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Topic ClosedShould the Beach Boys be considered Proto?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 09 2014 at 09:02
I read you the first time

There is a distinction between progressive music and prog rock. This is why we are not called Progressive Music Archives.
The influences and different avenues that ultimately fuelled prog rock are so far reaching that it is impossible to list all those artists who were forerunners. Jazz for example is quite possibly the biggest influence on prog bands who incorporated improv into the mix - and then I'm not even mentioning the overt heirtaker to the jazz legacy: fusion. Something that many a prog band fiddled about with from KC to Yes. So why don't we have Thelonious Monk, Albert Ayler and Bird up in this mother? They were at the very forefront of improvisation in music and have on many occasions been mentioned as inspiration to prog musicians.
The answer is that we have to draw the line somewhere. The Beach Boys were and have always been considered a pop band - just as Ayler, Bird and Monk were linked to jazz. We can't re-write music history on the back bone of hindsight and a continous effort to blur lines.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 09 2014 at 08:53
These categories are more trouble than they're worth.  That's my opinion.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 09 2014 at 08:40
^Fair enough David, But the topic is proto prog, not prog.

 For those too short sighted too see my error and comment on my post anyway, I've restated it below with the offending error corrected:

"As a retired recording engineer, I can only give a technically based answer of why the Beach Boys should be considered Proto Prog but it is sufficient enough for me to place them in that category. But first I think it is worth noting who (and by who, I'm happy to refer to Brian Wilson for the sake of simplicity) they actually and greatly influenced as opposed to Stockhausen, Varese and Shostakovich as their influences were purely musical and did not directly impact the most influential Rock Music group of the 20th Century. If they did, I think anyone would be hard pressed to come up with a percentage of influence on the Beatles of more than 5%. But I digress.

I put forward Wilson's work in Pet Sounds in that he took disparate (a new word for me) recording practices that were redundant like Phil Spector's ambient and mechanically enhanced echo laden multi instrumental all in one take 'Wall of Sound' approach and, using many of Spector's studio musicians as well as supplementing them with those more classically trained, he recorded 'snatches' of music in musical suites which he would later edit together, over dub vocals or additional musical instruments and made California's Gold Star studios 'his instrument', which in no way was lost on the Beatles and George Martin prior to their recording of Revolver. The fact that Wilson also used non musical instruments such as partially filled Seltzer bottles for percussion with treated studio harmonics was also not lost on the Beatles either.

If Proto Prog is really supposed to mean the prototypical forerunner and inspiration for the late 60's prog that follows, then I think that Pet Sounds and the Beach Boys meet that criteria."   

Addendum: Rubber Soul inspired the Beach Boys to make an album without throw away tracks, in other words a full album of quality songs. Rubber Soul was still engineered by the old school staid Norman Smith, not wunderkind Geoff Emerick and studio experiments were an album away. That album being Revolver to be exact.  





Edited by SteveG - September 09 2014 at 09:09
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 09 2014 at 08:31
I actually agree with most of what you say Steve, but I don't arrive at the same conclusion. I think The Beach Boys were instrumental in pushing both recording techniques and the general 'sound' of a contemporary pop band forth, but I see no proof of that crystallising in the approach of any early prog band to be perfectly honest. They may have influenced The Beatles a great deal, but then again, The Beatles were never a prog band either.
Anyways, if the closest their influences on prog rock ever got were The Beatles, a band who is listed as proto here on PA, then the link is too vague to support an inclusion. We're talking proto-proto prog if anything. The Beach Boys were a mixture of psychedelic, baroque and elaborate pop in the end. Incredibly progressive but not rock nor part of that scene.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 09 2014 at 08:13
Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

... Rubber Soul was recorded before Pet Sounds, it influenced Pet Sounds.

He probably meant Revolver.

You probably meant that he meant Sgt. Pepper 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 09 2014 at 06:13
Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

... Rubber Soul was recorded before Pet Sounds, it influenced Pet Sounds.

He probably meant Revolver.
Chronologically that is all he could have meant, but Pet Sounds was still influenced by Rubber Soul, which was the first Beatles album where they had full creative control in the studio.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 09 2014 at 05:43
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

... Rubber Soul was recorded before Pet Sounds, it influenced Pet Sounds.

