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Rocktopus View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 08:59
I knew you didn't support Coltrane being added, Micky. I just started my post saying no to both. I can see I wasn't clear, but I did read your post.

I know early early on many progbands were probably inspired by Dave Brubeck Quartet's use of complex time signatures, especially the albums Time Out and Time Further Out. But unlike Mile, they/he never released anything remotely close to what I associate with progressive rock, or rock.

Eric Dolphy's avantgardejazz-classic Out to Lunch, like Time Out is often mentioned as a huge influence  on prog. And its probably true. But none of them (or Bartok) really had a chance to fuse rock and jazz like Miles did a few years later, because that kind of rock hadn't been made yet.

Edit: I noticed a couple of posts that sneaked inbetween. Ok I'm fine with including Brubeck and plenty more jazzartists, but  then we need to open up for Stockhausen, Bartok, Varese, Orff etc too. And then selected works/recordings, not full discographies would be a really good idea.


Edited by Rocktopus - August 16 2008 at 09:11
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 09:05
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:


Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

who here has said that Brubeck played 'progressive rock'... not I kind sir...LOLI am talking about an important .. missing link.. in the proto prog category here. 



I guess it depends on how far you want to stretch the definition of proto-prog. My attention span for these kind of arguments is very short so I'll just let my first post stand on it's own.

You can tell it's important because I used all caps for a change, ha ha ha.
LOL..  and I guess I have an iron gut for these kind of things.and yes... proto needs to be be stretched out IMO... TO this point and time... 1959... when popular  music.. met complexity and exotic influences and odd meters and reached the general public. The expansion of what was possible in music.. and pushing the boundries of popular music.  If that isn't prog in a nutshell what it.  There were artist who MADE prog possible.. gave them their divine spark of inspiration to throw out the rules. The Beatles were a step in this with their addition in proto...  Brubeck is the next one.



What I fine pyramid she is ... you should definitley check out Don Ellis for the odd time meter thing, he's much more rockin than Brubeck, but Brubeck probably came first. Ellis is an obvious influence on Soft Machine, Zappa, Ozric Tentacles and many many more.

Probably the first people to combine things and stretch genres were Les Baxter and Sun Ra. Personally I think Les Baxter may be the roots of prog-rock, I think guys like Fred Frith and Robert Wyatt would agree.

Let's not forget those 'hippie' bands who 'invented' jazz rock. ...Where is that soapbox.    Anyway I have work to do (real work), but I'll be back, you'll play nice now.

Edited by Easy Money - August 16 2008 at 09:09
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 09:09
Duke Ellington has been a huge influence on Robert Wyatt, too.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 09:18
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

I knew you didn't support Coltrane being added, Micky. I just started my post saying no to both. I can see I wasn't clear, but I did read your post.

Clap

I know early early on many progbands were probably inspired by Dave Brubeck Quartet's use of complex time signatures, especially the albums Time Out and Time Further Out. But unlike Mile, they/he never released anything remotely close to what I associate with progressive rock, or rock.

yes... but look a bit deeper...  what was the predominant music of the day in the late 60's.. .rock music...

what was the predominent music of the 50's... a young rock and roll was reaching the teenagers ..for most though.. it was still jazz.  What Brubeck did was take the popular music of the day...  and.. expand the medium.. what was possible.. JUST as King Crimson and The Nice did with rock.  We can get hung up on the 'rock' part of that... but that is simply wrong.  It is about prog music...  there is a lot of music here on this site that is not rock.. .electronic,  folk..  even some of the J-R-F groups are heavily more jazz than rock.  It is a prog site... .and possibly no artist in popular times made prog possible and influenced it (not going classical composers.. that is a whole different subject) than  Brubeck.. with exception of the Beatles of course.  We are talking modern times here .. . dealing with the form of popular music.. which is what prog was about expanding upon. 




I've seen somewhere Eric Dolphy's avantgardejazz-classic Out to Lunch has been influence on as Time Out on prog. And its probably true. But none of them (or Bartok) really had a chance to fuse rock and jazz like Miles did a few years later, because that kind of rock hadn't been made yet.

again...  the rock part of this is nothing more than a rock to hide under...  jazz, rock, electronic, folk, and pop fit under prog.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 09:23
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:


Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

who here has said that Brubeck played 'progressive rock'... not I kind sir...LOLI am talking about an important .. missing link.. in the proto prog category here. 



