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Mandrakeroot View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2008 at 16:11
today it is difficult to clearly divide the Jazz by the Jazz Rock and understand the real differences. However, it is clear that Miles davies should be included in PA. But he created or only been a member of the Jazz Rock movement?
 
In my opinion miles Davies should not be included in the PA as well to see he has not created the Jazz Rock, but only helped to be born and more for the presence of certain musicians in the line-up of his discs.
I must admit that include Miles Davies, I would ask you to insert even Ray Charles... And this would not be a good thing. And all this because even Ray Charles has influenced Jazz Rock movement  and the contemporary Jazz scene (As Chat Baker or Count Basie, for example...).
 
Much better to include the musicians who played with Jazz Rock bands (see Jaco Pastorius, Joe Zawinhul, Chick Corea etc...) or bands like Ian Gillan Band because much closer to the mission of PA. I've one Chick Corea compilation, two Ian Gillan Band CDs and three Jaco Pastorius CD and all have shown me that my thesis is right. I also have a compilation (in MC) and one album (in CD format) of Miles Davies ... Yet I can not find, at the light of my new experiences, points of convergence with the mission of PA.
 
So I think that it is better to enter (as said) soloist phases of members of three Jazz Rock bands for excellence (Return To Forever, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Weather Report) which are not yet included in PA.
Is it not better to act like that?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2008 at 16:16
Originally posted by Mandrakeroot Mandrakeroot wrote:

today it is difficult to clearly divide the Jazz by the Jazz Rock and understand the real differences. However, it is clear that Miles davies should be included in PA. But he created or only been a member of the Jazz Rock movement?
 
In my opinion miles Davies should not be included in the PA as well to see he has not created the Jazz Rock, but only helped to be born and more for the presence of certain musicians in the line-up of his discs.
I must admit that include Miles Davies, I would ask you to insert even Ray Charles... And this would not be a good thing. And all this because even Ray Charles has influenced Jazz Rock movement  and the contemporary Jazz scene (As Chat Baker or Count Basie, for example...).


Eh?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2008 at 16:28
Originally posted by Pnoom! Pnoom! wrote:

Originally posted by Mandrakeroot Mandrakeroot wrote:

today it is difficult to clearly divide the Jazz by the Jazz Rock and understand the real differences. However, it is clear that Miles davies should be included in PA. But he created or only been a member of the Jazz Rock movement?
 
In my opinion miles Davies should not be included in the PA as well to see he has not created the Jazz Rock, but only helped to be born and more for the presence of certain musicians in the line-up of his discs.
I must admit that include Miles Davies, I would ask you to insert even Ray Charles... And this would not be a good thing. And all this because even Ray Charles has influenced Jazz Rock movement  and the contemporary Jazz scene (As Chat Baker or Count Basie, for example...).


Eh?
 
Strange, no? At the same time should be included for historical merits but not for the mission of PA.
The two statements clearly opposite and meaningless but reflect my state of mind on the issue. I think it is better to proceed in the direction that I drew in the second part of my post. If nothing else because the nearest to PA mission.
 
P.s.: I hope I have explained what I wanted to say.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2008 at 01:35
Wasn't Miles shunned by the jazz community when he went electric?  Miles is probably just a genre unto himself. Clap

Edited by Slartibartfast - May 04 2008 at 01:35
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2008 at 21:00
OK, this is what I've gathered - Davis's 100 or so albums include about 15 that are considered jazz fusion, this number including live albums. Then he also added synths, loops, and electronica in some of his albums.

Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Just thinking here mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
So once Davis gets in, Are we going to admit Joni Mitchell ?
Miles Davis is one of music's legends, a giant astride more than just the jazz scene,  in that he attracted fans from many other genres.
And if I seem to have gone overboard, I must say that some of the irritation stems from the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame wanting to induct him. My point there being that he is not related to what we generally consider rock n roll or that catch all Rock music. The Hall's arguement was the same - that he made some landmark jazz fusion albums (or at least one, if you put it out to the general public). But it still comes off as trying to add hipness to the site.
I do believe, though, that he is probably the perfect example for the idea of a separate "non-prog" section of artists or albums that prog lovers would be interested in. There would be no album reviews or commentary by the PA community. Just a simple bio by a collab or admin, covering the points of interests and how they relate to the prog world. Otherwise, we're going to face rants about the reviews on the non-jazz fusion Davis albums somehow abasing PA's standing in the internet prog community.
So think of it - a separate section, not prog related, but of interest to prog. So Metallica's Master of Puppets & Justice get their little piece of PA property. Judas Priest's Sad Wings of Destiny sees an appropriate appreciation for it qualities. And not only  Davis, but Coltrane, Brubeck, some other jazzbos, some contemporary composers (Steve Reich, Stockhausen, Edgar Varese), maybe others who indirectly have influenced prog music can be included on the site, without having to include their entire oeuvre for debate as to its' proggishness.
Heck, if we had the manpower, we could set up mini-sections that expose the sources for lyrical inspiration or musical form; example J R Tolkien, Ayn Rand, Sci-Fi, folk traditions, political beliefs etc.
IF PA is aiming for being the ALL-INCLUSIVE site for prog, why not bring it all under one roof ?
And while we're at it, why not question my mental sanity for completely not contemplating the massive work required to achieve a suitable result Confused
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 13 2008 at 17:26
If the intention of this site is to be comprehensive, I think this question answers itself.

The decision whether or not to include Miles Davis (or any artist) ought to be made based solely on his musical output, not on the difficulties posed by his addition, or the can of worms it might open, or the people it might upset. Particularly unhelpful are the arguments 'If artist X is added, then artists Y and Z ought to be added too' and 'Since we've added artist X, we now have to add Y and Z'. Artist X either has at least one album generally regarded as progressive, or s/he does not.

My understanding is that Miles Davis has a sequence of albums considered progressive jazz/rock fusion. I've listened to a couple of them and can't hear it myself: great stuff, though for me the jazz motifs dominate the other styles. But my tastes are irrelevant. If this is generally regarded as progressive, he must appear on PA.

And yes, I know it's easy for me to say, given the extraordinary amount of work required to put him here. But it could be done incrementally, surely?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 13 2008 at 19:42
Let me be the first to introduce PA's two new subgenres - Proto-Canterbury & Proto-Jazzfusion.
Our first inductees will include Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Oscar Peterson, Dave Brubeck, Charlie Parker, John Coltrane, Thelonius Monk, Dizzie Gillespie. Django Reinhardt may be added in the separate Proto-AndalusianJazz prog subgenre if there are any other artists that can be found to fill out the category.
Proto-folk prog is under consideration, with Jimmy Reed, La Bolduc (Mary Travers from QC Ca), Dylan, the Kingston Trio.
One genre / sub-genre that has been ruled out for now is Proto-Zean, as no recorded history has yet to be found; although some fossils have been dug(up).
Proto-Prog Metal has also been effectively ruled out, because even modern day Prog Metal is really just too full of loud guitars. I mean, just how far can we expect to go ?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 13 2008 at 20:17
LOL debrewguy!

I know you're making a serious point, but it's just a reprise of the 'if X, then Y' argument. I don't care about 'then Y'. I only care about 'If X'. Everyone has a line beyond which they find something unacceptable, and in many cases our views are different to the 'generally accepted' view.

