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Vibrationbaby
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Joined: February 13 2004
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 11:00 |
Does this mean no prog polka bands?
I dunno. I actually scanned down the thread before joining the fray. I just think that it`s sort of clutching at straws to have Hendrix on a site like this. I`ll just say one last thing about Coryell. If you watch his DVD A Retrospective one of his sons ( I forget which ) reflects on how dumbfounded he is that his dad is not in Rolling Stone`s top 100 guitarists.
I doubt that if Hendrix would have lived past 27 that he would have joined in on the short period during the early seventies when the prog ( or art rock ) movement ruled.
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StyLaZyn
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Joined: November 22 2005
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Points: 4079
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 11:05 |
Vibrationbaby wrote:
Does this mean no prog polka bands?
I dunno. I actually scanned down the thread before joining the fray. I just think that it`s sort of clutching at straws to have Hendrix on a site like this. I`ll just say one last thing about Coryell. If you watch his DVD A Retrospective one of his sons ( I forget which ) reflects on how dumbfounded he is that his dad is not in Rolling Stone`s top 100 guitarists.
I doubt that if Hendrix would have lived past 27 that he would have joined in on the short period during the early seventies when the prog ( or art rock ) movement ruled.
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That's a good point. Clapton certainly didn't after finding the Blues.
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Garion81
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Joined: May 22 2004
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 11:07 |
StyLaZyn wrote:
Vibrationbaby wrote:
Does this mean no prog polka bands?
I dunno. I actually scanned down the thread before joining the fray. I just think that it`s sort of clutching at straws to have Hendrix on a site like this. I`ll just say one last thing about Coryell. If you watch his DVD A Retrospective one of his sons ( I forget which ) reflects on how dumbfounded he is that his dad is not in Rolling Stone`s top 100 guitarists.
I doubt that if Hendrix would have lived past 27 that he would have joined in on the short period during the early seventies when the prog ( or art rock ) movement ruled.
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That's a good point. Clapton certainly didn't after finding the Blues. |
and yet Jeff Beck did. No one can say what would have happened to Jimi.
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"What are you going to do when that damn thing rusts?"
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Easy Money
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 11:20 |
I really don't see a lot of similarities between Hendrix and Clapton. Pete Cosey, Jeff Beck, Carlos Santana or Blackbyrd McKnight are better examples of similar to Hendrix.
Edited by Easy Money - April 15 2009 at 11:52
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StyLaZyn
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Joined: November 22 2005
Location: United States
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Points: 4079
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 11:22 |
Garion81 wrote:
StyLaZyn wrote:
Vibrationbaby wrote:
Does this mean no prog polka bands?
I dunno. I actually scanned down the thread before joining the fray. I just think that it`s sort of clutching at straws to have Hendrix on a site like this. I`ll just say one last thing about Coryell. If you watch his DVD A Retrospective one of his sons ( I forget which ) reflects on how dumbfounded he is that his dad is not in Rolling Stone`s top 100 guitarists.
I doubt that if Hendrix would have lived past 27 that he would have joined in on the short period during the early seventies when the prog ( or art rock ) movement ruled.
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That's a good point. Clapton certainly didn't after finding the Blues. |
and yet Jeff Beck did. No one can say what would have happened to Jimi.
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I would say Beck found more Fusion than Prog.
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Easy Money
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 11:29 |
Hendrix's last group was a proggy jazz fusion band with Larry Young (Miles, Mclaughlin, Santana), Mitch and Billy Cox.
He was also working with PA member Bo Hanson on another fusion project.
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Garion81
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Joined: May 22 2004
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 11:44 |
StyLaZyn wrote:
Garion81 wrote:
StyLaZyn wrote:
Vibrationbaby wrote:
Does this mean no prog polka bands?
I dunno. I actually scanned down the thread before joining the fray. I just think that it`s sort of clutching at straws to have Hendrix on a site like this. I`ll just say one last thing about Coryell. If you watch his DVD A Retrospective one of his sons ( I forget which ) reflects on how dumbfounded he is that his dad is not in Rolling Stone`s top 100 guitarists.
I doubt that if Hendrix would have lived past 27 that he would have joined in on the short period during the early seventies when the prog ( or art rock ) movement ruled.
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That's a good point. Clapton certainly didn't after finding the Blues. |
and yet Jeff Beck did. No one can say what would have happened to Jimi.
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I would say Beck found more Fusion than Prog. |
Is not fusion prog? It is listed here as a subgenre. It is why Jeff beck is here at all.
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"What are you going to do when that damn thing rusts?"
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StyLaZyn
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 22 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 4079
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 11:59 |
Garion81 wrote:
StyLaZyn wrote:
Garion81 wrote:
StyLaZyn wrote:
Vibrationbaby wrote:
Does this mean no prog polka bands?
