1 track by 1 band that best sums up prog for you
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Topic: 1 track by 1 band that best sums up prog for you
Posted By: Dr. Prog
Subject: 1 track by 1 band that best sums up prog for you
Date Posted: May 12 2008 at 17:36
If you had to pick one track from one band (song or instrumental) that best sums up what you want to listen to in prog rock, that best defines you as a listener, what is it? Yes, I know one track is tough, but that's why we do these. Multiple choices are automatically eliminated for wimpyness. The thread title is too short for all the words---its YOUR favorite or definitive prog rock track.
Mine would have to be Los Endos (live) from the Seconds Out album, Genesis. I find I probably listen to that track over the years the most. It defines everything I love about Genesis, it defines why I love progressive rock, and every time I heard it played live in concert over the years, including 4 times last fall, it never has failed to give me chills up the spine. Powerful, searing, bubbling and gurgling with synths, huge rolling toms and knife edge guitars, it never fails to impress me. Since the Seconds Out live version is the last one with Hackett, I have to go with that. Genesis at the peak of their craft.
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Replies:
Posted By: Pnoom!
Date Posted: May 12 2008 at 17:44
Ouch, tough topic (but a good one!)
Hmm... part of me wants to say Starless for its multiple parts, it's buildup, and its final explosion, but I would imagine that's less representative of prog than, say Supper's Ready.
I think I'll go with Tarkus. While not my favorite prog song (not even close), it has all the elements commonly associated with prog (virtuosity, multiple parts, etc). Not only that, though, it also represents the aspects of prog commonly associated with the genre by non-prog fans (pomposity, silly lyrics, etc), so in that sense, it is representative of prog to both those inside and outside of the prog community.
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Posted By: T.Rox
Date Posted: May 12 2008 at 17:53
I'd be thinking along the lines of Tarkus or Gates Of Delerium myself ... not sure which ... maybe Tarkus would win the day!
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Posted By: TGM: Orb
Date Posted: May 12 2008 at 17:59
Larks' Tongues In Aspic - King Crimson
A complete explosion for the ear-drums and brain matter, flowing perfectly, with Cross and Muir, especially, appearing and disappearing from the mix as if they'd always/never been there. Loads of diversity, gorgeous violin, some superb solos from Fripp and Cross, one of the most interesting rhythm section sections I've yet heard. More importantly, the combination of the title and the music evokes imagery throughout (for me), with a constant theme and flawless transitions. Absolutely amazing. I might prefer exiles, maybe, just, but this is certainly the one that exemplifies what I love in my prog.
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Posted By: laplace
Date Posted: May 12 2008 at 18:00
Dr. Prog wrote:
pick one track from one band (song or instrumental) that best sums up what you want to listen to in prog rock, that best defines you as a listener |
Henry Cow - Beautiful as the Moon; Terrible as an Army with Banners. It's a really powerful and poetic song that can go zap but is also delicate, and its eight minutes are about right to let everyone do their thing. everyone in Henry Cow was a really good composer and performer and the song proves it by having them all mesh perfectly.
I usually pick this song over anything from Western Culture because I love the female voice in prog rock.
------------- FREEDOM OF SPEECH GO TO HELL
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Posted By: T.Rox
Date Posted: May 12 2008 at 18:33
laplace wrote:
I usually pick this song over anything from Western Culture because I love the female voice in prog rock. |
laplace, It may be worth checking this out if you get a chance...
http://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=2900 - Saat EMTIDI
I found Dolly Holmes' vocals in Saat to be a very pleasant surprise!
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Posted By: Relayer09
Date Posted: May 13 2008 at 01:11
I had to think this one over for a while. CTTE, Tarkus, Supper's Ready all went through my mind but I went with something more contemporary.
A Change Of Seasons by Dream Theater - The song has every element I love about prog. Great musicianship, song structure, great story telling, it's and epic song with individual movements that blend nicely into each other. The song comes full circle from the opening guitar solo to it's closing section. There isn't a note sung until nearly five minutes into the song. Talk about over indulgent! Gotta love it.
------------- If you lose your temper, you've lost the arguement. -Proverb
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Posted By: ghost_of_morphy
Date Posted: May 13 2008 at 02:09
I'm going to have to think about this one a little bit. This topic deserves it.
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Posted By: Blacksword
Date Posted: May 13 2008 at 05:43
I'm going to go with another Genesis classic; the 'Seconds Out' version of 'Cinema Show' I love the power and excitement of the duel drums, the bass pedals and mellotron parts.
