Faux Prog Fans |
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ergaster
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 30 2010 Status: Offline Points: 294 |
Posted: August 26 2010 at 10:43 | ||||
Damn. My cover is blown. (slinks off to listen to Safety Dance again....) |
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We have done the impossible, and that makes us mighty.
Captain Malcolm Reynolds Reality rules, Honor the truth Chemist99a R.I.P. |
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Evolver
Special Collaborator Crossover & JR/F/Canterbury Teams Joined: October 22 2005 Location: The Idiocracy Status: Offline Points: 5482 |
Posted: August 26 2010 at 11:03 | ||||
If you want to you can dance
You can dance if you want
If you want you can dance
I'm not wearing any pants"
What do I win?
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Trust me. I know what I'm doing.
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Billy Pilgrim
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 28 2010 Location: Austin Status: Offline Points: 1505 |
Posted: September 30 2010 at 22:25 | ||||
I like what I find to be enjoyable, prog is just the majority of that!
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Lozlan
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 09 2009 Location: New Mexico Status: Offline Points: 536 |
Posted: October 01 2010 at 22:00 | ||||
I'm engaged to a classically trained musician who constantly laughs at and belittles my prog obsession. The fact that I listen to it regardless pretty much shows which side of this divide I'm on.
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Certified Obscure Prog Fart.
The Loose Palace of Exile - My first novel, The Mask of Tamrel, now available on Amazon and Kindle |
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rwhite
Forum Newbie Joined: December 20 2008 Location: Los Angeles Status: Offline Points: 25 |
Posted: October 02 2010 at 01:05 | ||||
I don't believe that people should set themselves up as "true prog fans" and claim that others who enjoy music under that label aren't "true prog fans". I believe that people who came to enjoy the music that came to be labeled as "progressive rock" in it's original sense, have every right to enjoy music that is within those parameters, and not have to feel bad because they aren't "progressing" to somebody else's standards just because this "progressive" title got stuck as a label for the music. It seems to be perfectly okay for other genres of music to keep getting made within even more limited boundaries than the original prog, so why can't some new prog be in the vein of the original prog, while other prog pushes the boundaries to whatever those particular musicians want?
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ExittheLemming
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 19 2007 Location: Penal Colony Status: Offline Points: 11415 |
Posted: October 02 2010 at 19:58 | ||||
Not sure if by 'receiving acclaim' you mean successful or just 'trendy', but as a warning to the dangers of prejudice impacting on our ability to try new things, it's probably apt. I see the problem here being what expectations each of us brings to PA itself i.e. those who you define in my emboldened red would not I suspect, source the majority of their listening material solely from what is described within the site. That proggy slant most of our members are attracted by is probably not present in much of the innovative and ground breaking work being produced in metal, pop, rock, electronic, classical, dance, jazz etc (If it were, such artists would either already be here or would be eligible for inclusion as per the genre definitions) I do think you have identified something that has for some time now, placed PA at something of a crossroads e.g. will the site eventually mutate into a portal for 'new music' or continue to be a celebration of the 'Progressive Rock spirit' that permeated the mainstream in the early 70's? |
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Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator Retired Admin Joined: January 22 2009 Location: Magic Theatre Status: Offline Points: 23104 |
Posted: October 02 2010 at 23:23 | ||||
I am basically with you all the way, but who decides whatīs progressive? Itīs the same kind of obstacles you face when you try to define art. I donīt subscribe to "forcing" the music onto myself, if I really donīt like it. Pretty simple, but then again 95% of my favourite albums in my record collection, didnīt click at all when I first started playing them, Music is tricky.
