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The-time-is-now
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 05 2008
Location: Belgium
Status: Offline
Points: 2060
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Posted: June 20 2012 at 03:22 |
Fragile.
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One of my best achievements in life was to find this picture :D
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dr prog
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 25 2010
Location: Melbourne
Status: Offline
Points: 2449
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Posted: June 20 2012 at 03:36 |
5 percent is awesome
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Moogtron III
Prog Reviewer
Joined: April 26 2005
Location: Belgium
Status: Offline
Points: 10616
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Posted: June 20 2012 at 04:16 |
dr prog wrote:
5 percent is awesome |
It most certainly is
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dr prog
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 25 2010
Location: Melbourne
Status: Offline
Points: 2449
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Posted: June 20 2012 at 04:55 |
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Barah86
Forum Groupie
Joined: May 23 2011
Location: Israel
Status: Offline
Points: 84
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Posted: June 20 2012 at 05:05 |
I love Five Per Cent For Nothing it shows just how creative you can be with in the 4/4 meter even if its just 38 seconds of music...
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Death seed blind man's greed Poets' starving children bleed Nothing he's got he really needs Twenty first century schizoid man.
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Libor10
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 19 2005
Location: Czech republic
Status: Offline
Points: 692
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 10:15 |
Well, I had to listen to these magical 35 seconds very carefully to find out if I haven't overlooked something extra special. And you know what? No, I haven't overlooked anything. What I've been finding again and again is short (uninteresting and disturbing IMHO) intermezzo between South Side and Long Distance. Exactly what I've been thinking about "5 percent" more than twenty years. So, no change of my mind about this "gem"...
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HarbouringTheSoul
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 21 2010
Status: Offline
Points: 1199
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 16:51 |
Five Perfect is a cool little exercise in syncopation that really should have been incorporated into another song. But I don't have a problem with it the way it is.
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dr prog
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 25 2010
Location: Melbourne
Status: Offline
Points: 2449
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 19:21 |
Libor10 wrote:
Well, I had to listen to these magical 35 seconds very carefully to find out if I haven't overlooked something extra special. And you know what? No, I haven't overlooked anything. What I've been finding again and again is short (uninteresting and disturbing IMHO) intermezzo between South Side and Long Distance. Exactly what I've been thinking about "5 percent" more than twenty years. So, no change of my mind about this "gem"...
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It's what prog is all about. Rock played by jazz/classical musicians and composers. A true progger should love it.
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crimhead
Forum Senior Member
VIP Member
Joined: October 10 2006
Location: Missouri
Status: Offline
Points: 19236
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 19:33 |
Foxtrot. One of my fav Genesis albums. Fragile is good but not one of my fav Yes albums.
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-Radioswim-
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 15 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 331
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 19:35 |
dr prog wrote:
Libor10 wrote:
Well, I had to listen to these magical 35 seconds very carefully to find out if I haven't overlooked something extra special. And you know what? No, I haven't overlooked anything. What I've been finding again and again is short (uninteresting and disturbing IMHO) intermezzo between South Side and Long Distance. Exactly what I've been thinking about "5 percent" more than twenty years. So, no change of my mind about this "gem"...
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It's what prog is all about. Rock played by jazz/classical musicians and composers. A true progger should love it. |
I think you've missed the train... let's not get into the realm of judging a proger's integrity now.
With that being said, I personally found your response to be incredibly close minded... tell me, what exactly is a "true Progger"? Tell me what else am I suppose to like?
Edited by -Radioswim- - June 22 2012 at 19:37
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Dust in the Kitchen
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dr prog
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 25 2010
Location: Melbourne
Status: Offline
Points: 2449
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 19:39 |
-Radioswim- wrote:
dr prog wrote:
Libor10 wrote:
Well, I had to listen to these magical 35 seconds very carefully to find out if I haven't overlooked something extra special. And you know what? No, I haven't overlooked anything. What I've been finding again and again is short (uninteresting and disturbing IMHO) intermezzo between South Side and Long Distance. Exactly what I've been thinking about "5 percent" more than twenty years. So, no change of my mind about this "gem"...
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It's what prog is all about. Rock played by jazz/classical musicians and composers. A true progger should love it. |
I think you've missed the train... let's not get into the realm of judging a proger's integrity now.
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Why not I'm an Aussie in my 30's who never bothered with music after 1982. I just went straight to the 70s in my teens and have never looked back. I'm sure many in here have somehow been sucked into the American hard rock and metal of the 80s, 90s and 00s. I dunno how, it's crap
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-Radioswim-
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 15 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 331
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 19:54 |
To get back to the real discussion, I think Foxtrot is a much better album. Not to say that the individual songs within the album are weaker or stronger than the contender, but the albums when seen in their entirety as in a painting or sculpture, Foxtrot to me just holds up integrally as one peice. What I mean is while fragile is succesful as an experimentation of rock and it's sounds, it is essentially that it is so experimental and arbitrarily inconsistant that is destroys itself. It's a great album with some great songs... but Foxtrot is just on a whole other level when it comes to orchestration and execution. The album's songs all belong together, not by association, but by design, even if not intentional.
All of this is obviously my opinion, and I'm opinionated. Some may prefer fragile's more provisional song flow throughout the album, I just happen to prefer Foxtrot :)
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Dust in the Kitchen
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-Radioswim-
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 15 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 331
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 20:05 |
dr prog wrote:
-Radioswim- wrote:
dr prog wrote:
Libor10 wrote:
Well, I had to listen to these magical 35 seconds very carefully to find out if I haven't overlooked something extra special. And you know what? No, I haven't overlooked anything. What I've been finding again and again is short (uninteresting and disturbing IMHO) intermezzo between South Side and Long Distance. Exactly what I've been thinking about "5 percent" more than twenty years. So, no change of my mind about this "gem"...
