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Yanns View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 17 2005 at 15:26
Originally posted by maani maani wrote:

Radioactive Toy:

Don't listen to all these prog-rock wanna-be know-it-alls...

I am usually a strong believer in approaching a new group from earlier to later, since it gives a sense of the "progression" of the group.  Thus, I would normally tell you to get a group's first album first, and go from there. However, if I have to give you a couple or few of each, I would still keep them in chron order.  Thus:

Crimson: In the Court, Wake, Larks Tongues, Starless, Red

Floyd: Piper, Atom Heart, Meddle, Dark Side, Wish, Animals, Wall

Genesis: Nursery Cryme, Foxtrot, Selling England, The Lamb, Trick, W&W

Giant: Gentle Giant, Three Friends, In A Glass House

Yes: Time and a Word, Yes Album, Fragile, Close to the Edge

Moody Blues: Do them in strict chrono order.

ELP: ELP, Tarkus, Trilogy, Brain Salad

Tull: Thick as a Brick, Aqualung, Minstrel

Those would be my choices.  Happy listening!

 

Umm, maani.... Aqualung came first.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 17 2005 at 15:30

Originally posted by JMCecil JMCecil wrote:

There are sooooo many bands that would fall under this umbrella of "prog-pop".

 

That's right. But I'm afraid what criterion you should adopt to add other bands?

If you add 10cc and Queen here (PS.: I really love Queen!!!), so we have to add Deep Purple, Beatles, Led Zeppelin... Metal lovers will go to add Metallica and others absolutelt non-prog bands.. there are many groups of rock (specially in seventies), with strong prog influences... In Brazil, we have 14 Bis (that I love).. so they should be add too.. how to say "yes" for some bands and "no" to others?

Let the sunshine in
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 17 2005 at 15:44
Originally posted by Prog-Brazil Prog-Brazil wrote:

That's right. But I'm afraid what criterion you should adopt to add other bands?

.. how to say "yes" for some bands and "no" to others?

That was the point of my post.  Some of the bands that are already allowed on the site have created a really slippery slope of what "prog" should be defined as.  If you look at someone like The Who, Quadraphenia and Tommy are more prog than tons of stuff on this site.  Even Who's Next is VERY progressive.  Longish songs, extended solos, tempo/keychanges etc...  What about someone like Brian Eno.  Again, he really isn't prog just like The Who aren't prog, but if DT is prog and Symphony X is prog then so are The Who and Eno and Queen.  If you are going to have prog-pop then Todd Rundgren and literally hundreds of other people will qualify.  You could easily double the number of bands on the site.

Although I think the current "rules" are screwy, I'm not sure opening up the system that wide would have a positive impact.  Maybe it would.  It's not my site so I'm good either way. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 17 2005 at 16:35
Hi, let me mingle into that conversation about 10CC and  Gentle Giant (GG). I'm 50 and still regard 10cc as a progressive band because they used parts of different styles of music in their songs. They broke the rules of "cgf" harmonies. For me it is progressive but more "pop" than the music of  e.g. GENESIS. 10CC wrote mostly songs in a clear structure as the BEATLES did. And they experimented with sounds (I'm not in love). What do you do more to be progressive?

GENTLE GIANT is terrible good. I bought my first album 1973 "Three friends". I was struck by that powerful music that had so gentle moments (Here the name of the group reached it's peak meaning) Now I own nearly all of their cd. But my favorite is still "Three friends". The album is the most coherent of all - at least for me and my musical taste. There are no nerve wrecking passages, no repetitive song elements. Only at the end of the album they repeat a melodic line again and again. But this is made so intelligent and complex that you get greedy to listen to. It's so marvelous crafted, so majestic, so fluent that you might wish it will never stop. This is not the case with other albums. - "Schooldays" is made so fragile with voices that cross over in a haunting way. That is pure fun and has such an atmospheric flow.

Give this album more than "one" chance - it is rewarding for the rest of your life. I listen to it since 32 years - and still like it.

Music can have such a big soul. Clap


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 17 2005 at 16:46

I want to talk about 10cc on this 10cc-thread, that's why i dug it up from the past

List - studio-albums from best to least good:

  • Sheet music
  • The original soundtrack
  • How dare you
  • Deceptive bends
  • 10cc
  • Bloody tourists
  • Windows in the jungle
  • Meanwhile
  • Look here
  • 10 out of ten
  • Mirror mirror

What do you guys think?

