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Ivan_Melgar_M View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Jazz Fusion or Jazz Prog Fusion
    Posted: August 22 2008 at 09:57
This is a doubt I always had and would love some expert in the issue to explain me.
 
 
Is it enough for a band to have blend Jazz and Rock in order to be added to Prog Archives or do we need the band to blend Jazz, Rock and Prog Elements like Mahavishnu or Jean Luc Ponty for example?
 
If the first case, then we should modify our addition policy and add for example Dylan and Steelee Span to Folk, despite they don't have a single Prog element, because they already blended Folk and Rock.
 
I honestly believe we are going too far with our desire to add some Jazz-Rock artists when they should have somethinhg more to be considered Prog.....But I leave this to the experts, because I'm not one of them.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 12:10
'Jazz rock' has always been about the fusion of 'jazz' elements and 'rock' elements into the hybrid. 'Progressive music' was originally the fusion of 'rock' with any one or more types of music, in the 60's often for the first time - whether folk, jazz, classical (here  including either use of classical compositions or classical music structures to a new composition), folk, various world (folk) musics, etc.  In other words 'jazz rock 'was both a sub-division of 'progressive music' and 'jazz'. . Around 1970 there was a parting of the ways of 'progressive music', into the more familar commonplace 'progressive rock', 'folk rock', 'heavy rock', etc. - and certainly MO, RTF, WR released albums afterwards which still retained creditability as 'progressive rock'. To a large extent is is the slow loss of much and often all of the rock elements, (apart from the element of amplification) moved 'jazz rock' into 'jazz fusion' (to added confusion since 'jazz rock' was literally a fusion of genres...... hence the better term  'jazz-rock-fusion') . But then a lot of Soft Machine's recording catalogue into the 70's has less rock than most other examples of the "'jazz-rock' fraternity.... (BTW I'm remain confused as to where 'Art -Rock' fits in here???)
 
I think see where you're coming from Ivan, but I am sticking with the 60's original useage of 'jazz rock', rather the useage corrupted by the rethink of what/who defined 'progressive rock' circa 1972-3, when the big players were becoming established, e.g. Yes, KC, GG, Genesis, VdGG, and definitions got really narrowed down. Hence, I'm looking/listening for a  fusion of jazz and rock, not more specifically jazz and progressive rock. One problem is many of the jazz rock musicians shifted into jazz-fusion sans rock late 70's early 80's to retain their jazz creditials - and we are stuck with that policy: the complete discography - which means very strangely Kind Of Blue greets you on the opening page to this site this week????????????????????????????????????????????????? Fortunately we have had musicians whohaven't bowed down to fashions, and jazz rock has continued to progress to this very day. BTW I would feel very unhappy if prog fusion became dominant, since since too often this is no more than instrumental progressive rock, lacking jazz..
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 12:16
Edit : Not all jazz fusion is progressive, I've been playing and listening to jazz fusion since the stuff was invented. In the 'business' we call lame fusion 'fuzak' after the background music company muzak.

Herbie and Miles are excellent examples of progressive jazz fusion. All that commercial crap that came out in the late 70s early 80s is a good example of fuzak.

Thank goodness for the Knitting Factory scene (John Zorn, Steve Coleman etc) in the mid-80s which reintroduced progressive jazz fusion.

Edited by Easy Money - August 23 2008 at 09:13
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 12:31
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

'Jazz rock' has always been about the fusion of 'jazz' elements and 'rock' elements into the hybrid. 'Progressive music' was originally the fusion of 'rock' with any one or more types of music, in the 60's often for the first time - whether folk, jazz, classical (here  including either use of classical compositions or classical music structures to a new composition), folk, various world (folk) musics, etc.  In other words 'jazz rock 'was both a sub-division of 'progressive music' and 'jazz'. . Around 1970 there was a parting of the ways of 'progressive music', into the more familar commonplace 'progressive rock', 'folk rock', 'heavy rock', etc. - and certainly MO, RTF, WR released albums afterwards which still retained creditability as 'progressive rock'. To a large extent is is the slow loss of much and often all of the rock elements, (apart from the element of amplification) moved 'jazz rock' into 'jazz fusion' (to added confusion since 'jazz rock' was literally a fusion of genres...... hence the better term  'jazz-rock-fusion') . But then a lot of Soft Machine's recording catalogue into the 70's has less rock than most other examples of the "'jazz-rock' fraternity.... (BTW I'm remain confused as to where 'Art -Rock' fits in here???)
 
