Forum Home Forum Home > Progressive Music Lounges > Prog Music Lounge
  New Posts New Posts RSS Feed - are there any Russian prog bands?
  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Events   Register Register  Login Login

Topic Closedare there any Russian prog bands?

 Post Reply Post Reply
Author
Message
Aaron View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member


Joined: April 08 2004
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 395
Direct Link To This Post Topic: are there any Russian prog bands?
    Posted: December 07 2004 at 11:41
any good ones?

Aaron
Back to Top
Dan Bobrowski View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator

Honorary Collaborator

Joined: February 02 2004
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 5243
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2004 at 11:46
Horizont, I believe is Russian. Summer in Town is a beautiful recording. Read Peter's review, he hits the nail squarely.
Back to Top
Prog_Bassist View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: August 29 2004
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 830
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2004 at 17:58
RUSHian? eh?eh?eh?    eh?







eh?
Back to Top
greenback View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Honorary Collaborator

Joined: August 14 2004
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 3300
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2004 at 19:45
Russ, Ian and Frenchie
[HEADPINS - LINE OF FIRE: THE RECORD HAVING THE MOST POWERFUL GUITAR SOUND IN THE WHOLE HISTORY OF MUSIC!>
Back to Top
Dick Heath View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Jazz-Rock Specialist

Joined: April 19 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 12800
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2004 at 06:15

Originally posted by danbo danbo wrote:

Horizont, I believe is Russian. Summer in Town is a beautiful recording. Read Peter's review, he hits the nail squarely.

 

Horizont most certainly, also check out their second  album recorded a couple years after Summer In Town, The Portrait Of A Boy - which suggests that with  the success of the first record, the Soviet bureaucracy allowed Horizont access to a completely different set of instruments giving them  a more modern if hasher synth sound. Strictly Horizont recorded these albums pre-glasnoz so they would have been called a USSR band - and so with broadened horizons of the former USSR I also suggest Gunesh: a Turkmenistan group - the drummer of who attracted Peter Gabriel's attention in the late 80's. There is an interesting Central Asian take on prog with their first album,  which occasionally suggests a rocked up Shakti, but they were to  go slightly techno in the second. I think the Russian label Melodica has reissued both the Horizont and Gunesh albums in the last 5 or 6 years on CD.

 



Edited by Dick Heath
Back to Top
Emperor View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: December 08 2004
Location: Russian Federation
Status: Offline
Points: 480
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2004 at 07:10

Good day to all!

Regarding the question I've just joined this forum today

The thing is that I'm just from Russia (Moscow) and I can say something about the music from here.

Unfortunately, the total most you can hear here is... eeeh... I even don't know how to call it easily... You better don't listen anything from post-USSR without suggestion of the man who listened it. In another case you can get a huge nervous breakdown, because there's not Rock Music (in right sense) at Russia at all!  

Yes, I've heard some good words about Horisont and also the Band named Dialog, but never heard their records - it's quiet impossible to find them here, because nobody likes Progressive Music (even simply good Rock Music!) in this country! Only several exeptional persons...  And as I know those two bands were collapsed more than 15 years ago...

But I can recommend to you really excellent band from Estonia - In Spe - they recorded a couple of wonderful albums at 1983 and 1984. I have these rare records on MP3 format...

And especially I recommend to all Prog-Fans two instrumental albums of Vitaliy Menshikov's (who's the owner of very large Prog resource www.progressor.net and also the collaborator of several other large sites including GEPR) band by 2002 and 2003. He plays bass and some guitars on both albums and also is the composer of some part of the stuff. The 1st one is named Al-Bird SODOM & GOMORRAH OF 21TH CENTURY (2002), and the 2nd project is named X Religion DANCES ON GOBELINS (2003). Both albums are absolutely original (you won't find any comparisons with "Giants" - Yes, Genesis, KC, JT, Gentle Giant, etc), innovative, fool of MUSIC, ARRANGEMENTS, IDEAS, IMPRESSIONS, technical features and virtuosness, improvisations, etc. I mean both albums are created in best traditions of Progressive Rock.

 

I Prophesy Disaster...
Back to Top
Fitzcarraldo View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Honorary Collaborator

Joined: April 30 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 1835
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2004 at 07:15

Hail the Emperor! Welcome to Progland.

I have consulted Vitaly's Web site several times in the past and found it very good.

Thanks for the tips on the albums - I'm definitely going to follow up on them.

 

Back to Top
Emperor View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: December 08 2004
Location: Russian Federation
Status: Offline
Points: 480
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2004 at 07:28
Originally posted by Fitzcarraldo Fitzcarraldo wrote:

Hail the Emperor! Welcome to Progland.

-Hi, Fitzcarraldo! :)

 

I have consulted Vitaly's Web site several times in the past and found it very good.

-Yes. The only lack of it is in some "unstucture", maybe... But Vitaliy almost has no time last months...

