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Topic ClosedHow can metal be prog?

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Peter View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 01:33
^ I think I had the DTs once.... Ermm
 
 
 
I could hardly tu rty typw TYPE for shaking! Wacko


Edited by Peter - December 13 2008 at 01:33
"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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Mr ProgFreak View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 03:02
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

This is INSANE, there must be only one Prog Metal IMHO, and we can't follow all this madness, in this thread we have used terms as:

  1. Tech Extreme Metal
  2. Metalcore
  3. Technical Metalcore
  4. Progressive Metalcore
  5. Technical Progressive Metalcore

Most of which I proudly say i didn't heard before, so I had to research

Where will this stop?
 
Is all this multiple tagging  helping people who want to learn something or scaring newbies?
 


Of course we need more. I'm not sure where your sentiment against tagging comes from ... if anything, I'd say that we need to select the tags we use more carefully. For example, I don't use a genre label like "metalcore" since it's a really fuzzy term ... nobody really knows what it means. It's even worse than the label "progressive" - for that one most people at least have an idea of what it means, but for "metalcore" there are several specific definitions floating around the internet which contradict each other. The same applies to genre labels like "groove metal" ... they are not self explanatory, so I tend to avoid them.

But please, where is the harm in using several easily understandable tags to further describe an album? Does "4 stars prog metal" really describe to a newbie what to expect of Symphony X - V, if the person is new to prog metal and has only heard Dream Theater yet ... in that case, wouldn't a label like "Orchestral Prog Power Metal" be a better description?

Have a look at your own review ... I took the liberty of highlighting the words that I would call tags. What I'm trying to show is that we all use tags in our reviews ... the tagging on my website (or at last.fm for that matter) is only a way to make some of the information of the review available to the system, so that it can be used in comparisons.

"Until today I had refused to review any Prog Metal album, being that if I didn’t had anything good to say about a whole sub-genre, most surely the problem should be in my personal taste; but just found “V: The New Mythology Suite” by SYMPHONY X and must honestly say that I’m impressed.

The album combines elements of Metal with excellent Symphonic structures, and that’s something I’m able to understand or even like, this doesn’t mean I became an instant fan of the genre, but it’s good to see there’s some Prog Metal that I’m able to listen with pleasure.

From the operatic “Overture” it’s easy to know you are in front of something different, all those unnecessary solos and contests of egomaniac guitar pyrotechnics are left aside for a coherent structure, loved the opening.

“Evolution (The Grand Design) marks a change, were in definitive inside Metal territory which somehow reminds me of the galloping style of IRON MAIDEN and their obsession for Ancient Egyptian obsession, but designed in such way that the Symphonic component is almost as important, of course you will find some fast guitars, but in small dose doesn’t harm, and at the end there’s not Prog Metal without guitars. The vocals are simply impressive, excellent choral work, another high point.

“Fallen” starts slower than the previous track with a keyboard that leads to an “in crescendo” guitar work, the drumming is extremely accurate, but this time the vocals by Russell Allen are a bit over the top, like he’s making an incredible effort not to leave the Metal zone in which sounds a bit less confident than in Symphonic territory.

“Transcendence” is just a pompous intro (those we like so much) for “Communion and the Oracle” which starts with a soft guitar pretty unusual in this kind of music that sends us to less familiar territory, but again it’s nice, I can understand why some hardcore metalheads don’t like this album too much, because it’s as Symphonic ads metallic.

But the most interesting aspect of this track is how it evolves, linking every section with the next one, in such way you almost don’t feel the dramatic changes, with Michael Pinella and Michael Romeo doing an outstanding work.

“The Bird-Serpent War / Cataclysm” begins harder than all the previous with the expected (even when uncommon in this album) distorted guitar, again that reminiscence of IRON MAIDEN pulls me towards the most familiar an pleasant sound for a non Metal fan as me. But what impresses me more is the fantastic synth work.

Somebody please stop the world, I’m listening Prog Metal and I like it, “In the Breath of Poseidon” is full of pompous and ancient atmospheres with soft instrumental bridges to link the harder sections making the gap between them less evident, simply delightful.

“Egypt” as expected by the name is mysterious but frantic at the same time, two concepts that usually are not easy to combine are managed with enough dexterity to make them sound as natural partners, again the vocal work is amazing. Of course the soft piano closing section was a total surprise for me.

“Death of Balance / Lacrymosa” defies all what I thought I knew about Metal, the aggressive guitars blending with traditional piano in the most Classical sense is brilliant, the controlled cacophony is almost pleasant, reminding me of a harder version of ELP, but the surprises don’t end, another amazing choral section proves me that SYMPHONY X is different than most of the bands of the genre….Vive la différence”

Despite “Absence of Light” is the harder song of the album and clearly more oriented towards what I could expect from a metal album, can’t say I dislike it, the elaborate vocal work makes it easy to digest even by a person who usually won’t listen distorted guitars unless is forced.

“A Fool’s Paradise” starts frantic and breathtaking, for the second time seems like Russell Allen does too much effort when trying to be a metal singer instead of a Symphonic Metal singer, but when someone fails to match ,my taste, another member rescues the song, in this case Pinella with his impeccable keyboards. Around the middle, Allen recovers the calm and everything matches perfectly again, specially when the chorus enter and during a Bach reminiscent organ section…..Loved the song.

