Mike Oldfield's category? |
Post Reply | Page <123> |
Author | ||||
splyu
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 06 2008 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 316 |
Posted: October 23 2008 at 15:51 | |||
OK, great; I like the direct approach myself but I have become very cautious in using it over a few years of experiences with internet forums... as for continuing the discussion, I feel I've pretty much said all I personally had to say about the matter, though if anyone would like to bring a fresh angle to this, I'd certainly be interested in that. Edited by splyu - October 23 2008 at 15:52 |
||||
Ricochet
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 27 2005 Location: Nauru Status: Offline Points: 46301 |
Posted: October 23 2008 at 15:54 | |||
|
||||
|
||||
Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35403 |
Posted: October 23 2008 at 16:25 | |||
A very interesting discussion which I have only just skimmed. I have had several albums by Oldfield, but don't know his discography well-enough to make the call. From what I know, I could see him fitting both Crossover and Eclectic. Since both categories stem from the old "Art Rock" category, I have less problems with the overlap than, say, if a dominantly Prog Metal band was placed in, say, Prog Folk (and of course there are bands that are metal/folk fusion). And similarly to Eclectic, the Crossover category is eclectic in the mix of styles represented by the bands/ artists (and the artists in Crossover need not have a dominant Prog style), but, of course, Crossover is intended for the ones with significant mainstream elements.
|
||||
Two tracks per many of my fave acts: A Youtube Playlist
|
||||
progressive
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 08 2005 Location: Finland Status: Offline Points: 366 |
Posted: October 24 2008 at 10:04 | |||
Well, that's how I justified Panza to Crossover prog! ( http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=51809 ) But Mike Oldfield is definitely crossover prog (those things I don't like in it), but I think it should be moved to eclectic prog, because I also like it. This is the most valid way to judge. Edited by progressive - October 24 2008 at 10:06 |
||||
► rateyourmusic.com/~Fastro 2672 ratings ▲ last.fm/user/Fastro 5556 artists ▲ www.progarchives.com/Collaborators.asp?id=4933 266◄ |
||||
Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: October 24 2008 at 10:18 | |||
... quicker too I would imagine.
|
||||
What?
|
||||
Ricochet
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 27 2005 Location: Nauru Status: Offline Points: 46301 |
Posted: October 24 2008 at 10:25 | |||
Definitely, my axiom was always "Van der Graaf Generator and Peter Hammill are awesome, and I won't allow any other genre to have them. (Especially not James' genre.)". |
||||
|
||||
clarke2001
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: June 14 2006 Location: Croatia Status: Offline Points: 4160 |
Posted: October 24 2008 at 11:00 | |||
|
||||
Vibrationbaby
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 13 2004 Status: Offline Points: 6898 |
Posted: October 24 2008 at 15:02 | |||
Here`s my two cents. Why not just call him New Age ? That`s where he`s found in many music stores now. Haven`t heard the new album yet though. I`ll check it out today.
Edited by Vibrationbaby - October 24 2008 at 15:03 |
||||
Ricochet
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 27 2005 Location: Nauru Status: Offline Points: 46301 |
Posted: October 24 2008 at 15:03 | |||
The new albums have nothing to do with prog - and Oldfield was never added here for those... |
||||
|
||||
russellk
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 28 2005 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 782 |
Posted: October 24 2008 at 15:35 | |||
... but if he is to be categorised by the albums for which he was added, surely he'd be ...
(here I advertently reveal my ignorance - as opposed to all the times I inadvertently revealed it) ... symphonic prog? More accurately, OLDFIELD’s progressive work is Symphonic Prog with one or two latter-career exceptions. In fact, I believe OLDFIELD is the absolute exemplar of Symphonic Prog, and it astounds me that his classification here seems to be driven by his non-prog material. As a long-time lover of 'classical' music, I've yet to find another artist that more closely approximates the structure of concertos or symphonies in his compositions. Even in his supposedly 'commercial' albums he still spins out album-length themes, reworking them and adding variations. The disco 'Guilty' is a variation on the main 'Incantations' theme. 'The Lake' contains elements of 'To France'. He does this on every album. But the most obvious examples are his second, third and fourth albums. 'Ommadawn' is about the most perfect thing these ears have heard, and I've never thought of it as anything other than symphonic. Having said that, we can’t shift OLDFIELD: if we do, the whole Crossover sub-genre will be unpicked. YES, GENESIS, GENTLE GIANT, ELP – all the greats – allowed the sounds of the late 70s and 1980s to influence their work (which many call ‘mainstream’ or ‘commercial’). So, merely using logic, these bands ought to be classified as Crossover. They’re not so classified: so what has influenced their current classification? Something other than logic. OLDFIELD never fully surrendered his progressive past. Until ‘Earth Moving’ he nearest he came to letting go of prog was on ‘Discovery’, but the fully prog ‘The Lake’, a twelve-minute instrumental, was enough to remind us of his prog talents. Also, the whole of ‘Discovery’ reprises his main theme: this symphonic trick (used in other albums such as ‘Ommadawn’) welds the album together and makes it something more than a collection of unrelated pop and rock songs. I said that already, didn't I. It’s an understandable mistake to think that the long tracks ‘Taurus II’ and ‘Crises’ are more ‘commercial’ than his previous extended prog compositions. They use contemporary instruments, and embrace the sounds, techniques and production of the early 1980s. But they are every bit as prog as his earlier work: the underlying compositions take a varied selection of influences and meld them into extended melodic tracks that build to a symphonic climax. Just because they sound like the 80s doesn’t mean they’re built like the 80s. OLDFIELD for symphonic! You may be derisory now. |
||||
Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: October 24 2008 at 15:36 | |||
The new album is Crossover, but Crossover Classical (à la Vanessa May et al) not Crossover Prog. Very strong Tubby Bells flavour to it though.
