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Topic ClosedExclusionsist or Inclusivist?

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Poll Question: Does Contemporary Progressive in 2014 still constitute Prog?
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Tom Ozric View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2014 at 04:39
What's with the obsession with 'pot noodles' ????
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2014 at 03:56
Originally posted by uduwudu uduwudu wrote:

  It's a new authenticity.

Great observation, maybe it'll turn out to be true.

"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2014 at 03:31
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:

  Here's the plan: the execs thought that if they could foist an engineered brand loyalty onto consumers akin to that experienced by the followers of sports teams then they could sell snow to Eskimos. Artists like Hendrix, the Nice and King Crimson (one of those is not a Brit, rabid sniffer dogs at Ethnocentral Police HQ) exemplified the belief that music was an indivisible whole and that attempts to draw artificial boundaries between its league of nations was the antithesis of any trailblazing pioneering ethos. Once the nascent marketplace realised the leverage to be gained by a demarcation process kicking in, it foisted this engineered 'brand patriotism' onto its consumers which would lead to the 'phony' wars that are still being waged from within the forums of this very website. In short PRE circa 1980 you could hear Jazz, Blues, Rock, Metal, Classical, Folk, Ballad, Avant Garde and formless weird sh*t on the one album. POST circa 1980 you had to buy at least 9 different albums. I'm Scottish, I care deeply about unnecessary expenditure....


As am I, and if it's not Scottish...  well anyway--  good post my subniveal friend, however something I've notice about almost all those genres is that they each have hardcore fans; authenticists who feel, understandably so, that the "folk" Jethro Tull (or even Steeleye Span) play has something important missing.   Same goes for Mahavishnu's "jazz", ELP's "classical", and Zep's "blues".   It sounds artificial to them and I have little doubt it indeed does.


Well, this is the difference between roots and progressive (adjective.) Although jazz and classical are art forms based on roots music anyway. It's a new authenticity and many people hate the idea of change and progressive (adj) is all about change.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2014 at 03:19
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:

  Here's the plan: the execs thought that if they could foist an engineered brand loyalty onto consumers akin to that experienced by the followers of sports teams then they could sell snow to Eskimos. Artists like Hendrix, the Nice and King Crimson (one of those is not a Brit, rabid sniffer dogs at Ethnocentral Police HQ) exemplified the belief that music was an indivisible whole and that attempts to draw artificial boundaries between its league of nations was the antithesis of any trailblazing pioneering ethos. Once the nascent marketplace realised the leverage to be gained by a demarcation process kicking in, it foisted this engineered 'brand patriotism' onto its consumers which would lead to the 'phony' wars that are still being waged from within the forums of this very website. In short PRE circa 1980 you could hear Jazz, Blues, Rock, Metal, Classical, Folk, Ballad, Avant Garde and formless weird sh*t on the one album. POST circa 1980 you had to buy at least 9 different albums. I'm Scottish, I care deeply about unnecessary expenditure....


As am I, and if it's not Scottish...  well anyway--  good post my subniveal friend, however something I've notice about almost all those genres is that they each have hardcore fans; authenticists who feel, understandably so, that the "folk" Jethro Tull (or even Steeleye Span) play has something important missing.   Same goes for Mahavishnu's "jazz", ELP's "classical", and Zep's "blues".   It sounds artificial to them and I have little doubt it indeed does.




Thanks, I had to look that up (subniveal I mean) Confused

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2014 at 03:16
Originally posted by uduwudu uduwudu wrote:


Anyway, isn't a 9 album experience better than a 1 album of hodge podge of styles which would annoy and divide the reasonable and balanced prog archives views?

Who knows? Perhaps it was a Scottish exec who thought this up. Tales probably should have been 4 different albums rather than the condensed edited form everyone knows and loves without equivocation for 40 years.

Wink


Nope, I guess that one man's hodge podge is another's eclectic blend of a number of disparate musical styles that does not impinge on the identity or originality of its creators and conspires to be more than the sum of its parts? (off the top of my sleepy head while overdosed on flu medicationSleepy)
e.g I find say, the Nice playing jazz considerably more interesting and innovative than jazzers playing jazz and the idea of sitting through 9 specialist albums where execs have decided beforehand just how limited by strict stylistic conventions the musical boundaries are gonna be, would bore me rigid.

