future of prog |
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PrograhamLincoln
Forum Newbie Joined: May 06 2013 Location: New York Status: Offline Points: 28 |
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Agreed. Also, young and future composers will still want to write conceptual works, and if they do this in a rock mode, they may accidentally write and release prog albums.
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28029 |
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I'm just wondering when the thread will descend into the usual argument of what prog rock is. Is it a style or is it an attitude? Does seem they are divided into 2 seperate camps.
If you take any notice of ratings and rankings then PA's top 30 list is mostly 1970's albums. That's when it happened. Latterly it's hard to pin down what it is although even now there is a rewriting of history as to what prog was in the 70's with the likes of Roxy Music, 10CC and Supertramp lumped in somehow. It's not so much that the music evolves it's just that everyone wants to talk about music that is 'creative' and then apparently it all becomes prog. We either draw the boundaries or not. The less we draw them the more we are just talking about music generally and what is good and what isn't. Most agree that manufactured pop music is carp but that's about it.
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King Crimson776
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 12 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2779 |
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If you don't have the understanding of Classical that I'm talking about, you get Mars Volta and black midi instead of KC, GG and Yes. Some may be fine with that, but I'm basically saying those newer bands are infected with a kind of "Punk" attitude which compromises their Prog aspects. This attitude is basically "it doesn't matter how much you know about music, just be creative bro". It's a poison that is ubiquitous in modern music. Take a look at any recent yearly chart on RateYourMusic. I think the main reason it's 95% total trash is for the very reason I'm saying. The approach appears to be more "let's throw cool sounds at the wall" than any kind of real attempt at composition or songwriting. So no, it does matter that you know the fundamentals of music and have an acquaintance with the masters of Classical, especially if you're making Prog. Where's the broader view of musical history? If all you do is listen to a bit of KC, Zappa, GG and Mr. Bungle and think you can make prog now (black midi), you're going to be limited in what you're capable of. Experimentalism is fine so long as the fundamental composition is solid. It can't be a replacement for actual musical depth. For the most part, it should be a "spice" rather than the main dish.
Edited by King Crimson776 - April 15 2024 at 00:22 |
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MikeEnRegalia
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^ I don't think that kind of snobbery is helpful, but you do you.
Have you looked into the Black Midi musicians and what their musical background is?
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 17511 |
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HI, I'm not sure that the "background" is that important, although I would not argue that it does help to a degree. However, there are many musicians that are self taught that made it very big, and in some ways, it's like the work they did is not valid as we don't have a "background" ... Progressive material, however, did have quite a few folks that were fairly well educated when it came to music, and the Berlin folks is probably the one spot where there were a lot of modern composers that helped influence a lot of the new music. Both Schulze and Froese, and all members of CAN (except Damo), were very highly educated folks as well ... and we don't have to check their background to know they put together an amazing amount of music. England might differ a bit, but some of the areas were definitely educated, Canterbury being the one area where folks were musically more advanced than half the folks in rock music at the time. For America, just about all of it is reactive and against the establishment in some ways when it comes to the start of the progressive/psychedelic days. But they made it clear to a lot of people that it was about how it all felt, not how much it was studied ... and to this day, folks still wonder/say ... wtf was Jack Casady doing on that bass? And he is rarely anointed with a nice compliment. I don't know much about their "education" but based on the playing, I would think that JC was fairly well educated. The Grateful Dead is another story ... in the end, JG came off as very well educated musically, but no one or any biography discusses that much, and his later years doing solo and duet shows totally improvised once or twice weekly and that is probably how he studied his instrument ... We should not trash "self-taught" a whole lot ... I suppose that many of us will sit here and think most rap is not good because there is no education behind it (usually), but that would be a nasty generalization about a race, and is not fair. There is some value in their "voice" ... even if we do not consider it progressive. And then we can go back to Gil Scott Heron (The Last Poets) and I would say that a lot of their stuff was actually very well educated!
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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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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 22 2005 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 21179 |
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^ When I'm listening to newly released music, I try not to read anything about the musicians involved. I want to experience the music as unprejudiced as possible. Then I'll assign a rating, which I know you don't like because it's "numbers" ... but it is simply a way to say whether the music moved me which other users can immediately understand, especially when visualised as tiers ("good", "great", "awesome" ...). Upon further listening I'll write a blurb or even a longer review. I usually find out about the musicians much later ...
