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Topic ClosedPunk: A Logical Extension of Prog?

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rogerthat View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 07:35
Originally posted by Toaster Mantis Toaster Mantis wrote:

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?!

I do have the Anglosphere in mind.  Much writing on rock comes out of the UK and US, so their view tends to dictate the norm even if it is not true elsewhere.  It is no coincidence that Sweden became the centre of the prog revival (also, incidentally that of extreme metal) in the 90s.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 07:48
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:


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


I am happy to read TFTO mentioned in the category of prog excess.  Refreshing change...on a prog forum, that is.  While I heartily agree that some of these prog albums pretty much extended an open invitation to criticism on the count of pretentiousness, not all were of the same kind.  That Kurt Cobain of all rock icons would mention Red as an influence shows that there are always exceptions to the rule...in fact enough such exceptions that the validity of the rule itself could be called into question.  My wife is playing an Osibisa track just now and some of the jamming is positively awesome.  And not very far from prog territory (Santana is another example).  The ideological turn effected by punk also inflicted collateral damage on such kind of music in general.  I cannot tell whether that is a good or a bad thing; it is just history as it unfolded and judging it would be futile.  

I don't know what PA members don't like Clash on account of classification issues but I am not one of them.  I love London Calling.  I just mentioned the thing about not being sure of how to classify them because I didn't know whether I could include them along side the other post punk bands.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 08:21
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:


I am happy to read TFTO mentioned in the category of prog excess.  Refreshing change...on a prog forum, that is.  While I heartily agree that some of these prog albums pretty much extended an open invitation to criticism on the count of pretentiousness, not all were of the same kind.  That Kurt Cobain of all rock icons would mention Red as an influence shows that there are always exceptions to the rule...in fact enough such exceptions that the validity of the rule itself could be called into question.  My wife is playing an Osibisa track just now and some of the jamming is positively awesome.  And not very far from prog territory (Santana is another example).  The ideological turn effected by punk also inflicted collateral damage on such kind of music in general.  I cannot tell whether that is a good or a bad thing; it is just history as it unfolded and judging it would be futile.  

I don't know what PA members don't like Clash on account of classification issues but I am not one of them.  I love London Calling.  I just mentioned the thing about not being sure of how to classify them because I didn't know whether I could include them along side the other post punk bands.  


I am always more interested in what you think rather than some dead nihilist d.i.c.k like Kurt Cobain. Don't get me wrong, Prog for me, in musical terms, has an almost unimpeachable past which Punk will never impinge upon as the latter had negligible innovation or prescience. Prog has never monopolised the 'pretentious' barb so I'm at a loss to where your defensive 'exceptions to the rule' response originates i.e. I'm not saying all Prog was pretentious (why else would I have joined a Prog Rock web site ffs so read my reviews) It's unfortunate that I heartily loathe both Osibisa and Santana but that's probably due to my innate resistance to what always strike me as meandering improvs and noodly jamming (those perceptions are both my problem but inflicted collateral damage when confined to the realm of aesthetics is mercifully a non contact sport and is overstating the case a tad re precluding such expression) London Calling is probably on a par with the Stones Exile on Main Street as pivotal in subsequent developments in Rock circa 1979 but although contemporaneous, is clearly very far removed from the artistic milieu that characterized Post Punk.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 08:36
I am ,like everybody else in this thread, only opining in general so it would help a great deal if you didn't interpret everything I say as directly attacking your own opinions.  I am not saying you said all prog was pretentious but that the net effect of punk-driven myth making amounted to that being held up as the generally accepted view of prog.  That is what we read in the mainstream: that prog is pretentious and all but a musical bad word.  I think to mention it so apologetically, as if they are sorry they liked it in the 70s, is just delusional because you can't change history.  It happened; prog was an important part of 70s music culture.  

And the manner in which musicians responded to the new rules excluded lengthy improvs or jamming from the music; THAT is the collateral damage I refer to.    It is no coincidence that the links between blues and rock also began to get more tenuous from that point on and especially so as metal came to occupy the space once occupied by hard rock.  

Once again, I don't really have any opinion on whether or not these developments in rock were a good thing because it's purely a matter of each one's taste.  All I am doing is calling out the normative view imposed by the mainstream wherein the DIY punk warriors rescued the world from bloated prog dinosaurs.  It is a simplistic narrative and punk's own subsequent avatar, i.e, post punk gives the lie to it.  Not that the music press have acknowledged this and nor has it stopped them from continuing to repeat a tired old narrative that may have been relevant in the 70s but not anymore.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 09:19
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

I am ,like everybody else in this thread, only opining in general so it would help a great deal if you didn't interpret everything I say as directly attacking your own opinions.  I am not saying you said all prog was pretentious but that the net effect of punk-driven myth making amounted to that being held up as the generally accepted view of prog.  That is what we read in the mainstream: that prog is pretentious and all but a musical bad word.  I think to mention it so apologetically, as if they are sorry they liked it in the 70s, is just delusional because you can't change history.  It happened; prog was an important part of 70s music culture.  

