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uduwudu View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2016 at 03:31
Oh, and another thing, did these 50 albums really build progressive metal this week? Sorry, I jest.

But seriously folks; look, Book of Souls might be the best Maiden album ever (sorry Powerslave fans but it had to happen) but it's only been out a short while. How can it have built progressive metal? It's more like one of THE consequences rather than a building block.






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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2016 at 08:12
Black Sabbath was instrumental in building metal in general but King Crimson was very much a key player in the progressive metal scene as well. In The Court established a very early way of combining aggression and progressiveness all together. In fact KC is one of the few artists that is listed on PA, MMA and JMA. On MMA as proto-metal although some of their albums like Lizard are lacking the metal bite.

The list lacks Queen, Led Zeppelin, early Iron Maiden, Metallica (and Justice..), Crimson Glory, Mr Bungle, Tool, plus many others. I could go on. The first Watchtower album Energetic Dissassembly is rightfully the first true progressive metal album. Dude needs to work on this one a bit :)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2016 at 09:27
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:


To me...  it begins with the first musical incarnation of Judas Priest.  Sad Wings of Destiny. To me.. that is the ground zero of prog metal.
Maybe, but there was a bit on Rocka Rolla too. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2016 at 12:12
Originally posted by aglasshouse aglasshouse wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:


To me...  it begins with the first musical incarnation of Judas Priest.  Sad Wings of Destiny. To me.. that is the ground zero of prog metal.
Maybe, but there was a bit on Rocka Rolla too. 


true that... but a firm believer in the old adage.... if they ain't listening to it.. they aren't being influenced by it.

Good album.. that sold.. what 15 copes LOL  Sad Wings put them on the map...and what would become prog metal on the radar.

One thing to add...  as a veteran, ,participant and observer of this topic over what 15 years on musical forums.

It is interesting to note how people fail to differentiate between metal and heavy rock.. or this case.. heavy prog.. and prog metal.  Deep Purple.. the orginators of heavy prog.. but metal?  come on...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2016 at 14:14
I totally agree with Micky about "Sad wings of Destiny" Judas Priest - preceded by Black Sabbath (Sabbath Bloody Sabbath and Sabotage)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2016 at 15:42
Thumbs Up given the nature of prog metal.... one can see the sonic influence of Priest over Sabbath.  No question in my mind there.  One could argue that Sabbath didn't exactly pervue prog metal.. but was a metal band that given suitcases full of cocaine decided to expand their sound.  Prog? hell yeah... prog-METAL?  debatable. Priest never bothered with teh artsy fartsy sh*t and broadening their sonic horizons... never bothered with f**king mellotrons, bagpipes, sitars or bringing in Rick Wakeman as a guest haha but again.. as has been noted... metal is a different beast than rock. .and prog-metal is not prog rock. A distinction that if often missed IMO.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2016 at 17:04
^ no one is saying that Sabbath, Priest or Purple are progressive metal, but they influenced the genre, that's all.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2016 at 17:48
Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

^ no one is saying that Sabbath, Priest or Purple are progressive metal, but they influenced the genre, that's all.


interesting.. so let's get to brass tacks and nails... I was going here but your post is what I was waiting for to bring up my thoughts.

how... just how did they influence it.  No one is saying they are...  some of the more infamous 'discussions' this site has had have been directly about just what those groups were.. or were not.

it is a rote thing to say they did.... but can you explain just how they did?  Or anyone..for discussions sake of course for I want to measure that versus my thoughts on it.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2016 at 18:47
Well they are one of the earliest definers of the metal sound so anything that has spawned from metal is by definition influenced by Sabbath
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2016 at 18:56
A little late, but Nostradamus is the Priest nomination? I know Sad Wings... was already mentioned, but what Sin After Sin? Stained Class? Screaming For Vengeance? Even Painkiller probably had a bigger impact.
He looks at this world and wants it all... so he strikes, like Thunderball!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 03 2016 at 00:22
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

^ no one is saying that Sabbath, Priest or Purple are progressive metal, but they influenced the genre, that's all.


