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Poll Question: Are the Stranglers Eligible for this sight as a classic progger?
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Ivan_Melgar_M View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 12 2008 at 20:54
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

I think I realize your problem, Ivan. you are speaking as someone who is trying to see the Stranglers as symphonic prog. this will of course fail; they aren't and don't fit into that category at all. but there is a lot of prog out there which is VERY repetitive (just think of Can, for example)
 
No Jean, that's not truth either, in the past two weeks I have added or recommended for addition two Eclectic (One of them "Andrés Ruiz", very close to Avant), one Folk and one Avant Jazz band (Antihéroes).
 
Yesterday I recommended Friedre a band called  Factor Burzaco which I believe you liked also, and that's as far as can be from Symphonic.
 
I don't judge a band by Symphonic standards, this does't fit anywhere in Prog IMHO, it's cleary formed by a couple of guitar chords, punk vocals and a dissonant but absolutely repetitive keyboard work that reminds me a lot of B-52 meets Mecano (Listen Barco a Venus), a well known and respected Spanish Post Punk band (Their first 4 releases, then became Glam POP).
 
That's my opinion by musical sandards, not by Symphonic.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 00:54
I volunteer to take the test. I've listened to a lot of music, but I can honestly say I've never knowingly heard The Stranglers. Given the number of people I respect who like this band, I'll d/l from iTunes and have a few listens ... not that my opinion means anything, but it might be of some interest. I'll start with 'Black and White', shall I?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 02:07
"Black and White" is a good start.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 02:58
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

...as I said 3 pages ago, PE's Post Rock tag for them is "an utter misfit if I ever saw one" -  IMO there is nothing Post Rock or even Proto-Post Rock about The Strangers' music, if anything it is the antithesis of Post Rock, and perhaps they meant Post-Punk.

I also maintain that there is little "Punk" about their music either - it is all image, attitude (mainly that of JJ Burnel) and (very lucrative) A&R marketing.
 
@Jean: we will evaluate The Stranglers for Crossover as suggested, but since this comes under the 'Controversial Bands' guidelines, it will require a unanimous vote from all three team members.
 
Also, I assume you know of JJ Burnel's association with Belgian Electro-pop band Polyphonic Size Wink


Guess The Stranglers got lucky, they were rejected for PR 6 months ago. If they don't make it through the controversial procedure, they won't be put to the vote for a while.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 03:08
Originally posted by Angelo Angelo wrote:

Guess The Stranglers got lucky, they were rejected for PR 6 months ago. If they don't make it through the controversial procedure,
...they'll meet Phil Collins in the play-offs. LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 03:29
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

there is a lot of prog out there which is VERY repetitive (just think of Can, for example)
 
...and much Hawkwind, Kosmisch, etc - in which there is also a great deal of the punk ethic and attitude, as well as heavy metal and all the other goodies that make up Kosmisch music.
 
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Confused can't understand how or where anyone hears "punk" in the music of the Stranglers. this is not 3-chords music at all
 
Here's where I disagree - there IS a strong punk ingredient in the Stranglers' music - but that's no reason in itself to cross them out of a Prog-related category, as flirting with other musical styles is an essential ingredient of Prog.
 
Originally posted by Jon The Impaler Jon The Impaler wrote:

(...)The Clash started out as a punk band but progressed to other styles - I wouldn't call them prog though .I didn't like the direction The Clash took , but thats just personal taste .
 
There's a different level of sophistication between the Clash and the Stranglers. I can take or leave most of the Clash's out put - although I really dig their flirtations with dub, such as "Guns of Brixton".
 
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

read the post I posted immediately before yours, Ivan. there is no real polyphony in the Mamas and the Papas
 
Yes they have POLYPHONIC vocals and choirs, as a fact, they are famous for that.
 
What about Early Beach Boys or REM or OMD?
 
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Ivan, have a look at the checklist. that should tell you all. or do we really have to redefine prog?
 
Have answered this exact same question a few posts above
 
Iván
 
 
There is clear confusion here - sorry Ivan, but it's true - between Polyphony (multiple independent voices) and simple part harmony - or indeed, its most corrupt form, parallel chord movement.
 
The latter is corrupt, in the worst cases, because performers simply follow identical lines at a fixed pitch below or above the main harmony line. This involves next to no compositional skill.
 
