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Trotsky
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 25 2004
Location: Malaysia
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Points: 2771
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 05:11 |
To Greenback (based on latest post):
To anyone who opposes the idea of progressive rap: Surely it is close-minded to reject something you have never heard ...
I repeat my point that those who have rejected it don't seem to have
much experience actually playing music ... it's not a very far stretch
of the imagination to combine rap and prog-rock ...
P.S.: just a small point ... does anybody think that what Hendrix did
on "If 6 was 9" would be a good starting point for "progressive rap"?
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"Death to Utopia! Death to faith! Death to love! Death to hope?" thunders the 20th century. "Surrender, you pathetic dreamer.”
"No" replies the unhumbled optimist "You are only the present."
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 04 2005
Location: Malaria
Status: Offline
Points: 89372
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 10:12 |
How about Dalek?
Quote: Dalek is the MC who has his sights set on Hip-Hop 2000. With worldwide scope and influence, Dalek
speaks to all of us regardless of race or background. We are a
universal community, aware of our spiral towards violence and
destruction, and Dalek serves as a wakeup call, bringing forth a message through apocalyptic beats and abstract rhymes.
Once, the music of artists like KRS One, Public Enemy and N.W.A.
spoke to us with lyrics and music that galvanized us and helped to
create a youth-oriented urban political voice. Now, it seems as though
there might not be any room left for politics in hip hop (if you based
that opinion solely on recent record sales). Dalek offers an alternative by creating a medium of interaction never before experienced, fusing the sounds of groups like Faust or The Velvet Underground with the raw energy of Eric B and Rakim
End quote.
Metal music now uses rappers, just listen to Xecutioners (Linkin Park
members), Linkin Park with Jayzee (sp.) for instance. I am sure
progressive music can be linked with rap/hip-hop. I am not sure if I'd
necessarily like it though. I am always open to new music, so I would
give it a listen at least.
I like a lot of Prodigy (not rap I know) and that has a lot of
progressive elements and samples, the same applied with Fat Boy Slim.
Anything is possible.
Also, check out this link: http://www.scaruffi.com/history/cpt513.html
Edited by Geck0
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The Doctor
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: June 23 2005
Location: The Tardis
Status: Offline
Points: 8543
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 10:24 |
No. We do not need progressive rap. That would lead to prog gangstas, turf wars between the artists. Could you imagine Jon Anderson doing a drive-by of Peter Gabriel's house? The lyrics would become nothing more than talking about what a great band they are, the sexual prowess of its members, and how the other bands suck and are gonna get shot up. Let's not forget the anger directed toward the police for just doing their job and arresting scumbags. No, progressive rap would lead to a massive deterioration of the art form into nothing more than a feeding ground for the bottom feeders of the world.
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I can understand your anger at me, but what did the horse I rode in on ever do to you?
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Ty1020
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 24 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 721
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 11:11 |
The Doctor wrote:
No. We do not need progressive rap. That
would lead to prog gangstas, turf wars between the artists. Could
you imagine Jon Anderson doing a drive-by of Peter Gabriel's
house? The lyrics would become nothing more than talking about
what a great band they are, the sexual prowess of its members, and how
the other bands suck and are gonna get shot up. Let's not forget
the anger directed toward the police for just doing their job and
arresting scumbags. No, progressive rap would lead to a massive
deterioration of the art form into nothing more than a feeding ground
for the bottom feeders of the world. |
If I have to read one more post like this I think I'll explode. For
Christ's sakes, mainstream rap sucks and we all know it. But,
whether you want to believe it or not, there are many more unknown rap
artists out there whose lyrics and musicality are exponentially better
than what you've heard on the radio. A good way to tell if you know
anything about rap: if you actually think "gangstas" and that sort of
thing are part of the genre, then no, you don't know anything about it.
Ivan: I find it funny that you thought I was "only a rap fan with good
intentions" when I already made it clear that I was not a big
rap fan; I'm simply someone who can accept the fact that the genre has
good artists and goes much deeper than the crap the radio plays. If I
showed you my current playlist of over 1000 songs, you'd see that
literally less than 10 of them were rap, so please, don't think my
judgement is clouded by some sort of blind fanatacism or something like
that. That said, I have listened to a good deal of rap, and although I
have not enjoyed it all, it's still been obvious to me that most of the
artists are lyrically interesting and have the potential to be
musically interesting, should they ever choose to be. Many of them
already are.