He probably meant Revolver.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2014 at 23:44
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

(...)




If Proto Prog is really supposed to mean the prototypical forerunner and inspiration for the late 60's prog that follows, then I think that Pet Sounds and the Beach Boys meet that criteria.       





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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2014 at 18:56
Help me Rhonda, yeah 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2014 at 18:23
... Rubber Soul was recorded before Pet Sounds, it influenced Pet Sounds.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2014 at 15:24
Originally posted by Guldbamsen Guldbamsen wrote:

Well Paul always said that Sgt Pepper was a reaction to Pet Sounds that came out the year before.
I'd say The Beach Boys were very progressive, but rock? Nah....more like progressive pop.
Since I joined the admin team I've also been part of the prog related and proto 'teams', so in the end this lands on my doorstep if any collabs decide to suggest them for proto or related.
My take on it is that we should include them, if we were a progressive pop site, no question about that, but we're not. As for the influence factor, then I guess you'll find a fair few prog acts who felt influenced by them, but then again you'll find just as many claiming Stockhausen, Varese and Shostakovich to have been the main factors of inspiration - all of which were incredibly progressive for their day. Should we start including these as well?

As a retired recording engineer, I can only give a technically based answer of why the Beach Boys should be considered Proto Prog but it is sufficient enough for me to place them in that category. But first I think it is worth noting who (and by who, I'm happy to refer to Brian Wilson for the sake of simplicity) they actually and greatly influenced as opposed to Stockhausen, Varese and Shostakovich as their influences were purely musical and did not directly impact the most influential Rock Music group of the 20th Century. If they did, I think anyone would be hard pressed to come up with a percentage of influence on the Beatles of more than 5%. But I digress.

I put forward Wilson's work in Pet Sounds in that he took disparate (a new word for me) recording practices that were redundant like Phil Spector's ambient and mechanically enhanced echo laden multi instrumental all in one take 'Wall of Sound' approach and, using many of Spector's studio musicians as well as supplementing them with those more classically trained, he recorded 'snatches' of music in musical suites which he would later edit together, over dub vocals or additional musical instruments and made California's Gold Star studios 'his instrument', which in no way was lost on the Beatles and George Martin prior to their recording of Rubber Soul. The fact that Wilson also used non musical instruments such as partially filled Seltzer bottles for percussion with treated studio harmonics was also not lost on the Beatles either.

If Proto Prog is really supposed to mean the prototypical forerunner and inspiration for the late 60's prog that follows, then I think that Pet Sounds and the Beach Boys meet that criteria.      








Edited by SteveG - September 08 2014 at 15:27
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2014 at 23:10
Whether or not they should, it's a fine argument because they straddled the fence of pop and art so early and  interestingly.   For or against doesn't really matter, the impact Brian Wilson's vision and production genius will always be there for us to admire.
"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2014 at 19:45
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

 

Feel free to question what is 'written in stone'. But at least be prepared for some level of rebuttal and don't be too shocked or defensive when it arrives (which it most surely will). In my experience those who question how we do things around here often don't actually know how we do things around here, and that's kinda nutty. Assumptions make an 'ass' out of 'u' and 'mptions' (or something like that).


Just to clear the air, your original response was not futile and indeed was quite informative, and you have made some good points in the above noted post. I do indeed read past posts but as I've said, they mean me little to me but if you and a small hand full are the ones deciding what's Proto, Prog Related, etc, then my questions certainly are fruitless and that's said without prejudice. It's just the way it is, as they say.
For the record. I am not one of those small handful who decides what is Proto or Prog Related, nor am I on one of the several teams that decide the "etc.". 

However, I was once on an "etc." team and for many years I was on the Admin team (along with Angelo who first responded to this thread). One of the responsibilities of the Admin team is to decided the Proto and Prog Related additions.

If you were not aware, Proto Prog and Prog Related suggestions are treated as a special case here at the PA and fall under the domain of the Admins, it is they alone who decide whether a band should be added or not. Adding a band to either of those two categories is not a simple matter of ticking all the boxes on a crib-sheet or having the popular support of a select few members, a band can have all the right credentials to be added and still be rejected by the Admins. I could explain the reasons for that in great detail but I suspect that would be a waste of my time. 

