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chopper ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20032 |
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Nobody seems to have mentioned this lot so far.
The violinist is Kate Bush's nephew.
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HemispheresOfXanadu ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: June 28 2012 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 4339 |
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Folky power metal.
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@ProgFollower on Twitter. Tweet me muzak.
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dwill123 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: December 19 2006 Status: Offline Points: 4460 |
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Vertu (Karen Briggs, Violin)
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Svetonio ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 20 2010 Location: Serbia Status: Offline Points: 10213 |
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Svetonio ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 20 2010 Location: Serbia Status: Offline Points: 10213 |
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presdoug ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 24 2010 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 8737 |
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Edited by presdoug - May 30 2014 at 14:18 |
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Nogbad_The_Bad ![]() Forum & Site Admin Group ![]() ![]() RIO/Avant/Zeuhl & Eclectic Team Joined: March 16 2007 Location: Boston Status: Offline Points: 21315 |
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The wonderful Forgas Band Phenomena
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Ian
Host of the Post-Avant Jazzcore Happy Hour on Progrock.com https://podcasts.progrock.com/post-avant-jazzcore-happy-hour/ |
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Mascodagama ![]() Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2006 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 5111 |
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There's some lovely violin by Niels Skovmand on Afenginn's recent album Lux:
Edited by Mascodagama - May 30 2014 at 13:24 |
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moshkito ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 18064 |
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(Sorry ... didn't realize this was so old!)
Eddie Jobson in Roxy Music, also played violin in Curved Air as well as keyboards.
Kris Karrer in AD2 is almost too much, and all the way to "Vive La Trance", his playing is out of this world, and totally off the charts.
Grahame Smith was in String Driven Thing for their best known years, but in many ways, his best work was done with Peter Hammill, where you can even find him in concert with him by himself, which is insane, but tells you what a great musician can do with his instrument. I also love the work he did in at one Van der Graaf Generator album, which is outstanding.
Jean Luc Ponty, in many ways is the man that has helped the violin explode in the scene, though his stuff is considered "jazz" and sometimes it is better thought of as "fusion". For his stuff, you must get the "Return to Forever" Live CD from their recent tour. It was fantastic to say the least, and blows out so many progressive bands, it's not funny. RTF blew out and made ZpZ look like an idiot band!
I like Simon House, who has helped Hawkwind so much over the years and create some magnificent backgrounds as well in keyboards.
Papa John Creach was well known in California but ended up getting even more famous with Jefferson Airplane, and gave them more character and quality.
Laurie Anderson was all about experimental synthesizers and later violin. Her shows were weird, strange, literary, off its rocker and not exactly something a progressive audience tends to enjoy, since we love our top ten way too much to appreciate other stuff.
David LaFlamme, was the violinist behind "White Bird" a massive hit in the late 60's for the band "It's a Beautiful Day". Both of the band's firts albums fit very well in any "progressive" collection, with American artists. The song even had a shorter version for the AM radio crowd, and the new FM band used to love to show off AM Radio as crap by playing the long version (along with Light My Fire and all that!).
Darryl Way is worth the mention (Curved Air) for a couple of things that are fun and great at the same time. "Vivaldi with Cannons" in both the 1st album and in the Live album. If you have the guts to do something like that (or Smith's Tympany for the Devil") you should be ready for prime time!
But it is kind of unfair to not appreciate other folks out there, as mentioned before. Edited by moshkito - May 31 2014 at 15:03 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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richardh ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 29438 |
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sorry for hacking your post down but I must have missed this particular comment first time. I like Par Lindh Project a lot and regard PLP as the most interesting modern symph band. Magda (RIP) was certainly a very talented musician and her passing put a stop to any future development of that particular band sadly. Time Mirror was a bit dull by comparison to the earlier albums. I think though my favourite violinist in prog is Eddie Jobson. Curved Air's best album was with him in the line up and UK's two albums are both gems. Of course he plays keyboard more than violin but is rather brilliant at both things.
