Great ELP Debate |
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arcer
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 01 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 1239 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 12:26 | ||
this is good fun. provoking lots of analysis of elp's relevance and their place in the downfall of prog. After slating the poor old codgers (just not my cup of tea) I'll go further and offer my tuppene worth on their place in the downfall of 'classic' prog... I firmly believe prog's demise was occasioned by a two-pronged attack, one self-inflicted and the other via the natural culling that occurs in popular music. I sincerely believe that most of the world-class proggers (Yes, ELP, less so Genesis) had crawled enthusiastically up their own backsides my 1975. Prog, always a somewhat elitist marque (music for the intelligentsia/musicians) had climbed into an ivory tower of self-regarding narcissism that forbade any gainsaying of its right to probe the innermost depths of its own navel. Tales, anything ELP did (), possibly Lamb (tho I think it's their finest work) were impossibly extravagant pieces of self-involved do doo that to a greater or lessr degree excluded all but the most dedicated (I particularly think this of Tales). Locked away in splendid isolation, prog's elder lemons deserved to be brought done. And their own inaccessibility was ultimately their undoing. The social and political climate of the mid-70s (in the US and UK) had no place for such rarefied self-indulgence. It NEEDED a revolution. That revolution was punk in the UK and it's descendant new wave in the US (for I don't think punk ever really permeated the American zeitgeist. I love aspects of punk - its visceral aggression, it's three-chord thrashery, and I love what it did to some of the prog and rock dinosaurs. It gave Floyd a vicious, angular edge on Animals after the (admittedly beautiful) lush meandering of Wish You Were Here. It led Jimmy Page to incorporate all sorts of brittle, icy guitar magic into the criminally underrated Presence. It led Peter Gabriel to walk his own path and produce some stunning fusions of art rock, new wave and world music. Bowie decamped to Berlin and gave us the beautifully fractured Heroes and Low. Elsewhere, it gave rise to the Pretenders, Blondie, Talking Heads, The Buzzcocks, New Order, Joy Division, Echo and the Bunnymen, Television, PIL, the Stranglers, Joe Jackson, The Police et al. Those who couldn't adapt failed to survive - good. Out with the old in with the new. The same thing happened in 1991 with the snarling, mewling arrival of Kurt Cobain's Nirvana. Bye bye tired old college rock as typified by the awful likes of the Spin Doctors or Hootie and the goddamn Blowfish, hello Queens of the Stone Age, Pearl Jam, etc. The same thing had happened in the UK in 1986 with the advent of the second summer of love with dance music and the nascent madchester scene which severely impacted on the increasingly unbearable reigns of Madonna, Michael Jackson, Sting, the Eurthymics and a whole host of dismal 80s monoliths. The same thing, hopefully will happen again soon so we can lose the current crop of hopeless new wave regurgitators and find something new and exciting. Progressive is about progressing. maybe ultimately that's why I dislike neo-prog so much. It does not progress at all. It is rooted in the early 70s, slavishly replaying Close to the Edge and Fanfare for the Common Man and The Musical Box with marginal shifts in structure. As a very young teenager I was possibly blessed to straddlle the death of prog and the birth of punk. I feel that I have a greater affinity to the prog camp but I am very attracted to the energy and dynamism of punk and new wave (and its decsendents). I can distinctly remember listening to both PIL's Metal Box and Lez Zeppelin's Song Remains the Same in the same week and being blown away by both. The death of prog in 1977-78 was a function of teenagers growing increasingly disaffacted with the unapproachability of the music their older brothers and sisters clung to. And like all rebellious youngsters they sought out something to make their own - and at the 100 Club in the shape of the Clash, they found it. I recognise the role played in this by the music media, but while there was a year zero feeeling about the whole thing, however I would also add that many of the journalists of the time were young themselves and utterly entranced by punk's rebellion and alienated by prog's self-satisfaction in its fascination with musical and technical exclusivity. Prog wasn't killed by either itself or its rivals, it was wounded from all quarters and left to slowly exsanguinate in a quickly forgotten corner. There is some fantastic prog out there, oddles - but by the same token there is much that is overbearing, overblown and overdone. Some will call the explorations on Tales etc 'questing' or 'the attempted perfection of their art'. Me, I just call it self-indulgent tripe, a world away from the tight, focussed objectives achieved on Yes's first three albums. Then again, it's all down to personal taste innit And i still think ELP are crap |
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Gaston
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 26 2004 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 401 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 12:33 | ||
"Tales, anything ELP did (), possibly Lamb (tho I think it's their finest work) were impossibly extravagant pieces of self-involved do doo that to a greater or lessr degree excluded all but the most dedicated (I particularly think this of Tales). "
Hence, you turn to punk?
