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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Opinions on why some don't like prog metal?
    Posted: December 05 2010 at 18:33
Now don't you go and say "But I like prog metal!!" I know some people do, but a lot of people don't.

Why?

In my opinion, I think many of the classic prog fans don't like the heavier music tainting their genre. If you like Harry Potter, Prog Metal is like half-bloods: where classic prog rock is pure-blood and metal is mud-blood-- when the two mix, the pure-bloods don't like it. Prog metal is essentially the combination of bands that most classic fans don't like, such as Metallica or Slayer, with the bands they do, such as Yes, Genesis or Rush. The resulted product is a tainted one. You wouldn't eat something that had dirt on it would you? 

What are your thoughts?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 18:42
I like progressive metal when it's progressive death/black/doom/what-have-you. I don't like prefix-less prog metal like Dream Theater and their ilk a lot of the time because I find they often have bad songwriting and terrible vocals. Those aren't problems with a band like, say, Opeth or Agalloch, who are two bands who also happen to use their prog roots in far more interesting ways than Dream Theater, as it happens. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:14
For me, it's simply because I don't care for much modern metal -- "prog" or otherwise.
 
I don't think about any supposed "tainting" of prog, or worry about genres, the music simply tends to be too heavy, fast and aggressive for me. It makes me feel anxious/stressed, and I just can't relate or find pleasure in that.
 
Overall, I favour the softer end of the musical spectrum (folk, etc) much more than the heavier.
 
Different strokes....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:16
it has nothing to do with whether or not it's prog metal, some people just don't like music that they don't like
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:22

Exactly Colin, I don't like most neo-prog but it has absolutely nothing to do with it's heaviness obviously.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:25
It's too Censored loud!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:25
Originally posted by Triceratopsoil Triceratopsoil wrote:

it has nothing to do with whether or not it's prog metal, some people just don't like music that they don't like
Yes -- I went into more detail as why I don't often like it, but this is true. Tastes are individual, and not purely rational. It's a "gut" thing which often defies analysis.
 
Two people hear the same music: one loves it, the other loathes it. Both are "right" (if not to each other).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:31
Originally posted by andyman1125 andyman1125 wrote:



In my opinion, I think many of the classic prog fans don't like the heavier music tainting their genre. If you like Harry Potter, Prog Metal is like half-bloods: where classic prog rock is pure-blood and metal is mud-blood-- when the two mix, the pure-bloods don't like it. 


I am pretty sure that this analogy does not work as classic prog is anything but a "pure" genre. It is this refusal to acknowledge generic boundaries that help to make the music so interesting, and insofar as prog metal also displays this tendency, it is simply following in the footsteps of classic prog. So no, I have to say that the matter of "purity" is probably not terribly relevant. Perhaps the heaviness of the sub-genre puts some people off, as I admit it put me off at first--though once I gave it a chance, I found that my mind changed fairly quickly, and prog metal now makes up a substantial proportion of my listening.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:35
Originally posted by 40footwolf 40footwolf wrote:

I like progressive metal when it's progressive death/black/doom/what-have-you. I don't like prefix-less prog metal like Dream Theater and their ilk a lot of the time because I find they often have bad songwriting and terrible vocals. Those aren't problems with a band like, say, Opeth or Agalloch, who are two bands who also happen to use their prog roots in far more interesting ways than Dream Theater, as it happens. 


Protip: Agalloch & Opeth are hipster garbage and DT is 2deep4u.Ying Yang
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:37
Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

Originally posted by 40footwolf 40footwolf wrote:

I like progressive metal when it's progressive death/black/doom/what-have-you. I don't like prefix-less prog metal like Dream Theater and their ilk a lot of the time because I find they often have bad songwriting and terrible vocals. Those aren't problems with a band like, say, Opeth or Agalloch, who are two bands who also happen to use their prog roots in far more interesting ways than Dream Theater, as it happens. 


Protip: Agalloch & Opeth are hipster garbage and DT is 2deep4u.Ying Yang
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Obvious troll is obvious. Tongue

FWIW, I don't like the Prog Metal genre very much, but I do like Tech/Extreme and Post/Experimental a lot.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:41
Loudness and aggression is the reason for some people, but you can't generalize at all. I just find metal cheesy and ridiculous, almost nothing is too loud and aggressive.

Edited by Henry Plainview - December 05 2010 at 19:42
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:49
Originally posted by andyman1125 andyman1125 wrote:

Now don't you go and say "But I like prog metal!!" I know some people do, but a lot of people don't.

Why?

