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The way I see it Sufjan Stevens is a progressive artist in the truest sense of the word.
The term "progressive" in music should not be taken literally ("in the truest sense of the word") because music does not progress. If the music were to progress, it would mean that it was going somewhere. Any musicologist will tell you that this is not the case.
Progressive rock is just a term that denotes the aggregate state of part of the underground music scene in Europe at the end of the 1960s and the beginning of the 1970s.
By the way, Sufjan Stevens has nothing to do with progressive rock. He is an American indie folk-rock artist.
Family and King Crimson are labeled as both Art Rock and Progressive Rock - everywhere.
Maybe
in America. In America, art rock and progressive rock have always been
synonymous. In Europe, no.
But
you claim they are two fundamentally different genres.
Of course, because in Europe back then, mainstream and underground music were two fundamentally different things.
I don't doubt that this was true in whatever part of Europe you grew
up (edit: I do actually doubt it, but I was trying to stay nice and polite:). Europe is a great many different things though. My dad or all those
older guys I share musical interest with - never
make your kind of "fundamental" distinctions between groups or genres.
ELP or Camel doesn't represent any kind of underground and Velvet Underground or Family were never mainstream anyway. I'm
glad we approach this music from our near past in a less
cultural and more of a musical way. Because your truths from the past are anecdotal,
and a lot of them are irrelevant and wrong. The music lives
on. Although it doesn't change, fifty years later we hear it differntly. Using a
mainstream/underground
divide that makes no sense in describing the actual music in question is useless to me.
Edited by Saperlipopette! - February 11 2024 at 23:47
Family and King Crimson are labeled as both Art Rock and Progressive Rock - everywhere.
Maybe
in America. In America, art rock and progressive rock have always been
synonymous. In Europe, no.
But
you claim they are two fundamentally different genres.
Of course, because in Europe back then, mainstream and underground music were two fundamentally different things.
Using a
mainstream/underground
divide that makes very little sense
I'm afraid that the distinctions between art rock, which is mainstream rock with an artistic bent, and progressive rock, which is a subgenre of underground music, are too metaphysical for you.
The way I see it Sufjan Stevens is a progressive artist in the truest sense of the word.
The term "progressive" in music should not be taken literally ("in the truest sense of the word") because music does not progress. If the music were to progress, it would mean that it was going somewhere. Any musicologist will tell you that this is not the case.
Progressive rock is just a term that denotes the aggregate state of part of the underground music scene in Europe at the end of the 1960s and the beginning of the 1970s.
By the way, Sufjan Stevens has nothing to do with progressive rock. He is an American indie folk-rock artist.
I think you and your musicologist ways are stuck in definitions and ways of seeing this that doesn't feel particularly relevant to me. I'm not interested in a form of Progressive Rock that isn't allowed to be and mean differnt things at differnt times. That's for genres that belong in a museum. And you can think of that in whatever way you like.
Family and King Crimson are labeled as both Art Rock and Progressive Rock - everywhere.
Maybe
in America. In America, art rock and progressive rock have always been
synonymous. In Europe, no.
But
you claim they are two fundamentally different genres.
Of course, because in Europe back then, mainstream and underground music were two fundamentally different things.
Using a
mainstream/underground
divide that makes very little sense
I'm afraid that the distinctions between art rock, which is mainstream rock with an artistic bent, and progressive rock, which is a subgenre of underground music, are too metaphysical for you.
I would suggest you are not metaphysical, but constipated.
The definitions of "art rock" and "progressive rock" are fluid, and prog was essentially "underground music" until it wasn't (and that was very early on), and many bands later considered "prog rock" were earlier referred to as "art rock". As a matter of fact, the transitory term "underground music" is an inapt reference for music in general as it does not define a specific genre.
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...
Family and King Crimson are labeled as both Art Rock and Progressive Rock - everywhere.
Maybe
in America. In America, art rock and progressive rock have always been
synonymous. In Europe, no.
But
you claim they are two fundamentally different genres.
Of course, because in Europe back then, mainstream and underground music were two fundamentally different things.
Using a
mainstream/underground
divide that makes very little sense
I'm afraid that the distinctions between art rock, which is mainstream rock with an artistic bent, and progressive rock, which is a subgenre of underground music, are too metaphysical for you.