And the manner in which musicians responded to the new rules excluded lengthy improvs or jamming from the music; THAT is the collateral damage I refer to.    It is no coincidence that the links between blues and rock also began to get more tenuous from that point on and especially so as metal came to occupy the space once occupied by hard rock.  

Once again, I don't really have any opinion on whether or not these developments in rock were a good thing because it's purely a matter of each one's taste.  All I am doing is calling out the normative view imposed by the mainstream wherein the DIY punk warriors rescued the world from bloated prog dinosaurs.  It is a simplistic narrative and punk's own subsequent avatar, i.e, post punk gives the lie to it.  Not that the music press have acknowledged this and nor has it stopped them from continuing to repeat a tired old narrative that may have been relevant in the 70s but not anymore.  


So, you are vox populi but I'm not here to help bubba, only stimulate and provoke opinion. My opinions are under no threat whatsoever and I can get the normative view from anywhere. If you don't have any opinion on whether the developments we are discussing were either a good or bad thing, why are you wasting keystrokes with such shrill indifference at allLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 10:05
Because I do have an opinion on how much was just myth making and how much was reality. I believe the mainstream narrative on punk is too romanticised and simplistic and that is the point I intended to make. The appearance of a mutually exclusive dichotomy was simply an exaggeration. As for whether the developments were good or bad for music, for me to opine on that would be to presume to know what music would be good for people in general and I certainly would not want to be so presumptuous. I am just saying the truth about the transition from prog to punk is probably somewhere in the middle rather than the generally accepted view which is lopsided in favour of punk. It may be a mundane point to make but I would like to all the same. I also have a rather naive way of looking at all music as just different ways of expressing emotions that are common across genres. So the notion of a genre warfare seems rather silly to me and little more than the musicians way of winning more listeners over to 'their' side.  The trend in favour of greater and greater fragmentation of music (with not particularly edifying consequences for the artists as it reduces the size of their potential audience) also seems to have gained strength post the emergence of punk, even if it may have been there before the event.  Whether that was directly a consequence of the way punk was pitted as a musical adversary of prog I do not know but it seems plausible that it would have had something to do with it.  As somebody else said in the thread about prog lacking metal's success in recent years, punk is far more polarizing than prog (about which the worst that can be said is indeed that it is pretentious or overlong or noodly and boring) and therein its greatest strength and weakness.  I will go out on a limb in that regard and say that I do regard fragmentation as more bad than good for music overall.  Not in terms of music appreciation but in the way it affects how music is distributed to listeners.  But a music that plots itself in an adversarial corner probably cannot ever bring all kinds of listeners together no matter how good it is.  

Yes, if I had to distill what I have been trying to express through the last few rambling comments to just one sentence, it is that punk marked the death of the idea that everybody could listen to the same music.  In other words, a long journey from the point where the Beatles took off.  That in a nutshell is the far reaching influence it has exerted on music.   Michael Jackson overturned this push towards divergence but only through emphasis on well choreographed videos.  After him, there hasn't really been one single artist or band capable of reaching out to listeners across age groups, class, preferences, so on and so forth.


Edited by rogerthat - March 11 2015 at 10:51
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 14:56
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Foul! A  modern 'retro' gathering does not past harmony make. Tisck, tisck!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 14:58
Whatever. I'm outa here
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 15:02
^LOLLOLLOL
This message was brought to you by a proud supporter of the Deep State.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 15:21
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

More like illogical Wink
And when the broken hearted people,
living in the world agree,
there will be an answer,
let it be
                                 -McCartney
 
Imagine there's no heaven,
it's easy if you try,
no hell below us, and above us only sky...
            
                                  -Lennon
 
 
Mama, take these guns off of me,
I just can't shoot them anymore,
It's getting to dark to see,
and I feel like knocking on Heaven's door.
 
                                   -Dylan
 
In the clearing stands a boxer,
he's a fighter by his trade,
and he's carried the reminder,
of every glove that lied him down,
and cut him 'til he cried out,
in his anger and his shame,
I am leaving,
I am leaving,
but the fighter still remains.
       
                                      -Simon
 
Now how illogical does my position sound, starblart?
 
And now, I'm out of here.
                   
 
 


Edited by SteveG - March 11 2015 at 15:33
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 15:33
"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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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 15:53





Help me I'm falling!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 15:55
Sorry Toaster, but those are shallow words coming from a man who produced this travesty:
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 15:57


Help me I'm falling!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 15:57
And let's not ever forget this logical piece of art:                  LOLLOLLOLLOLLOL


Edited by SteveG - March 11 2015 at 15:59
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 16:01
If there's one thing I've learned, it's this:
 
There is no accounting for taste in either music or lyrics. Wink


Edited by SteveG - March 11 2015 at 19:17
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2015 at 21:01
If one plays "De do do do de da da da da" backwards, I believe one gets "Sussudio". Or is it "Radio ga-ga"?
Must be a Brit thing.Wink
 
...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...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 12 2015 at 02:18
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

If there's one thing I've learned, it's this:
 
There is no accounting for taste in either music or lyrics. Wink
Before I leave this retirement home of senile delinquents:

1. Brian was referring to the thread title, not the your comment that his post just happened to follow. Not everything is about you.