“Rediscovery” is the short and softer interlude that places the audience in mood for the final epic, sadly is too short, I believe they could had exploited it much more.

The almost 12 minutes epic “Rediscovery pt. II - The New Mythology” is the cherry in the top of the cake, the band jumps from one style, mood and atmosphere to another one with absolute coherence but at the same time in a very dramatic and radical way, always linking every section with an accurate bridge usually classical or Baroque, sometimes is Bach, in this case is Mozart, another high point.

Now, is time for my biggest problem, I really enjoyed the album but not enough to classify it as an essential masterpiece of Progressive Rock, so five stars are out of my book, but less than four would be unfair and lack of coherence with what I wrote.

Now I will get “The Odyssey” and “The Divine Wings of Tragedy” to convince myself that this is not a mirage and that I really like SYMPHONY X."

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 04:31
[QUOTE=Ivan_Melgar_M]

So please Russellk, don't try to tell me that it wasn't directed towards me, I'm not that naive and nobody here is.
 
[QUOTE=russellk]

So now you can read my mind? I'm telling you the truth, I intended my post as a general comment on nine pages of discussion. Ivan, as this thread shows, you're out of control.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 04:34
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

Of course there is a link between Progressive Metalcore and Progressive Metal, we have progressive metalcore/mathcore bands in Tech/Extreme Prog Metal in our database.
 
Thanks.

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

But before you tried to say there is a link between metalcore and progressive metal, but metalcore per se is a totally different beast to progressive metal and are not directly linked, that's what me and Dean have been trying to explain to you Ivan.
 

Please Hughes, WE WERE TALKING ABOUT MATH, I quoted you...You the expert were the one that said that the name was wrong and I believed you because I said (and I almost quote me) "I know very little and care less about Math", you said that it was really Technical Metalcore and used many terms (that keep growing with new adjective in each new post).

But I quoted a place where Math is called Progressive Metalcore.

BTW: Between the Buried and Me (A band I don't know about) is catalogued as Metalcore in other sites and we have them as Tech Extreme Metal...Do you insist there's no connection?

Will explain further down

But to make it simpler that, and will explain you step by step:

  1. There is Progressive Metal
  2. You admit Progressive Metalcore is related to Progressive Metal
  3. There's a sub-genre or whatever called Metalcore
  4. Some of the Metalcore bands are Progressive Metalcore

In that case despite anything you say, there's a relation between Metalcore and Progressive Metal, call it direct or indirect (I never said direct, my knowledge doesn't go that far), but you can't deny the relation and the link between the two.


Well yes, if you want to say metalcore is 'indirectly' connected to prog metal, I have no qualms, since both obviously are metal genres, but both have somewhat different roots, which again, I'm sure we can agree on now from previous posts explaining that.



Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

And don't put words into my mouth like you did before, I never said Technical Metalcore was the same as Progressive Metalcore. Nowhere did I say that or even imply that.
Technical Metalcore does not  equal progressive. Technical Progressive Metalcore does in fact equal progressive.
No Hughes, you never said that,  I had to find it in another source. LOL 
 
Quote Mathcore (also known as technical metalcore, progressive metalcore, or noisecore)
 
 
And its' funny how each step you add new names, now you call it Progressive Technical Metalcore....WOW!!!!!! What will be next?
 

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

If I didn't understand the difference, I doubt I would have even got promoted to the Prog Metal Team at all.
 

I don't doubt you know the difference, I'm not saying they are exactly the same, but seems the difference is so subtle that even our own Prog Reviewers have problems.

And I say that because Prog Reviewers in our one site, call "Between The Buried and Me" PURE Metalcore http://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=16337 , and you call it Extreme Tech Metal....Aren't there enough similarities if some Prog reviewers catalogue a Tech Extreme Metal Band as Metalcore, even if they are wrong?

Iván

PS: To make it clear, i don't pretend to know more than you, as a fact I know almost nothing about 90% of the adjectives you add, but using logic and a short research, you find that there's a connection



Regarding Between the Buried and Me, they were a band that started off as a very much pure metalcore band with very slight hints towards prog metal.
They eventually evolved into a Progressive Death Metal band and their most recent album displaying very very little metalcore sound in it at all.
To call them metalcore or progressive death metal.....neither is incorrect (hence why you see them labeled as both), unless you apply the tag to the wrong phase of the band.

The thing is, with some PA genres, what can fit in them is somewhat broad.
In Tech/Extreme we sometimes have bands that are not technical bands (in the case of Opeth for example) but fit in there better than the other two genres for their Extreme (i.e musical traits such as death growls, death metal riffs/influence).

We then have bands which are progressive metalcore, yet fit into the Tech/Extreme genre.
We have progressive death metal bands that fit into Tech/Extreme genre.
We have progressive technical death bands that fit into Tech/Extreme.
We have progressive thrash metal bands that fit into Tech/Extreme.
We have some bands which are a cross breed between groove metal and various extreme metal genres that fit into Tech/Extreme.
We have progressive Deathcore bands that fit into Tech/Extreme (deathcore itself being an offshoot of metalcore, a hybridization of metalcore, death metal, hardcore punk and in some bands, grindcore or even death grind.......yep it's confusing, but I know deathcore when I hear it).
We can have progressive technical deathcore bands.
We have progressive black metal bands.

