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Vibrationbaby
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Topic: Did Prog Kill Prog? Posted: March 11 2004 at 17:22 |
Was it the evil forces of Disco and Punk that killed prog back in the late seventies or was it creative burnout?
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Dan Bobrowski
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Posted: March 11 2004 at 18:27 |
Over-indulgence? Kind of the same thing happened to Hair Metal in the 80's. Too many Steve Vai's and too many notes. (Tumeninotes - Steve Morse, ha ha). Bit of both, I think. Disco had sex appeal (Read Jim Garten's take on Raves). Punk had social backlash. Prog had intellectuals. Nerds lose every time. Or do we? Prog went "underground" and survived. Not everyone wants 4/4 timing and love songs.
"Killed" is probably not the correct term. Something like, stagnated, is more appropriate. As Greg Lake was so astute to say, "C'est La Vie."
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Ulf Uggason
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Posted: March 11 2004 at 21:22 |
Well, disco and punk sure didn't help anything. But the handwriting was on the wall that Prog was on the decline a few years before that. Many of the big leaders on the scene were either splitting up, or had lost a fair amount of inspiration. A classic case was ELP. In the history of rock, most bands have their greatest creative spurt in the earlier days of their career. Success sometimes hinders creativity, especially when egos begin to grow, and everybody is fighting for their space of musical turf - especially when the musicians are virtuosos. By the mid-to-late '70s, things started looking pretty grim musically. Plus fashion and styles changed, and Prog bands started going pop. It was pretty sad.
The beauty of the thing is that what once went around, comes around again. As the original Prog musicians began to age, and the fact that their bank accounts probably weren't going to last the rest of their lives, they had to start getting serious again. Many a rock musician has experienced a creative revival in their late 40's and 50's. I love to follow these guy's careers, charting the peaks and valleys. The oldsters rarely reach the pinnacle of their former creative peaks, but they can come damn close at times. To me, there is nothing more satisfying seeing some oldsters out there kicking some serious ass!!!
Peace,
Ulf (an oldster myself)
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maani
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Posted: March 12 2004 at 00:52 |
My two cents worth:
I'm not entirely sure that anything "killed" prog. I could make the argument that music goes through "periods," and that no period lasts forever. Nothing "killed" doo-wop or Motown or rock'n'roll, etc. (Just as be-bop didn't "kill" swing, which didn't "kill" dixieland, etc.) Part of it is (as Ulf notes) that culture - tastes, styles, etc. - changes. There is nothing necessarily "nefarious" about this.
However, there certainly were a number of factors that had an effect on the prominence of prog. The break-ups (or major personnel changes) of the seminal bands was one, though I'm not sure to what degree. I think the far more major change - which affected not only prog, but almost everything else - was the conglomeration of the music industry.
In the 1960s, when rock was young, promoters and producers were supporting anything and everything in "rock," since no one knew exactly what would "stick" when thrown against the wall. So they threw everyting at it. Eventually (i.e., by the late 60s), the industry - vis-a-vis rock - settled into a handful of genres, including "black" music (Motown, Stevie Wonder, etc.), "heavy metal" (Cream, Zep, Sabbath, etc.), "folk-rock" or "songwriter-rock" (Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Cat Stevens,etc.), "prog-rock" (Crimson, Floyd, Yes, Genesis, Tull, etc.), and "mainstream rock" (most everything else). There were others, but these seemed to be the main five.
Back then, because it was all still "new," artists were "nurtured," and given the time to "progress." Often, an artist wouldn't really "hit" until a third, fourth or even fifth album. For example, Genesis didn't hit until Foxtrot, their third album. Same with Yes (third album). And Floyd didn't really "hit" until Dark Side - their sixth album.
As these various artists started bringing in serious money (through both albums and tours), record companies started to get greedy, and see dollar signs instead of artists - and they no longer wanted to wait for their money; i.e., they no longer saw the benefit in "nurturing" artists through careers (which almost always fell off earnings-wise), when they could obtain major short-term capital via a major debut album. By the late 70s/early 80s (if not earlier), record labels were looking for the "fast buck": if an artist couldn't "produce" by their second album, they were often dropped.
In addition, as a result of the kind of money that some artists were generating for their labels, record companies started to view each other as serious competitors. So a wave of agglomeration started. Consider that even when I sent out my first demo in 1983 (pretty late in the game), there were 30 major labels. By 1995, there were only eight. By 2000, there were only five. And if the proposed merger occurs, there will only be four. And, of course, by now all those companies are no longer run by people with "ears," but by "bean counters," for whom the bottom line is not "creativity," but earnings.
Ultimately, the industry limited choice by focusing on short-term capital. What is ironic about this is that it actually eventually hurt the industry. This is because it is not short-term capital that keeps the industry afloat - even with debut albums that sell 13 million copies. Rather, the industry survives on the artists who had long-term careers - what are referred to as "deep catalogue artists." (These are the artists whose albums almost never go on sale: Floyd, the Stones, Bowie, Zep, etc. The reason is that the industry knows that people will always buy those albums. There is no coincidence that Floyd's Dark Side spent 20 years on the Billboard Top 200.)
