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richardh View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 02:56
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

For something that's deemed to be so small, Punk's lasting impact on music cannot be underestimated. There would be no New Wave movement without it and no Grudge movement as a response to New Wave. And let's not forget the entire arty Post Punk movement. Prog simply has not have had that impact on Pop music, regardless of how big it was, unless we look in terms of Punk being a reaction to Prog, which would place Prog right back into the negative light that it was cast into in the middle to later seventies.


Have to agree with most of this but as for the reasons, things get a tad blurry hereabouts. As Dean has correctly pointed out already, Punk's musical legacy was rudimentary and meager at best, until such time as we reached circa '79 and the so-called Post Punk artists emerged. I guess that what Punk bequeathed to music were the sorts of values I personally still hold dear e.g. discipline, brevity, economy, focus, structure etc in stark contrast to the spacey improvs and lengthy noodly meanderings that afflict some of the worst Prog. It also probably goes without saying that Punk was accessible so that anyone with a very basic set of chops and a cheap guitar could join a band with like minded souls without being subjected to ridicule or having to attend a conservatoire beforehand. Similarly, the subject matter was considerably more pragmatic, prosaic and political (at least in the UK) than the sort of conceptual tangents so beloved of Sinfield, Anderson, Gabriel, Lake et al. Prog was effectively overripe and rotting by circa 1974/75 and had lost much of its customer base. I'm still unsure what deserting Prog fans started to listen to instead between then and the end of the decade?
 
Some of the new stuff was worth listening to. The Stranglers were a weird mix of styles and I just happened to listen to Grip this morning which has prog keyboards/bass but very punkish singing and lyrics. This played well across all audiences. I was also very found of Siouxsie and The Banshees who were not your average band. Then you had the emergence of Kate Bush from nowhere it seemed which caught everyone by surprise. From across the pond there was also The Tubes who managed to confuse the hell out of everyone!! I would also add Be Bop Deluxe who were kinda of punkish in some respects and then Bill Nelson adopted the new wave approach with Red Noise. Of course we can also talk about Peter Gabriel and the rise of metal (Iron Maiden . Motorhead) that was massive at the time and did appeal to rock fans generally because they were bloody good!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 04:07
The thing most frequently said about the Stranglers was "well, they were never really a Punk band"... Jet Black has even said they were never a Punk band. In the main they were treated with suspicion within the punk scene fro being too old, too intellectual and too musical. Burnell was trained as a classical guitarist, Greenfield's keyboards would sit comfortably alongside Mazarek's and Jet Black was in his 40's in 1977.

" Up until that point it’s almost politically incorrect to admit your influences. But you can tell by just listening to the music. On our first album, the nearest thing we had to a prog rock song was this four-part piece called Down In The Sewer. That was about 11 minutes long and it was a suite. Prog rock, essentially, even if it was prog ŕ la Beefheart and The Doors. " .... JJ Burnell, Classic Rock Magazine.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 09:56
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Since you are a songwriter who teaches others I would have thought that Sting's 'articulate song about being inarticulate' would have been regarded as serious enough subject matter.
My post was not a knock against Sting's lyrical abilities. It was only an example of the New Wave subject matter, which was generally not of a serious nature. 
 
