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Joined: February 02 2015
Location: Yugoslavia
Status: Offline
Points: 954
Posted: March 16 2015 at 07:24
@Svetonio, I do love that Sladjana's song "Amsterdam", especially those late 70s kraut-like synthesizers. Sladjana's "Miki Miki" video is pretty well executed for that time. I mean, it's just a few years after MTV was born. No doubt that Sladjana Milošević was very popular Yugoslav post-punk artist in late 70s and 80s as a nice looking and talented female singer with a magnificent voice. Though, I'm affraid that early Yugoslav punk was far less sofisticated.
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Posted: March 16 2015 at 07:35
More like not very good power-pop, hardly Punk at all. And the Svetonio's two videos weren't Punk either.
There is a world of difference between Punk Rock and Pop Punk that cannot be dismissed or ignored.
You have established that the Punk phenomenon extended beyond the confines of the USA and UK, and we have acknowledged that fact. But please don't try any harder and please don't post any more videos.
Joined: February 02 2015
Location: Yugoslavia
Status: Offline
Points: 954
Posted: March 16 2015 at 09:28
Dean wrote:
More like not very good power-pop, hardly Punk at all. And the Svetonio's two videos weren't Punk either.
There is a world of difference between Punk Rock and Pop Punk that cannot be dismissed or ignored.
You have established that the Punk phenomenon extended beyond the confines of the USA and UK, and we have acknowledged that fact. But please don't try any harder and please don't post any more videos.
POWER POP?
Oh yeah, i've just recentlylearned that theYugoslav punk-rock band Šarlo Akrobata ("Sharlo The Acrobat") weren't punk / post-punk, but prog-rock band! I sawthemon thePAlist! Whetherit was you anadminat the timethey wereadded to the PAdatabase?
I would not besurprised...
PROG?!!
Is this Yugoslav punk-rock band called Fleke ("Patches") was also prog but we didn't know that? or power-pop maybe?
or whatever else but not punk because there wasn't punk outside USA and UK, right?
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Posted: March 16 2015 at 09:39
Komandant Shamal wrote:
or whatever else but not punk because there wasn't punk outside USA and UK, right?
give me a break.
Did I ever say that? No I did not. I have already acknowledged that Punk existed in other countries, including the former Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. Like in all other countries it seems that quickly morphed into other forms of music that are not Punk Rock, all the examples you have shown are from later than 1977 - things moved on and they moved on very quickly. How difficult is it for you to grasp this simple fact?
I'm happy to break anything, including preconceptions.
Joined: September 30 2006
Location: Pearland
Status: Offline
Points: 65249
Posted: March 16 2015 at 21:29
Komandant Shamal wrote:
Oh yeah, i've just recentlylearned that theYugoslav punk-rock band Šarlo Akrobata ("Sharlo The Acrobat") weren't punk / post-punk, but prog-rock band! I sawthemon thePAlist! Whetherit was you anadminat the timethey wereadded to the PAdatabase?
I would not besurprised...
Please don't bait people, especially if you're new and you're calling out a veteran member. It doesn't hold much credibility.
"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
Please mind the videos people! We have a fair few members on PA with poor internet connections, and when they try to access a page with this many vids it takes about a year to load. Use some common sense: if the page is already booming with them, then try a link instead or *gosh* maybe a good old conversation.
“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: February 02 2015
Location: Yugoslavia
Status: Offline
Points: 954
Posted: March 18 2015 at 04:31
Svetonio wrote:
tamijo wrote:
To answer the OP, there was a lot of diffrent music, not just Prog and Punk, (...)
Of course, there was Funk, Disco, Disco-Funk, Funk-Rock, Pop Rock, Glam Rock, Adult Oriented Rock, Hard Rock and so on, but it was especially Prog that symbolized something for punks that they should be against. Well, it's not so difficult to imagine why
It's true.
