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Joined: February 01 2011
Location: Michigan
Status: Offline
Points: 13020
Posted: November 11 2014 at 22:13
Chris S wrote:
^ Pharrell is hugely talented, make no mistake. Longevity remains to be seen. his work with Nike Rodgers and Daft Punk was especially good.
Again, your definition of "especially good" in no way coincides with mine. But to each his own. Let's just agree that wearing a Yes t-shirt on an inane show like The Voice does not in any way translate into musical influence.
...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
Status: Online
Points: 27836
Posted: November 12 2014 at 00:30
twosteves wrote:
Flame not out--Pharrell ----hippest songwriter producer of our time was on The Voice wearing a Yes tour tee shirt.
You watch 'The Voice'?! Is it any good?! I watch Strictly so I can't say much . At least it has Dave Arch who once played in Greg Lake's touring band. Prog creeping into Saturday nights on the BEEB
Joined: April 29 2006
Location: Atlantais
Status: Offline
Points: 29630
Posted: November 12 2014 at 06:08
The Dark Elf wrote:
Chris S wrote:
^ Pharrell is hugely talented, make no mistake. Longevity remains to be seen. his work with Nike Rodgers and Daft Punk was especially good.
Again, your definition of "especially good" in no way coincides with mine. But to each his own. Let's just agree that wearing a Yes t-shirt on an inane show like The Voice does not in any way translate into musical influence.
I base good on gut reaction and I liked Happy. Seems like a decent pop song to me. Other than that I haven't heard anything else.
The flame has only gone out if you think punk killed prog. If you think no good prog has been made after the '70's. If you ignore the the new generation of old prog fans that are making new music...
Edited by Slartibartfast - November 12 2014 at 06:10
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
Nope, but the fire has definitely spread to other fields than prog. The part that made prog musicians truly progressive in their day is often found in modern electronic music. The search for an altogether new sonic expression and the freedom and will to explore it, yep go to the electronic genre to look for that.
“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
Joined: May 01 2007
Location: NYC/Rhinebeck
Status: Offline
Points: 4085
Posted: November 12 2014 at 09:22
richardh wrote:
twosteves wrote:
Flame not out--Pharrell ----hippest songwriter producer of our time was on The Voice wearing a Yes tour tee shirt.
You watch 'The Voice'?! Is it any good?! I watch Strictly so I can't say much . At least it has Dave Arch who once played in Greg Lake's touring band. Prog creeping into Saturday nights on the BEEB
Do I watch The Voice? No--I channel surf and end up on it for like 3 minutes at a time this season to see Pharrell and Gwen Stephanie as both have had some songs I appreciated but no never sat there for 2 hours and stared at the TV--my brother and a friend texted me with the Yes shirt info---knowing I'm a huge fan.
Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
Posted: November 12 2014 at 09:35
NERD (Pharrell's band) had this album Fly or Die which isn't half bad. That band was reasonably successful, so the way he seemingly sprang out of the woodwork with Happy is strange. Voice is maybe the most tolerable of the big music reality shows, which isn't saying a whole lot. But at least the singing isn't too bad and sometimes the contestants can surprise, like Jean Kelley's performance of Chandelier. The song selections are very unappetizing (for me), that's the main problem.
If I had heard Art Zoyd's "Le Mariage du Ciel et de l' Enfer" in 1972 after my discovery of Jethro Tull's "Thick As A Brick", I would have most likely told you that it was "Progressive Rock". This is a distant observation into the world of music progressing. If people become discouraged over the last 10 years of "Neo Prog', they can always refer back to the underground Prog bands of the 80's and 90's. Many of them were not clones of something written in music or someone that wrote it.
Joined: October 31 2006
Location: Italy
Status: Offline
Points: 13979
Posted: November 13 2014 at 13:35
TODDLER wrote:
If I had heard Art Zoyd's "Le Mariage du Ciel et de l' Enfer" in 1972 after my discovery of Jethro Tull's "Thick As A Brick", I would have most likely told you that it was "Progressive Rock". This is a distant observation into the world of music progressing. If people become discouraged over the last 10 years of "Neo Prog', they can always refer back to the underground Prog bands of the 80's and 90's. Many of them were not clones of something written in music or someone that wrote it.
Le Mariage du Ciel et de l' Enfer --- Great album
I stand with Roger Waters, I stand with Joan Baez, I stand with Victor Jara, I stand with Woody Guthrie. Music is revolution
Joined: June 22 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 16130
Posted: November 14 2014 at 00:21
richardh wrote:
Power To Believe is a great album so King Crimson can safely be left out of this hypothesis.( however read my later comments)
ELP's last album was crap but then they were virtually crippled and trying to churn out an album to save a dying record company ( they might just as well as bombed it for the good it did). Their last brilliant album anyway was 1973's Brain Salad Surgery
Yes - Relayer was the last time they made a significant progressive rock statement imo although there are plenty of good albums that followed and I do like the most recent.
Genesis and the descent into pop music has been discussed to death but then they stopped being a proper working band 20 years ago.
Jethro Tull is the one band of the big five I don't own much of. I'm guessing though that they haven't made anything as good as say Thick and A Brick or A Passion Play since those albums. They found massive success in the USA in the eighties although I gather a lot of it was not proggy . The recent stuff by ian Anderson I do own and its very good but not exactly earth shattering.