Please. Talk about devolution. There's a big difference between being defiant like Tales was and being defiant like Never mind the Bollocks, was. Figure it out first, then assault prog.
Gaston |
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It's the same guy. Great minds think alike. |
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Reed Lover
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 16 2004 Location: Sao Tome and Pr Status: Offline Points: 5187 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 12:41 | ||
That's the worst response to a reasoned, articulate post ive ever witnessed on here! |
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Syzygy
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 16 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 7003 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 13:05 | ||
I've got to agree with you about a lot of points there Arcer - we'd be about the same age. I remember seeing my first proper gig (Genesis on the TOTT tour) and getting home afterwards in time to catch the Sex Pistols on So It Goes. At the time I hated the Pistols, but at a party a few months later a lethal combination of Woodpecker Cider and Players Number 6 convinced me of the benefits of Anarchy In The UK (and also the 12" version of le Freak). BUT - I don't think punk had that much effect on the big prog acts. Pink Floyd's Animals material had been around a couple of years before they recorded it, when the Pistols were still but a gleam in Malcolm Mclaren's eye. At the height of punk's ascendancy, ELP had massive hits in both the singles and album charts with Works Vol 1, Yes achieved the same with Going For The One, Genesis had a big hit with Wind And Wuthering and Jethro Tull did well with Heavy Horses. Admittedly, the music press were (IMO rightly) much more interested in the nascent punk/new wave scene, but if you look at the album charts for 77 - 78, punk had surprisingly little impact beyond Never Mind... and the Clash's first effort. Punk and disco had a huge impact on what had been a rather moribund singles market, but prog was never really about singles. Punk did have a big impact on the less commercially successful prog acts, particularly the Canterbury scene. For much of the 1970s these bands had toured smaller venues and student's unions and there was a well established circuit for them. Punk acts had much less equipment to lug around (few used keyboards, and certainly not the huge banks favoured by prog acts). They were smaller, cheaper and effectively took over the circuit that had sustained bands like Gryphon, Henry Cow, Soft Machine and so on. Some simply focussed their efforts on continental Europe (which had always been a more lucrative market for that style of music), others simply called it a day. As for the ELP question - it is a question of personal taste. For me they're rather like Queen. Some of the material makes me cringe (Pictures, any of their allegedly 'humorous' songs) but I can't wholly dislike any band who went so completely, magnificently over the top. The world would be a poorer place without Tarkus and Karn Evil 9, as would my music collection. Edited by Syzygy |
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'Like so many of you
I've got my doubts about how much to contribute to the already rich among us...' Robert Wyatt, Gloria Gloom |
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arcer
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 01 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 1239 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 13:06 | ||
The only thing defiant about Tales or ELP is their ability to defy prolonged listening - gimme the Pistols anyday - at least their stuff was short, if only Howe and Anderson had restricted their blatherings on the Siddhartha to three minutes come to think of it - maybe theu should have listened to the Ramones - they could have got it down to 1.5 minutes |
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Wrath_of_Ninian
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 04 2004 Location: Scotland Status: Offline Points: 230 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 13:44 | ||
Sorry Arcer, I thought your summation was excellent, but I have to respond to Threefates again. regarding my 'stupid comments'. |
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threefates
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 30 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4215 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 13:52 | ||
Just as I thought. You're not really a prog fan afterall. And you just don't get it, so you've turned to belittling it and making excuses for why you just don't understand it. Sorry Arcer... I guess you're just not enlightened enough.... Oh and, as an aside, ELP largely did not play the same form of music on their studio album in 1977 as they did before but this was most certainly NOT as a result of the '70s Punk movement. They took the orchestral route, did it beautifully, and still sold sh!tloads more albums across the world than any Punk band. |
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THIS IS ELP
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Reed Lover
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 16 2004 Location: Sao Tome and Pr Status: Offline Points: 5187 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:04 | ||
Never noticed that before>>>>>>>>>>>>>&a mp;g t;>>>>>>>>>>>>>>&a mp;g t;>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Maybe Linda's right, I could be brain dead! Anyway.. I distinctly remember seeing ELP playing in London in the Eighties. It was outside Marks & Spencer's. They had a lovely little dog with them too! In fact here's my picture of Keith in action:
Edited by Reed Lover |
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Velvetclown
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 13 2004 Status: Offline Points: 8548 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:10 | ||
And look at ELP these days
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Velvetclown
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 13 2004 Status: Offline Points: 8548 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:12 | ||