This was proven the hard way in 1982. That year, the music industry was expected to post its first major loss in over 15 years - of over $500 million (which was alot back then). Yet three albums released later that year actually brought the industry out of the red and into the black. If memory serves, two of them were Michael Jackson's "Thriller" and Springsteen's "Born in the U.S.A." I forget the third (it might have been Bowie's "Let's Dance"), but all three were by "deep catalogue artists."
As we all know, these days music is mass-produced and mass-marketed to the lowest common denominator. If they can't pigeon-hole you and sell you as "the next" whoever, there is little chance you will ever get a contract.
Such are the vagaries of the music industry - which I believe was the largest factor in the "death" (or at least sidelining) of so much great music.
Peace.
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Paco Fox
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Posted: March 12 2004 at 05:15 |
Nah, I don't think prog killed prog. As always, critics killed everything. Prog was not massive. Was the 'hip' intellectual thing. When the intelligentsia turned their backs to seach for the 'next big thing', prog died in the media. And you don't have success if you are not in the media.
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dude
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Posted: March 12 2004 at 06:03 |
I have always thought that "punk" was a REACTION to what young people at that time saw as "musical pretention"(eg prog, poseur bands like Led Zep etc and lets face it there is a certain pretention to prog that can help to define it although an argument could be made that complexity, is mistaken for pretention) hence a return to a basic more "raw" sound of "The Clash" "Sex Pistols" etc mind you i personally think that "pretentious" aspect returned somewhat when punk evolved into the new wave and "new romantic" sound of the early-mid 80,s "what goes around comes around"(something like the material shunning hippies of the 60,s becoming the business leaders of today.) what do you fellow proggers think?
Edited by dude
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Aztech
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Posted: March 12 2004 at 14:55 |
Manni well said
I too know something of the music industry and you are right on.
Companies like Sony Music are the #1 music killers .They are like you said "bean counters" ; just wanting to make a buck with not much on the creativity and artistery side of music. -Just make a record 98% similar like the other "band" who made us a fortune with the masses- and then after the "band" acomplishes this for a while and are not "fashionable" the company spits them out and creates a new mass idol band .
Here's another term that kills music
"fashion" = Great today and crap tommorrow.
I hate fashion especially in music. Fashion was invented to get the masses to consume.Just tell people what they bought is "out,silly,outdated,nerdish etc.." and then they will want to buy the new product to be hip.
To quote an old Black Sabbath quote :
"iF YOU LISTEN TO FOOLS ...THE MOB RULES"
Some types of music may not be main stream or in the media but music never dies if someone listens and enjoys it and shares it with others.
oufff I feel beter now....
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maani
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Posted: March 12 2004 at 15:18 |
All:
Paco Fox adds an aspect missing from my analysis, and I agree that "critics" played some role in prog's decline.
Aztech: Thank you for your wisdom and support. My question re "fashion" is: is it a "natural" phenomenon or is it "pre-determined" and then "foisted" upon the populace? Both are probably correct in different ways, at different times. But if the later applies, then you are absolutely correct.
Dude: I agree (sometimes) with the notion that music is (or can be) a "reaction" to other music. Certainly many "punk" artists stated that, in as much as their music was a "reaction" to other music (as opposed to society or culture as a whole), it was a reaction to "mainstream pap" or "prog pretention" or otherwise.
However, as you correctly note, "what comes around, goes around." When "new wave" came out of "punk," it added some of the very elements that punk rejected, including non-standard instruments (notably mandolin, violin, flute and percussion), some "keyboard" (beyond piano), and more "mature" production values. It could be argued that neo-prog (certainly post-mid-80s) took "new wave" and added most (if not all) of the elements that originally made prog "prog": layered synths, non-standard time signatures, textured atmospheres, and, let's be honest, at least some "bombast."
By the way, I would reject the notion of Zep as "poseurs" of anything. They were one of the (if not the) greatest heavy metal blues bands ever. And although they may have "stumbled upon" prog sensibilities in songs like Kashmir, Achilles Last Stand, etc., this does not make them "poseurs" - it makes them "creative."
Peace.
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Aztech
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Posted: March 12 2004 at 17:40 |
Glad to be of service manni
Wether fashion is predetermined and stuffed down the masses throats or be it a normal phenomenom : music one day popular and after a while labeled outdated by the masses,they are different premises ,yes, but unfortunately they leave the same conclusion : they kill off potentially good music and artists.
"Good" music is and should be timeless ie: classical music
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richardh
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Posted: March 13 2004 at 04:53 |
I'll go for 'Option B' - Creative Burnout
Prog rock came from the sixties and was a part of the natural evolution of rock music.The original bands (ELP,Yes,King Crimson etc) were talented enough to make there way without having to be tied to having radio airplay or clever marketing.They could 'do it' in the live arena.To some extent it just ran its course.Once the classic prog albums were 'in the can' there was nowhere left to go (apart from down). Most modern prog is really a tribute to the music that was made between 1969-1975.That was a special era in music history.
