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Topic ClosedPink Floyd's Proggyness

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DJPuffyLemon View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2008 at 12:49
oh that last thing is a good point, I had always considered PF to be the best psychedelic band ever, guess this settles it thoughSmile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2008 at 14:35
Originally posted by DJPuffyLemon DJPuffyLemon wrote:

oh that last thing is a good point, I had always considered PF to be the best psychedelic band ever, guess this settles it thoughSmile


They had very strong competition from Soft Machine on good nights during the period  1967 and 68, but Machine progressed to jazz fusion 69/70.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2008 at 15:24
I think that any reasonable response should depend on a clear definition of prog.  Although those who run this site have taken admirable efforts to formulate such a definition, I believe that ultimately such an effort is done in vain.  Perhaps the most useful (and intellectually honest) formulation of progressive music would be a paraphrase of Potter Stewart's well-known remark on pornography, i.e. progressive music is hard to define but I know it when I hear it.

In any case, when I hear PinkFloyd's music, and despite its polyvalent simplicity, I know that it's prog.


Edited by WinterLight - June 09 2008 at 15:25
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2008 at 00:37
Originally posted by DJPuffyLemon DJPuffyLemon wrote:

So basically I've been giving it some thought and to me, Pink Floyd's always been more of a rock/psychedelic band than prog band.



I totally agree with you. I don't think of Floyd as being a prog band. Psychedelic at first, then morphing into classic rock (or art rock some might call it). I don't see what's prog about them really.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2008 at 00:41
Originally posted by DJPuffyLemon DJPuffyLemon wrote:

And well, art rock is more along the lines of David Bowie or Queen for me. I don't see either of those artists as prog.


I think Queen is far more prog than Floyd. Sure, they had no synthesizers, but the heavy influence and incorporation of classical music, along with the virtuoso musicianship makes them at least semi-prog.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2008 at 00:56
mabe by modernized standards but if you look at it in context...
Pipers: if this were the only Floyd album we would likelly have Floyd included in the canterburry genre, after all it fits all of the prequisites of canterburry, and Syd worked alot with some of the seminal Canterburry scene musitians.
Transition Period: The Floyd began constructing spacey jam based tunes and along with Hawkwind they pioneered Space Rock, wich is considered a subgenre of prog, therefore they must be included as one of spacerocks most important bands
Classic Period: Darkside is a prog record, containing only one "classic rock" tune. and if that track wernt on "classic rock radio" one would notice that it is in odd meter. Wish you were here may have some plain rock tracks but they are sandwiched between the spacey goodness of both Sine on's and Welcome to the Machine.
Waters-lead era: Started off hardcoreprog with Animals... three epics all sick as hell and totally progressive especially in their song structures. Then they start getting less progressive going into the wall and the final cut, but still have prog moments, and consept albums galore.
 
they can be considered prog in all their fazes. that is all
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2008 at 03:08
Originally posted by peskypesky peskypesky wrote:

Originally posted by DJPuffyLemon DJPuffyLemon wrote:

So basically I've been giving it some thought and to me, Pink Floyd's always been more of a rock/psychedelic band than prog band.



I totally agree with you. I don't think of Floyd as being a prog band. Psychedelic at first, then morphing into classic rock (or art rock some might call it). I don't see what's prog about them really.

That all depends on how you, personally, define Prog.
 
 
Originally posted by WinterLight WinterLight wrote:

I think that any reasonable response should depend on a clear definition of prog.  Although those who run this site have taken admirable efforts to formulate such a definition, I believe that ultimately such an effort is done in vain.  Perhaps the most useful (and intellectually honest) formulation of progressive music would be a paraphrase of Potter Stewart's well-known remark on pornography, i.e. progressive music is hard to define but I know it when I hear it.

In any case, when I hear PinkFloyd's music, and despite its polyvalent simplicity, I know that it's prog.
 
I work on the basic principle that the music is both composed and improvised - like jazz - but is emphatically rock music at it's core. This is something you can both "just feel", and scientifically prove via evidence in the music itself.
 
This "litmus test" appears to work for every major Prog band of the "Classic" period, but not for modern Prog bands. It also works for "Prog-Related" or "Proto-Prog" bands - it's quite uncanny how such a simple formula is such a catch-all for the defining music.
 
It also demonstrates clearly that people who are familiar with, or grew up with "Classic Prog" have a markedly different idea of what constitutes Prog to those who are more accustomed to what passes for Prog at the moment (as if it's not apparent simply by reading posts here!).
The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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DJPuffyLemon View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2008 at 08:50
can you elaborate on this "litmus test" theory?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2008 at 12:52
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

I work on the basic principle that the music is both composed and improvised - like jazz - but is emphatically rock music at it's core. This is something you can both "just feel", and scientifically prove via evidence in the music itself.


Let's examine this a bit more closely. 

First, it's not so easy to detect passages that are improvised or composed.  Two examples come immediately to mind.  Fripp remarked that many of King Crimson's most carefully constructed pieces sound improvised whereas some of its material evocative of tight composition is, in fact, improvised.  Also, Dream Theater generally composes through improvisation; or to use the musician's patois, they "jam" their songs into existence.  Ultimately, I don't trust my gut to distinguish between composed and improvised music. 

And, in any case, one really can't prove anything scientifically (by definition of the scientific method itself).  Even if we could make a "scientific" assessment of the music, what sort of evidence would we look for?  What factors would imply improvisational technique over composition?  I'm not sure that such an exercise would be fruitful even if possible.

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This "litmus test" appears to work for every major Prog band of the "Classic" period, but not for modern Prog bands. It also works for "Prog-Related" or "Proto-Prog" bands - it's quite uncanny how such a simple formula is such a catch-all for the defining music.
 
It also demonstrates clearly that people who are familiar with, or grew up with "Classic Prog" have a markedly different idea of what constitutes Prog to those who are more accustomed to what passes for Prog at the moment (as if it's not apparent simply by reading posts here!).


In other words, I know what I like and I like what I know.  I grew up with modern prog but came of age with prog from the classic era (chronologically impossible, yes, but I'm saying this figuratively, of course).  However, I reject any absolute definition of "prog", just as I would reject any absolute definition of the color "red".  They're ultimately ostensive definitions, i.e. one just as to point and say "See, that's what I mean by prog."  Again, I think that's the only intellectually honest approach to the matter.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2008 at 16:20
Pink Floyd had prog elements especially on albums like Animals but I've never considered Dark Side to be prog rock. Experimental contemporary rock yes but not prog, except perhaps Any Colour You Like. Even the Shine On song part is a fairly straightforward rock song.  The problem is trying to paste artists into this prog genre or to assume they are part of that genre.
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WinterLight View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2008 at 16:48
Again, it's all well and good to say something is or is not prog, but it's literally meaningless unless one indicates the standard of evaluation.
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