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Topic ClosedWhat Is a Masterpiece of Progressive ?

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trackstoni View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: What Is a Masterpiece of Progressive ?
    Posted: July 15 2011 at 19:05
    How can we tell about a Masterpiece of Progressive music , and is it fair to rate all these albums , the undiscovered ones i mean , the way we're doing now , and do you believe that some albums are really rated unfairly !!   if yes , is the answer , what is the best way to rate an album instead of rating it , from members only . and do you believe that musicians & non musicians can rate or review  any specific album the same way !  since i've been a member in Progarchives , i've seen the same 10 albums in the top of the list , so , do you believe it's fair that Close to the Edge , Thick as a Brick , Selling England  are Masterpieces  , but some other albums aren't even on the top 100 !

  in your opinion , is there's any other way to be more accurate in the ratings of these albums , or we have only to take what's already has been done for many years !
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 15 2011 at 19:07
The definition changes from person to person, really hard to pin down exactly what makes a masterpiece. I think it has to do with the emotion that is put into the piece of music.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 15 2011 at 19:37
Originally posted by trackstoni trackstoni wrote:

    How can we tell about a Masterpiece of Progressive music , and is it fair to rate all these albums , the undiscovered ones i mean , the way we're doing now , and do you believe that some albums are really rated unfairly !!   if yes , is the answer , what is the best way to rate an album instead of rating it , from members only . and do you believe that musicians & non musicians can rate or review  any specific album the same way !  since i've been a member in Progarchives , i've seen the same 10 albums in the top of the list , so , do you believe it's fair that Close to the Edge , Thick as a Brick , Selling England  are Masterpieces  , but some other albums aren't even on the top 100 !

  in your opinion , is there's any other way to be more accurate in the ratings of these albums , or we have only to take what's already has been done for many years !


When you say 'rated unfairly' do you mean that an album with an overall rating of say 3 stars, but you deem to be 5 stars, is indicative of insincere reviews? (and vice versa but I don't think you are)
You also seem to imply that a musicians review should carry greater weight than a non-musicians?
We can only measure accurately how much we like or dislike an album, we cannot measure something that doesn't exist i.e. how 'good' it is
You are correct that there are avowed 'masterpieces of progressive rock' that will never get near the top 10 albums list but that's simply down to the popularity of any given artist. I'm sure you would agree that it could be considered fanciful to expect the arts to assemble themselves into something approaching your own vision of a meritocracy?


Edited by ExittheLemming - July 15 2011 at 19:43
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 15 2011 at 19:45
I suspect that you have some favorite albums that are not highly placed in the top 100.  That's the case with me as well, and is probably the same for most of us.  The top albums in the list are the ones that have received the most ratings and/or reviews, so they are not merely great albums, they are also popular as well.  This is the way of top lists - they often represent the most common denominators.  In this case, these are albums most of us are familiar with and represent the foundations of Prog.  Personally, it would gratify me to see one of my favorite bands ever, Jade Warrior, even in the listings, but alas, they are not that well known (but for those who know them, they tend to be rated very high).
 
How do you tell a masterpiece is so?  Precedent.  Listen to samples, if available.  Look at what people say about it.  No matter what, you still have to listen to it and decide for yourself.  Then you can add your opinion to the mix.  If the album is brand new, then you get to set the tone with your own reviews.
 
It can get frustrating sometimes but it can also lead to real revelations.  I have bought albums based on glowing reviews on this site, only to be disappointed with them.  On the other hand, I have also discovered some real gems I would not have known about without having come to the Archives.
 
Lists, like reviews are mere guidelines, maps as it were.  No map, however, is the real territory.  There is no substitute to listening yourself.
The world of sound is certainly capable of infinite variety and, were our sense developed, of infinite extensions. -- George Santayana, "The Sense of Beauty"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 15 2011 at 20:20
I think some of it must be objective though. It's not just a coincidence that the top 10 get 5-star reviews everyday. Sure, there are some people who don't like them, but you're never going to get 100% of the reviewers to feel the same way (conversely, an album widely regarded as bad will likely have a few people who like it a lot). People throw around the word overrated a lot for these kind of albums, but generally when so many people like something, there's a pretty good reason for it.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 15 2011 at 21:08
I struggled to understand most of your post, but...
Originally posted by trackstoni trackstoni wrote:

 
  in your opinion , is there's any other way to be more accurate in the ratings of these albums , or we have only to take what's already has been done for many years !
I don't think there is a better way. The general consensus approach works well enough.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 04:08
This thing the poster just made a problem of, isn't a problem at all. It's important not to make something out of the PA top 100 it is not. There's complete transparency about how the list is created and what it can be used for.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 05:05
Originally posted by Progosopher Progosopher wrote:

