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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Moody Blues(#1 Prog)
    Posted: February 14 2006 at 08:24
 Im a big Moodys fan, and as far as im concerned,  they laid the ground work for progressive rock bands. Dont get me wrong,  there are a lot of  great prog bands out there,during that time frame, but i think that the Moodys opened the door.....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 09:18

I think there is a strong case for the Moodys being the real prog pioneers. Your view will meet some strong opposition around here.

'The Days of Future Passed' is a brilliant album and arguably the first prog rock album IMO. When you listen to it's structure, it's concept, the fusion of orchestral music with rock and poetry and then consider it was recorded two years before 'In the court of the Crimson King' one has to conclude it was prog.

I'm very much in that camp, anyway!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 10:58

AGREED

Not only were they the prog pioneers, but also, imho, the BEST prog band in history.  I love many a prog band, just look at my fav bands according to last-fm.

I didnt get that last FM thingy till long after i played the moodies here at school almost every day, they should be at about 1,000 plays!!

I grew up on them, they are the reason i even got into prog, THANKS DAD!!!

moodies = DOFP through SEVENTH SOJOURN, all else is NOT moodies there is NO PINDER!!!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 11:14

I think that the Moodies are viewed as proto-prog because they are a "pop" band and many people see prog as somehow contrary to pop. When you look at what early Crimosn and Genesis were doing  as far as creating mood, no pun intended, it really got its start with the Moody Blues, the flute and Mellotron.

The progressive impulses of popular music of the 1960s really starts much earlier.  You can hear it in a lot of the folk-rcok bands or Simon and Garfunkel, whose Scarborough Fair used the harpsichord. With the Moody Blues you have something that can be considered progressive starting with Days in 12/67. If Nights in White Satin is not progressive what is.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 11:16

Originally posted by riverking riverking wrote:

 Im a big Moodys fan, and as far as im concerned,  they laid the ground work for progressive rock bands. Dont get me wrong,  there are a lot of  great prog bands out there,during that time frame, but i think that the Moodys opened the door.....

Sorry but no... Maybe they set the ball rolling for the mellotron-laden art rock bands of the early 70s and some of the tamer symphonic bands, but they sure as hell didn't single-handedly give birth to prog. No band can claim to have done that.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 12:33
Originally posted by ken4musiq ken4musiq wrote:

If Nights in White Satin is not progressive what is.

 

Days of Future Passed is proto-prog, a studio experiment using a has-been pop group (when was Go Now a hit?) with Decca's (Phase 4?) studio orchestra, which initially struggled for sales because it wasn't either fish or fowl to LP buyers of that time. But Decca had the wisdom to release Nights In White Satin  and it became a psychedelic hit in 1968, (you should have seen how the BBC late night programme  Twice A Fortnight televised that hit in '68 - oil wheels and various other hippy effects). However, the track did feature on the first ever progressive music sampler, Wowie Zowie. Indeed Moody Blues had to get recognition in the USA before being accepted in Blighty - e.g. with Legend Of A Mind, a great psychedelia tune: the west coast freaks could tune in and drop out on it. By the time the MB starting cracking the UK once more, King Crimson and Renaissance first albums had been released by Island Records, and inevitably ITCOCK was compared to DOFP and seen as superior.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 12:56
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

Originally posted by ken4musiq ken4musiq wrote:

If Nights in White Satin is not progressive what is.

 

Days of Future Passed is proto-prog, a studio experiment using a has-been pop group (when was Go Now a hit?) with Decca's (Phase 4?) studio orchestra, which initially struggled for sales because it wasn't either fish or fowl to LP buyers of that time. But Decca had the wisdom to release Nights In White Satin  and it became a psychedelic hit in 1968, (you should have seen how the BBC late night programme  Twice A Fortnight televised that hit in '68 - oil wheels and various other hippy effects). However, the track did feature on the first ever progressive music sampler, Wowie Zowie. Indeed Moody Blues had to get recognition in the USA before being accepted in Blighty - e.g. with Legend Of A Mind, a great psychedelia tune: the west coast freaks could tune in and drop out on it. By the time the MB starting cracking the UK once more, King Crimson and Renaissance first albums had been released by Island Records, and inevitably ITCOCK was compared to DOFP and seen as superior.