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AtomicCrimsonRush ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
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I love the violin on this album by VDGG
![]() Violinist from String Driven Thing hear some of it here www.youtube.com/watch?v=36b-_xPTq8Q Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - May 26 2014 at 07:44 |
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Fusionist47 ![]() Forum Newbie ![]() ![]() Joined: May 26 2014 Status: Offline Points: 3 |
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Hello from Australia,
I contributed on this site to one of the listing about violinists playing in various styles over the years.... However it seems that a handful are above a level of proficiency than most..... For some interested in knowing which one to listen to, is relative to the style/s of interest....I would be glad to assist anyone in quest of annusual players gracing the music scene past and present.... Fusion is my preference but not only. Hoping to exchange some threads....Erick |
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Gully Foyle ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: December 26 2011 Location: Massachusetts Status: Offline Points: 350 |
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Boud Deun!
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ProgressiveAttic ![]() Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 05 2008 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 1243 |
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this is a good place to start: http://deliciousagony.com/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=61&t=3768 I would also recommend the excellent Pochakaite Malko, Bubu and Steve Unruh (and his group Resistor) + RtF with Ponty is quite amazing!
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Michael's Sonic Kaleidoscope Mondays 5:00pm EST(re-runs Thursdays 3:00pm) @ Delicious Agony Progressive Rock Radio(http://www.deliciousagony.com)
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Zombywoof ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: November 26 2009 Status: Offline Points: 1217 |
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Check out some of Don 'Sugarcane' Harris's work with Frank Zappa: "Gumbo Variations", "Directly From my Heart to You", "Little House I Used to Live In", "Sharleena" ("Lost Episodes" version), "50/50", etc. He had an extremely dirty, bluesy sound on those tracks that is very unique and very different from Jean-luc Ponty's.
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Continue the prog discussion here: http://zombyprog.proboards.com/index.cgi ...
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ClemofNazareth ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Prog Folk Researcher Joined: August 17 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4659 |
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Some of my favorite string players:
Beat Circus (Paran Amirinazari)
After Crying (Zsolt Maroevich - viola, Péter Pejtsik - cello)
the Decemberists (Petra Haden - violin, Nate Query - upright bass)
Rasputina (Melora Creager - cello)
Comus (Colin Pearson)
Pearls Before Swine (Buddy Spicher - violin, viola, cello)
Godspeed You! Black Emperor (Sophie Trudeau - violin, Norsola Johnson - cello, Thierry Amar - string bass)
and this guy of course
![]() and just for fun from the non-proggy list
![]() Amy LaVere (upright bass)
Val Stoecklein (acoustic 12-string with studio orchestra)
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"Peace is the only battle worth waging."
Albert Camus |
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moshkito ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 18064 |
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The one thing a teacher can NOT help you with is ... what it takes to "be" that master. The academic view is that you play notes better than anyone else, which is not necessarily true ... because then you get the new "wave" and they do things different and they become the new "master".
What helps me, is learning and reading about how they thought and worked with others and the best scene to take a look at, and see what they did, is the French scene from the 30's to the 60's which is magnificently documented by all of them, something that rock music thinks they can do strictly by sales and "Number 1's".
In the end, you will find only one thing ... it's about how YOU express yourself, and the day that your instrument "turns over" and it becomes just an extension of your hand, or arm, you know that you are a "master" ...
From an stage/acting perspective, I will tell you what is very good for an exercise ... I used to take one set of lines and have the actor say it ... with hate ... now say it with love ... like say it like you don't care ... now say it like you don't give a $hit ... and so on ... create as many of these as possible .... it's still the same music, but HOW you express it all of a sudden is the difference, and one almost would say ... wow ... it's a totally different piece of music expressed this way, or that way.
The next thing that happens once you learn this a bit, which is a fun exercise (you should always do this with vacuum cleaners and brooms and such with folks around you!), is that one day you create a piece of music ... and you have the notes written down ... then you go play them ... and you change the notes, because this is the way you want to play them and express your piece ... and now you know what the :heavy" and the "good" ones are all about ... the music is "seconday" (so to speak) and you concern yourself with HOW to bring it off.
This, of course, is the part that English instructors in college hate about Theater people and love to say that theater and film doesn't know anything about Iambic Pentameter or poetry ... and of course, the theater folks flick the finger and say ... yeah ... you wrote history and the laws of man, and the Bible!