And that's probably not even all of it listed there (and had I listed much more, it may have been quite overwhelming to some readers), but you get my point that the common link between these sub genres/bands within the sub geners is that they contain elements of either technical metal or extreme metal or both.


Hell, in heavy prog, we have the example of Fall Of Troy.
A band which is not really influenced by the older heavy prog bands like Rush at all, and sounds nothing like Rush or Porcupine Tree.
They are a mathcore/post-hardcore/experimental with an aesthetic a lot closer to punk than and by many people are not associated with prog rock at all.
But the band is heavy, heavy enough for heavy prog, and perhaps most importantly, a progressive rock band too, in midst of all the mathcore/post-hardcore/experimental sound they have.
Sure enough, the Mathcore is there, but unlike the progressive mathcore of Tech/Extreme, The Fall of Troy does not have mathcore their main focus, and as such, isn't all out as heavy as the Tech/Extreme progressive mathcore bands.

As many can see, it can get confusing perhaps, but that's why the more knowledgable on the topic are called in to investigate because they know the subtle details of the genres/sub genres and know how to put them in the right genres because they can hear more than the obvious details in the music.



Edited by HughesJB4 - December 13 2008 at 04:39
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 04:50
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

This is INSANE, there must be only one Prog Metal IMHO, and we can't follow all this madness, in this thread we have used terms as:

  1. Tech Extreme Metal
  2. Metalcore
  3. Technical Metalcore
  4. Progressive Metalcore
  5. Technical Progressive Metalcore

Most of which I proudly say i didn't heard before, so I had to research

Where will this stop?
 
Is all this multiple tagging  helping people who want to learn something or scaring newbies?

 


Of course we need more. I'm not sure where your sentiment against tagging comes from ... if anything, I'd say that we need to select the tags we use more carefully. For example, I don't use a genre label like "metalcore" since it's a really fuzzy term ... nobody really knows what it means. It's even worse than the label "progressive" - for that one most people at least have an idea of what it means, but for "metalcore" there are several specific definitions floating around the internet which contradict each other. The same applies to genre labels like "groove metal" ... they are not self explanatory, so I tend to avoid them.



Yes, I too belive more multiple/more tagging helps people learn and can help to be more descriptive about music.
Whether it needs to be applied at PA is another question entirely, but I strongly support Mike in his endeavors in his comprehensive tagging system at Progfreak.com.

Indeed, the term Groove metal is widely used and known among the metal community, but outside of metal, it's probably not highly descriptive to people, yet I personally still use the term anyway it can help be more descriptive about some bands if the person understands what the genre is.

And yes, metalcore is indeed confusing.

The problem is, despite the use of 'core' in the name, some metalcore bands are in fact less punk influenced than many metal bands.
For example, the big name metalcore band, Darkest Hour, has released a lot of music that is essentially melodic death metal musically but with hardcore punk style screaming and the band wears clothes that ties them in more with the punk crowd than it does the metal crowd, yet their music is indenially essentially heavy metal at it's core, compared to say, Metallica's Kill 'Em All, which has an obvious hardcore punk influence, but yet is called a metal album.
And from this, we can also perhaps say metalcore is defined partly by aesthetics, just as metal as.
And let's not forget, the aesthetics of punk and metal were always things that were notable parts of the 2 scenes.

And then we have metalcore bands that are more punk influenced than metal bands, but the key to identifying metalcore as a different overal genre to metal is, again, in the subtleties one begins to understand only from having heard the music many many times.


Edited by HughesJB4 - December 13 2008 at 04:53
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 04:55
^^ I think the main intention for this category (Extreme/Tech Prog Metal) was for bands that are either rooted in an aggressive style of metal (the "extreme" component) or play on a very technical level with the technicality being the main focus (as opposed to songwriting, melody etc). Fortunately those two components go well together - many Thrash/Death/Black Metal bands in the archives also play on a high technical level, and many of the bands in the genre which are there mainly for the technicality are also related to Thrash/Metal/Black, either because they started in those styles and then "outgrew" them, or because the band members come from bands which played in those styles.


Edited by Mr ProgFreak - December 13 2008 at 05:03
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 05:03
^^ I understand you perfectly, but in my opinion both "Groove Metal" and "Metalcore" are simply bad choices as genre labels. Thrash, Death, Black ... those are intuitively understandable at least to some extent, but "Groove Metal"? Come on. As far as I'm concerned, it's just metal that grooves ... it could really mean anything. I've read that Pantera is a key band of Groove Metal. But I also remember a special issue of the German Guitar magazine, where they defined the metal genres, and they happened to call Pantera a key band of Metalcore. So ... is Groove Metal the same as Metalcore? And if it isn't ... how is Metalcore defined, it hardly is the core of all metal. Of course I know how it came to be (Metal + Emocore), I just mean that it is simply not a descriptive label. We need labels which are self-explanatory ... genres like "Canterbury" or "Zeuhl" really aren't, and that's why I avoid them. They exist - so it makes no sense to ignore them - but that doesn't mean that we *have* to use them.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 05:26
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^^ I think the main intention for this category (Extreme/Tech Prog Metal) was for bands that are either rooted in an aggressive style of metal (the "extreme" component) or play on a very technical level with the technicality being the main focus (as opposed to songwriting, melody etc). Fortunately those two components go well together - many Thrash/Death/Black Metal bands in the archives also play on a high technical level, and many of the bands in the genre which are there mainly for the technicality are also related to Thrash/Metal/Black, either because they started in those styles and then "outgrew" them, or because the band members come from bands which played in those styles.


