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Dick Heath
Special Collaborator
Jazz-Rock Specialist
Joined: April 19 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 12818
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Posted: October 15 2004 at 08:56 |
Easy Livin wrote:
"SF Sorrow" by THE PRETTY THINGS (Widely acknowledged to be the first concept album) fall into this category. |
Point of information.
Pete Townshend has long been on record acknowledging SF Sorrow as (specifically) the first rock opera - (although some sad sap of a reviewer at Amazon.UK thinks Tommy was). But a 'concept album' - hence my original query at the start of this thread? And of course the Pretty Things were/are not archetypal prog rockers; originally in direct competition to the Rolling Stones, jumped on the psychedelic band wagon releasing SF Sorrow producing an important gem (innovative enough to prove impossible to play completely live then, forcing the first use of taped recordings to be mixed into live performance), then they went straight to rock (Parachute, one of the first Harvest Records releases, has some really great early British rock tunes)
In many respects the SF Sorrow record being the first rock opera, comes down to EMI backing out of a project for an earlier rock opera (written by Mark Weiss?????????) which involved members of Tomorrow - Keith West having a hit single, and Steve Howe in there somewhere. EMI released a couple of singles from it, Excerpts From A Teenage Opera and Grocer Jack - which Private Eye than paradied/corrupted into Grocer Heath for satirical ends. I guess the sales of the second single didn't inspire EMI to invest in releasing the full LP. RPM Records eventually released it on CD in the early 90's.
You also have to ask whether Ray Davies might have got in first, if the Kinks hadn't been tied up in legal matters that prevented them releasing anything for about a year.
Back in 67 to 69, concept albums were few and far apart, Sgt Pepper and Moody Blues' Days Of Future Past being the most obvious - but memory suggests The Electric Prunes Mass might have been tagged in that way. However, the liner notes which accompanied the first CD issue of Sgt Pepper, includes an alternative tracking list order which had been considered, but eventually dropped in favour of what was released. This suggests that if track order was flexible, then the variable song order/coherency indicates less of a continual concept with the telling of a story set to music. Instead you have an LP bookended approximately by the Sgt Pepper songs, while Day In A Life is a post script. With reports of Lennon and McCartney writing songs independently of each other for this project, I wonder if any concept having related songs was ever considered.
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Easy Livin
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
Joined: February 21 2004
Location: Scotland
Status: Offline
Points: 15585
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Posted: October 15 2004 at 15:30 |
Dick Heath wrote:
When does a rock opera become a concept album: when a rock band is a progressive rock band?????
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That is an interesting concept. I'll have to think more about that one!![Wink](https://www.progarchives.com/forum/smileys/smiley2.gif)
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maani
Special Collaborator
Founding Moderator
Joined: January 30 2004
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2632
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Posted: October 15 2004 at 18:27 |
Dick/Easy Livin:
Actually, you might be surprised by the answer (at least "according to Maani" ).
There is no question in my mind that Tommy, Quadrophenia, etc. are "concept albums." One would have to be truly dense not to accept that. However, this does not automatically make The Who (or other writers of rock operas) "prog." I believe the two ideas - the creation of a concept album, and a band being "prog" - are, or at least can be, mutually exclusive.
Again, I want to reiterate my belief that a band can (or at least should) only be called "prog" if the majority of its output falls within that genre. Clearly, The Who does not fit this. Neither do The Beatles, or other rock bands that have created either a "concept album" or even a couple of "proto-prog" or even "prog" albums.
This is my own personal problem with PA, and I have not been shy about expressing it: I believe there are far too many bands on PA who do not belong if for no other reason that they only put out one or two or three "prog" albums in an oeuvre of ten albums or more. To my mind, those one or two or three "prog" albums do not support their classification as "prog," and their inclusion on this site.
I continue to support Max and the webmasters re their absolute right to decide who is included and who is not. But I stand by my comments on this issue.
Peace.
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19557
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Posted: October 15 2004 at 18:43 |
When does a rock opera become a concept album: when a rock band is a progressive rock band????? |
Every Rock Opera is a conceptual album because it's a story told along a whole album but not every Concept album is a Rock Opera, because the last one is based mostly in dialogues and solos more than narrations.
Of course there are some other structural differences that come from the classic operas (Or at least there should be), but the most obvious difference is in the dialogues between the characters.
Don't ask me about The War of the Worlds, because that would be a derivative genre of the opera, the musical (like the ones of Broadway).
I won't get into the the second question, because there's a lot of posible and valid answers.
Iván
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frenchie
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 30 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 2234
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Posted: October 15 2004 at 18:45 |
1. the mars volta - deloused in the comatorium 2. dream theater - scenes from a memory 3. pink floyd - the wall
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The Worthless Recluse
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karansaraf
Forum Newbie
Joined: October 15 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 11
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Posted: October 15 2004 at 18:47 |
Dream Theater - Scenes From a Memory
Queensryche - Operation: Mindcrime (I'm surprised not to see this in this thread already!!)
Ayreon - The Human Equation (OMG!! Best album of 2004) Features singers
such as James Labrie (Dream Theater), Devin Townsend (Devin Townsend
Band, Strapping Young Lad), Mikael Akerfeldt (Opeth), Arjen Lucassen,
Heather Findlay, Devon Graves, Mike Baker and about ten others.
This is THE album of 2004 - may take a few listens to get though.
