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BaldJean
Prog Reviewer
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Topic: Stripping a myth - the truth about ITCOTCK Posted: March 07 2014 at 06:31 |
"In the Course of the Crimson King" is considered to be the first full-fledged prog album by many people. let me first make it clear that I don't believe such a claim can be made by any album. prog was, like any other musical form, something that gradually developed, and it makes no sense at all to define a clear point for saying "this is where it all starts". that being said let's have a closer look at ITCOTCK track by track: "21st Century Schizoid Man" has all the trademarks we expect from a prog song, even if it keeps the traditional song structure. there are unusual time signatures and lots of complicated stuff going on. conclusion: a full-fledged prog song. "I Talk to the Wind" is most definitely a pop song. a beautiful one with a nice instrumental midsection, but nevertheless a pop song. not prog at all "Epitaph" really is a tearjerker sung by a crooner, including the funeral march in the middle. the heavy use of mellotron only serves to emphasize the tearjerker qualities of that song. not prog at all. "Moonchild" can be divided into two parts, a song part and an experimental part that hardly anyone listens to; it is usually skipped (not by me though). what is being done in the instrumental section is in my opinion trying to express the song lyrics word for word with instruments only, and it succeeds in this regard. this second part is highly prog; the first part however is a simple pop song. verdict: prog, but since the second part is skipped by most people this has to be taken with a grain of salt. the first part is not prog at all. "In the Court of the Crimson King". this song has all the hallmarks of true prog, though it has to be noted that this song still more or less keeps the traditional song structure. so what do we have in the whole? a pop song, a tearjerker, two prog songs and one half-and-half (which taken as a whole has to be considered fully prog). now decide for yourself: is that enough to make up a full-fledged prog album? oh, and so you don't get me wrong: I like the album very much, and all of it, including "Moonchild". I just don't think it's status as "first full-fledged prog album" is justified. and don't forget the statement I made in the second sentence of this post. I am completely aware that this post is extremely heretical, and I fully expect to be subjected to the Spanish inquisition for it
Edited by BaldJean - March 07 2014 at 06:34
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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Moogtron III
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Joined: April 26 2005
Location: Belgium
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Points: 10616
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 06:40 |
No inquisition from me. Good arguments, actually. I am amazed, though, I must say. But I agree! We've all been mesmerized, or should I say mellotronized! It reminds me of a post of Iván who once explained why the Moody Blues' The Days Of Future Passed wasn't prog. The same kind of logic could be used for ITCOTCK, which you do. So strip the tempo changes, the eclecticism, the mellotrons, the full symphonic sound on some tracks, the free jazz and the adventurous percussion from the album and there remains a bunch of... songs. Proto-prog then?
EDIT: while I read back my post I wonder: what makes prog prog? All the extras on the album (and there are a lot of proggish extras on ITCOTCK) don't make it prog, as long as the skeleton consists still of traditional songs, right? So a non-innovating album like Pendragon's The Window Of Life is prog, because the basis consists of long stretched non-traditional songs, but ITCOTCK with all its innovative coachwork on the traditional chassis is not prog, right?
Edited by Moogtron III - March 07 2014 at 06:47
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lazland
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 28 2008
Location: Wales
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Points: 13627
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 06:53 |
The only shot I would fire is that we will once again have the interminable "what was the first true prog album" debate, a question which is incapable of being answered fully, and is one we have had over and over (and over) again.
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BaldJean
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 28 2005
Location: Germany
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 07:10 |
lazland wrote:
The only shot I would fire is that we will once again have the interminable "what was the first true prog album" debate, a question which is incapable of being answered fully, and is one we have had over and over (and over) again. |
that's exactly what I stated. there is no such thing. having to categorize everything is the eternal flaw of human beings. that was the original sin when we ate from the tree of knowledge
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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Dean
Special Collaborator
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Joined: May 13 2007
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 07:15 |
BaldJean wrote:
lazland wrote:
The only shot I would fire is that we will once again have the interminable "what was the first true prog album" debate, a question which is incapable of being answered fully, and is one we have had over and over (and over) again. |
that's exactly what I stated. there is no such thing. having to categorize everything is the eternal flaw of human beings. that was the original sin when we ate from the tree of knowledge
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Now, that is what I call a myth
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What?
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BaldJean
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 28 2005
Location: Germany
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 07:20 |
that comment of me was tongue in cheek
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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Toaster Mantis
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 07:28 |
Not sure how often I've actually heard In the Court of the Crimson King mentioned as the first progressive rock LP, thought that honour most often went to either Days of Future Passed (which I unfortunately haven't heard) or Freak Out. (whose case I'm not entirely convinced of)
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"The past is not some static being, it is not a previous present, nor a present that has passed away; the past has its own dynamic being which is constantly renewed and renewing." - Claire Colebrook
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Svetonio
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 07:35 |
Originally posted by earlyprog
One can say that itCotCk was the conceptualization of album long prog. It was soon followed by other prog albums and the development of prog was in full action. |
I agreed what Earlyprog said in another thread.