|
||||
What?
|
||||
Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: October 24 2008 at 15:48 | |||
(just trimmed your post for continuity, so we could ignore the dolt who posted just after you, not to dissmiss your reasonings)
The Oldfield/Symphonic question has come up in the past, before the Art Rock split (here: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=25163) - the general consensus was Not. But as I say, that was before the split and before he was put into Crossover.
|
||||
What?
|
||||
Ricochet
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 27 2005 Location: Nauru Status: Offline Points: 46301 |
Posted: October 24 2008 at 15:50 | |||
^I was just gonna say that (Dean checked quicker than me).
In fact, here's the official statement of Oldfield moving out from Symphonic: Mike Oldfield (UK) - Not Symphonic, absolutely unique and hard to describe him, I’ve seen his albums in the Jazz, New Age, Rock and Progressive Rock sections of musical stores, some sites have created a new sub-genre based only in this band, another book case of Art Rock |
||||
|
||||
russellk
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 28 2005 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 782 |
Posted: October 24 2008 at 22:15 | |||
Hmm. I wonder why not Symphonic. Curious only, and not worried about it. He began as prog-folk, of course, and there's still a fair bit of that in Tubular Bells.
Edited by russellk - October 24 2008 at 22:15 |
||||
splyu
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 06 2008 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 316 |
Posted: October 25 2008 at 10:52 | |||
While this is true, it seems to me like it is more a certain sound that qualifies albums as "symphonic", rather than the way they're constructed. There are bands in "symphonic" whose tracks have pretty simple constructions, but that have the typical "symphonic" sound (e.g. Novalis). On the other hand, Oldfield's 80s albums may be constructed like classical pieces, but they don't "sound symphonic" (i.e. like a "rock orchestra"). I'm not saying I necessarily endorse that view, but that's what the situation seems to be from my observations.
Those three albums would probably be the only ones that would qualify as "symphonic" in the above sense (though even they sound different from Genesis and Yes).
True, but according to that reasoning, wouldn't Oldfield have to be shifted, to avoid having to shift all the others instead?
Very well put! Edited by splyu - October 25 2008 at 17:06 |
||||
Vibrationbaby
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 13 2004 Status: Offline Points: 6898 |
Posted: October 27 2008 at 16:54 | |||
Well I listened to the new album music Of The Spheres in the music store. Music stores are lonely places these days with all this crazy dowlaoding. Why don`t we just call him Mike The Orchestra Leader. Good music to listen to in the dentist`s chair. Can`t really figure out what demographic he`s aiming at here.
|
||||
Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: October 27 2008 at 18:25 | |||
As Music of the Spheres went #1 in the UK Classical chart and #10 in the Billboard Crossover Classical chart it is fair to say it was squarely aimed at the Popular Classic market and the people who also buy Vanessa Mae, Star Wars soundtrack albums and that music from that advert on TV that goes 'da-dah-dah-de-dah-de-dah' - i.e. Not Prog. (and he's probably made more cash out of it than he ever did with Amarok)
|
||||
What?
|
||||
Desoc
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 12 2006 Location: Oslo, Norway Status: Offline Points: 216 |
Posted: October 28 2008 at 10:13 | |||
Ah, but that's a good argument to move Genesis to Crossover as well, isn't it? |
||||
Vibrationbaby
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 13 2004 Status: Offline Points: 6898 |
Posted: October 28 2008 at 10:23 | |||
|
||||
Ricochet
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 27 2005 Location: Nauru Status: Offline Points: 46301 |
Posted: October 28 2008 at 12:01 | |||
No. Genesis played and (in our books) pioneered Symphonic Prog for 9 years. Oldfield made prog rock fans proud thanks to 5-6 albums. If you're willing to leave the Symphonic Prog genre orphan of one of the godfathers of Symphonic Prog, just because there was also pop in the band's career, it's your own view. On the other hand, Oldfield would be polished of everything non-prog in his music, which is almost a non-sense, since Oldfield blended somewhat constantly styles and such. That allows a few degree of "lesser-progressive" art in his music, but also makes the pop-rock (& others) more than just "plain rezidues" (sp?). |
||||
|
||||
Post Reply | Page <123> |
Forum Jump | Forum Permissions You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum |