Top Ten Prog Keyboard Players
Printed From: Progarchives.com
Category: Progressive Music Lounges
Forum Name: Top 10s and lists
Forum Description: List all your favourites here
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=66722
Printed Date: January 22 2025 at 05:51 Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com
Topic: Top Ten Prog Keyboard Players
Posted By: presdoug
Subject: Top Ten Prog Keyboard Players
Date Posted: April 19 2010 at 10:15
who are your top ten prog keyboard players?
mine are (in no particular order)
Jurgen Dollase (The Cosmic Jokers, Wallenstein)
Jurgen Fritz (Triumvirat)
J. Peter Robinson (Quatermass, Sun Treader, Brand X)
Oliviero Lacagnina (Latte e Miele)
Eddie Spence (Strange Days)
Kristian Schultze (Passport, Snowball, Cusco)
Toni Pagliuca (Le Orme)
Wolfgang Dauner
John Mealing (If, Passport, the Strawbs)
Dave Greenslade (Colosseum, Greenslade)
|
Replies:
Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: April 19 2010 at 10:42
Technically only
- Vittorio Nocenzzi (BMS)
- Patrick Moraz
- Par Lindh
- Jurgen Fritz
- John Tout (Reinasance)
- Rick Wakeman
- Tony Banks
- Kerry Minnear (I hate his music, but that's not the point here)
- Thijs Van Leer
- Jordan Ruddess
I consider Keith Emerson a bit sloppy, great talent, but don't like his technique at all.
Musically (production)
- Tony Banks
- Rick Wakeman
- Steve Walsh
- Jurgen Fritz
- Keith Emerson
- Vittorio Nocenzzi
- Thijs Van Leer
- John Tout
- Flavio Premolli
- Eddie Jobson
Iván
-------------
|
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 19 2010 at 17:50
1.Keith Emerson
2.Rick Wakeman
3.Par LIndh
4.Martin Orford
5.Evangelis Papathanassiou
6.Tony Banks
7.Neal Morse
8.Fred Schendel
9.Eddie Jobson
10.Ton Scherpenzeel
|
Posted By: The Quiet One
Date Posted: April 19 2010 at 18:06
My favorites, not necessarily the best:
1. Jon Lord (you just can't beat his Hammond-Organ)
2. Tony Banks (mysterious mellotron, splendid piano, fantastic organ and unique synths, what else can you ask?)
3. Peter Bardens (great jazzy touch, some really moving solos as well)
4. Rick Wright (very original player, some great organ playing and some beautiful piano playing too, but foremost the atmospheres he created in Floyd were amazing)
5. Rick Wakeman (he has his eventual annoying pure-classical bits, but overall his organ, mellotron, piano and synth playing is top-notch)
6. Chick Corea (amazing player; a master of the Rhodes, but as well of the synths and piano)
7. Dave Stewart (very versatile player, jaw-dropping organ work as well fantastic Rhodes work)
8. Joe Zawinul (another out-of-this-world player in terms of atmospheres, simply gorgeous)
9. Gregg Rolie (marvellous Hammond, and some really fine electric piano)
10. Kerry Minnear (quirky and fun, yet complex)
|
Posted By: MFP
Date Posted: April 19 2010 at 18:10
No order:
Hugh Banton
Dave Stewart
Jon Lord
Kerry Minnear
Mike Ratledge
Rick Wright
Tony Banks
Keith Emerson
Rick Wakeman
Anna Sofi Dahlberg/Nicklas Berg
|
Posted By: harmonium.ro
Date Posted: April 19 2010 at 18:37
The classics remain great, but know I am in a phase when I want to hear somethign different. Therefore I nominate
Marian Varga of Collegium Musicum Allan Freeman of Nektar (two Hammond giants) Mike Ratledge of Soft Machine Mike Oldfield Józef Skrzek of SBB (synths) Gunter Reininger of Phoenix (synths) John Paul Jones (electric piano)
and from current players, Stĺle Storlřkken of Elephant9 (GREAT Hammond!) Isaiah Ikey Owens of Mars Volta (usually a low profile member but outstanding on Octahedron) Emmanuel Borghi of Magma and One Shot (any keys, basically) Bruno Ruder of Magma (exceptional Fender Rhodes)
|
Posted By: himtroy
Date Posted: April 19 2010 at 19:32
No order, other than Dave Stewart being first.
Dave StewartDave Sinclair Mike Pinder Alan Gowen Mike Ratledge Kerry Minnear Duncan Mckay Jon Lord
I'll add more later.
|
Posted By: dwill123
Date Posted: April 19 2010 at 21:05
Keith Emerson Tony Banks Rick Wakeman Joe Zawinul Chick Corea George Duke David Sancious Jan Hammer Thijs Van Leer Brian Auger
|
Posted By: tszirmay
Date Posted: April 19 2010 at 21:44
The obvious are obvious . I too wish to look at the 'lesser" knowns:
Agostino Macor (La maschera di Cera, Rohmer, Hostsonaten, Zaal, etc...)
John Hawken (Strawbs, Illusion )
Richard Barbieri (truly amazing)
Dave Stewart (incredible in so many ways)
Olov Andersson (Grandstand)
Tomas Bodin (TFK)
Manfred Mann (Earth Band)
Erik Norlander (Roswell 6, Rocket Scientists)
Paolo Paroni (Quasar Lux Symphoniae)
and the amazing Nicolas Piveteau (Progression by Failure)
------------- I never post anything anywhere without doing more than basic research, often in depth.
|
Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: April 19 2010 at 22:30
Yikes, I forgot such keyboardists as:
- Jon Lord
- Ken Hensley
- Manfred Mann
- Thomas Jhonson (Anglagard)
- Mike Oldfield
- Evangelos Odysseus Papathanassiou
- Doug Inge
- Clive Nolan
- Mike Pinder
- Julian Colbeck
The list is endless in Progressive Rock....The house of the keyboardists
Iván
-------------
|
Posted By: CinemaZebra
Date Posted: April 19 2010 at 22:44
Mike Oldfield and Keith Emerson.