Nice dodge. Glad to see you back in old form. Wink


Edited by SteveG - March 10 2015 at 14:37
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 12:55
Originally posted by Komandant Shamal Komandant Shamal wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Just to illustrate how the punk movement was big in my country and how much Punk was popular in former Yugoslavia, here's a feature film Dečko koji Obećava ("The Promising Boy") about the punk movement in former Yugoslavia that was a big hit in cinemas across the country in 1981: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZddmkTQsZaE (English subtitles, drama genre). The members of Belgrade's post-punk band Šarlo Akrobata - already in Prog Archives as an "avant-prog" act what always make me laugh - are also starring in this film. Released in 1981, it was one of the first feature films with the theme of Punk ever filmed. Not that much feature 'punk-movies' was filmed before Yugoslav "The Promising Boy", as e.g. British film Jubilee with Adam Ant from 1977, Rock'n'Roll Highschool, an American comedy with The Ramones from 1979, Dutch movie Cha Cha with Lene Lovich and Nina Hagen from 1979 and the British film Breaking Glass  with Hazel O'Connor from 1980.
In February 1981, one of the major record companies in former Yugoslavia, Jugoton, released a punk / post-punk compilation album titled Paket Aranžman ("Package Deal") with the songs of the most popular Yugoslav punk / post-punk bands; that album sold tremendously well to this day, as it reached a cult status.
 
Both mentioned film and the compilation were a final "victory" of Punk aesthetics here. As a music genre, Punk in my country represented a complete break with the Progressive rock because young bands were completely turned into punk and (or) post-punk. Progressive rock in my country has not yet recovered from Punk hysteria then gripped the former Yugoslavia in late 70s / early 80s. 
 
A few days ago, a former Yugoslav punk rocker (who also starring with his band in "The Promising Boy" the movie), Vlada Divljan from "Idoli" ("Idols") died by cancer at 57. As a young man he was one of the pioneers of the punk movement here, and the government is seriously considering to declare a day of mourning in the capital of Serbia. That's how big youth movement it was here.
Great post, comrade Svetonio! hey what about some LIVE FOOTAGE of 80s Yugoslavia post-punk grooves? it would be nice:
 
Nice video of EKV... However, as you know, it is a sad story with that band. It is worth to say that it was the Punk that bring heroin to Yugoslavia. All of them in that video, except the drummer, were destroyed themselfs with heroin and died one by one. Of course it was some heroin in Yugoslavia before the Punk hysteria, but these were isolated cases because the youngsters enjoyed hashish in 70s. With Punk, Yugoslavia was coming to an epidemic of young people death caused by intravenous use of heroin (overdose and AIDS).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 16:46
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

The thing most frequently said about the Stranglers was "well, they were never really a Punk band"... Jet Black has even said they were never a Punk band. In the main they were treated with suspicion within the punk scene fro being too old, too intellectual and too musical. Burnell was trained as a classical guitarist, Greenfield's keyboards would sit comfortably alongside Mazarek's and Jet Black was in his 40's in 1977.

" Up until that point it’s almost politically incorrect to admit your influences. But you can tell by just listening to the music. On our first album, the nearest thing we had to a prog rock song was this four-part piece called Down In The Sewer. That was about 11 minutes long and it was a suite. Prog rock, essentially, even if it was prog ŕ la Beefheart and The Doors. " .... JJ Burnell, Classic Rock Magazine.

 
Yep I well remember Fluff playing them on the prog show and they were the 'punk band' adopted by most prog fans
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 17:53
The Stranglers. Punk? Post Punks? Something else? Or all three?
Decide for yourself:
 
Biography excerpt from Allmusic,
"The Stranglers
formed as the Guildford Stranglers in the southern England village of Chiddingfold (near Guildford) in 1974, plowing a heavily Doors-influenced furrow through the local pub rock scene -- such as it was. Of the four founding members, only Hugh Cornwell had any kind of recognizable historical pedigree, having played alongside Richard Thompson in the schoolboy band Emil & the Detectives. According to Thompson, their repertoire stretched from "Smokestack Lightning" and the blues, through to "old Kiki Dee B-sides," while their gigging was largely confined to the Hornsey School of Art, where Thompson's sister was Social Secretary.

The Guildford Stranglers were confined to a similar circuit. It was 1975 before they ventured into even the London suburbs, although once there -- and having shortened their name to the less parochial Stranglers -- things began moving quickly. The established pub rock scene was dying and promoters were willing to give any unknown band a break, simply to try and establish a new hierarchy. Thus it was that as the first stirrings of punk began to make their own presence felt on the same circuit, The Stranglers were on board the bandwagon from the beginning.