Tales should have been an EP with maybe just The Revealing Science of God included (together with an advisory sticker slapped over the title warning consumers: may contain tracers of Pot NoodleApprove

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2014 at 03:05
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:

  Here's the plan: the execs thought that if they could foist an engineered brand loyalty onto consumers akin to that experienced by the followers of sports teams then they could sell snow to Eskimos. Artists like Hendrix, the Nice and King Crimson (one of those is not a Brit, rabid sniffer dogs at Ethnocentral Police HQ) exemplified the belief that music was an indivisible whole and that attempts to draw artificial boundaries between its league of nations was the antithesis of any trailblazing pioneering ethos. Once the nascent marketplace realised the leverage to be gained by a demarcation process kicking in, it foisted this engineered 'brand patriotism' onto its consumers which would lead to the 'phony' wars that are still being waged from within the forums of this very website. In short PRE circa 1980 you could hear Jazz, Blues, Rock, Metal, Classical, Folk, Ballad, Avant Garde and formless weird sh*t on the one album. POST circa 1980 you had to buy at least 9 different albums. I'm Scottish, I care deeply about unnecessary expenditure....


As am I, and if it's not Scottish...  well anyway--  good post my subniveal friend, however something I've notice about almost all those genres is that they each have hardcore fans; authenticists who feel, understandably so, that the "folk" Jethro Tull (or even Steeleye Span) play has something important missing.   Same goes for Mahavishnu's "jazz", ELP's "classical", and Zep's "blues".   It sounds artificial to them and I have little doubt it indeed does.


"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 21:12
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:


LOL but I really don't need a glasses to see (hear) that unquestionable truth that 70s hits were miles above better than the hits in (your favourite?) 80s.

..just as a decore...

That was pretty pointless.

And misses the point by a country mile.

Well done.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 18:30
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:

One of the strongest themes in the entire debate so far is the acknowledged seismic shift in the market place that took place circa 1980. It's no happy accident that MTV emerged and blossomed during this time (I mean ELP might have had a stripper in a till, a gypsy queen in vaseline, seven virgins and a mule but even they couldn't hope to make Karn Evil 9 fit the bite size pop video format). Suddenly the old big shifters of units (album bands with squat singles) were replaced by the new big shifters of units (singles bands with albums with loads of hit singles) I've always thought that such developments were indicative of the game changing when record companies discovered how to exploit branding as a marketing ploy. Here's the plan: the execs thought that if they could foist an engineered brand loyalty onto consumers akin to that experienced by the followers of sports teams then they could sell snow to Eskimos. Artists like Hendrix, the Nice and King Crimson (one of those is not a Brit, rabid sniffer dogs at Ethnocentral Police HQ) exemplified the belief that music was an indivisible whole and that attempts to draw artificial boundaries between its league of nations was the antithesis of any trailblazing pioneering ethos. Once the nascent marketplace realised the leverage to be gained by a demarcation process kicking in, it foisted this engineered 'brand patriotism' onto its consumers which would lead to the 'phony' wars that are still being waged from within the forums of this very website. In short PRE circa 1980 you could hear Jazz, Blues, Rock, Metal, Classical, Folk, Ballad, Avant Garde and formless weird sh*t on the one album. POST circa 1980 you had to buy at least 9 different albums. I'm Scottish, I care deeply about unnecessary expenditure....


That was a test just to see if we could count. Yes,  was informed of the edit. If 8 turned out to be 9.

Anyway, isn't a 9 album experience better than a 1 album of hodge podge of styles which would annoy and divide the reasonable and balanced prog archives views?

But yes, that exploitation existed before prog. It was just applied by playing music's own game - fostering the relationship.It's the only way the execs knew how to market and sell music without a real image. The manipulation went deeper as the music went deeper.

Who knows? Perhaps it was a Scottish exec who thought this up. Tales probably should have been 4 different albums rather than the condensed edited form everyone knows and loves without equivocation for 40 years.

Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 17:35
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

lol, I saw this coming the moment I wrote it. Maybe I just recall more hit songs of these one hit wonders from the 80s.  Or maybe they have got more sustained airplay on radio/TV.  
I think the honest answer is that they were better and thus more memorable. The 1970s singles charts were dire even through rose-tinted spectacles.
I disagree. 
Well, that was pretty pointless. 





LOL but I really don't need a glasses to see (hear) that unquestionable truth that 70s hits were miles above better than the hits in (your favourite?) 80s.

..just as a decore...








edit: Unbroken Chain by The Dead removed because it wasn't released as a single, so Truckin' is here.



Edited by Svetonio - April 14 2014 at 18:11
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 17:15
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

lol, I saw this coming the moment I wrote it. Maybe I just recall more hit songs of these one hit wonders from the 80s.  Or maybe they have got more sustained airplay on radio/TV.  
I think the honest answer is that they were better and thus more memorable. The 1970s singles charts were dire even through rose-tinted spectacles.
I disagree. 
Well, that was pretty pointless. 