I agree for the most part.
But "as opposed to songwriting", doesn't gel with me at all.
If I thoroughly enjoy an album (take Colors from Between The Buried and Me, which I enjoy immensely) doesn't that mean the band did focus on song writing then? Doesn't that mean the songs are well written, if I was able to sit there and immerse myself in the music, regardless of the lack of melody, or whether the playing was technical or not?
Of course they focused on song writing, the whole point was to make music wasn't it, not a battle of how technical/aggressive/non melodic it was?
It just happens in between what (IMO) is amazing song writing also happens to a very complex, technical, aggressive and relatively non melodic album.

The song writing tag of all tags, make some of the least sense of all to me, because if someone enjoyed the music, then they enjoyed the song writing......the two are inseparable. 



Edited by HughesJB4 - December 13 2008 at 05:27
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 05:40
Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^^ I think the main intention for this category (Extreme/Tech Prog Metal) was for bands that are either rooted in an aggressive style of metal (the "extreme" component) or play on a very technical level with the technicality being the main focus (as opposed to songwriting, melody etc). Fortunately those two components go well together - many Thrash/Death/Black Metal bands in the archives also play on a high technical level, and many of the bands in the genre which are there mainly for the technicality are also related to Thrash/Metal/Black, either because they started in those styles and then "outgrew" them, or because the band members come from bands which played in those styles.


I agree for the most part.
But "as opposed to songwriting", doesn't gel with me at all.
If I thoroughly enjoy an album (take Colors from Between The Buried and Me, which I enjoy immensely) doesn't that mean the band did focus on song writing then? Doesn't that mean the songs are well written, if I was able to sit there and immerse myself in the music, regardless of the lack of melody, or whether the playing was technical or not?
Of course they focused on song writing, the whole point was to make music wasn't it, not a battle of how technical/aggressive/non melodic it was?
It just happens in between what (IMO) is amazing song writing also happens to a very complex, technical, aggressive and relatively non melodic album.



Of course every band/album is different. I would not say that BtBaM are in that genre because of their technicality, but because of their Metalcore/Death/Thrash "ingredients". I would not say that all the bands in that genre focus more on technicality than on songwriting, but I *would* say that there are many who do.

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:



The song writing tag of all tags, make some of the least sense of all to me, because if someone enjoyed the music, then they enjoyed the song writing......the two are inseparable. 



I disagree. I can really enjoy an album but say that the songwriting could be improved (for example, it might contain mostly improvisation). On the other hand, I could listen to an album and not like it at all but still acknowledge that the songs are well written. For example I'm not really a big fan of Neill Young, but I would never say that he's a bad songwriter. I know that he isn't, I simply don't "connect".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 05:47
^I guess I can somewhat see your point about the 'song writing' tag, but it's very much open to a lot of misinterpretation.

And while obviously BtBaM aren't a straight out tech band, much of their material off Colors anyway, is certainly far more technical than that of say, Opeth and many bands that fall in "prog metal', so it's not entirely incorrect to apply the technical tag to them.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 05:59
 
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

 
I had a long and coherent argument about why a Metal FAMILY TREE is a perfect analogy to a FAMILY TREE...............................but is unnecessary, because:
 
1.- I was talking about Math, not about Metalcore
 
Quote You can get into math rock  (which btw, I still believe is a misnomer and is in many cases more correctly called mathcore, while what is called mathcore is more technically 'technical metalcore') and never have heard a 'prog' band in your life.
 
Many math rock ans came from the punk scene and couldn't care less about Yes, Genesis etc, although more so from the sub genre Post Hardcore than 'straight' punk.
 
Well, isn't there a connection between Metalcore and prog Metal?
 
2.- Hugues is not talking about Metalcore, he's talking about Math

Quote You can get into math rock  (which btw, I still believe is a misnomer and is in many cases more correctly called mathcore, while what is called mathcore is more technically 'technical metalcore') and never have heard a 'prog' band in your life.

4.- Mathcore or what Hugues calls Technical Metalcore is also knon as PROGRESSIVE METALCORE Shocked
Quote
Mathcore (also known as technical metalcore, progressive metalcore, or noisecore) is a rhythmically complex and dissonant style of metalcore. Mathcore has its roots in bands like Converge,[1] Botch,[2][3] and the Dillinger Escape Plan.[4] The term mathcore is suggested by analogy with math rock. Both math rock and mathcore make use of unusual time signatures. Math rock groups such as Slint, Don Caballero, Shellac, and Drive Like Jehu have some influence on mathcore, though mathcore is more closely related to extreme metal. Prominent mathcore groups have been associated with grindcore.
 
 
If you don't trust in Wikipedia, there are 1'000,000 links to Progressive Metalcore in http://www.google.com.pe/search?hl=es&q=Progressive+Metalcore&meta=
 
 
I clearly said I'm not an expert on Math,. but accepted when Hugues named Math as Metalcore because he's the expert, but if I find that Math is known as PROGRESSIVE METALCORE....Well Confused
 
They are so related that there even exists a PROGRESSIVE METALCORE with not only one but the two same ancestors.
 
Would you insist that Metalcore and progressive Metal are not related if there is a PROGRESSIVE METALCORE as a direct link between both??????????
 
