Author |
Topic Search Topic Options
|
logoman
Forum Newbie
Joined: February 16 2010
Location: Cornwall
Status: Offline
Points: 24
|
Posted: April 18 2010 at 14:40 |
Er, at the risk of sounding obvious, " From Genesis to Revelation" refined later by "Trespass". Nothing touches them for my own personal awakening to prog 69/70.
|
|
ghost_of_morphy
Prog Reviewer
Joined: March 08 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2755
|
Posted: April 18 2010 at 11:58 |
Mr. Maestro wrote:
I
First Progressive Rock Album: Pink Floyd, Piper at the Gates of Dawn
First Progressive Rock Band: Either King Crimson or Floyd, if you consider early Floyd true prog
|
Piper is a fine album, but it's psychedelic, not prog. I think most of us realize that Floyd developed their own brand of prog during their experimental period.
|
|
|
ghost_of_morphy
Prog Reviewer
Joined: March 08 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2755
|
Posted: April 18 2010 at 11:53 |
flaxton wrote:
ian mcdonald had just as much input to itkotck as fripp. maybe he was the one who came upon the idea of progressive rock. |
Greg Lake came up with the 21st Century Schizoid Man riff. All hail Greg Lake, the true inventor of prog!
|
|
|
friso
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 24 2007
Location: Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 2506
|
Posted: April 18 2010 at 11:26 |
As concluded before several times prog was is more then I musical genre a mindset that slowly came to be in the late sixties. Marking a beginning is therefore just a ceremonial activity, for it has no true meaning IMHO. There was so much innovation all of the sudden and the many prog sub-genres show how diverse it all got when the seventies started.
|
|
Atavachron
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: September 30 2006
Location: Pearland
Status: Offline
Points: 65246
|
Posted: April 17 2010 at 23:20 |
I like cake
|
|
javier0889
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 21 2010
Location: Chile
Status: Offline
Points: 170
|
Posted: April 17 2010 at 23:07 |
We could say that The Beatles went "prog" because of Bob Dylan! Dylan gave them the inspiration (and the drugs, of course xD) to start playing more complex music, and not just those cheap love songs of the Beatlemania days. Also I'd like to mention The 13th Floor Elevators. Their first record, "Psychedelic Sounds Of..." was released with a certain tracklist, but the "real order" was different. With the "official" order, you just hear a bunch of psychedelic rock songs. But in the "alternative" order, you are supposed to experience a journey through the human spirit (or something like that xD). Then you had a big eye on the album cover, and a lot of hidden meanings around the idea of that eye, you know, because of the Illuminati. Does it sound familiar? ;)
|
|
Ronnie Pilgrim
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 09 2010
Location: The South of TX
Status: Offline
Points: 771
|
Posted: April 17 2010 at 21:11 |
RoyFairbank wrote:
Bob Dylan's material in 1965 is earlier than most of what has been discussed and features what I consider quasi-prog elements.
|
Agreed. I've always thought Prog Folk owed a lot to Dylan.
|
"The pointy birds are pointy pointy
Anoint my head anointy nointy"
Steve Martin The Man With Two Brains
|
|
RoyFairbank
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 07 2008
Location: Somewhere
Status: Offline
Points: 1072
|
Posted: April 17 2010 at 20:49 |
Damn you javier, stole mine right out of my head
A Quick One has strong elements of prog (a definite prog song in the title track, plus a complex instrumental), and that's 1966 Stronger for sure is Piper, I haven't really listened to Srg. Peppers. Piper has huge, glaring Prog features (Intersteller Overdrive, huge experimenting, complexity and oddness on all tracks). It isn't really a pop record. It is already Art Rock. The Floyd already had their single days behind them when they released that album. Their next single (Apples and Oranges) flopped, and they didn't get a charter again until Another Brick in 1980.
I would also vouch for the Who's Tommy 1969, a definite prog album in quasi-pop format, but hardly less prog than something like Alan Parsons Project. In the Court goes without saying of course.
Bob Dylan's material in 1965 is earlier than most of what has been discussed and features what I consider quasi-prog elements. Desolation Row, for instance, is an anti-pop song and I think early Prog is better labled as sort of improvised anti-pop.
Edited by RoyFairbank - April 17 2010 at 20:55
|
|
javier0889
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 21 2010
Location: Chile
Status: Offline
Points: 170
|
Posted: April 17 2010 at 15:09 |
I think we should give The Who at least an honorable mention for things like A Quick One, While He's Away (song), and their concept albums like Sell Out, Tommy and Quadrophenia.
|
|
flaxton
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 08 2005
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 110
|
Posted: April 17 2010 at 12:26 |
ian mcdonald had just as much input to itkotck as fripp. maybe he was the one who came upon the idea of progressive rock.
|
flaxton
|
|
Mr. Maestro
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 05 2010
Location: Knowhere, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 918
|
Posted: April 17 2010 at 10:13 |
I think the reason that the birth of prog is such a vague topic is that everyone has a different idea of just what defines "birth" in a musical sense. The first progressive music ever recorded could be practically anything: Beatles, Procol Harum, Zappa, etc. The first truly progressive album is a little less vague, but still subjective: In the Court of the Crimson King, Piper at the Gates of Dawn, maybe even Sgt. Pepper's. But the first progressive rock band? There's the real question. Crimson? Floyd? Again, it could be practically anything.
