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BaldJean View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 22 2008 at 05:23
Originally posted by Kestrel Kestrel wrote:

Another thing about prog lyrics that I like a lot is that they often tackle subjects that pop music won't, or I feel they do a much better job of it. Also, prog rarely has a love song, which I find to be a usually boring cliche of most pop music.

I could name thousands of prog love songs.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 22 2008 at 03:57
Another thing about prog lyrics that I like a lot is that they often tackle subjects that pop music won't, or I feel they do a much better job of it. Also, prog rarely has a love song, which I find to be a usually boring cliche of most pop music.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 22 2008 at 03:40
I'd like to expand this a bit: Are lyrics important for music at all? Let's take for example Bob Dylan: He may write great lyrics, but his music is, to be honest, very bland, and it hardly reflects the lyrics, or very superficially only. He should in my opinion stop making music and stick to poetry instead. This can be said for most songwriters.
How about classical music? Are the lyrics important there? Well, I would say in opera they obviously are; that's what an opera is all about. Let's go to another art form, the lied. Are the lyrics important there? The answer again has to be "yes". Take Schubert's "Winterreise", for example; it is impossible to fully understand the music without the lyrics; they are a perfect fit.
So what about prog then? Are lyrics important there? Indeed they are. Can you honestly imagine a song like "House with no Door" by VdGG as an up-tempo prog metal number? Well, perhaps you can, but only as an extremely weird parody.
It is, however, also true that most lyricists in prog are not exactly poets. But nevertheless the meaning of the lyrics should go along with the composition, else the result is not enjoyable at all.
Some bands like Hatfield and the North often wrote silly lyrics, which was a perfect match for their music. The same can be said for Guru Guru, though in their case you usually have to understand German (or even the German dialect Bavarian, in which drummer Mani Neumeier sometimes sings).


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 22 2008 at 00:57
I'm not all that fussed on what is going on with the lyrics in prog. It is all about the delivery of the complete package.
 
Many of the bands we hold high would not be there without the singer, but I sure don't know a lot of the prog lyrics off by heart as I do with much of the pop music from "the day". Every now and then I catch one of the messages in the lyrics and think, "I didn't realise he was singing about that". I rarely sit and study the lyrics that come with the album ... and they are getting a bit hard to read with CD's as I get older!
 
A singer who I feel is a little underrated and really added his voice as another instrument in the ensemble is David Byron from early Uriah Heep. Brilliant IMHO Thumbs%20Up
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 23:27
To me, music will always matter most.  I see vocals as another instrument.  If they fit with the sound you are going for or you have a message to get across to the audience, by all means use them, but they are certainly not neccessary.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 22:59
Here's my take on lyrics:

- Really bad delivery regardless of lyrics: I won't listen
- Really bad lyrics regardless of delivery: I won't listen unless the lyrics are unintelligible
- Mediocre lyrics, mediocre delivery: I probably won't listen
- Good lyrics, mediocre delivery: I'll listen to it if I can actually understand the lyrics
- Mediocre lyrics, good delivery: I'll listen to it
- Good lyrics and delivery: probably one of my favorite bands

Lyrics are moderately important to me, because I enjoy thinking about the music I hear not just from a musical perspective, but I still enjoy things like the Liquid Tension Experiment albums or extended KC instrumental songs.  I think it comes from my affinity for also enjoying writing lyrics/poetry/literature myself.  It's strange, because my major is kind of the polar opposite (computer science), but I'm kind of full of paradoxes -- for example, I needed a rest from what I was doing, so I turned on Catch 33 to relax, and it's working Big%20smile  Speaking of Meshuggah, I actually like their lyrics.  You can find a lot of truth in observing the workings of chaos.

I digress... So anyhow, it's no surprise that Tool, Rush (they DO have good lyrics -- I don't know what you guys are talking about), early Dream Theater, Porcupine Tree, and Pain of Salvation are among my favorite bands, but then you have some power metal cheese like Symphony X, Kamelot (4th Legacy is pretty hilariously cheesy, but still tolerable), and Sonata Arctica.  I suppose Opeth's lyrics have never been their strong point either, but they're not bad.