Like Con Safo, I'm not a rap expert and I don't claim to be, but I know
many people who are; those people could easily name 100 great rap
artists off the top of their heads and it's because of their knowledge
that I'm aware of the existance of quality rap artists.
About a year ago, I had the exact same misinformed opinion as you. I
hated all rap and thought it was impossible for good rap to exist. Any
time somebody showed me a good rap artist, I assumed that they were an
exception to the rule and dismissed them as such. Now, obviously, I've
been proven wrong and have a different opinion now that I have a larger
knowledge of the genre and its characteristics. It is because of this,
though, that I can see the futility in this argument: when I thought
like you, I refused to change my mind regardless of how many times
people told me I was wrong, and I can see you're being the same way.
You claim to be using logic, but logic doesn't work when the basic
facts of the situation remain unknown to you. Before you can try to
legitimately argue against rap, you have to know about rap
beyond the terrible mainstream artists, and you admittedly don't, so
what's the point of trying to convince you that you're wrong when you
don't even know a thing about the topic at hand? There is no
point, as this thread has proven time and time again. We've been
talking in circles here for a long time and I don't have the energy to
keep explaining the same things to you over and over again because
you're clearly unwilling to accept the truth, so, in the interest of my
time and sanity, I'm going to just agree to disagree here for now. If
you ever do some research on what the rap genre is actually like and
want to continue this discussion afterwards, I'd be glad to, but for
now it's just a waste of everybody's time. It would be like me trying
to argue with you about what it's like to be a lawyer - obviously you
would know a lot more about that than me, but I could just as
easily sit here and keep refusing to listen to you, re-stating my
incorrect opinions based on my limited knowledge of the subject from
what I've seen on TV shows and in movies.
The bottom line: this argument is going nowhere, and until you know a
thing or two about the subject, it will continue to go nowhere. Good
day to you, sir. Hopefully there are no hard feelings left behind.
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horza
Prog Reviewer
Joined: August 31 2005
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 2530
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 12:10 |
^ Funny - I seem to remember saying I liked Insane Clown Posse and being sl*gged by you for saying it - I liked the music and was informed that they were rednecks etc etc - some of their stuff is amusing but it doesnt mean I subscribe to them as individuals
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Originally posted by darkshade:
Calling Mike Portnoy a bad drummer is like calling Stephen Hawking an idiot.
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goose
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 20 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 4097
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 13:03 |
Well, some people are arguing about mixing progressive rock with rap, and some people are arguing about mixing sophistication with rap. And some poeple think they're the same thing .
I suppose to create a hybrid of progressive rock and rap (not what the original thread said, but there we go), it must be accepted that sophistication with rapping is possible, so let me provide just a couple of examples. You don't have to like it, but to say it's simple, one beat repeated over and over again, etc. etc. is just wrong
http://www.m-base.org/myths_modes_and_means_mp3_files/Song_o f_the_beginnings.mp3
...and yes, you have to wait about fourteen minutes before it moves into proper rapping, but for about three or four minutes before that it's sort of half singing. Nineteen minutes long? It must be prog
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goose
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 20 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 4097
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 13:03 |
"of" is of course meant to be one word in that URL.
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 13:18 |
The Doctor wrote:
No. We do not need progressive rap. That would lead to prog gangstas, turf wars between the artists. Could you imagine Jon Anderson doing a drive-by of Peter Gabriel's house? The lyrics would become nothing more than talking about what a great band they are, the sexual prowess of its members, and how the other bands suck and are gonna get shot up. Let's not forget the anger directed toward the police for just doing their job and arresting scumbags. No, progressive rap would lead to a massive deterioration of the art form into nothing more than a feeding ground for the bottom feeders of the world. |
Ty 1020 answered:
A good way to tell if you know anything about rap: if you actually think "gangstas" and that sort of thing are part of the genre, then no, you don't know anything about it. |
Ty 1020 saoid again:
If you ever do some research on what the rap genre is actually like and want to continue this discussion afterwards, I'd be glad to |
Well, I'm doing the research and guess what I found, Con Safo mentioned in his list of great Rappers a N°1 a guy named Immortal Technique, let's see his background:
Compiling multiple assault charges in New York State and in other states eventually caught up to the uncompromisingly hardheaded actions of one Immortal Technique. He faced several charges for Aggravated Assault in the tri-state area. Realizing his inevitable incarceration...