If I had to nail each of these catagories down myself, it'd go:
First Progressive Music Ever Recorded: The Beatles on Sgt. Pepper's, especially "A Day In the Life"
First Progressive Rock Album: Pink Floyd, Piper at the Gates of Dawn
First Progressive Rock Band: Either King Crimson or Floyd, if you consider early Floyd true prog
|
"I am the one who crossed through space...or stayed where I was...or didn't exist in the first place...."
|
|
AllyAshantiBrown
Forum Newbie
Joined: April 17 2010
Status: Offline
Points: 3
|
Posted: April 17 2010 at 05:48 |
the history of the modern computer begins with two separate technologies—automated .... completed but did not see full-time use for an additional two years. Nearly all modern computers implement some form of the stored-program architecture, ..... Further topics. Hardware.
|
|
richardh
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 18 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Online
Points: 27956
|
Posted: April 17 2010 at 02:43 |
The Nice were very important in the birth of prog rock as we know it. Their first album 'The Thoughts Of Emerlist Davjack'( 1967) included some very strongly classically linked tracks 'War And Peace' and 'Rondo' where Keith Emerson started his experiments. This line up included the guitarist Davy O'List who found it very hard to live with Emersons lead role in the band plus his growing drugs abuse got himself thrown out the band. (Davy is a nice bloke btw.Met him several years ago and he bore no resentment to Emerson whatsoever). The signifance of this though was that Emerson was able to give even more free reign to his symphonic exploarations and a year later they released 'Ars Longa Vita Brevis'. The Nice were without doubt the most influential band on the British prog scene until King Crimson emerged in 1969 although even after that The Nice ploughed on with further important albums included the strangely under appreciated 'The Five Bridges Suite' 1970. KC had upped the ante and Emerson was to go onto bigger and better things. However in the period 1967-68 The Nice were as important as any in the development of prog.
Edited by richardh - April 17 2010 at 02:49
|
|
ExittheLemming
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 19 2007
Location: Penal Colony
Status: Offline
Points: 11415
|
Posted: April 16 2010 at 20:29 |
WalterDigsTunes wrote:
December 17th, 1968:
It was another dreary morning in Old Blighty. Bobby "Chuckles" Fripp awoke from another insatiable all-night bender with his mates at the Cornish Gypsy pub right around the corner. Bedraggled and slightly scraggly, Bobby clambered out of bed in search for a drink of water. As he lugged his frame forward, visions of a hookah-laced dream crept up from the deep recesses of the mind. The soundtrack involved mellotrons, guitar notes, odd time signatures and that nice paperboy Greg. He was on the cusp of a revelation. Stumbling into the living room, he gleefully clasped Giles and McDonald on their respective shoulders.
"Boys," muttered Fripp, "I've got an idea."
|
|
|
Atavachron
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: September 30 2006
Location: Pearland
Status: Offline
Points: 65246
|
Posted: April 16 2010 at 20:24 |
WalterDigsTunes wrote:
December 17th, 1968:
It was another dreary morning in Old Blighty. Bobby "Chuckles" Fripp awoke from another insatiable all-night bender with his mates at the Cornish Gypsy pub right around the corner. Bedraggled and slightly scraggly, Bobby clambered out of bed in search for a drink of water. As he lugged his frame forward, visions of a hookah-laced dream crept up from the deep recesses of the mind. The soundtrack involved mellotrons, guitar notes, odd time signatures and that nice paperboy Greg. He was on the cusp of a revelation. Stumbling into the living room, he gleefully clasped Giles and McDonald on their respective shoulders.
"Boys," muttered Fripp, "I've got an idea."
|
yeah, Ian's uncle has money and he'll pay for us to make a real album seriously though, as to the OP's question, I think the general consensus is that Crimson's debut was perhaps the first prog album with all of its components in place (including thematic structure), though even that's debatable as this had already occurred in rock in other forms as mentioned in this thread. The Nice's first two from 1967 & '68 and Five Bridges I haven't seen mentioned, these were crucial LPs and exhibited most of the important Prog elements (the Beach Boy's Smiley Smile in '67 as well). Another interesting thing about KC's debut is that if you listen to Giles,Giles&Fripp, ItCotCK isn't far from the Brit-psyche/pop they'd been doing, and their truly progressive spark wouldn't get going till subsequent albums
Edited by Atavachron - April 16 2010 at 20:37
|
|
carlmarx38
Forum Groupie
Joined: February 01 2010
Status: Offline
Points: 60
|
Posted: April 16 2010 at 20:07 |
1966-1967: The Beatles show what is possible by featuring a symphonic sound on a few tracks
1967: The Moody Blues invent prog.