The prosecusion rests. Approve
 
I seldom get angry and will happily lose an argument if I'm wrong Wink
 
I'm waiting. LOL
 
Iván

 

 
I'll not dissect this in it's entirety because Mike and Harry have explained well enough. The clues and answers are in what you have written and quoted - Math Rock is not called Mathcore but should be, while what is much of what is currently called Mathcore is should be called Technical Metalcore. Basically if you fuse any Metal (or Rock) subgenre with (Harcore) Punk you will get a xxxxcore of of some form.
 
The multitude metal subgenres have descriptive self-explanatory sounding names, but they are not necessarily descriptive or self explanatory and, like many of the Progressive Rock subgenres, are named as much for their historical derivation than they are for any musical description, which is why many of us avoid using them and use more generic "umbrella" names like Extreme Metal.
 
The Metal community can sub-divide and categorise as much as they like - here on the PA we will continue to be more controlled and use the three we have as generic terms, (however, we do have to use those terms for individual bands if that is what they are often referred to as), the problem with using narrow-band naming is that bands mature, develop and progress - they change styles, jumping from one subgenre to another or even creating new ones (something we are all too familiar within Prog Rock Wink)
 
 
You're going to have a long wait Tongue


Edited by Dean - December 13 2008 at 06:03
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 06:09
hahhaha
The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 09:56

Well, I have been replied by everybody, but still no problem, lets go step by step:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Of course we need more. I'm not sure where your sentiment against tagging comes from ... if anything, I'd say that we need to select the tags we use more carefully. For example, I don't use a genre label like "metalcore" since it's a really fuzzy term ... nobody really knows what it means. It's even worse than the label "progressive" - for that one most people at least have an idea of what it means, but for "metalcore" there are several specific definitions floating around the internet which contradict each other. The same applies to genre labels like "groove metal" ... they are not self explanatory, so I tend to avoid them.

Maybe Progfreak (site) needs more tagging, because you are obsessed with tags and you created a site for that Mike, but that's not the case of ProgArchives


Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Have a look at your own review ... I took the liberty of highlighting the words that I would call tags. What I'm trying to show is that we all use tags in our reviews ... the tagging on my website (or at last.fm for that matter) is only a way to make some of the information of the review available to the system, so that it can be used in comparisons.

Mike , a review is a place for PERSONAL OPINIONS, you say everything you want with freedom.

But for a genre is absurd, we would need a specific combination of names, moods and influences to describe each and every band and we will have no point to end, because if I in my PERSONAL REVIEW feel that all the terms I used are correct in a phrase, we would have to tag V as:

Symphonic, Operatic, Egyptian, Fast, Choral, Keyboard, Synth, Pompous, Instrumental, Dramatic, Bach Mozart Prog Metal Wink

That would maybe be OK for ProgFreak, but honestly....Would be ridiculous for a Prog label band of a place as Prog Archives.

Plus the fact you point it well, I use several terms in MY review, to clear my ideas, but each person has his own ideas, his own perceptions, and ProgArchives is not a place where people put their own twenty words definitions.

A PERSONAL REVIEW is a place to be as explñanatory as you want, to use the adjectives you need, to add as many literary figures as you wantt, but a definition must be concise and d simple, if not, we are confusing the person who comes here and finds a place with so many names.

I remember when I took Symphonic, you told me to split it as much as I needed, but I honestly believe that there is one Symphonic, and even when we pretend to add Schools and eras to EXPLAIN, the genre will remain as simple as it is now....SYMPHONIC PROG.

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

Well yes, if you want to say metalcore is 'indirectly' connected to prog metal, I have no qualms, since both obviously are metal genres, but both have somewhat different roots, which again, I'm sure we can agree on now from previous posts explaining that.

That's what I said from my first post, you added direct links or whatever, made it ultra complex, when you could had simply and easily said...Yes there is a connection.

Always the need to over complicate everything.

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

Regarding Between the Buried and Me, they were a band that started off as a very much pure metalcore band with very slight hints towards prog metal.
They eventually evolved into a Progressive Death Metal band and their most recent album displaying very very little metalcore sound in it at all.
To call them metalcore or progressive death metal.....neither is incorrect (hence why you see them labeled as both), unless you apply the tag to the wrong phase of the band.

Now there are right and wrong phases of a band?

Please Hughes, you catalogue it as Extreme Tech Metal and three Prog Reviewers, two of them members of a team and like 5 people who reviewed the album called it and I quote "PURE METALCORE.

The Sound is so similar that 8 persons out of a few, believe it's Metalcore, despite you believe it's Tech, Extreme Prog Metal...Do we need all this terms to describe a band? LOL

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

The thing is, with some PA genres, what can fit in them is somewhat broad.
In Tech/Extreme we sometimes have bands that are not technical bands (in the case of Opeth for example) but fit in there better than the other two genres for their Extreme (i.e musical traits such as death growls, death metal riffs/influence).

So even though Prog Metal has three sub-genres, this are not enough and you need more?

Please, I believe your capacity of abstraction is under questioning.


Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

We then have bands which are progressive metalcore, yet fit into the Tech/Extreme genre.
We have progressive death metal bands that fit into Tech/Extreme genre.
We have progressive technical death bands that fit into Tech/Extreme.
We have progressive thrash metal bands that fit into Tech/Extreme.
We have some bands which are a cross breed between groove metal and various extreme metal genres that fit into Tech/Extreme.
We have progressive Deathcore bands that fit into Tech/Extreme (deathcore itself being an offshoot of metalcore, a hybridization of metalcore, death metal, hardcore punk and in some bands, grindcore or even death grind.......