'Runners up' would have to be:
Suppers Ready - Genesis
Starless - King Crimson
Dogs - Pink Floyd
Awaken - Yes
Xanadu (especuially live on 'ESL') - Rush
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Posted By: sleeper
Date Posted: May 13 2008 at 11:03
Damn tough, but I think in the end I'll go for Transatlantic- All of the Above, it really does seem to encompass much of what is prog.
------------- Spending more than I should on Prog since 2005
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Posted By: BaldJean
Date Posted: May 13 2008 at 11:47
"A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers". changes between harmonic and cacophonic passages all the time, has the full range of dynamics, complex riffs (sometimes even 2 completely different ones at the same time), slow and fast passages and a majestic ending
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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Posted By: Padraic
Date Posted: May 13 2008 at 12:28
Close to the Edge. A bit cliched, perhaps? C'mon, it's a 19 minute long song in four parts with birds and a harp in the introduction, with the rest awash in mellotrons and organs, virtuoso performances by some of the best musicians, and incomprehensible lyrics. Prog.
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Posted By: Nightfly
Date Posted: May 13 2008 at 13:35
NaturalScience wrote:
Close to the Edge. A bit cliched, perhaps? C'mon, it's a 19 minute long song in four parts with birds and a harp in the introduction, with the rest awash in mellotrons and organs, virtuoso performances by some of the best musicians, and incomprehensible lyrics. Prog. |
I'd agree with that one .....not cliched though; they're one of the originals and rarely bettered.
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Posted By: Padraic
Date Posted: May 13 2008 at 13:41
Posted By: sean
Date Posted: May 13 2008 at 14:31
BaldJean wrote:
"A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers". changes between harmonic and cacophonic passages all the time, has the full range of dynamics, complex riffs (sometimes even 2 completely different ones at the same time), slow and fast passages and a majestic ending
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The same for me, and for similar reasons. Also, musicality aside, just turning the lights off and listening to that song in the dark is an amazing (if somewhat frightening) experience. It just gets to me in a way that most songs can't, but then again, not every band is Van der Graaf Generator.
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Posted By: Pnoom!
Date Posted: May 13 2008 at 16:04
laplace wrote:
Dr. Prog wrote:
pick one track from one band (song or instrumental) that best sums up what you want to listen to in prog rock, that best defines you as a listener |
Henry Cow - Beautiful as the Moon; Terrible as an Army with Banners. |
You can't pick that, it's by two bands
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Posted By: Moogtron III
Date Posted: May 13 2008 at 16:11
Heart Of The Sunrise. It has a strange, unusual buildup, like lots of other tracks in prog, and has melodious and non-melodious sounding parts, as well as slow and fast parts. It has instrumental and vocal parts. It has a lot of different things in a time span of almost 10 minutes.
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Posted By: el böthy
Date Posted: May 17 2008 at 18:04
Probably Dancing with the moonlight knight by Genesis. I really think it summons up around 90% of what prog is. It´s got everything, interesting intro, gradual guild ups, fast paces, tempo changes, mellotrons, thought out lyrics, great soloing, strange ending and even hooks!
------------- "You want me to play what, Robert?"
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Posted By: Vompatti
Date Posted: May 17 2008 at 18:11
The Musical Box by Genesis.
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Posted By: micky
Date Posted: May 17 2008 at 18:18
Nice topic Dr. Prog...
lets let the reviews speak for the song that sums it for me..
Franco Battiato - Sequenze e Frequenze
'blends dark experimental sounds with oriental
influences; the unusual “filtered” Battiato’s vocals appear after more than two
minutes and seem to walk on a “flying musical carpet”, then give way to suggestive
percussions and other experimental sounds'
' a long, juicy but also artistic-dissolving dark piece, eccentric on experimentalism, synth sequence and minimal
atmospheric conception; the middle-part has a shrill, through a sort of glass-sound play tune, on astral or harsh-vibrating
pulses. The piece, so steamy yet contemplative, seems of a very pleasing and intense satisfaction. Mellow on the art (though
is it really inartistic?), ravishing on the sound, one almost independent and circulant'
'long dronal synth sounds mixed with a duo of unusual wind instruments
for rock (clarinet and oboe) and reminiscent of the Third Ear Band, are
slowly guiding us towards a heavenly or celestial almost liturgical
singing. The rest of the track hovers between TEB, Tangerine Dream,
Terry Riley, Moondog andc some Umma-Saucerful era Floyd. The track ends
slowly by fading out the industrial chopper sounds and gets an
extension of African instruments'
'delivers a narcotic ambience, an atmospheric deluge throw avant
garde noises and mysterious synth chords / oscillations. Aries develops a relatively similar mood and
expression, focusing the interest on an effective melody, making a dialogue between trippy, surreal
chords, acoustic elements, a ritual percussive rhythm and vague chorus. Some dancing brass parts come
into the mix to develop a more achieved musical “trip”'
and my thoughts..