 

The reason why Days is not considered prog is because the instrumentalists do not possess the virtuosity that later became associated with prog; but a big part of progressive rock was also the verstility demonstrated by members of bands like the Moody Blues or Genesis. The Moody Blues have a very unique sound as well. And certainly they sound like progressive rock. Like the man said, "I may not know what it is, but I know it when I hear it."

 If you look at when the term "progressive rock" historically started to be used it was 1968 so anything pre 1968 is proto from that stand point. But Days being on the cusp surely qualifies it to be considered under the rubric of what writers were calling progressive rock at the time. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 16:03
Days of Future Past is my favourite PROTO-PROG album.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 22:32
No question, they are one of the great early pioneers.

IMO I think they are THE great Prog giant of the 60s. What they did was so original and such a departure at the time (66/67). They never really get the credit they deserve around here.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 22:53

I never understood why Days of Future Passed is considered a pioneer of Progressive Rock.

For me it's just a popish album with some great ballads that adds an orchestral intro and ending, nothing more, nothing less.

Nights in White satin for example has been played repeteadly by The Moody Blues without all this artificial orchestration and narration and it's nothing else but a top 40 love ballad.

The Afternoon, has also been played in almost any compilation as Tuesday Afternoon and again it's nothing more than a cute ballad.

The evening is another Popish track this time with some Psyche elements like a kind of simplistic Peter Gunn, but 50% of the song is an extremely forced and horrible Orchestral introduction that has no relation with the track, not remotely Prog.

The Moody Blues are expert in this kind of things, remeber that Justin Hayward was invited by  Jeff Wayne to sing "Forever Autumn" in The War of the Worlds".

Then the good Justin deleted all the narration, some orchestral parts and by art of magic he recorded it as a top 40 ballad for some of The Moody Blues live albums. Due to the fact that few people outside the prog' community had ever the patience to listen the Whole Wayne's War of the Worlds, most of the Moody's fans believed it was created to be a love ballad  and not part of an epic concept album.

It's good...of course; I like it...Yes; Has some Psychedelic elements...maybe; but is it Prog or Proto Prog....NO WAY.

If the Moodies were remotely Prog at any moment of their career was when Patrixck Moraz replaced Mike Pinder and they released "Long Distance Voyager".

Iván 



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 23:31

People do not see the Moodies as an influential band.  When one looks at 1967 one immediately sees Sgt. Pepper's and the influence it had on many musicians, notably Brian Wilson who is infamous for driving himself crazy trying to surpass it. But down the line they were very influential. The Moodies used a lot of ambiance in their music, which Brian Eno cites as a chief influence on his future work in ambiant music, which brought us Frippertronics, Talking Heads and U2, two bands that whether one likes them have been quite big.

In addition, Talking Heads had a direct reference to the New York avant-garde and minimalism, which was influential on Yes and Genesis, the opening to Firth of Fifth for example. The piano intro is a series of piano ostinati.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 23:50
Originally posted by ken4musiq ken4musiq wrote:

People do not see the Moodies as an influential band.  When one looks at 1967 one immediately sees Sgt. Pepper's and the influence it had on many musicians, notably Brian Wilson who is infamous for driving himself crazy trying to surpass it. But down the line they were very influential. The Moodies used a lot of ambiance in their music, which Brian Eno cites as a chief influence on his future work in ambiant music, which brought us Frippertronics, Talking Heads and U2, two bands that whether one likes them have been quite big.

In addition, Talking Heads had a direct reference to the New York avant-garde and minimalism, which was influential on Yes and Genesis, the opening to Firth of Fifth for example. The piano intro is a series of piano ostinati.

I hope we can have a civilized discussion now.

Moodies are influential, but everybody is influential, Moodies were influenced by The Beatles, early Beatles were influenced by Presley and Presley was influenced by pioneers of Rock as Chuck Berry or Little Richard.

So we could say that Prog was influenced by Chuck Berry, and that would be too much.

