micky wrote:
t d wombat wrote:
Thinking that myself. Mickey .... was there any serious attempt at setting a cut off point for Modern v Classic or was the final decision simply a refusal to be dictated too by the outdated rules, regulations and traditions of the English language ?
Anywho .... some albums I simply cannot make all the way through so forgive me if I am wrong but from what I hear of Queensryche they appear to be nowt but yet another Deep Purple wannabe.
Otoh, I do like Talk Talk though I've always lumped them in what I'd think of as Prog Lite with such outfits as Simple Minds, Ultravox, Japan and the like. I confess though that by the time Eden was released I wasn't listening to them at all. Nice album. Wish I'd been aware of it back in the day.
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I posted this way back in the tournament threads.
The whole matter and actual year of the dividing date was something we heavily discussed and debated. The first notion was to use Neo as that dividing point.. from the classic where they were aping Genesis to later when they started aping PT  
it worked until we saw that ..ahem.. prog is not all symphonic and aping and mimicking the classics.
Post-Rock and prog metal. Both had their beginning in our haphazardly designated cut off which so we shifted the cut date into the 80's for the modern to take into account the beginning of prog metal and Post-Rock. All agreed they would be horribly out of place in the 'classic' prog section.
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Using Progressive Metal, Post Rock or Neo Prog as that dividing date is WRONG.

Neo Prog is a subgenre [style] of Symphonic Prog, Progressive Metal is long-tailed in 70s melodic Hard Rock [check Rainbow's "Stargazer"] and 70s Symphonic Prog a la Yes. Post Rock was beginning to run in 90s as an obscure subgenre with its artistic origins in Post-Punk and therefore had nothing to do with Prog at all [in fact Post Rock is not even now recognized by so many music sites and fans as prog as it is in PA]. But if you insist that dividing point must be in pre-digital era, then that cut point where modern prog was beginning to run could be ONLY
Rock In Opposition movement in late 70s.
edit: Re "Spirit of Eden", i know that many fans are thinking that the "Spirit of Eden" is a Post Rock album. It's also wrong. "Spirit of Eden" is awesome 80sArt Rock album thats pretty ambiental as in 80s was some degree of enthusiasm for 70s Ambient music and when Brian Eno's "Another Green World" was re-discovered as well.
Edited by Komandant Shamal - August 07 2015 at 13:33