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 16:34
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

lol, I saw this coming the moment I wrote it. Maybe I just recall more hit songs of these one hit wonders from the 80s.  Or maybe they have got more sustained airplay on radio/TV.  
I think the honest answer is that they were better and thus more memorable. The 1970s singles charts were dire even through rose-tinted spectacles.
I disagree. 

e.g. in 70s, the female hit-makers were sexiest and didn't play bad rock'n'roll at all...



...aside from 70s glamour,  there was so many great and memorable hits... 





...and awesome ballads too; nothing like that in 80s.







Edited by Svetonio - April 14 2014 at 16:36
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 15:03
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

I almost envy people who think prog ended in the '70's.  They have set up a finite universe.  For those of us who haven't stopped there, there is too much out there....


There is however, a whole lot more to my musical universe than just ProgWink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 11:40
I almost envy people who think prog ended in the '70's.  They have set up a finite universe.  For those of us who haven't stopped there, there is too much out there....
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 10:49
^^^  Based on the two times I heard the Coast to Coast show on road trips (a local radio station somehow thinks it's a great idea to re run old episodes of that show), I did feel that, yes, 70s top 20 was pretty boring.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 10:47
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

lol, I saw this coming the moment I wrote it. Maybe I just recall more hit songs of these one hit wonders from the 80s.  Or maybe they have got more sustained airplay on radio/TV.  
I think the honest answer is that they were better and thus more memorable. The 1970s singles charts were dire even through rose-tinted spectacles.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 10:23
lol, I saw this coming the moment I wrote it. Maybe I just recall more hit songs of these one hit wonders from the 80s.  Or maybe they have got more sustained airplay on radio/TV.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 10:21
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

It's also no coincidence that one hit wonders proliferated in a much bigger way in the 80s.
That's disputable.

Wikipedia lists 273 US one-hit wonders for the 1980s but 350 for the 1970s. Out of interest, it list 261 for the 2000s.

Now obviously Wikipedia list are not necessarily definitive but it does suggest that the 1970s are far and above the most prolific years for the one-hit wonder.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 10:10
^^^ I think the idea of strict genre-based demarcation of music products goes back earlier than MTV in USA.  For instance, it seems labels found it hard to convince radio stations to play Minnie Riperton's songs because they couldn't decide if it was rock or R&B (and therefore what would be its target audience).  When you listen to the songs, the idea that they would find it so difficult to slot very accessible, straight up music defies logic!  But, yes, it has gradually spread to other markets.  Punk possibly offered them a great chance to ignite cultural wars and then keep them going.  There was another - and imo very silly - war between so called 'true' metal bands like Metallica and glam metal bands in the 80s.   It's also no coincidence that one hit wonders proliferated in a much bigger way in the 80s.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2014 at 06:36
One of the strongest themes in the entire debate so far is the acknowledged seismic shift in the market place that took place circa 1980. It's no happy accident that MTV emerged and blossomed during this time (I mean ELP might have had a stripper in a till, a gypsy queen in vaseline, seven virgins and a mule but even they couldn't hope to make Karn Evil 9 fit the bite size pop video format). Suddenly the old big shifters of units (album bands with squat singles) were replaced by the new big shifters of units (singles bands with albums with loads of hit singles) I've always thought that such developments were indicative of the game changing when record companies discovered how to exploit branding as a marketing ploy. Here's the plan: the execs thought that if they could foist an engineered brand loyalty onto consumers akin to that experienced by the followers of sports teams then they could sell snow to Eskimos. Artists like Hendrix, the Nice and King Crimson (one of those is not a Brit, rabid sniffer dogs at Ethnocentral Police HQ) exemplified the belief that music was an indivisible whole and that attempts to draw artificial boundaries between its league of nations was the antithesis of any trailblazing pioneering ethos. Once the nascent marketplace realised the leverage to be gained by a demarcation process kicking in, it foisted this engineered 'brand patriotism' onto its consumers which would lead to the 'phony' wars that are still being waged from within the forums of this very website. In short PRE circa 1980 you could hear Jazz, Blues, Rock, Metal, Classical, Folk, Ballad, Avant Garde and formless weird sh*t on the one album. POST circa 1980 you had to buy at least 9 different albums. I'm Scottish, I care deeply about unnecessary expenditure....

Edited by ExittheLemming - April 14 2014 at 06:58
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2014 at 21:13
^ Correct, and like Moon, it's no secret Bonzo had drug and alcohol problems but he was also the consummate pro, probably the tightest of the four.





Edited by Atavachron - April 13 2014 at 21:22
"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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