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LionRocker View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 13:42
I'm one of the few idiots who has given the "pop sell out" years of many prog outfits a chance and quite frankly, some of their efforts make for some minor masterpieces. Take the mighty "Discipline" by King Crimson, for instance, which is highly original and experimental, yet it's still accessible and "pap" so that means these so called "faux prog" fans should hate it like the holocaust.  

My point is, I don't care about the influences or images projected by "selling out" prog bands in their later years. As long as the band sounds inspired, twists the particular genre around and makes something new out of it, or the melodies are simply superb, (A case with many Caravan and Camel "pop" albums) I will give the music a high grade and a positive review on PA.

That is basically the "code" I go by when it come to rating music.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 14:00
Originally posted by LionRocker LionRocker wrote:

I'm one of the few idiots who has given the "pop sell out" years of many prog outfits a chance and quite frankly, some of their efforts make for some minor masterpieces. Take the mighty "Discipline" by King Crimson, for instance, which is highly original and experimental, yet it's still accessible and "pap" so that means these so called "faux prog" fans should hate it like the holocaust.  

My point is, I don't care about the influences or images projected by "selling out" prog bands in their later years. As long as the band sounds inspired, twists the particular genre around and makes something new out of it, or the melodies are simply superb, (A case with many Caravan and Camel "pop" albums) I will give the music a high grade and a positive review on PA.

That is basically the "code" I go by when it come to rating music.


ThisClap. Huge fan of Discipline here - in my view, one of KC's undisputed masterpieces. Yes' 90125 also ranks pretty highly in my personal scale.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 15:59
I tend to agree with Textbook, in the UK here its clear that the local fandom is extremely conservative in its tastes. If it sounds like Marillion, IQ or Pendragon then it will do well, if it doesnt then its stuffed. I think the related Prog metal bands To-Mera and Haken make for a good case in point. Hakens debut album aquarius is currently doing very well, but its quite clearly a pretty standard Prog metal affair, dare I say Dream Theater clone, that brings absolutely nothing new to the table whereas To-Mera's two albums and EP offer a pretty unique mix of traditional prog metal and tech metal (ala Cynic) that no other band I've come across offers, yet they are largelly ignored.
 
I can envision a point in the future (and not distant) where prog vertually dies in this country because there are no new fans and the old guard of musicians have retired from repeating themselves ad nausium. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 16:04
Originally posted by Easy Livin Easy Livin wrote:

Originally posted by Textbook Textbook wrote:

 
I totally disagree when you say prog does not need to change to be vital. Please point out an original and important piece of music that sounded exactly like something that already existed.

 
...
 
Exactly, it can't be done. To embrace a lack of change is to consign prog to the dustbin as far as relevance and innovation goes. If you don't want innovation, I suspect your ties to prog are nostalgic rather than musical.
Music may need to change, prog does not. What I am saying is that much of the music being pushed forward now in the name of prog is not prog. Of course, not all prog has to come from the late 60's/early 70's. What I am saying is that to call it prog it should sound like the prog music of that time. By all means make or listen to any music you like, but don't call it prog just for convenience. For whatever reason, the name prog has been stolen by bands and artists whose music has no relation to prog.
 
No one demands that other genres of music constantly change, why should prog? take post rock as an example. That has it's own name and definition. Why has it been subsumed into "prog" when it bears no relation to it. Does every new style and sound have to been deemed to be prog simply because it is different?
The original prog bands of the late 60's and eary 70's were so diverse and, for the most part, unrelated that its hard to consider them as a genre anyway unless you consider it as a mindset, and its a mind set which in current times can demad to follow the sounds of the early bands or the desire to experiment, regardless of genre within which they are experimenting. Prog could never be defined by sound, or a set of rules alone becuase there was always two or more well known groupes that would not adhere to those rules.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 16:06
Nah, it won't die, just go even further underground. It will never be extinct. But the perception that prog fans are not really progressive in terms of seeking out new and groundbreaking music, but people who are lost in the 70s isn't going to help.
 
No I'm NOT saying don't listen to music from the 70s, I frequently do. I'm saying don't create a dreamland where being from the 70s is some sort of badge of distinction.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 16:14
Originally posted by Textbook Textbook wrote:

Nah, it won't die, just go even further underground. It will never be extinct. But the perception that prog fans are not really progressive in terms of seeking out new and groundbreaking music, but people who are lost in the 70s isn't going to help.
 