 

Their early songs, too, radiated the same ugly alienation that was the proto-punk movement's strongest calling card. Material like "Peasant in the Big sh*tty," "I Feel Like a Wog," "Down in the Sewer," and "Ugly" itself were harsh, uncompromising, and grotesque, a muddy blurge of sound cut through with Dave Greenfield's hypnotically Doors-like keyboards that was possessed of as much attitude as it was detectable musical competence. One uses the word guardedly, but "highlights" of this period were included on the 1994 archive release Live, Rare & Unreleased 1974-1976.

By mid-1976 The Stranglers already had enough force behind them to be booked as opening act at the Ramones' first London show, and Mark P., editor of the newly launched punk fanzine Sniffin' Glue, conferred further punk approval on the band when he wrote, "their sound is 1976...The Stranglers are a pleasure to boogie to -- sometimes they sound like the Doors, other times like Television, but they've got an ID of their own." Further prestige accompanied the band's opening slot for Patti Smith in October -- and that despite most of the audience walking out long before the band left the stage; by the time the band set out on their own first U.K. tour, they had signed with UA (A&M in America) and were preparing to record their debut album with producer Martin Rushent.

 
"(Get A) Grip (On Yourself)," The Stranglers' debut single, made the lower reaches of the Top 50; Rattus Norvegicus, their first album, confirmed the group as one of the fastest developing bands on the entire scene -- even as the scene itself still puzzled over whether The Stranglers even belonged on board. "Old hairy misogynists" was a common accusation to fling in their direction, and it was one which The Stranglers themselves delighted in encouraging. In a more PC climate, their first U.K. Top Ten hit, summer 1977's "Peaches," would never even have been written, let alone recorded, while the bandmembers' reputation as sexual bad boys was only exacerbated by other songs in their repertoire: "London Lady," "Bring on the Nubiles," "Choosy Susie."

The fact that much of their lyrical prowess was built around the darkest hued of black humors never entered many people's minds at the time, but listen again to their finest moments -- "Hangin' Around," "Down in the Sewer," the mindless boogie of "Go Buddy Go," and the sheer vile joys of "Ugly" -- and try to keep an even halfway straight face.

Unfortunately, though The Stranglers themselves reveled in an almost Monty Python-esque grasp of absurdity (and, in particular, the absurdities of modern "men's talk"), there was an undercurrent of violence that not only permeated their music, it also, inevitably, spilled into their live shows. Their fall 1977 British tour was marred by some very ugly scenes, while a trip to Sweden brought them into violent confrontation with the Raggere, that country's equivalent of Britain's punk-hating Teddy Boys. Hugh Cornwell's choice of T-shirts (a Ford logo reworked to read  "F*ck") brought the band into conflict with London's local council, while the group's decision to line their stage with topless dancing girls when they played a concert in that city's Battersea Park brought women's groups screaming down on them, too.               

Yet despite so much controversy, The Stranglers' grip on the British chart seemed unbreakable. "Peaches" was followed by "Something Better Change" and might easily have been joined by a passionate cover of "Mony Mony" had the band not opted to hide behind the pseudonym of the Mutations, accompanying singer Celia Gollin on the number. (A second Celia & the Mutations single, "You Better Believe Me," followed late in 1977.) "No More Heroes," the driving title track to The Stranglers' second album, was another huge hit, although the album itself was a disappointment -- recorded in a hurry, with little time to write new material, it was largely comprised of older songs that had been passed over for Rattus. Within months, a new Stranglers album was on the streets, and this time they got everything right. Black and White was previewed by the hits "Five Minutes" and "Nice'n'Sleazy" (self-mythology in a nutshell), and was swiftly followed by one of the band's finest moments, a murderously slowed-down version of Bacharach/David's "Walk on By."               

