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desistindo View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Prog rock tree (or map)
    Posted: June 23 2011 at 17:43
i saw a prog rock documentary (Prog Rock Years) that shows what it seems to be an amazing ``prog genealogy``, does anyone got that ``tree`` ? To know what im talking about, check it out on 00.46 sec of this video:



I got another map some years ago, but i lost it Cry

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2011 at 20:27
I don't have that map but I would like to see it too. There's two simpler maps linked from http://www.e-prog.net/genre.htm.

The map in the video may be for the video only.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 24 2011 at 02:18
What? Rick Wakemen pushed Salvidor Dali offstage?!

Ermm... sorry, no idea about the tree thing.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 24 2011 at 09:29
I do believe that show (BBC 2's Rock Family Trees) were based on the work of Pete Frame - that "prog tree" is among his projects. You can find it in his official site (sadly, you have to buy it to see it big): http://www.familyofrock.com/browse/details/progrock.html
Bigger on the inside.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2011 at 08:43
Originally posted by Kotro Kotro wrote:

I do believe that show (BBC 2's Rock Family Trees) were based on the work of Pete Frame - that "prog tree" is among his projects. You can find it in his official site (sadly, you have to buy it to see it big): http://www.familyofrock.com/browse/details/progrock.html

This is it! Thanks, man!


I ve found one from School of Rock, too (lol):


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2011 at 09:30
Good topic! Very useful! Therefore, you want prog rock to be a lesson in school. Yeah!

Edited by Prog Geo - June 25 2011 at 09:31
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2011 at 10:57
Originally posted by desistindo desistindo wrote:

Originally posted by Kotro Kotro wrote:

I do believe that show (BBC 2's Rock Family Trees) were based on the work of Pete Frame - that "prog tree" is among his projects. You can find it in his official site (sadly, you have to buy it to see it big): http://www.familyofrock.com/browse/details/progrock.html

This is it! Thanks, man!


I ve found one from School of Rock, too (lol):



The question mark one. LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2011 at 14:44
Originally posted by desistindo desistindo wrote:

[QUOTE=Kotro]

 
that's very informative !
"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2011 at 16:59
Originally posted by irrelevant irrelevant wrote:

Originally posted by desistindo desistindo wrote:

Originally posted by Kotro Kotro wrote:

I do believe that show (BBC 2's Rock Family Trees) were based on the work of Pete Frame - that "prog tree" is among his projects. You can find it in his official site (sadly, you have to buy it to see it big): http://www.familyofrock.com/browse/details/progrock.html

This is it! Thanks, man!


I ve found one from School of Rock, too (lol):



The question mark one. LOL

What did you mean? the interrogation above Frank Zappa and Can? Well, i supose its a sence of ´´alternative prog´´ they put.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2011 at 08:51
Originally posted by desistindo desistindo wrote:

Originally posted by irrelevant irrelevant wrote:

Originally posted by desistindo desistindo wrote:

Originally posted by Kotro Kotro wrote:

I do believe that show (BBC 2's Rock Family Trees) were based on the work of Pete Frame - that "prog tree" is among his projects. You can find it in his official site (sadly, you have to buy it to see it big): http://www.familyofrock.com/browse/details/progrock.html

This is it! Thanks, man!


I ve found one from School of Rock, too (lol):



The question mark one. LOL

What did you mean? the interrogation above Frank Zappa and Can? Well, i supose its a sence of ´´alternative prog´´ they put.

You could say that. Smile I just found it entertaining that they made a "?" section.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 04:16
I saw a map of British prog rock back in the 80's at a British record store.  It wasn't a family tree, it was an actual map of the uk showing the hometowns of the great prog bands ie Birmingham for elo, guilford for genesis etc.

Anyone with info on how I can get a copy please email me at [email protected].

Thanks so much !!!  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 05:17
Being catalan I once made a similar family tree for Catalan Prog only, of course rather obscure for most non-catalans, I did it just as a hobbie. The years flow from top to bottom and each album is listed in it's year row including the line up of the band, and the relationships beween bands (members moving from band to band) are shown by connectors.
On paper print you need 16 A4 sheets and glue them together to get the whole thing which looks like this (it covers the 70's only).
 
 
A zoom-in example of a small piece. Musicians in dotted line are guests:
 
 
 
If anyone would be interested I can email it in pdf.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 06:09
This is interesting


and this!
The Prog Rock Years


Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - December 15 2012 at 06:13
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 07:23
This is even better

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 08:52
Yep, that's indeed nice Scott Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 13:03
Hi,
 
Even though this last map is wayyyyyyy better than others, the information is not really that good or great.
 
Why? ... Easy ... Folk, Classical and Jazz were there way before Rock ... simply because the most distinctive thing in "Rock" is ... ELECTRICITY ... which did not really exist in most of the forms prior  ... which makes us think that rock was there before ... it could have been but was not electric, and we do not consider Chuck Berry "rock'n'roll" if it is done accoustically ... it's not the same and the attitude kinda falls off quick!
 
So, for me, with dates, of course, the chart would simply show Classical going way back ... then Avant Garde ... since this was a very obvious thing in Classical Music and you can easily start with Stravinsky ... then ... I would have a side bar ... which would be Folk music. And this one, could go back thousands of years and probably longer than "classical music"!
 