However, I will explain the suggestion process one more time just in case anyone has missed one of the many other occasions where I have explained it:

1. Anyone can suggest a band for Proto Prog or Prog Related.
2. Only a Special Collaborator can propose an artist to the Admin team for PP or PR evaluation.
(full details here)

What this means is that anyone suggesting a band for either of those categories has to convince an SC to propose the band to the Admin team. Just to make that interesting if the proposal is successful the Admin team will then dump the mechanics of adding the band (such as writing the biography and adding the entire discography) back onto the SC who proposed them. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2014 at 09:36
Even though I 'grew up' with bands like The Beach Boys (being an old fart..) I have never been a big fan. I do like many of their singles but never got into the albums overall though I do own Pet Sounds and a singles compilation.
 
Proto Prog..? Not in my opinion and all the various reasons have already been given above and elsewhere.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 06 2014 at 22:34
As a big fan of numerous albums from the various Beach Boys periods, even right up to that plastic sounding self titled album 1985 album, I can safely say there is very little other that sporadic moments scattered across a few albums that would suggest prog-related. An inventive, PROGRESSIVE, daring and experimental pop unit in a few spots no doubt, especially on `Pet Sounds', `Smiley Smile' and parts of the superb `Surf's Up' album, but that's as far as I'd go.

But what a charming and impossibly melodic group of individuals, I'm a very proud owner of most of their discs

I'd love to think The Byrds would have a spot on the Archives, but they're in exactly the same boat as the Beach Boys on this occasion.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 06 2014 at 21:28
Originally posted by Mirror Image Mirror Image wrote:

No and it's as simple as that really.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 06 2014 at 18:19
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

And we'll have prog, prog, prog
Till my daddy takes the T-bird away...

[Insert Robert Fripp lead]

...I'm picking up prog vibrations,
Prog's giving me ex-ci-tations.

Ummm...no. Definitely not.
Progger girl,
My little Progger girl.....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 06 2014 at 11:23
Well Paul always said that Sgt Pepper was a reaction to Pet Sounds that came out the year before.
I'd say The Beach Boys were very progressive, but rock? Nah....more like progressive pop.
Since I joined the admin team I've also been part of the prog related and proto 'teams', so in the end this lands on my doorstep if any collabs decide to suggest them for proto or related.
My take on it is that we should include them, if we were a progressive pop site, no question about that, but we're not. As for the influence factor, then I guess you'll find a fair few prog acts who felt influenced by them, but then again you'll find just as many claiming Stockhausen, Varese and Shostakovich to have been the main factors of inspiration - all of which were incredibly progressive for their day. Should we start including these as well?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 06 2014 at 10:55
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Of course that the Beach Boys ought to be in PA' Proto Prog / Prog Related section.
I've finally got a witness!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 06 2014 at 10:49
Originally posted by KingCrInuYasha KingCrInuYasha wrote:


(...) Their prog period only lasted about two years - with Pet Sounds and The Smile Sessions (...)

Actually, that's enough for Proto Prog / Prog Related section. Those albums are prog. Also, especialy with Pet Sounds, The Beach Boys did exerts very strong influence to many prog musicians who were just started their careers.
A same thing is with The Grateful Dead who are not in Proto Prog / Prog Related section yet although The Dead were released at least two full prog albums - Blues For Allah and Terrapin Station + they were one of two or three the most important bands of 60's Psychedelia movement - actually the most important movement for the birth of Progressive rock.
The Steve Miller Band also ought to be here because of their first two albums from 1968 - "the milestones of the progressive rock genre" as Nick Logan and Bob Woffinden wrote about Sailor and Children of the Future in The illustrated NME Encyclopedia of Rock (1977) as well - together with e.g. the same year released Music In A Doll's House by Family. Steve Miller left the prog genre later on, what means that The Steve Miller Band would not to be in a full PA' prog section, but have to be in PA' Proto Prog / Prog Related section without a question.






Edited by Svetonio - September 06 2014 at 18:23
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