Author |
Topic Search Topic Options
|
gdub411
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 24 2004
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 3484
|
Posted: March 07 2005 at 20:46 |
At last some people agree with me.
Janes addiction did some progressive songs.
Then She Did
Ted, Just Admit It
Of Course
and Three Days
What pisses me off is I remember reading in Rolling Stone magazine that the 3 songs mentioned above that was on Ritual de Lo Habitual as self indulgent, meandering and too long. Then She Did, Of Course and Three Days is what made that cd great.....the rest was just simple alternative...naturally the critic thought the rest of good, but was weighed down by these three tunes and thus gave the effort 2 stars.
|
|
madgo2
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 25 2004
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 118
|
Posted: March 07 2005 at 21:33 |
richardh wrote:
madgo2 wrote:
[QUOTE=richardh][QUOTE=madgo2][QUOTE=richardh]
Madgo,did you hear the extended version of Love Is Like Oxygen? This is a prog track!
A few others off the top of my head:
Lone Star - The Bells Of Berlin
Be Bop Deluxe - Blazing Apostles
Al Stewart - Nostradamus
Iron Maiden - Ryme Of The Ancient Mariner
Mountain - Nantucket Sleighride (to Owens Coffin)
Simple Minds - Waterfront
Beatles - Day In The Life
Jean Michel Jarre - Magnetic Fields Pt1
Deep Purple - Child In Time
Hi Richard - yes that is the version I heard and I thought it was very good actually, I had always remembered Sweet as being a top forty band but they obviously had some very good elements to them. I always thought they had the Queen type vocals early on, maybe even before Queeen I see you mention "Lone Star" and that must be the band from Wales with Paul Chapman later of UFO and Waysted. I have their albums and enjoy them quite a bit. Thought I was the only one who remembered them...
Madgo
Hi Madgo.I have both Lone Star's albums as well.The first album has some seriously proggy stuff and is very good IMO.They also employed Jeff Wayne to provide an orchestral arrangement for one of the songs on 'Firing On All Six'.I reckon they have enough Prog credentials for them to be included in the archive.What do you reckon?
|
Yeah I would imagine they belong in the archives as well. Have you ever heard the third album which was unreleased? I got a hold of it about a year ago and it was finished up by Paul Chapman. The production is a little shoddy but still worth having for the true fans of the band, not for the casual listener. |
I wasn't aware of a third album.Very intriguing.i would be interested in getting that as well as the BBC studio sessions they recorded.
Hey Richard - I would be happy to burn you copies of both if you cannot find them or whatever as I have the BBC sessions as well. Let me know and we can work something out.
|
He whom life can no longer surprise
|
|
madgo2
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 25 2004
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 118
|
Posted: March 07 2005 at 21:36 |
[QUOTE=gdub411]
At last some people agree with me.
Janes addiction did some progressive songs.
Then She Did
Ted, Just Admit It
Of Course
and Three Days
What pisses me off is I remember reading in Rolling Stone magazine that the 3 songs mentioned above that was on Ritual de Lo Habitual as self indulgent, meandering and too long. Then She Did, Of Course and Three Days is what made that cd great.....the rest was just simple alternative...naturally the critic thought the rest of good, but was weighed down by these three tunes and thus gave the effort 2 stars. Hey Gdub I think Rolling STone sold out a long time ago so anything that comes from that rag I wouldn't take too seriously. The magazine stinks of perfume samples and with the likes of Britney Spears, Kid Rock,etc gracing the covers they lost any credibility left back in the 90's.
|
He whom life can no longer surprise
|
|
video vertigo
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 17 2004
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 1930
|
Posted: March 08 2005 at 02:10 |
Baba O'Reilley by The Who ?
|
"The rock and roll business is pretty absurd, but the world of serious music is much worse." - Zappa
|
|
Captain Fudge
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 21 2004
Location: Romania
Status: Offline
Points: 238
|
Posted: March 08 2005 at 08:20 |
The Doors - The End
Acid prog
|
Teenage sucks hard -- Emo sucks even harder Epic. Simply epic.
|
|
panagos
Forum Newbie
Joined: March 15 2005
Location: Greece
Status: Offline
Points: 7
|
Posted: March 15 2005 at 02:55 |
Well what about deep purple's early albums-like The book of taliesyn and their third -deep purple?? With songs like Fault line and April or their astonishing live bootleg from Aachen Germany called Sonic Zoom ?? There is this instrumental called wring that neck which has this brilliant and exciting hammond solo. Also for more relaxing music what about Sweet smoke live album???
|
|
Publius
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 14 2005
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 382
|
Posted: February 03 2006 at 18:09 |
*casts thread necromancy*
Status Quo - Ring of a Change - the first 30 seconds are very prog!
|
I'm so prog, I clap in 9/8
|
|
ProgWizard2112
Forum Newbie
Joined: February 03 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 9
|
Posted: February 03 2006 at 19:21 |
Achiles last stand- led zeppelin
Nofx- The decline
Guns n' roses- Coma
Are some I can think of
|
|
Rocktopus
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 02 2006
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 4202
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 04:40 |
Sixties/Seventies:
The Bee Gees - 'Odessa'
Incredible String Band - 'A Very Cellular Song'
Alice Cooper - 'Black Juju' and side two of 'Welcome to my Nightmare'
Tim Buckley - Goodbye and Hello
The Pretty Things - 'Defecting Grey'
Steeleye Span - 'King Henry'
Now:
Sufian Stevens - 'Come on! Feel the Illinoise! Part I and II'
Enslaved - 'The Dead Stare'
The Dears - 'Postcard from Purtagory'
They all have lots of proggy songs.
