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Topic ClosedIs 70's prog a nostalgia thing?

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CinemaZebra View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 11 2010 at 22:09
Originally posted by King By-Tor King By-Tor wrote:

I'm 22 and I say that music from the 70s/80s is, in large, better than what we get today. So no.
This, except I'm 14.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 12 2010 at 13:19
Originally posted by boo boo boo boo wrote:

Originally posted by Nightshine Nightshine wrote:

Originally posted by boo boo boo boo wrote:

Originally posted by Nightshine Nightshine wrote:

New prog is an ignorance thing.
 
How so?
 
If anything the new prog movement is the best thing to happen to prog in a long time, because unlike the neo prog movement it's not COMPLETELY derivative of the 70s prog bands, it takes after more modern influences as well. Artists like The Mars Volta, Porcupine Tree, Muse, Coheed, etc are bands who embrace influences outside of prog and thus the more uptight prog fans don't want to acknowledge them as even remotely prog. It doesn't matter that they acknowledge groups like KC, Genesis and Yes as major influences. They're also influenced by hard rock, pop, electronic and even punk music. And we can't taint the topographic oceans of prog with such evil now can we?
 
Prog and progressive are two completely different words at this point. Some of the most progressive bands going right now aren't considered prog at all.


By "ignorance", I mean ignorance to the word progressive.  They sap up so much influence that most of these bands don't progress at all, namely the bands of which you have listed.  As much as I like some of those bands, they've began to evolve into such a way that I would like to dub bands like that "regressive rock", with Dream Theater as the poster boys.
 
What are you talking about? Pretty much every PT and TMV album has differences in style and sound. PT have evolved a lot over the years. 
 
Muse are prog pop IMO. And yes unlike a lot of proggies I don't think those two words are mutually exclusive. I know I'm committing heresy here, I better watch my back. Ouch



Differentiation from the self is cool.  However, differentiation from everything else is the main point.  You have to keep moving forward in order to keep music progressing.  Hell, more bands that I listen to which aren't on this site are moving forward so much faster than the bands that I do see on this site.  The Mars Volta are sapping up influence with each new release, as are Muse and Porcupine Tree...and even the 70s band did/are doing the exact same thing.


In fact, to make my statement even clearer, I will say something bold:


The Protomen are more progressive than Dream Theater, Porcupine Tree, or any popular band on this website as of the current moment of activity.


Now watch as all the veterans of the website flock on this post and begin their counterpoints in tons of paragraphs of which nobody will read.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 12 2010 at 13:25
I can respond to it succinctly:

Most fans of any given genre are fans of a given sound, not an approach. Bands that recall the sound of 70's prog bands are fulfilling the sound of the genre. It is tough to expect people to flock to an approach to making music, as with a progressive approach, that means everything will always sound different, and therefore never settle on any sound.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 12 2010 at 14:17
Originally posted by CinemaZebra CinemaZebra wrote:

Originally posted by King By-Tor King By-Tor wrote:

I'm 22 and I say that music from the 70s/80s is, in large, better than what we get today. So no.
This, except I'm 14.

I'm 21 and this post is exactly what I think. Thanks !


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 12 2010 at 14:25
I've been out of this post for a while and I don't understand what boo boo and nightshine are speaking of.
I like 60's sound as well as 70's, probably because I'm still a bit hippy in the deep of my heart.  I think what matters is the sensation that music makes you feel. For me prog is a sensation that other enres can't give me. This is how I define it, and maybe the reason why each time I suggest an artist is rejected by the teams . Smile  The sound, of course, is part of this sensation: a Hammond organ can transmit sensations better than any fairlight, as well as vinyl is more "natural than CD and transistors can't give yo the same quality of valves. So not just nostalgia, there are technical reasons too.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 12 2010 at 20:34
Originally posted by jplanet jplanet wrote:



Most fans of any given genre are fans of a given sound, not an approach. Bands that recall the sound of 70's prog bands are fulfilling the sound of the genre. It is tough to expect people to flock to an approach to making music, as with a progressive approach, that means everything will always sound different, and therefore never settle on any sound.



This is a good point and sums up why I don't enjoy current bands trying to play in the 70s style.  It is the compositional wizardry that blew me away when I got into prog.  The point of most of the recent big prog names seems to be something other than that, at least that's my impression. Even if I did hear interesting things here and there, by and large it didn't capture my imagination. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 16 2010 at 16:29
Wink  To Answer yur Question Briefly As one of the Old Timers ( and believe that most old timers will Agree )
         I Personally Prefer Porcupine Tree on Pink Floyd , and Dreamtheater on ELP , Opeth on Gentel Giant ,
and Ayreon on Led Zeppelin .   So , are yu Satisfied that yu're yur Father's Father ////   Please , i request yur answer  ////////////////////       Toni     /////
Tracking Tracks of Rock
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 19 2010 at 11:34
Is weird but it seems that the younger the people the more nostalgic they are, and is extrange precisely because they didnt live that era!! So is being nostalgic of something you didnt and cant not live.
Thats pretty romantic LOL
But the reason is those bands were archetypical compared to later music more generic in sound and aproach.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 19 2010 at 13:19
Not nostalgia, it's just simply better in 9/10 situations.
Which of you to gain me, tell, will risk uncertain pains of hell?
I will not forgive you if you will not take the chance.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 19 2010 at 13:36
We can close this discussion quite clearly right here right now:


Yes, 70s prog is a nostalgia thing.