'incredibly intoxicating and
hypnotic. I love listening to this song. Like a lot of his music.. not the stuff you
listen to when getting revved up for a hot date.. but when you are curled up with a
good book on a rainy day.'
again... a song.. and album I highly recommend
------------- The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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Posted By: sleeper
Date Posted: May 17 2008 at 19:04
^I've got to be honest, I didnt really get what the first three exerts you posted where on about Mickey.
------------- Spending more than I should on Prog since 2005
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Posted By: jimmy_row
Date Posted: May 17 2008 at 19:07
Close to the Edge, round by the corner, Dancing with the Moonlit Knight.
The Musical Box is a good'un as well.
Thick as a Brick too,
You see where this is going...
Actually all of the ones mentioned so far that I've heard seem like good choices to me. For a single piece to "sum up" prog, it would have to cover a lot of ground; hit the soft and heavy, complex and melodic parts with good fluidity. Genesis and Yes were the best at that IMO, and that's why were talk about them so much.
------------- Signature Writers Guild on strike
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Posted By: micky
Date Posted: May 17 2008 at 19:52
sleeper wrote:
^I've got to be honest, I didnt really get what the first three exerts you posted where on about Mickey.
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hahhahah... well... they were excerpts of reviews the Battiato's album Sulle Corde di Aries, dealing with the song I was talking about. Tried to use a different approach I guess and I guess it didn't take off Let me try the normal approach instead....
Battiato - Sequenze e Frequenze
I love the song it sums prog up for me.
------------- The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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Posted By: The Quiet One
Date Posted: May 17 2008 at 20:03
Thick as a Brick pt 1 for me, although the whole album can be considered.
Folk, heavy, good lyrics, masterful instrumental passages, great vocals, varied instruments, excellent solos of varied instruments, MASTERPIECE that covers most of prog is about! IMHO
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Posted By: T.Rox
Date Posted: May 17 2008 at 20:57
cacho wrote:
Thick as a Brick pt 1 for me, although the whole album can be considered.
Folk, heavy, good lyrics, masterful instrumental passages, great vocals, varied instruments, excellent solos of varied instruments, MASTERPIECE that covers most of prog is about! IMHO |
TAAB is my favourite album of all time but it is missing the really serious keyboard workout that I think would be required to be "the one track for all things prog".
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Posted By: LinusW
Date Posted: May 17 2008 at 21:03
Canto Nomade Per Un Prigioniero Politico - Banco Del Mutuo Soccorso
All I've ever expected and wanted condensed in 16 minutes.
------------- http://www.last.fm/user/LinusW88" rel="nofollow - Blargh
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Posted By: micky
Date Posted: May 17 2008 at 21:09
LinusW wrote:
Canto Nomade Per Un Prigioniero Politico - Banco Del Mutuo Soccorso
All I've ever expected and wanted condensed in 16 minutes.
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Wonderful choice
------------- The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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Posted By: KrakAtack
Date Posted: May 18 2008 at 03:56
Blue Oyster Cult.....Beautiful As A Foot
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Posted By: The Whistler
Date Posted: May 18 2008 at 04:05
I was GONNA say something stupid like "Bungle in the Jungle" for best combining complexity, virtuoso playing, intelligent lyrics and symphonic sound all in a catchy, fun song, but instead, I'll say...
"Buckingham Green" by Ween. Laugh all you want, but that things really IS like the ultimate prog song. Where else can you have all of prog's epic sprawl crammed into three minutes? Dude, that thing is DEEP. Epic. Emotional. Cold. Virtuoso. And awesome.
------------- "There seem to be quite a large percentage of young American boys out there tonight. A long way from home, eh? Well so are we... Gotta stick together." -I. Anderson
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Posted By: jimmy_row
Date Posted: May 18 2008 at 11:37
KrakAtack wrote:
Blue Oyster Cult.....Beautiful As A Foot | Oh so beautiful...