-------------
|
Posted By: Mr. Maestro
Date Posted: April 20 2010 at 10:06
This is just a list of personal favorites:
1. Rick Wakeman (Yes) 2. Keith Emerson (ELP) 3. Thijs van Leer (Focus) 4. Jon Lord (Deep Purple) 5. Kerry Livgren (Kansas) 6. Richard Wright (Pink Floyd) 7. Erik Norlander (Rocket Scientists) 8. Tony Banks (Genesis) 9. Jem Godfrey (Frost*) 10. Neal Morse (Spock's Beard)
------------- "I am the one who crossed through space...or stayed where I was...or didn't exist in the first place...."
|
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 20 2010 at 16:05
I hope Rod Argent isn't reading this thread! Apparently not good enough for anyone's selections
|
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 20 2010 at 16:20
Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:
Yikes, I forgot such keyboardists as:
- Jon Lord
- Ken Hensley
- Manfred Mann
- Thomas Jhonson (Anglagard)
- Mike Oldfield
- Evangelos Odysseus Papathanasiou
- Doug Inge
- Clive Nolan
- Mike Pinder
- Julian Colbeck
The list is endless in Progressive Rock....The house of the keyboardists
Iván
|
Yep that was sloppy of me...although when I googled Vangelis there appear to be other spellings:
Evangelos Odysseas Papathanassiou
or
Evanghelos Odyssey Papathanassiou
perhaps I got his last name right
|
Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: April 20 2010 at 19:04
richardh wrote:
Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:
Yikes, I forgot such keyboardists as:
- Jon Lord
- Ken Hensley
- Manfred Mann
- Thomas Jhonson (Anglagard)
- Mike Oldfield
- Evangelos Odysseus Papathanasiou
- Doug Inge
- Clive Nolan
- Mike Pinder
- Julian Colbeck
The list is endless in Progressive Rock....The house of the keyboardists
Iván
|
Yep that was sloppy of me...although when I googled Vangelis there appear to be other spellings:
Evangelos Odysseas Papathanassiou
or
Evanghelos Odyssey Papathanassiou
perhaps I got his last name right |
I read at least two different spellings of his name in two different versions of 666 (One with double and another with single s in Papathanasiou),
But I'm pretty sure he's Evangelos (Comes the two Greek words Ev - Good and Angelos- Messenger which meens Evangelos or Gospel) ........... Odysseus (The greek name of Ulysses), while Oddysey is in English
I understand why he changed his name, but I refuse to call him by the Holywood name that is symbol of his boring New Age era.
Iván
-------------
|
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 21 2010 at 01:19
Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:
richardh wrote:
Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:
Yikes, I forgot such keyboardists as:
- Jon Lord
- Ken Hensley
- Manfred Mann
- Thomas Jhonson (Anglagard)
- Mike Oldfield
- Evangelos Odysseus Papathanasiou
- Doug Inge
- Clive Nolan
- Mike Pinder
- Julian Colbeck
The list is endless in Progressive Rock....The house of the keyboardists
Iván
|
Yep that was sloppy of me...although when I googled Vangelis there appear to be other spellings:
Evangelos Odysseas Papathanassiou
or
Evanghelos Odyssey Papathanassiou
perhaps I got his last name right |
I read at least two different spellings of his name in two different versions of 666 (One with double and another with single s in Papathanasiou),
But I'm pretty sure he's Evangelos (Comes the two Greek words Ev - Good and Angelos- Messenger which meens Evangelos or Gospel) ........... Odysseus (The greek name of Ulysses), while Oddysey is in English
I understand why he changed his name, but I refuse to call him by the Holywood name that is symbol of his boring New Age era.
Iván |
Interesting comment about his 'Hollywood name'.So what do you consider his ''new age'' albums?
I would suggest:
Apocalypse Des Animaux
La Fete Sauvage
Opera Sauvage
Antarctica
Soil Festivites
perhaps also
Oceanic
Voices
None of those albums are bad imo but each to his own
For me the worst albums are mostly the film soundtrack stuff like Chariots Of Fire ,Conquest Of Paradise and Alexander all very dull imo. The exception is Blade Runner obviously
|
Posted By: ozzy_tom
Date Posted: April 21 2010 at 02:00
hmm difficult to choose only 10 so I'll choose 10 old times (60'-70') and 10 nowadays (80'-00') keyboardplayers:
Old keyboards wizards:
1. Keith Emerson (The Nice, ELP)
2. Ken Hensley (Uriah Heep, Weed)
3. Manfred Wieczorke (Eloy, Jane)
4. Vincent Crane (Crazy World of Arthur Brown, Atomic Rooster)
5. Marian Varga (Collegium Musicum)
6. Alan Park (Beggar's Opera)
7.Jon Lord (Deep Purple)
8. Jean-Jacques Kravetz (Frumpy, Atlantis, 8 Days of April)
9. Rick Van Der Linden (Trace, Ekseption)
10. Jurgen Fritz (Triumvirat)
+ special mention of Charles Tiring from Jacula
New:
1. Keiko Kumagai (Ars Nova)
2. Par Lindh (Par Lindh Project)
3. Nobuo Endoh (Social Tension)
4. Toshio Egawa (Gerard, Novela, http://rateyourmusic.com/artist/scheherazade - Scheherazade )
5. Lalo Huber (Nexus, Subliminal, solo)
6. Motoi Sakuraba (Deja-Vu, solo)
7. Walter Pini (Nuova Era)
8. Paolo "Apollo" Negri (Wicked Minds)
9. Michele Profeti (Standarte)
10. Dave Gryder (Covenant, Storm At Sunrise, Blood of The Sun)
-------------
|
Posted By: Tursake
Date Posted: April 21 2010 at 06:35
1. Jon Lord 2. Keith Emerson 3. Richard Wright 4. Tony Banks 5. Ken Hensley
Didn't feel like putting up a top10, but I think those should be enough
-------------
Last.fm: TursakeX
RYM: Tursake
|
Posted By: Icarium
Date Posted: April 21 2010 at 08:02
1. Kerry Minnear 2. Tony Banks 3. Kerry Livgren 4. Donald Fagen 5. RIck Wakeman 6. Kevin Moore 7. Brian Ferry 8. Chick Corea 9. David Garfield 10. Gary Brooker
|
Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: April 21 2010 at 11:00
richardh wrote:
Interesting comment about his 'Hollywood name'.So what do you consider his ''new age'' albums?
I would suggest:
Apocalypse Des Animaux
La Fete Sauvage
Opera Sauvage
Antarctica
Soil Festivites
perhaps also
Oceanic
Voices
None of those albums are bad imo but each to his own
For me the worst albums are mostly the film soundtrack stuff like Chariots Of Fire ,Conquest Of Paradise and Alexander all very dull imo. The exception is Blade Runner obviously |
It's quite funny, after getting Heaven & Hell in the late 80's, I was so impressed that called my parents (who were in USA), and asked for everything Vangelis had released.