interesting.. so let's get to brass tacks and nails... I was going here but your post is what I was waiting for to bring up my thoughts.

how... just how did they influence it.  No one is saying they are...  some of the more infamous 'discussions' this site has had have been directly about just what those groups were.. or were not.

it is a rote thing to say they did.... but can you explain just how they did?  Or anyone..for discussions sake of course for I want to measure that versus my thoughts on it.

omg, what have I done? LOL

ok, let me give you some examples: I hear Black Sabbath influences (the Dio era) in Symphony X music.
On DT's Awake album, I hear some Rush, Pantera (Petrucci definitely paid attention to Dimebag), Kansas (Innocence Faded), Deep Purple/Rainbow (Erotomania).

or maybe I'm just hearing things...LOL



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 03 2016 at 00:55
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

Thumbs Up given the nature of prog metal.... one can see the sonic influence of Priest over Sabbath.  No question in my mind there.  One could argue that Sabbath didn't exactly pervue prog metal.. but was a metal band that given suitcases full of cocaine decided to expand their sound.  Prog? hell yeah... prog-METAL?  debatable. Priest never bothered with teh artsy fartsy sh*t and broadening their sonic horizons... never bothered with f**king mellotrons, bagpipes, sitars or bringing in Rick Wakeman as a guest haha but again.. as has been noted... metal is a different beast than rock. .and prog-metal is not prog rock. A distinction that if often missed IMO.

Good observation.   I tend to agree, and I'd add that progmetal is, on balance, a product of heavy metal, not prog rock.   Conversely and contradictive, heavy metal itself was a byproduct, or a result, of the progression of rock in the late 1960s (Psych/Prog).  

"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 03 2016 at 00:58
Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

^ no one is saying that Sabbath, Priest or Purple are progressive metal, but they influenced the genre, that's all.


interesting.. so let's get to brass tacks and nails... I was going here but your post is what I was waiting for to bring up my thoughts.

how... just how did they influence it.  No one is saying they are...  some of the more infamous 'discussions' this site has had have been directly about just what those groups were.. or were not.

it is a rote thing to say they did.... but can you explain just how they did?  Or anyone..for discussions sake of course for I want to measure that versus my thoughts on it.

omg, what have I done? LOL

ok, let me give you some examples: I hear Black Sabbath influences (the Dio era) in Symphony X music.
On DT's Awake album, I hear some Rush, Pantera (Petrucci definitely paid attention to Dimebag), Kansas (Innocence Faded), Deep Purple/Rainbow (Erotomania).

or maybe I'm just hearing things...LOL
Is this even a question Mickey? The more ambitious works and albums by the metal pioneers of the 70's was obviously a huge influence on the early days of prog-metal. There is a direct line of inspiration from Sabbath/Purple (and anyone in their right mind would have included Sabotage over Never Say Die andTechnical Ecstacy) through NWOBHM who both Priest and Maiden once were a part of - through the early days of early 80's thrash, speed and heavy metal. Metallica, Mercyful Fate, Queensr˙che, Fates Warning, Voivod, Watchtower... virtually all metal that had more to offer than sped up garage punk on steroids were fans who knew knew their metal-history.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 03 2016 at 02:38
The musical influence that moved heavy rock to metal was firstly, abandoning blues, being more aware of harmonic changes - i.e. a more classical influence. This is usually in the form of using modes which is the part of a scale that originates on parts of a piece of music that is not the root or tonic. The addition of building blocks of established classical harmony rather than pentatonic blues jamming. Of course there is the neo-classical guitar thing where they all wanted to prove they could all do the same thing. And not play actual pop songs for me.

Rhythmically, abandoning groove especially on thrash. The knucklehead approach mistaken for being "aufentic".

Melodically - oh hell it's metal, why bother.

Ok there are the Scorpions and UFO.

Look if you tracked a line from say Therion to Purple and Sabbath you'd be including priest, Maiden (itself a cross between Wishbone Ash, Jethro Tull and Led Zeppelin, especially Achilles.). Therion use orchestras and opera singers (think Lonesome Crow as a good influence on that bit). Not to mention the last Uli Jon Roth album. He's a fine example of progressive metal. Four Seasons covered as well.