That should, probably, be a "maybe", because there are times that ... there is no understanding, as the "source" of that "doing" is not in the area of the "mind" or "thinking" ... and this is where improvisation and intuition take a massive hit in almost all music. It does wayyyyyyyyyyy better in literature and art, than it does in music. But, sometimes the hard price one pays for that individuality is ... difficult.
For an example, read the post I have on Patti Smith's book and the comments around it. That is called, a very poetic quotidian study of the time and place that created something ... and again, we have to stop with the ideas, to allow it to flow before we can even find what the whole thing is about ... which might never be visible anyway.
This is the hard part, and why I always say, the answer is inside of YOU, and your relationship to the "moment" ... not even the music at all ... which, of course, is a set of terms that some music instructors and musicians themselves don't like ... and immediately get defensive and state ... you can't do that, and in the end, that is simply a perceptual limitation on the player's part and has NOTHING to do with the composer or the teacher, other than ideas.
Also remember that some teachers just want the attention so they can get more students, and I'm ok with that if their interest and love is the kids themselves, otherwise get another teacher, in my book! Edited by moshkito - November 23 2011 at 16:15 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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mrweiner ![]() Forum Newbie ![]() ![]() Joined: November 18 2011 Location: Chico, CA Status: Offline Points: 5 |
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Well said! Yeah I definitely understand that. However, throughout my musical career I've never really been the best at listening to people who are masters in their own right, and internalizing what they do. That's something that I want to work toward now. In my opinion, the best way to create something new and exciting is to understand those who came before you. Whether you imitate, transform, or completely disregard what they did is another issue altogether, but it is a decision that can only be made and understood after extensive listening. |
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If you check out my band I'll love you forever.
"If you always do what you've always done, you'll always be what you've always been." |
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MFP ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: March 31 2009 Status: Offline Points: 9439 |
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BUBU |
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moshkito ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 18064 |
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Hi, Nice thread ...
But while it is very nice to hear these things, and how different people can be, maybe you will see the one thing that will help you the most ... what made these people was not the music per se, but their very special chance at creating something and working themselves into it.
So, in essence, the secret is ... YOU ... when it comes to "making it" and separating yourself from the masses that also play a violin.
I like to blow my ear wax off in a while and here is my favorite list of things to play back to back, and they all have a violin going crazy and then some ...
- Curved Air - Vivaldi with Cannons - 1st album
- String Driven Thing - Tympany for the Devil ( I think it was also done before with McKendree Spring with same violinist)
- Esperanto - Dance Macabre
- Curved Air - Vivaldi with Cannons - Live
- Amon Duul 2 - Apocaliptyc Bore (massive violin guitar duet -- which they also did many other times flat out crazy)
- Darryl Way's Wolf - Anteros
- Peter Hammill - Cat's Eye / Yellow Fever
- Roxy Music - Out of the Blue - (this is Eddie Jobson, who also played keyboards)
- Curved Air - Moonshine (title cut)
- Caravan - "L' Auberge du Sanglier/ A Hunting We Shall Go/Pengola/Backwards/A Hunting We Shall Go (reprise)" (For Girls)
- Jefferson Airplane - Have You Seen the Saucers (Papa John Creech)
- Jefferson Airplane - Ride the Tiger (also Papa)
- Hawkwind - "The Psychedelic Warlords (Disappear in Smoke)" – "Wind of Change" (Simon House)
- Anekdotten - First album
- Par Lindh Project - any album with Magdalena ... she's was way better than he was!
- It's a Beautiful Day - White Bird
After that I can put myself to sleep. Must be long cuts and be vibrant and explode in your speakers out loud, or it's not worth beans!
![]() Ooopppsss ... and no, I did not forget Doug Kershaw, Charlie Daniels and that one guy here in Portland that played with "Group du Jour" that was a magnificent mix of Tull and KC with a violin, and he played flute when he needed a break, or vice versa! Charlie Daniels probably can outplay more than two thirds of these folks listed in PA ... and you know what he would say ... you want what? ...
I was pretty sure that I also saw Robin Williamson (Incredible String Band and solo) also play violin, but it might be better said that there isn't an instrument in the face of the earth that Robin can't play! Edited by moshkito - November 22 2011 at 20:51 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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