The definitions of "art rock" and "progressive rock" are fluid,
In my humble opinion, it is not at all fluid. Naturally, a lot of underground musicians wanted to make it big in mainstream rock, especially in the U.S. because of its absurdly large market, which opens up some (unimaginable for Europe) possibilities, yet the songs they wrote for the ears of underground music freaks have nothing to do with mainstream rock songs they supposedly did later, whether they are artistically inclined or not.
By the way, Sufjan Stevens has nothing to do with progressive rock. He is an American indie folk-rock artist
That's a perfect way of telling me you haven't got the faintest clue what you're talking about - without telling me. Thank you.
The artistic distance of genre-wise positions between American indie-folk star Sufjan Stevens and, e.g., a French progressive band like PoiL, is roughly the same as the distance between some 60's easy rockers from Laurel Canyonand, e.g., The Plastic People of the Universe from 1968 Prague.
By the way, Sufjan Stevens has nothing to do with progressive rock. He is an American indie folk-rock artist
That's a perfect way of telling me you haven't got the faintest clue what you're talking about - without telling me. Thank you.
The distance of artistic positions between Sufjan Stevens and, e.g., PoiL, is roughly the same as the distance between some easy rockers from Lauryl Canyon and, e.g., The Plastic People of the Universe from 1968 Prague.
No need to compare with PoiL because I never did. But you can come back and let me know if you still think Sufjan Stevens is purely an American indie folk-rock artist, after you listened to a handful of these albums of his: Meditations, Lamentations, Revelations, Celebrations, Incantation, Reflections, The BQE, The Age of Adz, Planetarium, The Decalogue, Aporia, The Ascension, Enjoy Your Rabbit... etc...
By the way, Sufjan Stevens has nothing to do with progressive rock. He is an American indie folk-rock artist
That's a perfect way of telling me you haven't got the faintest clue what you're talking about - without telling me. Thank you.
The distance of artistic positions between Sufjan Stevens and, e.g., PoiL, is roughly the same as the distance between some easy rockers from Lauryl Canyon and, e.g., The Plastic People of the Universe from 1968 Prague.
No need to compare with PoiL
Ok, let's imagine that I remove French underground band PoiL from the example and put Napier's Bones from England. What changes? Nothing. Sufjan Stevens is never going to be progressive rock.
And he doesn't need to be progressive, because he is an indie folk-rock star, and a progressive tag doesn't mean a badge of honour.
^ No never to you he will I suppose. But I never cared much for strong, uninformed opinions anyway (I haven't labeled him as Progressive Rock myself, btw). If you removed PoiL and replaced it with Napier's Bones from
England not much would change. I agree. You would still come across like you don't know what the hell you're talking
about - and that it's blatantly obvious that you have no idea whatsoever
about the musical contents of any of the albums I challenged you to
listen to. Because that's the only possible reason for reducing Sufjan Steven's body
of work to those of an indie-folker (it doesn't even cover particularly well the
albums I'm guessing you're somewhat familiar with).
Edited by Saperlipopette! - February 11 2024 at 04:43
^You're comical in pretending that you know a thing of two about
something that you
clearly don't. You obviously have no qualms postualting strong opinions
backed by nothing but superficial knowlegde. I'm reading all your posts
here from now on with this in
mind.
music does not progress. If the music were to progress, it would mean that it was going somewhere. Any musicologist will tell you that this is not the case.
I don't think I can agree with this. All music progresses from the start to the finish. But some music is perceived to portray a strong sense of motion, while other music can sound quite static.
An example of a track with a strong sense of motion ("groove") is Jeff Beck - Air Blower:
An example of a section of music which sounds almost static is Van der Graaf Generator - Presence of the Night (section from A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers):
No, I know how to behave in the restaurant now, I don't tear at the meat with my hands. If I've become a man of the world somehow, that's not necessarily to say I'm a worldly man.
I'm afraid that the distinctions between art rock, which is mainstream rock with an artistic bent, and progressive rock, which is a subgenre of underground music, are too metaphysical for you.
The Dark Elf wrote:
I would suggest you are not metaphysical, but constipated.
The definitions of "art rock" and "progressive rock" are fluid, and prog was essentially "underground music" until it wasn't (and that was very early on), and many bands later considered "prog rock" were earlier referred to as "art rock". As a matter of fact, the transitory term "underground music" is an inapt reference for music in general as it does not define a specific genre.