Purple you betcha - Two Group and Orchestra suites (and one done again, thankfully) but guitar wise probably more Rainbow. You get metal bands doing Purple tributes, one lot that's been around a while called Machine Head. Vocally singers have spent decades in the shadow of Ian Gillan. Sadly the use of wit has been one of the first of his many influences to go.

Not that I regard death growls as helping things along. At least no one I like can blamed for that overdone gimmick. If only they had ignored Mike Oldfield in this respect. I know I do.

I think the question is not that which metal / heavy rock / whatever has influenced metal but what music other than metal has helped things along. I'm imagining romantic classical (Beethoven, Mahler, Wagner) as modern classical (Varese, Messiaen, Stravinsky, Webern) has worked in with prog rock.

I think it might be hard to pinpoint a direct obvious Hendrix influence in Converge or Opeth but that is hardly the point which is the development of heavy metal pop music is a process. Once upon a time ACDC were regarded as metal. But the metal heads insist now this is not so. The often spouted idea that ACDC are "classic rock" is a way of trying to shake that off and "purifying" the metal blood. (I hope dear reader you get an inkling of sarcasm here).

"Vey're klassik rokk!"

"You mean, like ACDC and Simon and Garfunkel?" Attempting a contrasting correlative example

"Wot?!"

... sigh... where's the vino...?

Classic rock is a sales format not a style of playing any pop music. Perhaps metal heads are even more simple than the ones I knew and are only able to take in very limited information and that is only within their cultural orbit. Trying to discuss a musical one makes me think of a combo of The Wall and Thick As A Brick (real life Dunning - Kruger syndrome).

I find it funny that metal heads find prog rock a challenge. They insist that metal is not "pop". Yet if there is anything to far outside the sonic milieu (noisy) and wimpy (fast, noisy) and yet thusly go and display the same characteristics as any other teenybopper.

Thankfully we prog rock fans with our wisdom and lack of snob standards know better and can set an example, or at least be quietly understanding.




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 03 2016 at 02:59
Originally posted by Windhawk Windhawk wrote:



50 Albums That Built Progressive Metal (in chronological order)

1.    "Sabbath Bloody Sabbath"    Black Sabbath (1973)
2.    "Kansas"    Kansas (1974)
2.    "Sabotage"    Black Sabbath (1975)
4.    "2112"    Rush (1976)
5.    "Technical Ecstasy"    Black Sabbath (1976)
6.    "Leftoverture"    Kansas (1976)
7.    "A Farewell to Kings"    Rush (1977)
8.    "Never Say Die"    Black Sabbath (1978)
9.    "Hemispheres"    Rush (1978)
10.    "Moving Pictures"    Rush (1981)

11.    "Melissa"    Mercyful Fate (1983)
12.    "Power Windows"    Rush (1985)
13.    "Awaken the Guradian"    Fates Warning (1986)
14.    "Epicus Doomivus Metallicus"    Candlemass (1986)
15.    "Mekong Delta"    Mekong Delta (1987)
16.    "Life Cycle"    Sieges Even (1988)
17.    "Dimension Hatross"    Voivod (1988)
18.    "No Exit"    Fates Warning (1988)
19.    "Operation Mindcrime"    Queensryche (1988)
20.    "Them"    King Diamond (1988)
 
I'm not aware of many of these 80's, 90's and 00's albums you cite, but I'd have definitely included Judas Priest's Sad Wings of Destiny and Rainbow's Rising ....
 .... and why not Iron Maiden's début.
 
No BÖC , either, though?? Confused
 
 
however,Shocked Power Windows?? Confused


Edited by Sean Trane - October 03 2016 at 03:02
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 03 2016 at 05:44
^ Absolutely Wink

How can we realistically track influence? Influence is not something copied that we can read like the pages a book, it is something used to inspire and inspiration (which can come from the most unlikely of quarters) is difficult to determine just by listening to the result. Unless an artist stands up and says, "This album what I made was influenced by that album here and that other album there" then all we are doing is guessing and speculating. You cannot actually tell Metallica's direct influences by listening to 'Kill 'Em All'.

