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Topic ClosedWhy isn't prog as successful as metal as an indus

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 09:54
Or perhaps Sir prefers...... this ???

Bet "Metal Warriors" is worth a listen. Wonder what that's all about, eh ? 

"This is your new cell mate..... " 




Edited by Davesax1965 - March 30 2015 at 10:05

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 09:52
Originally posted by NutterAlert NutterAlert wrote:

Originally posted by Davesax1965 Davesax1965 wrote:

So Blackie Lawless has a codpiece which shoots 45 foot flames.
 
Impressive. Compensating for a small nob no doubt! Would have loved to see the band's risk assessment for that one...
I thought the only person who wore a codpiece was Ian Anderson, I have much to learn you see Big smile hugs Hug
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 09:52
I'm sure I heard that it blew back one fateful night....

In the interim....... woo hoo hoooo haaaaaaaaaaaaa ahemmmmmm - "Heavy Metal, sir ? "

To be fair, they DID have the album art professionally re-done for later issues of the album. Guess what ? Motorcycle. Axe. Flames. Anyone for a cliche ? 




Edited by Davesax1965 - March 30 2015 at 10:07

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 09:48
Originally posted by Davesax1965 Davesax1965 wrote:

So Blackie Lawless has a codpiece which shoots 45 foot flames.
 
Impressive. Compensating for a small nob no doubt! Would have loved to see the band's risk assessment for that one...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 09:29
Hi Kati, actually, I'm 102 and am stone deaf due to listening to too much loud music in the 1930's. 

Can I use your teeth when you've finished with them ? :-)

The reason why heavy metal is more commercially successful than prog rock is that prog, at its' best, is "musicians' music". It's not commercial, it takes more thought and musical appreciation to get into, there is no uniform and it requires people to *think*, which they don't generally like doing. 

Heavy metal is anti-fashion statement which can be easily picked up. It was, at one point, conversely, fashionable to be unfashionable. You can easily spot someone else suffering from Heavy Metal due to the obligatory tattoos, piercings, ludicrous pantaloons et al which the adherent MUST wear and go off and be tragic in the company of other like minded pop music (by another name) fans. Hence the popularity, it requires no thought and can be easily bought into. 

Prog rock has survived since the late 60's as it has some worth - Heavy metal, son of glam rock, will probably still be going 30-40 years on, but because a few people can make money from it. Not because it has any musical worth. 

I have no problem with people listening to heavy metal in the comfort of their own front rooms or anywhere else, but coming on what's supposed to be a prog rock site and extolling the virtues of it is inappropriate. What next ? Prog disco ? It is NOT music for musicians or wannabe musicians. It is music for the easily fooled, who think that playing an arpeggio at 240+ beats per minute constitutes some form of musical ability.

As for Dean saying that my post was 35 years out of date - I look at pics from the mid 80's and pics from Heavy Metal fans from today: not much has changed. Otherwise it wouldn't be heavy metal, would it, Dean ? 


Edited by Davesax1965 - March 30 2015 at 09:40

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 09:27
Originally posted by Davesax1965 Davesax1965 wrote:

Get a haircut, sonny. :-)
No, seriously. Listen to whatever you want, heavy metal included, but this is a prog rock site. 
Davesax, I have heard of prog metal and do like some a lot but not all. However I am 86 years old and I have never heard of Indus, what is that?
HugsHug Smile but hold on let me grab my teeth Big smileha much better, more hugs Hug
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 09:21
Get a haircut, sonny. :-)
No, seriously. Listen to whatever you want, heavy metal included, but this is a prog rock site. Not prog rock ? On the bonfire. All those lovely rivulets of melting vinyl have the same musical worth as the albums AND you've kept warm as well. You could even toast some pentagram shaped marshmallows.

Big smile


Edited by Davesax1965 - March 30 2015 at 09:26

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 09:19
Originally posted by Davesax1965 Davesax1965 wrote:


Ladies and gentlemen, I am a 49 year old musician....


 Heavy metal is sh*te. Anyone who listens to it needs to (a) get a haircut (b) get a life and (c) learn to think for themselves. Take your spandex trousers, copies of Kerrang, Metal Hammer and all your Myofist, Budgie, Twisted Sister albums and put them on a lovely big bonfire. 
...and get off my lawn!!


Oh dear.

I'm a 57.99452 year old not-a-musician and I love metal. I have a life, can think for myself and wear my hair long because I bloody well can. 

However, other than that your rant is fine and I have no issue with it. If it had been more contemporary and not 35 years behind the times I may have taken exception, but since it is archaic and dates from a time when I too had little interest in Metal I can view it as a minor amusement.
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 08:57
Progressive rock was originally thought of as being a genre which stretched musicians - taking them away from a three minute 12 bar progression to something more complicated. It demanded higher levels of musicianship from the players and more attention from the audience. There was supposed to be some musical worth, individuality and hence integrity to it - music for the sake of art. There is good prog, there is bad prog but it should, at the end of the day, stem from an honest attempt to create something different and of musical worth which then finds its' own level. The audience like it - understand it - or they don't. Music first, commerciality second. 