But being The Moody Blues influential of Prog as they are IMO doesn't mean they are Prog or even Proto Prog. The Orchestra on Days of Future Passed is not an integral part of the central piece, is just added (sounds that it was added after the central piece was written). It was a step towards Prog, but just an early step.

About Firth of Fifth being a Piano Ostinato (Stubborn or Obstinate piano in English), it's evident and even logic, because the main characteristic of the piano ostinato is that it disintegrates gradually as other instruments enter and takes center stage for the transition to the next song.

In the case of Firth of Fifth the piano is not a transition to other song, but an intro to the central part or a transition between two different sections of the song, in the case of the intro I'm not so sure the break between piano is too dramatic because vocals and the rest of the band enter almost inmediately the piano intro finishes.

The Ostinato structure you talk about is much more clear in the piano solos at the middle of the song, specially in the first one, because the piano gradually fades and it's replaced by the flute.

But in the case of Firth of Fifth the piano solos are a integral part of the song, that's why all the live versions sound so empty and incomplete due to the fact that Genesis rarely used Grand Piano on stage.

Iván



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2006 at 23:58
Originally posted by ivan_2068 ivan_2068 wrote:

I never understood why Days of Future Passed is considered a pioneer of Progressive Rock.

For me it's just a popish album with some great ballads that adds an orchestral intro and ending, nothing more, nothing less.


Iván 




hahhah... not to give you a flippant answer to your inquiry but.... some people see what is and what is not prog differently from you.  I've seen Yes described...accurately?... as nothing more than an trumped up  pop group.  You obviously see anything with pop tendancies as not prog.  I respect that, but I don't agree.  I suscribe to the train of thought that prog was a movement rather than something that is black and white musically.  How else to rationalize such diverse musical groups such as Magma, Faust, Gryphon, Frank Zappa, and Hawkwind being all considered prog.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 15 2006 at 00:00
^ Ivan I disagree.

Along with the Nice, I think the Moody Blues pioneered symphonic prog rock, and was one of the earliest real prog bands, along with the aforementioned Nice, Zappa, and Pink Floyd.

I feel that the orchestra on DOFP was integrated incredibly well for such an early effort, the Moodies admirably share the stage with them.

Though it lacks complexity, it is still progressive rock in the truest sense of the word.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 15 2006 at 00:07

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:



hahhah... not to give you a flippant answer to your inquiry but.... some people see what is and what is not prog differently from you.  I've seen Yes described...accurately?... as nothing more than an trumped up  pop group.  You obviously see anything with pop tendancies as not prog.  I respect that, but I don't agree.  I suscribe to the train of thought that prog was a movement rather than something that is black and white musically.  How else to rationalize such diverse musical groups such as Magma, Faust, Gryphon, Frank Zappa, and Hawkwind being all considered prog.

Yes Micky, and that's why we're here, each one of us has a different perspective, and we can freely discuss it, sometimes we'll reach an agreement, some others not.

I believe Days of Future Passed is a good album, but the orcheestra sounds too artificial, as overplaced at the beginning and the end of each track.

The Orchestra never blends with the central song, and please, you can't argue that Nights in White Satin and Tuesday Afternoon without that pompous and artificial orchestra are nothuing else than sweet ballads.

Have you checked the later example I give of Forever Autumn, it's the exact case:

The summer sun is fading as the year grows old
And darker days are drawing near.
The winter winds will be much colder
Now you're not here.

I watch the birds fly south across the autumn sky
And one by one they disappear.
I wish that I was flying with them
Now you're not here.

Like the sun through the trees you came to love me.
Like a leaf on a breeze you blew away.

Through autumn's golden gown we used to kick our way,
You always loved this time of year.
Those fallen leaves lie undisturbed now
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.

Like the sun through the trees you came to love me,
Like a leaf on a breeze you blew away.

A gentle rain falls softly on my weary eyes
As if to hide a lonely tear,
My life will be forever autumn
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.

the lyrics of forever Autumn are so ambiguous and vague that make sense to the concept of a husband looking for his wife in a war against martians and as a love song for Valentines Day.

Justin took it out of the War of the Worlds context, erased the narration and orchestra and vouila a top 40 single, the same case as in Tuesday's Afternoon and Nights in White Satin.