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Jessica Alba > Your Girlfriends
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Lunarscape
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 19 2004
Location: Brazil
Status: Offline
Points: 374
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Posted: October 15 2004 at 19:52 |
karansaraf wrote:
Queensryche - Operation: Mindcrime (I'm surprised not to see this in this thread already!!) |
Pretty much true my friend ! And are we getting heretic here forgetting Renaissance's Scheherezade and Other Stories !
___________
Lunar ![](smileys/smiley4.gif)
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Music Is The Soul Bird That Flies In The Immense Heart Of The Listener . . .
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Foxy
Forum Groupie
Joined: April 17 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 60
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Posted: October 15 2004 at 20:10 |
I guess that concept of the "concept дигь" itself is too narrow and too
broad at the same time. It is narrow, because very often by "concept"
people mean a "story", or general idea, like in Operation Mindcrime.
However, there may be a musical concept as well or even just aesthetic
one. That is why Sgt. Pepper is a truly concept album: it has an
aesthtic concept. Or Power To Believe which has a definite musical
concept. The term too broad in a sense that it also includes musicals
and rock operas, which very often have only a story as a concept being
musically very assorted.
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Easy Livin
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
Joined: February 21 2004
Location: Scotland
Status: Offline
Points: 15585
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Posted: October 16 2004 at 12:20 |
Maani,
I have to say I agree entirely with what you say above about rock operas and concept albums. They are by no means the exclusive domain of prog rock either, although as I think I suggested previously, prog does have a much higher proportion of such albums than any other genre.
I understand what you say about bands who should and should not be here. I think the problem is that we all have our own different ideas about which bands are prog and which are not. There have been plenty of discussion threads on defining prog, and on whether individual bands are or are not prog, and each contains a wide diversity of views.
I find bands like Asia the hardest to come to a considered opinion on. There is no question that their music has little which is truly progressive about it, yet their pedigree, at least on their early albums, entirely to me justifies their inclusion.
I would prefer that the site captures those bands for whom there is a reasonable degree of support, rather than requiring unanimous, or even perhaps majority agreement. The webmasters will always have the final say of course (as they should), and they too will have their own opinions with which we might not always agree. I find it immensley encouraging though, that they are as open to suggestions as they are.
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asuma
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 23 2004
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 230
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Posted: October 16 2004 at 12:59 |
what about only putting in an certain artists 'prog'
albums. like only having styx's prog stuff (not sure
what it i, but i assume there is some since styx is on
PA)
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*Remember all advice given by Asuma is for entertainment purposes only. Asuma is not a licensed medical doctor, psychologist, or counselor and he does not play one on TV.*
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Bryan
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 01 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 3013
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Posted: October 16 2004 at 14:48 |
asuma wrote:
what about only putting in an certain artists 'prog' albums. like only having styx's prog stuff (not sure what it i, but i assume there is some since styx is on PA) |
This is an idea that has been brought up before. However, what is and isn't prog is simply too subjective for it to work. For example, I consider The Division Bell by Pink Floyd to a be a fantastic prog album. However, I know for a fact that there are numerous people on here who would strongly disagree with that.
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asuma
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 23 2004
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 230
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Posted: October 16 2004 at 15:27 |
yeah, i suppose then personal opinion and such
would come up to what is and isn't prog. eventually it
would all be on personal taste, and thus making it
way to hard to do.
according to one of my band mates. a lot of early
(20's) and later (50's-60's) jazz has had a lot of
concept albums. i'm not sure how that would work
as many of the songs don't have lyrics, but maybe by
the overall feel (sound) of the album.
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*Remember all advice given by Asuma is for entertainment purposes only. Asuma is not a licensed medical doctor, psychologist, or counselor and he does not play one on TV.*
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frenchie
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 30 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 2234
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Posted: October 16 2004 at 15:40 |
THE MARS VOLTA - DELOUSED IN THE COMATORIUM!!!
also (no particular order)
dream theater - scenes from a memory pink floyd - the wall the who - quadrophenia rick wakeman - the myths and legends of king arthur and the knights of the round table jeff wayne - war of the worlds flaming lips - yoshimi battles the pink robots nine inch nails - the downward spiral the beatles - sgt peppers lonely hearts club band the who - tommy muse - absolution (?) yes - tales from topographic oceans (?)
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The Worthless Recluse
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Petra
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 23 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 663
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Posted: October 19 2004 at 08:00 |
One of my favourite concept album is 'Nightfall in Middle Earth' by Blind Guardian one for the prog archives i'd say!
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Don't hate me
I'm not special like you
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Dick Heath
Special Collaborator
Jazz-Rock Specialist
Joined: April 19 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 12818
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Posted: October 19 2004 at 12:50 |
Dick Heath wrote:
Easy Livin wrote:
"SF Sorrow" by THE PRETTY THINGS (Widely acknowledged to be the first concept album) fall into this category. |
You also have to ask whether Ray Davies might have got in first, if the Kinks hadn't been tied up in legal matters that prevented them releasing anything for about a year.
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Coincidentally just found this in the latest Artist Shop newsletter:
Kinks - Village Green Preservation Soc $25.95 2004 reissue of this 1968 jewel loaded with extras in the form of two extra discs featuring original stereo mixes, mono versions, demos, Euro editions, instrumentals BBC sessions and more. 71 tracks in all. Enjoy! Sanctuary
That 1968 date, does suggest the Kinks were close to being the first but denied by legal action preventing them from recording any earlier.
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