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Joined: September 01 2009
Location: Belgium
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Points: 4521
Posted: June 25 2011 at 12:03
ghost_of_morphy wrote:
If you don't like ELP, you don't like prog.
As if the wide range of music under the Prog embrella can be summed up by just one band.
I do agree ELP is the best example of Prog taken to its extreme of "not much content told in a zillion of notes". (Still like a good deal of their 70-72 material though)
Joined: December 23 2009
Location: Emerald City
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Points: 17966
Posted: June 25 2011 at 12:58
This is a great thread....after my initial post, I have listened to Tarkus, Brain Salad Surgery and ELP. The musicianship was so masterful...the lyrics still not so much, I really like what Bonnek says here:
Bonnek wrote:
[QUOTE=ghost_of_morphy] "not much content told in a zillion of notes".
As I grew up in So Cali I do so remember hearing tons of ELP on the FM radio both KMET and KLOS. I wonder if the bombastic was due to the fact they were a 3pc and tried to make up for that on stage by being so "big"! I never saw them live......but I just wonder.
Joined: February 18 2004
Location: United Kingdom
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Points: 29452
Posted: June 25 2011 at 15:59
The Dark Elf wrote:
Personally, I don't see how anyone watching a bombastic ELP concert in the early 70s could not enjoy it. The same could be said for over-the-top concert extravangas by Alice Cooper or Pink Floyd. For sheer entertainment value, they were absolutely enjoyable, and you certainly got your money's worth, ticket-wise.
The problem lay with ELP taking pretension one step too far: the bloated triple album Welcome Back My Friends to the Show that Never Ends (even the title was bloated), followed by Works, Vol. I (not a bad album really, but it would have been far better as a single group album rather than extended foray into solo endeavors) . This is the point where critics, and particularly New York critics like Robert Christgau or Dave Marsh from the Rolling Sone magazine, began savaging ELP and other prog acts. Neither Christgau nor Marsh ever liked prog acts (actually, if you look at their reviews, they despised them), and they wielded enough influence back then to affect other critics into voicing the same, tired opinions. Thus, ELP, Yes, Tull and other progressively-minded bands got increasingly harsher reviews by 1974 -75.
These critics had an axe to grind, and a decided preference in the mid-70s for prepunk or decidedly non-progressive bands like The New York Dolls, Bruce Springsteen, David Bowie, Roxie Music (they had big erections for Brian Eno) and the punk vanguard of The Ramones, Patti Smith and The Sex Pistols. The record industry played along, and there you have it: a completely contrived attack on a certain genre of music that continues to this day.
Don't believe me? These same critics and the publisher of Rolling Stone, Jann Wenner, control much of the voting process in the supposed Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. This is why such stellar and deserving progressive bands such as Yes, Tull, King Crimson, Rush and even The Moody Blues are not in the Hall, while such wastes of vinyl like the Bee Gees, Madonna and ABBA, or bands that had very little to do with rock at all, like Run DMC, Grandmaster Flash, or Michael Jackson, are regularly inducted. Do you really think Genesis made it into the hall based on Peter Gabriel's years with the band? F*ck no.
The problem is that you have absolved Yes and Genesis from any wrong doing yet they released a couple of equally 'bloated' albums Tales From Topographic Oceans and Lamb Lies Down On Broadway.These were also targets of attack from critics. ELP can't really be blamed for igniting all the vitriol towards prog from the music press.
That's ridiculous. If you don't like ELP, you don't like prog. (Real prog, of course. Not this revisionism of the genre where Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, Herbie Hancock, etc. etc. etc. get thrown into the mix.)
I meant ELP were a convenient scapegoat for all the perceived excesses of the Prog giants (why do I have to explain this?)
Joined: September 03 2006
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Posted: June 25 2011 at 22:41
richardh wrote:
The problem is that you have absolved Yes and Genesis from any wrong doing yet they released a couple of equally 'bloated' albums Tales From Topographic Oceans and Lamb Lies Down On Broadway.These were also targets of attack from critics. ELP can't really be blamed for igniting all the vitriol towards prog from the music press.
Well, I would not and I do not like TFTO at all. With that said, I don't HATE either of Karn Evil or Welcome Back, so you'd be dialing the wrong number here in a prog forum. I don't see the problem with Lamb at all, it's a fantastic album with amazing diversity within the scope of one (double) album that neither of these bands could boast within the scope of a single release to my knowledge, very accessible songs by prog standards and a mastery of drama that Yes or ELP never so much as approached (again in the opinion of a partisan Genesis fan). I know the critics panned it and I know why they panned it (oooh, Gabriel is making so many mythological references, this is so boring LOLZ) but I don't see how it is any more bloated than either Quadrophenia or Wall.
EDIT: I also don't see the comparison between Pink Floyd and ELP shows re Dark Elf's post unless Mason was trying to play like Palmer and Wright like Emerson in the early 70s. They used extravagant sound and lights, yes,but there was not much musical showboating in their shows from what I've gathered and they also put the thrust heavily on lyrics that people could relate to and, right or wrong, that makes a difference to critical perception. In that sense, the appropriate comparison is indeed with the shows of Purple, Zep or Who, which, in the revisionist view, are perceived as 'rawk' while 'wimpy' keyboards don't interest rock listeners no more. Now who's to say that Emerson and Lake could gang up and get really heavy too?