 

More importantly, Black and White was the last Stranglers album to even flirt with the socio-sexual shock troop imagery that fired their first records; with the live X Cert album (their first for IRS in America) rounding off 1978 with a final flurry of gruffness, the band was now free to experiment beyond even the most indulgent fan's wildest imaginings.

 

1979's The Raven saw them moving toward both psychedelia and radio-friendly pop -- "The Duchess," Top 20 that summer, was a classic tune by anybody's standards and, while a flurry of solo activity from Jean Jacques Burnel (The Euroman Cometh) and Hugh Cornwell (Nosferatu) raised rumors that the band was reaching the end of its lifespan, in fact it was their non-musical activities that came closest to bursting the bubble, after Cornwell was sentenced to three months imprisonment for drug possession in January 1980.               

 

The band regrouped following his release and banged out two albums in a year, the concept Meninblack and the extraordinarily ambitious La Folie -- home of their biggest hit single yet, "Golden Brown." It reached number two in Britain, although two other singles from the same album, "Let Me Introduce You to the Family" and "La Folie" itself, contrarily proved among their least successful so far.              

 

"Strange Little Girl," specially recorded for the hits compilation The Collection 1977-1982, returned the band to the Top Ten the following summer and, having moved from UA to Epic, The Stranglers rounded out 1982 with the "European Female" single and Feline album, defiantly pop-heavy albums flavored by the group's own special take on the then-prevalent synthesizer sounds. This phase of the band's development reached a nadir of sorts with 1984's Aural Sculpture, the least engaging of their albums to date, and the least successful -- it faltered at number 14, with the exquisite "Skin Deep" single drawn up one place lower.               

 

Two years of near silence followed, punctuated only by a succession of under-performing British 45s -- American releases were even rarer. "Nice in Nice," a commentary on a six-year-old misadventure in the French city of that name, "Always the Sun," "Big in America," and "Shakin' Like a Leaf," drawn from the 1986 album Dreamtime, ensured the band remained very much a sideshow into the late '80s, but 1988 finally brought a massive turnaround in their fortunes. That January, a wildly churning cover of the Kinks' "All Day and All of the Night" powered The Stranglers back into the Top Ten, to be followed by a new live album of the same name.             

 

Another long silence followed but, sticking with covers, The Stranglers were back to their best with ? & the Mysterians' "96 Tears" in early 1990, a taster for the album 10. A second hits collection, Greatest Hits 1977-1990, stuffed stockings across Europe that Christmas, but any serious attempt at a lasting revival was stymied by the departure of Cornwell for a solo career. He was replaced by John Ellis, a former member of fellow pub-to-punk graduates the Vibrators, and Sniff 'n' the Tears frontman Paul Roberts, and the new-look Stranglers re-emerged on the China indie in early 1992.             

 

A new album, Stranglers in the Night, appeared that fall, together with the minor hit "Heaven or Hell"; by year's end, however, drummer Jet Black, too, had departed. He was replaced by Tikake Tobe and, in this form, the group recorded yet another live album, Saturday Night Sunday Morning, before Black returned for 1995's About Time. The group's studio set Coup de Grace was issued in 1998, after which Ellis left the band, to be replaced by Baz Warne. Their next album, Norfolk Coast, was a surprise success in 2004, spawning a Top 40 hit in "Big Thing Coming." After this record, Roberts departed and the group released Suite XVI in 2006. Six years later, they put out their 17th album, Giants.

 

Each of their UA/Epic albums was reissued with generous helpings of bonus tracks, while 1992 saw the release of a classic 1977 live show, Live at the Hope & Anchor, together with a collection of the band's (surprisingly inventive) 12" singles and a fabulous box set drawn from the 1976-1982 period, The Old Testament. Further live albums have since appeared, as has a remarkable document of the band's three BBC sessions, from 1977 and 1982.

