Forum Home Forum Home > Progressive Music Lounges > Prog Music Lounge
  New Posts New Posts RSS Feed - Is Progressive Rock truly pretentious?
  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Events   Register Register  Login Login

Topic ClosedIs Progressive Rock truly pretentious?

 Post Reply Post Reply Page  <1 34567 9>
Author
Message Reverse Sort Order
rogerthat View Drop Down
Prog Reviewer
Prog Reviewer


Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2011 at 06:37
Originally posted by OT Räihälä OT Räihälä wrote:


Of course there are musicians and composers/songwriters who never have any intention of making art! When I played in a punk/rock bands in my youth, I was totally aware of that the works I and my pals made was in no way art, and wasn't meant to be art. They were just rock music.

When I realized I must start creating more ambitious music, it became an intention to make pieces of art. In my view, intention is the essential question.


You are aware of it because you participated in creating the music. A listener cannot judge accurately whether the composer intended it as a piece of art or entertainment.
Back to Top
Dean View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout

Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2011 at 06:29
Originally posted by OT Räihälä OT Räihälä wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


However, I do question whether some composers and song writers never intend to make art when the compose - to me that is elitism to say that they do not - only the composer knows the intent behind any composition, we can only guess at what it was and we certainly cannot tell just by listening - all we can guarantee is that they intended to make music. Therefore you cannot define music by intent

(Elitism is a state, where someone would want to be considered as one of the elite. True members of the elite would never claim to be among the elite - there's no need for that. For that reason only someone who doesn't belong to the real elite can be accused of elitism.)

Of course there are musicians and composers/songwriters who never have any intention of making art! When I played in a punk/rock bands in my youth, I was totally aware of that the works I and my pals made was in no way art, and wasn't meant to be art. They were just rock music.

When I realized I must start creating more ambitious music, it became an intention to make pieces of art. In my view, intention is the essential question.
Then surely that is a personal experience and not a generalisation. When I created this, I never intended to make some pseudo-classical pastiche, though I did intend to use seperate keyboard tracks for violins, cello and bass rather than just hitting the generic "strings" key so I could create a more natural string-quartet feel - and with the church bells I did intend to recreated a peel of church bells as six seperate bell tracks and played Plain Bob Major using them rather than simply recording an actual set of church bells playing it, which denotes ambition of somekind. So I certainly believed I was creating art (however bad that turned out to be), but I would not call it Art Music by intent or result.
What?
Back to Top
OT Räihälä View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: August 09 2005
Location: Finland
Status: Offline
Points: 514
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2011 at 06:08
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


However, I do question whether some composers and song writers never intend to make art when the compose - to me that is elitism to say that they do not - only the composer knows the intent behind any composition, we can only guess at what it was and we certainly cannot tell just by listening - all we can guarantee is that they intended to make music. Therefore you cannot define music by intent

(Elitism is a state, where someone would want to be considered as one of the elite. True members of the elite would never claim to be among the elite - there's no need for that. For that reason only someone who doesn't belong to the real elite can be accused of elitism.)

Of course there are musicians and composers/songwriters who never have any intention of making art! When I played in a punk/rock bands in my youth, I was totally aware of that the works I and my pals made was in no way art, and wasn't meant to be art. They were just rock music.

When I realized I must start creating more ambitious music, it became an intention to make pieces of art. In my view, intention is the essential question.
Back to Top
Dean View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout

Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2011 at 05:07
^ agreed. Thumbs Up
What?
Back to Top
rogerthat View Drop Down
Prog Reviewer
Prog Reviewer


Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2011 at 05:01
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Actually, if we do want to do a post modern double take on the meaning of the word art music, might as well question the very need for such a term and accept that all music is art in some or the other light.  Or maybe something like "academic music" or some such if you would still want to capture the difference in approach.
The problem there is "academic music" (or "serious music" or "erudite music") is still invokes elitist thoughts because of the inherent elitism in the words "academic", "serious" and "erudite" and that for me is the problem. Art Music is a terrible terminology, but it is the one used to describe all classical music, including non-Western classical music and any music that is not Traditional or Popular - again those latter two terms are ambiguous because of the words used in the names, not in the definitions that describe them. It would be easier if they were called something unambiguous, in non-hierarchical terms like Ghah Music, Juim Music and Xorl Music - that way someone could describe some Ghah music as being popular traditional art music and some Juim Music as also being popular traditional art music without causing a disagreement.