 
Lists, like reviews are mere guidelines, maps as it were.  No map, however, is the real territory. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 06:45
There's precious little objective about articulating your preferences so finding one universal, fair way to assign the masterpiece rating is impossible.  What reviewers can and should do in general and not just on this website is to describe what things swung the rating towards masterpiece for them and follow fairly consistent patterns in the manner in which they rate albums.  Yes, that necessarily means you have to give a better reason than you like it. You likely wouldn't give it five stars otherwise, duh, so what made you hold it in such high regard, that's what I like to get out of reviews.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 07:02
i think it has to do with how much the music in the album teaches you about progressive music and the emotions that The Truth said of course but technique is more important so i think in the court of the crimson king should be on top here not close to the edge IMO
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 07:21
I can't define pornography but I know it when I see it. Tongue

I'm kind of leery about elevating anything to that pedestal.


Edited by Slartibartfast - July 16 2011 at 07:22
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: July 16 2011 at 07:25
1- a album that don't have much more than 1 or 2  weak tracks
2- a album that reach a wide range of prog rock muscic lover
3- a album that is still interesting over the years
4- a album that is oustanding from a artistic perspective

I think the ratings system is quite accurate here because it has more meanings when there is more ratings. Normally, classing albums have more ratings. People prefer rate albums that they like, and it could be a good start to check the ratings of a album before acutally listen to it. I don't think there is a lot of albums that deserves a five stars that are not on the top 100 list. But in the other hand, if i had to listen to only masterpiece's album i wouldn't listen to a lot of music.


Edited by rdtprog - July 16 2011 at 07:26
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 07:33
Originally posted by m2thek m2thek wrote:

I think some of it must be objective though. It's not just a coincidence that the top 10 get 5-star reviews everyday. Sure, there are some people who don't like them, but you're never going to get 100% of the reviewers to feel the same way (conversely, an album widely regarded as bad will likely have a few people who like it a lot). People throw around the word overrated a lot for these kind of albums, but generally when so many people like something, there's a pretty good reason for it.


I think there is both:  we are all here because we all, at some level, understand what we mean by "prog" (even if we can't completely describe it) and why we love that genre.  That means there must be representative examples of it, and that is why (I think) the same albums keep coming out on top: these are what we paleontologists call the "type specimens", with which all other potential taxon members are compared (if only implicitly). 

/geek  Wink

Then there is the subjective part, because we are all individuals.  As a personal example, I objectively understand why Dark Side of the Moon is considered an epitome of progressive music, but subjectively I have never liked it much.  It doesn't set off any of those emotions, responses and feelings that my personal favourite prog albums do (such as Wish You Were Here).  To me, it's all very slick and smooth and shiny, with no substance to speak of.

Masterpieces fall in the intersection between subjective and objective.  I know why DSoM is considered a masterpiece by so many, and objectively I have to agree.  But to me, it is no such thing. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 07:47
I would compare Mastepiece to what we call the "Absolute", meaning not relative or comparative or subject to any limitations, but the irony is that this "Absolute" could not exist without human individuals. So this Absolute is relative...Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 08:00
We all have our own masterpieces, I think. That's the beauty of it. When reviewing you can always say that THIS band has achieved something great no matter how unknown the album is. And by contributing with your opinion you have helped the band more than any place on the ladder can do. PA top 100 is just a cumulative effort. Actually, what makes me wonder is how much are ratings affected by the average age and location of the majority of the PA user base? Geek Every generation have its own bands, it is said. So I would suspect even PA top 100 will change significantly in the future years... 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 08:19
I don't think you can come with a system that would be better, since there will be faults into any other way of doing it. I have a way to rate music that's a little different than the one used in PA, but I don't think it's better, and I'm sure if I present it to everyone, I would find some people who like it, and others who disagree. PA system is fine, and as somebody mentioned before, it's just a map, a guide, something to give you a reference point to music, not the absolute truth. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 08:29
Music is subjective. If you think an album is great then it is.
If someone else thinks an album is a masterpiece and you don't. It still is to that person at least.
Beauty is in the eye(or ear in this case) of the beholder.