No I'm NOT saying don't listen to music from the 70s, I frequently do. I'm saying don't create a dreamland where being from the 70s is some sort of badge of distinction.
I wouldnt be so sure of that, the gigs here all seem to be attendad by the same group of people (myself included) and its exceptionally hard to find a UK based band thats doing something different and gets support for it whilst being recognised as prog.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 16:15
I thought that prog was a genre of music (or at least and umbrella term for a series of closely related genre).  Every genre has its own recognisable conventions and there is usually infinite scope to create and innovate within that genre.  If you love a particular genre (such as Prog), it doesn't mean that you are drowning in a pool of cultural stagnation.
 
I don't understand why some people get so worked up about what other people enjoy.  Just go your own way, but don't judge others who choose to go a different way.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 16:19

It's true that not all genres evolve- look at reggae which despite almost never changing still does quite well- but I think prog is different. It was originally about doing something new and continuing to do something new. It wasn't about doing something new once and then having everybody else imitate that (now no-longer) new thing for 30 years.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 16:20
Looking at your initial post, agree totally but it really is their musical opinion.  Technically they wouldn't be prog fans but they'd be Yes or Genesis fans.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 16:26
That's what I was trying to say. But the problem is the two get conflated and prog becomes the "Yes/Genesis etc" genre which I think weakens the genre's mission statement which was to make music that fused anything you liked with anything else regardless of whether it sounded like the pioneering bands of the style.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 16:30
Hi,
 
I think people are entitled to their choices and thinking.
 
The only issue with that is ... if you are a "fan", in general, you are not really into it because of the music or the progressiveness of it at all ... but because you like it, and you might, or might not, have an idea as to why ... you just like it.
 
My biggest issue with the "big ones" is that ... when compared in artistic terms ... many times they are NOT that original or even that good! I don't think that folks would have noticed Genesis in those days if it weren't for the colorful pictures of the costumes that Peter Gabriel was wearing on stage to try and get some attention to the music! So, a little push and advertising makes it! And Melody Maker fell for it! Sadly, there were bands and others that did this before, but they will never get any credit ... for their work.
 
All in all, if I have a stink about it all, it is that ... it has become "might makes right" ... meaning that who sells the most or who gets written about the most ... must be good ... or ... better yet ... is prog ... or progressive. And that is a sad statement all around ... it's like saying the world does not exist because London has progressive and no one else in the world did it ... which of course is horribly ethnocentric and inapropriate,
 
All in all, for the sake of all that is good in this board, we must take the good with the bad ... and help each other more, so we can help this music survive longer and make a name for itself. I'm a strong believer that for the most part these people wanted to do more with the music than just pop music ... but that appears to be a statement that some are afraid to talk about. No one sits down and writes "progressive music" ... you write what you feel and what you are comfortable with ... and 100 years later it might be called something or other ... but a group today saying they are "prog" is right down pretentious and so faceless and indistinctive that ... I, for one, is not going to bother even looking at the cover of the album!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 16:54
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

 
Sadly, there were bands and others that did this before, but they will never get any credit ... for their work.
 


Hah. Frank Zappa's vast amount of stage plays and silly theatrics he did with The Mothers comes to my mind.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 17:30
Originally posted by LionRocker LionRocker wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

 
Sadly, there were bands and others that did this before, but they will never get any credit ... for their work.
 


Hah. Frank Zappa's vast amount of stage plays and silly theatrics he did with The Mothers comes to my mind.
 
You don't see Frank's name listed along side of the "prog" giants in London ... and Frank was there a lot longer and way before, and in fact many of those bands own more to Frank than any of us is willing to accept and appreciate.
 
We might as well state that prog started with Frank ... since even the Beatles commented on his work. John in particular! When you listen to the whole ending of Abbey Road ... one of these days ... just think of Frank Zappa ... and you can see the guitar wanting to just fly away and it does in the end. ... as he used to say ... just hut up and play yer gueetar! ... and that is what "prog" is all about!


Edited by moshkito - August 09 2010 at 17:38
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 17:59
I've heard people say that Zappa, not The Beatles, actually got the ball rolling. I'm pretty sure McCartney went on record saying they heard Freak Out in '66 and consciously decided to try and implement elements of it in their own music.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 18:21
Originally posted by Textbook Textbook wrote:

I've heard people say that Zappa, not The Beatles, actually got the ball rolling. I'm pretty sure McCartney went on record saying they heard Freak Out in '66 and consciously decided to try and implement elements of it in their own music.
 