Please, read yourself......I need a guide to remotely follow you, and I consider myself a person with more Prog knowledge than the normal casual visitor....Do you believe this helps or confuses the people=


And that's probably not even all of it listed there (and had I listed much more, it may have been quite overwhelming to some readers), but you get my point that the common link between these sub genres/bands within the sub genres is that they contain elements of either technical metal or extreme metal or both.

And at the end you say:


Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

yep it's confusing, but I know deathcore when I hear it).
We can have progressive technical deathcore bands.
We have progressive black metal bands.

Yes, you understand it, but the visitor gets more lost than before your explanation.

I'm sure that 90% of Prog Archives members are lost by this point

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

Hell, in heavy prog, we have the example of Fall Of Troy.
A band which is not really influenced by the older heavy prog bands like Rush at all, and sounds nothing like Rush or Porcupine Tree.
They are a mathcore/post-hardcore/experimental with an aesthetic a lot closer to punk than and by many people are not associated with prog rock at all.
But the band is heavy, heavy enough for heavy prog, and perhaps most importantly, a progressive rock band too, in midst of all the mathcore/post-hardcore/experimental sound they have.
Sure enough, the Mathcore is there, but unlike the progressive mathcore of Tech/Extreme, The Fall of Troy does not have mathcore their main focus, and as such, isn't all out as heavy as the Tech/Extreme progressive mathcore bands.

Honestly, I would need a Metal - English online translator to at least attempt to understand 10% of what you are saying.

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

As many can see, it can get confusing perhaps, but that's why the more knowledgeable on the topic are called in to investigate because they know the subtle details of the genres/sub genres and know how to put them in the right genres because they can hear more than the obvious details in the music.

But you are forgetting this knowledgeable people should work for the public, not to satisfy an insane need of over-tagging in such extreme that only an expert can get it.

I don't agree with Peter when he says he would Put Symphony X under the category of I like or i don'tt like, but I see he has a point.

I will continue in the next post, because this is getting huge.

Iván

            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 10:21
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Of course we need more. I'm not sure where your sentiment against tagging comes from ... if anything, I'd say that we need to select the tags we use more carefully. For example, I don't use a genre label like "metalcore" since it's a really fuzzy term ... nobody really knows what it means. It's even worse than the label "progressive" - for that one most people at least have an idea of what it means, but for "metalcore" there are several specific definitions floating around the internet which contradict each other. The same applies to genre labels like "groove metal" ... they are not self explanatory, so I tend to avoid them.

Maybe Progfreak (site) needs more tagging, because you are obsessed with tags and you created a site for that Mike, but that's not the case of ProgArchives.

Of course PF is different from PA, and I'm no longer trying to get my visions implemented here. I'm just trying to say that many people like tagging - for some things you simply can't find a short and precise label. Sure, we could just simply call everything "music" ...

Originally posted by Iván Iván wrote:


Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Have a look at your own review ... I took the liberty of highlighting the words that I would call tags. What I'm trying to show is that we all use tags in our reviews ... the tagging on my website (or at last.fm for that matter) is only a way to make some of the information of the review available to the system, so that it can be used in comparisons.

Mike , a review is a place for PERSONAL OPINIONS, you say everything you want with freedom.

But for a genre is absurd, we would need a specific combination of names, moods and influences to describe each and every band and we will have no point to end, because if I in my PERSONAL REVIEW feel that all the terms I used are correct in a phrase, we would have to tag V as:

Symphonic, Operatic, Egyptian, Fast, Choral, Keyboard, Synth, Pompous, Instrumental, Dramatic, Bach Mozart Prog Metal Wink

That would maybe be OK for ProgFreak, but honestly....Would be ridiculous for a Prog label band of a place as Prog Archives.

Since you're mentioning my website, let's look at how the album is currently labelled there:

"Neo-Classical Technical Prog Power Metal"

Is that so bad? I know that you're having problems with the word neo-classical, but let's not go there in this thread ... Wink

Of course it makes no sense to include every bit of information about an album in its genre label. But we can collect all the tags people assign to it and then select the most important ones. That's where the power of tags comes from: The system can count them. If you have only reviews, the system can't possibly know how many people think that an album is pompous, for example.

Plus the fact you point it well, I use several terms in MY review, to clear my ideas, but each person has his own ideas, his own perceptions, and ProgArchives is not a place where people put their own twenty words definitions.

Sure. But whenever I'm browsing through reviews - be it here, at PF or at any other website or magazine - I find out that people are using these tags in the text. You may reject my website for whatever reason you want, but you can't deny that even you use them.Smile

A PERSONAL REVIEW is a place to be as explñanatory as you want, to use the adjectives you need, to add as many literary figures as you wantt, but a definition must be concise and d simple, if not, we are confusing the person who comes here and finds a place with so many names.

I remember when I took Symphonic, you told me to split it as much as I needed, but I honestly believe that there is one Symphonic, and even when we pretend to add Schools and eras to EXPLAIN, the genre will remain as simple as it is now....SYMPHONIC PROG.