Of course, if there's no generally accepted view, we'll have to debate it endlessly ... In the case of Miles Davis, however, the generally accepted view is that a significant portion of his output was progressive jazz/rock fusion. In my view that ought to be the end of the matter. (But not of the debate, of course, debate is healthy.)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 13 2008 at 23:29
If the site is going to have a Jazz/Rock Fusion category -- which it does -- it seems there's no way to exclude Miles Davis. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 14 2008 at 20:01
This is the conundrum with Miles Davis - he made more than a few jazz fusion albums. However, he also made quite a few other albums that were not . Some musical groups have been included in PA due to 2-3 "prog" albums out of 7 or more releases . fFor some of our Prog Icons  - 5, 6, 7, or 8 are easily classified as "prog" out of a 20 records or more career.
But we have also seen a few groups excluded because they only had a few albums in their career that could be considered prog.
In this fist group, we've seen Split Enz, Sabbath, Styx. In the second, our prog gods like Genesis, Yes, Rush and even Jethro Tull could be argued (I'm not making a point for or against) to have more "non-prog" albums than pure prog records; this being mainly because they've enjoyed long careers with 20-30 albums to their name.
With Davis, my arguement is that while he may have put out more than a couple of albums that influenced or were considered jazz fusion , this does not represent the majority of his output, nor for the most part, do these LPs serve as the main basis for his status as a legendary musician.
I don't remember if anyone picked up on my comparison to Joni Mitchell. While clearly a folk singer, she did have an extended jazz influenced period. Do we include her in jazz fusion or prog folk based on these records ?
And if we argue that Davis is a major influence on Jazz Fusion, does that mean Metallica has unjustly been excluded when you consider that many prog metal bands look to Ride The Lightning, Master of Puppets, and And Justice for All as templates for the direction their own bands took music in ? How about Stockhausen and Edgar Varese ? Do the Avant-Garde owe more than a little to their pioneeing efforts ?

Maybe the thread that needs to be initiated, or rather the subject that needs debate is how to "quantify" requirements for inclusion at PA, whatever the genre. In the sense that, do we say that the majority of a group's music must be related to prog to justify its' place ? Do we allow groups that had a continuous period where their output was clearly prog, and is or was considered of some importance to the genre or subgenre ? Do we consider that most musical acts progress as their career advances, and may at a certain point become "unprog" (now there's a word fer ya!) ? How many albums, or what percentage of output do we set as a threshold ?
 
Using the recent example of Judas Priest's being considered for Prog Related because of their first 3 LPs; I remember a few reviews that considered Rocka Rolla more blues based than later releases, Sin After Sin showing the first signs of the JP "sound, but being spotty quality wise, and then Sad Wings of Destiny being the album that could fairly be considered "progressive" in concept & composition without much arguement. After that, Priest becomes the Metal God, and progness is not even a memory.
Then, flipping to the other hand, and using a fave of mine - Split Enz - that was included based on their first 2 albums, and one or two mid period releases out of some 10 studio records.

The hard part would be determining these numbers without resorting to citing such and such a group's contribution. And it may be pointless, because then some resenters (i.e. sore losers) would have cause to revisit past defeats. And God knows there are more than a few intense debates that are best left done & decided.

P.S. or maybe we add a very general sub-genre named porg (sic) that we could assign the iffy candidates so to make sure the purists cannot argue about the "progginess" of said acts.


Edited by debrewguy - May 14 2008 at 20:08
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 16 2008 at 04:59
How about the Gary Burton great album named "Duster"? There are tones of artist that could be described like been fusion (or proto-fusion if you want) and they aren't here. It's better to create a category where to put essential albums in this direction, not bands or artists.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 16 2008 at 06:03
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:


Maybe the thread that needs to be initiated, or rather the subject that needs debate is how to "quantify" requirements for inclusion at PA, whatever the genre. In the sense that, do we say that the majority of a group's music must be related to prog to justify its' place ? Do we allow groups that had a continuous period where their output was clearly prog, and is or was considered of some importance to the genre or subgenre ? Do we consider that most musical acts progress as their career advances, and may at a certain point become "unprog" (now there's a word fer ya!) ? How many albums, or what percentage of output do we set as a threshold ?
 