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Triceratopsoil
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 07:44 |
The fact that you think complex rhythms and changing time signatures are the main elements defining progressive rock shows that you have no reasonable ground to stand on with your assertions.
Also, Monster Movie is totally the first prog album.
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BaldJean
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Location: Germany
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 07:48 |
Triceratopsoil wrote:
The fact that you think complex rhythms and changing time signatures are the main elements defining progressive rock shows that you have no reasonable ground to stand on with your assertions.
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those were stated as examples only; by no means did I mean to reduce prog to that. as to the human flaw of having to categorize everything I would like to quote Goethe who satirically remarked: "Denn eben wo Begriffe fehlen, da stellt ein Wort zur rechten Zeit sich ein" "For just when concepts are lacking, a word will appear right on time"
Edited by BaldJean - March 07 2014 at 07:57
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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HolyMoly
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 08:03 |
BaldJean wrote:
having to categorize everything is the eternal flaw of human beings
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Sorry to take this out of context, but it's a very astute observation. Our tendency to classify and break things up into components is not the only way of looking at the world, yet we often take it for granted that nature is really that way.
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Warthur
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Joined: January 06 2008
Location: London, UK
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 08:09 |
I think the question is complicated a lot because what we today expect from "prog" has been shaped by decades and decades of the stuff - but King Crimson, Procol Harum, the Moody Blues and the rest weren't working to any such blueprint, any more than Black Sabbath had any preconceptions about what heavy metal or doom metal sounded like when they recorded their debut. So it's no surprise that if you look at early work by any of those groups through a "prog" lens a lot of it won't seem to qualify as being especially proggy, even though at the same time they were clearly extremely important to the early genre.
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ExittheLemming
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 08:11 |
BaldJean wrote:
I am completely aware that this post is extremely heretical, and I fully expect to be subjected to the Spanish inquisition for it
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The lady doth protest too much methinks. Yes, it's a very patchy album that contains some inordinately lengthy stoned d.i.c.k.i.n.g. about, some hippy gothic histrionics (right up your generously proportioned psychedelic alley I would have thought) and some unimpeachably
sublime moments of pure unadulterated Prog fresh from the source. I guess that picking this album apart in 2014 might be compared to Jeremy Clarkson marking the Model T Ford down for the lack of a drinks holder, GPS and airbags? Yeah, nothing beats engineered controversy.
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BaldJean
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 08:27 |
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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friso
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 24 2007
Location: Netherlands
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Points: 2506
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 08:32 |
Yeah the whole prog thing has nothing to do with the atmosphere of the music... or does it?
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Dean
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 08:35 |
HolyMoly wrote:
BaldJean wrote:
having to categorize everything is the eternal flaw of human beings
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Sorry to take this out of context, but it's a very astute observation. Our tendency to classify and break things up into components is not the only way of looking at the world, yet we often take it for granted that nature is really that way.
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We categorise and name things so we can communicate with each other. So classifications are merely points of common reference that allow us to recognise that we are talking about the same thing. This isn't a flaw, quite the opposite, it is a survival trait, without which we'd have died-out from eating plants that no one had bothered to previously classify as poisonous.
Where it all goes wrong is when we get overly concerned by being pedantically exact about it. Sometimes it's okay to call spiders "insects" when there is no need to be taxonomically precise, just as it is perfectly fine to use the word "bugs" to mean all manner of creepy-crawlies and not just those that are insects of the suborder Heteroptera.
Saying that Itchycock (or whatever) was the first prog album is merely a point of reference so we all know what we are talking about. When we pedantically pick over it with a pseudo-musicological taxonomy it loses that peg-in-the-ground relationship and when approached like that very few (if any) albums would survive such close scrutiny. So it's semi-arbitrary consensus (by some undeclared common agreement) that this particular album is chosen to be "the first Prog album", and there is nothing wrong with that, any one of a number of albums could have been picked, it doesn't actually change anything. Itchycock suddenly doesn't become any easier or harder to listen to, it doesn't instantly become an album that you are not permitted to like or dislike; and so its status as an album is not affected by whatever label you give it.
Edited by Dean - March 07 2014 at 08:36
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What?
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BaldJean
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 28 2005
Location: Germany
Status: Offline
Points: 10387
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 08:40 |
Dean wrote:
HolyMoly wrote:
BaldJean wrote:
having to categorize everything is the eternal flaw of human beings
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Sorry to take this out of context, but it's a very astute observation. Our tendency to classify and break things up into components is not the only way of looking at the world, yet we often take it for granted that nature is really that way.
|
We categorise and name things so we can communicate with each other. So classifications are merely points of common reference that allow us to recognise that we are talking about the same thing. This isn't a flaw, quite the opposite, it is a survival trait, without which we'd have died-out from eating plants that no one had bothered to previously classify as poisonous.