Which I think they did ... and my thought still is that George Martin said ... ok ... we can do this, but let's tie it up so it sounds better, more cohesive and interesting ... and the Beatles bought it.
 
Zappa's made more sense in a conceptual way, not so much musically or lyrically, since it was quite anarchistic. And this is the part that is very difficult for us to work with and describe, and one of the reasons why sometimes Frank is not listed in the top 3 of the "progressive" albums ... because he's too weird and off on his own thing ... that we can not understand, or relate to or ... appreciate!
 
Get ready for 200 Motels ... will be available at any time on DVD!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 18:28
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Textbook Textbook wrote:

I've heard people say that Zappa, not The Beatles, actually got the ball rolling. I'm pretty sure McCartney went on record saying they heard Freak Out in '66 and consciously decided to try and implement elements of it in their own music.
 
Which I think they did ... and my thought still is that George Martin said ... ok ... we can do this, but let's tie it up so it sounds better, more cohesive and interesting ... and the Beatles bought it.
 
Zappa's made more sense in a conceptual way, not so much musically or lyrically, since it was quite anarchistic. And this is the part that is very difficult for us to work with and describe, and one of the reasons why sometimes Frank is not listed in the top 3 of the "progressive" albums ... because he's too weird and off on his own thing ... that we can not understand, or relate to or ... appreciate!
 
Get ready for 200 Motels ... will be available at any time on DVD!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 19:45
Thanks to Textbook for starting a good discussion. That's one of the many reasons I love this site. And for the record I also love Johnny Cash. And Frank Sinatra. And Dream Theatre and Yes and......
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 20:08
Originally posted by Easy Livin Easy Livin wrote:

Originally posted by Textbook Textbook wrote:

 
I totally disagree when you say prog does not need to change to be vital. Please point out an original and important piece of music that sounded exactly like something that already existed.

 
...
 
Exactly, it can't be done. To embrace a lack of change is to consign prog to the dustbin as far as relevance and innovation goes. If you don't want innovation, I suspect your ties to prog are nostalgic rather than musical.
Music may need to change, prog does not. What I am saying is that much of the music being pushed forward now in the name of prog is not prog. Of course, not all prog has to come from the late 60's/early 70's. What I am saying is that to call it prog it should sound like the prog music of that time. By all means make or listen to any music you like, but don't call it prog just for convenience. For whatever reason, the name prog has been stolen by bands and artists whose music has no relation to prog.
 
No one demands that other genres of music constantly change, why should prog? take post rock as an example. That has it's own name and definition. Why has it been subsumed into "prog" when it bears no relation to it. Does every new style and sound have to been deemed to be prog simply because it is different?


Disagree. Prog is not an ordinary genre. It's more of a description - meaning this music is PROGRESSIVE. Either in the sense that the structure is progressive or that the means, idealogies, technologies ot melodies, textures or rhythmns going into it are prog.

The WHOLE definition of PROG defines that is SHOULD change. It's PROGRESSIVE. It changes!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 20:13
I disagree with Easy Living that it has to SOUND like the prog of the 70s to be called 70s.  No, but it does need to be based in that compositional approach.  It would not sound like Yes, for instance, if there was no Hammond organ.  On the other hand, modern bands that get called Yes-like do try to evoke the sound of Yes, often without the compositional approach.  A lot of highly acclaimed modern prog is abrupt pastiche which seems to be put in there to shock the listener rather than serve a strong purpose in terms of development of the composition.  There are people who like it and it's their choice, but I personally find it hard to get excited about that and would rather look elsewhere for modern treats.  From the 90s onwards, I like Jeff Buckley, Radiohead, Tori Amos, Radiohead, Jamiroquai most in that order.  None of these would be considered prog proper, not even Radiohead which is actually on this site.  So, I disagree heavily with a suggestion that not liking several modern prog acts means the listener is not adventurous.  There is some good modern, as in 90s onwards, prog by the way, I personally like Kevin Gilbert and ACT a lot.  Please spare me later DT...noooo! Dead
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2010 at 20:20
I think I'm beginning to prefer later Dream Theater.
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