That it is those earliest years that remain The Stranglers' most popular is not surprising -- from bad-mannered yobs to purveyors of supreme pop delicacies, the group was responsible for music that may have been ugly and might have been crude -- but it was never, ever boring. That people are still offended by it only adds to its delight -- if rock & roll (especially punk rock & roll) was meant to be pleasant, it would never have changed the world, after all. The fact that much of The Stranglers' message was actually hysterically funny -- as they themselves intended it to be -- only adds to their modern appeal. And the fact that their fans are still called upon to defend them only proves them right. 



Edited by SteveG - March 10 2015 at 18:00
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 18:20
Copywrong.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 18:30
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Since you are a songwriter who teaches others I would have thought that Sting's 'articulate song about being inarticulate' would have been regarded as serious enough subject matter.

My post was not a knock against Sting's lyrical abilities. It was only an example of the New Wave subject matter, which was generally not of a serious nature. 
 
Nice dodge. Glad to see you back in old form. Wink



So are you saying that de do do do de da da da is not serious subject matter?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 18:52
^It's not a serious subject on this planet.

Edited by SteveG - March 10 2015 at 19:00
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 18:57
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:


^Not on this planet.

is that No you're not saying that or No it isn't serious subject matter?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 19:04
^I edited my original post for clarity. It is a record, after all.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 19:17
Okay... I think a treatise on the banality and abuse of language is a serious subject matter, you don't. We'll leave it there then.

Edited by Dean - March 10 2015 at 19:18
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2015 at 19:35
More like illogical Wink
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 04:57
This thread has reminded me to finally go investigate listening to The Stranglers, which I've been meaning to for a while. Not sure how much I can contribute to the rest of the discussion, other than share my anecdotes from whatever experience I have interacting with a lot of people from the crust/grind/hardcore milieu here in Denmark. Which is a couple generations removed from the original 1970s punk era discussed here, which I also think focuses mostly on the UK/US too.

All I can say is that I think the common ground between punk and progressive rock came in part from the 1960s psychedelic scene, where the garage psych scene was influential on punk later on. Notice that it was Lenny Kaye, an associate of Patti Smith, who compiled the Nuggets anthology which is like the definitive chronicle of that scene. Then there is the fact I've never met a punk who didn't love Roky Erickson and the 13th Floor Elevators. Progressive rock then came from the British psychedelic rock scene beginning to incorporate classical influences starting with The Moody Blues, Traffic and their ilk.

From my vantage point in history, I get the impression the rest of the overlap was in the early-1970s glam rock movement. Like I said earlier, it's pretty clear even to someone my age that its rawer and more aggressive sector like the New York Dolls and The Sweet were a huge influence on punk, but also that the subculture had an artier and more technically proficient overlapping with prog rock as seen in a group like Queen. Hell, I could just mention that David Bowie collaborated with both Robert Fripp and Iggy Pop.

Then again, that's just what it looks like to a member of "Generation Y" who knows most of this information second- or third-hand from interviews and books and reviews.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 06:09
^^^  There's actually a photograph of Patti Smith with Annie Haslam after attending a Renaissance concert in 1974.  

I am sure some of the differences that caused both sides to indulge in some verbal warfare at the time must have indeed been ideological.  But the nagging suspicion lingers that some of it was also myth making.  I have seen a similar scenario play out closer home in the 90s (won't mention it as it would be hard to relate to).  But basically the newer upstart guy used some unpleasant truths about the older guy's eccentricities to build up a huge myth to all but burn the latter's effigies and 'herald' a 'new era'.  The older guy was far more musically accomplished and fond of complexity in music, by the by.  Does read like the punk reaction to prog.  They  had songs to sing, they wanted to make their own voice heard too.  But the prog guys were signed up to the big labels and they were gifted musicians.  So why not build up a legend around prog's pretentiousness so that the audience might regard it as a terrible thing and forget it ever existed?  No other genre of rock or pop seems to have been consigned so brutally to oblivion by the mainstream so the potential for myth making seems to be there.