Joined: February 01 2011
Location: Michigan
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Points: 13228
Posted: June 25 2011 at 23:06
richardh wrote:
The Dark Elf wrote:
Personally, I don't see how anyone watching a bombastic ELP concert in the early 70s could not enjoy it. The same could be said for over-the-top concert extravangas by Alice Cooper or Pink Floyd. For sheer entertainment value, they were absolutely enjoyable, and you certainly got your money's worth, ticket-wise.
The problem lay with ELP taking pretension one step too far: the bloated triple album Welcome Back My Friends to the Show that Never Ends (even the title was bloated), followed by Works, Vol. I (not a bad album really, but it would have been far better as a single group album rather than extended foray into solo endeavors) . This is the point where critics, and particularly New York critics like Robert Christgau or Dave Marsh from the Rolling Sone magazine, began savaging ELP and other prog acts. Neither Christgau nor Marsh ever liked prog acts (actually, if you look at their reviews, they despised them), and they wielded enough influence back then to affect other critics into voicing the same, tired opinions. Thus, ELP, Yes, Tull and other progressively-minded bands got increasingly harsher reviews by 1974 -75.
These critics had an axe to grind, and a decided preference in the mid-70s for prepunk or decidedly non-progressive bands like The New York Dolls, Bruce Springsteen, David Bowie, Roxie Music (they had big erections for Brian Eno) and the punk vanguard of The Ramones, Patti Smith and The Sex Pistols. The record industry played along, and there you have it: a completely contrived attack on a certain genre of music that continues to this day.
Don't believe me? These same critics and the publisher of Rolling Stone, Jann Wenner, control much of the voting process in the supposed Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. This is why such stellar and deserving progressive bands such as Yes, Tull, King Crimson, Rush and even The Moody Blues are not in the Hall, while such wastes of vinyl like the Bee Gees, Madonna and ABBA, or bands that had very little to do with rock at all, like Run DMC, Grandmaster Flash, or Michael Jackson, are regularly inducted. Do you really think Genesis made it into the hall based on Peter Gabriel's years with the band? F*ck no.
The problem is that you have absolved Yes and Genesis from any wrong doing yet they released a couple of equally 'bloated' albums Tales From Topographic Oceans and Lamb Lies Down On Broadway.These were also targets of attack from critics. ELP can't really be blamed for igniting all the vitriol towards prog from the music press.
Actually, the critics didn't pan The Lamb LIes Down on Broadway - it recieved generally favorable reviews. But I will agree that Tales From the Topographic Ocean is certainly bloated and pretentious, and following the dense and obscurant Relayer, it certainly added flames to the bonfire. Yet I will say that the important critics of the time were predisposed to disliking Prog. Tull's A Passion Play was so savaged that Ian Anderson started a war with critics that lasted quite a long time (he even wrote the song "Solitaire" in reply to one critic) .
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...
Joined: February 18 2004
Location: United Kingdom
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Points: 29452
Posted: June 26 2011 at 02:18
rogerthat wrote:
richardh wrote:
The problem is that you have absolved Yes and Genesis from any wrong doing yet they released a couple of equally 'bloated' albums Tales From Topographic Oceans and Lamb Lies Down On Broadway.These were also targets of attack from critics. ELP can't really be blamed for igniting all the vitriol towards prog from the music press.
Well, I would not and I do not like TFTO at all. With that said, I don't HATE either of Karn Evil or Welcome Back, so you'd be dialing the wrong number here in a prog forum. I don't see the problem with Lamb at all, it's a fantastic album with amazing diversity within the scope of one (double) album that neither of these bands could boast within the scope of a single release to my knowledge, very accessible songs by prog standards and a mastery of drama that Yes or ELP never so much as approached (again in the opinion of a partisan Genesis fan). I know the critics panned it and I know why they panned it (oooh, Gabriel is making so many mythological references, this is so boring LOLZ) but I don't see how it is any more bloated than either Quadrophenia or Wall.
Of course but I was just sticking to the thread topic. Prog is misunderstood/underappreciated/derided by critics a fact that seems to be blamed on ELP's artic lorries but not Yes gaint mushrooms or Gabriels daft Slipperman costume (not to mention Anderson's cod peice).
I think its this - a lot of prog fans just don't like ELP so they become the most convenient target. Nothing to do with the real facts of the matter imo.
Joined: September 03 2006
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Posted: June 26 2011 at 03:16
richardh wrote:
Of course but I was just sticking to the thread topic. Prog is misunderstood/underappreciated/derided by critics a fact that seems to be blamed on ELP's artic lorries but not Yes gaint mushrooms or Gabriels daft Slipperman costume (not to mention Anderson's cod peice).
I think its this - a lot of prog fans just don't like ELP so they become the most convenient target. Nothing to do with the real facts of the matter imo.
No, it's simply that they were the most popular face of prog, as Garion81 put it. And also, this is subjective, but I think the other big prog rock bands just had a little bit more 'meat' in their music (making the live frills a bit easier to ignore) and with ELP you really had to pay attention to Emerson's parts followed by Palmer's and so on to appreciate it. As I said earlier, I am not concerned so much with showboating in the sense of wearing costumes or sound and light shows but showboating in the sense of playing long and redundant solos is dicey. Sometimes, it makes you God, like Led Zeppelin, and sometimes it can earn you notoriety like ELP and it's not necessary that in either case, the perception would reflect how well or not the band executed it.
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