Fair enough, but I interpreted academic music to mean something academic in its nature and therefore having a separate purpose from what music would generally have, which is 'only' a means of artistic expression.   I agree that it could also have elitist connotations but I can't think of a better word and found it preferable to serious or erudite.  However, my point was simply that if at all we don't want to take art music to mean what it is supposed to, then the solution is to change the term, not change its meaning to imply something else.
Back to Top
Dean View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout

Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2011 at 04:56
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Actually, if we do want to do a post modern double take on the meaning of the word art music, might as well question the very need for such a term and accept that all music is art in some or the other light.  Or maybe something like "academic music" or some such if you would still want to capture the difference in approach.
The problem there is "academic music" (or "serious music" or "erudite music") is still invokes elitist thoughts because of the inherent elitism in the words "academic", "serious" and "erudite" and that for me is the problem. Art Music is a terrible terminology, but it is the one used to describe all classical music, including non-Western classical music and any music that is not Traditional or Popular - again those latter two terms are ambiguous because of the words used in the names, not in the definitions that describe them. It would be easier if they were called something unambiguous, in non-hierarchical terms like Ghah Music, Juim Music and Xorl Music - that way someone could describe some Ghah music as being popular traditional art music and some Juim Music as also being popular traditional art music without causing a disagreement.
What?
Back to Top
rogerthat View Drop Down
Prog Reviewer
Prog Reviewer


Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2011 at 04:35
Actually, if we do want to do a post modern double take on the meaning of the word art music, might as well question the very need for such a term and accept that all music is art in some or the other light.  Or maybe something like "academic music" or some such if you would still want to capture the difference in approach.
Back to Top
Dean View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout

Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2011 at 04:15
Originally posted by OT Räihälä OT Räihälä wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

But we are conversing in English and not Spanish so when I say Art Music I mean Western Art Music - again, there are three pages of posts where I explain that I'm not talking about music as an artform. So, No, I will not agree to disagree because I'm not wrong - I will agree that you are not talking about the same thing I am.

But who says you have the right to define what the term "Art Music" includes? I don't think it's a question of which language we are using. To me Art Music is music, where the creator has had the intention to make a piece of art. I'm pretty sure you wouldn't have accepted Marcel Duchamp's Fountain a piece of art in 1917 because it didn't fulfill art's definitions then, would you..?

So, back to the square one with this... And I strongly agree with Ivan.
This isn't about me and what I define as Art Music (that would be pretentious Wink), but about what musicologists and the Music world defines as Art Music - again, I repeat - I do not deny that music is art.
 
However, I do question whether some composers and song writers never intend to make art when the compose - to me that is elitism to say that they do not - only the composer knows the intent behind any composition, we can only guess at what it was and we certainly cannot tell just by listening - all we can guarantee is that they intended to make music. Therefore you cannot define music by intent
 
Of course Duchamp's Fountain was accepted as Art by the Art world in 1917 and they changed the definition of Art in doing so - the parallel to that in the music world is "sampling" - which has been accepted as Music in the Music world and changed the definition of music in doing so. In this instance we do know Duchamp intended to make art because he chose to display it in an Art exhibition, not a toilet.
 
If you agree with Ivan then you're not talking about the same thing I am.
What?
Back to Top
OT Räihälä View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: August 09 2005
Location: Finland
Status: Offline
Points: 514
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2011 at 03:48
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

But we are conversing in English and not Spanish so when I say Art Music I mean Western Art Music - again, there are three pages of posts where I explain that I'm not talking about music as an artform. So, No, I will not agree to disagree because I'm not wrong - I will agree that you are not talking about the same thing I am.

