Peter wrote:
What is "prog?"
I find Tool and TMV very irritating/painful, and Radiohead haven't really grabbed me yet.
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With the exception of discussions about the inclusion of such groups like Triumph and Muse, I think that debates about who is more or less prog are inocuous. I know, this is a prog website, but the fact that a band doesn't fit in the prog definition (which is a subgenre of rock'n'roll - we cant' forget it) doesn't mean that this band is awfull or minor. This kind of apreciation is tipical of some prog lovers, which has generated a forum about the pedantism atributed to us.
This said, I must say that I don't consider any contemporary band as being prog, because this genre is dead. We can observe elements of it in a large amount of groups (e.g. in the self-described "prog metal"), but the prog rock movement per se is over. The undergound movement that try to ressurrect it create a lot of good music, but to call it prog is very delicate. Groups like Finisterre fits very well in the italian prog category, but what they made is just the classic italian prog sound, without adding anything new. Other bands, like Thinking Plague, try to create a different perspective of pop music, but if all groups that try to do this should be called prog, we will just to extend the definition of this subgenre to an extension larger than jazz.
This is a very controversial topic, and I know I'll receive a lot of stones. But my main idea is: we don't need to commit suicide if a group that we like isn't prog. Prog isn't everything in the world of music; there is a lot of other musical genres as good as it, although different.