Honestly, I know Vitaliy personally - earlier (till 2001 when I has removed to Moscow) we lived in one City - Tashkent (the capitol of Uzbekistan). A year ago I've become a collaborator to the site, but Vitaliy asks me to wright reviews in Russian - the thing he especially has no time for :)

 

Thanks for the tips on the albums - I'm definitely going to follow up on them.

-I need to say, that it must be hard to find them...

Well, open your "forum" mailbox after some minutes... ;)

 

I Prophesy Disaster...
Back to Top
Easy Livin View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin

Joined: February 21 2004
Location: Scotland
Status: Offline
Points: 15585
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2004 at 14:39

Welcome Emperor,

Good to have you here, I haven't noticed anyone else from Russia in the forum.Clap

No relation to Penguin12 I take it! (Emperor Penguin, gettit?)LOL

 

Back to Top
Emperor View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: December 08 2004
Location: Russian Federation
Status: Offline
Points: 480
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2004 at 02:27
Originally posted by Easy Livin Easy Livin wrote:

Welcome Emperor,

Good to have you here, I haven't noticed anyone else from Russia in the forum.Clap

No relation to Penguin12 I take it! (Emperor Penguin, gettit?)LOL

 

 

Hi, Easy Living! ;)

Hasn't really anyone from Russia ever been at the forum?!

And what's the Penguin 12?

 

I Prophesy Disaster...
Back to Top
zappa123 View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member


Joined: July 13 2004
Location: Slovenia
Status: Offline
Points: 153
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2004 at 04:51
Penguin 12 is from Antarctic.
Back to Top
Emperor View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: December 08 2004
Location: Russian Federation
Status: Offline
Points: 480
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2004 at 07:10

The band from Antarctic??!??!??!??!?! :-) :-) :-) :-)

So how do they play music???? It's so cold there to move fingers! ;-)

I Prophesy Disaster...
Back to Top
sigod View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: September 17 2004
Location: London
Status: Offline
Points: 2779
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2004 at 07:19

Welcome Emperor. I hope you enjoy your time here and get used to the 'unusual' brand of humor that resides upon this site

The Emperor.....Isn't that another name for Beethovens 5th?

 



Edited by sigod
I must remind the right honourable gentleman that a monologue is not a decision.
- Clement Atlee, on Winston Churchill
Back to Top
Emperor View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: December 08 2004
Location: Russian Federation
Status: Offline
Points: 480
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2004 at 07:22
Originally posted by sigod sigod wrote:

Welcome Emperor. I hope you enjoy your time here and get used to the 'unusual' brand of humor that resides upon this site

The Emperor.....Isn't that another name for Beethovens 5th?

 

 

Hi, Sigod!

Emperor is my constant nick on some forums :-) It was at once when I listened VDGG's H to He and the song EMPEROR IN HIS WAR-ROOM... ;-)

I really enjoy by the site and forum!

But what's unusual with my humor? :-)

I Prophesy Disaster...
Back to Top
Peter View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Honorary Collaborator

Joined: January 31 2004
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 9669
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2004 at 10:40
Originally posted by sigod sigod wrote:

Welcome Emperor. I hope you enjoy your time here and get used to the 'unusual' brand of humor that resides upon this site

The Emperor.....Isn't that another name for Beethovens 5th?

 

\

Smile Hello, Sigod, you funny guy!

 No, the stirring 5th Symphony is sometimes known as the "Victory" symphony, as the opening motif (da da da daaaaa") is supposedly similar to the Morse code signal to attack, or go ahead, that was used by the Allies on D-Day.

Ermm The "Emperor" is an informal name given to one of Beet's concertos, but I have heard that it was not, as often supposed, dedicated to then Emperor Napoleon (Beethoven was said to be furious when ol' Nappy crowned himself emperor) nor did Beethoven call it that. He rarely gave his works names, and though his  5th Piano Concerto has been referred to as the "Emperor" since his time, Beethoven had no admiration for emperors, or the nobility in general. A pianist colleague of the composer seems to have given the piece its sobriquet in honour of its majestic sound -- not for any connection to any actual emperor.

Pedantically,Wink

Peter



Edited by Peter
"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock?
Come to my arms, my beamish boy!
O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!'
He chortled in his joy.
Back to Top
Easy Livin View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator
Avatar
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin

Joined: February 21 2004
Location: Scotland
Status: Offline
Points: 15585
Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2004 at 15:27
Originally posted by Emperor Emperor wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Livin Easy Livin wrote:

Welcome Emperor, Good to have you here, I haven't noticed anyone else from Russia in the forum.Clap No relation to Penguin12 I take it! (Emperor Penguin, gettit?)LOL

Hi, Easy Living! ;)

Hasn't really anyone from Russia ever been at the forum?!

And what's the Penguin 12?

But what's unusual with my humor? :-)

Penguin12 is one of our younger, but enlightened members. You can learn all about him here.

http://www.progarchives.com/Collaborators.asp?id=58

It wasn't your humour Sigod was referring to, it was the humour of other members of the site! It can sometimes be an "acquired taste"!

Back to Top
 Post Reply Post Reply

Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down



This page was generated in 0.482 seconds.
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.