2. It has fu*k all to do with taste - I cannot abide The Police and their white-boy calypso-reggae, I dislike Sting, his lyrics and his nasally voice. De do do do de da da da is the worst of all that I dislike about them.

3. Now...

"Poets, priests and politicians
Have words to thank for their positions
Words that scream for your submission
And no-one's jamming their transmission
And when their eloquence escapes you
Their logic ties you up and rapes you."

...is not a great lyric by any means, but the subject matter seems pretty serious to me and certainly no less banal that singing about an unprovable afterlife.

4.
Quote According to lead singer Sting, the song is about the attraction that people have to simple songs. Sting later criticized those who labelled the lyrics of the song as "baby talk," claiming that the song was grossly misunderstood." He evaluated, "The lyrics are about banality, about the abuse of words," saying that "the lyrics have an internal logic."

"I was trying to make an intellectual point about how the simple can be so powerful. Why are our favourite songs 'Da Doo Ron Ron' and 'Do Wah Diddy Diddy'? In the song, I tried to address that issue. But everyone said, 'This is bullsh*t, child's play.' No one listened to the lyrics. Listen to the lyrics. I'm going to remake it again and put more emphasis on what I was talking about."


What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 12 2015 at 05:30
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

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).
Yes. Damn punks were so big snobs that they were rejected hashish and marijuana as "hippy stuff" and switch to their beloved heroin. Once a punker even told me, "without a needle in my vein, there's not a high for me." LOL
For the first time, it was "in" to be a junkie.
Last but not least, heroin was very expensive at that time and so many families went in poverty due to their kids who were "in" during punk hysteria in Yugoslavia.


Edited by Komandant Shamal - March 12 2015 at 06:36
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 12 2015 at 09:04
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

If there's one thing I've learned, it's this:
 
There is no accounting for taste in either music or lyrics. Wink
Before I leave this retirement home of senile delinquents:

1. Brian was referring to the thread title, not the your comment that his post just happened to follow. Not everything is about you.

2. It has fu*k all to do with taste - I cannot abide The Police and their white-boy calypso-reggae, I dislike Sting, his lyrics and his nasally voice. De do do do de da da da is the worst of all that I dislike about them.

3. Now...

"Poets, priests and politicians
Have words to thank for their positions
Words that scream for your submission
And no-one's jamming their transmission
And when their eloquence escapes you
Their logic ties you up and rapes you."

...is not a great lyric by any means, but the subject matter seems pretty serious to me and certainly no less banal that singing about an unprovable afterlife.

4.
Quote According to lead singer Sting, the song is about the attraction that people have to simple songs. Sting later criticized those who labelled the lyrics of the song as "baby talk," claiming that the song was grossly misunderstood." He evaluated, "The lyrics are about banality, about the abuse of words," saying that "the lyrics have an internal logic."

"I was trying to make an intellectual point about how the simple can be so powerful. Why are our favourite songs 'Da Doo Ron Ron' and 'Do Wah Diddy Diddy'? In the song, I tried to address that issue. But everyone said, 'This is bullsh*t, child's play.' No one listened to the lyrics. Listen to the lyrics. I'm going to remake it again and put more emphasis on what I was talking about."


1) Your endless obsession with Sting's idiotically titled song was another way for you avoid the true subject matter, which was simply that a majority of New Wave songs are lyrically inconsequential. Focusing on De do do do  cannot alter that perception, except, sadly, perhaps only to you.
 
2) How you interpret Brian's comments is of no concern to me as you clearly lack the insight to make that call.
 
3) After reading post after post of your efforts to down play Punk as some kind of ultra short lived and inconsequential music craze that doesn't represent authentic Punk bands like the Ramones and Television is daft and does a disservice to groups such as the Black Flag, Dead Kennedys, et al.
 
 
The only reasonable statement you made was regarding Punk groups that followed these imagined 'Phantom Punks' is that they were truly musicians who had skill and could really play their instruments. No s**t Sherlock. That's because Punk groups were inspired by American garage rock bands that, believe it or not, could actually play their instruments, write songs, and sing.
 
The main Punk influence in the States were the Texas psych rock bands such as The Elevators who, while crudely recorded, featured a vocalist on the level of a Robert Plant, a deft rhythm section and a lead guitarist who would show him self to be a sleeper blues rock virtuoso on later albums such as Bull of The Woods.  The Moving Sidewalks also from Texas, featured future blues rock great Billy Gibsons who went on to found, and have maga success, with ZZ Top. Tell me now, what simple three chord rock aesthetic was involved in that?
 
4) If this post devolved into delinquency, blame yourself, as that what happens when you introduce fantasy into an adult themed topic.
 
I have return to my professional life which prohibits me from posting on PA, so this is my last, and frankly, I'm glad.
 
 
 
 


Edited by SteveG - March 12 2015 at 19:32
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