I guess it depends on how far you want to stretch the definition of proto-prog. My attention span for these kind of arguments is very short so I'll just let my first post stand on it's own.

You can tell it's important because I used all caps for a change, ha ha ha.
LOL..  and I guess I have an iron gut for these kind of things.and yes... proto needs to be be stretched out IMO... TO this point and time... 1959... when popular  music.. met complexity and exotic influences and odd meters and reached the general public. The expansion of what was possible in music.. and pushing the boundries of popular music.  If that isn't prog in a nutshell what it.  There were artist who MADE prog possible.. gave them their divine spark of inspiration to throw out the rules. The Beatles were a step in this with their addition in proto...  Brubeck is the next one.



What I fine pyramid she is ... you should definitley check out Don Ellis for the odd time meter thing, he's much more rockin than Brubeck, but Brubeck probably came first. Ellis is an obvious influence on Soft Machine, Zappa, Ozric Tentacles and many many more.

Probably the first people to combine things and stretch genres were Les Baxter and Sun Ra. Personally I think Les Baxter may be the roots of prog-rock, I think guys like Fred Frith and Robert Wyatt would agree.

Let's not forget those 'hippie' bands who 'invented' jazz rock. ...Where is that soapbox.    Anyway I have work to do (real work), but I'll be back, you'll play nice now.


good suggestions... .obviously... I have thrown my hat in with Brubeck.. because he was the first.. and is the logical beginning point if Proto is to be expanded a bit.. which I think is a wonderful idea.  Wouldn't it be nice to have people here discover Sun Ra and Les Baxter.

1959.. that is where Proto should begin... the birth of prog... where the expansion of pop music into art. began.. and it did with Brubeck.  Not just the first.. .but he brought it to the masses .. not some obscure record. That album touched all kinds of people.. from Donald Fagen to Emerson.

yes someone mentioned Sun Ra earlier....  agree with that completely btw Clap


Edited by micky - August 16 2008 at 09:23
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 09:31
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:



again...  the rock part of this is nothing more than a rock to hide under...  jazz, rock, electronic, folk, and pop fit under prog.


I thought those genres atleast to some extent had to be fused with rock, to be prog(rock).

Don't get me wrong though. I'd also like  this expansion of protoprog idea. But when you say Brubeck, I say fine, just add some of the influential 20th century composers too. Varese and Stockhausen fused classical contemporary and electronic music. In modern times. That should count as equally important, imo.


Edited by Rocktopus - August 16 2008 at 09:38
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 09:39
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:



again...  the rock part of this is nothing more than a rock to hide under...  jazz, rock, electronic, folk, and pop fit under prog.


I thought those genres atleast to some extent had to be fused with rock, to be prog(rock).



sure .... in texts written by half-wits who think prog was English.. .symphonic.. based in rock.. and died at the birth of the age of punk.  No.. rock was the starting point.. being the predominant music of the day. .and was a rebellion of sort TO it..... but because it is prog it has never had to have beenBASED on rock to BE prog... it shot into a 1000 glorious directions .. .isn't that why we love prog man.

as far as Varese and Stockhausen.... again... that is another subject... a different discussion.  We are talking the roots of prog here.. 'proto prog'... taking pop music... and rebelling against it.. and making art of it.  THAT.. that .. in a nutshell is exactly what prog is.. and is about.  Brubeck may not have been 'prog-rock' ... which is why I'm not calling for him to be in ISP/RPI or eclectic.. J-R ...or whatever pigeon-hole we can dream up for him .....but I think it is safe to call him the first to be ... prog. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 09:43

Interesting discussion here.  I'll throw Jacques Loussier Trio into the mix.  As far as I know he was the first to take classical music (Bach) and play it in a jazz mode.  Huge influence on Keith Emerson. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 09:53


Another suggestion: moog pioneer Walter/Wendy Carlos?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 09:57
well start a thread on them  LOL

anyhow.. .hopefully you all see where I am coming from with Brubeck.. sure you all can name a bunch of examples of other artists... but as posted in reference to Coltrane.  If proto is to be expanded (and it should to include groups and artists that REALLY did influence.. not just artists.. but what was to become prog) ..  it needs to start with Brubeck.


I'm out.. Raff just got home and have lots of catching up to do with her.....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 10:17
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:



Another suggestion: moog pioneer Walter/Wendy Carlos?