In my opinion, I think many of the classic prog fans don't like the heavier music tainting their genre. If you like Harry Potter, Prog Metal is like half-bloods: where classic prog rock is pure-blood and metal is mud-blood-- when the two mix, the pure-bloods don't like it. Prog metal is essentially the combination of bands that most classic fans don't like, such as Metallica or Slayer, with the bands they do, such as Yes, Genesis or Rush. The resulted product is a tainted one. You wouldn't eat something that had dirt on it would you? 

What are your thoughts?


Because there's people whop don't like Prog or Pop or Rap, Hip Hop or Rock or Classical, etc....Why should Metal or Prog Metal should be different?

Even inside Prog, I know people who hate Neo Prog or Fusion or pre 90's  or Post 89 Prog.

Every person has a different taste and we don't need to ask why, because there's bno answer except that each person has his/her own taste.

Iván

            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:55
I think there's a perception that Progressive Metal was lauded as the closest thing we had in the 90's to a legitimate heir to the Prog throne after the abdication of the royal family of 20 years before (Crimson, Yes, ELP, Floyd, Genesis etc)
There's also a feeling amongst some of the older progheads (myself included) that not only were these young pretenders of dubious lineage they were unwittingly pivotal in the constitution of PA changing from a monarchy to a republic.
Sometimes we're nostalgic for things that never even occurred in the first place (and everyone loves what can never come back) but I suspect the original spirit of Prog can never be, nor should be able to be replicated (how progressive would that be?Wink)

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 19:57
I know you are a musician. Cert1fied's Scenes from A Memory review is a good analysis of the problems in the prog metal approach.  Anyway, this in a nutshell is my problem:

1.  The accent in prog rock is heavily on melodic exploration along a clear melodic path.  I don't mind the often slow pace of the music because it is developing all the time, moving forward.  A lot of times, it is not clear in prog metal where the song is heading. Nor is there much melodic exploration. It is difficult to explore - once you bring in those crushing metal riffs, you have to find melodies that go along with the riffs and there's not all that broad a range of melodies that work with heavy riffs. In absolute terms, anything can be broad and exploratory, of course, but I am obviously comparing it to prog rock here.  There's not much melodic adventure in prog metal. Essentially, once you get past the complications and technicalities, it's good ol' metal music.

2.  But it ought to still work as metal music, right?   No, because metal music is driven by riffs. When you listen to Metallica or Slayer's 80s songs, there is a sort of mathematical progression in the riffs each time the verses are played.  That gives me something to focus on when there's not much happening melodically (especially Slayer).  But prog metal, especially the melodic side of it, draws from heavy metal and particularly from 80s pop metal, which is essentially a heavier kind of hard rock. Not too highly engrossing riffs-wise.  What prog metal bands do is to write complicated riffs instead. Again, complicated riffs only sound interesting in isolation and not in the context of a song as they don't by themselves propel movement.  Essentially, prog metal could be described as having an idealistic approach of getting the best out of both prog rock and metal but rarely succeeding in practice.  It comes across often as a pastiche of lots of interesting ideas that could not somehow be bound together as well they ought to be for my taste.

3. A big problem that comes with the metal sound is the base becomes rigid.  You might play a minute or two of reggae over it, a minute of hip-hop later, whatever, but the base is undeniably metal.  Prog rock bands were often able to develop their own unique base. In fact, superficial similarities like the use of organs or classical influence were all that Yes, Genesis and ELP had in common. Fundamentally, they were as different as three bands could be from each other.  That is difficult to achieve for prog metal bands because they all share the same base: metal. You can add your own colour and twist to it but at the end of the day you are all playing metal. It would not do to say that likewise prog rock bands are all playing rock because it's rock in a loose sense to begin with and what is rock, further, is not so easily identifiable as metal.  Particularly, modern metal is defined by 80s crunch, so the common base becomes swiftly evident. 

4. Lastly, even after all these reasons are overlooked, remains the unfortunate preference for 80s pop metal cliches or 90s pop by prog metal bands.  If I could at least find some originality in the dimension of emotional expression, which is ultimately the most important part of music, other considerations become easy to forgive.  But I don't really want to hear LaBrie sing like those very pop metal singers I want to avoid, the same plastic and faceless approach to singing.  The playing too is precise and calculated rather than expressive. This is something particularly surprising for me because metal playing in the 80s was raw and often sloppy, emphasising speed and aggression over precision.  However, prog metal musicians seem to be influenced more by Malmsteen or technical metal like Megadeth. 