NetsNJFan wrote:

Quote:
I feel that the orchestra on DOFP was integrated incredibly well for such an early effort, the Moodies admirably share the stage with them.

Nets, please listen this album if you have it:

Especially the highligted tracks

2. Tuesday Afternoon (Forever Afternoon) (4:14)
3. Nights In White Satin (4:27)
12. Forever Autumn (4:33)

You'll notice that this are tracks from Days of Future Passed and the last one from The War of the Worlds out of their conceptual environment, and all of them are nothing but sweet ballads without the pompous orchestration.

Iván 

 



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 15 2006 at 00:22
Originally posted by ivan_2068 ivan_2068 wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:



hahhah... not to give you a flippant answer to your inquiry but.... some people see what is and what is not prog differently from you.  I've seen Yes described...accurately?... as nothing more than an trumped up  pop group.  You obviously see anything with pop tendancies as not prog.  I respect that, but I don't agree.  I suscribe to the train of thought that prog was a movement rather than something that is black and white musically.  How else to rationalize such diverse musical groups such as Magma, Faust, Gryphon, Frank Zappa, and Hawkwind being all considered prog.

Yes Micky, and that's why we're here, each one of us has a different perspective, and we can freely discuss it, sometimes we'll reach an agreement, some others not.

I believe Days of Future Passed is a good album, but the orcheestra sounds too artificial, as overplaced at the beginning and the end of each track.

The Orchestra never blends with the central song, and please, you can't argue that Nights in White Satin and Tuesday Afternoon without that pompous and artificial orchestra are nothuing else than sweet ballads.

Have you checked the later example I give of Forever Autumn, it's the exact case:

The summer sun is fading as the year grows old
And darker days are drawing near.
The winter winds will be much colder
Now you're not here.

I watch the birds fly south across the autumn sky
And one by one they disappear.
I wish that I was flying with them
Now you're not here.

Like the sun through the trees you came to love me.
Like a leaf on a breeze you blew away.

Through autumn's golden gown we used to kick our way,
You always loved this time of year.
Those fallen leaves lie undisturbed now
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.

Like the sun through the trees you came to love me,
Like a leaf on a breeze you blew away.

A gentle rain falls softly on my weary eyes
As if to hide a lonely tear,
My life will be forever autumn
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.

the lyrics of forever Autumn are so ambiguous and vague that make sense to the concept of a husband looking for his wife in a war against martians and as a love song for Valentines Day.

Justin took it out of the War of the Worlds context, erased the narration and orchestra and vouila a top 40 single, the same case as in Tuesday's Afternoon and Nights in White Satin.

Iván



Ivan.... I understand what you are saying about Forever Autumn.... however... what does that have to do with the question at hand.  While I appreciate your 'death to all things pop' prog mentality, pop is not a mortal sin and hasn't a thing to do with whether they were prog or not.  They were masters of melody and songwriting, much like the Beatles who I seen the Moodies compared to in ability to write a great song with a catchy melody.  As such their music does sound more poppy than what we normally associate with prog but that in itself doesn't mean the Moodies were not prog. Being they were rather similar in my book... Were the Beatles a pop group?.... or would they have been considered prog if they had been around in the 70's. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 15 2006 at 00:33

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:


Ivan.... I understand what you are saying about Forever Autumn.... however... what does that have to do with the question at hand.  While I appreciate your 'death to all things pop' prog mentality, pop is not a mortal sin and hasn't a thing to do with whether they were prog or not. 

I agree with you, it's not a mortal sin, it's not a sin at all, I'm just pointing that Days of Future Passed is not Prog' point. I love it, I have it in LP and Cd, but that has no relation with their genre.

I love The Moody Blues, have a lot of albums by them and two DVD's (One of the 70's and Montraeaux), but one thing is being good and another different one is being Prog.

There's good and bad Prog (if not...listen Love Beach or Duke) and there's good and bad POP. Moody Blues were initially a Pop band, a great one, even influenced Prog, but the fact is that i don't believe they are Prog.

The funny thing is that you accuse me of considering a sin being POP, but the one who has hidden disrespect for POP are you.  I just said that Days of Future Passed is not Prog and has POP ballads without saying any word about the quality of the music (which I consider very high).

