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stonebeard
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 27 2005
Location: NE Indiana
Status: Offline
Points: 28057
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 13:27 |
It's not totally a disaster, but Scarsick after BE was kind of like "....................wat?"
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Queen By-Tor
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: September 13 2006
Location: Xanadu
Status: Offline
Points: 16111
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 13:46 |
Deep Purple.
Machine Head --> Who Do We Think We Are?
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The Quiet One
Prog Reviewer
Joined: January 16 2008
Location: Argentina
Status: Offline
Points: 15745
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 13:53 |
^good one, though I don't actually consider Who Do We Think We Are a disaster.
Relayer --> Going for the One: again, not an actual disaster is Going for the One, but Yes lost a lot of their creativity in my opinion from Relayer to GftO.
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Queen By-Tor
Special Collaborator
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Joined: September 13 2006
Location: Xanadu
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Points: 16111
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 14:02 |
I'd consider that an opposite actually. Relayer wasn't great IMO and GFTO is one of my favorite Yes albums :D
Drama --> 90215
we can all agree on that one!
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: December 30 2007
Location: Raeford, NC
Status: Offline
Points: 32550
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 14:11 |
King By-Tor wrote:
I'd consider that an opposite actually. Relayer wasn't great IMO and GFTO is one of my favorite Yes albums :D
Drama --> 90215
we can all agree on that one!
| I would rather do it the other way round (Tormato < Drama). I quite like Yes's 80s music for what it is (to be fair, I quite like Tormato as well, but I can see why it's generally loathed).
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The Quiet One
Prog Reviewer
Joined: January 16 2008
Location: Argentina
Status: Offline
Points: 15745
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 14:16 |
Epignosis wrote:
King By-Tor wrote:
I'd consider that an opposite actually. Relayer wasn't great IMO and GFTO is one of my favorite Yes albums :D
Drama --> 90215
we can all agree on that one!
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I would rather do it the other way round (Tormato < Drama). I quite like Yes's 80s music for what it is (to be fair, I quite like Tormato as well, but I can see why it's generally loathed).
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I agree, 90125 is very different to Drama but not necessarily worse. The same I would say of Duke.
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Finnforest
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: February 03 2007
Location: The Heartland
Status: Offline
Points: 17075
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 14:18 |
King By-Tor wrote:
I'd consider that an opposite actually. Relayer wasn't great IMO and GFTO is one of my favorite Yes albums :D
Drama --> 90215
we can all agree on that one!
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Well, let's test that Mike. Poll coming in prog polls . I'm certainly with you on it.
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...that moment you realize you like "Mob Rules" better than "Heaven and Hell"
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KingCrimson250
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 29 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 573
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 14:53 |
I don't really think you can do this with Genesis, apart from the huge leap up in quality from the debut to Trespass. Their decline into 80s synth-pop rubbish wasn't really an overnight affair so much as it was a gradual slide into hell. TOTT and WAW are still quite good, barring a couple of tracks, ATTWT and Duke were a different sound but still reasonably enjoyable, Abacab and Shapes were more or less write-offs but had their good moments (I've always like Home by the Sea and it's sequel), and IT and ICD are basically the worst of the worst. There isn't really any moment in there that jumps out as "Here is where we lost our creativity." It was a slow and gradual process, IMHO.
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King Crimson776
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 12 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2779
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 15:24 |
^^ I'd just like to say, I think Invisible Touch is underrated, there are some classic tracks on there, though it does kind of lack atmosphere. After that of course it got bad with We Can't Dance... and then utterly hellish on Calling All Stations.
Anyway, I'd say... how about Spock's Beard with the great concept album Snow ----> Feel Euphoria? Of course one can attribute this almost entirely to Neal Morse's departure, but the vast drop in quality remains nonetheless.
Also, in the converse, The Flower Kings from the mediocre The Rainmaker to what I consider their best album, Unfold the Future.
Neal Morse from his masterpiece Sola Scriptura to the par-for-the-course Lifeline...