Recently Iīve had a thesis about women I know searching for adventure and complexity in their relationships - whereas I and the majority of my male friends seek these things in music. I think most seekers of new and challenging music refrain from moulds and prefabricated recipes - unless you are a girl... |
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uduwudu
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 17 2007 Status: Offline Points: 2601 |
Posted: October 02 2010 at 23:56 | ||||
Can't speak for the dragon but this is quite right for me. trying to find that thrill (Like A Farewell To Kings for example.) That is mere emotion of course and that should be discarded from serious and high minded prog rock. The thrills do happen though. P tree for me... though still not the latest release... But new music to me is just something I have not yet heard. The top 20 attitude that something has to be listenable / heard only in it's current year of release just irritates the bejesus out of me. Fashions... I've heard some prog bands as I keep trying) and found Mostly Autumn to be slavishly David Gilmour oriented (so what, so am I ...) or Pure Reason Revolution with their Echoes obsession (Bright ambassador' of the morning ... repeat... again, so what so am I...) Wobbler who sound like a band that are good but have a style of music (symphonic prog) that needs new and fresh takes. Maybe these guys have done new and original stuff since. But time is money as has been noted and it someone wants to live his rock fantasy put tat's fine but I like rock music that builds something different from what influenced them. Or at least try... Like Purple and Zeppelin with blues and 50s rock and roll did not stop them from going to great places. (Purple - Concerto, Gemini Suite, In Rock, Japan. Everything Zeppelin did... which wasn't a lot....) It's the orginal ideas that win. It's oddly not the great players always. Otherwise I'd have lots of recordings with Billy Sheehan and Steve Vai (FZ appearances not withstanding.) I have some of their recordings but the best music is when someone has something fantastic to say even if it could be said better... (e.g I do prefer hearing Jeff Beck playing A Day In The Life but it was a Beatles idea...) Don't think I'm an ersatz or faux prog rock fan. The recent internet unveiling of zeuhl and RIO did wonders for me... Trying.... well, one has to spend time with albums. Giving a cursory listen has it's merits to see if it takes off but ... oh well, take chances. The PA album reviews (overall ratings) usually give a reasonable indication so long as they are honest... |
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Antennas
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 01 2006 Location: Netherlands Status: Offline Points: 331 |
Posted: October 03 2010 at 08:09 | ||||
Read: "Female Prog Fans don't exist".
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Jesus never managed to figure out the theremin either |
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ergaster
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 30 2010 Status: Offline Points: 294 |
Posted: October 03 2010 at 09:31 | ||||
LOL. We exist, but we're not "girlfriends". |
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We have done the impossible, and that makes us mighty.
Captain Malcolm Reynolds Reality rules, Honor the truth Chemist99a R.I.P. |
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Lozlan
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 09 2009 Location: New Mexico Status: Offline Points: 536 |
Posted: October 03 2010 at 10:28 | ||||
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Certified Obscure Prog Fart.
The Loose Palace of Exile - My first novel, The Mask of Tamrel, now available on Amazon and Kindle |
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Antennas
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 01 2006 Location: Netherlands Status: Offline Points: 331 |
Posted: October 03 2010 at 11:12 | ||||
I am my boyfriend's (and fellow ProgFan!) girlfriend, though.
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Jesus never managed to figure out the theremin either |
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Gerinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 10 2010 Location: Barcelona Spain Status: Offline Points: 5154 |
Posted: October 03 2010 at 14:57 | ||||
I think most proggers are open to listening to new things, if only because by experience we know very well that many of the qualities we enjoy in our favourite music took us quite a few listens to appreciate.
But the most important thing is being honest with yourself, and not force your "taste" by prejudices. You like what you like, and that's it.
I sense in the OP something like "Yes and Genesis are for old farts who are not really progressive, if you don't like Avant, Zeuhl, or Post Rock you are not a cool progger". Prejudicing your taste by such viewpoints is as "faux" as the attitude the OP is criticising.
You have simply to be honest with your tastes, although I fully agree that you must be open to appreciate new forms of musical expression.
For myself, the best prog is that which manages to hit the delicate balance between retaining "musicality" (if I'm allowed to use that word) while still being challenging to the listener. And honestly, this is what I find in many of the classic symphonic (and many eclectic and fusion/jazz-rock) masters which I still find unparalleled today. They got the right balance between the traditional musical values of melody, harmony and rythm while producing truly interesting and challenging music.
