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10 cc in PA

Printed From: Progarchives.com
Category: Other music related lounges
Forum Name: Proto-Prog and Prog-Related Lounge
Forum Description: Discuss bands and albums classified as Proto-Prog and Prog-Related
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=26887
Printed Date: November 24 2024 at 11:27
Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com


Topic: 10 cc in PA
Posted By: Prog-Brazil
Subject: 10 cc in PA
Date Posted: August 03 2006 at 15:27
So 10cc is in PA (I remember Maani asking for that)
What is the best (more prog, if you want) of 10cc for you?
If you want to, tell us why you consider (or don't) 10cc prog-related.

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Let the sunshine in



Replies:
Posted By: sm sm
Date Posted: August 03 2006 at 15:31
Perhaps when doing reviews of such albums put e.g. ***** for album content and e.g. ** for prog content.
 
That should apply to 10cc'a  later "things we do for love" type material


Posted By: salmacis
Date Posted: August 03 2006 at 15:36
I feel 'The Original Soundtrack' is an album right up there with anything Queen recorded- clever, musically quite ornate and intricate, lyrically often wry and amusing, first class production but with a pop sensibility that will ultimately put die-hard proggers off them. Still though, their first few albums are great for the open minded prog fan, and IMO definitely prog related if ever there was a band that could be called that. 'How Dare You' is a more musically developed album but some of their quirkiness is sacrificed a little at times on that, imo. Still a great album though.


Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: August 03 2006 at 15:45
Never heard the remotest prog in anything 10CC did - they are just well written, intelligent pop.


Posted By: Ounamahl
Date Posted: August 03 2006 at 16:25
10cc here?.... I don't like reggae, uh, I love it...... ok 10cc IMO has nothing to do with prog =)

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This is an electrified fairytale


Posted By: Evolver
Date Posted: August 03 2006 at 16:33

I'd put them in the same category as Supertramp.  Up through "How Dare You" they were art-rock on the edge of prog.

Now Godley & Creme's first three, "Cosequences", "L" and "Freeze Frame" are definitely prog.



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Trust me. I know what I'm doing.


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 02:24
Growing up as a teenager and nashing my teeth at yet another radio play of 'I'm Not In Love' I'm not sure I would of thought they were 'related' to ELP,Yes and Genesis.Confused


Posted By: Sean Trane
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 03:09
I'd say Original Soundtrack and How dare you are their proggier effort
 
Not any less proggy than Queen: this is why they are in the Prog-related category


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let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter
keep our sand-castle virtues
content to be a doer
as well as a thinker,
prefer lifting our pen
rather than un-sheath our sword


Posted By: Yukorin
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 04:11


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Posted By: Sean Trane
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 04:17
Originally posted by Yukorin Yukorin wrote:

Prog-related is such a pointless category. Reads like a whos-who of stadium rock. Even the severed greenfly currently dying a slow, painful, and ultimately pointless death on my desk who I will soon put out of its' misery by impaling it with my lit cigarette is fully aware of everything in prog-related.


      Why no Bedjabetch ? Yog Sothoth ? Forever Einstein ? Resonance 2 ? Metabolist ? And for the love of God: No Eider Stellaire ? ! ? !


     was only recently that The Mighty Xaal were added. Yes folks, The Mighty Xaal.





                                        Jab
 
I agree that there are still some glaring omission on this site!
 
I am the one who included Xaal
 
I am working on Forever Einstein : currently waiting for Charles OMeara to communicate me the info and provide us with an intro and maybe samples.
 
 
Rome was not built in one day


-------------
let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter
keep our sand-castle virtues
content to be a doer
as well as a thinker,
prefer lifting our pen
rather than un-sheath our sword


Posted By: Yukorin
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 04:21


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Posted By: Yukorin
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 04:23


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Posted By: Sean Trane
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 04:29
I do not know of Eider Stellaire, so I will not include it myself
 
 
                   BUT
 
 
You can submit their candidacy on the suggest a band for admission.
 
The best bet is:
 
to provide a link and short historic of the artist including eventually a discography


-------------
let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter
keep our sand-castle virtues
content to be a doer
as well as a thinker,
prefer lifting our pen
rather than un-sheath our sword


Posted By: Equality 7-2521
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 09:32
Originally posted by Evolver Evolver wrote:

I'd put them in the same category as Supertramp.  Up through "How Dare You" they were art-rock on the edge of prog.