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Logan
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I commonly am not that interested in the background other than, perhaps, to find other related projects. I'm not one who likes to read much about bands or music artists, or about music generally. I felt differently with film. I like to listen to music that I think will be or find to be of interest. I like to listen to black midi. I love a lot of music that has post-punk/ punk qualities, much of which I find progressive (if not so much typically Prog genre). I like classical music, and when I want classical I would often prefer to listen to classical music composers than those who emulate it and absorb it into a rock framework. Doesn't mean I don;t love things such as Focus' Hamburger Concerto or William Sheller's Lux Aeterna. I disagree that 95 percent is total trash in those charts and that just says something about your biases, not the music itself. I would doubt you would even know the music well enough to make such a statement fairly even taking your own biases and frameworks for quality assessments into account.
Or you sort of get both. Just as some might be interested, black midi has covered King Crimson (and I find similarities between black midi and KC). Edited by Logan - April 15 2024 at 09:49 |
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Valdez1
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 07 2024 Location: Walla Walla Wa Status: Offline Points: 351 |
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I attempted to like this version.
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AFlowerKingCrimson
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 02 2016 Location: Philly burbs Status: Offline Points: 18269 |
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A little bit late in responding but thanks!
Edited by AFlowerKingCrimson - April 15 2024 at 11:42 |
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miamiscot
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Prog will last until the end of time. Just like Bach, Mozart and Beethoven.
Mark my words.
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The Prog Corner
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cstack3
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The future belongs to the young.
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SteveG
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Awesoreno
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You keep saying things that newer bands/artists do like they are bad things (and it's erroneous to assume that all, or even most of them, do, but that's another issue). You also claim to know that all the classic era musicians you listed actually have that much of a background in Classical music (which, again, is a brooooaaaaad genre, that covers many styles that Zappa and Fripp enjoyed, but you'd probably label as "experimentalist cr@p"). Many of them did not, and if they did, didn't actually receive formal training. Which shouldn't matter. And many of those artists see it as an upside to not have that training so as not to pigeonhole their own creativity. None of it is good or bad, it just is. Once again, it's ok to not like it, but just admit that it comes down to your taste and not the talent of the musicians. For every band that actually reaches for something, like black midi, Bubblemath, you get some band that professes to love Mussorgsky and Yes and it just sounds like rehash after rehash (Karfagen, Karmakanic, etc.).
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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 22 2005 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 21179 |
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^ There definitely is "good" and "bad" music out there, objectively. But it takes a lot of experience to be able to assess the quality, and we all have our biases in how we determine and weigh the criteria. Some people are biased heavily towards the classic prog style, if there even is such a thing (even classic Yes sound really different from classic Genesis, for example). And some people are also biased towards the classic musicians they grew up listening to, and against newer generations of musicians which they feel are like imposters, claiming previous discoveries as their own. Then on the other hand there are those who look for experimentation above all else, nothing can sound like it's been done before, resulting in dissonant/noisy music that is practically void of (musical) substance.
To me, this all seems silly. Just listen to a release and you'll know, intuitively, if you found it to be bad, good, great or even awesome. Listen to it again after some time, maybe also under different circumstances, and your feeling about it may change. You can add some analysis on top, but IMHO the best we can do is to just listen and communicate how we felt about what we heard.
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fuxi
Prog Reviewer Joined: March 08 2006 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 2459 |
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Henry Cow and National Health have NEVER been played much. I grew up in the 1970s, and other than me there was only ONE person who liked them in our entire school. But Hatfield and the North and National Health especially keep influencing younger new bands, which shows SOME people are still discovering AND loving them. They're always going to be a minority taste, just like (for example) Flann O'Brien's novels or Utagawa Kuniyoshi's woodblock prints, but albums such as OF QUEUES AND CURES sound so fresh and imaginative they'll always find new converts. |
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Atavachron
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Archisorcerus
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But, aren't you Shakespeare? |
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Hrychu
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On the day of my creation, I fell in love with education. And overcoming all frustration, a teacher I became.
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 17511 |
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Hi, With one HUGE difference. The young tend to do their own thing, not someone else's! You really think Stravinsky would have gotten where he did by doing some other local, and known music of the time? It's not, necessarily, about being young ... it's about being "stubborn" enough to do your own thing, and not give a cahoot about anything else. Weird that you STILL don't see that in the ranks of Progressive Music, specially in the late 60's and early 70's ... very few of them played covers, and just went out their own way. I kinda do not think of The Nice, or later ELP playing "covers" in fun stuff that gave them a mental break! The really special progressive folks NEVER played covers or anyone else's material!
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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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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 22 2005 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 21179 |
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^ Hard to parse, I'm assuming there are a couple of extraneous "not"s in there.
BTW: Stravinsky had all sorts of musical influences, Tchaikovsky for example.
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