Other than KC the big five were on slippery slope from about 1975 onwards. King Crimson has bucked the trend by to all intents and purposes being an ongoing project of Robert Fripp rather than a band in any traditional way. A band has to have an ongoing collaboration of a core membership. King Criimson barely had that at all. Fripp decides what he wanted to to do and then recruites accordingly. Nothing wrong with that and avoids the possibility of lurching head first into self parody which often happens to bands that have been around for thousand of years.
Good summary.
Agree about KC. Fripps approach has meant they have survived and maintained artistic edge. Konstruction of Light wasn't fantastic, but certainly everything up to and including Power to Believe ranks alongside their 70's efforts imo.
Joined: February 10 2010
Location: Barcelona Spain
Status: Offline
Points: 5154
Posted: November 14 2014 at 02:26
As someone pointed, the environmental and cultural circumstances were completely different. Rock music was the main entertainment and vehicle for cultural expression for the youth of the early 70's. People awaited eagerly for the new albums, went to the shop to buy them, they shared them, listened to them together, discussed them, got stoned together listening to them, studied and discussed the artwork, copied the clothing styles of their musical heroes, hanged posters in their bedrooms, bought the music magazines because they talked about those bands... The bands knew this so they were engaged in a certain form of competition for becoming the most appealing and talked-about, musically and as a cultural and entertainment act.
Those of us who learnt Prog in the 70's can't avoid having our perception of the classic masterpieces linked to those environmental factors, which very probably gives them a deeper dimension in our hearts, and we may feel that although great music is surely made today (possibly even better from a purely technical point of view), some of the magic is gone.
But I am not sure if the young generations who are discovering the 70's classics now, free from their original environmental circumstances, agree that they were so much better than many modern great Prog albums.
I have discovered many truly fantastic modern albums, but the discovery experience is now much colder, I learn about them through the internet, order them online, I'm usually alone when I receive them and listen to them for the first times, and if I like them the only chance to share them and discuss them is with a few close friends who as myself do not have much time anymore for music, or through the net in places like PA with people I don't even know.
It's not "the flame" which is gone, it's the times.
Joined: January 18 2014
Location: Mar Vista, CA
Status: Offline
Points: 4807
Posted: November 14 2014 at 10:41
As long as bored 15-year-old boys are still around and sneaking into their fathers' dens to discover and pull out that battered copy of Yes' Fragile for a spin, there's still hope...
Joined: November 06 2012
Location: here
Status: Offline
Points: 8856
Posted: November 14 2014 at 10:52
Rednight wrote:
As long as bored 15-year-old boys are still around and sneaking into their fathers' dens to discover and pull out that battered copy of Yes' Fragile for a spin, there's still hope...
Jack and his friends were shivering with excitement, anticipation in their secret hideout. They knew the girls wouldn't approve of what they were looking at. But they were young and who cared about those sissies anyway? They stared at the glossy cover of what Jack had found in his father's top drawer. This was it. A prog album.
Joined: January 18 2014
Location: Mar Vista, CA
Status: Offline
Points: 4807
Posted: November 14 2014 at 12:29
Polymorphia wrote:
Rednight wrote:
As long as bored 15-year-old boys are still around and sneaking into their fathers' dens to discover and pull out that battered copy of Yes' Fragile for a spin, there's still hope...
Jack and his friends were shivering with excitement, anticipation in their secret hideout. They knew the girls wouldn't approve of what they were looking at. But they were young and who cared about those sissies anyway? They stared at the glossy cover of what Jack had found in his father's top drawer. This was it. A prog album.
"Like some tacky little pamphlet In your daddy's bottom drawer..." -Zappa
That's all that comes to mind, quite frankly. And don't quit your day job.
Joined: April 01 2009
Location: Atlanta
Status: Offline
Points: 26138
Posted: November 14 2014 at 12:38
Gerinski wrote:
As someone pointed, the environmental and cultural circumstances were completely different. Rock music was the main entertainment and vehicle for cultural expression for the youth of the early 70's. People awaited eagerly for the new albums, went to the shop to buy them, they shared them, listened to them together, discussed them, got stoned together listening to them, studied and discussed the artwork, copied the clothing styles of their musical heroes, hanged posters in their bedrooms, bought the music magazines because they talked about those bands... The bands knew this so they were engaged in a certain form of competition for becoming the most appealing and talked-about, musically and as a cultural and entertainment act.
Those of us who learnt Prog in the 70's can't avoid having our perception of the classic masterpieces linked to those environmental factors, which very probably gives them a deeper dimension in our hearts, and we may feel that although great music is surely made today (possibly even better from a purely technical point of view), some of the magic is gone.
But I am not sure if the young generations who are discovering the 70's classics now, free from their original environmental circumstances, agree that they were so much better than many modern great Prog albums.
I have discovered many truly fantastic modern albums, but the discovery experience is now much colder, I learn about them through the internet, order them online, I'm usually alone when I receive them and listen to them for the first times, and if I like them the only chance to share them and discuss them is with a few close friends who as myself do not have much time anymore for music, or through the net in places like PA with people I don't even know.
It's not "the flame" which is gone, it's the times.
Agree.
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.
Nope, but the fire has definitely spread to other fields than prog. The part that made prog musicians truly progressive in their day is often found in modern electronic music. The search for an altogether new sonic expression and the freedom and will to explore it, yep go to the electronic genre to look for that.
I felt this way about Ron Geesin's last official release..Ron Cycle 1
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