They got me like 10 or 12 albums, and the only ones I found interesting were:
- Heaven & Hell
- Albedo 0,39
- Spiral
- China (even when a bit tedious)
- Blade Runner (Bought later)
Most of the post Albedo are New Age in some degree (some more, some less) according to my opinion and The Friends of Mr Cairo is just cheesy.
Even when not all his albums are New Age, the name Vangelis is an icon of the New Age Holllywood soundtracks, for all of us who were there.
But I really was impressed with his technique in MYTHODEA DVD, his performance is simply btilliant, one of the best I have ever seen, remember having watched this with my mother (who is a concertist and was never impressed with the technique of most Prog keyboardists) one day I visited her and she was simply amazed.
Iván
-------------
|
Posted By: el böthy
Date Posted: April 21 2010 at 15:04
Thomas Johnson! Number one in my book
------------- "You want me to play what, Robert?"
|
Posted By: nordwind
Date Posted: April 24 2010 at 23:08
Rick Wright
Jon Lord
Don Airey
Paul Raymond
Geoff Downes
Rick Wakeman
Jim Gilmour
Dennis DeYoung
Ken Hensley
Michael Sadler
------------- Jazz isn't dead.......it just smells funny.
Frank Zappa / Live in New York
|
Posted By: ProgressiveAttic
Date Posted: April 25 2010 at 01:14
Here is my list (just prog or prog-related):
1) Keith Emerson / Rick Wakeman
2) Tony Banks
3) Chick Corea
4) Patrick Moraz
5) Herbie Hacock
6) Rick Wright
7) Jon Lord
8) Peter Bardens
9) Eddie Jobson
10) Thijs Van Leer / Don Airey
...but I also have to mention:
Hugh Banton
Kerry Minnear
Jordan Rudess
Par Lindh
Ray Manzarek
Rick van der Linden
Steve Winwood
Joe Zawinul
Jan Hammer
------------- Michael's Sonic Kaleidoscope Mondays 5:00pm EST(re-runs Thursdays 3:00pm) @ Delicious Agony Progressive Rock Radio(http://www.deliciousagony.com)
|
Posted By: DAVE M
Date Posted: April 27 2010 at 01:51
In no particular order:
Keith Emerson
Rick Wakeman
David Greenslade
Jon Lord
Ken Hemsley (forgive spelling (Uriah Heep)
Lyle Mays
Tony Kaye
Chick Korea
Jo Zawinul
Dave Stewart (I think that's his name - used to be with Egg)
Perhaps a couple of jazz fusion guys included in the above
|
Posted By: BaldFriede
Date Posted: April 27 2010 at 02:08
No love for the late Alan Gowen at all? No-one mentioned him.
-------------
BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.
|
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 27 2010 at 10:36
Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:
richardh wrote:
Interesting comment about his 'Hollywood name'.So what do you consider his ''new age'' albums?
I would suggest:
Apocalypse Des Animaux
La Fete Sauvage
Opera Sauvage
Antarctica
Soil Festivites
perhaps also
Oceanic
Voices
None of those albums are bad imo but each to his own
For me the worst albums are mostly the film soundtrack stuff like Chariots Of Fire ,Conquest Of Paradise and Alexander all very dull imo. The exception is Blade Runner obviously |
It's quite funny, after getting Heaven & Hell in the late 80's, I was so impressed that called my parents (who were in USA), and asked for everything Vangelis had released.
They got me like 10 or 12 albums, and the only ones I found interesting were:
- Heaven & Hell
- Albedo 0,39
- Spiral
- China (even when a bit tedious)
- Blade Runner (Bought later)
Most of the post Albedo are New Age in some degree (some more, some less) according to my opinion and The Friends of Mr Cairo is just cheesy.
Even when not all his albums are New Age, the name Vangelis is an icon of the New Age Holllywood soundtracks, for all of us who were there.
But I really was impressed with his technique in MYTHODEA DVD, his performance is simply btilliant, one of the best I have ever seen, remember having watched this with my mother (who is a concertist and was never impressed with the technique of most Prog keyboardists) one day I visited her and she was simply amazed.
Iván |
I have that DVD as well.Very nice stuff.
Amongst his soundtracks I forgot to mention The Bounty which actually has some decent moments as evidenced on the The Themes compilation.Never been able to track down a CD of the complete soundtrack though.There's also some music he did for a Roman Polanski film but I've never actually heard it.
Worth a mention in passing is the 1972 Aphrodites Child album '666' which to me is good stuff but I know from reading your review that you're not such a big fan of it.
|
Posted By: cloviskoba
Date Posted: April 29 2010 at 21:24
Neal Morse Peter Bardens Erdesz Robert Kit Watkins Edgar Froese
|
Posted By: ProgressiveAttic
Date Posted: April 30 2010 at 00:31
cloviskoba wrote:
Neal Morse |
good call!
------------- Michael's Sonic Kaleidoscope Mondays 5:00pm EST(re-runs Thursdays 3:00pm) @ Delicious Agony Progressive Rock Radio(http://www.deliciousagony.com)
|
Posted By: SaltyJon
Date Posted: April 30 2010 at 00:44
Mike Ratledge David Sinclair Alan Gowen (there you go Friede ) Emmanuel Borghi Robert Wyatt Edgar Froese Kerry Minnear George Duke Dave Stewart Florian Fricke
Those are in no specific order.
------------- http://www.last.fm/user/Salty_Jon" rel="nofollow">
|
Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: April 30 2010 at 00:48
richardh wrote:
Worth a mention in passing is the 1972 Aphrodites Child album '666' which to me is good stuff but I know from reading your review that you're not such a big fan of it. |
Are you sure you read my review?
http://www.progarchives.com/Collaborators.asp?id=318"> http://www.progarchives.com/Collaborators.asp?id=318 - Ivan_Melgar_M Special Collaborator Symphonic Prog Specialist |
Progressive Rock fans usually are unfair with talented musicians as Demis Roussos and Evangelos Odysseus Papathanassiou (Vangelis), is true that Demis solo career is mostly based in soft pop but people forget he was a very talented bassist with a great vocal range and Vangelis is remembered for his New Age boring albums or commercial soundtracks instead of progressive masterpieces as "Heaven & Hell" or even his albums with Jon Anderson, which are not among my favorites but must recognize as quality music.
