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tamijo View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 12 2015 at 02:03
Instrumental, think that is basicaly the answer. Very Very few instrumental albums will hit a broad span of listeners.
Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 12 2015 at 01:02
Originally posted by Lear'sFool Lear'sFool wrote:

^ That violin is more jazz then you think. Compare Jerry Goodman's violin with that of Jean-Luc Ponty - the violinist on Apocalypse and Visions, in fact, but see also Enigmatic Ocean - and contrast with that of David Cross.
Exactly Clap
In fact, there were a lot of bands who were released their magnificent instrumental tracks that are jazz-rock / fusion, and though there is actually more rock than jazz, they still remain in a frame of jazz-rock / fusion genre.
 
 
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 12 2015 at 00:34
^ That violin is more jazz then you think. Compare Jerry Goodman's violin with that of Jean-Luc Ponty - the violinist on Apocalypse and Visions, in fact, but see also Enigmatic Ocean - and contrast with that of David Cross.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 23:07
Originally posted by petewhit petewhit wrote:

Mahavishnu is fusion not prog rock.  In my opinion The Inner Mounting Flame and Birds of Fire were the best and it went down from there.  Some bands are destined for a short lifespan, especially a band with the intensity of the Mahavishnu Orchestra.  


Fusion?  Fusion of what? Jazz and rock? Where is the Jazz? Please explain.  The drums are not jazz, the bass is not jazz, the guitar is not jazz, keyboards?  Maybe slightly.  Violin? I don't hear anything along the lines of traditional jazz. 

Mahavishnu sounds as prog rock as anything I can imagine. 

Isn't prog rock a fusion of things also?  Rock and Classical, Jazz, Folk, Psychedelic, New Age, Electronica.

If there is any genre of music that should be labeled fusion it is prog rock.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 21:49
--My Goal's Beyond--

I enjoyed side one with only John McLaughlin playing various acoustic guitar tracks.
Side two was acoustic guitar with the rest of the band and consisted of two long cuts. As mentioned by others here some of the other musicians were not always "comfortable" to listen to.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 21:08
I love apocalypse. Call it prog or fusion. It was an extremely brave album. It fails in certain sections, but in others parts it reaches a 'fusion' of instrumentation that has rarely been accomplished elsewhere. Some really haunting melodies. 


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 19:49
Digging through my J/R/F albums (I wasn't sure from memory what I had) I came up with ---
Inner Worlds 
Between Nothingness & Eternity - live
John McLaughlin     His Acoustic Guitar - My Goal's Beyond


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 16:43
Originally posted by petewhit petewhit wrote:

Some bands are destined for a short lifespan, especially a band with the intensity of the Mahavishnu Orchestra.  

I agree. There's always some point where the band flames out from way too much extreme savageness that they play. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 13:12
Mahavishnu is fusion not prog rock.  In my opinion The Inner Mounting Flame and Birds of Fire were the best and it went down from there.  Some bands are destined for a short lifespan, especially a band with the intensity of the Mahavishnu Orchestra.  


Edited by petewhit - January 11 2015 at 13:44
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 12:06
Well....I don't think they lasted long enough (consistent..) in a trad sense to become one of the prog greats and it's has been pointed out they were fusion more than prog, but the first 2 albums are a must for any  collector of fusion/prog . There are tracks on those that are as good as anything the so-called prog greats did.
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 12:01
Originally posted by dr prog dr prog wrote:

Originally posted by Argonaught Argonaught wrote:

I can't speak for the humankind in general, but I could tell you why I never listen to Mahavishnu Orchestra (while recognizing their talent and innovation). Based on the Birds, Emerald, Flame and another album, the name of which I forgot;

Goodman's violentin is highly irritating; things got better wtih J-L.P, but I prefer his solo albums.
McLaughlin's guitar is highly irritating; he gets mellower and more listenable towards the Radioland.
Cobham's drumming is highly irritating, with Maha or solo.

They create a ragged, jagged, serrated pile-up of sound that takes too much effort to process. 