You are the one that took the word POP as an insult, when it's nothing but the description of  a genre.

They were masters of melody and songwriting, much like the Beatles who I seen the Moodies compared to in ability to write a great song with a catchy melody.  As such their music does sound more poppy than what we normally associate with prog but that in itself doesn't mean the Moodies were not prog. Being they were rather similar in my book... Were the Beatles a pop group?.... or would they have been considered prog if they had been around in the 70's. 

The first Beatles albums with songs as Love Me Do, I Want to Hold your Hand were POP, even the most stubborn Beatles fan will agree with that, later they were Psychedelic, as any long living band they evolved with pass of the years and probably even Proto Prog in Abbey Road.

So yes, during a stage of their career they were POP, but great and innovative POP.

Would they have been Prog during the 70's?

I don't know, I don't own a crystal ball, if they would have taken a path closer to what Paul McCartney did with The Wings, probably not, but if John Lennon (Lennon was a Genesis fan I believe) would have made a combined effort with Paul and George who had some progressive tendencies  probably they would have made some Proggy albums.

Maybe not as complex as King Crimson or as structured as Yes and Genesis because they already had a background of short songs and a defined structure, but I'm sure they would have taken the plavce of bands as ELO, with some Prog elements but a more commercial approach.

But this is something we will never know.

Iván




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 15 2006 at 00:53
Originally posted by ivan_2068 ivan_2068 wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:


Ivan.... I understand what you are saying about Forever Autumn.... however... what does that have to do with the question at hand.  While I appreciate your 'death to all things pop' prog mentality, pop is not a mortal sin and hasn't a thing to do with whether they were prog or not. 

I agree with you, it's not a mortal sin, it's not a sin at all, I'm just pointing that Days of Future Passed is not Prog' point. I love it, I have it in LP and Cd, but that has no relation with their genre.

I love The Moody Blues, have a lot of albums by them and two DVD's (One of the 70's and Montraeaux), but one thing is being good and another different one is being Prog.

There's good and bad Prog (if not...listen Love Beach or Duke) and there's good and bad POP. Moody Blues were initially a Pop band, a great one, even influenced Prog, but the fact is that i don't believe they are Prog.

  I do love the red font....  we are disagreeing over something that really has no answer.  Obviously those who see the album as prog...or proto-prog or..... oh Jesus... will see it as one of the 'genesei' of progressive rock.  Those who don't....won't.  I mean look at their next album....In Search of the Lost Chord.. that album has prog written all over it.. they used what....30+ instruments on that album hahhaha.  However some will see it STRICTLY in psychedelic terms, why?... it is not complex enough for them.  That's fine, if that is how you strictly interpet prog.

They were masters of melody and songwriting, much like the Beatles who I seen the Moodies compared to in ability to write a great song with a catchy melody.  As such their music does sound more poppy than what we normally associate with prog but that in itself doesn't mean the Moodies were not prog. Being they were rather similar in my book... Were the Beatles a pop group?.... or would they have been considered prog if they had been around in the 70's. 

The first Beatles albums with songs as Love Me Do, I Want to Hold your Hand were POP, even the most stubborn Beatles fan will agree with that, later they were Psychedelic, as any long living band they evolved with pass of the years and probably even Proto Prog in Abbey Road.

So yes, during a stage of their career they were POP, but great and innovative POP.

Would they have been Prog during the 70's?

I don't know, I don't own a crystal ball, if they would have taken a path closer to what Paul McCartney did with The Wings, probably not, but if John Lennon (Lennon was a Genesis fan I believe) would have made a combined effort with Paul and George who had some progressive tendencies  probably they would have made some Prog albums.

But this is something we will never know.

Iván

my point was that the Beatles, were at heart a pop group. You said it correctly... innovative Pop, and so were the Moodies.  If you think as I do, that the root of the progressive movement was a consious effort to break the boundries of popular music. Then you have your answer as to why people consider DoFP an influential prog album.  Anyway.. it's past my bedtime... as always enjoyed the discussion. 