Polyphony requires real compositional skill, because not only do you have to satisfy the need for clear, separate parts with melodic beauty/logic  in themselves, but also the vertical harmonic aspects. Skilled polyphonists will put off harmonic resolution until later, creating odd, sometimes jarring moments. Since the payback is later in time, this can be difficult for the casual ear to detect, so is unsuitable for most pop music.
 
This practice also implies a clear overview of form - one of the most overlooked (because it's difficult) aspects of rock music writing. If you're involved in true polyphonic writing, chances are that you're not focussing on verse, chorus, bridge, etc., but are instead having to concentrate like mad on what I would consider a "higher" form (if only because it requires thought, skill, artistry and logic to bring it about).
 
The other things polyphonic writers have to be careful and skilful with are rhythm (astonishing cross-rhythms and polyrhythms can emerge, if you get it right, but misjudge, and the whole thing sounds a mess.), and timbre (ie, if the voices don't work well together, and the dynamic is poor, then you might just as well not bother.
 
 
REAL Polyphony is difficult, IMO - for what that's worth to anyone - and I do admire the Stranglers' frequent experimentations in that area - although I think that most of it comes from a musical arrogance more befitting a Prog band of the untrained variety (and there are many!) - even though the music is more polished and precise than many of the educated bands.
 
The Stranglers merely "made it" during the UK Punk revolution of the mid 1970s - they formed in respectable Guildford in 1973, but had their first hit with "Peaches"/"Go Buddy Go" in 1977. This single, like "God Save the Queen" by the Sex Pistols (released around the same time), was banned from airplay ("Go Buddy Go" was played instead), and, like GSTQ, was first released in a highly controversial sleeve, featuring lettering cut from newspapers - so are only really Punk by association - ie, the music is aggressive, and not heavy metal, ergo punk (to a straw man...). The replacement sleeve for "Peaches" is remarkably similar to the cover of Gentle Giant's "Acquiring the Taste", if you think about it...
 
 
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 03:37
thank you, Cert Thumbs%20Up; I tried to point out that confusion by explaining about pseudo-polyphony and quint parallels, but I may have been too academic


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 03:44
scratch the 'may' in that Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 04:23
OK, three successive listens to 'Black and White' is all I can spare given a looming deadline. Here's some thoughts, in no sensible order. (Caveats: I'm no music expert etc.)

A lot of the baroque ornamentation common in symphonic prog is missing here, deliberately of course. The supposedly 'punk' vocals, for example, are sung deadpan, with no vibrato, with little of the theatrics of early punk vocals. So they sound nothing like a 'classic prog' band - if you mean by that a British symphonic prog band. But they sure as hell don't sound like a punk band either.

I'm a big fan of CARDIACS, and while THE STRANGLERS don't come from exactly the same tin, they're off the same shelf. I thoroughly approve of the music. Love the bass (in 'Threatened' for example). Come on, this isn't your typical musically challenged garage band or punk outfit. Not within a hundred miles. Not so sure of the lyrics: doubt you'd get away with some of them nowadays.

Can't say I heard a hint of polyphony, unless you're meaning independent keyboard and vocal lines (eg 'Enough Time'): that sort of stuff is quite common, isn't it? I wouldn't compare it to GG or VDGG.

'Toiler on the Sea' is a masterpiece. Puts me in mind of early SPLIT ENZ, who predate punk. Actually, I don't think one needs to refer to punk to understand them: from the one album I've heard I discern a lot of THE WHO. 'Sweden', 'Threatened' and 'Do You Wanna/Death and Night and Blood' are also classics.

But do they come from the prog shelf? Certainly not the prog shelf as we anglophiles knew it in the 1970s. But our understanding of prog has broadened since then. This isn't primarily prog, but it's helluva proggy. I'd have absolutely no problem with the band being added to the archives based on this album. Perhaps in the same category as CARDIACS.

I'll get me some more some time in the future.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 04:27

I wouldn't have suggested "Black and White" as the place to start to check out the proggier side of the Stranglers - start with "The Raven", then move on to "MenInBlack" (the two albums are related - the latter is a conceptual extension of the MenInBlack theme on The Raven).