Now Godley & Creme's first three, "Cosequences", "L" and "Freeze Frame" are definitely prog.

 
 
I agree, but 10cc never had their Crime Of The Century to solidify their status.
 
Original Soundtrack is a good place to start. Very arsty and with the epic "One Night In Paris"


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"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "


Posted By: maani
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 15:52
As the person who fought for the inclusion of 10CC longest and hardest, I would like to weigh in here.
 
It is important to note that I did not fight for their inclusion because I thought they were "prog."  I fought for their inclusion because they are no less "prog" than Supertramp, Queen or Klaatu.  Thus, my argument - which can be found in numerous older threads - was that, if you are going to include Supertramp and Queen (among others) on the site, then 10CC's omission is arbitrary and capricious.
 
That said, I have never considered Supertramp "prog."  True, parts of Crime of the Century (and Even...) are "proggish," and there is a "concept" involved.  But to my mind, simply having a concept and "toeing the line" of prog does not make one "prog."  Indeed, I would argue that "Hide In Your Shell" - among Supertramp's most amazing, proggy songs - is far less proggish than 10CC's "One Night in Paris."
 
As for Queen, I fought as hard for their exclusion as I did for 10CC's inclusion, for the same reason: because despite occasional "cutting edge" proggish tracks like Bohemian Rhapsody, Prophet's Song and a handful of others, to my mind there is more to "prog" than simply having songs influenced by other genres, having admittedly exquisite harmonies and arrangements, and using numerous studio tricks.  (And no, I do not consider Queen 2 "prog" as a whole.)
 
Given that Supertramp and Klaatu were not about to be ejected, and especially given the even later inclusion of Queen (i.e., the 10CC debate preceded the Queen debate, and ultimate inclusion), I believe 10CC has as much right to be here as those three groups.  Indeed, Supertramp and 10CC were contemporaries who were not only close friends, but were constantly influencing each other, and have very similar sounds and approaches.  And Klaatu, in their first interview, stated that 10CC and Supertramp were two of their main influences.  (Indeed, Klaatu's debut album did not come out until 1976, at which point 10CC had put out their first four albums and Supertramp had put out their first five.)  So how can one justify including both Supertramp and Klaatu without including 10CC?  That was my original argument, and I maintain it.
 
As for 10CC's claims to "proggishness," let me make another point.
 
One of the arguments made for Queen's proggishness is the number of genre influences they use: from classical to jazz, from dance hall to vaudeville, etc.  If that is one criteria for proggishness, then 10CC can claim this right out the box.  The very first song on their first album, Johnny Don't Do It, is not simply an homage to the 50s, but a spectacularly brilliant homage to the 50s.  It begins with one of the most proggy guitar effects one can imagine (Eric Stewart being the most underrated and under-appreciated guitarist in rock), and has an arrangement that is no more or less "proggish" than many of the "homage" songs by Queen: if "Seaside Rendezvous" and "Lazing on a Sunday Afternoon" are proggish, so is "Johnny Don't Do It."
 
But even though 10CC can make claims of proggishness similar to Supertramp and Queen right from their debut album, it was with their sophomore album, Sheet Music, that they found their quasi-prog "niche" - which, as stated, is not "prog" as we all tend to define it (except broadly) - which they honed to frightening perfection on The Original Soundtrack and How Dare You.  And after the departure of Lol Creme and Kevin Godley (and why are they not here?), and the slightly weaker Deceptive Bends (which nevertheless has some amazing stuff), they returned to form on Bloody Tourists.  [N.B.  Now that 10CC has finally been included, I will be doing a complete series of reviews of their entire oeuvre.]
 
Finally, I believe that rather than classifying Queen and 10CC as "prog-related" and Supertramp as "art rock," all three groups should be categorized as "art rock," since they all came out of the same background - art school (which is where the term derives from: musicians who attended art schools in the 1960s and 70s) - and all have basically similar sounds and approaches vis-a-vis arrangement and production, especially re harmonies.
 
Peace.


Posted By: Evolver
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 16:05
Maani: Clap

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Trust me. I know what I'm doing.


Posted By: maani
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 16:32
Evolver:
 
Thanks for the support.  Embarrassed
 
Peace.