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 17 2005 at 18:37
I just heard 10cc for the first time this weekend. I had a party and my friend brought some of his vinyl LPs, but forgot to take them with him afterwards, so I decided to listen to them. All I've heard from them is a greatest hits collection from the late 70s, but from what I've heard they sound very progressive. Also, I just listened to 'Moontan' by Golden Earring, and that is an extremely progressive album, and I would classify them as progressive from just that album (although I have never heard any of their other stuff so I may be wrong).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 17 2005 at 22:20

All:

My own personal point is close to JM's.  For example, what makes Supertramp - who are included on this site - "progressive," but not 10CC?  They were not only contemporaneous, but were admittedly influenced by each other.  (N.B.  Klaatu was the third of this triumvirate, and they are included here as well).  I have never understood why Supertramp is here.  However, since they are, I cannot understand why 10CC is rejected.  Indeed, The Original Soundtrack (10CC) is as prog or moreso than Crime of the Century, the one album most people point to as "progressive."  And Sheet Music and How Dare You - and even much of Bloody Tourists - (10CC) are equally as "progressive" as Even in the Quietest Moments or Crime of the Century - and far more progressive than anything on Crisis What Crisis or any other Supertramp album.

As for XTC, their absence from this site is all but inexcusable.  If English Settlement and Mummer are not "progressive," I don't know what is.

And no, I do not believe that adding XTC, or even 10CC, would necessarily lead down the road to including every band back to The Beatles.

What I would do (though I am only an assistant here...) is create a new category called "progressive pop," and include some of the groups already on the site - Supertramp, Klaatu, Styx, et al - and some new groups, including 10CC, XTC, Queen, and others that clearly have progressive influences but don't quite make the cut as "truly" progressive.

I think we are all smart enough and mature enough to know how far we could take such a category without going down that "slippery slope" that everyone is worried about.  For example, neither The Who nor Zep would qualify since, although they both had songs with "progressive sensibilities," they clearly did not write their music from a consciously and deliberately "progressive" approach.  A few songs - Kashmir, Achilles Last Stand, No Quarter, and a handful of others (or Baba O'Riley and a few others) - do not a progressive group make.  The Who clearly approached their writing from a rock-and-roll perspective, and Zep approached their writing from a blues-rock perspective.  Neither was "consciously" progressive, and thus would not qualify as such.

These are just some personal thoughts on the matter.

Peace.



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 06:16
Originally posted by maani maani wrote:

 (and XTC, and a few others). 

 

Maani beware.

 XTC like Police, Squeeze and the Stranglers are products of the UK punk and post-punk period - Making Plans For Nigel is a punk classic. Sure, Police's roots are directly  back to prog rock. XTC (Andy Partridge in particular) are firm psychedelic fans (as Dukes Of the Stratosphere demonstrate) - but I hear in XTC similarities to Stackridge (maybe its the two bands coming from about the same part of England that does it). [And the Stranglers were relatively geriatric (cf. Sex Pistols) when they started - how do you rate Hugh Cornwall/Robert Williams Nosferatu , which with a slight stretch of the imagination could be called a 'Stranglers meet the Magic Band' LP?]

10cc were a marvellous group of like-thinking Manchester-based pop composers - look at the hits notched up for the Hollies and the Yardbirds. However, when one or two tracks that are proggie in structure, amongst  8 superior pop tunes, don't make the band out and out progressive rockers. Again Progarchives seem to be very loose (to the point of losing it) with the definitions. With due consideration, including bands like Wishbone Ash, Spooky Tooth etc., Progarchives should have a review section in which  specific tracks by non-prog bands are nominated (by providing good reason). A couple albums with a couple of tracks by a band should not be good enough reason for complete inclusion here - else we open Porgarchives to every band that ever existed!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 06:19

Originally posted by kingofbizzare kingofbizzare wrote:

Also, I just listened to 'Moontan' by Golden Earring, and that is an extremely progressive album, and I would classify them as progressive from just that album (although I have never heard any of their other stuff so I may be wrong).

 

I've always heard Moontan as a straight rock album - prog rock no. It seems there is a subtle difference  as to where different prog fans put the boundary between the two forms of rock.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 07:40

I agreed with you, maani, except for includind Queen here.