------------- Signature Writers Guild on strike
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Posted By: Prog-jester
Date Posted: May 18 2008 at 14:45
Script for a Jester's Tear by MARILLION
just picked one from the top of my head
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Posted By: JLocke
Date Posted: May 18 2008 at 15:02
Posted By: stonebeard
Date Posted: May 18 2008 at 15:35
Marillion - Jesus Christ It's a Bear!
------------- http://soundcloud.com/drewagler" rel="nofollow - My soundcloud. Please give feedback if you want!
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Posted By: Epignosis
Date Posted: May 18 2008 at 17:03
"The Pinnacle" by Kansas is an absolutely stunning example of progressive rock music, with all the examples necessary.
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Posted By: T.Rox
Date Posted: May 18 2008 at 18:38
T.Rox wrote:
cacho wrote:
Thick as a Brick pt 1 for me, although the whole album can be considered.
Folk, heavy, good lyrics, masterful instrumental passages, great vocals, varied instruments, excellent solos of varied instruments, MASTERPIECE that covers most of prog is about! IMHO |
TAAB is my favourite album of all time but it is missing the really serious keyboard workout that I think would be required to be "the one track for all things prog".
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Cacho, maybe I am wrong, which would make you right! I had another listen to TAAB last night ( as one does ) with this thread in mind. There IS enough from the keys and perhaps TAAB DOES fit the bill after all!
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Posted By: Angelo
Date Posted: May 18 2008 at 19:17
el böthy wrote:
Probably Dancing with the moonlight knight by Genesis. I really think it summons up around 90% of what prog is. It´s got everything, interesting intro, gradual guild ups, fast paces, tempo changes, mellotrons, thought out lyrics, great soloing, strange ending and even hooks!
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Good suggestion, but I'll go for it's little brother/sister: Firth of Fifth
------------- http://www.iskcrocks.com" rel="nofollow - ISKC Rock Radio I stopped blogging and reviewing - so won't be handling requests. Promo's for ariplay can be sent to [email protected]
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Posted By: The Quiet One
Date Posted: May 18 2008 at 19:24
T.Rox wrote:
T.Rox wrote:
cacho wrote:
Thick as a Brick pt 1 for me, although the whole album can be considered. Folk, heavy, good lyrics, masterful instrumental passages, great vocals, varied instruments, excellent solos of varied instruments, MASTERPIECE that covers most of prog is about! IMHO |
TAAB is my favourite album of all time but it is missing the really serious keyboard workout that I think would be required to be "the one track for all things prog".
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Cacho, maybe I am wrong, which would make you right! I had another listen to TAAB last night ( as one does ) with this thread in mind. There IS enough from the keys and perhaps TAAB DOES fit the bill after all!
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I knew I was right I was just waiting for you to recognise
kidding of course..
It has some wonderful keys, specially the hammond that in prog in general isn't quite take in count although there are various exceptions.
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Posted By: paulwalker71
Date Posted: May 19 2008 at 17:35
Some cracking suggestions on this thread
I think I'd go for Close to the Edge, which is saying something because I'm not really that much of a Yes fanboy.
Honourable mentions to Dancing with the Moonlit Knight, Stardust we are and, on a slightly different theme, Fand by The Enid
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Posted By: manray
Date Posted: May 19 2008 at 18:31
el böthy wrote:
Probably Dancing with the moonlight knight by Genesis.
I really think it summons up around 90% of what prog is. It´s got
everything, interesting intro, gradual guild ups, fast paces, tempo
changes, mellotrons, thought out lyrics, great soloing, strange ending
and even hooks!
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Maybe i'm a bit biased but for me prog needs a small bit of jazz influence, and moonlight night (apart from the drumming maybe) has None
Nightfly wrote:
NaturalScience wrote:
Close to the Edge. A bit
cliched, perhaps? C'mon, it's a 19 minute long song in four parts with
birds and a harp in the introduction, with the rest awash in mellotrons
and organs, virtuoso performances by some of the best musicians, and
incomprehensible lyrics. Prog. |
I'd agree with that one .....not cliched though; they're one of the originals and rarely bettered. |
YES, close to edge is the one for me it has it all, very complex piece and ive read many studys on its structure and the lads are genius
BaldJean wrote:
"A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers". changes between
harmonic and cacophonic passages all the time, has the full range of
dynamics, complex riffs (sometimes even 2 completely different ones at
the same time), slow and fast passages and a majestic ending
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this is a close second
-------------
EROTIC VOLVO
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Posted By: NurseryCryme89
Date Posted: May 20 2008 at 11:26
TGM: Orb wrote:
Larks' Tongues In Aspic - King Crimson
A complete explosion for the ear-drums and brain matter, flowing perfectly, with Cross and Muir, especially, appearing and disappearing from the mix as if they'd always/never been there. Loads of diversity, gorgeous violin, some superb solos from Fripp and Cross, one of the most interesting rhythm section sections I've yet heard. More importantly, the combination of the title and the music evokes imagery throughout (for me), with a constant theme and flawless transitions. Absolutely amazing. I might prefer exiles, maybe, just, but this is certainly the one that exemplifies what I love in my prog.