The Raven is a stunning album whether you think it's Prog or not - just buy it and thank me later (check out "Ice" particularly) Tongue
 
 


Edited by Certif1ed - October 13 2008 at 05:00
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 04:29
the most advanced form of polyphony in prog, by the way, can be heard in Peter Hammill's opera "The Fall of the House of Usher". no wonder it took him over 20 years to write it; Hammill is not a classically trained composer, and it is really remarkable what he came up with there. "The Fall of the House of Usher" makes "Knots" by Gentle Giant (another example of polyphony) appear simple in comparison. it is a full-fledged opera indeed (at least in the 1999 version)


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 04:39
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

I wouldn't have suggested "Black and White" as the place to start to check out the proggier side of the Stranglers - start with "The Raven", then move on to "MenInBlack" (the two albums are related - the latter is a conceptual extension of the MenInBlack theme on The Raven).

The Raven is a stunning album whether you think it's Prog or not - just buy it and thank me later (check out "Ice" particularly) Tongue
 

I suggested "Black and White" because it is the Stranglers album I am most familiar with; my parents played it a lot (and they HATED punk!)


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 04:45
Is it just me, or does one of the many keyboard hook lines in "Don't Bring Harry" (especially the intro bit) sound a LOT like the hook in "Kayleigh" by Marillion?
 
The song itself is obviously a LOT more complex than the Marillion number - it's more like a progged-up Lou Reed/Velvet Underground number.
 
 
Polyphonic experimentation in Genetix; http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=DkeZ4CauPbc&feature=related
 
(Both tracks from "The Raven" - neither are punk Wink)


Edited by Certif1ed - October 13 2008 at 04:55
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 04:54
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Is it just me, or does one of the many keyboard hook lines in "Don't Bring Harry" (especially the intro bit) sound a LOT like the hook in "Kayleigh" by Marillion?
 
The song itself is obviously a LOT more complex than the Marillion number - it's more like a progged-up Lou Reed/Velvet Underground number.
 

I hear what you mean, Cert. there are some similarities indeed. and yes, it is a lot more complex than "Kayleigh"


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2008 at 12:50
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

 
 
There is clear confusion here - sorry Ivan, but it's true - between Polyphony (multiple independent voices) and simple part harmony - or indeed, its most corrupt form, parallel chord movement.
 
The latter is corrupt, in the worst cases, because performers simply follow identical lines at a fixed pitch below or above the main harmony line. This involves next to no compositional skill.
 
Polyphony requires real compositional skill, because not only do you have to satisfy the need for clear, separate parts with melodic beauty/logic  in themselves, but also the vertical harmonic aspects. Skilled polyphonists will put off harmonic resolution until later, creating odd, sometimes jarring moments. Since the payback is later in time, this can be difficult for the casual ear to detect, so is unsuitable for most pop music.
 
This practice also implies a clear overview of form - one of the most overlooked (because it's difficult) aspects of rock music writing. If you're involved in true polyphonic writing, chances are that you're not focussing on verse, chorus, bridge, etc., but are instead having to concentrate like mad on what I would consider a "higher" form (if only because it requires thought, skill, artistry and logic to bring it about).
 
The other things polyphonic writers have to be careful and skilful with are rhythm (astonishing cross-rhythms and polyrhythms can emerge, if you get it right, but misjudge, and the whole thing sounds a mess.), and timbre (ie, if the voices don't work well together, and the dynamic is poor, then you might just as well not bother.
 
 
REAL Polyphony is difficult, IMO - for what that's worth to anyone - and I do admire the Stranglers' frequent experimentations in that area - although I think that most of it comes from a musical arrogance more befitting a Prog band of the untrained variety (and there are many!) - even though the music is more polished and precise than many of the educated bands.
 
The Stranglers merely "made it" during the UK Punk revolution of the mid 1970s - they formed in respectable Guildford in 1973, but had their first hit with "Peaches"/"Go Buddy Go" in 1977. This single, like "God Save the Queen" by the Sex Pistols (released around the same time), was banned from airplay ("Go Buddy Go" was played instead), and, like GSTQ, was first released in a highly controversial sleeve, featuring lettering cut from newspapers - so are only really Punk by association - ie, the music is aggressive, and not heavy metal, ergo punk (to a straw man...). The replacement sleeve for "Peaches" is remarkably similar to the cover of Gentle Giant's "Acquiring the Taste", if you think about it...
 