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It's what prog is all about. Rock played by jazz/classical musicians and composers. A true progger should love it. |
I think you've missed the train... let's not get into the realm of judging a proger's integrity now.
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Why not |
I guess I can't stop you... It just tends to spiral any good discussion into the gutter, and quick. " I'm sure many in here have somehow been sucked into the American hard rock and metal of the 80s, 90s and 00s. I dunno how, it's crap " well... I never got 'sucked' into anything, but I do enjoy a bit of 'American' hard rock every now and then, a little german, a little swedish and maybe some norwegen after all is done. Fact is, people listen to music becuase they get something out of it, and as cliched as the statement "beauty is in the eye of the beholder" is, music taste is as subjective as any other form of art. Sure, I think a lot of it's crap as well. Why does so much of this crap give joy and hope to millions? I'm of right mind to ask, but sure as hell have no right to answer that, as if I knew. Must not be crap after all... not to those millions anyways.
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Dust in the Kitchen
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irrelevant
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: March 07 2010
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 13382
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 23:30 |
dr prog wrote:
-Radioswim- wrote:
dr prog wrote:
Libor10 wrote:
Well, I had to listen to these magical 35 seconds very carefully to find out if I haven't overlooked something extra special. And you know what? No, I haven't overlooked anything. What I've been finding again and again is short (uninteresting and disturbing IMHO) intermezzo between South Side and Long Distance. Exactly what I've been thinking about "5 percent" more than twenty years. So, no change of my mind about this "gem"...
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It's what prog is all about. Rock played by jazz/classical musicians and composers. A true progger should love it. |
I think you've missed the train... let's not get into the realm of judging a proger's integrity now.
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Why not I'm an Aussie in my 30's who never bothered with music after 1982. I just went straight to the 70s in my teens and have never looked back. I'm sure many in here have somehow been sucked into the American hard rock and metal of the 80s, 90s and 00s. I dunno how, it's crap |
I'm an Aussie in my teens and you're full of sh*t.
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Dayvenkirq
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 25 2011
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Status: Offline
Points: 10970
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Posted: June 23 2012 at 00:10 |
HarbouringTheSoul wrote:
Five Perfect is a cool little exercise in syncopation that really should have been incorporated into another song. But I don't have a problem with it the way it is.
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I remember someone saying on YouTube that it sounds pretty complicated when in actual fact it is "deceptively easy to play". Someone tried playing it, and it was mostly a repeating pattern workout.
OK, now let's get back to the topic.
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
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Posted: June 23 2012 at 01:03 |
dr prog wrote:
Why not I'm an Aussie in my 30's who never bothered with music after 1982. I just went straight to the 70s in my teens and have never looked back. I'm sure many in here have somehow been sucked into the American hard rock and metal of the 80s, 90s and 00s. I dunno how, it's crap |
I don't believe in pitying listeners for what choices they make, but your lot does merit that sentiment. After all, what are you going to do once you have run out of 70s classics to get? Because if you are then forced to change your mind about contemporary music just so you can listen to something else, you would not even know where to look for it. The music biz today is fragmented and scattered and it's hard to zero in on artists you can relate to, especially if one is far too specific in one's requirements from music. On topic, Foxtrot is a touch more consistent. Fragile's best moments are more brilliant. Coin toss...will go with Foxtrot.
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HackettFan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 20 2012
Location: Oklahoma
Status: Offline
Points: 7946
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Posted: June 23 2012 at 03:29 |
Foxtrot to me is a weak album. The ones both before and after much better. But Genesis tells and musically illustrates better stories. So, I go with Foxtrot.
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Dayvenkirq
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 25 2011
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Status: Offline
Points: 10970
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Posted: June 23 2012 at 12:12 |
-Radioswim- wrote:
Why does so much of this crap give joy and hope to millions? I'm of right mind to ask, but sure as hell have no right to answer that, as if I knew. Must not be crap after all... not to those millions anyways. |
I remember Mont Campbell of Egg saying "Nobody hears anything new, nobody expects anything new. Just like that." So, those millions probably haven't heard "better" music.
Edited by Dayvenkirq - June 23 2012 at 12:13
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dr prog
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 25 2010
Location: Melbourne
Status: Offline
Points: 2449
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Posted: June 23 2012 at 19:12 |
Maybe I won't run out of late 60s, 70s or early 80s. But I won't be getting into bands who formed after 1975 apart from bands such as uk and national health who were made of members of bands from pre 75. Modern bands will never have the right mix and they'll never have the right influences. Songs from the good days are just a few classes above. I prefer old prog bands who can mix it up a bit with melodies, rock and folk. So bands such as Crimson and Floyd probably don't even make my top 15 bands of the 70s. Gabriel Genesis doesn't make my top 10, but late 70s Genesis bring them into my top 10. I reckon Yes were not that great after 1972 either. I dodn't really care for experimenting and I don't really like fusion. It just sounds silly and annoying most of the time. The ultimate bands don't try to overdo it
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Dayvenkirq
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 25 2011
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Status: Offline
Points: 10970
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Posted: June 23 2012 at 19:52 |
dr prog wrote:
But I won't be getting into bands who formed after 1975 apart from bands such as uk and national health who were made of members of bands from pre 75. Modern bands will never have the right mix and they'll never have the right influences. ... I reckon Yes were not that great after 1972 either. I dodn't really care for experimenting and I don't really like fusion. It just sounds silly and annoying most of the time. The ultimate bands don't try to overdo it |
My personal favorite:
dr prog wrote:
Modern bands will never have the right mix and they'll never have the right influences. |
That's a very naive statement to make, cap'n ... err ... doc.
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