Using the recent example of Judas Priest's being considered for Prog Related because of their first 3 LPs; I remember a few reviews that considered Rocka Rolla more blues based than later releases, Sin After Sin showing the first signs of the JP "sound, but being spotty quality wise, and then Sad Wings of Destiny being the album that could fairly be considered "progressive" in concept & composition without much arguement. After that, Priest becomes the Metal God, and progness is not even a memory.
Then, flipping to the other hand, and using a fave of mine - Split Enz - that was included based on their first 2 albums, and one or two mid period releases out of some 10 studio records.

The hard part would be determining these numbers without resorting to citing such and such a group's contribution. And it may be pointless, because then some resenters (i.e. sore losers) would have cause to revisit past defeats. And God knows there are more than a few intense debates that are best left done & decided.


yes, that is the hard part, i.e. recently we've been looking at New Zealand band Dragon who's first two LPs were prog but went on to make five pop records, and if we are to stick to our guidlines they should be added somewhere (and may very well be)  ..luckily it's self-evident that Genesis, Yes, Rush and Tull made iconic, impactful progressive rock regardless of later pop excursions  ..same for Split Enz , that first record is definitive art rock no matter how you slice it and those early albums must appear at a prog site as this, so the whole catalog is included (this is an archives after all)  ..and Split Enz are in Crossover, a full prog category, Sabbath is in ProgRelated which is an important difference 


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 16 2008 at 06:05
Originally posted by darkshade darkshade wrote:

Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:


Miles Davis, he's got like what , 100 albums, and because 3-4 were jazz fusion, even if Bitches Brew is the only one that gets mentioned most of the time, we should automatically say, YES THIS IS A PROG GUY.




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Its the pointless whole discography or nothing thing, that keeps this thread alive.

Miles 68-74 = yes (I don't know his 80's output). If debrewguy knows the albums in darkshade's post, he would also know that they belong in jazzrockfusion.

Its Miles with a very different band or bands. Imagine if he started calling it The Miles Davis Group in '68. Then this group would already been here.

Same thing with Herbie Hancock, a couple of years later, starting with the Mwandishi albums.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 16 2008 at 07:46
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

Originally posted by darkshade darkshade wrote:

Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:


Miles Davis, he's got like what , 100 albums, and because 3-4 were jazz fusion, even if Bitches Brew is the only one that gets mentioned most of the time, we should automatically say, YES THIS IS A PROG GUY.




Agharta
At Fillmore-Live at the Fillmore East
Big Fun
Bitches Brew
Dark Magus
Filles De Kilimanjaro
Get Up With It
In A Silent Way
It's About That Time
Live at Philharmonic Hall
Live At The Fillmore West
Live Evil
The Man With The Horn
Miles In The Sky
On The Corner
Pangea
Star People
A Tribute To Jack Johnson
Waterbabies
We Want Miles



Its the pointless whole discography or nothing thing, that keeps this thread alive.

Miles 68-74 = yes (I don't know his 80's output). If debrewguy knows the albums in darkshade's post, he would also know that they belong in jazzrockfusion.

Its Miles with a very different band or bands. Imagine if he started calling it The Miles Davis Group in '68. Then this group would already been here.

Same thing with Herbie Hancock, a couple of years later, starting with the Mwandishi albums.


No no ... my point is how do we qualify a non-prog musician who has a portion of their output that is prog.
Yes, Davis has more than one jazz fusion album. .
My attempt at seeking a "criteria" is meant to see at what point do we say, "O.K. band X put out umpteenth records, and ? percent were or are prog.. there fore we can argue for their inclusion at PA".
Please refer to my examples - Split Enz : 2 out of 9 studio albums, they're in. Metallica : 2 out of 10, not in; Deep Purple 3 out of ???, they're in; Dave Brubeck ? out of ?. not in (yet)
Do you see my point ? If I've put out a hundred LPs,  and 10 of them are heavy metal, and the rest are rock n roll or hard blues rock, am I a metal band ?

Oh, and by the way, live albums, unless comprised of all new material shouldn't count, eh...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 16 2008 at 12:51
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

Are we going to admit Joni Mitchell ?
 