 

 


I agree but I do like cobhams drumming. I think Inner worlds is their best album. It's more relaxed, has no violin from what I remember and has some catchy moments
I agree.
Btw, I love Vital Transformation  from Inner Worlds  the album. I think that this is one of few The Mahavisnu Orchestra's "straight in the face" jazz-rock tracks that could be comparable to Return to Forever's amazing & timeless Vulcan Worlds  (from Where Have I Know You Before, composed by Stanley Clarke) of which I think that it's the best 70s jazz-rock track.


Edited by Svetonio - January 11 2015 at 12:05
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 09:49
There is an honesty in the feel of the recordings of Mahavishnu that I don't hear from Weather Report or Return to Forever, Brand X etc.  The typical jazz fusion stuff started trying to fuse that loose improv style with Steely Dan production values.  It all sounds a bit sterile and over produced.  I suspect that was one of the reasons Punk Rock took off.  People got tired of perfectly produced albums that not only came across as pretentious but for all intent and purpose were pretentious.  A lot of the prog went down that wormhole to, and that continues to this day.

I would love to hear a quality new prog band just get back to basics and lay down their recording live with some of that passion and feel that Mahavishnu did so well.  There is something about that era and the limitations that were just part of that era kept things sounding more honest and natural.  I like the early Pink Floyd stuff for that reason also.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 02:46
Originally posted by Skullhead Skullhead wrote:

(...) 

I don't the the jazz thing either.  I don't hear anything that sounds like traditional jazz music.  The band is driven by Cobham who has jazz chops for speed, but plays with rock energy completely.

I personally prefer the later version with Ponty and Narada Walden on drum kit.  It's much more refined and anyone here who hasn't checked them out yet should listen to "Visions of the Emerald Beyond" first, then Apocalypse, and if you like those albums, then go back to Birds of Fire and Inner Mounting Flame.

Check out "Devotion"If you like the first two, (Birds, and Inner Mounting) there is another great album called "My Goals Beyond"where McLaughlin did two solo albums that set the groundwork sound for Mahavishnu.

If you get into "Visions of the Emerald Beyond" then make sure to check out Jeff Beck's "Wired" where he basically took Jan Hammer and Narada Walden from Mahavishu for his own.  It's a similar style but with Jeff Beck on guitar instead of John McLaughlin.  Beck followed with his classic "Blow by Blow".  That was the pinnacle of his career in my opinion.
John McLaughlin's solo album simply called Electric Guitarist (1978) is way better than all the Mahavisnu Orchestra's post-Birds of Fire 'ultra-spiritual' albums that sounds today to me like a 'classic' World Fusion stuff, not as jazz-rock as well.

Sadly enough, Electric Guitarist  was released in the middle of New Wave mass-hysteria and that great album was (and sadly still to be) underrated as much as the Mahavishnu Orchestra's albums from their 'hyper-spiritual' and pretty new-agey phase that were overrated at the time they were recorded & released.
Just my opinion, of course.





Edited by Svetonio - January 11 2015 at 06:17
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 01:45
Originally posted by Lear'sFool Lear'sFool wrote:

(...) Mainly because of McLaughlin, they ended up favouring rock elements over jazz elements, in spite of their backgrounds. Must have something to do with McLaughlin honing his skills with bands like The Graham Bond Organisation (....)
Of course; he was there with Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker Wink


Edited by Svetonio - January 11 2015 at 01:48
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 01:39
^ Probably the biggest thing the band took from their jazz background was a semi-improvisational nature that resists overdubs, which musicians and fans of the genre particularly loathed - many jazz fans went nuclear when Miles did some overdubbing on Bitches Brew, for further example.

Mainly because of McLaughlin, they ended up favouring rock elements over jazz elements, in spite of their backgrounds. Must have something to do with McLaughlin honing his skills with bands like The Graham Bond Organisation before Tony Williams found him.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 01:30
I like that Mahavishnu records all sounded and felt live.  Yes, there are occasional overdubs, but there is no doubt that most of it went down live.  I don't feel that energy of live interplay in much modern prog for instance.  DT sounds like a great studio offering all synced up nicely with click tracks and endless digital editing.  Today's standard for high production sounds completely sterilized when compared to a listen to Mahavishnu.  They were a great live band that delivered.  Mahavishu doesn't come across to me as showboating.  I think what they were doing was creating a high energy interplay for the listener, that worked as a texture more than a "look at me" vibe.  It sounds musical.  There are gorgeous passages of slower music then contrasting with fast then frenetic.  They were going for full spectrum. 