It's also a important to remember APHRODITE'S CHILD was not only formed by the mentioned musicians because Anargyros (Silver) Koulouris who had returned from his military Service to record this album is a very good guitar player and Lucas Sideras is a very capable drummer, this two members had a direct participation in the album
Because of the complexity of 666 they recruited also a good number of Greek artists to complement the band as the multi talented and brilliant actress Irene Papas, Harris Chalkitis and Michel Ripoche for the winds, a great lyricist, movie director, book author and member of the European Film Academy Costas Ferris to take care of the lyrics and even the well known artist Yannis Tsarouchis for the Greek text. In other words, the album was carefully planned.
The concept of the album is about the most complex and controversial Book of the Bible, "Saint John's Book of Revelations" also known as "The Apocalypse", a really hard task even today, but harder in 1970 when there was very little experience with conceptual albums, it's important to notice that 666 is considered the first properly concept album, because before it were only released some rock operas which are part of a different sub-genre.
When 666 was recorded the problems inside the band were leading to the inevitable split, mostly because Roussos and Sideras wanted to continue doing commercial music as in their previous albums and Vangelis was decided to take a more complex path, so 666 was really their last attempt to maintain the classic formation of the band allowing Vangelis to compose a real progressive and complex album, but it was too late for the band, and 666 was their last album, an excellent way to close the short story of APHRODITE'S CHILD.
It's hard to describe the music because there's not other band that had a similar sound or style, the Greek influence is also different than the usual, don't expect something catchy or folksy as Zorba the Greek, because the band uses darker religious music over a 100% Symphonic structure with touches of Psychedelia, it's important to remember that Greece is the country where the Orthodox Catholic Church is based, and this influence helps to create a Biblical and mysterious atmosphere.
The greatest achievement of the band is the way they blend this liturgical music with more western influences like pop and of course symphonic prog. But they do something even more adventurous, they include some tracks that sound like prayers by monks, with traces of Gregorian Chants and even complex sounds, they were ahead of their time in many aspects.
It's hard to describe the tracks searching for a favorite or high point, because the album is very faithful to "The Book of Revelations" and any attempt of separating a song takes it from it's natural context and breaks the atmosphere so carefully created by APHRODITE'S CHILD.
For example the track Infinity (sign that can't be reproduced with a PC keyboard) outside of the album means nothing except a woman having an orgasm, but in the context of the album makes sense because the Book of Revelation makes various references to the prostitute that tempted the kings. It may be a good interpretation by Irene Papas but don't place out loud in the CD player of your car unless you have the windows closed because it may be embarrassing.
Disk 1 has many important songs after the weird "The System" which sounds as a strange prayer.
"Babylon" is a rock song with an outstanding guitar work, even though is a studio track, the band created the sound of a crowd to symbolize multitudes on the biblical capital of the world, very good song even if not progressive.
"Loud, Loud, Loud" is a narration of a paragraph of the Bible surrounded by a beautiful piano, for this song the band used the voice of the son of a Greek Diplomat, very atmospheric track.
"The Four Horsemen" is a terrifying song that starts with a scary narration in the form of a sung prayer, talks about the moment The Lamb (Christ) opens the seals to free the four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, followed by the band leaded by Lucas Sideras and his accurate drums, really scares me very much.
"The Lamb" is an instrumental with a very Greek sound; the entire band is perfect and well supported by a chorus that adds some dramatics. Almost in the same vein but softer and darker comes "The Seventh Seal" which announces more terrible moments for humanity, the phrase "And when the Lamb opened the Seventh Seal, Silence above the Skies" resumes the terrible message.
"Aegian Seal" has an introduction that you could expect from any Vangelis later album but followed by explosions of music and narrations.
The rest of the first CD is full of laments, tribulations and Greek style music blended perfectly with progressive rock, maybe except for "The Beast" which I supposed would be the darker song but paradoxically is the only poppy track of the album with a guitar that reminds of Clapton's slow hand.
Disk 2 is even better than the first one (if this is possible) "Seven Trumpets" is a 30 seconds track that literally announces the next song "Altamont" which is very atmospheric and elaborate and shows the great skills of Vangelis as keyboardist, who without the wonderful excesses of Wakeman or Emerson does a very precise work, the background voice is very disturbing and scary, as anyone could expect from an album that describes the end of the world.
"The Wedding of the Lamb" is a strange song that mixes Gregorian Chants with Greek Liturgical music, supported by percussion, other typical Greek instruments and the whole band, confusing but very good track. The next song "The Capture of the Beast" is a track based in percussion and chain sounds with some typical Vangelis keyboard interruptions.
Talked already about "Infinity" so I won't do it again. "Hic et Nunc" (Here and Now) is a jazzy tune that works as a relief in preparation for the most important song of the album which is "All the Seats Were Occupied", a 19:19 minutes epic that mixes all the influences, sounds and songs of the album in a single track all surrounded by a mystical atmosphere, extremely beautiful and very complex represents Progressive Rock best face.
The album ends with the only ballad named Break, which sounds to me as a Roussos contribution, not a filler, but not necessary either, because IMHO 666 would have ended perfectly with the wonderful "All the Seats Were Occupied"
After 666 was recorded in 1970, the band broke and the album couldn't be released until 1972 because of many reasons that include the track "Infinity", the controversial concept and an innocent confession made by the band that they were influenced by Sahlep, most people believed it was a demon or a drug when it's only a non alcoholic beverage from Turkey. There was even a boycott by several radio stations, and when the album was finally released by Vertigo (the adventurous face of Mercury), the band was separate for two years.
There's no other possible rate for this essential masterpiece than 5 stars, not only for it's quality but also because this guys were ahead of their own time, something unusual for a band that had previously released only two poppy albums in search for a hit single.
| |
As a fact is one of my top 10 all time albums and reviewed it with a 5 stars rating in 2004, a few days after I joined the forum.
But this is not a Vangelis album, it's the Aphrodite's Child masterpiece.
Iván
-------------
|
Posted By: BaldJean
Date Posted: April 30 2010 at 01:24
I am surprised you forgot to mention that "I am, I was, I am to come" is an excerpt from a verse in Revelation (Rev 1:8). it depends on the translation though to find it in that form; the King James bible, for example, gives Rev 1:8 as "I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the
Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the Almighty". Irene Papas took some liberties with the meaning of "I am to come" though
-------------
A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
|
Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: April 30 2010 at 01:32
BaldJean wrote:
I am surprised you forgot to mention that "I am, I was, I am to come" is an excerpt from a verse in Revelation (Rev 1:8). it depends on the translation though to find it in that form; the King James bible, for example, gives Rev 1:8 as "I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the Almighty". Irene Papas took some liberties with the meaning of "I am to come" though
|
Yes, but I was raised with the Catholic Bible in Spanish, which says:
8 "Yo soy el Alfa y la Omega", dice el Seńor Dios, "el que es, y que era y que ha de venir, el Todopoderoso.