SLASH


THREAD


: D
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 19 2010 at 13:40
Originally posted by himtroy himtroy wrote:

Not nostalgia, it's just simply better in 9/10 situations.

This! Besides, nostalgia is for those who have actually been there. Wish I were and now be a looney granny who tells stories about smuggling prog records in the country from former Yugoslavia of West Germany right under the nose of the communist regime.

Edit: Whoops! Missed the above post.Tongue


Edited by Lizzy - May 19 2010 at 13:52
Property of Queen Productions...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 19 2010 at 13:56
Originally posted by Lizzy Lizzy wrote:

Originally posted by himtroy himtroy wrote:

Not nostalgia, it's just simply better in 9/10 situations.

This! Besides, nostalgia is for those who have actually been there. Wish I were and now be a looney granny who tells stories about smuggling prog records in the country from former Yugoslavia of West Germany right under the nose of the communist regime.

Edit: Whoops! Missed the above post.Tongue



I don't think you caught on fast enough >_>
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 19 2010 at 19:29
I think it has nothing to do with nostalgia. For example, I love all of deep purple's stuff before perfect strangers. I dislike any Deep Purple album after perfect strangers. It's not because stuff like in rock or machine head was earlier or nostalgic, it was way better made. Same can be said for 70's rock, it's not good because it's nostalgic, it's good because it's good.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 19 2010 at 22:41
Originally posted by Lizzy Lizzy wrote:


Wish I were and now be a looney granny who tells stories about smuggling prog records in the country from former Yugoslavia of West Germany right under the nose of the communist regime.
 
 
Reminds me of the olden days when I used to hike two miles through the snow in order to get the latest prog album.  Hmmm, I think that actually happened once or twice.Confused
Even a man who stumbles around in the dark will influence those he does not see.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 19 2010 at 23:08
Originally posted by jplanet jplanet wrote:

I can respond to it succinctly:

Most fans of any given genre are fans of a given sound, not an approach. Bands that recall the sound of 70's prog bands are fulfilling the sound of the genre. It is tough to expect people to flock to an approach to making music, as with a progressive approach, that means everything will always sound different, and therefore never settle on any sound.


jplanet:

I like your point about sound being more important than approach for most fans. As for me--and for the record, I started becoming aware of prog in the 70s--I listen quite happily to bands from all decades in which prog was or is made. It is very much about the sound, or the feeling that the sound evokes. What I find interesting about some current bands, and yes, they are often neo-prog and therefore by definition derivative in many people's opinion--is not so much that they imitate the earlier prog but rather that they respond to it, often in ways that feels very much, to me at least, like a conversation. A specific example:

At the moment, I am listening to IQ's "Last Human Gateway" (1984). It is similar to "Supper's Ready" in a number of ways, and you can hear that the band, at that point, had not come into a full sense of themselves, much as I do enjoy the song. But the matter is quite different with their 2004 epic, "Harvest of Souls." The influences of the older bands are still there, and I do not see any shame in that, but the band is now in greater control of the sound. I hear, as I listen to that song, not just a sum of influences but rather a thoughtful meditation upon the history of a genre. I hear both "then" and "now," and the relationships between them.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 20 2010 at 00:24
Originally posted by The-time-is-now The-time-is-now wrote:

Originally posted by CinemaZebra CinemaZebra wrote:

Originally posted by King By-Tor King By-Tor wrote:

I'm 22 and I say that music from the 70s/80s is, in large, better than what we get today. So no.
This, except I'm 14.

I'm 21 and this post is exactly what I think. Thanks !


ditto! and i am 26
BUT
with some exceptions of the Swedish third wave of prog.
I Could have bought a Third World country with the riches that I've spent
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 20 2010 at 10:49

Noticing something good is not here, and cannot be here, because is historical, that makes you nostalgic..........And example ( and an example only) you can  say i dont like ( cristianism, comunism, whatever) because im nostalgic i like it is because its good, but as long as these fenomenon appears to be historical and its gone, i feel nostalgic . I wanna reawake it but its truly posible? Is what lovers of 70 prog wonder when facing the neo-prog waves.

Maybe neo-prog waves have nothing to do with reawaking 70 prog......Another reason for nostalgia LOL LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 20 2010 at 13:33
my band Welcome to the Machine are recording an album right now that is just pretending the 70s never ended!!!! its the only way we can write music and it doesnt feel like nostalgia
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2010 at 16:55
Whaaat? Come here! Take that. And that. Here's another one. Now get outta' here. But seriously, '70s prog is the standard for all else to be held up against, really, and I believe many bands today have a healthy realization of that fact.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 24 2010 at 06:22
I find the production of albums from the late 60's through the 70's very pleasing. The early experiments with stereo, the warmth of the analogue environment, the spontaneity of the compositions, experimenting with synths/mellotrons/new electronic instruments etc all make for a superb listening experience imo. The digital revolution of the 80's made things far too sterile and clinical sounding, along with the general decline in the style of music I enjoy so much, due in part to the continued fragmentation of music into metal/dance/pop/rock/whatever. It' no nostalgia for me, just the enjoyment of excellent music.
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