Here's a thing:  on 'Garage Days', along with several other NWOBHM and European Heavy Metal bands, Metallica covered Diamond Head and have cited them as an influence; and in turn, Diamond Head cite as influences Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, UFO, Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, Rush and Free ... as would every other NWOBHM band at the time!

And that's kinda important - Every Metal band on the planet that formed in the 1980s was influenced by NWOBHM, including some of those cited by Metallica such as Merciful Fate. NWOBHM grew out of the old-wave of Heavy Metal, which at the time we called Heavy Rock (Britain) or Hard Rock (America), which in turn grew out of British and American Blues Rock. As Rollon correctly pointed out and Hugues has emphasised, from the 1960s to the 1980s and beyond is an unbroken lineage, so it's damn near impossible to draw a line from one end to the other without hitting several (or even all) points in between. Furthermore Heavy/Hard/Rock/Metal never experienced a decline so never needed a resurgence, renaissance or reinvention to revive its fortunes, we delineate it chronologically and compartmentalise it into subgenres out of convenience and for no other reason, Sabbath, Heep, AC/DC or Led Zepp could headline a Metal festival and no one would bat an eyelid.

As a curious sidetracking co-incidence: Diamond Head took their name from Phil Manzanera's first solo album and in 1983 released a Heavy Metal Progressive Rock album called 'Canterbury'. Listening to 'Canterbury' now we would quickly surmise that it was not even remotely influenced by Phil Manz or the Canterbury Scene but at times sounds a little bit like Queen and at others sounds not unlike Uriah Heep, neither of whom has Diamond Head acknowledged as an influence, and those similarities do not actually imply influence anyway because it's hard to tell just by listening that Diamond Head in general, and 'Canterbury' in particular, was influenced by Rush, Sabbath or Priest. 

This wasn't the first Metal album to get a bit Prog or the first Prog album to get a bit Metal, nor is a Progressive Metal album (so can't be one of the first Progressive Metal albums) and it's a bankable certainty that it played no part in the "building" of Progressive Metal because even though the band Diamond Head is now familiar to many (at least by name), few heard this album in 1983 and fewer still after. Releasing a Heavy Metal Prog Rock album in 1983 probably wasn't the smartest thing to do when Iron Maiden, Def Leopard and Saxon were still riding what was left of the NWOBHM, erm, wave and unbeknown to them, a month after this album was released a band their previous albums had influenced were about to unleash an album that would rip the Metal scene a new arsehole. But like other 2nd-tier NWOBHM bands such as Samson and Tygers of Pan Tang whose fortunes were fading, they were struggling and had do try something, so for various reasons the album flopped, disappeared into obscurity and became a rare collectors item. 

So, we cannot deny that all those albums that people are claiming built Prog Metal or influenced Prog Metal actually exist so the later bands must have heard them, it does not follow that any of them can be directly attributed to aiding its inception or actually being a part of its development.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 03 2016 at 05:50
I thought Sunn O))) were in there somewhere?  This genre is not my cup of tea but I thought these guys were highly influential.  I guess it is because they don't do 'songs' or 'anthems'...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 03 2016 at 06:26
Yes to everything Dean said.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 03 2016 at 06:29
Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

I think I heard about progressive metal for the first time (if I remember right) '94 or'95.

I remember back in Germany the term "Techno Thrash" was quite popular around 1987-1990ish, when bands like Hades, Realm, Anacrusis, Sadus, Mekong Delta etc. were somewhat on the rise, but bands like Crimson Glory, Queensryche, Fates Warning and Dream Theater were definitely labelled as "Progressive Metal" around the same time.

The absence of WatchTower's "Energetic Disassembly" makes the list appear to be incomplete, a highly influential record of the somewhat more extreme metal of the 80's. Add Death's "Human" and a few others too!! 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 03 2016 at 07:29
Someone is going to have to explain Power Windows by Rush being anywhere on that list. I love that album but to say that it helped build prog metal? huh?
What am I missing?


Edited by Jeffro - October 03 2016 at 07:30
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