Where it all goes wrong is when we get overly concerned by being pedantically exact about it. Sometimes it's okay to call spiders "insects" when there is no need to be taxonomically precise, just as it is perfectly fine to use the word "bugs" to mean all manner of creepy-crawlies and not just those that are insects of the suborder Heteroptera.
Saying that Itchycock (or whatever) was the first prog album is merely a point of reference so we all know what we are talking about. When we pedantically pick over it with a pseudo-musicological taxonomy it loses that peg-in-the-ground relationship and when approached like that very few (if any) albums would survive such close scrutiny. So it's semi-arbitrary consensus (by some undeclared common agreement) that this particular album is chosen to be "the first Prog album", and there is nothing wrong with that, any one of a number of albums could have been picked, it doesn't actually change anything. Itchycock suddenly doesn't become any easier or harder to listen to, it doesn't instantly become an album that you are not permitted to like or dislike; and so its status as an album is not affected by whatever label you give it.
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exactly my point, Dean
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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The T
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 08:40 |
Itchycock? Now that's a progressive album...
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ExittheLemming
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 08:43 |
BaldJean wrote:
ExittheLemming wrote:
BaldJean wrote:
I am completely aware that this post is extremely heretical, and I fully expect to be subjected to the Spanish inquisition for it
|
The lady doth protest too much methinks. Yes, it's a very patchy album that contains some inordinately lengthy stoned d.i.c.k.i.n.g. about, some hippy gothic histrionics (right up your generously proportioned psychedelic alley I would have thought) and some unimpeachably
sublime moments of pure unadulterated Prog fresh from the source. I guess that picking this album apart in 2014 might be compared to Jeremy Clarkson marking the Model T Ford down for the lack of a drinks holder, GPS and airbags? Yeah, nothing beats engineered controversy.
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since I am originally a historian who for some reason wound up as a restaurant owner I am fully aware of this. it is in fact part of my statement. that's why I stated my second sentence, and I think it can not be repeated often enough: there is no such thing as a first prog album.
I actually couldn't care less how an album is being categorized. all that matters to me is: is it "good music" (meaning "music I like"). and I mentioned that I like the album a lot, and all of it
| OK, no-one will dispute that you couldn't care less about how an album is categorized e.g. some people lazily categorize this one as being the first Prog album etc yet you have started a thread to underline your indifference to such categorisation? I love bits of it a lot but not all of it (and that's not because I consider the bits I don't like ain't Prog - I just think some of it is stoned hippy w..a.n.k.)
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HolyMoly
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Posted: March 07 2014 at 08:45 |
Dean wrote:
HolyMoly wrote:
BaldJean wrote:
having to categorize everything is the eternal flaw of human beings
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Sorry to take this out of context, but it's a very astute observation. Our tendency to classify and break things up into components is not the only way of looking at the world, yet we often take it for granted that nature is really that way.
|
We categorise and name things so we can communicate with each other. So classifications are merely points of common reference that allow us to recognise that we are talking about the same thing. This isn't a flaw, quite the opposite, it is a survival trait, without which we'd have died-out from eating plants that no one had bothered to previously classify as poisonous.
Where it all goes wrong is when we get overly concerned by being pedantically exact about it. Sometimes it's okay to call spiders "insects" when there is no need to be taxonomically precise, just as it is perfectly fine to use the word "bugs" to mean all manner of creepy-crawlies and not just those that are insects of the suborder Heteroptera.
Saying that Itchycock (or whatever) was the first prog album is merely a point of reference so we all know what we are talking about. When we pedantically pick over it with a pseudo-musicological taxonomy it loses that peg-in-the-ground relationship and when approached like that very few (if any) albums would survive such close scrutiny. So it's semi-arbitrary consensus (by some undeclared common agreement) that this particular album is chosen to be "the first Prog album", and there is nothing wrong with that, any one of a number of albums could have been picked, it doesn't actually change anything. Itchycock suddenly doesn't become any easier or harder to listen to, it doesn't instantly become an album that you are not permitted to like or dislike; and so its status as an album is not affected by whatever label you give it.
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I agree. Classifying is very useful. It's how we organize our thoughts. But as you say (pardon the paraphrase here), when we take it too literally and insist that the classification is an actual metaphysical reality, it can lead to problems. When it comes to calling something "prog" or "not prog", or "the first prog album", in the end the music is just itself and the labels are just a convenience.
Edited by HolyMoly - March 07 2014 at 08:46
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My other avatar is a Porsche
It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle if it is lightly greased.
-Kehlog Albran
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