Srđan Gojković Gile, the front-man of the band Električni orgazam, defines his own view of the Yugoslav music scene in the early eighties: "We thought of Bijelo dugme [a great band, already in PA prog-related section] or Riblja čorba as rural (primitive) bands. We viewed them in the same way in which Sex Pistols probably viewed the bands like Yes or Genesis. We were just kids, punkers and our main philosophy was that everything before us was sh*t, that history began with us. It was not true, of course, but it was what it looked like to us back then. The sensibility that both Bijelo dugme and Riblja čorba possessed was too rural for us but that was precisely the key ingredient of their success"
Joined: September 03 2005
Location: Olympus Mons
Status: Offline
Points: 15916
Posted: March 18 2015 at 04:40
I do believe Punk to be in opposition of technically demanding music - however, it was revolutionary at the time, and more adept musicians took the style to further heights. It HAD to happen, eventually.
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Posted: March 18 2015 at 08:00
Tom Ozric wrote:
I do believe Punk to be in opposition of technically demanding music - however, it was revolutionary at the time, and more adept musicians took the style to further heights. It HAD to happen, eventually.
I believe that view is too simplistic.
Punk Rock was not a reaction to Progressive Rock (or any other form of technically demanding music). As we have shown, its origins (Protopunk) run a parallel course to the emergence and development of Prog Rock. Since both timelines have their roots firmly embedded in the mid-60s underground and homeground music scenes, there is even evidence of a shared appreciation of some of the psychedelic bands of that time.
Any opposition to more technically demanding music was an after-the-event justification for what already existed, however, it was not a reaction to the technical complexity of the music, but an anti-establishment rally against the status quo. Pink Floyd were not singled out because they were technically demanding ('cos they ain't) but because they represented the Music Industry establishment, just as Pejr's points out in his example of a few years later from Yugoslavia: the"rural" music of Riblja čorba represented the established music scene and not necessarily a more technically demanding style of music. Basically, Prog was an easy target with no inclination to fight back.
The reason they went for Prog as opposed to Glam, Funk, Hard Rock or Disco or any of the other even more popular forms of music prevalent at that time is because none of those styles of music were being covered by the "serious" music press (they could be found in teen magazines such as Jackie, Blues & Soul or Disco'45 - not quite the readership demographic that was going to appeal to Punk Rock and vice-versa).
That readership demographic is key (and vital). Just as today with people who like hip-hop or R&B music are never going to buy a Royal Blood album, the people who bought records of the more popular styles of music in the late 70s would never have bought a Prog record and they would never have liked Punk Rock. The adoption of Punk by the "serious" music press should have sounded the death-knell for Prog, and in the "public eye" it certainly did, yet the genre continued regardless.
The divergence of Punk into New Wave and Post Punk created two briefly related audience demographics, yet it didn't take long for those two audiences to become completely separate: the "serious" and the "pop" if you like.
The adoption of Punk by the "serious" music press should have sounded the death-knell for Prog, and in the "public eye" it certainly did, yet the genre continued regardless.
Good post certainly but just for clarity: although it is demonstrably true that Prog continued regardless of its flagellation at the hands of the 'serious' UK music press (e.g. Sounds, NME circa '76 onwards) the actual quality of this music was, even by the partisan views of nostalgic apologists, more than a bit sh*t by that stage surely? i.e. practically every acknowledged Prog masterpiece was recorded long before 1976 and most of what came after was a rather unconvincing assimilation of late 70's zeitgeist 'economy' and 'energy' buzzwords as realised by slumming virtuosos with nervous record labels to appease. The game was up and a demographic had voted with their feet. Ergo, the Punk ethos clearly impacted very profoundly on every single facet of the music industry. Prog musicians simply did not have the option to 'carry on regardless' with their esoteric oeuvre post '76 as niche markets are notoriously poor payers (Try buying flared jeans, platform boots and a wide tie in 1978 etc)
I'm not saying that the marketplace should be the ultimate arbiter of taste here, but unless you countenance subsidised arts, we invariably get the popular culture we deserve
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Posted: March 18 2015 at 09:40
ExittheLemming wrote:
Dean wrote:
The adoption of Punk by the "serious" music press should have sounded the death-knell for Prog, and in the "public eye" it certainly did, yet the genre continued regardless.