1968: Birth of Canterbury. Pink Floyd's prog explorations begin.
1969: Enter King Crimson, with a symphonic blueprint that will last three or four years.
1970-1971: Beginning of the Progressive Golden Age. Too many milestones to count for a while.
1978-1980: Prog "dies." Pick your year.
UK gives us a brief hope for awhile.........then dies.
Desperate souls in the States hanging onto the "Illusion of prog" with bands like
STYX, KANSAS, and ELO....."FareWell To Kings" (RUSH) gives us the birth of Prog
Metal.
1983: Marillion resurrects prog.
.......and IQ !
I leave this for others to elaborate upon and finish, but here are the biggest events post-1983.
The birth of prog metal.
The start of the third wave.
The internet rehabillitating the genre.
The recognition of fusion and avant-garde as belonging to the genre.
(check out my other blog post of TIMELINE OF PROGRESSIVE ROCK, let me know
if you like it, I have a rough draft up through 1975, but currently only posted
through '72.)
|
|
WalterDigsTunes
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 11 2007
Location: SanDiegoTijuana
Status: Offline
Points: 4373
|
Posted: April 16 2010 at 18:20 |
December 17th, 1968:
It was another dreary morning in Old Blighty. Bobby "Chuckles" Fripp awoke from another insatiable all-night bender with his mates at the Cornish Gypsy pub right around the corner. Bedraggled and slightly scraggly, Bobby clambered out of bed in search for a drink of water. As he lugged his frame forward, visions of a hookah-laced dream crept up from the deep recesses of the mind. The soundtrack involved mellotrons, guitar notes, odd time signatures and that nice paperboy Greg. He was on the cusp of a revelation. Stumbling into the living room, he gleefully clasped Giles and McDonald on their respective shoulders.
"Boys," muttered Fripp, "I've got an idea."
|
|
ghost_of_morphy
Prog Reviewer
Joined: March 08 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2755
|
Posted: April 16 2010 at 18:12 |
A timeline would go something like this:
1966-1967: The Beatles show what is possible by featuring a symphonic sound on a few tracks
1967: The Moody Blues invent prog.
1968: Birth of Canterbury. Pink Floyd's prog explorations begin.
1969: Enter King Crimson, with a symphonic blueprint that will last three or four years.
1970-1971: Beginning of the Progressive Golden Age. Too many milestones to count for a while.
1978-1980: Prog "dies." Pick your year.
1983: Marillion resurrects prog.
I leave this for others to elaborate upon and finish, but here are the biggest events post-1983.
The birth of prog metal.
The start of the third wave.
The internet rehabillitating the genre.
The recognition of fusion and avant-garde as belonging to the genre.
|
|
|
unclemeat69
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 14 2007
Location: Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 362
|
Posted: April 16 2010 at 17:47 |
carlmarx38 wrote:
Looking for a minute at the database for Prog Archives, it becomes clear that nothing much happened until 1967. There was "Freak Out" by Zappa in 1966, but in '67 there were several releases which seem to be essential to the development of "prog as we know it" (whatever that is) : DAYS OF FUTURE PASSED (Moody Blues) PROCOL HARUM (first album) PIPER AT THE GATES OF DAWN (Pink Floyd) ABSOLUTELY FREE |
Why is Sgt Pepper's missing from this list? Robert Fripp has said in interviews that that album encouraged him to go 'progressive'. I've said this before (I think), but to me it is no coincidence that after the release of ITCOTCK many of the bands that are now considered classic prog (Yes, Genesis, VDGG, GG etc) either got started (GG) or changed direction (the other bands mentioned). I'm not too familiar with Pink Floyd though, i wouldn't be surprised if such a change would be clearly audible there.
|
Follow your bliss
|
|
carlmarx38
Forum Groupie
Joined: February 01 2010
Status: Offline
Points: 60
|
Posted: April 16 2010 at 16:55 |
That is the kind of question, where you will never be able to get a clear answer.
Where im from, it wasent even used by progheads while prog. was peaking, but i remember someone in here saying they used it in the US.
I think I remember reading in Chris Welch' bio of YES (Close To The Edge) that the term was first used around the time of "The Yes Album" and "Nursery Cryme", when comparing these albums similarity to "In The Court of the Crimson King"......something about the "mellotron sound" which was used to connect YES, ELP, Genesis, and King Crimson....(even though ELP didn't use mellotrons !)......and then someone in a review said it was the "New progressive sound of Rock" !!
|
|
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.