Although I at least kind of like every album by SB, TFK, and NM to some degree... a more radical change in quality from album to album would be, perhaps The Moody Blues great Seventh Sojourn to the bland pop of Octave (though I somewhat like a few tunes from it)
Oh, the biggest of all, imo: U.K. had one of my favorite albums of all time with their debut, an utter masterpiece, and then they lose Holdsworth and Bruford and put out the disappointing Danger Money. It wasn't all bad but a HUGE drop after the first, though I guess that is understandable losing such key members.
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seventhsojourn
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: December 11 2009
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 4006
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 16:08 |
King Crimson776 wrote:
^^ I'd just like to say, I think Invisible Touch is underrated, there are some classic tracks on there, though it does kind of lack atmosphere. After that of course it got bad with We Can't Dance... and then utterly hellish on Calling All Stations.
Anyway, I'd say... how about Spock's Beard with the great concept album Snow ----> Feel Euphoria? Of course one can attribute this almost entirely to Neal Morse's departure, but the vast drop in quality remains nonetheless.
Also, in the converse, The Flower Kings from the mediocre The Rainmaker to what I consider their best album, Unfold the Future.
Neal Morse from his masterpiece Sola Scriptura to the par-for-the-course Lifeline...
Although I at least kind of like every album by SB, TFK, and NM to some degree... a more radical change in quality from album to album would be, perhaps The Moody Blues great Seventh Sojourn to the bland pop of Octave (though I somewhat like a few tunes from it)
Oh, the biggest of all, imo: U.K. had one of my favorite albums of all time with their debut, an utter masterpiece, and then they lose Holdsworth and Bruford and put out the disappointing Danger Money. It wasn't all bad but a HUGE drop after the first, though I guess that is understandable losing such key members. |
Ok, there was a 6-year gap between these albums... still, I agree 100%.
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Rune2000
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: May 23 2004
Location: STHLM, Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 1833
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 16:23 |
A Person wrote:
I would say the opposite is more true with PF, but that's just my opinion. |
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BaldJean
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 28 2005
Location: Germany
Status: Offline
Points: 10387
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Posted: April 24 2010 at 18:42 |
Evolver wrote:
I felt the Pink Floyd's drop off was after "Animals".
"The Wall", while conceptually brilliant, really has only a few tracks that don't bore me.
ELP's "Works" was their first disappointing album.
Gentle Giant's "Giant For A Day", was pretty bad, but "The Missing Piece" was hinting of that direction.
Queen lost me at "Day At The Races", Kansas at "Monolith". |
and for me "Animals" already was a severe letdown. it is an absolutely boring album, in my opinion
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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tamijo
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 06 2009
Location: Denmark
Status: Offline
Points: 4287
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Posted: April 25 2010 at 02:13 |
Bowie: "Scary Monsters" - "Lets Dance", is the worst example of a follow up i can remember.
Supreemly followed up by the disasterous "Tonight" to keep the downwards spiral turning.
Edited by tamijo - April 25 2010 at 02:15
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Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Ahmadbarqawi
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 10 2007
Location: Jordan
Status: Offline
Points: 149
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Posted: April 25 2010 at 09:32 |
Dream Theater :
From Failure to Greatness: Falling into Infinity to Metropolis 2: Scenes from a Memory
From Greatness to Failure: 6 Degrees Inner Turbulence to Train of Thought
Also Queensryche From the Great Epic "Promised Land" to the disastrous "Hear in the Now Frontier"... and its been an Epic fail for those guys ever since
Edited by Ahmadbarqawi - April 25 2010 at 09:36
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{Flashlights shade shrunken views
Of a red demon’s foxtrot in brews
Guns & flowers crown morning news
Panic-stricken guilt now ensues}
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam
Joined: April 29 2006
Location: Atlantais
Status: Offline
Points: 29630
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Posted: April 25 2010 at 10:29 |
It's necessary for balance in the musical universe.