.......He was facing a 5-10 stretch, but the hiring of a pittbull attorney helped him compile the cases without turning snitch like his co-defendants. The result was a 1-2 year sentence in the mountains, 6 hours away from the city.
Taken from his web page in Viper Records |
Is there any difference with mainstream Rappers, please, the guy is a convicted criminal.
- Does he have musical studies.....NO
- Is he virtuoso in any instrument....NO
- Does he even plays instruments...NO
- Where did he learned to Rap.....In Prison, after he recieved a soft condemn due to tecnicalities used by a "pittbull lawyer".
And don't come me with the BS that this is because lack of opportunities because
the kid still managed to finish high school and got accepted to a state university. Unfortunately the survivalist and aggressive attitude that was the norm in New York City caused him to be involved in more violent altercations at school, whether it was with other brothers, false flaggers or the relentlessly racist population of an uncultured Middle America. |
He chosed this life even when he reached the university, the easy way is blaming the rest of the people, "New York", "his brothers", "false Flaggers" or "Racist Population of the uncultured middle America" always blaming the rest of the people, never himself, how convinient.
Is this what we want for Prog'? Is there any difference with the scumbags you mention Doctor? I don't think so, this guy is even worst.
By the way, also mentioned Gang Starr, has this some relation with Gangsta?
I also found a some info about another "great Underground band" (In Con Safo's words) called Ugly Duckling:
When Ugly Duckling came through Iowa City last year promoting their second album, Journey to Anywhere, they left a bit to be desired, especially when overcompensating by telling us how "real" they were....
Anyway, imagine my surprise when I heard Ugly Duckling's new Taste the Secret, which is anything but authentic. What undie hip-hop group in its right mind would dare hire 1980s one-hit wonder Stacey "Two of Hearts" Q to help write pop hooks for a concept album about a fast-food chain that only serves meat fries, meat salads, and meatshakes? The Long Beach trio sprinkles ad jingles ("When you're hungry and thirsty") between ridiculously hummable songs
http://www.villagevoice.com/music/0324,mcleod,44742,22.html |
Sound like Posers to me.
And just starting the search
Iván
Edited by ivan_2068
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BePinkTheater
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 01 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 1381
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 13:36 |
robertplantowns wrote:
Another reason that progressive-rap is impossible is that there is simply no audience for it. There is simply no demand for progressive-rap music because people who listen to rap don't care about music, they just care about the words, concepts, or feelings of being 'hard' or 'cool' when listening to it. It's basically just to make little suburban white kids feel like they're more bad-ass. Plus most rap listeners, and I say most, going back to the limited audience argument, are incapable of demanding a new or boundary-breaking form of music because most of them have a limited amount of brain cells and are incapable of envisioning anything other than the status quo, i.e. the next 50-cent song that talks about new hoes, new models of cars with a new 5 second beat to repeat itself 500 times! I guarantee if progressive rap came out, rap fans everywhere would proclaim its "wackness" and would not be interested in it because it hasn't passed the PEER Review test of at least a million Americans, which if it did, they would certainly think it was cool, because rap fans are TREND FOLLOWERS. It would simply be too hard for these trend followers to switch gears and start a new trend. Not many are adventurous enough on their own to go off the beaten path and start listening to something else. Keep in mind these are the same people who watch MTV and see the new "sick" rapper and just have to have the album.
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This is a very well thought out valid point.
You're absolutly correct. The number of people that litsen to it would be almost 0.
But that does not change the fact thtat it is 100% possible and would be really cool.
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I can strangle a canary in a tin can and it would be really original, but that wouldn't save it from sounding like utter sh*t.
-Stone Beard
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goose
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 20 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 4097
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 13:56 |
No, it's not a valid point. Near the end you claim that rap fans are trend followers. Ok, so many people listening to trendy rap are trend followers. So to are many people listening to trendy rock. Does that make all rock fans trend followers? If so, how does prog rock exist?