Their uniques art-rock albums are Queen II and A Night of the Opera. What else? Maybe Innuendo (song, not album), Somebody to love or other song.

Queen released more or less 20 albums, right? They are like The Who with their Tommy, Who's Next and Quadrophenia.

What do you think?

 

Let the sunshine in
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 08:11

I remember a review that described 10cc as "A diamond in the viscous pap of bubble-gum that is contemporary pop music". So true.

I think "Sheet Music", "Original Soundtrack" and "How Dare You?" are excellent albums with lot of prog moments.

I kind of lost my interest after the split in 1977 when Kevin Godley and Lol Creme started their own duo and Graham Gouldman and Eric Stewart carried on as 10cc.

Codley & Creme's albums are even more progressive than the original 10cc.

Especially the first three:

  • Consequences (1977)
  • L (1978)
  • Freeze Frame (1979)


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 08:22
Originally posted by Mategra Mategra wrote:

 

Godley & Creme's albums are even more progressive than the original 10cc.

Especially the first three:

  • Consequences (1977)
  • L (1978)
  • Freeze Frame (1979)

 

But perhaps their biggest hit was Cry - a good soul tune, tied up with a brilliant innovation pop video.

The compilation album Changing Faces:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000074EE/qid=1116 418536/sr=1-7/ref=sr_1_11_7/026-4013407-5278830

 covering the popular tunes/single from 10cc and G&C, has relatively few prog tunes.  G&C's History Mix:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000070IV/qid=1116 418536/sr=1-9/ref=sr_1_11_9/026-4013407-5278830

cover little (however, recommended) of the same territory, but they had mixed several of their tunes together with added drum'n'bass, in a disco style prevalent at the time - shifting away from true prog rock structuring.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 08:38

I think the hardest part is that most, if not all, of the people that would qualify did music that is all over the musical map.  Take someone like Kate Bush or Jane Sieberry.  Both have done work that is straight up prog, but also straight up pop, straight up rock......Sieberry is doing jazz torch songs now hehehe.  Then you have someone like Todd R who would be the king of pop-prog in my book.  Sure his roots are R&B and Rock, but if you can name anything more progressive rock than the albums Todd and Wizard True Star, plus almost every single album breaks off for a little progism between or around the pop/rock/r&b tunes.

I agree with Maani about bands like Supertramp and Styx being on the site.  Also, I would add Rush and a few of the other rock bands.  I like them, but I still can't see how you classify them as prog.  The metal bands here are a joke.  The only difference between them and the guys not on this site are keyboards and maybe extending the songs a bit in length.

The only argument I would have for Klatuu is that a few songs on the first record and Hope are extremely prog.  Hope is one of my all time favorite records and is total prog in my book.  But, most of the rest of their stuff sucks and is the worst kind of pop rock twaddle.  That brings back the issue of how much prog stuff do you have to do before you are prog.

How about someone like They Might Be Giants?  Does ironic pop parody count as prog? 



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 09:51
My Parents like 10cc and I dont mind them either, I feel that "I'm Not in Love" has lots of Prog elements and so does "I'm Mandy Fly Me".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 09:56

I think Maani's idea would work if "progressive pop" genre was added bands like Queen, 10cc could be added then on.

 

Could even put PHIL COLLINS in as well then, Im kidding!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 10:16

I tend to agree with Dick, but I could live with Queen, 10CC and others in a category with Supertramp as pop-prog.

XTC though,  I do have a problem with them being here for the same reasons Dick mentioned.

Before XTC, I would (wishful thinking , of course) like to see Spirit, Jefferson Airplane, the Doors , Love etc..... on the very same grounds that 10CC made intelligent rock songs adventurous enough in spirit to qualify foir the site.

And we have still two major bands definitely worthy of inclusion still absent: Nucleus and Family

Those should be top priority.

let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter
keep our sand-castle virtues
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as well as a thinker,
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 10:27
Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:

still absent: Nucleus and Family

Those should be top priority.

 

Nucleus yes, for virtual of the same reasons Soft Machine are here - although Ian Carr was a free jazzer in the 60's while Soft Machine started in the mid 60's as a pop-soul group, progressing by producing some unique psychedelia, to some of the earliest prog to jazz rock fusion. Then there was a lsignificant amount of  transfusion of players from Nucleus to Soft Machine.