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 20:19
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

I know you are a musician. Cert1fied's Scenes from A Memory review is a good analysis of the problems in the prog metal approach.  Anyway, this in a nutshell is my problem:

1.  The accent in prog rock is heavily on melodic exploration along a clear melodic path.  I don't mind the often slow pace of the music because it is developing all the time, moving forward.  A lot of times, it is not clear in prog metal where the song is heading. Nor is there much melodic exploration. It is difficult to explore - once you bring in those crushing metal riffs, you have to find melodies that go along with the riffs and there's not all that broad a range of melodies that work with heavy riffs. In absolute terms, anything can be broad and exploratory, of course, but I am obviously comparing it to prog rock here.  There's not much melodic adventure in prog metal. Essentially, once you get past the complications and technicalities, it's good ol' metal music.

2.  But it ought to still work as metal music, right?   No, because metal music is driven by riffs. When you listen to Metallica or Slayer's 80s songs, there is a sort of mathematical progression in the riffs each time the verses are played.  That gives me something to focus on when there's not much happening melodically (especially Slayer).  But prog metal, especially the melodic side of it, draws from heavy metal and particularly from 80s pop metal, which is essentially a heavier kind of hard rock. Not too highly engrossing riffs-wise.  What prog metal bands do is to write complicated riffs instead. Again, complicated riffs only sound interesting in isolation and not in the context of a song as they don't by themselves propel movement.  Essentially, prog metal could be described as having an idealistic approach of getting the best out of both prog rock and metal but rarely succeeding in practice.  It comes across often as a pastiche of lots of interesting ideas that could not somehow be bound together as well they ought to be for my taste.

3. A big problem that comes with the metal sound is the base becomes rigid.  You might play a minute or two of reggae over it, a minute of hip-hop later, whatever, but the base is undeniably metal.  Prog rock bands were often able to develop their own unique base. In fact, superficial similarities like the use of organs or classical influence were all that Yes, Genesis and ELP had in common. Fundamentally, they were as different as three bands could be from each other.  That is difficult to achieve for prog metal bands because they all share the same base: metal. You can add your own colour and twist to it but at the end of the day you are all playing metal. It would not do to say that likewise prog rock bands are all playing rock because it's rock in a loose sense to begin with and what is rock, further, is not so easily identifiable as metal.  Particularly, modern metal is defined by 80s crunch, so the common base becomes swiftly evident. 

4. Lastly, even after all these reasons are overlooked, remains the unfortunate preference for 80s pop metal cliches or 90s pop by prog metal bands.  If I could at least find some originality in the dimension of emotional expression, which is ultimately the most important part of music, other considerations become easy to forgive.  But I don't really want to hear LaBrie sing like those very pop metal singers I want to avoid, the same plastic and faceless approach to singing.  The playing too is precise and calculated rather than expressive. This is something particularly surprising for me because metal playing in the 80s was raw and often sloppy, emphasising speed and aggression over precision.  However, prog metal musicians seem to be influenced more by Malmsteen or technical metal like Megadeth. 



You are indeed on target, I could not say it better.

One thing I could add is the fact that the 80s influence is quite predominant, forgetting about the legacy of the 70s hard rock or metal bands, like Black Sabbath, Uriah Heep, Deep Purple, etc. Their sound was original and distinct, not like the metal of today. I find it very hard to see a difference of style on today's bands, and most guitarist have the same sound (The Eddie Van Halen sound to be more specific). You could very easily tell Ritchie Blackmore from Tommy Iomi, or Jimmy Page for example, which is not really the case today. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 20:25
Originally posted by Triceratopsoil Triceratopsoil wrote:

it has nothing to do with whether or not it's prog metal, some people just don't like music that they don't like


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 20:29
Originally posted by Manuel Manuel wrote:


I find it very hard to see a difference of style on today's bands, and most guitarist have the same sound (The Eddie Van Halen sound to be more specific). You could very easily tell Ritchie Blackmore from Tommy Iomi, or Jimmy Page for example, which is not really the case today. 


Absolutely, Eddie Van Halen has indeed turned out to be one of the most influential guitarists but, and for no fault of his, for the wrong reasons. Everybody wants to play like him, though 30 years have passed since they exploded on the scene.  Iommi, Blackmore, or even more precise axemen like Roth had distinct styles.   It is not too far fetched to say that some of the differences between 70s metal and modern metal are similar to that of between prog rock and prog metal.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2010 at 22:04
Originally posted by Manuel Manuel wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

I know you are a musician. Cert1fied's Scenes from A Memory review is a good analysis of the problems in the prog metal approach.  Anyway, this in a nutshell is my problem:

1.  The accent in prog rock is heavily on melodic exploration along a clear melodic path.  I don't mind the often slow pace of the music because it is developing all the time, moving forward.  A lot of times, it is not clear in prog metal where the song is heading. Nor is there much melodic exploration. It is difficult to explore - once you bring in those crushing metal riffs, you have to find melodies that go along with the riffs and there's not all that broad a range of melodies that work with heavy riffs. In absolute terms, anything can be broad and exploratory, of course, but I am obviously comparing it to prog rock here.  There's not much melodic adventure in prog metal. Essentially, once you get past the complications and technicalities, it's good ol' metal music.