Edited by goose
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BePinkTheater
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 01 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 1381
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 13:58 |
ivan_2068 wrote:
The Doctor wrote:
No. We do not need progressive rap. That would lead to prog gangstas, turf wars between the artists. Could you imagine Jon Anderson doing a drive-by of Peter Gabriel's house? The lyrics would become nothing more than talking about what a great band they are, the sexual prowess of its members, and how the other bands suck and are gonna get shot up. Let's not forget the anger directed toward the police for just doing their job and arresting scumbags. No, progressive rap would lead to a massive deterioration of the art form into nothing more than a feeding ground for the bottom feeders of the world. |
Ty 1020 answered:
A good way to tell if you know anything about rap: if you actually think "gangstas" and that sort of thing are part of the genre, then no, you don't know anything about it. |
Ty 1020 saoid again:
If you ever do some research on what the rap genre is actually like and want to continue this discussion afterwards, I'd be glad to |
Well, I'm doing the research and guess what I found, Con Safo mentioned in his list of great Rappers a N°1 a guy named Immortal Technique, let's see his background:
Compiling multiple assault charges in New York State and in other states eventually caught up to the uncompromisingly hardheaded actions of one Immortal Technique. He faced several charges for Aggravated Assault in the tri-state area. Realizing his inevitable incarceration...
.......He was facing a 5-10 stretch, but the hiring of a pittbull attorney helped him compile the cases without turning snitch like his co-defendants. The result was a 1-2 year sentence in the mountains, 6 hours away from the city.
Taken from his web page in Viper Records |
Is there any difference with mainstream Rappers, please, the guy is a convicted criminal.
- Does he have musical studies.....NO
- Is he virtuoso in any instrument....NO
- Does he even plays instruments...NO
- Where did he learned to Rap.....In Prison, after he recieved a soft condemn due to tecnicalities used by a "pittbull lawyer".
And don't come me with the BS that this is because lack of opportunities because
the kid still managed to finish high school and got accepted to a state university. Unfortunately the survivalist and aggressive attitude that was the norm in New York City caused him to be involved in more violent altercations at school, whether it was with other brothers, false flaggers or the relentlessly racist population of an uncultured Middle America. |
He chosed this life even when he reached the university, the easy way is blaming the rest of the people, "New York", "his brothers", "false Flaggers" or "Racist Population of the uncultured middle America" always blaming the rest of the people, never himself, how convinient.
Is this what we want for Prog'? Is there any difference with the scumbags you mention Doctor? I don't think so, this guy is even worst.
By the way, also mentioned Gang Starr, has this some relation with Gangsta?
I also found a some info about another "great Underground band" (In Con Safo's words) called Ugly Duckling:
When Ugly Duckling came through Iowa City last year promoting their second album, Journey to Anywhere, they left a bit to be desired, especially when overcompensating by telling us how "real" they were....
Anyway, imagine my surprise when I heard Ugly Duckling's new Taste the Secret, which is anything but authentic. What undie hip-hop group in its right mind would dare hire 1980s one-hit wonder Stacey "Two of Hearts" Q to help write pop hooks for a concept album about a fast-food chain that only serves meat fries, meat salads, and meatshakes? The Long Beach trio sprinkles ad jingles ("When you're hungry and thirsty") between ridiculously hummable songs
http://www.villagevoice.com/music/0324,mcleod,44742,22.html |
Sound like Posers to me.
And just starting the search
Iván
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Ivan I applaud you!
For once you made a coherrent and valid argument.and it only took you 6 pages!
'but in all seriousness you have a good point. I does mean anything to the possiblilty of Prog rap, but you are correct.
It does matter if all of them are posers and hoodlums, they can still make god music if they were put in a room wiht the right people and the right mindset.
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I can strangle a canary in a tin can and it would be really original, but that wouldn't save it from sounding like utter sh*t.