 
I won't discuss music with you because you're a proffesional in that field and I'm only an amateur with some incomplete studies, but I don't believe that only Prog bands are able to create a real polyphony, in the case I mention, I heard The Mamas & The Papas, The Beach Boys, etc, and IMO they really created Polyphony.
 
Not mentioned befoire, but Meatloaf i Bat Out of Hell with the compositional skills of Jim Steinman did really compledx musical works, including elaborate and real polyphonies and complex arrangements that were rejected originally by many labels because of their excessibve complexity...But despite has been recommended, I never supported his inclusion neither you if I'm not wrong.
 
I nevever said that The Stranglers are pure Punk, I repeated that ad nauseam, but Jean and yourepeat the same mistake, the Punk movement didn't ended in 1979 with the fall of the hard pioneers, it vonyinued in several different styles like:
 
  1. New Wave
  2. Post ¨Punk
  3. Romantic Punk
  4. Neo Romantic Punk
  5. Colwave
  6. Goth
  7. Dark
  8. Industrial
  9. etc

IMO most of The Stranglers works iwere during the New Wave peak and their sound is very close to OMD, B-52, Mecano, The Cars, etc. Which were much more elaborate than three chord sound originally created and soon almost vanished.

The fact of being more polished than most educated bands doesn't make them Prog, I mentioned a few paragraphs above the case of Jim Steinman's work in Bar out of hell and Bat out of Hell II.
 
I'm suure you know a lot of music, and I respect that, but you are not the only expert in the world, and 99% of the musical listening expert, critics Prog and punk communities and even the band themselves, consider The Stranglers Punk (not in the rudimentary way of The Poistols or The Dead Kennedys, but in the more polished way of New Wave), and honestly, I stay with their opinion and my ear, which may not be as trained as your's (as a fact it isn't) but I can also find the difference between Post Punk and Prog,
 
Cheers
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 14 2008 at 04:34
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

 
I won't discuss music with you because you're a proffesional in that field and I'm only an amateur with some incomplete studies, but I don't believe that only Prog bands are able to create a real polyphony, in the case I mention, I heard The Mamas & The Papas, The Beach Boys, etc, and IMO they really created Polyphony.
 
 
Neither created polyphony, to the best of my knowledge - although I can't say I'm familiar with their entire back catalogues.
 
What I've heard of their vocal harmonies is often sophisticated - especially the Beach Boys - but the vocal lines were not independent, even though they often did different things.
 
To clarify, the vocal lines were entirely dependent on each other - they followed the harmonic scheme, deviating rhythmically only for effect (although I'm not sure if the M&Ps did this, I know the BBs were capable of layering rhythmically different, but not independent, ideas.
 
Besides, none of the instrumental music that underlies the songs I've heard by these bands was ever polyphonic. Polyphony is not a vocal technique, but an all-encompassing compositional method.
 
I agree that not only Prog bands create real polyphony - and it's certainly not a hallmark of Prog, but you are more likely to hear polyphony in Prog than in any other form of rock-related music.
 
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

 
Not mentioned befoire, but Meatloaf i Bat Out of Hell with the compositional skills of Jim Steinman did really compledx musical works, including elaborate and real polyphonies and complex arrangements that were rejected originally by many labels because of their excessibve complexity...But despite has been recommended, I never supported his inclusion neither you if I'm not wrong.
 
 
I was never against MeatLoaf - and it seems, with additions like Steely Dan and other completely non-Prog acts that MeatLoaf should be reconsidered.
 
I wouldn't be over-enthusiastic  about his inclusion, though.
 
Steinman was a fantastic writer, and had a great handle on Broadway musical writing - his epic, symphonic arrangements rooted in Rock and Roll are amazing - but, due to the Rock and Roll roots, never went into Polyphony.
 
This is where the confusion still seems to be - polyphony is not simply about multiple part writing or orchestral arrangements with instrumental motifs that give the impression of multiple parts playing different things. This style of writing is more contrapuntal, where each part is subservient to the main melody and rigid harmonic progressions, not an almost independent entity.
 
 
Marillion's debut album might give a better, familiar idea - it's not pure polyphony, but it's steeped in counterpoint that is very close to polyphony - especially the track "Chelsea Monday".
 
