BeatleProg |
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Abstrakt
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 18 2005 Location: Soundgarden Status: Offline Points: 18292 |
Posted: September 14 2009 at 03:10 | |
Well, i kind of agree I really like that song! Kind of a shame that such a beautiful song should have such a brutal intro. But it's the dynamics that makes opeth i guess. |
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horla
Forum Newbie Joined: May 29 2006 Location: Chile Status: Offline Points: 37 |
Posted: September 14 2009 at 04:01 | |
walking on air from thrak is definetely influenced by the beatles sun king from abbey road. anyways the entire song it's sounds pretty beatle esque
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someone_else
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: May 02 2008 Location: Going Bananas Status: Offline Points: 24368 |
Posted: September 14 2009 at 04:04 | |
^Dinosaur from the same album is another fine example that comes to my mind.
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persianfish
Forum Newbie Joined: September 09 2009 Location: TEHRAN-IRAN Status: Offline Points: 5 |
Posted: September 14 2009 at 06:05 | |
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soundscape
Forum Newbie Joined: June 22 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 34 |
Posted: September 16 2009 at 22:30 | |
Thanks to everyone who has contributed to this discussion. In developing a reasonable playlist I often get in over my head and I always appreciate the feedback of all you fine folks. The Beatleprog show that we put together can be found here: www.thedividingline.com/ss I was not able to hit all of the suggestions, and I may have flubbed once or twice but for the most part I feel the setlist came together quite nicely. I am posting the setlist here for anyone who wants to take a look. My deepest thanks to you all.
After some incredible discussion through the Dividingline mailing list and over at Prog Archives, we got togeher a group of the most beatle inspired prog that we could find. Regardless of whether or not you call the fab four prog, proto prog, experimental pop, or psychedelic you will see that they had a huge influence on the progressive world. Even our short flash in the pan set cannot do justice to pointing out the effect of the Beatles on progressive rock, but it was a great deal of fun to put together and to listen to. We also have tucked inside of this episode new music from Phish, Paris Keeling, and Shadowland as well as a tribute to our Dragon experience featuring the one and only C.S. Brown as well as George Hrab. Next week we will spin the tale of progfolk. Prog is so huge it has a great many subsets and we here at Soundscape are trying to understand the boundaries of each division and we will carry you along on our journey with us. Also next week, new live music from Tinyfish, Believe, and Jupiter Society. If you would like to vote for Soundscape drop by podcast alley: http://www.podcastalley.com/
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Listen to the best in Progressive Rock at www.thedividingline.com
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micky
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 02 2005 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 46838 |
Posted: September 17 2009 at 05:37 | |
bingo.... and no shame.. the song wouldn't have been half as good if it was simply brutal... or even beautiful. It is the contrast that makes the song interesting.. I'll go a step further and say that it is dynamics that separates the good from the ... hoohum. Any swinging dick can play it fast and heavy... practice enough and you can do with a high degree of technicality... a good musician is not just technically proficient... but has a sense of compositional proficiency. Use of dark and light as Prince once said... it is those dynamics which often make music 'interesting' to listen to. In a nutshell.. if I had to express why I love Opeth.. and loath DT. That is why... Opeth is simply interesting to listen to...DT... heard one... heard them all. It simply isn't interesting. |
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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earlyprog
Collaborator Neo / PSIKE / Heavy Teams Joined: March 05 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 2134 |
Posted: September 21 2009 at 07:50 | |
Porcupine Tree delivered an excellent example of beatleprog on The Incident: Remember Me Lover bears clear similarities with I Want You (She's So Heavy). Even until the last abrupt ending of the song.
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ModernRocker79
Forum Groupie Joined: November 02 2008 Status: Offline Points: 62 |
Posted: September 21 2009 at 22:43 | |
A number of Radiohead songs are influenced strongly by the Beatles. "Karma Police takes from "Sexy Sadie, "Hail to the Theif" takes from "I Want You She So Heavy, and "Paraniod Andriod" takes from "Happiness is a Warm Gun". King Crimson "Tomorrow Never Knew Thela" obviously takes from "Tomorrow Never Knows". |
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sealchan
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 12 2009 Status: Offline Points: 179 |
Posted: September 22 2009 at 14:39 | |
I'm beginning a systematic review of albums starting with the late 60s and moving forward...one thing I've noticed in songs by the Beatles are some forms and phrases that might turn out to be common in later prog. But since I don't know music in general I can't say if this is exclusive to The Beatles and prog...
One form is the two different melodies alternating with contrasting moods and tempos. The Beatles used this in "Strawberry Fields Forever" and in "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds". So far I've seen this in "Back to the Family" by Jethro Tull, but I expect I will see it more as I continue my reviews (which have just barely escaped the era of the Beatles).
Also, I noticed how The Beatles used the instrumental coda and then moved this either into the middle of the song or also to the middle of the song. Examples include again "Strawberry Fields Forever", "I Am The Walrus", "Hello Goodbye", "All You Need Is Love" and "Here Comes the Sun" moves this instrumental coda to the middle. Now I'm sure I'm going to spot tons of these but already I see that Chicago does a brilliant one in "Beginnings", but I believe this is also the case in the classic "Starship Trooper" (although whether you see "Wurm" as a coda or a third movement may be debatable). Now the Beatles could never take this instrumental coda very far but the basic emotional impact it has on the song is there only amplified tenfold by the good progressive rock song.
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soundscape
Forum Newbie Joined: June 22 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 34 |
Posted: September 27 2009 at 09:30 | |
This sounds like a fantastic project although incredibly time consuming. I applaud your efforts.
I do not pretend to be much a music historian, but weren't The Beatles one of the first bands to use orchestrations, as well as back masking. At least for the strings part, this seems to be a stepping stone towards the full orchestrations done by the Moody Blues and of course quite a few people consider Days of Future Passed to be the first prog album. The guys over at Pandora have done a lot of work analyzing songs and their supposed genome and this might be a helpful way to analyze each Beatle song as well. www.pandora.com Cheers, Woody |
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Listen to the best in Progressive Rock at www.thedividingline.com
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ModernRocker79
Forum Groupie Joined: November 02 2008 Status: Offline Points: 62 |
Posted: September 29 2009 at 10:08 | |
After the Beatles, British groups were finally able to have impact over here in America. And lets face facts, if the Who or Pink Floyd or Led Zeppelin didn’t have the Beatles to come before them, would they have been as widely accepted by this country? The Beatles were not like Traffic, The Doors, Cream and Jimmie Hendrix. They were not blues artists. The Beatles ability to incorporate exotic sources into a pop song was what they excelled at. This proved to be hugely influential to music in general. A song that is not popular like “Think For Yourself” is innovative as uses layering of fuzz bass and regular bass right up-front as the same function as if you would use electric guitar and rhythm guitar in a rock song. Listen to a track like “I’m Only Sleeping” instead of regular guitar leads they use backward guitar leads. They recorded their guitars and vocals using Automatic Double Tracking. The Beatles recorded vocals and guitar backwards, creating volume swells by the use of harmonics example "Yes It Is" and coaxing feedback from other instruments like piano. On “Tomorrow Never Knows” you have McCartney instead of using the regular way creating sounds from rock instruments, created a soundscape from loops and samples. Now yeah this was done in musique concrete but not really in rock music. The Beatles “The Word” Definitely a forerunner to psychedelia that The Thirteenth Floor Elevators liked it enough to play it in their live sets during 1966. Another thing we can be thankful for is that these guys brought Avante-Garde music to mainstream. Edited by ModernRocker79 - September 29 2009 at 10:11 |
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