-Stone Beard
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The Doctor
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: June 23 2005
Location: The Tardis
Status: Offline
Points: 8543
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 14:33 |
BePinkTheater wrote:
ivan_2068 wrote:
The Doctor wrote:
No. We do not need progressive rap. That would lead to prog gangstas, turf wars between the artists. Could you imagine Jon Anderson doing a drive-by of Peter Gabriel's house? The lyrics would become nothing more than talking about what a great band they are, the sexual prowess of its members, and how the other bands suck and are gonna get shot up. Let's not forget the anger directed toward the police for just doing their job and arresting scumbags. No, progressive rap would lead to a massive deterioration of the art form into nothing more than a feeding ground for the bottom feeders of the world. |
Ty 1020 answered:
A good way to tell if you know anything about rap: if you actually think "gangstas" and that sort of thing are part of the genre, then no, you don't know anything about it. |
Ty 1020 saoid again:
If you ever do some research on what the rap genre is actually like and want to continue this discussion afterwards, I'd be glad to |
Well, I'm doing the research and guess what I found, Con Safo mentioned in his list of great Rappers a N°1 a guy named Immortal Technique, let's see his background:
Compiling multiple assault charges in New York State and in other states eventually caught up to the uncompromisingly hardheaded actions of one Immortal Technique. He faced several charges for Aggravated Assault in the tri-state area. Realizing his inevitable incarceration...
.......He was facing a 5-10 stretch, but the hiring of a pittbull attorney helped him compile the cases without turning snitch like his co-defendants. The result was a 1-2 year sentence in the mountains, 6 hours away from the city.
Taken from his web page in Viper Records |
Is there any difference with mainstream Rappers, please, the guy is a convicted criminal.
- Does he have musical studies.....NO
- Is he virtuoso in any instrument....NO
- Does he even plays instruments...NO
- Where did he learned to Rap.....In Prison, after he recieved a soft condemn due to tecnicalities used by a "pittbull lawyer".
And don't come me with the BS that this is because lack of opportunities because
the kid still managed to finish high school and got accepted to a state university. Unfortunately the survivalist and aggressive attitude that was the norm in New York City caused him to be involved in more violent altercations at school, whether it was with other brothers, false flaggers or the relentlessly racist population of an uncultured Middle America. |
He chosed this life even when he reached the university, the easy way is blaming the rest of the people, "New York", "his brothers", "false Flaggers" or "Racist Population of the uncultured middle America" always blaming the rest of the people, never himself, how convinient.
Is this what we want for Prog'? Is there any difference with the scumbags you mention Doctor? I don't think so, this guy is even worst.
By the way, also mentioned Gang Starr, has this some relation with Gangsta?
I also found a some info about another "great Underground band" (In Con Safo's words) called Ugly Duckling:
When Ugly Duckling came through Iowa City last year promoting their second album, Journey to Anywhere, they left a bit to be desired, especially when overcompensating by telling us how "real" they were....
Anyway, imagine my surprise when I heard Ugly Duckling's new Taste the Secret, which is anything but authentic. What undie hip-hop group in its right mind would dare hire 1980s one-hit wonder Stacey "Two of Hearts" Q to help write pop hooks for a concept album about a fast-food chain that only serves meat fries, meat salads, and meatshakes? The Long Beach trio sprinkles ad jingles ("When you're hungry and thirsty") between ridiculously hummable songs
http://www.villagevoice.com/music/0324,mcleod,44742,22.html |
Sound like Posers to me.
And just starting the search
Iván
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Ivan I applaud you!
For once you made a coherrent and valid argument.and it only took you 6 pages!
'but in all seriousness you have a good point. I does mean anything to the possiblilty of Prog rap, but you are correct.
It does matter if all of them are posers and hoodlums, they can still make god music if they were put in a room wiht the right people and the right mindset.
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Well done Ivan and well said.
Pink. I disagree. It does matter if they are hoodlums. Do we as a society want to exalt people who are incapable of living by society's standards? And I'm not talking about harmless activities which go against society's standards like smoking a little pot, or being homosexual, or whatever. I'm talking about crimes with victims. These people are criminals and should be taken off the streets permanently, not awarded multi-million dollar recording contracts so that they can brag about their crimes and influence the children of america and elsewhere to commit similar crimes against humanity. Further, I think it is pretty obvious that these people have very little talent and cannot make good music. That is, if you can even stretch the definition of music far enough to include rap within its confines. I submit that you cannot.