8 "I am the Alpha and the Omega," says the Lord God, "who is, and who was, and who is to come, the Almighty."
And to be honest, my capacity to translate in my mind complex Bible passages from Spanish to English when I heard this album, was even worst than it is today .
Since I use the Internet on daily bases (mainly because of this site), I'm more or less able to think in English when writing in this language, but in 2004 I wasn't yet, I had to do all the process of thinking in Spanish and then translating it all, and for his reason lost a lot of details.
Iván
-------------
|
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 30 2010 at 01:37
Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:
richardh wrote:
Worth a mention in passing is the 1972 Aphrodites Child album '666' which to me is good stuff but I know from reading your review that you're not such a big fan of it. |
Are you sure you read my review?
http://www.progarchives.com/Collaborators.asp?id=318"> http://www.progarchives.com/Collaborators.asp?id=318 - Ivan_Melgar_M Special Collaborator Symphonic Prog Specialist |
Progressive Rock fans usually are unfair with talented musicians as Demis Roussos and Evangelos Odysseus Papathanassiou (Vangelis), is true that Demis solo career is mostly based in soft pop but people forget he was a very talented bassist with a great vocal range and Vangelis is remembered for his New Age boring albums or commercial soundtracks instead of progressive masterpieces as "Heaven & Hell" or even his albums with Jon Anderson, which are not among my favorites but must recognize as quality music.
It's also a important to remember APHRODITE'S CHILD was not only formed by the mentioned musicians because Anargyros (Silver) Koulouris who had returned from his military Service to record this album is a very good guitar player and Lucas Sideras is a very capable drummer, this two members had a direct participation in the album
Because of the complexity of 666 they recruited also a good number of Greek artists to complement the band as the multi talented and brilliant actress Irene Papas, Harris Chalkitis and Michel Ripoche for the winds, a great lyricist, movie director, book author and member of the European Film Academy Costas Ferris to take care of the lyrics and even the well known artist Yannis Tsarouchis for the Greek text. In other words, the album was carefully planned.
The concept of the album is about the most complex and controversial Book of the Bible, "Saint John's Book of Revelations" also known as "The Apocalypse", a really hard task even today, but harder in 1970 when there was very little experience with conceptual albums, it's important to notice that 666 is considered the first properly concept album, because before it were only released some rock operas which are part of a different sub-genre.
When 666 was recorded the problems inside the band were leading to the inevitable split, mostly because Roussos and Sideras wanted to continue doing commercial music as in their previous albums and Vangelis was decided to take a more complex path, so 666 was really their last attempt to maintain the classic formation of the band allowing Vangelis to compose a real progressive and complex album, but it was too late for the band, and 666 was their last album, an excellent way to close the short story of APHRODITE'S CHILD.
It's hard to describe the music because there's not other band that had a similar sound or style, the Greek influence is also different than the usual, don't expect something catchy or folksy as Zorba the Greek, because the band uses darker religious music over a 100% Symphonic structure with touches of Psychedelia, it's important to remember that Greece is the country where the Orthodox Catholic Church is based, and this influence helps to create a Biblical and mysterious atmosphere.
The greatest achievement of the band is the way they blend this liturgical music with more western influences like pop and of course symphonic prog. But they do something even more adventurous, they include some tracks that sound like prayers by monks, with traces of Gregorian Chants and even complex sounds, they were ahead of their time in many aspects.
It's hard to describe the tracks searching for a favorite or high point, because the album is very faithful to "The Book of Revelations" and any attempt of separating a song takes it from it's natural context and breaks the atmosphere so carefully created by APHRODITE'S CHILD.
For example the track Infinity (sign that can't be reproduced with a PC keyboard) outside of the album means nothing except a woman having an orgasm, but in the context of the album makes sense because the Book of Revelation makes various references to the prostitute that tempted the kings. It may be a good interpretation by Irene Papas but don't place out loud in the CD player of your car unless you have the windows closed because it may be embarrassing.
Disk 1 has many important songs after the weird "The System" which sounds as a strange prayer.
"Babylon" is a rock song with an outstanding guitar work, even though is a studio track, the band created the sound of a crowd to symbolize multitudes on the biblical capital of the world, very good song even if not progressive.
"Loud, Loud, Loud" is a narration of a paragraph of the Bible surrounded by a beautiful piano, for this song the band used the voice of the son of a Greek Diplomat, very atmospheric track.
"The Four Horsemen" is a terrifying song that starts with a scary narration in the form of a sung prayer, talks about the moment The Lamb (Christ) opens the seals to free the four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, followed by the band leaded by Lucas Sideras and his accurate drums, really scares me very much.
"The Lamb" is an instrumental with a very Greek sound; the entire band is perfect and well supported by a chorus that adds some dramatics. Almost in the same vein but softer and darker comes "The Seventh Seal" which announces more terrible moments for humanity, the phrase "And when the Lamb opened the Seventh Seal, Silence above the Skies" resumes the terrible message.
"Aegian Seal" has an introduction that you could expect from any Vangelis later album but followed by explosions of music and narrations.
The rest of the first CD is full of laments, tribulations and Greek style music blended perfectly with progressive rock, maybe except for "The Beast" which I supposed would be the darker song but paradoxically is the only poppy track of the album with a guitar that reminds of Clapton's slow hand.
Disk 2 is even better than the first one (if this is possible) "Seven Trumpets" is a 30 seconds track that literally announces the next song "Altamont" which is very atmospheric and elaborate and shows the great skills of Vangelis as keyboardist, who without the wonderful excesses of Wakeman or Emerson does a very precise work, the background voice is very disturbing and scary, as anyone could expect from an album that describes the end of the world.
"The Wedding of the Lamb" is a strange song that mixes Gregorian Chants with Greek Liturgical music, supported by percussion, other typical Greek instruments and the whole band, confusing but very good track. The next song "The Capture of the Beast" is a track based in percussion and chain sounds with some typical Vangelis keyboard interruptions.
Talked already about "Infinity" so I won't do it again. "Hic et Nunc" (Here and Now) is a jazzy tune that works as a relief in preparation for the most important song of the album which is "All the Seats Were Occupied", a 19:19 minutes epic that mixes all the influences, sounds and songs of the album in a single track all surrounded by a mystical atmosphere, extremely beautiful and very complex represents Progressive Rock best face.
