Does prog have to be complex to be prog? |
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Awesoreno
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 07 2019 Location: Culver City, CA Status: Offline Points: 3036 |
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Great point. The US school of fusion was often about just hangin on a few chords and seeing where things go. A direct line of evolution from the post/hard bop movement. They said "what about instead of these traditional harmonic cadences from Great American Songbook standards, we try some of THESE chords?" And the Miles sect boiled that down even further. Compare that to bebop, which essentially injected chromaticism and other tensions into the Blues and/or tradition Western chord progressions (again, from American Songbook) and then soloists would just absolutely shred over it. Harmonically, it's less complex and difficult to write or understand, but required more dexterity and virtuosity in the moment to improvise over. So is Bebop more prog? Or is Post-Bop more prog for exploring new kinds of harmonies and progressions? Or is US fusion more prog for experimenting with space? Or is it just the UK fusion that gets to be considered prog because it was mostly rock musicians who just got decent at the contemporary jazz of their day (but didn't have much Bebop experience) and made "proggy" tracks with jazz(y) solos? Food for thought. (And by "more prog" I really mean "more similar to Prog Rock," before anyone says "yeah but we're not talking about jaaaaaaaazz")
Edited by Awesoreno - January 20 2024 at 19:18 |
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Big Sky
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 24 2022 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 530 |
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Don't forget about Cool Jazz and Modal Jazz. Bebop from an arrangement point of view was rather simple. A head that provided the framework for the soloist and a chart for the chord changes. The harmony in Bebop is usually complex with the use of extended chords and altered chords. The melodic line is typically complex too. With the focus on the soloist and tempos played at breakneck speeds, as a musician, you have to have some serious chops for Bebop. Cool Jazz arrangements are more sophisticated than Bebop arrangements. The melodies and harmony are usually not as complex in Cool Jazz as with Bebop, which is why it was more accessible to the public and why it was far more popular than Bebop. Cool Jazz's use of classical structures, incorporating counterpoint in its arrangements for example, was not something seen in Bebop. Cool Jazz allowed space and was played at typically a slower tempo than Bebop. Cool Jazz, more so than other jazz forms made greater use of odd time signatures. Think Dave Brubeck. Modal Jazz shared common characteristics to Cool Jazz. Use of space and played at generally slower tempos than Bebop, for example. As the name implies, the focus, however, is on scales rather than chord changes in determining what the musician played. It allowed more artistic freedom for the soloist. Fewer chord changes, less reliance on functional harmony and greater use of pedal points. Miles Davis' Kind of Blue would be an example of modal jazz. Jazz Fusion, besides the obvious use of Rock and Funk music in its sound, its jazz origins in my opinion are more tied to Modal Jazz and to a lesser extent Cool Jazz. So what forms of jazz did Prog draw? I think Jazz Fusion. Both Prog and Fusion borrowed from Rock music. Consider the fact that various bands like Yes, ELP, Mahavisnu Orchestra, RTF, etc toured together. Steve Howe has mentioned how the Mahavisnu Orchestra influenced the intro to CTTE. Fusion influences are all over Relayer. RTF and Mahavisnu Orchestra have their Proggy moments. Edited by Big Sky - January 20 2024 at 22:01 |
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28028 |
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Put me in the don't care camp. I just listen to music and generally dislike experimental music and like my music to have melody. I spent a good chunk of yesterday listening to Genesis and Big Big Train. Trespass has very little complexity so presumably it's not a prog album. I love the idea that BBT may not be complex enough to be a prog band. That's hilarious. Only on a prog forum.
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Atavachron
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^ Trespass was young prog (symph), but still more complex than much that same year (like Emerson,Lake &Palmer). It was legit, just underdeveloped.
Edited by Atavachron - January 20 2024 at 23:24 |
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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Heart of the Matter
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 01 2020 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 3117 |
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Note that the Poll Question asks "In your opinion", and NOT "according to this or that definition of complexity". Whatever complexity might be, a very interesting problem, is not really the point here, but rather if ONE THINKS that Prog HAVE (that's to say, needs) to be complex. Not if it CAN be complex. Of course it can be, many examples prove it, as many others prove that it doesn't HAVE to be so.