But who says you have the right to define what the term "Art Music" includes? I don't think it's a question of which language we are using. To me Art Music is music, where the creator has had the intention to make a piece of art. I'm pretty sure you wouldn't have accepted Marcel Duchamp's Fountain a piece of art in 1917 because it didn't fulfill art's definitions then, would you..?

So, back to the square one with this... And I strongly agree with Ivan.
Back to Top
Dean View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout

Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2011 at 03:20
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


I have explained why Prog Rock is not Art Music and don't see much point in re-itterating three pages of posts because you think it is created to be art and not commercial, because that is simply not a definition of Art Music.
 

Your conception of art music is different than mine...For me Art Music is music that privilege the artistic experience over anything and I do believe this is the case of most Prog Rockers.

Probably our cultural environment influences our opinion,.here  in Latin America  the term Art Music (musica artística) is different than for British speaking listeners, for us is only music that can be considered art..

But again, we must agree to disagree.

Iván


But we are conversing in English and not Spanish so when I say Art Music I mean Western Art Music - again, there are three pages of posts where I explain that I'm not talking about music as an artform. So, No, I will not agree to disagree because I'm not wrong - I will agree that you are not talking about the same thing I am.
What?
Back to Top
rogerthat View Drop Down
Prog Reviewer
Prog Reviewer


Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2011 at 22:57
I think art music at least in the western canon means something specific and even in India, it strictly refers to classical music and semi classical like ghazal is not considered art music.  On the other hand, I would not want to differentiate between two works of music on the basis of intent - artistic or commercial - unless I have very strong evidence to point me in either direction.  I agree with Dean that writing a good pop song is an art too.

Edited by rogerthat - December 10 2011 at 22:58
Back to Top
Ivan_Melgar_M View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator

Honorary Collaborator

Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2011 at 21:08
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


I have explained why Prog Rock is not Art Music and don't see much point in re-itterating three pages of posts because you think it is created to be art and not commercial, because that is simply not a definition of Art Music.
 

Your conception of art music is different than mine...For me Art Music is music that privilege the artistic experience over anything and I do believe this is the case of most Prog Rockers.

Probably our cultural environment influences our opinion,.here  in Latin America  the term Art Music (musica artística) is different than for British speaking listeners, for us is only music that can be considered art..

But again, we must agree to disagree.

Iván


            
Back to Top
Dean View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout

Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2011 at 20:05
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

^ Pretentiousness has nothing to do with accessibility, complexity or ambition. Music is pretentious if it is pretending to be something it is not or if the fans pretend it is something it is not. Anyone claiming Progressive Rock is Art Music and not Popular Music is being pretentious.


You didn't got my point Dean, I don't believe ambitiousness has a direct relation with pretentiousness, but critics of Prog Rock seem to mistake one for the others.

For the vast majority of musicians using an A-B--A-B structure, a few chords and a three minutes limits is the idea of Rock, and whoever escapes to that mold is pretentious.

Many Prog musicians feel that 3 minutes is not enough (not that a 3 minutes song is wrong "per se"), they also feel that an elaborate structure and good lyrics is necessary to express their sentiments, so they create an album like The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway that is very hard work, a year of planning and recording.....Only then they believe they are close to have communicated what they want to express to the public.

I believe this is an ambitious work that they do for love, most people believe they are pretentious idiots who avoid simplicity to show off, so they say PRETENTIOUS.

For me pretentious is a guy who believes who does complex music for the sake of complexity, but the guy who puts all his soul in an album is an artist.

And I do believe Prog Rock is Art Music, because the force that impulses this artists is mainly art and  not commercialism.

My two cents.

Iván
I don't think I missed your point, I think I addressed it perfectly. This thread is not asking non-prog fans whether they think Prog is pretentious - (we don't care what they think) - it is asking Prog Fans if they think Prog is pretentious.
 