Well, maybe it doesn't make sense to split the genre - you're the expert, and I trust your judgement. However, assigning more tags to something doesn't necessarily mean that something is split, or that you're narrowing/boxing something. If you added the tag "pompous" to something which is also "symphonic", you're not creating a new sub genre called "pompous symphonic" ... you're merely saying that the music is both pompous and symphonic. Maybe I should explain these things in more detail at PF ...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 10:24

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:


Yes, I too belive more multiple/more tagging helps people learn and can help to be more descriptive about music.
Whether it needs to be applied at PA is another question entirely, but I strongly support Mike in his endeavors in his comprehensive tagging system at Progfreak.com.

I'm nobody to say what is best for Progfreak, but this scares the sh!t out of me, and now you understand why the common Collaborator didn't participate in Progfreak, despite the invaluable service this site is doing for ProgArchives....Because it's unfriendly and confusing Ermm

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

Indeed, the term Groove metal is widely used and known among the metal community, but outside of metal, it's probably not highly descriptive to people, yet I personally still use the term anyway it can help be more descriptive about some bands if the person understands what the genre is.

You just hit the nail in the head.."WIDELY USED AMONG THE METAL COMMUNITY"

But this is not the Metal Community, this is the PROG COMMUNITY, and we need only Prog Metal, they may need all this names for THEIR sub-genres,. but we are not transporting all Metal sub-genres here, or do you believe we should have Free Jazz Fusion, Classical Jazz Fusion, Nu Jazz Fusion, Latin Jazz Fusion, etc

No we absorb Jazz Fusion as one category of Prog, so should do Prog Metal.


Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

And yes, metalcore is indeed confusing.

Of course it's confusing, I have proved that not even the experts can agree.LOL


Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

The problem is, despite the use of 'core' in the name, some metalcore bands are in fact less punk influenced than many metal bands.
For example, the big name metalcore band, Darkest Hour, has released a lot of music that is essentially melodic death metal musically but with hardcore punk style screaming and the band wears clothes that ties them in more with the punk crowd than it does the metal crowd, yet their music is indenially essentially heavy metal at it's core, compared to say, Metallica's Kill 'Em All, which has an obvious hardcore punk influence, but yet is called a metal album.
And from this, we can also perhaps say metalcore is defined partly by aesthetics, just as metal as.
And let's not forget, the aesthetics of punk and metal were always things that were notable parts of the 2 scenes.

Please...Do we have Prog Punk or has it been added since last week?

Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

And then we have metalcore bands that are more punk influenced than metal bands, but the key to identifying metalcore as a different overal genre to metal is, again, in the subtleties one begins to understand only from having heard the music many many times.

They are Prog Metal, that's what the normal, not obsessed member and visitor of Prog Archives needs to know, if you want to wrote a thesis of Metal for a select public, do it,, but here it must remain simple.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

I'll not dissect this in it's entirety because Mike and Harry have explained well enough. The clues and answers are in what you have written and quoted - Math Rock is not called Mathcore but should be, while what is much of what is currently called Mathcore is should be called Technical Metalcore. Basically if you fuse any Metal (or Rock) sub genre with (Harcore) Punk you will get a xxxxcore of of some form.

Self explanatory?????????? LOLLOLLOL

I'm more lost than when I started.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

The multitude metal subgenres have descriptive self-explanatory sounding names, but they are not necessarily descriptive or self explanatory and, like many of the Progressive Rock subgenres, are named as much for their historical derivation than they are for any musical description, which is why many of us avoid using them and use more generic "umbrella" names like Extreme Metal.

As any person who doesn't have a degree in metal and too much time on his hands. ), but as you have seen in the poets I reply to, the Prog Team members don't understand this a PROGRESSIVE ROCK COMMUNITY and their excuse is that this terms are used in the METAL COMMUNITY.

The funniest thing is that in the next 4 posts after the ones I replied to, Mike and Hughes start to disagree, instead ofestroying bad Iván, the Metal Hater, they start to discuss between them, because the tags of one of them is not accurate for the other. LOLLOLLOL

What do you expect from the normal human without Metal super powers? Confused

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

You're going to have a long wait .

I don't think so Dean I proved that at least for some experts, the term that is called Math and should be called Mathcore but which Hughes calls Technical Metalcore, is an equivalent with Progressive Metalcore, so the relation is undeniable, to the point that Hughes has accepted it....And trhatb my friend, is an achievement .Cool

Iván

            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 10:36
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Of course PF is different from PA, and I'm no longer trying to get my visions implemented here. I'm just trying to say that many people like tagging - for some things you simply can't find a short and precise label. Sure, we could just simply call everything "music" .

As far as I know, definitions must nbe short, clear and concise, but you are free to do in Prog Freak as you want

Since you're mentioning my website, let's look at how the album is currently labelled there:

"Neo-Classical Technical Prog Power Metal"

  1. Neo
  2. Classical
  3. Technical
  4. Prog
    1. Progressive
    2. Rock
  5. Power
  6. Metal

Don't you think that's more than enough to talk of over tagging?

 
Is that so bad? I know that you're having problems with the word neo-classical, but let's not go there in this thread ... Wink

I don't have any problem with Neo Classical, used alone to describe a determined genre of musicor a sub-genre of Classical.


Of course it makes no sense to include every bit of information about an album in its genre label. But we can collect all the tags people assign to it and then select the most important ones. That's where the power of tags comes from: The system can count them. If you have only reviews, the system can't possibly know how many people think that an album is pompous, for example.