Good post certainly but just for clarity: although it is demonstrably true that Prog continued regardless of its flagellation at the hands of the 'serious' UK music press (e.g. Sounds, NME circa '76 onwards) the actual quality of this music was, even by the partisan views of nostalgic apologists, more than a bit sh*t by that stage surely? i.e. practically every acknowledged Prog masterpiece was recorded long before 1976 and most of what came after was a rather unconvincing assimilation of late 70's zeitgeist 'economy' and 'energy' buzzwords as realised by slumming virtuosos with nervous record labels to appease. The game was up and a demographic had voted with their feet. Ergo, the Punk ethos clearly impacted very profoundly on every single facet of the music industry. Prog musicians simply did not have the option to 'carry on regardless' with their esoteric oeuvre post '76 as niche markets are notoriously poor payers (Try buying flared jeans, platform boots and a wide tie in 1978 etc)
I'm not saying that the marketplace should be the ultimate arbiter of taste here, but unless you countenance subsidised arts, we invariably get the popular culture we deserve
Absolutely. Thou' it wasn't a case of carrying on regardless but of continuing on regardless (of the lack of press and/or popular support). Irrespective of anyone's opinion of the quality of music represented by Progressive Rock in the period from 1977 through to the early 80s it didn't suddenly go through a drastic overhaul or period of self-examination. Trends that had been prevalent since the hay-day of 1973 continued, whether that is seen as a decline, a simplification or more displays of excess (erm, that's sounds like a potted history of the decline and fall of ELP, but it could apply to any of the bigger names in prog). With or without Punk I suspect that trend would have continued. I have no proof of that of course, other than natural entropy that afflicts most forms of music that have been around for any length of time - they stagnate or they decline but are rarely able to replicate their former glory. That all of the "big six" (or whatever the number currently is) continued on into the 80s with a modicum of commercial (if not critical) success without becoming self-tributes or embarrassing parodies of themselves is indicative of something - while some decry the pop success of Yes and Genesis, they didn't completely divorce themselves from Prog Rock. The point is (if there is one) is that they didn't simply shrink back into the woodwork.
Joined: September 20 2010
Location: Serbia
Status: Offline
Points: 10213
Posted: March 18 2015 at 12:45
Komandant Shamal wrote:
Svetonio wrote:
tamijo wrote:
To answer the OP, there was a lot of diffrent music, not just Prog and Punk, (...)
Of course, there was Funk, Disco, Disco-Funk, Funk-Rock, Pop Rock, Glam Rock, Adult Oriented Rock, Hard Rock and so on, but it was especially Prog that symbolized something for punks that they should be against. Well, it's not so difficult to imagine why
It's true.
Srđan Gojković Gile, the front-man of the band Električni orgazam, defines his own view of the Yugoslav music scene in the early eighties: "We thought of Bijelo dugme [a great band, already in PA prog-related section] or Riblja čorba as rural (primitive) bands. We viewed them in the same way in which Sex Pistols probably viewed the bands like Yes or Genesis. We were just kids, punkers and our main philosophy was that everything before us was sh*t, that history began with us. It was not true, of course, but it was what it looked like to us back then. The sensibility that both Bijelo dugme and Riblja čorba possessed was too rural for us but that was precisely the key ingredient of their success"
Bijelo Dugme had their great pastoral ("rural", "primitive") moments, especially at the first three albums which are prog. But, Riblja Čorba - rural? No, especially not in early eighties (btw, Riblja Čorba was released their debut single in December 1978; "Riblja Čorba" means Danube river fish soup which is pretty red colour due to tomato juice ingredient and it was Belgrade' slang for menstrual period); maybe more like when Bruce Springsteen sings about the darkness on the edge of town, that kind of topics, but "rural" they weren't for sure. Mr Gojković, as a punker as well, usually like to add some bullsh*t in his statements.
Joined: April 11 2014
Location: Kyiv In Spirit
Status: Offline
Points: 20604
Posted: March 18 2015 at 16:27
Dean wrote:
Tom Ozric wrote:
I do believe Punk to be in opposition of technically demanding music - however, it was revolutionary at the time, and more adept musicians took the style to further heights. It HAD to happen, eventually.
I believe that view is too simplistic.