Rejected for Prog Electronic.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 10:17
Originally posted by jammun jammun wrote:

Interesting discussion here.  I'll throw Jacques Loussier Trio into the mix.  As far as I know he was the first to take classical music (Bach) and play it in a jazz mode.  Huge influence on Keith Emerson. 



So?

Classical - check (great artist, I agree)
Jazz - check (highly original)

Where's the prog?


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 10:59
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

Duke Ellington has been a huge influence on Robert Wyatt, too.


Yep. And Charles Mingus on entire Canterbury scene
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 15:12
a No for me, in terms of Coltrane being added to the site. Herbie Hancock is more likely to be added. However, i saw this thread coming, and kind of knew most people would be against it. I'm not going to repeat what everyone else has already said as to why he wont make it.

Jazz Archives should be an extension of Prog Archives, almost a sibling website. haha. I would help in its creation if anyone want to help take up the task!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 15:18
Originally posted by darkshade darkshade wrote:

a No for me, in terms of Coltrane being added to the site. Herbie Hancock is more likely to be added. However, i saw this thread coming, and kind of knew most people would be against it. I'm not going to repeat what everyone else has already said as to why he wont make it.

Jazz Archives should be an extension of Prog Archives, almost a sibling website. haha. I would help in its creation if anyone want to help take up the task!
 
Dark shade Count me in to support!!
 




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 15:21
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

well start a thread on them  LOL

anyhow.. .hopefully you all see where I am coming from with Brubeck.. sure you all can name a bunch of examples of other artists... but as posted in reference to Coltrane.  If proto is to be expanded (and it should to include groups and artists that REALLY did influence.. not just artists.. but what was to become prog) ..  it needs to start with Brubeck.


I'm out.. Raff just got home and have lots of catching up to do with her.....
 
Micky, totally agree with you but... up to John Coltrane!!!!




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 15:28
Originally posted by zafreth zafreth wrote:

Originally posted by darkshade darkshade wrote:

a No for me, in terms of Coltrane being added to the site. Herbie Hancock is more likely to be added. However, i saw this thread coming, and kind of knew most people would be against it. I'm not going to repeat what everyone else has already said as to why he wont make it.

Jazz Archives should be an extension of Prog Archives, almost a sibling website. haha. I would help in its creation if anyone want to help take up the task!
 
Dark shade Count me in to support!!
 


woooo! lets get a team going!

btw i think Coltrane would have done jazz-rock had he lived at least 5 more years. THAT would have been some interesting music, considering the direction he was going before he died. Maybe "avant-guard free funk"?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 15:43
Originally posted by zafreth zafreth wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

well start a thread on them  LOL

anyhow.. .hopefully you all see where I am coming from with Brubeck.. sure you all can name a bunch of examples of other artists... but as posted in reference to Coltrane.  If proto is to be expanded (and it should to include groups and artists that REALLY did influence.. not just artists.. but what was to become prog) ..  it needs to start with Brubeck.


I'm out.. Raff just got home and have lots of catching up to do with her.....
 
Micky, totally agree with you but... up to John Coltrane!!!!



personally... I think Coltrane could have a place in one of the non-prog subs . but I think not until after a good long list of those who really did make an impact on all of prog.. not just a particular segment on it.  Not to diminish Coltrane in the least.. give another couple of years.. god knows what he might have done.. but the fact is a fact... he didn't. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 15:47
[
 
[/QUOTE]

woooo! lets get a team going!

[/QUOTE]
 
Well i have three huge and great book of all things jazz and related, maybe i can begin doing some sort of biographies...
 
i'm willing to do a mirror site called jazz archives.
 
any other ideas/support.
Big%20smile




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2008 at 23:43
Originally posted by zafreth zafreth wrote:

[
 


woooo! lets get a team going!

[/QUOTE]
 
Well i have three huge and great book of all things jazz and related, maybe i can begin doing some sort of biographies...
 
i'm willing to do a mirror site called jazz archives.
 
any other ideas/support.
Big%20smile
[/QUOTE]

i would like to do this, but i dont know anything about making a website, and my technical knowledge of related things is very limited. we would need someone (like M@x or similar people) to start it up. However, my knowledge of jazz and anything related in vast, and i would not mind spending a good portion of my time on making it a complete site (which would take time, jazz is vast, and even this site is not complete) maybe people like Dick Heath or mr70s or anyone else who'd be interested could help too. We should have a separate thread for this. Which would be the best place to start a new thread? General Discussions??


Edited by darkshade - August 16 2008 at 23:44
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