(I think it sticks out quite heavily that I'm more of a prog metal fan than older prog)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 21:24
Lyrics aren't especially important to me most of the time. Usually I can't even understand what they're saying anyway without reading them at the same time. If they're bad, they make me angry, such as Yes (although Jon's voice has much to do with that too), and if they're good, then that's helpful, such as Pink Floyd, but mediocre lyrics are no problem. Mediocre music is.
Originally posted by Sacred 22 Sacred 22 wrote:

If you listen to the words of much of the prog of today you get a very clear message that we as a species are in big trouble. Listen to IQ or the Flower Kings, Dream Theater or even some of YES's later stuff. Porcupine Tree also gives us warnings and I hope the words don't fall upon deaf ears.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 19:30
In most cases, they are not very important to me.  There are some important exceptions, though.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 17:40
Sometimes the lyrics are just another instrument, sometimes they are incidental the music and other times they are the key to the music. In Prog we don't really have singer/songwriters where lyrics are the whole raison d'être and it is the music that is incidental, but we do have some good lyricists - people who can pen an interesting and though provoking lyric that don't sound as if it was lifted from the pages of a comic book or written by a love-sick 14yo adolescent searching for the rhyme for 'broken-hearted'.
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 17:35
Originally posted by Toaster Mantis Toaster Mantis wrote:

... lots of people think of sci-fi and fantasy as "not real literature", and because lots of prog rock (not all of it, of course, but more than in ordinary rock) has SF/F lyrics, they dismiss it out of hand prematurely. Angry


If what these people mean is that scifi/fantasy isn't literary, they're mostly right. Apart from a few literary works, which get filed in the 'literature' and not the 'scifi/fantasy' shelves, the genre exists primarily as entertainment, not art. Nothing to be ashamed of: I'd rather move someone than impress them.

That's why I laugh at the 'prog-snobs' (of whom there are, happily, only a few here) who argue that they are more intelligent than other music lovers because they like prog rock. The lyrics to most prog rock aren't exactly literary: we don't have an equivalent to Dylan or even Bruce Cockburn. And some of the fantasy/scifi stuff is appalling (RHAPSODY, for example). Lyrics in prog-rock are best when they are enigmatic, allowing the listener to use them as part of the soundscape.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 16:48
Originally posted by Kestrel Kestrel wrote:

I'll never undestand the bashing of prog rock lyrics. To me, it seems the density of good lyrics within the genre surpasses most other genres (pop, country, rock, etc.). Genesis, King Crimson (perhaps only the first couple of albums), Jethro Tull,  Van der Graaf Generator, Pink Floyd, Comus, Marillion, Pain of Salvation, Rush, Tool, and Yes all have incredible lyrics. I can't think of many other bands that surpass these guys (except for the obligatory Bob Dylan reference, I guess). Of course, the delivery and how it complements the music is also important (Genesis and VDGG being masters at this, imo), but these guys had important things to say and it seems to largely go ignored by their own fans who go along with prog critics saying that prog lyrics are sci-fi/fantasy rubbish and cold.


You've answered your own question, kinda... lots of people think of sci-fi and fantasy as "not real literature", and because lots of prog rock (not all of it, of course, but more than in ordinary rock) has SF/F lyrics, they dismiss it out of hand prematurely. Angry
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 16:48
Originally posted by MisterProg2112 MisterProg2112 wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

^ good opinion.. and the right one...  it's all about the music and delivery...  most of the sh*t that makes up prog lyrics is silly and complete rubbish anyway.. .Rush anyone? 
 
I can see where you're coming from, but Rush's lyrics are not all that bad. I mean sure, there are quite a few that are ridiculous (ie: "I Think I'm Going Bald", "Tom Sawyer", "Working Man", "The Trees LOL") But, still there are quite a few of their lyrics that really stand out like "Limelight" portraying living life on a stage, "2112", tells a great story, "A Farwell to Kings" is about corruption of our leaders, "Cygnus X-1" tells another great story as well.