 

But Family??????? The early Rick Grech period maybe although the label 'post British psychedelia' fits just as well, e.g. Dolls House. But after Grech's departure to Blind Faith and so on, Chapman-Whitney developed Leicester's finest into a great hard nose rock band - and again here is an example of a band who released albums with  a few proggie tunes, but a majority of straight rock numbers - and some of these ended up in single charts. Alas they didn't break the USA - why when so many inferior bands did?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 10:33

Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

so on, Chapman-Whitney developed Leicester's finest into a great hard nose rock band - and again here is an example of a band who released albums with  a few proggie tunes, but a majority of straight rock numbers - and some of these ended up in single charts. Alas they didn't break the USA - why when so many inferior bands did?

My guess is exposure.  I first heard them AFTER they were defuncted and I was an obscure music junkey in the 70s.  I can't remember ever hearing one of their songs on the radio even on the college stations.  And, I don't recall ever seeing any mention of them doing concerts in the bay area.  Without that kind of even minimal exposure they had ZERO chance over here.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 14:48

Spot on with your first post on this page Dick (or may I call you DrJazzRockWink).

So Maani, you have doubts about Supertramp’s prog credentials? You should have said so before!LOL

I can understand why you do so, if you are basing your judgment on their later albums. I would however contend once again that "Crime of the century" is a masterpiece of prog and that their albums before that were of the prog genre. I ask again, have you heard those albums?

On this topic of 10CC in general, I don’t accept the logic that because a band was influenced by another, they are necessarily of the same genre. The Beatles clearly had a major influence on Spock’s Beard, but they are totally different bands. Neither do I accept the weary argument that "if band X is here, then so should band Y be". Each band should be judged on its own merits.

In the case of 10CC, I would argue that they did not make any albums which could be considered to be completely prog (the stated key requirement of the site), nor did they make many individual tracks which might be considered to even be pop-prog. It’s not about whether we like them or not (I like them a lot), it’s only about the type of music they made. They were a very clever group, who made educated pop with strong melodies and well written lyrics. Their albums are however devoid of any notable instrumental work, with even their rare longer tracks such as "One night in Paris" being in reality three pop based vocal songs joined together. The rare instrumentals 10CC have produced (I can only think of "How dare you" off hand) are very basic. I would suggest (and perhaps this is a topic for a new thread) that instrumental passages are core part of what makes a band prog.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 18 2005 at 17:33

Easy Livin:

This is one debate I will "join," since it is probably my single biggest bugaboo with this site.  As an aside,  I own every Supertramp album and every 10CC album, so this is an issue I feel eminently qualified to debate.

Can you explain to me what makes Crime of the Century "progressive?"  I think you are giving too much credit to the fact that it is a "concept" album, rather than to whether the music is prog or not.

For example, what makes "Hide in Your Shell" - my favorite song on COTC, and arguably one of the two most "prog" on it - more "prog" than "One Night in Paris," my favorite song on Original Soundtrack?  I'm talking about musically, instrumentally, arrangement, production, etc.  For my money, they are about equal.  But HIYS is certainly no more prog than ONIP.

Similarly, what makes the title song on COTC - the other one with the most "prog" elements - more "prog" than "Brand New Day," or even "Flying Junk?"  Again, I'm talking musically, intrsumentally, etc.

Finally, I would say that "I'm Not in Love" (the hit from Original Soundtrack) is miles beyond "Dreamer" (the hit from COTC), which is a fairly basic pop hit.

Ultimately, I doubt seriously that you could make a cogent argument in this regard - at least one that would support Supertramp at the expense of 10CC.  Indeed, my guess is that you would only end up proving my point: that either both groups are equally "prog" (if "prog" they are at all), or both groups are not prog.  But it is absurd - from a musical point of view - to argue that Supertramp is prog and 10CC is not.

Peace.

P.S.  And I have not even begun to discuss How Dare You, with songs like I Wanna Rule The World, I'M Mandy Fly Me, Iceberg and Don't Hang Up - all of which are so far beyond anything Supertramp wrote (vis-a-vis prog-ness) that it is almost ludicrous to discuss it.



Edited by maani
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