The album ends with the only ballad named Break, which sounds to me as a Roussos contribution, not a filler, but not necessary either, because IMHO 666 would have ended perfectly with the wonderful "All the Seats Were Occupied"
After 666 was recorded in 1970, the band broke and the album couldn't be released until 1972 because of many reasons that include the track "Infinity", the controversial concept and an innocent confession made by the band that they were influenced by Sahlep, most people believed it was a demon or a drug when it's only a non alcoholic beverage from Turkey. There was even a boycott by several radio stations, and when the album was finally released by Vertigo (the adventurous face of Mercury), the band was separate for two years.
There's no other possible rate for this essential masterpiece than 5 stars, not only for it's quality but also because this guys were ahead of their own time, something unusual for a band that had previously released only two poppy albums in search for a hit single.
| |
As a fact is one of my top 10 all time albums and reviewed it with a 5 stars rating in 2004, a few days after I joined the forum.
But this is not a Vangelis album, it's the Aphrodite's Child masterpiece.
Iván |
Sorry complete misunderstanding on my part. I was sure I read some comment (which I wrongly attributed to you) that the album was a big disappointment to them after the 'hype' of several positive reviews.
Great review and I also regard this as a masterpeice. The only thing I would pick you up on is the song 'infinity' which got dubbed by many as 'The Orgasm Song'. I remember an interview with Irene Papas some years ago that where she claimed that the song was actually about exorcism. However after my previous mistake I guess I might be wrong about this as well
|
Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: April 30 2010 at 01:48
Well Richardh, most surely you are right, Irene was an outstanding actress, but probably her motivation of the song was different than the one the artists had..
Iván
-------------
|
Posted By: raindance
Date Posted: April 30 2010 at 08:03
1. Emerson
2.Wakeman
those two were the maestros.
|
Posted By: sydbarrett2010
Date Posted: August 09 2010 at 05:04
rick wright keith emerson jordan rudess
|
Posted By: DreamInSong
Date Posted: August 09 2010 at 14:37
Don't know many but...
- Martin Orford
- Richard Wright
- Kevin Moore
-------------
|
Posted By: Gandalff
Date Posted: August 12 2010 at 02:49
1. Marián Varga
2. Keith Emerson
3. Jozef Skrzek
4. Rick Wakeman
5. Ken Hensley
6. Jon Lord
7. Dave Greenslade
8. Jan Hammer
9. Allan "Taff" Freeman
10. Peter Bardens
|
Posted By: BaldFriede
Date Posted: August 12 2010 at 04:37
Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:
Yikes, I forgot such keyboardists as:
- Jon Lord
- Ken Hensley
- Manfred Mann
- Thomas Jhonson (Anglagard)
- Mike Oldfield
- Evangelos Odysseus Papathanassiou
- Doug Inge
- Clive Nolan
- Mike Pinder
- Julian Colbeck
The list is endless in Progressive Rock....The house of the keyboardists
Iván
|
The name is Doug Ingle. At least if you mean the keyboarder of Iron Butterfly.
-------------
BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.
|
Posted By: AerosolKid74
Date Posted: August 12 2010 at 17:14
Tony Banks Rick Wakeman Keith Emerson Richard Wright
Something like that in roughly that order
------------- Prog Rock: Founded on a fundamental misunderstanding of the word virtuoso.
|
Posted By: paganinio
Date Posted: August 13 2010 at 00:58
I'll list band names only. In countdown order.
5. Emperor 4. Arcturus 3. DragonForce (not prog? I bet they will go prog in the future.) 2. Ayreon / Star One 1. Dream Theater (the new one)
-------------
|
Posted By: Tull Freak 94
Date Posted: August 13 2010 at 05:55
No particular order:
Tony Banks
John Evan
Richard Wright
Ken Hensley
Keith Emerson
Jon Lord
Mike Oldfield
Ian McDonald
Rick Wakeman
Dave Stewart
|
Posted By: Andy Webb
Date Posted: August 13 2010 at 20:26
in no order:
keith emerson - ELP rick wakeman - Yes, solo jordan rudess - Dream Theater, solo derek sherinian - Dream Theater, solo kevin moore - Dream Theater, OSI neal morse - Spock's Beard, solo, Transatlantic michael pinnella - Symphony X tony banks - Genesis geddy lee - Rush (i know hes not TECHNICALLY their keys player, but hes plays bass at the same time!) richard right - Pink Floyd
------------- http://ow.ly/8ymqg" rel="nofollow">
|
Posted By: Rolf Bos
Date Posted: August 22 2010 at 15:21
Joachim Kühn (Jan Akkerman)
Coen Molenaar ( " " )
Tony Carey
David Rosenthal
Ray Manzarek
Don Airey
Vangelis
Ken Hensley
Ton Scherpenzeel
Mark Kelly
|
Posted By: The Neck Romancer
Date Posted: August 30 2010 at 12:15
Not all prog but what the hell.
Richard Barbieri Richard Wright Trent Reznor Toby Smith Benoît Widemann Jordan Rudess Rick Wakeman Dave Brubeck Bill Evans Steven Wilson
-------------
|
Posted By: Icarium
Date Posted: August 31 2010 at 01:41
honorable mention
Gary Brooker
Mathew Fisher
two great keybord/piano players who revolutionised rock music with one song.
-------------
|
Posted By: ten years after
Date Posted: September 01 2010 at 07:10
Emerson
Wakeman
Rick Wright
Hugh Banton
Dave Greenslade
Dave Stewart
Tony Banks
Francis Decamps
Jon Lord
Chick Churchill
|
Posted By: octopus-4
Date Posted: September 01 2010 at 08:28
I didn't read all the replies, but I don't see Peter Bardens
------------- I stand with Roger Waters, I stand with Joan Baez, I stand with Victor Jara, I stand with Woody Guthrie. Music is revolution
|
Posted By: spookytooth
Date Posted: September 01 2010 at 09:04
In no order:
Tony Banks Rick Wakeman Richard Wright Jordan Rudess Kevin Moore Keith Emerson Tony Carey Tony Kaye Steinar Sverd Johnsen Mike Ratledge
-------------
Would you like some Bailey's?
|
Posted By: resurrection
Date Posted: October 03 2010 at 01:34
No mention of Billy Ritchie (Clouds/1-2-3)? Shocking! Acknowledged as the first person to bring keyboards to the foreground of the band, in a Rock organ trio at the Marquee in 1967 when Keith and Rick et al were playing background. Don't take my word for it, read the history. Yet another glaring example of how commercial sales sadly dictate taste and historical knowledge.