P.S:  I am quite fond of some post punk bands like Siouxsie & the Banshees, Magazine (not sure how I should classify Clash).  This is just in case anybody feels tempted to mark the above observations down as prog snobbery.


Edited by rogerthat - March 11 2015 at 06:13
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 06:37
Like I said on the thread's first page, most punks I know aren't adverse to more technically involved music or ambitious songwriting at all since quite a few hardcore punk groups of this generation match that description. I even posted a link to the bandcamp page of a grind/HC band I'm friends with IRL that happens to be very strongly influenced by Gorguts and Voivod, who have been quite well received by the punk milieu in my country while also pulling off some pretty damn complex arrangements.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 06:47
Yeah, the antipathy between the two factions seems to have faded away with that generation.  It is not that I don't appreciate punk's DIY approach.  It's just that it doesn't have to be a dichotomy, an either-or as it was made out to be at the time.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 06:51
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 07:22
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

^^^  There's actually a photograph of Patti Smith with Annie Haslam after attending a Renaissance concert in 1974.  

I am sure some of the differences that caused both sides to indulge in some verbal warfare at the time must have indeed been ideological.  But the nagging suspicion lingers that some of it was also myth making.  I have seen a similar scenario play out closer home in the 90s (won't mention it as it would be hard to relate to).  But basically the newer upstart guy used some unpleasant truths about the older guy's eccentricities to build up a huge myth to all but burn the latter's effigies and 'herald' a 'new era'.  The older guy was far more musically accomplished and fond of complexity in music, by the by.  Does read like the punk reaction to prog.  They  had songs to sing, they wanted to make their own voice heard too.  But the prog guys were signed up to the big labels and they were gifted musicians.  So why not build up a legend around prog's pretentiousness so that the audience might regard it as a terrible thing and forget it ever existed?  No other genre of rock or pop seems to have been consigned so brutally to oblivion by the mainstream so the potential for myth making seems to be there.

P.S:  I am quite fond of some post punk bands like Siouxsie & the Banshees, Magazine (not sure how I should classify Clash).  This is just in case anybody feels tempted to mark the above observations down as prog snobbery.


Not an entirely implausible scenario and yes, there is always that cocky schadenfreude from the younger musicians when they are clearly supplanting the old guard in the marketplace. This is natural, this is good, this is healthy see Fathers and Sons by Turgenev from (gulp) 1862 for evidence that anything less always leads to conservatism, sentimental nostalgia, complacency, decline, apathy and unthinking conformity. The Nice, King Crimson, VDGG, Hendrix, Arthur Brown, the Who, the Stones, the Kinks, the Doors and Pink Floyd etc all had the same irreverent attitude to their forebears that the Punks had. Trouble is, Punk revisionists didn't have to work that hard at concocting a legend around Prog's alleged 'pretentiousness' or in some instances, the overripe and rotten fruit from the abandoned cosmiche orchard: Works Volume 1, Tales from Topographic Oceans, The Wall, Tormato, Love Beach, Stormwatch, Rhapsodies, Passpartu, (OK some of these can be dismissed as demonstrably w.a.n.k.y reactions to the burgeoning new wave aesthetics at the time)

I don't think you're a Prog snob, but word to the wise, never shell out for the ammo that can be used by your assassinsWink

The Clash developed into a truly great Rock band with a punky and confrontational attitude not dissimilar to Oasis. Why PA members have a problem enjoying such brilliant music because they may have reservations about classification is beyond me.Confused

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 07:23
For the record I won't say that progressive rock has been "brutally consigned to oblivion by the mainstream", but maybe this depends on your geographical location? I get the impression prog rock is to some extent more popular in Continental Europe than elsewhere - at least in the Anglosphere. Notice Van der Graaf Generator getting way higher on the charts in France and Italy compared to back home in the UK, or that I remember reading the Rock In Opposition movement actually achieved some degree of mainstream crossover success in Sweden?!
"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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