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Joined: June 20 2008
Location: Denmark
Status: Offline
Points: 377
Posted: July 25 2010 at 07:18
The Soft Machine's first self titled album is one of the first prog albums in my opinion. (from 1968) The last 3 songs of side one makes up an Epic Psychedelic Progressive Jazz/Fusion Symphonic masterpiece (the song "A Certain Kind" contains the symphonic stuff).
If this is too long just skip to Climax culminating in "A Certain Kind" (the video below)
Joined: April 05 2006
Location: Vancouver, BC
Status: Offline
Points: 35804
Posted: July 25 2010 at 09:06
Rabid wrote:
Logan wrote:
VanVanVan wrote:
himtroy wrote:
Moody Blues-Days of Future Passed undeniably beat ITCOTCK to the punch. People only say it's not progressive because theres vocals throughout and it's not dark sounding.
People say things aren't progressive because there are vocals?
Vocals, depending on how they're used, can make music sound less "progressive". If the music is vocals-based (the vocals are dominant), and the music lends itself to a typical song structure, then it's less likely going to sound progressive. I often find when the vocals are being used as a musical instrument more than as a means to convey words, it sounds more progressive. The Beatles were mentioned, and I don't think of the Beatles as even Proto-Prog (though I won't deny the influence it had) because it's largely still song-based music to me. Aside from that, I must admit that there is music that I might have thought appropriate for PA were it not for the vocals (had it been instrumental I would have been more lenient).
Instrumentals commonly are associated with Prog, and if it starts to sound too much like a "song" (say a singer/songwriter type work), that can really make it sound less progressive. I like choral vocals in progressive rock very music. The Moody Blues often does sound rather less progressive (in the sense of being Proggy) because I feel it's too song-based.
I've got the feeling that the first uses of the term progressive refers to the artiste(s). Are you saying that you cant have progressive rock songs?
No, I'm not saying that you can't have progressive rock songs.
Joined: March 09 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 13351
Posted: July 25 2010 at 11:26
(QUOTE)If you look through previous threads, you will realise that this is the sort of question that gets people tied up in knots, endlessly debating what is prog and not prog. For example, you want to discount proto prog bands, but many of us on the site would regard such bands as being genuinely prog. It's the sort of subject where you will never really get a definitive answer
It's actually, though, a fair question. Most people regard ITCOTCK as being the archetypal first "proper" prog LP, in the sense that most people understand prog. However, others, and I include myself here, would point to Procol Harum's first three, for example, or The Moody Blues Days of Future Passed and the subsequent four albums.
The Who's Tommy is a glorious example of concept album meeting sixties rock. I would regard it as pure prog, although others, probably including Townsend, would argue.
In conclusion, how long is a piece of string? How large is the universe? Cleverer people than me have to answer these and the question you pose
[QUOTE]
Great answer. I would also add the Beatles' "Sargent Pepper" to this list.
In other words, the first prog album can be anything that is related to prog between the end of 60's and the beginning of the 70's...Depending on what is your definition of prog and how much prog a record has to have to be consider the first prog album. So, its a question without a definitive answer. But i will go for a real progressive record that i think has been innovative : King Crimson In the Court of...
Edited by rdtprog - July 25 2010 at 11:43
Music is the refuge of souls ulcerated by happiness.
Joined: January 20 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 1601
Posted: July 25 2010 at 11:50
I can accept answers like Dave Brubeck-Time Out. But it's most certainly not the Beatles or King Crimson. Thats garbage answers (no offense to KC, as they're one of my favorites). We've provided way to many examples pre-ITCOTCK for people to keep saying thats the first one.
Which of you to gain me, tell, will risk uncertain pains of hell?
I will not forgive you if you will not take the chance.
I can accept answers like Dave Brubeck-Time Out. But it's most certainly not the Beatles or King Crimson. Thats garbage answers (no offense to KC, as they're one of my favorites). We've provided way to many examples pre-ITCOTCK for people to keep saying thats the first one.
To me Dave Brubeck is not very much stuff related to prog or i have been wrong for 30 years...
Music is the refuge of souls ulcerated by happiness.
Joined: January 20 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 1601
Posted: July 25 2010 at 13:08
rdtprog wrote:
himtroy wrote:
I can accept answers like Dave Brubeck-Time Out. But it's most certainly not the Beatles or King Crimson. Thats garbage answers (no offense to KC, as they're one of my favorites). We've provided way to many examples pre-ITCOTCK for people to keep saying thats the first one.
To me Dave Brubeck is not very much stuff related to prog or i have been wrong for 30 years...
A jazz album exploring new ideas and odd time signatures is way more progressive than The Beatles, who for some reason keep getting mentioned as having potentially the first prog album and psych album, neither of which is even potentially true.
Which of you to gain me, tell, will risk uncertain pains of hell?
I will not forgive you if you will not take the chance.