Punk Rock was not a reaction to Progressive Rock (or any other form of technically demanding music). As we have shown, its origins (Protopunk) run a parallel course to the emergence and development of Prog Rock. Since both timelines have their roots firmly embedded in the mid-60s underground and homeground music scenes, there is even evidence of a shared appreciation of some of the psychedelic bands of that time.
Any opposition to more technically demanding music was an after-the-event justification for what already existed, however, it was not a reaction to the technical complexity of the music, but an anti-establishment rally against the status quo. Pink Floyd were not singled out because they were technically demanding ('cos they ain't) but because they represented the Music Industry establishment, just as Pejr's points out in his example of a few years later from Yugoslavia: the"rural" music of Riblja čorba represented the established music scene and not necessarily a more technically demanding style of music. Basically, Prog was an easy target with no inclination to fight back.
The reason they went for Prog as opposed to Glam, Funk, Hard Rock or Disco or any of the other even more popular forms of music prevalent at that time is because none of those styles of music were being covered by the "serious" music press (they could be found in teen magazines such as Jackie, Blues & Soul or Disco'45 - not quite the readership demographic that was going to appeal to Punk Rock and vice-versa).
That readership demographic is key (and vital). Just as today with people who like hip-hop or R&B music are never going to buy a Royal Blood album, the people who bought records of the more popular styles of music in the late 70s would never have bought a Prog record and they would never have liked Punk Rock. The adoption of Punk by the "serious" music press should have sounded the death-knell for Prog, and in the "public eye" it certainly did, yet the genre continued regardless.
The divergence of Punk into New Wave and Post Punk created two briefly related audience demographics, yet it didn't take long for those two audiences to become completely separate: the "serious" and the "pop" if you like.
I still get email alerts for this thread and this caught my eye.
Joined: February 02 2015
Location: Yugoslavia
Status: Offline
Points: 954
Posted: March 19 2015 at 03:44
Svetonio wrote:
Komandant Shamal wrote:
Svetonio wrote:
tamijo wrote:
To answer the OP, there was a lot of diffrent music, not just Prog and Punk, (...)
Of course, there was Funk, Disco, Disco-Funk, Funk-Rock, Pop Rock, Glam Rock, Adult Oriented Rock, Hard Rock and so on, but it was especially Prog that symbolized something for punks that they should be against. Well, it's not so difficult to imagine why
It's true.
Srđan Gojković Gile, the front-man of the band Električni orgazam, defines his own view of the Yugoslav music scene in the early eighties: "We thought of Bijelo dugme [a great band, already in PA prog-related section] or Riblja čorba as rural (primitive) bands. We viewed them in the same way in which Sex Pistols probably viewed the bands like Yes or Genesis. We were just kids, punkers and our main philosophy was that everything before us was sh*t, that history began with us. It was not true, of course, but it was what it looked like to us back then. The sensibility that both Bijelo dugme and Riblja čorba possessed was too rural for us but that was precisely the key ingredient of their success"
Bijelo Dugme had their great pastoral ("rural", "primitive") moments, especially at the first three albums which are prog. But, Riblja Čorba - rural? No, especially not in early eighties (btw, Riblja Čorba was released their debut single in December 1978; "Riblja Čorba" means Danube river fish soup which is pretty red colour due to tomato juice ingredient and it was Belgrade' slang for menstrual period); maybe more like when Bruce Springsteen sings about the darkness on the edge of town, that kind of topics, but "rural" they weren't for sure. Mr Gojković, as a punker as well, usually like to add some bullsh*t in his statements.
Yes it could be, though slightly less romantic.
^ the album cover of Riblja Čorba debut "Kost u grlu" ("The Bone In The Throat"), released 1979.
And Riblja Čorba, at least at their first 3 LPs, had more socially critical lyrics (in Rock genre) than Električni Orgazam as a Punk band - throughout the whole career.
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Posted: March 19 2015 at 03:56
he means "rural" as the opposite of "urban", "primitive" (peasant) as opposed to "educated" (elite), [which shows how much he understood of the UK music scene and social-culture]. He certainly does not mean it in a literal "pastoral" or bucolic sense.
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