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I can understand your anger at me, but what did the horse I rode in on ever do to you?
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Prog_Bassist
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 29 2004
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 830
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 14:44 |
it's possible. My drummer's old band, evil eyeball, was a progressive metalish type band, that sounded something like a cross from king crimson and primus, and the singer rapped.
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 15:19 |
BePinkTheater wrote:
It does matter if all of them are posers and hoodlums, they can still make god music if they were put in a room wiht the right people and the right mindset. |
I don't think so, in order to make great music you need a solid musical formation or at least the basics, but most of this guys don't absolutely care, it's easier and requires less effort to just blame the whole world without any real musical talent.
And if you're talking about Rap being blended with Prog, no way ,over any other genre, Progressive Rock bands are formed by a very high percentage of musicians have a very solid or even classical formation, guys like Wakeman or Banks who spent their childhood practicing even six or eighht hours a day instead of wasting their time.
Jeann-Luc Ponty left the school at the age of 13, not to assault a grocery store or a gas station, but to join the Paris Conservatoire and win in two years the Premiere Prix, the highest award given by this institution.
Of course there are exceptions but even this guys took the time to study by themselves, Peter Gabriel (for example) really learned to play keyboards after he left Genesis, even when it would have been easier for him to stay with his lyrics and make catchy tunes, he decided to improve his skills in order to make better music, that's the kind of people that make Prog great.
Go with Prog Metal (A genre that's not my cup of tea), but check the background of guys as Petrucci, Rudess or Petrucci, people with a solid formation.
Progressive Rock is for prepared, talented and virtuoso musicians, people who play their own instrument (a lot of them fluid in 5 or more instruments) and not DJ's who work with turntables scratching music that other people created.
There's no way this guys could ever blend with Prog' unless they change their perspective about music.
Iván
Edited by ivan_2068
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con safo
Prog Reviewer
Joined: March 17 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 1230
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 18:21 |
I wasn't argueing that progressive rap could indeed exist, just
pointing out the obvious lack of knowledge in your claims about rap.
Even still you lead on and on, even snipping from someone elses review,
not even taking the time to form your own opinion. Really quite typical
of people like you. Okay ivan congratulations on checking out two, YES
TWO hip hop groups and forming your opinion on that alone. You've truly
got us pinned.
And did you even LISTEN to immortal technique? Oh yes, because he's a
'gangsta' his music has absolutely no merit. Makes sense. I do agree
that immortal technique is over the top with his political claims.. but
i like his music.
And i do realise you will most definitely reply to this with yet
another lengthy response which will bring us back to exactly where we
started. Carry on.
Edited by con safo
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GoldenSpiral
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: May 27 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 3839
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 18:54 |
to concisely sum up this thread for those just joining (so you dont have to read the last 6 pages of poo)
One guy: "Progressive rap CAN indeed exist, for these good reasons which i am about to list...."
other guy: "NO it cannot! all rappers are mindless thugs and the music means nothing!"
one guy: "yuh huh!"
other guy: "nuh uh!"
ad infinitum...
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
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Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 18:55 |
No more lenghty replies, I'm tired of this thread.}
By this point I downloaded at least samplers and/or songs from 50% of the bands you mention (easily found everywhere), and my opinion remains intact, I can't find musical merit on Rap.
BTW: Not the first rap or hip hop bands I listened, probably the first from your llist.
So what's the point to keep with this thread.
Iván
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con safo
Prog Reviewer
Joined: March 17 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 1230
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 18:59 |
Well we can all agree that Kenny G is the greatest prog musician of all
time, and if anybody is going to combine rap and prog it might as well
be him!
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GoldenSpiral
Special Collaborator
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Joined: May 27 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 3839
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 19:04 |
con safo wrote:
Well we can all agree that Kenny G is the greatest prog musician of all
time, and if anybody is going to combine rap and prog it might as well
be him!
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it's about time someone recognized the G-man for his contributions to prog-rap! cheers to kenny!
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zachfive
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 13 2005
Location: Kitsap WA
Status: Offline
Points: 770
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Posted: November 13 2005 at 19:16 |
There is rap in prog rock, Roll the Bones by rush, good song untill the
skeleton starts to sing and dance... it sorda ruined a good song
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