Thank the lard for Jethro Tull
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threefates
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 30 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4215 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:15 | ||
Well that definitely proves your brain dead, Reed!! (Not that we needed proof) cause Keith would never be caught dead playing a KAWAi!! Man, get with it.... lay off the alcohol! |
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THIS IS ELP
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arcer
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 01 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 1239 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:17 | ||
Three Fates wrote: Just as I thought. You're not really a prog fan afterall. And you just don't get it, so you've turned to belittling it and making excuses for why you just don't understand it. Sorry Arcer... I guess you're just not enlightened enough.... Ahhh but I am a progger - owning the collected works of genesis, floyd, rush, tull, yes etc as well as key works by a host of other prog bands from Tangerine Dream to well list any one you want - even ELP!! And au contraire I think my view of prog's place in the grand scheme of popular music is very enlightened - enlightened by 30 odd years of serious consumption of popular music and also by a very catholic taste that takes in everything from punk to pop, goth to electronica, country to world music. It's just my personal take on mid-70s prog, I sincerely believe it had become a horrible lumbering monster and needed to be, if not killed off, then at least relieved of its more gluttinous, bloated attributes. Oh and, as an aside, ELP largely did not play the same form of music on their studio album in 1977 as they did before but this was most certainly NOT as a result of the '70s Punk movement. They took the orchestral route, did it beautifully, and still sold sh!tloads more albums across the world than any Punk band. A similar point was made elsewhere, saying that punk had little impact on prog's success in 77. very true but what I actually said was that it had a severe impact on prog which was left to slowly bleed to death in a forgotten corner (though i think I said exsanguinate). A year on, prog was barely registering a heartbeat. By 1979/80 it was dead. By 1982, a prog band couldn't get arrested in the charts - unless it was on the grounds of being criminally out of touch. And I'll wager that the Clash might have something to say about album sales. I love progressive rock but it is not the be all and end all. Some of it's terrible and nowhere near as good as some of the best punk and new wave or grunge or dance or whatever. Compare Pictures at an Exhibition with Talking Heads' 'Remain in Light' or the Police's 'Regatta de Blanc' or The Clash's 'London Calling' and I know which ones I would rather have in my collection. Just because you put your hands over your ears and sing Jerusalem at the top of your voice doesn't mean that nothing else of merit exists. |
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Reed Lover
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 16 2004 Location: Sao Tome and Pr Status: Offline Points: 5187 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:18 | ||
http://www.greglake.com/forum/topic.asp?whichpage=2&ARCH IVEVIEW=&TOPIC_ID=3467#top........................................................... You multitasking 3F8TS? |
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Velvetclown
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 13 2004 Status: Offline Points: 8548 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:21 | ||
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Reed Lover
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 16 2004 Location: Sao Tome and Pr Status: Offline Points: 5187 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:22 | ||
Werent Rush getting TOP 5 albums all through the early to mid? Didnt Tom Sawyer get to No 23 in 1982? Weren't Marillion pounding the charts as well as Genesis,PF and erm...... |
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threefates
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 30 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4215 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:24 | ||
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THIS IS ELP
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gdub411
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 24 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 3484 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:29 | ||
Marillion and such weren't pounding the charts here in the US. Genesis was, but they were pop by then. I wish they would have, but over here , your average person was a total tard when it came to music. Man, did the 80's suck! |
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Reed Lover
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 16 2004 Location: Sao Tome and Pr Status: Offline Points: 5187 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:41 | ||
Rush US chart positions 1980's: Permanent Waves (1980) No 4 Mot bad for a totally unhip Canadian Prog Rock Trio!
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threefates
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 30 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4215 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:42 | ||
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THIS IS ELP
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arcer
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 01 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 1239 |
Posted: January 09 2005 at 14:42 | ||
ah yes Reed but Rush had adapted to survive. 1980's Permanent Waves is you'll agree massively different to 1978's Hemispheres - shorter, tougher tunes, a more defined sense of structure. By Moving Pictures they were dabbling with reggae and new wave (Red Barchetta, Vital Signs) and by Signals they'd turned into The Police
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