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 02 2008
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 14258
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Posted: April 25 2010 at 10:37 |
Ahmadbarqawi wrote:
Dream Theater :
From Failure to Greatness: Falling into Infinity to Metropolis 2: Scenes from a Memory
From Greatness to Failure: 6 Degrees Inner Turbulence to Train of Thought
Also Queensryche From the Great Epic "Promised Land" to the disastrous "Hear in the Now Frontier"... and its been an Epic fail for those guys ever since |
I agree with all those except I kind of liked Train Of Thought
Queensryche have not excelled since Operation Mindcrime and its a real pity.
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zappaholic
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 24 2006
Location: flyover country
Status: Offline
Points: 2822
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Posted: April 25 2010 at 10:57 |
AtomicCrimsonRush wrote:
Ahmadbarqawi wrote:
Dream Theater :
From Failure to Greatness: Falling into Infinity to Metropolis 2: Scenes from a Memory
From Greatness to Failure: 6 Degrees Inner Turbulence to Train of Thought
Also Queensryche From the Great Epic "Promised Land" to the disastrous "Hear in the Now Frontier"... and its been an Epic fail for those guys ever since |
I agree with all those except I kind of liked Train Of Thought
Queensryche have not excelled since Operation Mindcrime and its a real pity. |
I agree, Operation:mindcrime was fantastic, and they followed it up with Empire, which had about 2 good songs on it. I lost track of them after that.
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"Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard." -- H.L. Mencken
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bsms810
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 03 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 363
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Posted: April 25 2010 at 13:00 |
zappaholic wrote:
AtomicCrimsonRush wrote:
Ahmadbarqawi wrote:
Dream Theater :
From Failure to Greatness: Falling into Infinity to Metropolis 2: Scenes from a Memory
From Greatness to Failure: 6 Degrees Inner Turbulence to Train of Thought
Also Queensryche From the Great Epic "Promised Land" to the disastrous "Hear in the Now Frontier"... and its been an Epic fail for those guys ever since |
I agree with all those except I kind of liked Train Of Thought
Queensryche have not excelled since Operation Mindcrime and its a real pity. |
I agree, Operation:mindcrime was fantastic, and they followed it up with Empire, which had about 2 good songs on it. I lost track of them after that.
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I also agree wholeheartedly with these sentiments. It is such a shame because Operation Mindcrime was so great... perhaps it wasnt them....
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'when was the last time you had a girlfriend?'
'I dont look at it as when, I look at it as who...and why' - David Brent
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Progosopher
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 12 2009
Location: Coolwood
Status: Offline
Points: 6472
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Posted: April 25 2010 at 13:19 |
Slartibartfast wrote:
It's necessary for balance in the musical universe. |
One comes from the other.
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The world of sound is certainly capable of infinite variety and, were our sense developed, of infinite extensions. -- George Santayana, "The Sense of Beauty"
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RoyFairbank
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 07 2008
Location: Somewhere
Status: Offline
Points: 1072
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Posted: April 25 2010 at 15:20 |
Drama and 90125 are a whole of a lot better than Going For The One and Tormato, and 90125 is the best of the bunch. I would probably take the 80s albums over Relayer/Tales From Topographic Ocean/Close to the Edge. Relayers the only one I really (as in very) like, and although its in a different way than 90125, if you translate the like 90125 comes on top. Big Generator is lackluster, Drama's probably better. On the Other Hand, Fragile and especially the Yes Album, a masterpiece, hit very hard in any conflict with 90125.
Biggest drop offs in Yes history then:
(if I got this right, they're a kind of a distant band to me, despite being in my permanent top 5 or 6)
Fragile to Close to The Edge (~ medium drop, because I don't listen to Fragile that much either, but its very good) Going For The One to Tormato (an album I've barely listened to over the years) 90125 to Big Generator (there's just something missing, besides originality, cuz that goes without saying)
now I've got some blanks my friends after BG- Union I haven't listened to, Talk no, Keys to Ascension I & II (but ironically the supposedly rare Keystudio, which is a 3/5 in my mind, so pretty good). I have listened to the Ladder (2.75/5, reasonable), and Magnification now, but not throughly, but it sounds like Keystudio or the non-modern parts of the Ladder, so perhaps 2.75/5 again. So to me,
Big Generator to...... x......x......x.....The Ladder
:is a pretty big drop too.
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