Posted By: Yukorin
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 17:00




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Posted By: mystic fred
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 17:03
Many thanks Maani for your work in including 10cc on PA - i was even inspired to get off my lazy a**e and write some reviews!!Thumbs Up ...hope you like 'em!
 
 
 
 
 


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Prog Archives Tour Van


Posted By: erik neuteboom
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 17:17
I just wrote my review about 10CC their captivating album The Original Soundtrack and then discovered this thread, good to read those mixed comments Wink !


Posted By: chessman
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 18:53
I too am pleased 10cc are at last in PA. In the early '70s they were probably my favourite band, certainly from around '72 - '74, when my interest in Genesis and Yes and Floyd put them ahead.
Always loved the intelligent, witty lyrics, superb production, and beautiful harmonies of 10cc.
All four musicians could write, play, and sing. They all knew each other well long before the formation of 10cc, were session musicians, had appeared in the charts as Hotlegs with Neanderthal Man (Godly, Creme and Stewart anyway) and had had a successful album released as that group, with appearances from Gouldman as well.
I always preferred them to Queen (even though I enjoyed the early Queen period) and agree wholeheartedly that they belong in the art rock genre.
Sheet Music is probably my fave album, but The Original Soundtrack runs it close. Deceptive Bends, How Dare You, the self titled debut and Bloody Tourists were, and are, all fine albums.
All in all, they are a fitting addition to this site.
ClapClapClapStar


Posted By: Yukorin
Date Posted: August 04 2006 at 18:57




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Posted By: Sean Trane
Date Posted: August 05 2006 at 05:30

What the peacher said!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! >>>>> Clap

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Cannot believe this old heathen just said!!!!!!!!!!ShockedEmbarrassedConfusedWink
 
 
 
 
 


-------------
let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter
keep our sand-castle virtues
content to be a doer
as well as a thinker,
prefer lifting our pen
rather than un-sheath our sword


Posted By: zappaholic
Date Posted: August 06 2006 at 12:30
The only reason I'm in this thread is to point out that the bio is continuing to perpetuate the common myth about the origin of the name 10cc.
 
Producer Jonathan King gave the band its name, which he says came to him in a dream.  From an interview:
 
"I started my own label in the early seventies called UK Records, and I picked up this master called 'Donna' by this group that was put together by a guy that I knew...  I had to give them a name there and then because I'd signed the record, and I went to sleep that night and had a dream that a band of mine on my label made number one on the album and singles charts simultaneously in America, and the band was called 10cc.  So I gave them that name the next morning.  Everybody then decided that this was apparently meant to be the amount of an average male ejaculation.  Which was absolutely far from the truth; it had not been a wet dream, I can promise."  (from Rock Names by Adam Dolgins)
 
 


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"Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard." -- H.L. Mencken


Posted By: maani
Date Posted: August 06 2006 at 13:04
Zappaholic:
 
Do you believe everything that you read in interviews?  LOL.  As perhaps the biggest 10CC aficionado (and historian) on the site, I can assure you that the meaning of 10CC's name is not an urban legend.  As an aside, their previous name - Hotlegs - did not come (...) out of nowhere either.  The members of the band had been playing with subtle (and not so subtle...) sexual references and double entendres for some time even before King became their manager.
 
All that said, there is one error in the meaning of the name.  While it does refer to semen, the average sperm count is 5cc's, not 10.  So the name does not refer to "one more cc than the average sperm count," but to masturbating (or having sex) twice.
 
Peace.


Posted By: Sean Trane
Date Posted: August 07 2006 at 04:07
Originally posted by maani maani wrote:

Zappaholic:
 
Do you believe everything that you read in interviews?  LOL.  As perhaps the biggest 10CC aficionado (and historian) on the site, I can assure you that the meaning of 10CC's name is not an urban legend.  As an aside, their previous name - Hotlegs - did not come (...) out of nowhere either.  The members of the band had been playing with subtle (and not so subtle...) sexual references and double entendres for some time even before King became their manager.
 
All that said, there is one error in the meaning of the name.  While it does refer to semen, the average sperm count is 5cc's, not 10.  So the name does not refer to "one more cc than the average sperm count," but to masturbating (or having sex) twice.
 
Peace.
 
 
Wow that makes my 15 CC even more out of norm >>> feel like a freakLOLClown


-------------
let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter
keep our sand-castle virtues
content to be a doer
as well as a thinker,
prefer lifting our pen
rather than un-sheath our sword



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