I dunno. I actually scanned down the thread before joining the fray. I just think that it`s sort of clutching at straws to have Hendrix on a site like this. I`ll just say one last thing about Coryell. If you watch his DVD A Retrospective one of his sons ( I forget which ) reflects on how dumbfounded he is that his dad is not in Rolling Stone`s top 100 guitarists.
I doubt that if Hendrix would have lived past 27 that he would have joined in on the short period during the early seventies when the prog ( or art rock ) movement ruled.
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That's a good point. Clapton certainly didn't after finding the Blues. |
and yet Jeff Beck did. No one can say what would have happened to Jimi.
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I would say Beck found more Fusion than Prog. |
Is not fusion prog? It is listed here as a subgenre. It is why Jeff beck is here at all.
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I certainly would separate Fusion from Prog. Is Jazz Prog? Not really, IMO. Prog bands have ventured into those genres but Jazz bands haven't gone Prog, have they? Jazz could be considered the next step beyond Prog. Jazz has many sub-genres (music.download.com) but Prog isn't one of them. For some reason I can't figure out how to search http://www.jazzworlddatabase.com (might be due to Websense) but I'd like to see how many traditional Prog bands are listed.
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Logan
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 12:06 |
Jazz is an important ingredient (and influence) of much prog, and while Prog is short for Progressive Rock, I think it very fair to include Progressive Jazz-Rock. Fusion is essential to Prog, be it jazz-rock fusion, classical-rock fusion, a folk-rock fusion etc.
Edited by Logan - April 15 2009 at 12:08
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micky
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 12:14 |
Logan wrote:
Jazz is an important ingredient (and influence) of much prog, and while Prog is short for Progressive Rock, I think it very fair to include Progressive Jazz-Rock. Fusion is essential to Prog, be it jazz-rock fusion, classical-rock fusion, a folk-rock fusion etc.
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very true... and it is important to note that not all Jazz Rock is going to sound like Mahavishnu clones... look at Steely Dan? One of our 'experts' on Jazz rock called the Dan..one the most misunderstood groups around. Case in point. John touched on something earier... you have to really listen sometimes.. not be so quick to judge. The site can be educational... but that only workds if one wants to learn. Oh well hahha. Thankfully some do.. while others will take their opinions to the grave no matter what. There's nothing to be done for them.. hopefully .. with additions like this... even though Hendrix is known by all.. maybe some might look at him in a different light.. not just as a guitar hero.. but a musician.
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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micky
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 12:26 |
Easy Money wrote:
Speaking of The Turtles:
The very first gig I ever saw was Flo and Eddie opening for Alice Cooper in Shreveport Louisiana.
Flo and Eddie (they were in The Turtles for those of you who are obviously ignorant of rock music history) towards the end of their set decided to taunt the local redneck youth and sang the chorus to Happy Together over and over while jumping up and down and fondling their big fat shirtless man boobs. Good times! |
hahhahahhaha... oh man. That beats my 'good times' of seeing the two teenage girls ripping each others hair out at the New Kids on the Block concert over which of the guys was cutest.
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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Easy Money
Special Collaborator
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Joined: August 11 2007
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 12:30 |
There are lots of artists who sit between prog rock and fusion: Mahavishnu, RTF, Bill Bruford, Quiet Sun, Ozric Tentacles, David Sancious, Jean Luc Ponty, Alan Holdsworth Terje Rypdal, Focus, early Soft Machine and many more.
Good thing this site calls Quiet Sun Canterbury because their perfect blend of fusion and prog rock would be hard to classify
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StyLaZyn
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Joined: November 22 2005
Location: United States
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 12:30 |
Logan wrote:
Jazz is an important ingredient (and influence) of much prog, and while Prog is short for Progressive Rock, I think it very fair to include Progressive Jazz-Rock. Fusion is essential to Prog, be it jazz-rock fusion, classical-rock fusion, a folk-rock fusion etc.
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Yet Prog is not necessary for Jazz. I think saying Jazz is an important ingredient for Prog is an exaggeration. While it certainly is present with a few Prog bands, it doesn't mandate to be Progressive you study Jazz. When I think of the staple Prog bands, Jazz does not come to mind. Albeit, when listening to certain Jazz, you can hear the next level of musicianship beyong Prog and wonder, could <insert Prog musician here> play this? The converse I would say is positively evident. I.E. could Dennis Chambers play Phil Collins? The answer is a resounding YES! There are always exceptions, but to suggest as a whole Prog musicians are comparable to Jazz artists is simply not the case.
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Garion81
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 12:38 |
I love Steely Dan and I would even go so far to add early Chicago to that mix as well. I have never separated JR/F from prog. It is a blend of rock with another genre and in my mind has always been an essential ingredient in prog.
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"What are you going to do when that damn thing rusts?"