Heavy Metal is pop music for those who think they're being left field. All they're doing is following sheep in a different field, except the sheep have perms, spandex trousers and studded wristbands. 

So Blackie Lawless has a codpiece which shoots 45 foot flames. Right. Can't play, though, can he ? Doesn't produce anything of musical worth, does he ? Just the same old same old, same boring themes, same as everyone else, let's all get together in a big group, wave a few pentagrams around, get some spiky guitars out and play at 140 DB ?

I am astonished that people come on a prog rock site and can't differentiate between childish "entertainment" and proper music done by musicians. Proper music is not about "entertainment" or gimmickry or slavish adherence to a set of rules. It is about musical creativity and integrity. You may think that playing some heavy metal guitar solo is talented: it's not. Any idiot can just play simple arpeggios fast. The problem is that there is no thought behind it, zero creativity. You, dear reader, may not be able to do it, but that doesn't mean it's good, even when you CAN do it. 

As for "prog metal", same criticism. It still relies on an adherence to genre, gimmickry and marketing. Anything with those underlying principles is musically worthless: you may be entertained, you may enjoy the spectacle. But it essentially is just pop music designed to appeal to those who just want to be entertained, rather than those who really want to listen and understand music. 


Edited by Davesax1965 - March 30 2015 at 09:19

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 08:50
Originally posted by WeepingElf WeepingElf wrote:

Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

Originally posted by Davesax1965 Davesax1965 wrote:

Because "metal" is product which can be shifted to the gullible, whilst "prog" involves much more listener input. 

Heavy Metal is sh*te. No other word for it. 


There are a lot of metalheads that enjoy listening to a lot of prog so... Plus as someone stated, there is metal that is quite complex.

I don't know what metal you've heard but sh*t it is not; I dislike some of metal's subgenres (but then again I dislike some prog ones as well) but calling it like you've just done is just unfair. Saying something like "I dislike it" would be one thing, calling it "sh*te" is another.

Of all the people I know that listen to some metal, none of them is gulible. LOL



Seconded.  Davesax1965 just regurgitates common prejudices against metal.  I doubt that he ever took the time to listen to a good assortment of metal albums.  Sure, some kinds of metal are as ugly as an oil spill and full of questionable ideology, but there is plenty of metal that is pretty deep and complex.  "Progressive metal" is far from an oxymoron, and many people are into both prog and metal.


Ladies and gentlemen, I am a 49 year old musician. I have listened to God knows how many thousand albums. I have been around since "heavy rock" became "heavy metal", and that was simply because heavy rock musicians who weren't good enough to make it realised that adding a pantomimetic touch of drama pulled crowds in. They were going to see the spectacle and not the music or musicianship. 

I have heard tons of heavy metal albums, from some of the first stuff to the later c r a p which was issued under the NWOBHM bandwaggon and unlike some of the people posting here, I understand it from a musical point of view. A great deal - 95% of heavy metal - relies on a boring adherence to repetitive arpeggios and simplistic chord progressions which have little bearing to proper music or musicianship.

Hence sh*te. 

I am not regurgitating anything and it seems a bit off to turn around and say - with no evidence pro or con - to say that I haven't listened to any. I have sat through a lot of badly played, tedious marketing exercises designed to entertain the gullible and remove them of their money - at the lowest possible level. So I'll say it again. Heavy metal is sh*te. Anyone who listens to it needs to (a) get a haircut (b) get a life and (c) learn to think for themselves. Take your spandex trousers, copies of Kerrang, Metal Hammer and all your Myofist, Budgie, Twisted Sister albums and put them on a lovely big bonfire. Then sit back, listen to some REAL music and actually think, listen and become a real human being instead of a cardboard cutout. 



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 01:31
Originally posted by Toaster Mantis Toaster Mantis wrote:

Most of the 1970s metal bands, for that matter also Venom and Slayer, meant the Satanic themes for entertainment or at best for metaphor. I think Mercyful Fate then started taking occult spirituality seriously which is where the 1990s black/death metal picked it up from. (Arckanum, Deicide, Dissection, Mayhem, Morbid Angel etc.)

MF might have been the exception rather than the rule back in the 1980s, but it's different now and artists who take esoteric/occult/pagan/Satanic religion very seriously are an integral part of the metal world's cultural landscape. However misguided you might find that entire kettle of fish. (hey, at least it's not Nazi Occultism...)
I am indifferent about all cult things, to me it's a just a gimmick just as Comic-on. Stern Smile Hey whatever you are into it's cool by me as long as it does not bully or physically hurt anyone.   
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 01:25
Originally posted by Guldbamsen Guldbamsen wrote:

Originally posted by Kati Kati wrote:

Originally posted by Padraic Padraic wrote:

Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal

Sorry.  Had to get that off my chest.  Carry on.