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Posted By: A B Negative
Date Posted: May 26 2008 at 06:28
BaldJean wrote:
"A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers". changes between harmonic and cacophonic passages all the time, has the full range of dynamics, complex riffs (sometimes even 2 completely different ones at the same time), slow and fast passages and a majestic ending
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------------- "The disgusting stink of a too-loud electric guitar.... Now, that's my idea of a good time."
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Posted By: AmericanKhatru
Date Posted: July 29 2008 at 17:06
Someone said Gates off Relayer. I'm going to go just one track more to "Sound Chaser." Absolutely nothing conventional about it. Hard driving riffs and basslines complimented by insane, almost spasmatic keyboarding by Patrick Moraz and flawless drumming by Alan White. I honestly have no clue what the time signature is, and even if I did know I'd never be able to play it. It's got a solid Telecaster solo by Steve Howe and a part that almost makes me move in slow motion. Great keyboard solo at the end and it just leaves you with a feeling like, "Damn that was fun." A difficult choice but if I could only give a friend one song to explain prog-rock, I'd go with Sound Chaser.
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Posted By: crimson87
Date Posted: July 29 2008 at 17:39
Karn Evil 9 3rd Impression. Mostly the epics , or a short one like The Musical Box
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Posted By: YesGoblin
Date Posted: July 29 2008 at 18:42
suppers ready, not my favourite song, but kind of sums up prog
Trilogy by ELP maybe, Roundabout, not sure
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Posted By: AtomicCrimsonRush
Date Posted: August 01 2008 at 00:35
As per my review of Pawn Hearts I have to stick with A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers from Van der Graaf Generator.
It is all that VDGG has come to personify and more. 'A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers' was the first track I had heard from this amazing band. It's unbelievable in every aspect, running for an awesome 23 minutes, it tells the story of an eyewitness who sees the unspeakable as he feels his body fading in a storm while voyaging on a doomed ship. It reminds one of Coleridge's Rime of the Ancient Mariner (check Iron Maiden's take on this poem). The narrator notes “I prophesy disaster and then I count the cost. I shine but shining, dying I know that I am almost lost.” The piano gets faster and seems to be falling down an abyss. There is a brief interlude that reminds one of a ship floating on an endless ocean and we hear the lonely saxophone blasts that resemble bizarre fog horns. You can almost picture the image of a ghost ship sailing through fog and there's a genuinely creepy ambience. The song takes on a darker atmosphere and Hammill begins to use his patented gravel tone to sing of death spectres that scratch on windows, hollowed faces, and lost mastheads that pierce the freezing dark. There are several parts that flash by until the track moves to Presence of the Night/ Kosmos Tours. The saxophone really shines in this section and a weird time signature locks in, with Hammill singing “Why can't I let me live and be free, but I die very slowly alone.” A beautiful hammond sound fills the void and the tempo ignites to a frenetic pace where it spirals blissfully out of control. Then it all ends suddenly and the gorgeous piano reverberates to a melancholic contemplative Hammill who asks “Lighthouses might hold the key but can I reach the door?” It's a lovely moment after all the mayhem preceding, then the next section begins suddenly with Hammill's rasping vocals and short jagged spurts of noise from Banton and Evans, The Clot Thickens. At times the sound seems curiously off kilter, out of tune and rhythm but it all gels perfectly into the tranquil Land's End, “Stars slice horizons where the lines stand much too stark, I feel I am drowning hands stretch in the dark...” And it ends on a rather positive note in a sense where Hammill muses that “it doesn't feel so very bad now” and perhaps “the end is the start... all things are apart.” You can take what you will from the potent lyrics but all is sung with absolute conviction which makes the piece all the more intriguing. It is a ballad of gothic grandeur in every sense that constantly surprises with its complex twisting structure.
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Posted By: tszirmay
Date Posted: August 01 2008 at 00:54
jimmy_row wrote:
Close to the Edge, round by the corner, Dancing with the Moonlit Knight.
The Musical Box is a good'un as well.