Just an opinion.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 15:49
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

^ good opinion.. and the right one...  it's all about the music and delivery...  most of the sh*t that makes up prog lyrics is silly and complete rubbish anyway.. .Rush anyone? 
 
I can see where you're coming from, but Rush's lyrics are not all that bad. I mean sure, there are quite a few that are ridiculous (ie: "I Think I'm Going Bald", "Tom Sawyer", "Working Man", "The Trees LOL") But, still there are quite a few of their lyrics that really stand out like "Limelight" portraying living life on a stage, "2112", tells a great story, "A Farwell to Kings" is about corruption of our leaders, "Cygnus X-1" tells another great story as well.

Just an opinion.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 15:33
Many many years ago we had traveling minstrels and their job was to pass the news from town to town. I'm not sure how they could have done that without words. Lyrics are used for many reasons in music and they are very important in conveying a message or a mood etc etc.
If you listen to the words of much of the prog of today you get a very clear message that we as a species are in big trouble. Listen to IQ or the Flower Kings, Dream Theater or even some of YES's later stuff. Porcupine Tree also gives us warnings and I hope the words don't fall upon deaf ears.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 15:26
Good music is more important than the lyrics. To me the sound of the lyrics matters most which, I guess, is why I am equally happy listening to any language. Just as long as it sounds right!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 15:22
I'll never undestand the bashing of prog rock lyrics. To me, it seems the density of good lyrics within the genre surpasses most other genres (pop, country, rock, etc.). Genesis, King Crimson (perhaps only the first couple of albums), Jethro Tull,  Van der Graaf Generator, Pink Floyd, Comus, Marillion, Pain of Salvation, Rush, Tool, and Yes all have incredible lyrics. I can't think of many other bands that surpass these guys (except for the obligatory Bob Dylan reference, I guess). Of course, the delivery and how it complements the music is also important (Genesis and VDGG being masters at this, imo), but these guys had important things to say and it seems to largely go ignored by their own fans who go along with prog critics saying that prog lyrics are sci-fi/fantasy rubbish and cold.

Edited by Kestrel - June 21 2008 at 15:27
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 14:37
Originally posted by Ghost Rider Ghost Rider wrote:

Though I am partial to good lyrics, I recognise that they are not that important in prog, or rock in general. What really counts is the way the lyrics are delivered. Jon Anderson's lyrics, meaningless as they may be, are delivered so effectively that they become a perfect complement to the music, and his voice another instrument. Same could be said about the much-reviled Cedric Bixler-Zavala... I don't listen to TMV in order to hear wonderful poetry, but because I love their music, and in my very humble opinion their zany lyrics fit it to a T.
 
Yeah actually I think the indecipherable lyrics are part of what makes them so good. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 14:26
Though I am partial to good lyrics, I recognise that they are not that important in prog, or rock in general. What really counts is the way the lyrics are delivered. Jon Anderson's lyrics, meaningless as they may be, are delivered so effectively that they become a perfect complement to the music, and his voice another instrument. Same could be said about the much-reviled Cedric Bixler-Zavala... I don't listen to TMV in order to hear wonderful poetry, but because I love their music, and in my very humble opinion their zany lyrics fit it to a T.

Edited by Ghost Rider - June 21 2008 at 14:27
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 14:26
Originally posted by jammun jammun wrote:

But let's not dismiss how good some of the lyrics from the classic era are.  KC, Procol, even Yes at times, had great lyrics.  As for more recent material, I have no idea what Mars Volta is singing about, which is fine because that continues in the fine tradition started with Yes' Tales.


oh sure... throw the Moodies and ELO in that as well... Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 21 2008 at 14:24
But let's not dismiss how good some of the lyrics from the classic era are.  KC, Procol, even Yes at times, had great lyrics.  As for more recent material, I have no idea what Mars Volta is singing about, which is fine because that continues in the fine tradition started with Yes' Tales.
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