" Big Six " 1980 and forward |
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Psychedelic Paul
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 39906 |
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It's okay to disagree with me. It's all good fun. Having disagreements over prog is all part of what makes Prog Archives such a great place to be.
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Cristi
Special Collaborator Crossover / Prog Metal Teams Joined: July 27 2006 Location: wonderland Status: Offline Points: 43510 |
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If I were the only one disagreeing, that would not be a problem, but I'm not, many disagreed. That is why I think you are trolling with your neo-prog threads. If not , it means it's a situation in which you think you are right and everyone else is wrong or you simply do not know (or understand) what neo-prog is.
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M27Barney
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 09 2006 Location: Swinton M27 Status: Offline Points: 3136 |
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Neo prog is a genre I refuse to recognise....most of the bands pigeon holed thus are symphonic prog or prog metal/heavy prog...Am I alone in this train of thought?
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dougmcauliffe
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 23 2019 Location: US Status: Offline Points: 3895 |
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Hmmm, I don’t necessarily agree but I do think it’s the most vague genre label on the site. |
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The sun has left the sky...
...Now you can close your eyes |
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Olape
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 28 2013 Location: Chile Status: Offline Points: 2168 |
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You’re right, but its a list of six of my personal favs.
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M27Barney
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 09 2006 Location: Swinton M27 Status: Offline Points: 3136 |
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Well. Just taken months to rip all my cd's. And for those cd's I haven't heard I placed into my own provisional genre of "we shall see" unless I already have an album by the band...however some genesis stuff is under the genre "pop crap". Mind you I really hate the discontinuous mind...so I think I will have to place every track into its correct genre...might take a while... Edited by M27Barney - February 03 2020 at 09:13 |
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AFlowerKingCrimson
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 02 2016 Location: Philly burbs Status: Offline Points: 18244 |
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Well to some there's a difference between prog and progressive. Yes, Genesis, KC, SB, PT, ELP, Rush, PF, etc is prog. Progressive might be stuff that is not typical prog rock. Maybe more experimental or stuff that is more literally progressive as opposed to bands who are trying to sound like old prog. TMV are very progressive but not typical prog if you know what I mean. Kind of the same way that krautrock, post rock, electronic and fusion are progressive but not prog rock(or Prog rock with the capital p).
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BrufordFreak
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: January 25 2008 Location: Wisconsin Status: Offline Points: 8185 |
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I get your perspective but the "Neo Prog" sound, as governed here on PA, is, to my mind & ears, one of the easier ones to distinguish! The problem comes when you hear bands that are obviously inspired by and/or imitating in a "retro-" style but not using the lush, romantic soundscapes used by Trick of the Tail/Wind & Wuthering Genesis--like ELP, Camel, Yes, VDGG, Gentle Giant, or Crimson imitators. Technically, these should also be "neo progressive" bands--or perhaps "retro-prog" bands--but are not often classified as such. What is an innately discerning, language-using human being to do?
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Drew Fisher
https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/ |
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BrufordFreak
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Perhaps the modern Big Six should be more relegated to individual artists--especially since there are several who seem to have had a huge impact on the modern prog revival. For example:
Roine Stolt (Kaipa, The Flower Kings, Hasse Bruniusson, The Tangent, Transatlantic, Karmakanic, The Sea Within, et al.) Steven Wilson (Re-mastering of so many old classics, producer, engineer, & mastering of many modern releases, Porcupine Tree, No-Man, Jansen/Barbieri/Karn, Bass Communion, Blackfield, Storm Corrosion, six solo studio albums, et al.) Mikael Åkerfeldt (Opeth, Ghost, Storm Corrosion, Devin Townsend, O.S.I. Insahn, Bloodbath, Katatonia, Edge of Sanity, et al.) Mattias Olsson (Änglagård, Anima Morte, Nekromant, The Opium Cartel, VLY, Kaukasus, White Willow, Celestine, Reminder, Brighteye Bison, Deadwood Forest, Pineforest Crunch, AK-Momo, Necromonkey, Walrus, Nanook of the North, Pixie Ninja, Galasphere 347, Therion, Rhys Marsh, Weserbergland, et al.) Francesco Zago (founder of AltrOck/Fading Records, Yugen, Not a Good Sign, Spaitklang, Empty Days, et al.) Omar Rodríguez-López (four At The Drive-In albums, nearly 50 solo albums, 14 The Mars Volta releases, John Frusciante, and engineering help on many others) Mariuz Duda (10 Riverside albums, Indukti, five Lunatic Soul releases) Jacob Holm-Lupo (White Willow, The Opium Cartel, Wobbler, Weserbergland, et al.) I would argue for the first five without question and then leave it up to you to decide from among the other three as who belongs in a "Big Six"
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Drew Fisher
https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/ |
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AFlowerKingCrimson
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 02 2016 Location: Philly burbs Status: Offline Points: 18244 |
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^ You left off Mike Portnoy, Neal Morse and Devin Townsend.