I have explained why Prog Rock is not Art Music and don't see much point in re-itterating three pages of posts because you think it is created to be art and not commercial, because that is simply not a definition of Art Music.
 
What?
Back to Top
Ivan_Melgar_M View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator

Honorary Collaborator

Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2011 at 19:55
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

^ Pretentiousness has nothing to do with accessibility, complexity or ambition. Music is pretentious if it is pretending to be something it is not or if the fans pretend it is something it is not. Anyone claiming Progressive Rock is Art Music and not Popular Music is being pretentious.


You didn't got my point Dean, I don't believe ambitiousness has a direct relation with pretentiousness, but critics of Prog Rock seem to mistake one for the others.

For the vast majority of musicians using an A-B--A-B structure, a few chords and a three minutes limits is the idea of Rock, and whoever escapes to that mold is pretentious.

Many Prog musicians feel that 3 minutes is not enough (not that a 3 minutes song is wrong "per se"), they also feel that an elaborate structure and good lyrics is necessary to express their sentiments, so they create an album like The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway that is very hard work, a year of planning and recording.....Only then they believe they are close to have communicated what they want to express to the public.

I believe this is an ambitious work that they do for love, most people believe they are pretentious idiots who avoid simplicity to show off, so they say PRETENTIOUS.

For me pretentious is a guy who believes who does complex music for the sake of complexity, but the guy who puts all his soul in an album is an artist.

And I do believe Prog Rock is Art Music, because the force that impulses this artists is mainly art and  not commercialism.

My two cents.

Iván

EDIT: Using an example, my partners in the studio used to call me pretentious because I wrote legal documents of 50 pages, researching jurisprudence, doctrine etc, when they did this kind of documents in two pages.

I was not trying to show off, I was doing the best effort for  a client who trusts me his defense.




Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - December 10 2011 at 19:59
            
Back to Top
thehallway View Drop Down
Prog Reviewer
Prog Reviewer
Avatar

Joined: April 13 2010
Location: Dorset, England
Status: Offline
Points: 1433
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2011 at 15:30

As soon as U2 was mentioned, all the prog bands lived happily and unpretentiously ever after.

The End.



Back to Top
SMSM View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member


Joined: July 15 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 210
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2011 at 15:05
What turned me off about punk and rap was the pretentiousness of the music claiming to be the music of the people etc, when the Sex Pistols accurately claimed their music was the great rock and roll swindle, same with rap.
 
When you have millionaire basketball players making rap albums and punks who can't even tune their instruments shows the pretentiousness of  this music claiming to be the music of the people
 
Most prententious bands are U2 and Rage Against the Machine, both who think they are God's gift to the music world
 
Back to Top
Dean View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout

Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2011 at 12:25
Originally posted by OT Räihälä OT Räihälä wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


Art Music is not an ethos, and since it covers 600 years of music development based upon traditional forms, it cannot be a style. There is an ethos behind that, but it is not an ethos in itself.
It seems we do not really disagree on the structure, but end up with different conclusions. I consider art music as an ethos, because as an art music composer myself, I have to justify my work every time I start.
In that case I'm glad I'm not an Art Music composer - when I did write music I never felt the need to justify anything, then I was never serious about it in any way, even when there was serious or erudite intent behind the music.
Originally posted by OT Räihälä OT Räihälä wrote:

I feel I should do that even if I made progressive rock, but if I wrote light ditties for pop singers, I wouldn't think of it as art, but rather as a way to get money.
I find that last comment rather sad, (in a tearful way not in a pathetic way), but anyway, I believe it is false or at least a fallacy - if it was so easy to write light pop ditties just to make money everyone would be doing it and that's clearly not happening. Writing pop songs is as much of an art as writing any music, and writing good pop songs is a gifted art.
Originally posted by OT Räihälä OT Räihälä wrote:


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

In the Prog world there are people who get upset with the violent bundling together of disparate musicians from opposite ends of a 40 year history. The Classical world appears far more receptive to new ideas and forms than the Prog world is.