ProgExpo wrote:
In my humble opinion, it is not at all fluid. Naturally, a lot of underground musicians wanted to make it big in mainstream rock, especially in the U.S. because of its absurdly large market, which opens up some (unimaginable for Europe) possibilities, yet the songs they wrote for the ears of underground music freaks have nothing to do with mainstream rock songs they supposedly did later, whether they are artistically inclined or not.
It is fluid, very much so. Genres, and particularly rock genres, are and were often transitory and ephemeral. I'm not sure what country you come from (the "Ottoman Empire" being a bit vague), but you neither speak for all of Europe, nor for most fans of prog rock.
Again, "underground music" is not a genre of music, but a transitory state of being for certain bands in any number of genres. A band is underground until it is not, no matter the genre it gravitates toward. Psych, prog, punk, metal, hip hop, indie all had their moments of being underground -- and then, suddenly, they were not.
And genres within rock are very fluid:
Genesis was underground, then art rock, then prog, then pop.
Pink Floyd was undeground psych, then art rock, then prog, then more standard rock with prog elements.
Jethro Tull has morphed into any number of genres (blues/jazz-rock, hard rock, prog, prog-folk, even metal according to some industry sources).
A band with idiosyncratic methods and/or non-mainstream compositional style remains "underground" until that moment they are not. It is a time period, not a genre.
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...
I'm afraid that the distinctions between art rock, which is mainstream rock with an artistic bent, and progressive rock, which is a subgenre of underground music, are too metaphysical for you.
The Dark Elf wrote:
I would suggest you are not metaphysical, but constipated.
The definitions of "art rock" and "progressive rock" are fluid, and prog was essentially "underground music" until it wasn't (and that was very early on), and many bands later considered "prog rock" were earlier referred to as "art rock". As a matter of fact, the transitory term "underground music" is an inapt reference for music in general as it does not define a specific genre.
ProgExpo wrote:
In my humble opinion, it is not at all fluid. Naturally, a lot of underground musicians wanted to make it big in mainstream rock, especially in the U.S. because of its absurdly large market, which opens up some (unimaginable for Europe) possibilities, yet the songs they wrote for the ears of underground music freaks have nothing to do with mainstream rock songs they supposedly did later, whether they are artistically inclined or not.
It is fluid, very much so. Genres, and particularly rock genres, are and were often transitory and ephemeral. I'm not sure what country you come from (the "Ottoman Empire" being a bit vague), but you neither speak for all of Europe, nor for most fans of prog rock.
Again, "underground music" is not a genre of music, but a transitory state of being for certain bands in any number of genres. A band is underground until it is not, no matter the genre it gravitates toward. Psych, prog, punk, metal, hip hop, indie all had their moments of being underground -- and then, suddenly, they were not.
And genres within rock are very fluid:
Genesis was underground, then art rock, then prog, then pop.
Pink Floyd was undeground psych, then art rock, then prog, then more standard rock with prog elements.
Jethro Tull has morphed into any number of genres (blues/jazz-rock, hard rock, prog, prog-folk, even metal according to some industry sources).
A band with idiosyncratic methods and/or non-mainstream compositional style remains "underground" until that moment they are not. It is a time period, not a genre.
If the boundaries of the fields of underground and mainstream are that fluid, it would mean that artists can go from the underground to the mainstream, earn some money, and then return to the underground. However, this is not the case. An underground musician can collaborate with songwriters to create mainstream music with reminiscences of their underground stuff., and then book mainstream shows with the help of a management team to make their songs radio-friendly, get their music licenced for movie and television show usage, and even advertise. Underground musicians have the option of hiring a producer to change their sound and take it in a more popular direction. But this is selling out, and then there's no going back; they never return to the underground.
By the way, Sufjan Stevens has nothing to do with progressive rock. He is an American indie folk-rock artist
That's a perfect way of telling me you haven't got the faintest clue what you're talking about - without telling me. Thank you.
That's Svet for you.
I love how lively the Sufjan discussion has gotten, even moreso than at Folk. Mike, I simply didn't suggest him to Crossover initially as I thought he would get a chilly reception. I certainly wouldn't mind reading what they, or Logan in Prog-Related, ultimately think before proceeding over at PF, where we are trying to convince Hugues to join us and make the decision unanimously.