Joined: July 14 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 3449
Posted: July 25 2010 at 16:35
I suppose if we're talking a full album, Crimson takes it. But that first Procol album, if we toss the psychedelia and focus on the key songs and even more particularly on Repent Walpurgis, is pure prog. Same with what was Side 1 of The Crazy World of Arthur Brown. Days of Future Passed I don't count because even I could and did play the songs on my Hammond.
Can you tell me where we're headin'?
Lincoln County Road or Armageddon.
Joined: April 05 2006
Location: Vancouver, BC
Status: Offline
Points: 35804
Posted: July 25 2010 at 17:49
himtroy wrote:
rdtprog wrote:
himtroy wrote:
I can accept answers like Dave Brubeck-Time Out. But it's most certainly not the Beatles or King Crimson. Thats garbage answers (no offense to KC, as they're one of my favorites). We've provided way to many examples pre-ITCOTCK for people to keep saying thats the first one.
To me Dave Brubeck is not very much stuff related to prog or i have been wrong for 30 years...
A jazz album exploring new ideas and odd time signatures is way more progressive than The Beatles, who for some reason keep getting mentioned as having potentially the first prog album and psych album, neither of which is even potentially true.
Progressive, sure, but not Prog (i.e. Progressive Rock).
Anyway, have a listen to this from Sun Ra's 1956 album, Super-Sonic Jazz:
Joined: May 16 2009
Location: Blighty
Status: Offline
Points: 6797
Posted: July 25 2010 at 17:54
Logan wrote:
himtroy wrote:
rdtprog wrote:
himtroy wrote:
I can accept answers like Dave Brubeck-Time Out. But it's most certainly not the Beatles or King Crimson. Thats garbage answers (no offense to KC, as they're one of my favorites). We've provided way to many examples pre-ITCOTCK for people to keep saying thats the first one.
To me Dave Brubeck is not very much stuff related to prog or i have been wrong for 30 years...
A jazz album exploring new ideas and odd time signatures is way more progressive than The Beatles, who for some reason keep getting mentioned as having potentially the first prog album and psych album, neither of which is even potentially true.
Progressive, sure, but not Prog (i.e. Progressive Rock).
Anyway, have a listen to this from Sun Ra's 1956 album, Super-Sonic Jazz:
It would still be a Jazz Album though No matter how many new ideas time sigs etc
Joined: April 05 2006
Location: Vancouver, BC
Status: Offline
Points: 35804
Posted: July 25 2010 at 18:21
akamaisondufromage wrote:
Logan wrote:
himtroy wrote:
rdtprog wrote:
himtroy wrote:
I can accept answers like Dave Brubeck-Time Out. But it's most certainly not the Beatles or King Crimson. Thats garbage answers (no offense to KC, as they're one of my favorites). We've provided way to many examples pre-ITCOTCK for people to keep saying thats the first one.
To me Dave Brubeck is not very much stuff related to prog or i have been wrong for 30 years...
A jazz album exploring new ideas and odd time signatures is way more progressive than The Beatles, who for some reason keep getting mentioned as having potentially the first prog album and psych album, neither of which is even potentially true.
Progressive, sure, but not Prog (i.e. Progressive Rock).
Anyway, have a listen to this from Sun Ra's 1956 album, Super-Sonic Jazz:
It would still be a Jazz Album though No matter how many new ideas time sigs etc
I know it is, didn't mean to imply otherwise, and of course new ideas and interesting time signatures are not uncommon to jazz (jazz has been a very innovative genre and complex rhythms are not uncommon to it. The best percussionists in Prog, I feel, are informed by jazz). They were less common to rock before progressive rock (particularly varied time sigs/ rhythms). Jazz had a big effect on Prog, and Prog, of course, incorporated jazz elements. Prog commonly incorporated ideas from other genres (typically Academic Music and jazz) rather than developed really new ideas (sometimes they stole music -- a lot of Progressive Rock is not really as progressive, in a sense, as people make it out to be since they commonly looked back to other music for ideas/ inspiration, which is not to say that Prog did not progress the lexicon of rock. Hybridisation was very important to that. But Prog is commonly not that originative, and often not that innovative).
Side-note: Of course Progressive Jazz existed as a genre before Progressive Rock, but that had to do with improvisation, experimentation, free-flowing music, dissonance.... blah, blah. Whereas Prog tends to be very structured, even if it has noodly bits -- Western Academic Music informed the structures significantly.
Why I mention that Sun Ra piece, though, is because I think due to the, I think it's a Wurlitzer electric piano, it sounds quite similar to Jazz-Rock Fusion to me.
Joined: May 12 2009
Location: Coolwood
Status: Offline
Points: 6467
Posted: July 25 2010 at 19:13
Logan said: What the first true prog album is really does depend on one's working prog definition.
Yes. As long as we define the first Prog album in terms of In the Court of the Crimson King, it will remain the first Prog album. Personally, I think Prog goes back to Hildegard von Bingen's Ordo Vertutum, but that's just me.
The world of sound is certainly capable of infinite variety and, were our sense developed, of infinite extensions. -- George Santayana, "The Sense of Beauty"
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