Folk music, is probably the most important part of "Progressive" as it gives it its impetus and desire to say something and fight for a cause. Folk music, has a history of fighting against many things, and not only in America, but in many other places around the world. The one thing here is that it also is highly volatile, and might have a lot of the cultural influences of the time and place. This "attitude" is important ... and one of the things that helped fuse "rock" into what it became, of which early folks like Bob Dylan (Blonde on Blonde) is absolutely massive! This "attitude" is also the main precursor to the INDIVIDUALITY that a lot of this stuff has, that becomes a musical expression sooner or later. But this "individuality" being defined as "music" was, is, and always will be an issue ... think of it as Mozart dictating to Salieri in the Amadeus movie -- the "establishment" did not like these "new", and very different, notations and expressions! ... still don't!
 
And then ... we have "jazz" ... and the Tom Dowd DVD here is the biggest historian of it there is for the American Music scene, and you all GOTTA SEE IT ... you will sit there and re-evaluate your thinking on a lot of "progressive" music! It might NOT, be the same thing as England/London, or Paris or Europe that have a tendency to appreciate arts and music a lot more than America does, but in essence, the American Movie Studios tried to kill jazz, accidentally, by pushing their "stars" instead ... like Elvis, Bobby Darin, and others ... and it made a lot of black music disappear from the market ... everyone bought what they knew and heard and SAW on the movies, and Elvis became a massive influence in a generation because of it, along with others.  At the expense of the "black music", which at this time, would normally be  ... a lot of jazz ... and I bet you gonna tell me that there was no black out there that was doing the same thing that Elvis was ... and better! Right!
 
In America, this map would take that popular music, mix the outspoken'ness of it all, and the independence of the black jazz music, and turn it loose at the Fillmore ... so to speak ... and you ended up with something that was called "psychedelic", because there was dope around it, but that's like saying that Paris never had dope or drink, and neither did London! ... BSSSSSSSS ... or Rome ... or Tokyo (which definitly had it!)
 
From the mix, came progressive and from that point on ... the "progressive" is a mumbo jumbo of everything including the kitchen sink ... but to my ears, folks like the Incredible String Band were far more progressive in all music than ELP, YES or Genesis ... and they even made it to Woodstock ... but no one got it! Theater on the stage? ... is that a newage concept of half naked nymphs running around on the stage? ... now you know why Wadleigh never showed it ...


Edited by moshkito - December 17 2012 at 11:05
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2012 at 11:11
Hi,
 
If you have never seen it, MAN's Be Good To Yourself At Least Once A Day ... had a map of Wales with various names of musicians for cities and such ... and it is a very neat little map ... that ... makes no sense at all, when it comes to musical tastes and what these folks went on to do ... but it was a fun map to look at, and one of those things that you usually went ... ohhhh ... I wanna hear that!
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: December 17 2012 at 11:27
Originally posted by irrelevant irrelevant wrote:

Originally posted by desistindo desistindo wrote:

Originally posted by irrelevant irrelevant wrote:

Originally posted by desistindo desistindo wrote:

Originally posted by Kotro Kotro wrote:

I do believe that show (BBC 2's Rock Family Trees) were based on the work of Pete Frame - that "prog tree" is among his projects. You can find it in his official site (sadly, you have to buy it to see it big): http://www.familyofrock.com/browse/details/progrock.html

This is it! Thanks, man!


I ve found one from School of Rock, too (lol):



The question mark one. LOL

What did you mean? the interrogation above Frank Zappa and Can? Well, i supose its a sence of ´´alternative prog´´ they put.

You could say that. Smile I just found it entertaining that they made a "?" section.  

wut is that the residents in the prog-rock section
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2012 at 11:50
Originally posted by Gerinski Gerinski wrote:

Being catalan I once made a similar family tree for Catalan Prog only, of course rather obscure for most non-catalans, I did it just as a hobbie. The years flow from top to bottom and each album is listed in it's year row including the line up of the band, and the relationships beween bands (members moving from band to band) are shown by connectors.
On paper print you need 16 A4 sheets and glue them together to get the whole thing which looks like this (it covers the 70's only).
 

 
A zoom-in example of a small piece. Musicians in dotted line are guests:
 

 
 
If anyone would be interested I can email it in pdf.






Wow, thats a holly work. Very instruntive. Now I got a hole obscure range of prog to research. Would you recommend me a specific band from Catalunã to start?

Could you send it to [email protected] ?

Thx.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 17 2012 at 14:57
Originally posted by desistindo desistindo wrote:

Wow, thats a holly work. Very instruntive. Now I got a hole obscure range of prog to research. Would you recommend me a specific band from Catalunã to start?

Could you send it to [email protected] ?

Thx.
I'm emailing you the family tree.
Be aware, 70's Catalan Prog was mostly based on Fusion. Some of my preferred recommendations:
 
MUSICA URBANA: both their 2 albums, eponimous and "Iberia", fantastic eclectic fusion.
ICEBERG: Their debut "Tutankhamon" is great rocking-fusion-symphonic with vocals, then they went pure instrumental fusion and their best albums of this period are "Coses Nostres" and "Sentiments".
FUSIOON: "Fusioon II" and "Minorisa".
ORQUESTRA MIRASOL: "D'Oca A Oca I Tira Que Et Toca", great fusion double-LP.
MIRASOL COLORES: "Linea 5" another fusion wonder.
SECTA SONICA: both their 2 albums "Fred Pedralbes" and "Astroferia", great guitar-based fusion.
COMPANYIA ELECTRICA DHARMA: "Diumenge", "Tramuntana", fusion with a folkrorical touch.
ATILA: "Reviure" great space-symphonic.
 
Many other great albums but the ones above should be a good starting point Smile
 
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