|
Over land and under ashes In the sunlight, see - it flashes Find a fly and eat his eye But don't believe in me Don't believe in me Don't believe in me
|
|
Raff
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 29 2005
Location: None
Status: Offline
Points: 24392
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 05:37 |
Many hard rock and heavy metal bands have proggy songs in their repertoire. Here's a few:
Rainbow - Stargazer
Led Zeppelin - No Quarter (especially the live version), Achilles' Last Stand, Kashmir
Black Sabbath - Spiral Architect
Iron Maiden - Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner, To Tame a Land
Metallica - The Call of Cthulhu
Blue Oyster Cult - 7 Screaming Dizbusters, Veteran of the Psychic Wars
As to The Doors, I'd mention at least The End, When the Music's Over and Riders on the Storm. I also noticed somebody mentioned Frankie Goes to Hollywood's Welcome to the Pleasure Dome, which I have always found great - a guilty pleasure?
|
|
rockandrail
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 22 2005
Location: France
Status: Offline
Points: 310
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 06:18 |
Love is like Oxygen by Sweet. This famous glam rock outfit released a last album that was quite different from their straightforward previous ones. And this number is really good.
|
Pierre R, the man who lost his signature
|
|
aprusso
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 16 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 312
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 06:21 |
BLACK SABBATH - "The Writ", "Who are you", and many others
BLUE OYSTER CULT - "Black blade", "Flaming telepaths", and many others
DEMON - "The Plague" (whole album), "British standard approved" (whole album)
THE BEACH BOYS - "Friends"
we have said that beatles are already in prog, did we? if not, Abbey Road is a prog album
LUCIO BATTISTI - "Anima latina" (whole album)
LED ZEPPELIN - "The rain song", "In the light", and many others
RED HOT CHILLI PEPPERS - many songs in "Blood sugar sex magick"
THE WHO - many parts of Tommy
THE CURE - "The funeral party"
JANES' ADDICTION - the whole second side of "Ritual de lo Habitual"
IRON MAIDEN - many mid-period songs
|
|
darren
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 31 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 452
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 06:48 |
Gowan "Criminal Mind". (rather obscure, I know)
Sarah MacLaughlin "Possession".
Leonard Cohen "Dance Me To The End Of Love".
Neil Young "Country Girl".
The OMD album "Dazzle Ships".
Otis Redding's "Try A Little Tenderness". A brilliantly deceptive piece of music. It sounds like just another R&B tune until you listen carefully.
XTC "Dear God".
Talking Heads... well, so many to choose from.
The Police "I Burn For You".
That's all I can think of now.
Edited by darren
|
"they locked up a man who wanted to rule the world. the fools they locked up the wrong man." - Leonard Cohen
|
|
eddietrooper
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 27 2006
Location: Spain
Status: Offline
Points: 940
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 07:22 |
Led Zeppelin: albums House of the Holy, Physical Graffitti, Presence. All of them have progressive rock elements. A good example is the song "No Quarter", very atmospheric and preogressive.
Same for Black Sabbath's albums Sabbath Bloody Sabbath and Sabotage.
|
|
harm s.
Forum Newbie
Joined: May 22 2005
Location: Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 30
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 07:35 |
David Bowie: the title track from "Station to Station" and some of the ambient stuff he did together with Brian Eno on "Low" and "Heroes".
|
|
ridingonacamel
Forum Newbie
Joined: February 04 2006
Status: Offline
Points: 29
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 07:54 |
BLACK SABBATH are PROG .Yes i believe it
|
|
stechell
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 30 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 155
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 08:01 |
Cygnus X-2 wrote:
ivan_2068 wrote:
- Overture and Underture (The Who)
|
I'd have to agree with you there. I'd also consider Tommy to be Progressive Album in it's own right, likewise with Quadrophenia, which is my favorite album.
|
Tommy and Quadrophenia are 100% Prog. Many few songs are Prog like A quick one, Won't get fooled again, Baba O'Riley, among others.
The Who has more merits to be in this page than The Beatles??
Queen?? I
|
|
stechell
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 30 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 155
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 08:01 |
Many few songs are Prog like A quick one, Won't get fooled again, Baba O'Riley, among others.
Many WHO songs...
|
|
Sit Ubu Sit
Forum Newbie
Joined: August 25 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 33
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 08:23 |
Iron Butterfly - "In-a-gadda-da-vida"
The Doors - "When the Music's Over" and "The End"
Steppenwolf - "Monster"
Chicago Transit Authority - "It Better End Soon"
Led Zeppelin - "How Many More Times"
Great Thread - a lot of interesting suggestions....
JS
|
|
robertplantowns
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 27 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 333
|
Posted: March 21 2006 at 08:30 |
ProgWizard2112 wrote:
Nofx- The decline
|
That's funny that you would mention the decline. I was going to post that but you beat me to it. I've always thought of this song as semi-progressive, well progressive for punk at least. I mean the tune is twenty-something minutes long, and although it could be thought of as just a bunch of little songs mixed together, there is a flow to them and it does feel like one long dynamic song. I think the decline is a perfect example of a non-prog band doing a prog song because many of the bands listed so far are almost prog or art rock to begin with, so it is not that much of a stretch, but a PUNK band doing a prog song is more amazing and unexpected.
I always thought Steely Dan was pretty progressive, as well as the Doobie Brothers. Many of Rainbow songs are progressive as well.
The one that sticks out the most in my mind is Edgar Winter's Frankenstein. That song sticks out like a sore thumb at the end of that album and is completely different from anything he did to my knowledge.
|
|
|
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.