But Pompous is not a genre definition, it's an adjective that can suit ELP as well as Jethro Tull or Genesis or Symphony X in a determined moment of their albums, not a  tag for a band or album.

Sure. But whenever I'm browsing through reviews - be it here, at PF or at any other website or magazine - I find out that people are using these tags in the text. You may reject my website for whatever reason you want, but you can't deny that even you use them.Smile

We atre not tagging, by definition a review has to be wide, explanatory, argumented, a name or tag must be clear, concuise and short.

Well, maybe it doesn't make sense to split the genre - you're the expert, and I trust your judgement. However, assigning more tags to something doesn't necessarily mean that something is split, or that you're narrowing/boxing something. If you added the tag "pompous" to something which is also "symphonic", you're not creating a new sub genre called "pompous symphonic" ... you're merely saying that the music is both pompous and symphonic. Maybe I should explain these things in more detail at PF ...
 
For God's sake, Pompous is only a wide and subjective adjective used as part of a long detailled descriptive review, not in a name or tag. 

What is pompous for me, may not be Pompous for other person, as a fact w3hat is normal for a Proghead, is extremely `pompous for the rest of the world...A review MUST BE SU(BJECTIVE, a tag MUST BE OBJECTIVE.

Iván
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 10:47
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Since you're mentioning my website, let's look at how the album is currently labelled there:

"Neo-Classical Technical Prog Power Metal"


  1. Neo
  2. Classical
  3. Technical
  4. Prog
    1. Progressive
    2. Rock
  5. Power
  6. Metal

Don't you think that's more than enough to talk of over tagging?

Only if you see it like that ... I don't. Who ever said that this was a genre definition? The genre for the album is Power Metal, as far as I'm concerned ... the other words are simply tags (attributes) which further describe the music.

 
Is that so bad? I know that you're having problems with the word neo-classical, but let's not go there in this thread ... Wink

I don't have any problem with Neo Classical, used alone to describe a determined genre of musicor a sub-genre of Classical.

Of course it makes no sense to include every bit of information about an album in its genre label. But we can collect all the tags people assign to it and then select the most important ones. That's where the power of tags comes from: The system can count them. If you have only reviews, the system can't possibly know how many people think that an album is pompous, for example.

But Pompous is not a genre definition, it's an adjective that can suit ELP as well as Jethro Tull or Genesis or Symphony X in a determined moment of their albums, not a  tag for a band or album.

Exactly - "pompous" is an adjective. Why shouldn't you assign it to an album or song? You did so in your review.

Sure. But whenever I'm browsing through reviews - be it here, at PF or at any other website or magazine - I find out that people are using these tags in the text. You may reject my website for whatever reason you want, but you can't deny that even you use them.Smile

We atre not tagging, by definition a review has to be wide, explanatory, argumented, a name or tag must be clear, concuise and short.

Well, maybe it doesn't make sense to split the genre - you're the expert, and I trust your judgement. However, assigning more tags to something doesn't necessarily mean that something is split, or that you're narrowing/boxing something. If you added the tag "pompous" to something which is also "symphonic", you're not creating a new sub genre called "pompous symphonic" ... you're merely saying that the music is both pompous and symphonic. Maybe I should explain these things in more detail at PF ...
 
For God's sake, Pompous is only a wide and subjective adjective used as part of a long detailled descriptive review, not in a name or tag.

Sorry, but the word "pompous" is well defined. If you decide to use it in your review, people will read it and use this definition to make sense of it.

What is pompous for me, may not be Pompous for other person, as a fact w3hat is normal for a Proghead, is extremely `pompous for the rest of the world...A review MUST BE SU(BJECTIVE, a tag MUST BE OBJECTIVE.

Iván

No. Both reviews and tags are subjective. Even the genre labels at PA are subjective, why else would there be so many discussions about them?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 10:51
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

You're going to have a long wait .

I don't think so Dean I proved that at least for some experts, the term that is called Math and should be called Mathcore but which Hughes calls Technical Metalcore, is an equivalent with Progressive Metalcore, so the relation is undeniable, to the point that Hughes has accepted it....And trhatb my friend, is an achievement .Cool

Iván

The statement is not commutative: if Harry calls Mathcore Technical Metalcore and what Harry calls Mathcore is Math Rock then what he calls Mathcore is not what he calls Technical Metalcore and therefore what is currenly called Math Rock is not what is currently called Technical Metalcore and Mathcore is not Metalcore.
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 10:56
"That sounds very simple Dean!"

Wink


Edited by Mr ProgFreak - December 13 2008 at 10:56
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2008 at 11:03
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

You're going to have a long wait .

I don't think so Dean I proved that at least for some experts, the term that is called Math and should be called Mathcore but which Hughes calls Technical Metalcore, is an equivalent with Progressive Metalcore, so the relation is undeniable, to the point that Hughes has accepted it....And trhatb my friend, is an achievement .Cool

Iván

The statement is not commutative: if Harry calls Mathcore Technical Metalcore and what Harry calls Mathcore is Math Rock then what he calls Mathcore is not what he calls Technical Metalcore and therefore what is currenly called Math Rock is not what is currently called Technical Metalcore and Mathcore is not Metalcore.


Wacko Dean can I use that post as my signature?
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