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Vibrationbaby
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Joined: February 13 2004
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Points: 6898
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 12:40 |
Easy Money wrote:
There are lots of artists who sit between prog rock and fusion: Mahavishnu, RTF, Bill Bruford, Quiet Sun, Ozric Tentacles, David Sancious, Jean Luc Ponty, Alan Holdsworth Terje Rypdal, Focus, early Soft Machine and many more.
Good thing this site calls Quiet Sun Canterbury because their perfect blend of fusion and prog rock would be hard to classify |
It seems that a lot of music that is beyond category finds it`s way on to this site and then the big argument always starts about which genre it should fit under. And then we start inventing genres and definitions to fit the artists such as this proto prog appellation or this heavy prog title which I think I`ve seen bands like Rush filed under. What is this site going to look like in 2080? ( that is if we haven`t destroyed the planet by then ).
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StyLaZyn
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Joined: November 22 2005
Location: United States
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Points: 4079
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 12:44 |
Garion81 wrote:
I love Steely Dan and I would even go so far to add early Chicago to that mix as well. I have never separated JR/F from prog. It is a blend of rock with another genre and in my mind has always been an essential ingredient in prog.
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I love Steely Dan as well. They have Jazz tendancies but are they jazz? Not really. Early Chicago is some excellent stuff, but like Steely Dan, not really Jazz. Prog has been a genre for rock musicians wanting to push their creativity outside the mainstream template. Jazz was already there, in that, it was not mainstream. But could you put Prog under Jazz? Could you put Jazz under Prog? Neither work without taking liberal interpretations.
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StyLaZyn
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Joined: November 22 2005
Location: United States
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 12:48 |
Vibrationbaby wrote:
Easy Money wrote:
There are lots of artists who sit between prog rock and fusion: Mahavishnu, RTF, Bill Bruford, Quiet Sun, Ozric Tentacles, David Sancious, Jean Luc Ponty, Alan Holdsworth Terje Rypdal, Focus, early Soft Machine and many more.
Good thing this site calls Quiet Sun Canterbury because their perfect blend of fusion and prog rock would be hard to classify |
It seems that a lot of music that is beyond category finds it`s way on to this site and then the big argument always starts about which genre it should fit under. And then we start inventing genres and definitions to fit the artists such as this proto prog appellation or this heavy prog title which I think I`ve seen bands like Rush filed under. What is this site going to look like in 2080? ( that is if we haven`t destroyed the planet by then ).
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This is part of my issue. I feel the website integrity has been compromised and people are wanting to generalize way too much so they can include artists as some type of Prog.
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Easy Money
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Joined: August 11 2007
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 13:05 |
^ Not me, if you read my intro you will know that The Experience is clearly part of the early London proto-prog scene (musically and socially) and needed to be added so that PA had a musicologically correct proto-prog section.
I'm not interested in adding too many more people to PA except essential progressive JR/F artists.
Edited by Easy Money - April 15 2009 at 13:07
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The T
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 13:10 |
I'd certainly agree with Ivan on this case... I feel Hendrix had to be here but I still can't hear much of him in later classic prog artists... He, on the other hand, has influenced many musicians in pother genres including newer prog bands... He would fit better in prog-related than in proto-prog.
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Garion81
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Joined: May 22 2004
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Posted: April 15 2009 at 13:12 |
StyLaZyn wrote:
Garion81 wrote:
I love Steely Dan and I would even go so far to add early Chicago to that mix as well. I have never separated JR/F from prog. It is a blend of rock with another genre and in my mind has always been an essential ingredient in prog.
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I love Steely Dan as well. They have Jazz tendancies but are they jazz? Not really. Early Chicago is some excellent stuff, but like Steely Dan, not really Jazz. Prog has been a genre for rock musicians wanting to push their creativity outside the mainstream template. Jazz was already there, in that, it was not mainstream. But could you put Prog under Jazz? Could you put Jazz under Prog? Neither work without taking liberal interpretations. |
Your right they are Jazz Rock/Fusion which is an acceptable category for prog. No one is trying to put Prog under Jazz no more than we would try and put it under classical. What we recognise is that sometimes Jazz and Rock and Classical and Rock come together and that is prog. Go to any prog site and tell me you cannot find Mahavishnu Orchestra, Return to Forever or sometimes Weather Report on the sites? This is a perfectly acceptable form of prog. Gee, go listen to Soundchaser by Yes or Take a Pebble by ELP and hear the jazz influences in these bands. How about Brand X a fusion band with a prog artist ?
Jazz influence over prog is all over the map. Just because some the bands have an American flavor or aanother flavor than Euro and don't use so much symphonic touches doesn't mean the music isn't on par or in the same category. Prog is so diverse even from Rush to Gentle Giant and ELP to Frank Zappa that to deny entry based on a style is not right.
Edited by Garion81 - April 15 2009 at 13:14
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"What are you going to do when that damn thing rusts?"
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