I don't like Linkin Park for example, yet they still manage to sell out stadiums. Does that mean i'm wrong. Hell no, they suck. haha
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 09:21
I think it is a very slippery slope, when one gets too focused on the top lists, and starts wondering why that one magnificent record one loves so dearly, isnīt there. It isnīt to say, that it doesnīt belong there, but when you start falling in the pedestal trap, like a lot of people do - also outside PA, the music suddenly turns into some kind of sport. Like the Idols show and what have you not, where music is treated like a tournament, and the ones who usually win, is the kind of person who can sing a billion notes - emulate Mariah Carey down to the t, and furthermore looks like a barbie-doll. How would the music scene today have looked like, if things were the same back when Bob Dylan, Lou Reed, Neil Young, David Bowie and a truckload of other respected artists started out? None of those mentioned were really singers, in fact you could call them anti-singers compared to the sport singers of today, but they had something unique - and ideas that helped spawn most of what we hear today. They wouldnīt have chance in hell today, if weīd treat them the same way we treat those in Idols. If we start treating music like you see a lot of television shows do at the moment - they are doing this in Scandinavia as well, - Iīm afraid the future will have no Dylans, Yes, Bowies, Floyds - no real progress and imagination or whatever...  I am not saying the prog scene resembles that scenario yet, although we have our fair share of polls and suspicious threads evolving around the "greatest", but if we are not careful - the music we love so dearly, will take us down that sporty road and become something quantifiable and something you can award a gold medal. This is of course exaggerating a bit, but the key point here is: there are no the greatest - nothing thatīs the best, or something along those lines. Thereīs a lot of music in PA, which I think rival the top 100, but yet are no way near it. Thatīs because these albums are obscure, and didnīt have the success like Close to the Edge or Dark side of the Moon. The one thing you can do, and for me this is the whole reason of being here, - is to write reviews about music you think others should hear - or you might think has gotten a bad rep, or maybe it is just unfairly obscure.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 10:44
For me a masterpiece is simply an album that blows me away in some manner.There are different ways that an album can do that but that's my criteria. If i went with the attitude that it has to be flawless in order to give 5 stars then i wouldn't have any 5 star records because i can find something about my favourite albums that i'd change.
I'm a music fan not a critic so that might have something to do with my rating system.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2011 at 11:03
Originally posted by Guldbamsen Guldbamsen wrote:

I think it is a very slippery slope, when one gets too focused on the top lists, and starts wondering why that one magnificent record one loves so dearly, isnīt there. It isnīt to say, that it doesnīt belong there, but when you start falling in the pedestal trap, like a lot of people do - also outside PA, the music suddenly turns into some kind of sport. Like the Idols show and what have you not, where music is treated like a tournament, and the ones who usually win, is the kind of person who can sing a billion notes - emulate Mariah Carey down to the t, and furthermore looks like a barbie-doll. How would the music scene today have looked like, if things were the same back when Bob Dylan, Lou Reed, Neil Young, David Bowie and a truckload of other respected artists started out? None of those mentioned were really singers, in fact you could call them anti-singers compared to the sport singers of today, but they had something unique - and ideas that helped spawn most of what we hear today. They wouldnīt have chance in hell today, if weīd treat them the same way we treat those in Idols. If we start treating music like you see a lot of television shows do at the moment - they are doing this in Scandinavia as well, - Iīm afraid the future will have no Dylans, Yes, Bowies, Floyds - no real progress and imagination or whatever...  I am not saying the prog scene resembles that scenario yet, although we have our fair share of polls and suspicious threads evolving around the "greatest", but if we are not careful - the music we love so dearly, will take us down that sporty road and become something quantifiable and something you can award a gold medal. This is of course exaggerating a bit, but the key point here is: there are no the greatest - nothing thatīs the best, or something along those lines. Thereīs a lot of music in PA, which I think rival the top 100, but yet are no way near it. Thatīs because these albums are obscure, and didnīt have the success like Close to the Edge or Dark side of the Moon. The one thing you can do, and for me this is the whole reason of being here, - is to write reviews about music you think others should hear - or you might think has gotten a bad rep, or maybe it is just unfairly obscure.
Please donīt turn music into sports!   


the closest i can think of is Jeff Buckley who was up their with the Bowies and Dylans, had the tallent and the carracther of a newer artist. almost until he sadly passed away, '
But one can only guess where he would have been today if he had lived after the succes of Grace, and the possible unkown future carear he would have had now... one never know...


Edited by aginor - July 16 2011 at 11:05
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