I do not fancy weirdness or experimentation just for the sake of it, as much as I do not fancy "musicality" in the simple forms exploited by maintream pop. The balance is the key.
If you truly enjoy highly progressive music, good for you, but thinking that you are more cool because you listen to the most progressive music around is as "faux" as anything else, and critisicing people who love Yes, Genesis, GG or ELP for "not being true proggers" is complete bull***t.
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
Posted: October 03 2010 at 20:26 | ||||
Well said! It was suggested earlier in this thread that prog is essentially weird music. I am afraid such a perception is a gross misunderstanding of what prog was all about in the 70s and not just symphonic prog but even the Canterbury scene doesn't support such a perception. There are moments of weirdness or quirk in Canterbury music but within the boundaries of wonderful melodic and harmonic explorations. I would suggest that melodic and harmonic exploration was the backbone of classic prog. However, I think it would also be a mistake to conclude that avant or zeuhl lack musicality for, if anything, they are loaded with it and you may be confusing musicality with accessibility. There is more musicality in Magma's Kohntarkohz than a lot of 'accessible' prog, brilliantly composed pieces of music imo. Further, I am not really so sure that people who dig krautrock/avant/zeuhl are necessarily chasing progressiveness; rather, they may be chasing dissonance, darkness and chaos. I am not so sure about the progressiveness of Dun's Eros album for instance, seems to be referencing Magma, National Health, Gentle Giant back and forth and not much better in 'progressiveness', if I may, than neo prog. I cannot comment on Present's other highly acclaimed albums like Certitudes but I have similar views on Le Poison...If it is somehow contradictory for a prog fan to listen to bands trying to make Genesis all over for a new generation, it is also contradictory to claim an album like Eros as a progressive masterpiece. I am not also sure that that is Textbook's agenda anyway. It seems to be to push people to accept new, innovative music as prog which cannot happen within the constraints of PA's database.
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Gerinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 10 2010 Location: Barcelona Spain Status: Offline Points: 5154 |
Posted: October 03 2010 at 23:56 | ||||
Just for the record, I enjoy Magma (I have 7 of their albums, although I have to admit that that's the only Zeuhl I own).
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Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator Retired Admin Joined: January 22 2009 Location: Magic Theatre Status: Offline Points: 23104 |
Posted: October 04 2010 at 04:26 | ||||
Glad to hear you exist - for a while there I was beginning to think that you were made up - like elves and transformers... |
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Henry Plainview
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 26 2008 Location: Declined Status: Offline Points: 16715 |
Posted: October 04 2010 at 05:38 | ||||
That is true, a lot of people in these discussions mistake dissonance for progressiveness. While a little free jazz or atonality may be new for you, there's a century of avant-garde music behind us.
Enough with the sexism, people, jeez. I saw women at a frickin Merzbow show, I'm sorry you can't find another woman on the internet that likes early Rush but that really doesn't mean anything. That is more because most people aren't hopeless music nerds, and a lot of the people who are get sucked into the horrible indie pop vortex instead of the complexity and chaos vortex. |
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if you own a sodastream i hate you
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June
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 03 2008 Location: Montreal Status: Offline Points: 6521 |
Posted: October 04 2010 at 06:43 | ||||
Thanks, Henry |
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Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator Retired Admin Joined: January 22 2009 Location: Magic Theatre Status: Offline Points: 23104 |
Posted: October 04 2010 at 06:46 | ||||
^^Allright bad joke.
My apologies. |
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Knife
Forum Newbie Joined: October 03 2010 Status: Offline Points: 17 |
Posted: October 04 2010 at 20:47 | ||||
Genesis
Johnny Cash Yes Nick Cave Arvo Part Michael Jackson ELP Public Enemy U2 Frank Zappa It's all the same really. The music always 'progresses' until you press the stop button.
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"Stand up and fight, for you know we are right. We must strike at the lies that have spread like disease through our minds." - The Knife
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