The keyboard line harmonises with the bass, so is not truly contrapuntal - but the later guitar solo is. The new bass line during the solo plays a bit more of a supporting act - but is still a distinct melody in itself, and independent of the guitar except for the tight adherence to the chord progression - hence it is not full-blown polyphony.
 
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

 
I nevever said that The Stranglers are pure Punk, I repeated that ad nauseam, but Jean and yourepeat the same mistake, the Punk movement didn't ended in 1979 with the fall of the hard pioneers, it vonyinued in several different styles like:
 
  1. New Wave
  2. Post ¨Punk
  3. Romantic Punk
  4. Neo Romantic Punk
  5. Colwave
  6. Goth
  7. Dark
  8. Industrial
  9. etc

I didn't say that the punk movement ended at any time, and I'm fully aware of most of these terms - except I've never heard of "Colwave".
 
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

 
 
IMO most of The Stranglers works iwere during the New Wave peak and their sound is very close to OMD, B-52, Mecano, The Cars, etc. Which were much more elaborate than three chord sound originally created and soon almost vanished.
 
 
Some of their output does sound close in style to the bands you mention - and Velvet Underground and a whole bunch of other sixties bands too. None of the bands you mention had the sophsitcation of the Stranglers' writing.
 
One quarter of their output was released in the Punk timeframe - including The Raven, which I re-iterate is well worth a listen for any Progger.
 
The next album, "The Gospel according to the MenInBlack" was released in 1981, and it's a stunner - you need to hear "The Raven" to make sense of it. It's a concept album released during the timeframe of the New Wave - and I can't think of any New Wave bands that did that. There's very little on it that sounds like the bands you mentioned.
 
 
There are passing similarities on "La Folie" and "Feline", but there are still those strong VU undercurrents - especially on "Let's Tango in Paris" (Feline), and the polyphony is still hinted at - the part writing is sophisticated, which is why the harmony often sounds "muddy" and strange - these are not the simple triads used by OMD and The Cars, but the result of independent lines and complex structures.
 
Only 3 of their albums were released during the "New Wave", and "Aural Sculpture" (the last in that timeframe) is way of out the "New Wave" sound and style.
 
The other half of their output was released since 1986, so I'm not sure why you say "most of The Stranglers works were during the New Wave peak " - that's simply not true.
 
They produced some music which could, through a casual listen, sound like OMD, but that's not typical - and when you listen closely (as proggers do), you quickly realise you're not listening to basic, throwaway pop tunes like OMD wrote.
 
 
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

 
The fact of being more polished than most educated bands doesn't make them Prog, I mentioned a few paragraphs above the case of Jim Steinman's work in Bar out of hell and Bat out of Hell II.
 
Yes, and given the arguments that supported Steely Dan (for example), there seems to be little reason to exclude Steinman's work - he is a talented composer/arranger. I won't fight his battle, though, as the music is clearly not progressive, unlike that of the Stranglers, which is
 
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

 
I'm suure you know a lot of music, and I respect that, but you are not the only expert in the world,
 
Please don't patronise me.
 
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

 
and 99% of the musical listening expert, critics Prog and punk communities and even the band themselves, consider The Stranglers Punk (not in the rudimentary way of The Poistols or The Dead Kennedys, but in the more polished way of New Wave), and honestly, I stay with their opinion and my ear, which may not be as trained as your's (as a fact it isn't) but I can also find the difference between Post Punk and Prog,
 
I do not claim to be an expert - I have never done that in any post I have ever made.
 
While I assert my opinions strongly, and possibly over-frequently sometimes, I have never professed to be an expert. I am a student - or more accurately, researcher.
 
I don't listen to other experts, particularly - I prefer to read stuff from people with something to say, rather than people who have read the same books I have and presented their research in an easy-to-digest way - and I prefer opinions that are reasoned and seasoned than bald and in my face.
 
I do not have a problem with considering the Stranglers Punk and Prog and New Wave - see, music is not Black and White (sic), and can't be put into little boxes, hence I dislike "genres", which are meaningless to me, but prefer descriptive terms, which I apply to pieces of music as I find them.
 