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fracturematt
Forum Groupie Joined: October 07 2016 Location: AZ Status: Offline Points: 44 |
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Pink Floyd, Leprous, Contortionist, Opeth, Porcupine Tree/Steven Wilson, Tool
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BrufordFreak
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Good point(s)! Though I'm ignorant as to what Mike Portnoy has done other than DT and Transatlantic.
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Drew Fisher
https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/ |
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AFlowerKingCrimson
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 02 2016 Location: Philly burbs Status: Offline Points: 18244 |
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A lot of stuff. For prog Neal Morse Band and Flying Colors. Also, sons of Apollo(more prog metal though). I'd have to look it up myself to discover what else but I know he has done other stuff(but I think mostly metal and rock; I think I(we)covered most of his pure prog stuff).
Edited by AFlowerKingCrimson - February 03 2020 at 11:42 |
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M27Barney
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 09 2006 Location: Swinton M27 Status: Offline Points: 3136 |
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I still class IQ as symphonic prog, as is Pendragon. Pallas is heavy prog..Twelfth Night possibly symph/heavy prog. Daga Band, and Trekellian Skyway were definately symph prog...both very obscure....
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dr wu23
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 22 2010 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 20623 |
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I agree with both of your posts on this.....to me IQ and some others are symph prog ....never really understood the neo prog genre that much. Most of the neo prog I own sounds like just a newer version of symph prog.
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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin |
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Cristi
Special Collaborator Crossover / Prog Metal Teams Joined: July 27 2006 Location: wonderland Status: Offline Points: 43510 |
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I like his hard rock project with Richie Kotzen - The Winery Dogs. I like Flying Colors. I don't like Sons of Apollo though, very bland and generic.
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Psychedelic Paul
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 39906 |
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As I've said before, Neo-Prog to me is a chronological definition, meaning any post-1970's prog bands, but I don't mind at all if PA members disagree with that definition. It doesn't mean I'm right and everyone else is wrong. Far from it. It's just a difference of opinion that's all. That's just the way we used to categorise prog when I used to edit my own music site. We had just two primary genres for Prog-Rock:- Progressive Rock and Neo-Prog, divided between classic 1970's prog bands in the Progressive Rock section and modern post-1970's prog bands in the Neo-Prog section. I'm not necessarily saying that was ideal or correct, but it made things a whole lot less complicated. In total though, across the whole music site, we had 20 primary genres and 200 sub-genres of music, so we weren't exactly short of music genres to choose from. If I was running the site now though, I'd add most of the prog sub-genres that are on Prog Archives. For a specialist prog site like ProgArchives, I think it's wonderful to have all of these additional prog categories here on PA, some of which I'd never even heard of before I arrived here last September. I used to think RIO was Prog-Rock from Brazil, but I know differently now.
Edited by Psychedelic Paul - February 03 2020 at 12:25 |
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I prophesy disaster
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 31 2017 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 4772 |
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It seems to me that the difference between neo-prog and retro-prog is that retro-prog use only musical instruments that were available to artists of the classic period, whereas neo-prog use contemporaneous musical instruments.
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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.
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 27956 |
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Neo prog started as New Symphonic prog. back in the eighties only the likes of ELP, Yes , Genesis were still recognised as 'prog' so IQ, Marillion , Twelth Night and Pallas were the new prog bands (or Neo to make it sound a bit fancy) . There wasn't any other prog imo. The 90's brought a raft of retro symphonic bands such as Par Lindh Project , Anglagard and Anekdoten who were coming more from an 'art rock' back background rather than the stylistic approach adopted by the eighties prog bands. There is a clear difference but its all putting things in boxes as usual! Generally it could all be considered Symphonic as M27Barney suggests. I also think that music freed itself up to some extent post 80's. The eighties was dominated by MTV and corporate interest. 90's and onwards a lot of people in music just did what the f**k they wanted. It was and still is largely very healthy but there are still bands that will follow the Yes, Genesis approach to the letter and therefore those can be clearly identified as Neo Prog. It can be tricky though defining a band like Big Big Train who apparently sit in the internal limbo of Crossover Prog never to be recognised as a fully grown up prog band. I'm not sure what they did to deserve that but hey ho.
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M27Barney
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 09 2006 Location: Swinton M27 Status: Offline Points: 3136 |
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^ aye. BBT are a good example but my cunning stunt of placing every track into a genre will negotiate the nooks and crannies of this particular valley of moist despair...😎
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