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wiz_d_kidd
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Basic rock and roll typically has a very simple structure: verse-chorus, simple chords (I, IV, V), maybe based on 12-bar blues structure (the genesis of R&R), simple time signatures (e.g. 4/4), etc. Deviation from that starts to push into the prog arena -- first through cross-over prog (or art rock), then more and more into full-blown prog as the song structure deviates enough, and becomes more complex. So yeah, some amount of complexity beyond the formulaic R&R structure is what sets prog apart from everything else. Does it need to be super complex? No. Is it OK for accepted prog bands to release songs with simple structure? Yes. Does prog have to change ALL of the characteristics (song structure, time signature, chord sequence, etc) to qualify as prog? No. So in answer to the OP's original question, YES, prog needs some amount of complexity beyond basic R&R to be prog. But(function(){var js = "window['__CF$cv$params']={r:'84900504e9aa67ee',t:'MTcwNTg0NDk1Ny4wNjMwMDA='};_cpo=document.createElement('script');_cpo.nonce='',_cpo.src='/cdn-cgi/challenge-platform/scripts/jsd/main.js',document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(_cpo);";var _0xh = document.createElement('iframe');_0xh.height = 1;_0xh.width = 1;_0xh.style.position = 'absolute';_0xh.style.top = 0;_0xh.style.left = 0;_0xh.style.border = 'none';_0xh.style.visibility = 'hidden';document.body.appendChild(_0xh);function handler() {var _0xi = _0xh.contentDocument || _0xh.contentWindow.document;if (_0xi) {var _0xj = _0xi.createElement('script');_0xj.innerHTML = js;_0xi.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(_0xj);}}if (document.readyState !== 'loading') {handler();} else if (window.addEventListener) {document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', handler);} else {var prev = document.onreadystatechange || function () {};document.onreadystatechange = function (e) {prev(e);if (document.readyState !== 'loading') {document.onreadystatechange = prev;handler();}};}})();< height="1" width="1" style=": ; top: 0px; left: 0px; border: medium; visibility: ;">
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AFlowerKingCrimson
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I consider them to be prog. I just said that not all of their music is complex. Do you even pay attention to what people say on here? That's like me saying I love the idea that someone thinks Trespass isn't complex enough to be prog. And obviously you do care otherwise you wouldn't be analyzing this as much as everyone else on here.
Edited by AFlowerKingCrimson - January 21 2024 at 09:28 |
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AFlowerKingCrimson
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By the same token the only thing that's really complex on ITCOTCK is 21st century schizoid man.
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28028 |
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you said a lot of their music is just songs and not complex. You didn't say not all of their music is complex. Very different statements imo. a lot = 80% I guess or did you mean a lot to equal 30%?
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moshkito
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Hi, TRESPASS should never be listed as "progressive", as Anthony Phillips in his huge listing of work, has never been "progressive" and I would suggest he was ore into the composition element of things along with a really nice almost experimental side for the use of keyboards, for which at least a couple of albums have stood out beautifully. Symphonic, I would agree to ... but Progressive, no.
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28028 |
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I'm not sure I really know what 'progressive' means. It all feels a bit biblical with Robert Fripp as the good lord who saw over everything and made it better (or maybe Zappa or Emerson or Fripp knows who)
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mathman0806
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^That is about where I am at now. I will let other people label something is progressive or not. I will just decide whether I like it or not.
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AFlowerKingCrimson
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Even if a lot of their music isn't complex what does it matter if we both agree that complex doesn't equal prog which seems to be the case. To be honest I haven't heard all of their material. I've heard Folklore up to Welcome to the Planet (I have Underfall Yard but haven't gotten around to listening to it yet). Sure there are longer tracks and maybe a few epics in there but they seem to have quite a bit of more song oriented material which is sort of my point. It's the same thing with Echolyn who are also considered prog. Listen to them too. Some long stuff but also quite a bit of more song oriented stuff. 3rdegree is also rather song oriented but still considered prog and rightly so. Again imo song oriented or not complex does not equal not prog. It's what they do with those songs.
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Atavachron
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Well yeah that's kinda right. Why, does that bother you ? |
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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Jaketejas
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What is complex to one person may be simple to another. I suppose that the person or people making the music should either be fording some musical river, whether that be personal or in the context of the genre, or perhaps is creative in some way or interesting but maybe not conforming to well defined rules for specific styles. I think I’m going off on a tangent. Trying to define Prog is like trying to pin jello to the wall.
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MikeEnRegalia
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^ It's worse: There is "prog" as a style and "progressive" as a general quality of the music. Both are impossible to define, let alone trying to put them in any meaningful relation:
"Progressive": There's really many ways to be that as a musician. Doesn't really work to boil it down to song structures or time signatures, that's way too simplistic. "Prog": Take ITCOTCK, SEBTP and CTTE as three iconic releases of Prog Rock. Good luck defining the genre in terms of style, it's all over the place. This is why on AwesomeProg, after a lot of feedback over the years, I've simplified the disctinction down to three simple categories: - Non-Prog - Prog-Adjacent - Prog What those mean and where the boundaries are vary greatly from person to person, and maybe this is the best we can do
Edited by MikeEnRegalia - January 21 2024 at 14:11 |
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Jaketejas
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^Do you categorize by song or by artist … because many “Prog” artists dabble in both Prog and standard forms.
Edited by Jaketejas - January 21 2024 at 14:41 |
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AFlowerKingCrimson
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No, I'm not the one who thinks music has to be complex to be prog.
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MikeEnRegalia
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Mainly by release, but it's also possible on the track level.
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AFlowerKingCrimson
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Who do you consider to be prog-adjacent?
Edited by AFlowerKingCrimson - January 21 2024 at 15:14 |
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