Listen to "The Raven" and "Gospel According to The MenInBlack", and I'm sure that, like me, you'll hear a Prog Punk Band that sounds a sight more Proggy than most Prog bands of 1979/81.
 
I'm not the only one that thinks this, as a simple Google will show;
 
 
 
 
 
 


Edited by Certif1ed - October 14 2008 at 04:39
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 14 2008 at 04:44
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

in the past two weeks I have added or recommended for addition two Eclectic (One of them "Andrés Ruiz", very close to Avant), one Folk and one Avant Jazz band (Antihéroes).
 
Yesterday I recommended Friedre a band called  Factor Burzaco which I believe you liked also, and that's as far as can be from Symphonic.
 
 
I listened to Andrés Ruiz: Unsophisticated folk with a slight jazzy/latin flavour: http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.Channel&ChannelID=123917724
 
It reminds me a lot of some of the stuff on "The Raven", "MenInBlack", "Feline" and "La Folie" - there's not much difference, except the Stranglers writing was more progressive and sophisticated - and they did it 25 years ago.
 
What's the essential difference between this and "Don''t Bring Harry" (which I posted a link to above), released in 1979?
 
 
I will listen to the other two when I get a moment.


Edited by Certif1ed - October 14 2008 at 04:47
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 14 2008 at 07:09
indeed; as I pointed out in capital letters on page 2 of this thread: the important thing for polyphony is that the different voices are INDEPENDENT. just having several different voices is not enough if they just follow the harmonic progression. the latter is quite easy and often done; but real polyphony is very complicated. and there is real polyphony in several compositions of the Stranglers


Edited by BaldJean - October 14 2008 at 07:10


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 14 2008 at 12:44
Just a couple of precistions, because I don't want to continue a discussion about a band I can care less about (this is honest) and which IMO should had never been suggested:
 
Originally posted by Certified Certified wrote:

I agree that not only Prog bands create real polyphony - and it's certainly not a hallmark of Prog, but you are more likely to hear polyphony in Prog than in any other form of rock-related music.
 
That's exactly what I've been saying from the start, against a position that implied that Polyphony alone was enough to consider a band  Prog, except that Polyphony is more likely to be found in Prog, I believe there's as much polyphony in Jazz for example.
 
Originally posted by Certified Certified wrote:

I didn't say that the punk movement ended at any time, and I'm fully aware of most of these terms - except I've never heard of "Colwave".
 
It's Coldwave (French Coldwave to be precise) just a typo, I thought you would had guessed
 
Originally posted by Certified Certified wrote:

Yes, and given the arguments that supported Steely Dan (for example), there seems to be little reason to exclude Steinman's work - he is a talented composer/arranger. I won't fight his battle, though, as the music is clearly not progressive, unlike that of the Stranglers, which is
 
That's a difference between you and me, if a mistake is made, i don't believe itjustifies a new one. I don't judge an addition by other bands added, I treat each band individually, as the guidelines from the Admns say.
 
Originally posted by Certified Certified wrote:

I do not claim to be an expert - I have never done that in any post I have ever made.
 
Please Certified, the first post you replied to me a few years ago, you said "My user is Certified, because I'm Certified in musical degrees" or something very similar, I'm too lazy to search for it, but if necessary will do it and will find your post.
 
In that post you corrected me about the use of the term Classical, I remember as if it was yesterday, and BTW: I don't patronize anybody.
 
 
Oh please Certified, two pracytically uinknown sites (one ofthem mainly Punk), and a Forum where one person says The Stranglers play in a very progressive way.
 
That was enough or me, the addition is in handsof a team and they will decide properly.
 
Iván


Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - October 14 2008 at 12:45
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 14 2008 at 13:24
alas, there are a lot of bands in here which in my opinion should never have been suggested, and yet they were included. I could, for example, never understand the inclusion of "Steely Dan" (they don't even belong into prog-related, in my honest opinion), but they were voted in, and I have to live with it. the Stranglers I could live with easily though (and I have explained why).
it is quite interesting that Ivan shifts them from Punk to New Wave, a sticker which in my opinion fits on them even less. New Wave was a genre that tried to ban emotion from music; it is not for nothing that Kraftwerk was cited as main influence by many New Wave bands. but whatever you can say about the Stranglers, you can hardly accuse them of trying to be emotionless


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