|
Posted By: Firstname Lastname
Date Posted: November 11 2013 at 15:34
1. Keith Emerson 2. Rick Wakeman 3. Jon Lord 4. Rick Wright 5. Tony Banks 6. Patrick Moraz 7. Par Lindh 8. Mike Ratledge 9. Mike Oldfield 10. John Paul Jones( Jonesy isn't that bad)
|
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: November 12 2013 at 01:55
Firstname Lastname wrote:
1. Keith Emerson2. Rick Wakeman 3. Jon Lord 4. Rick Wright 5. Tony Banks 6. Patrick Moraz 7. Par Lindh 8. Mike Ratledge 9. Mike Oldfield 10. John Paul Jones( Jonesy isn't that bad) |
great list
Mike Oldfield is an interesting one, he could be on any list virtually
JPJ is great on In Through The Out Door. That's Led Zep's 'keyboard album'
|
Posted By: Tom Ozric
Date Posted: November 12 2013 at 02:47
ten years after wrote:
Emerson
Wakeman
Rick Wright
Hugh Banton
Dave Greenslade
Dave Stewart
Tony Banks
Francis Decamps
Jon Lord
Chick Churchill | ^ *Amazing* list, though I don't know Chick....?
|
Posted By: markobarrows
Date Posted: January 31 2016 at 02:53
These lists are whack. Ridiculous, and I would know. I am 55 and roadied for LAs best prog band in the 80s...The Fents. The New Yorkers, with Chris Poland on guitar, and the Fents were the deepest bands at the time beside Holdsworth, who was from San Diego/England. Most of the bands listed had players that can not be compared to Holzman, or Watkins (Happy the Man).
|
Posted By: markobarrows
Date Posted: January 31 2016 at 02:54
These lists are whack. Ridiculous, and I would know. I am 55 and roadied for LAs best prog band in the 80s...The Fents. The New Yorkers, with Chris Poland on guitar, and the Fents were the deepest bands at the time beside Holdsworth, who was from San Diego/England. Most of the bands listed had players that can not be compared to Holzman, or Watkins (Happy the Man).
|
Posted By: markobarrows
Date Posted: January 31 2016 at 02:54
These lists are whack. Ridiculous, and I would know. I am 55 and roadied for LAs best prog band in the 80s...The Fents. The New Yorkers, with Chris Poland on guitar, and the Fents were the deepest bands at the time beside Holdsworth, who was from San Diego/England. Most of the bands listed had players that can not be compared to Holzman, or Watkins (Happy the Man). Watkins came from DC.
|
Posted By: sublime220
Date Posted: January 31 2016 at 10:36
markobarrows wrote:
These lists are whack. Ridiculous, and I would know. I am 55 and roadied for LAs best prog band in the 80s...The Fents. The New Yorkers, with Chris Poland on guitar, and the Fents were the deepest bands at the time beside Holdsworth, who was from San Diego/England. Most of the bands listed had players that can not be compared to Holzman, or Watkins (Happy the Man). Watkins came from DC. |
markobarrows wrote:
These lists are whack. Ridiculous, and I would know. I am 55 and roadied for LAs best prog band in the 80s...The Fents. The New Yorkers, with Chris Poland on guitar, and the Fents were the deepest bands at the time beside Holdsworth, who was from San Diego/England. Most of the bands listed had players that can not be compared to Holzman, or Watkins (Happy the Man). Watkins came from DC. |
markobarrows wrote:
These lists are whack. Ridiculous, and I would know. I am 55 and roadied for LAs best prog band in the 80s...The Fents. The New Yorkers, with Chris Poland on guitar, and the Fents were the deepest bands at the time beside Holdsworth, who was from San Diego/England. Most of the bands listed had players that can not be compared to Holzman, or Watkins (Happy the Man). Watkins came from DC. |
k
------------- There is no dark side in the moon, really... Matter of fact, it's all dark...
|
Posted By: akaBona
Date Posted: January 31 2016 at 17:16
Tony Banks Hugh Banton Peter Bardens Keith Emerson John Evan Ken Hensley Jon Lord Kerry Minnear Dave Stewart Rick Wakeman
|
Posted By: Upbeat Tango Monday
Date Posted: January 31 2016 at 17:30
Keith Emerson Rick Wakeman Patrick Moraz Jordan Rudess Tony Banks Peter Hammill Jon Lord Kerry Minnear Mike Oldfield Peter Bardens
------------- Two random guys agreed to shake hands. Just Because. They felt like it, you know. It was an agreement of sorts...a random agreement.
|
Posted By: SeeYouInSpain
Date Posted: February 13 2016 at 04:24
1. Tony Banks 2. Kerry Minnear 3. Rick Wakeman 4. Richard Harvey 5. Pete Bardens 6. Keith Emerson 7. Thjis Van Leer 8. Vangelis 9. Dave Stewart 10. Anthony Phillips
|
Posted By: Mista-Gordie
Date Posted: February 07 2018 at 10:04
Well I think in the prog world these four stand well above the rest:
1-Rick Wakeman 2-Keith Emerson 3-Kerry Minnear 4-Tony Banks
Then it gets trickier because there are so much outstanding ones but my ranking would look like that:
5-Dave Sinclair 6-Dave Stewart 7-Peter Bardens 8-Eddie Jobson 9-Hugh Banton 10-Thijs Van Leer
I excluded the fusion legends on purpose (Hancock, Zawinul, Corea, Hiromi and so on) because it's so hard to compare them with some less gifted players which are perfect for the context of their own band's sound, and also because the line would be thin between including these and having to include jazz greats such as Thelonious Monk and Duke Ellington.
|
Posted By: BaldJean
Date Posted: February 07 2018 at 12:01
Mista-Gordie wrote:
I excluded the fusion legends on purpose (Hancock, Zawinul, Corea, Hiromi and so on) because it's so hard to compare them with some less gifted players which are perfect for the context of their own band's sound, and also because the line would be thin between including these and having to include jazz greats such as Thelonious Monk and Duke Ellington. |
or Barbara Dennerlein
-------------
A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
|
Posted By: Kingsnake
Date Posted: February 07 2018 at 12:13
In no particular order:
Peter Bardens (Camel, solo) Jim Gilmour (Saga, solo) John Evans (Jethro Tull) Tim Blake (Gong, Hawkwind, solo) Hannes Folberth (Eloy, Echo Park) Rick Wakeman (Strawbs, Yes, solo) Eddie Jobson (Roxy Music, UK, Jethro Tull, solo) Tomas Bodin (Flower Kings, solo) Manfred Mann (Earth Band, Chapter Three, solo) Ton Scherpenzeel (Kayak, Camel, solo)
I recently discovered Beardfish, but Rikard Sjöblom could be in the list. I should have listed Martin Orford, Mark Kelly and Clive Nolan, but I'm recently not in the mood for this neo-prog-synth-sound, maybe another time.