You cute one Big smile maybe the cause might be us, the so called prog fans who are too critical to see beyond anything good, especially the great contributions new bands are bringing to us. Instead of being happy we tend to undermine them and this is wrong. xxx Hug 


I'm pretty sure Pat was referring to the misspelled thread title (which I've just corrected)
Nothing is true till the fat lady sings, ok Big smile ok now pls bring back Heston Blumenthal, that pic of him wearing a tiny pink bikini top while barbecuing..... jajaja yep ahum oui da si sim Big smile that pic is priceless! LOL hugs Hug
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2015 at 01:19
Originally posted by Padraic Padraic wrote:

Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal

Sorry.  Had to get that off my chest.  Carry on.
lol you naughty puppy!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 29 2015 at 20:54
Originally posted by Toaster Mantis Toaster Mantis wrote:

People still want me to post the link to that article about Satanism and the occult's relations to crime when I find it? I think that at this point, it's so off-topic it probably just deserves its own thread perhaps in the general discussion board instead...

It definitely does as a point of interest.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 29 2015 at 09:52
Originally posted by Kati Kati wrote:

Originally posted by Padraic Padraic wrote:

Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal
Why isn't prog as successful as metal

Sorry.  Had to get that off my chest.  Carry on.

You cute one Big smile maybe the cause might be us, the so called prog fans who are too critical to see beyond anything good, especially the great contributions new bands are bringing to us. Instead of being happy we tend to undermine them and this is wrong. xxx Hug 


I'm pretty sure Pat was referring to the misspelled thread title (which I've just corrected)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 29 2015 at 09:43
Originally posted by siLLy puPPy siLLy puPPy wrote:

Originally posted by Tapfret Tapfret wrote:

Because popularity is a disease and prog is an effective vaccine...and metal is an STD.

Remember that there is no light without dark. Some day when everyone catches up to prog there will be prog squared :) 
...
 
Only in a planet going around a star/sun! Or equivalent.
 
In space, there is no "light" per se, and you only see the flicker of the distance stars or galaxies, if that in some places.
 
So, the whole "light" thing is almost a complete illusion for the mind, which creates a dichotomy that is not necessary! But you definitely would know "light" if you had been travelling through the dark for a long time, I'm sure!
 
BTW, a blind friend we had used to joke about how we were so clumsy, and he used to black-wire telephones!


Edited by moshkito - March 29 2015 at 09:46
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 29 2015 at 06:39
People still want me to post the link to that article about Satanism and the occult's relations to crime when I find it? I think that at this point, it's so off-topic it probably just deserves its own thread perhaps in the general discussion board instead...
"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 28 2015 at 15:05
I think Tapfret's ideas are spot on eventually audiences must progress and then they find Prog
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 28 2015 at 13:02
Most of the 1970s metal bands, for that matter also Venom and Slayer, meant the Satanic themes for entertainment or at best for metaphor. I think Mercyful Fate then started taking occult spirituality seriously which is where the 1990s black/death metal picked it up from. (Arckanum, Deicide, Dissection, Mayhem, Morbid Angel etc.)

MF might have been the exception rather than the rule back in the 1980s, but it's different now and artists who take esoteric/occult/pagan/Satanic religion very seriously are an integral part of the metal world's cultural landscape. However misguided you might find that entire kettle of fish. (hey, at least it's not Nazi Occultism...)
"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 28 2015 at 10:12
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Toaster Mantis Toaster Mantis wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Oh,  for God's sake! Do members here really believe that the occult vibe of groups like Sabbath, Blue Oyster Cult and crazy old Ozzy is anything more than a way to sell albums?
Perhaps it's because the recording industry is now a shadow of it's  former self that causes some members to forget the real agenda behind the veil of Satanism and the occult: Business! Business! Business!
 
(And business!)


Black Sabbath were just doing it for fun, but starting with my countrymen Mercyful Fate and onwards there have been plenty of metal artists who genuinely follow occult religions. This is a photo of MF frontman King Diamond with the late Anton LaVey, founder of the Church of Satan:


I can come with several other examples, to start with a lot of the Swedish black metal scene (Arckanum, Dissection, Watain) are informed by and practice Gnostic religion on which Arckanum's frontman Johan "Shamaatae" Lahger is something of a major academic authority here in Europe.

If I am not mistaken, Dio himself took Satanism pretty seriously or at least did a pretty good job of pretending to.  It may have been part of the reason for the frequent bouts of discords between him and the rest of Sabbath.  

Re metal and punk, I am not sure if that was really a correction to psych/prog, but yes, it seems fair to say it was a reaction to it. 
I'm sorry Roger but you are mistaken. My professional back ground is in metal music and the many artists big and small that fit into that genre. I usually veer away from this subject because it inevitably requires name dropping which would be both irresponsible and unprofessional on my part.
As Ronnie James Dio is no longer with us, I can tell you from personal experience that he was one of the warmest individuals that I've ever that the pleasure of meeting in the entire metal genre, and created lyrics that were centered on fantasy "dragons and demons" motifs while in Rainbow before having to come up with darker material when he joined Sabbath. He was no fan of Satan as far as I know and his "devil's horns" hand gesture was simply based on an old world Italian curse or symbol that represented something he did not believe in called the "malocchio" or the evil eye in English.
 
Again, Dio was all about fan entertainment. Not Satan or the occult.   


Edited by SteveG - March 28 2015 at 10:18
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