressive artist who is not Prog.
Almost everything he does is simultaneously eclectic and
progressive - his albums generally arrive from the leftfield
and land slap bang in the middle of the mainstream. And that's where
the problem lies.
He produced some Prog songs, but maybe not whole Prog albums, he
did Concept albums (albeit within fairly a standard rock
format) and even ventured into the realm of Art Rock and Art School
Rock. He has created fusions of every school of music you can care to
imagine: minimalism, krautrock, jazz, soul,
hip-hop, electronic, hard-rock, folk... and of course prog... (He
is also pretty unique in suceeding in influencing some of the people he
was influenced by - the only other artist to do that I can think
of is Trent Reznor...) yet he remains a mainstream performer in the
eyes of the world, even when producing non-mainstream albums. |
very very very well said...
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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Zargus
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Joined: May 08 2005
Location: Sweden
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Points: 3491
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Posted: October 03 2007 at 00:02 |
Bowie is yust as prog as Peter Gabriel, and even much more IMO, the only reason PG is here and not Bowie is becaus he was in Genesis if it was the other way around Bowie whuld be here and not PG. You cant get more progressiv then Bowie he changed his sound and style more from album to album then most bands and artist do thiere whole carer.
Edited by Zargus - October 03 2007 at 00:05
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ghost_of_morphy
Prog Reviewer
Joined: March 08 2007
Location: United States
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Points: 2755
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Posted: October 03 2007 at 13:29 |
Zargus wrote:
Bowie is yust as prog as Peter Gabriel, and even much more IMO, the only reason PG is here and not Bowie is becaus he was in Genesis if it was the other way around Bowie whuld be here and not PG. You cant get more progressiv then Bowie he changed his sound and style more from album to album then most bands and artist do thiere whole carer. |
You are equating experimental with progressive. That's fine as long as we are talking about adjectives, but when we skip over to talk about genres, experimental is just one component of progressive rock.
Bowie isn't progressive rock. It's ok to like his music anyway, though.
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