Honourable mentions: Stuart Wooly Wolstenholme and Mike Pinder (for their outstandig mellotron-work) Freddy Mercury (such an underrated pianist) Susanna Sundřr (another great pianist) Kate Bush (another great pianist)
Fusion: Chick Corea (Miles Davis, Return to Forever, Electrik Band, Akoustik Band, solo) Joe Zawinul (Miles Davis, Wheather Report, solo) Herbie Hancock (Miles Davis, Headhunters, solo)
|
Posted By: Argo2112
Date Posted: February 07 2018 at 12:35
Just going to do the rock players, (excluding jazz fusion guys)
1. Keith Emerson 2. Rick Wakeman 3. Jordan Rudess 4. Tony Banks 5. John Tout 6. Eddie Jobson 7. Jon Lord 8. Neil Morse 9. Dave Stewart 10. Rick Wright
|
Posted By: YESESIS
Date Posted: February 07 2018 at 16:04
Mista-Gordie wrote:
Well I think in the prog world these four stand well above the rest:
1-Rick Wakeman 2-Keith Emerson 3-Kerry Minnear 4-Tony Banks
Then it gets trickier because there are so much outstanding ones but my ranking would look like that:
5-Dave Sinclair 6-Dave Stewart 7-Peter Bardens 8-Eddie Jobson 9-Hugh Banton 10-Thijs Van Leer
I excluded the fusion legends on purpose (Hancock, Zawinul, Corea, Hiromi and so on) because it's so hard to compare them with some less gifted players which are perfect for the context of their own band's sound, and also because the line would be thin between including these and having to include jazz greats such as Thelonious Monk and Duke Ellington. |
Those top 4 I couldn't agree more with. And right on mentioning David Sinclair.. Nine Feet Underground is one of the absolute greatest prog epics ever, and he is a major reason why.
|
Posted By: noni
Date Posted: February 07 2018 at 16:56
1. Pete Bardens 2. Keith Emerson 3. Rick Wakeman 4. Edgar Froese 5. Dave Greenslade 6. Ton Scherpenzeel 7. Martin Orford 8. Kit Watkins 9. Clive Nolan 10. Tony Banks.
|
Posted By: Mortte
Date Posted: February 07 2018 at 22:00
1. Jukka Gustavson 2. Sun Ra 3. Rick Wakeman 4. Jon Lord 5. Dave Greenslade 6. Jon Evan 7. Rick Wright 8. Tony Banks 9. Simon House 10. Irmin Schmidt
|
Posted By: Braka
Date Posted: February 09 2018 at 08:46
1. Jerry Lee Lewis
(I'm half serious here. The antecedent of Keith Emerson)
But really, Jon Lord is so far and away my fave KB player, the rest of the top 10 would be in a separate category.
|
Posted By: Guldbamsen
Date Posted: February 09 2018 at 08:55
Ten of my favourite keyboard players? How about 5? Alright, no ranking:
Dave Sinclair Edgar Froese Dave Stewart Klaus Schulze Robert John Godfrey
------------- “The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams
|
Posted By: Jzrk
Date Posted: February 12 2018 at 20:56
I have to go with the ones I have been familiar with over the years John Lord Herbie Hancock Chick Corea Jan Hammer Greg Rollie Kieth Emerson Klaus Schultz Joseph Zawinul Davis Sanctous Rick Wakeman Joe Sample
|
Posted By: Frenetic Zetetic
Date Posted: February 13 2018 at 02:31
Joe ZawinulKerry Minnear Herbie Hancock Tony Banks Patrick Moraz Rick Wakeman Chick Corea Eddie Jobson Jan Hammer
-------------
"I am so prog, I listen to concept albums on shuffle." -KMac2021
|
Posted By: Hrychu
Date Posted: February 13 2018 at 06:36
Here's a list of my fave keyboard players (at the moment) in terms of not only technique, but also songwriting and style.
5. Hans Lundin - pretty voice (at least in the 70s) and the skill to write sweet, catchy songs.
4. Jordan Rudess - THIS GUY CAN PLAY ANYTHING. JUST.. WOW!
3. Neal Morse - great taste in sounds and the ability to orchestrate complex passages without making them sound cheesy (most of the time).
2. Rick Wakeman - impressive and original approach to soloing and fun 70s output (Journey, King Arthur, Six Wives, Criminal Record etc.), great compositional skills plus he's one of the few who truly mastered the Mellotron.
1. Andy Tillison - amazing songwriting/composition skills, awesome taste in sounds, solid technique and most importantly he's the brain behind the sheer beauty that's the music of The Tangent. Bonus points for paying tribute to the Canterbury classics.
Honorable mentions: P. Moraz, J. Skrzek, T. Bodin
|
Posted By: BrufordFreak
Date Posted: February 13 2018 at 08:42
Can't believe I overlooked this poll nine years ago!
Old: Tony Banks
Chick Corea
Klaus Schulze
David Sinclair Larry Young
John Tout (Renaissance)
Patrizio Fariselli (AREA)
Dave Stewart
Mike Ratledge
Patrick Moraz Ken Hensley
Rick Wakeman
New: Jřrgen Hagen (Airbag) Ana Camelo (EKOS) Giovanni Parmeggiani (Accordo dei Contrari) Richard Barbieri Ryuichi Sakamoto Hiromi Uehara Lalo Huber (Nexus) James Blake Elisa Montaldo (Il Tempio delle Clessidre) Paolo Botti (Yugen, et al.) Olga Podgaiskaja (Five-Storey Ensemble, Rational Diet) < ="text/">
p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 12.0px Helvetica}
------------- Drew Fisher https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/
|
Posted By: xylot
Date Posted: April 02 2018 at 08:58
Emerson Wakeman Banks Lord Rachel Flowers Moraz Rudess Downes Argent Roger King
|
Posted By: tempest_77
Date Posted: April 10 2018 at 23:47
No particular order, and I'm sure I'm missing some as well:
Tony Banks Peter Bardens Rick Wright Rick Wakeman Chick Corea Page McConnell Matt Bellamy John Evan Steve Walsh Martin Orford
|
|