Micky

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 15 2006 at 03:09
Originally posted by ivan_2068 ivan_2068 wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:



hahhah... not to give you a flippant answer to your inquiry but.... some people see what is and what is not prog differently from you.  I've seen Yes described...accurately?... as nothing more than an trumped up  pop group.  You obviously see anything with pop tendancies as not prog.  I respect that, but I don't agree.  I suscribe to the train of thought that prog was a movement rather than something that is black and white musically.  How else to rationalize such diverse musical groups such as Magma, Faust, Gryphon, Frank Zappa, and Hawkwind being all considered prog.

Yes Micky, and that's why we're here, each one of us has a different perspective, and we can freely discuss it, sometimes we'll reach an agreement, some others not.

I believe Days of Future Passed is a good album, but the orcheestra sounds too artificial, as overplaced at the beginning and the end of each track.

The Orchestra never blends with the central song, and please, you can't argue that Nights in White Satin and Tuesday Afternoon without that pompous and artificial orchestra are nothuing else than sweet ballads.

Have you checked the later example I give of Forever Autumn, it's the exact case:

The summer sun is fading as the year grows old
And darker days are drawing near.
The winter winds will be much colder
Now you're not here.

I watch the birds fly south across the autumn sky
And one by one they disappear.
I wish that I was flying with them
Now you're not here.

Like the sun through the trees you came to love me.
Like a leaf on a breeze you blew away.

Through autumn's golden gown we used to kick our way,
You always loved this time of year.
Those fallen leaves lie undisturbed now
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.

Like the sun through the trees you came to love me,
Like a leaf on a breeze you blew away.

A gentle rain falls softly on my weary eyes
As if to hide a lonely tear,
My life will be forever autumn
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.
'Cause you're not here.

the lyrics of forever Autumn are so ambiguous and vague that make sense to the concept of a husband looking for his wife in a war against martians and as a love song for Valentines Day.

Justin took it out of the War of the Worlds context, erased the narration and orchestra and vouila a top 40 single, the same case as in Tuesday's Afternoon and Nights in White Satin.

NetsNJFan wrote:

Quote:
I feel that the orchestra on DOFP was integrated incredibly well for such an early effort, the Moodies admirably share the stage with them.

Nets, please listen this album if you have it:

Especially the highligted tracks

2. Tuesday Afternoon (Forever Afternoon) (4:14)
3. Nights In White Satin (4:27)
12. Forever Autumn (4:33)

You'll notice that this are tracks from Days of Future Passed and the last one from The War of the Worlds out of their conceptual environment, and all of them are nothing but sweet ballads without the pompous orchestration.

Iván 

 

 

The orchestra is not integrated.  It comes in and out of the songs, which stand alone. I love the orchestra because it is tacky.  As you said, it sounds like an artificial presense, much like a movie soundtrack. The Brits were never famous for their orchestrations.  But it also has an impressionistic quality that often adds to the romantic quality of the songs.

As much as one can say the Beatles influenced them, the Beatles never took the use of timbre to the level that the Moodies did. Martin used the string quartet on Eleanor Rigby to give it an aristocratic air, and Harrison the sitar to make a religious statement.  They might have been successful in creating a sense of mood but that was not intended.

The Moodies exceled in the use of timbre to create mood. On Days, every song on the album is unique and highlights a style as representative of a time of day.  This gives the band the opportunity to play with timbres: guitar sounds, the flute, sitar and mellotron. The later instruments are are used to create a sense of romantic alienation, which is really the essense of early prog, (as much as Gabriel's lyrics try to grant it a socio-political stance and thankfully save it from oblivion.)  They transport you and take you out of the pop song structure. Early prog is a quest for the grail, something transcendent and holy.  The Moodies portrayed that better than The Beatles ever did and made it the essense of who they were as a band.

Crimson used these instruments in the same way on those first two albums. People think of that first album and they think of Schizoid Man but really, that song is so much different than the romantic, moodiness and sense of alienation that the rest of the album grants.

 

 



Edited by ken4musiq
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lunaticviolist View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 15 2006 at 03:23
Don't forget Procol Harum -- much better and more progressive than the moodies, IMO.
My recent purchases:
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