2.  But it ought to still work as metal music, right?   No, because metal music is driven by riffs. When you listen to Metallica or Slayer's 80s songs, there is a sort of mathematical progression in the riffs each time the verses are played.  That gives me something to focus on when there's not much happening melodically (especially Slayer).  But prog metal, especially the melodic side of it, draws from heavy metal and particularly from 80s pop metal, which is essentially a heavier kind of hard rock. Not too highly engrossing riffs-wise.  What prog metal bands do is to write complicated riffs instead. Again, complicated riffs only sound interesting in isolation and not in the context of a song as they don't by themselves propel movement.  Essentially, prog metal could be described as having an idealistic approach of getting the best out of both prog rock and metal but rarely succeeding in practice.  It comes across often as a pastiche of lots of interesting ideas that could not somehow be bound together as well they ought to be for my taste.

3. A big problem that comes with the metal sound is the base becomes rigid.  You might play a minute or two of reggae over it, a minute of hip-hop later, whatever, but the base is undeniably metal.  Prog rock bands were often able to develop their own unique base. In fact, superficial similarities like the use of organs or classical influence were all that Yes, Genesis and ELP had in common. Fundamentally, they were as different as three bands could be from each other.  That is difficult to achieve for prog metal bands because they all share the same base: metal. You can add your own colour and twist to it but at the end of the day you are all playing metal. It would not do to say that likewise prog rock bands are all playing rock because it's rock in a loose sense to begin with and what is rock, further, is not so easily identifiable as metal.  Particularly, modern metal is defined by 80s crunch, so the common base becomes swiftly evident. 

4. Lastly, even after all these reasons are overlooked, remains the unfortunate preference for 80s pop metal cliches or 90s pop by prog metal bands.  If I could at least find some originality in the dimension of emotional expression, which is ultimately the most important part of music, other considerations become easy to forgive.  But I don't really want to hear LaBrie sing like those very pop metal singers I want to avoid, the same plastic and faceless approach to singing.  The playing too is precise and calculated rather than expressive. This is something particularly surprising for me because metal playing in the 80s was raw and often sloppy, emphasising speed and aggression over precision.  However, prog metal musicians seem to be influenced more by Malmsteen or technical metal like Megadeth. 



You are indeed on target, I could not say it better.

One thing I could add is the fact that the 80s influence is quite predominant, forgetting about the legacy of the 70s hard rock or metal bands, like Black Sabbath, Uriah Heep, Deep Purple, etc. Their sound was original and distinct, not like the metal of today. I find it very hard to see a difference of style on today's bands, and most guitarist have the same sound (The Eddie Van Halen sound to be more specific). You could very easily tell Ritchie Blackmore from Tommy Iomi, or Jimmy Page for example, which is not really the case today. 

I guess that's true if you're talking about mainstream stuff only, but the 2000s was a spectacular decade for metal if you knew where to look. 
Heaven's made a cesspool of us all.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 06 2010 at 01:40
I don't like progressive metal because of the lack of dynamics, the 'dead' recordings and the often power-metal-like atmosphere. There are some good examples of the contrary, but most progressive metal albums don't touch me at all (though I must say the technical approach challanges my musical brain from time to time).

Furthermore, (prog)metal has caused a huge amound of muscial inflation. Once the grunt stood for a moment of the most extremes of emotions (Be Carefull with that Axe Eugene), nowadays lot's of band use the grunt in all parts of the album and it isn't exciting at all. Another good example is usage of heavy metal riffs on all moments. Once the Larks Tongues in Aspic part 1 main riff stood as a powerhouse, now bands use this kind of force for a metal-ballad which is absurd. As an answer the modern metal has come with endless layers of distortion (Lucassan & Townsend now use 15 layers of metal guitars on their albums..) to keep up with their diminishing effect. This is the main reason for a dynamicless sound. Everything is loud.

Edited by friso - December 06 2010 at 01:49
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 06 2010 at 02:09
Originally posted by Peter Peter wrote:

For me, it's simply because I don't care for much modern metal -- "prog" or otherwise.
 


I don't care for modern music -- prog, metal, prog metal or otherwise.
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