I don't the the jazz thing either.  I don't hear anything that sounds like traditional jazz music.  The band is driven by Cobham who has jazz chops for speed, but plays with rock energy completely.

I personally prefer the later version with Ponty and Narada Walden on drum kit.  It's much more refined and anyone here who hasn't checked them out yet should listen to "Visions of the Emerald Beyond" first, then Apocalypse, and if you like those albums, then go back to Birds of Fire and Inner Mounting Flame.

Check out "Devotion"If you like the first two, (Birds, and Inner Mounting) there is another great album called "My Goals Beyond"where McLaughlin did two solo albums that set the groundwork sound for Mahavishnu.

If you get into "Visions of the Emerald Beyond" then make sure to check out Jeff Beck's "Wired" where he basically took Jan Hammer and Narada Walden from Mahavishu for his own.  It's a similar style but with Jeff Beck on guitar instead of John McLaughlin.  Beck followed with his classic "Blow by Blow".  That was the pinnacle of his career in my opinion.


Edited by Skullhead - January 11 2015 at 01:34
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2015 at 01:22
Steely Dan's Aja is also a jazz-rock, but it's a gloriously LP as much as the anything great by the symph bands that are mentioned in OP. Because Aja is the vocal jazz-rock LP with ingeniously composed songs  that are radio-friendly and yet meet the highest level of the genre.


Edited by Svetonio - January 11 2015 at 02:19
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 10 2015 at 23:45
Originally posted by Lear'sFool Lear'sFool wrote:

Originally posted by jayem jayem wrote:

Originally posted by Lear'sFool Lear'sFool wrote:

^ Prog can go either way. Crimson and the Giant's hardly relaxed, just to start...

Eh, eh...Crimson has the storms and rushes that made them so enjoyable, but you also have chillouts like after the LTIA I solo, or they have Exiles, and Trio. We'll Let You Know takes its time. So much more "relaxed" times than in Mahavishnu. Giant feels much less "speedy" and on the nerve, esp when sung falsetto.

Mahavishnu...Very long busy tracks, and in some ways less contrasting moods and tracks than KC or Giant...

Birds of Fire had "Thousand Island Park" and "Hope", just to start. I have no idea where you're coming from.

Anyone who can express better the way I hear (and listen to)  them is no less than welcome.

I'd consider Mahavishnu slightly closer to jazz, despite proggish moments, and Crimson's overall energies closer to rock, in spite of KC's flirting often with jazz.

When I say "horizontal" I mean light, quick, line-oriented music (of fill-in on drums), and vertical I'd say chord-oriented, slow, heavy.

If that doesn't feel right I'll stick with Gerinsky's comment, and try to post better messages next time...







Edited by jayem - January 11 2015 at 00:15
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 10 2015 at 23:30
Originally posted by Gerinski Gerinski wrote:

There was one time when Prog Rock and Jazz-Rock were considered as 2 different things, so it's quite logical that MO were then not considered among the bigs of Prog Rock, but they were always the bigs of Jazz-Rock together with Return To Forever, Weather Report etc (and consequently equivalent to the big Prog giants, although Jazz-Rock was less commercially successful).
KC (or other bands) may have infiltrated jazz elements in their Prog but they defined much of the symphonic sound with their seminal early works so by the time they had become more experimental they were already considered Prog Rock giants by many.


I agree.  Also, they were nearly entirely instrumental.  

The amazing "Visions of the Emerald Beyond" featuring Jean Luc Ponty wandered off into symphonic territory, with choir vocals!  This is great stuff, vocals come in at 1:40

Interestingly, Jon Anderson is now teamed up with Jean Luc Ponty in the Anderson-Ponty Band!  The first cuts are very interesting, sort of a blend of traditional Jon Anderson with some jazz-rock composition!  


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 10 2015 at 16:38
Originally posted by Rednight Rednight wrote:

I'd say Birds of Fire is prog.
I agree.
After Birds of Fire, their music was started to suffer from John McLaughlin's excessive try to connect it with the spiritual things of the Sri Chimnoy's cult to which he belonged (imo).
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