Edited by richardh
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shark
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Posted: March 13 2004 at 07:47 |
personally, I find it impossible to subscribe to just one explanation. Reality is a lot more complex, so the cultural demise of progressive rock was really caused by different events and developments coming together from different points.
All previous posters have picked out these reasons, but I would just like to add the following:
some posters have correctly mentioned Punk and Disco. My direct experience of those days also points out towards the emergence of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal, where scores of young musicians, previously prog inclined, suddenly directed their energy towards that direction.
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Tauhd Zaïa
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Posted: March 13 2004 at 16:21 |
shark wrote:
personally, I find it impossible to subscribe to just one explanation. Reality is a lot more complex, so the cultural demise of progressive rock was really caused by different events and developments coming together from different points.
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Yes, but no…
Maani and Paco Fox pointed out two components : business and critics.
I think the solution is more simple.
We speak about Progressive Music.
Please consider Progressive Music as a biologic group and try to study it with a vision of naturalist (Darwinist or not).
Each living group (species, genus, family) appears, evolves or disappears without lineage.
Progressive Music appears late in the sixties.
Some bands have evolved into another music style (the proper of progressive music is to progress) or, like the dinosaurs disappeared because they didn’t be able or didn’t want to change.
Anyway, in the two cases the "picture" of how Progressive Music " sounded " mostly in the seventies must die.
For example Genesis released "Abacab" or "Mama", King Crimson "Discipline" and "Beat" but they have nevermore sounded like Peter Gabriel era and Peter Sinfield or John Wetton era.
Other dinosaurs died, the page was turned.
So I think " Progressive Music " is not a style but more a part of a film or a book, a part of time.
But the time flows, the story continues and the film must go on.
Progressive Music evolves, new styles appear.
The Progressive Music of the seventies are " scattered pages of a book by the see, held by the sand washed by the waves… "
But it was our youth that we all want to keep.
We all are ready to extract fossils of our past and to claim they are still living.
Unfortunately not…
In my own opinion it is the principal reason why " neo prog " was created for us and why so many bought the first Marillion records.
Fossils, copies, mouldings, just chimera of the past.
But music is still living, creativity too, all is evolving, as small mammals appeared within the legs of the old dinosaurs.
That’s why I liked Punk Music, New Wave or World Music in the eighties, Fusion, Trash and Industrial in the nineties, and now Indie Rock and a lot of small mammals.
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The State Of Grace Is Achieved
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Peter
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Posted: March 13 2004 at 21:50 |
No, prog didn't kill prog -- Phil Collins did!
I watched him rip the still-beating, unshaven heart from Genesis!
Just kidding, Philbert, wherever you are. Balding men gotta eat too....
Edited by Peter Rideout
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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Peter
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Posted: March 13 2004 at 22:03 |
Eloquently and movingly put, Tauhd. I like tons of types/eras of music -- "new" prog too! Only change is constant.... Waaaahh!
I'm really enjoying Porcupine Tree -- Lightbulb Sun lately. (Review soon!)
It's nothing really like classic prog, but a solid, intelligent album that is a product of its time.
Speaking of punk, do you know the Damned tunes "New Rose" and "Under the Floor Again?"
To be played as loudly as possible, please!
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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dude
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Posted: March 14 2004 at 03:58 |
There are cynics who would argue that some dinosaurs have not died(FLOYD,YES etc) i for one am glad that these "Loch Ness Monsters" of rock are still with us
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Tauhd Zaïa
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Posted: March 14 2004 at 04:23 |
Peter Rideout wrote:
Speaking of punk, do you know the Damned tunes "New Rose" and "Under the Floor Again?"
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Surely Pete !!!
I have seen a jig of The Damned (and The Stranglers too) in "Le Gibus" (a small hall in Paris) and I had the chance to speak with 'em after (in fact only Dave Vanian, Captain Sensible and Lu*, the guitarist).
I have even their autograph !!
Dave Vanian : a little cold and reserved
Captain Sensible : Folish guy, very funny
Lu* : Human and very friendly (he just went out of jail)
Yes I know "New Rose" but no "Under the Floor Again"
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The State Of Grace Is Achieved
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Tauhd Zaïa
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Posted: March 14 2004 at 04:35 |
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The State Of Grace Is Achieved
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Joren
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Posted: March 14 2004 at 05:20 |
Yes, he's glad to be home again!
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dude
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Posted: March 14 2004 at 05:36 |
Ramses ll had a Mummy? gee i hope he visited her often
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Tauhd Zaïa
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Posted: March 14 2004 at 06:33 |
dude wrote:
Ramses ll had a Mummy? gee i hope he visited her often |
Maybe it's time for you to find a new joke
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The State Of Grace Is Achieved
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