Thick as a Brick too,
You see where this is going...
Actually all of the ones mentioned so far that I've heard seem like good choices to me. For a single piece to "sum up" prog, it would have to cover a lot of ground; hit the soft and heavy, complex and melodic parts with good fluidity. Genesis and Yes were the best at that IMO, and that's why were talk about them so much. |
You are on the ball, jimmy_row. I sort of like to add Eruption by Focus, River of Life by PFM, The Golden Void by Hawkwind, Isle of Everywhere by Gong, the entire Red Queen to Gryphon 3 album and , yes I must say Tubular Bells by Oldfield .
And as a sign of respect to my avatar , "the Bogus Man" by Roxy Music , very prog, very modern , very cool.
------------- I never post anything anywhere without doing more than basic research, often in depth.
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Posted By: Philip
Date Posted: August 07 2008 at 07:12
Too difficult.
"Shine on you Crazy Diamond" by Pink Floyd, possibly because it was one of the first I heard, and it made me think of what the so called "Progressive Rock" (that I didn't know) was.
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Posted By: AtomicCrimsonRush
Date Posted: August 07 2008 at 20:19
Nine Feet Underground by Caravan has to be on the list! Utterly brilliant.
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Posted By: toasterbum
Date Posted: August 08 2008 at 01:34
Sorrow by Lucifer's Friend. It represents everything I am attracted to in music.
------------- www.hagforsmusic.blogspot.com
"Without music, life would be a mistake."
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Posted By: Negoba
Date Posted: August 09 2008 at 12:50
"Dancing with the Moonlit Knight" is prog for me. Everytime I listen to other stuff for awhile and come back to Selling England, I'm just dumbfounded about how it's never been bested.
More modern and avant-gard I like Mr. Bungle's "Carry Stress in the Jaw", the only musical appearance of Grampa Simpson I'm aware of.
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Posted By: omri
Date Posted: August 10 2008 at 10:24
I failed to post here few days ago. So in short before the computer gets nuts again.
I think Alifib from Robert Wyatt's "Rock bottom" is the prog tune for me. The slow hypnotic start, the incredible lyrics, the amazing singing and above all - the sadness and the way we can realy feel the pain and sorrow is ............................................................................................... what art realy is.
------------- omri
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Posted By: Roj
Date Posted: August 11 2008 at 04:10
Awaken by Yes. If I had to choose one track that represents everything I love in prog it would be that.
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Posted By: AtomicCrimsonRush
Date Posted: August 13 2008 at 01:48
I recently heard Porcupine Tree's 'The Sky Moves Sideways - part1' - That was a great example of prog too.
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Posted By: jimidom
Date Posted: August 13 2008 at 14:12
Ritual (Nous Sommes Du Soleil) - Yes
I chose this track because like the album from which it comes, it sums up the grand parodox of prog, the good (artistry, virtuosity) and the bad (pretentiousness, indulgence).
------------- "The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side." - HST
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Posted By: AtomicCrimsonRush
Date Posted: August 13 2008 at 19:22
Ritual by Yes is terrific. I especially adore the version on the live Tsongas DVD. Magnifique!!!
Another good track to sum up prog is Karn Evil 9 by Emerson Lake and Palmer. Indulgent, pretentious, bombastic, mad time signature changes and bizarre multi movement suite structure - in other words Pretentious Revisionist Organic Genius (P.R.O.G).
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Posted By: The Quiet One
Date Posted: August 17 2008 at 09:43
AtomicCrimsonRush wrote:
Ritual by Yes is terrific. I especially adore the version on the live Tsongas DVD. Magnifique!!!
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I agree withe the version of Tsongas, the good thing is that instead of the horrible mid-section, it has a type of "drum solo". The bad thing of this version are the keys, excluding the magnificent moog. The bass rocks..
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Posted By: moe_blunts
Date Posted: August 17 2008 at 12:05
Magma - De Futura (Live)
or
Le Orme - L'Equilibrio
------------- http://www.last.fm/user/moe_blunts/?chartstyle=minimalDarkRecent">
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Posted By: Statutory-Mike
Date Posted: August 17 2008 at 13:45
AtomicCrimsonRush wrote:
Nine Feet Underground by Caravan has to be on the list! Utterly brilliant. |
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Posted By: Harry Hood
Date Posted: August 17 2008 at 16:29
"The Argus" by Ween
Sums up everything I love about prog in a little over 5 minutes.
"Did You See Me?" by Ween qualifies for the same reasons.
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