By the way, Sufjan Stevens has nothing to do with progressive rock. He is an American indie folk-rock artist
That's a perfect way of telling me you haven't got the faintest clue what you're talking about - without telling me. Thank you.
That's Svet for you.
I love how lively the Sufjan discussion has gotten, even moreso than at Folk. Mike, I simply didn't suggest him to Crossover initially as I thought he would get a chilly reception. I certainly wouldn't mind reading what they, or Logan in Prog-Related, ultimately think before proceeding over at PF, where we are trying to convince Hugues to join us and make the decision unanimously.
Adding artists like Sufjan Stevens to a progressive rock database means only further diluting the Progarchives as such.
I'm afraid that the distinctions between art rock, which is mainstream rock with an artistic bent, and progressive rock, which is a subgenre of underground music, are too metaphysical for you.
The Dark Elf wrote:
I would suggest you are not metaphysical, but constipated.
The definitions of "art rock" and "progressive rock" are fluid, and prog was essentially "underground music" until it wasn't (and that was very early on), and many bands later considered "prog rock" were earlier referred to as "art rock". As a matter of fact, the transitory term "underground music" is an inapt reference for music in general as it does not define a specific genre.
ProgExpo wrote:
In my humble opinion, it is not at all fluid. Naturally, a lot of underground musicians wanted to make it big in mainstream rock, especially in the U.S. because of its absurdly large market, which opens up some (unimaginable for Europe) possibilities, yet the songs they wrote for the ears of underground music freaks have nothing to do with mainstream rock songs they supposedly did later, whether they are artistically inclined or not.
It is fluid, very much so. Genres, and particularly rock genres, are and were often transitory and ephemeral. I'm not sure what country you come from (the "Ottoman Empire" being a bit vague), but you neither speak for all of Europe, nor for most fans of prog rock.
Again, "underground music" is not a genre of music, but a transitory state of being for certain bands in any number of genres. A band is underground until it is not, no matter the genre it gravitates toward. Psych, prog, punk, metal, hip hop, indie all had their moments of being underground -- and then, suddenly, they were not.
And genres within rock are very fluid:
Genesis was underground, then art rock, then prog, then pop.
Pink Floyd was undeground psych, then art rock, then prog, then more standard rock with prog elements.
Jethro Tull has morphed into any number of genres (blues/jazz-rock, hard rock, prog, prog-folk, even metal according to some industry sources).
A band with idiosyncratic methods and/or non-mainstream compositional style remains "underground" until that moment they are not. It is a time period, not a genre.
If the boundaries of the fields of underground and mainstream are that fluid, it would mean that artists can go from the underground to the mainstream, earn some money, and then return to the underground. However, this is not the case. An underground musician can collaborate with songwriters to create mainstream music with reminiscences of their underground stuff., and then book mainstream shows with the help of a management team to make their songs radio-friendly, get their music licenced for movie and television show usage, and even advertise. Underground musicians have the option of hiring a producer to change their sound and take it in a more popular direction. But this is selling out, and then there's no going back; they never return to the underground.
Again, "underground music" is not a genre. It is a time period. It is transitory. You are "underground" until you are not. When the music you compose is evidently so good and interesting that it piques the public's attention, then a performer reaches a critical mass of fans and listeners that literally propels them into the vacuous term "mainstream" (as in, "hey, I've sold enough albums that I can actually eat").
To quote a line from a definitely non-underground band, "What were vices are now habits." What was once "underground" is now "mainstream". I will quote a composer who, in all sense of the word, was "underground", but who rose to prominence and hence was no longer "underground," Igor Stravinsky, from his Poetics of Music In the Form of Six Lessons:
"I was made a revolutionary in spite of myself...The tone of a work like the Rite may have appeared arrogant, the language that it spoke may have seemed harsh in its newness, but that in no way implies that it is revolutionary in the most subversive sense of the word.
If one only need break a habit to merit being labeled revolutionary, then every musician who has something to say and who in order to say it goes beyond the bounds of established convention would beknown as revolutionary."
Sh*t happens. All the time.
Edited by The Dark Elf - February 11 2024 at 12:25
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...
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