Personally I think Ms Mitchell is easier to deal with, simply with Hiss Of The Summer Lawns through to her 80's recordings with her ex-husband, you have many excellent examples of jazz rock fusion - which number exceed her earlier folk-oriented recordings. Shadows & Lights (even with the acapella contributions for the Persuasions), has remained in my top ten list of jazz fusion albums for a longtime- Metheny, Pastorius and Brecker are on fire on the record - but it is a  pity the DVD version is a visual f***-up, however. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 16 2008 at 13:01
The jazz rock/Canterbury group are suggesting that one solution is to permit multi-labelling of bands/artists, e.g. Soft Machine would be canterbury, then depending on albums also be labelled psychedelic, or jazz rock fuson etc. This should permit tags other than those labelling prog bands to be used - but stop such albums being  named other than in a discography - i.e. not being available for open review. Therefore with Miles Davis, by consensus certain albums would be labelled jazz fusion, or jazz rock or jazz funk and be open for review, but others labelled jazz - post bop, jazz -cool school, jazz- bebop wouldn't be reviewable. Similarly I would hope a lot of the early Beatles albums etc. would stop cluttering up the review section .
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 16 2008 at 13:32
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:



Its the pointless whole discography or nothing thing, that keeps this thread alive.

Miles 68-74 = yes (I don't know his 80's output). If debrewguy knows the albums in darkshade's post, he would also know that they belong in jazzrockfusion.

Its Miles with a very different band or bands. Imagine if he started calling it The Miles Davis Group in '68. Then this group would already been here.

Same thing with Herbie Hancock, a couple of years later, starting with the Mwandishi albums.


No no ... my point is how do we qualify a non-prog musician who has a portion of their output that is prog.
Yes, Davis has more than one jazz fusion album. .
My attempt at seeking a "criteria" is meant to see at what point do we say, "O.K. band X put out umpteenth records, and ? percent were or are prog.. there fore we can argue for their inclusion at PA".
Please refer to my examples - Split Enz : 2 out of 9 studio albums, they're in. Metallica : 2 out of 10, not in; Deep Purple 3 out of ???, they're in; Dave Brubeck ? out of ?. not in (yet)
Do you see my point ? If I've put out a hundred LPs,  and 10 of them are heavy metal, and the rest are rock n roll or hard blues rock, am I a metal band ?

Oh, and by the way, live albums, unless comprised of all new material shouldn't count, eh...


I get your point, and disagree. I'd much prefer the archives included two Split Enz, two Metallica and fifteen Miles Davis albums (and no Brubeck albums. he is just influence, while Miles is jazzfusion).

Btw: Most Miles livealbums count in the same way Magma Hhai, Tangerine Dream, Encore or Can BBC.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 16 2008 at 20:40
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

The jazz rock/Canterbury group are suggesting that one solution is to permit multi-labelling of bands/artists, e.g. Soft Machine would be canterbury, then depending on albums also be labelled psychedelic, or jazz rock fuson etc. This should permit tags other than those labelling prog bands to be used - but stop such albums being  named other than in a discography - i.e. not being available for open review. Therefore with Miles Davis, by consensus certain albums would be labelled jazz fusion, or jazz rock or jazz funk and be open for review, but others labelled jazz - post bop, jazz -cool school, jazz- bebop wouldn't be reviewable. Similarly I would hope a lot of the early Beatles albums etc. would stop cluttering up the review section .


Yeah, but we wouldn't dare stop the Deep Purple reviews right ? Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 17 2008 at 05:31
Yep, Davis is certainly progressive!
His music changed from Jazz, to Jazz-fusion and Free-jazz, to Funk/Jazz-fusion, to Hiphop!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 24 2008 at 20:33
any update on whether Miles will be added here?

also, to add to the discussion, would it be possible if an exception was taken to Miles and only albums post-1967 be added to the site? that would help a lot, since his music prior, really has little to do with prog rock.
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