In my opinion, popular music scene is in general far more conservative than the classical/art music field.
In the short term I agree, but the life span of popular music styles is remarkably short governed solely by the time each generation spends as a teenager, since the teenage market is the prime source of income for popular music. But in the long term it is not conservative at all. Prog is an odd-ball in that we have people who have been fans for 40 years and some that have been fans for 4 minutes, and in my experience the most conservative fans appear to be those who haven't been here for the durtation..
Originally posted by OT Räihälä OT Räihälä wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

With the increasing popularity of Tribute bands and cover versions I actually believe that Rock Music (not just Prog Rock) is breaking out of the definitive Performer/Recording trap and in 40, 100, 600 years there will be "tribute" bands performing Dark Side Of The Moon, Scenes From A Memory and Thick As A Brick as concert performances in the same way as modern symphony orchestras are Mahler, Beethoven and Bach tribute bands today.

In a way this proves that some prog rock is part of art music: I can't imagine people doing concert performances of justinbiebers (or whatever they are) of this world in the 23rd century, because only true art survives the test of time. Wink

Well, I carefully said Rock Music (not just Prog) and tried to avoid bring Pop into the picture - however, if you look at what tribute bands are around at the moment there is certainly a market for ersatz pop bands. Certainly I can imagine Mamma Mia! still playing in the 23rd Century, but without a time machine anything we say is mere speculation. Looking backwards 600 years, what is popular from Art Music today is a fraction of all the Art Music that has ever been produced, so guessing what will still be popular from a narrow genre such as Prog or Pop in 200 years is extremely difficult.


Edited by Dean - December 10 2011 at 12:38
What?
Back to Top
Zombiezilla View Drop Down
Forum Newbie
Forum Newbie
Avatar

Joined: December 06 2011
Location: USA
Status: Offline
Points: 19
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2011 at 11:31
Good Lord, I do believe this is going to be one of those boards I enjoy reading more than I enjoy actually taking part on. Brilliant stuff up there!!!
 
Dark Elf mentions Johnny Rotten. Just this morning I was thinking about this thread and thought about The Clash. Might they possibly be the most pretentious band to ever exist? Their slogan was "The only band that matters," and as they went on in their careers their music got more and more, ummm, flashy? I can't think of the right word.
 
I would give the title of the most pretentious album EVER to Kiss and their abysmal "The Elder." Sadly that album would back up the argument of Prog being pretentious, as it is pretty much their stab at being Prog. Yet their lack of talent, the horrendous lyrics and composition tank that effort and turn it into the pretentious mess that it is.
Back to Top
OT Räihälä View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: August 09 2005
Location: Finland
Status: Offline
Points: 514
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2011 at 10:04
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:


If we take all prog as part of art music, that's not true. I think Beatles, Stevie Wonder, Steely Dan took more risks than Strawbs.  They could accommodate risk taking within a popular music framework but that imo says more about their compositional skill.

I completely agree. I should have added that the popular music field of today has become very conservative. During the heyday of those you mentioned, they surely didn't shirk a tackle, so to say, when looking for progress in their music.
Back to Top
rogerthat View Drop Down
Prog Reviewer
Prog Reviewer


Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2011 at 07:09
Originally posted by OT Räihälä OT Räihälä wrote:



In my opinion, popular music scene is in general far more conservative than the classical/art music field.



If we take all prog as part of art music, that's not true. I think Beatles, Stevie Wonder, Steely Dan took more risks than Strawbs.  They could accommodate risk taking within a popular music framework but that imo says more about their compositional skill.  Paradoxical as it might sound, I think art music necessarily has to be that which is very heavily concerned with the science of music. A musician can be largely true and uncompromising within the boundaries of pop, e.g Dylan so it is not a function of the artist's intent imo.
Back to Top
 Post Reply Post Reply Page  <1 34567 9>

Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down



This page was generated in 0.141 seconds.
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.