Until there I follow you Dick, that's what I thought, as a fact as few know I'm a fan of Jazz and Fusion since I inherited my whole gradfather's Jazz and Fusion collection when he died in 1981, more than 300 original LP's.
 
I remember all then problems I had to add Jean Luc Ponty to the Archives about two years ago, but I believe his post Mahavishnu works are 100% Prog.
 
 
I think see where you're coming from Ivan, but I am sticking with the 60's original useage of 'jazz rock', rather the useage corrupted by the rethink of what/who defined 'progressive rock' circa 1972-3, when the big players were becoming established, e.g. Yes, KC, GG, Genesis, VdGG, and definitions got really narrowed down. Hence, I'm looking/listening for a  fusion of jazz and rock, not more specifically jazz and progressive rock. One problem is many of the jazz rock musicians shifted into jazz-fusion sans rock late 70's early 80's to retain their jazz creditials - and we are stuck with that policy: the complete discography - which means very strangely Kind Of Blue greets you on the opening page to this site this week????????????????????????????????????????????????? Fortunately we have had musicians whohaven't bowed down to fashions, and jazz rock has continued to progress to this very day. BTW I would feel very unhappy if prog fusion became dominant, since since too often this is no more than instrumental progressive rock, lacking jazz..
 
 
But my main question (which you obviously get) is:
 
  1. Is it enough for a Jazz band to blend Jazz and Rock to be here?
  2. Do we need a special and additional Prog element to add a band-

Iván

 
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 12:37
In the 70s and 80s, there was never any talk of including jazz fusion or jazz rock under the prog umbrella.
Could it be that prog should actually be included under the jazz rock umbrella ? Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 12:43
Originally posted by mr70s mr70s wrote:

In the 70s and 80s, there was never any talk of including jazz fusion or jazz rock under the prog umbrella.
Could it be that prog should actually be included under the jazz rock umbrella ? Smile
 
Well, as long as I remember, Mahavishnu was always considered a Prog band.
 
I know all of this is technicall, maybe we should work the forum in three separete fields as Proggnosis:
 
  1. Progressive Rock
  2. Progressive Metal
  3. Progressive Jazz Fusion.

Each one with it's related and Proto categories, because as I see, in the actual way it's not working.

Iván
 
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 13:01
Originally posted by mr70s mr70s wrote:

In the 70s and 80s, there was never any talk of including jazz fusion or jazz rock under the prog umbrella.
Could it be that prog should actually be included under the jazz rock umbrella ? Smile


Speaking as someone who became a fan of prog in the late '70's all of the following top albums from the '70's were considered prog in my circle of prog loving friends. 

4.47
MAHAVISHNU ORCHESTRA
Birds of Fire
(1973)    
4.50
DI MEOLA, AL
Elegant Gypsy
(1977)    
4.45
BRUFORD, BILL
One of a Kind
(1979)    
4.45
SANTANA
Caravanserai
(1972)
4.32
MAHAVISHNU ORCHESTRA
Inner Mounting Flame
(1971)
4.53
RETURN TO FOREVER
Hymn of the Seventh Galaxy
(1973)    
4.48
COBHAM, BILLY
Spectrum
(1973)    
4.52
PONTY, JEAN-LUC
Enigmatic Ocean
(1977)    
4.39
RETURN TO FOREVER
Romantic Warrior
(1976)    
4.25
BRAND X
Unorthodox Behaviour
(1976)

Looking at the list, they all do have plenty of rock elements in them.  Frankly I don't mind if a little jazz sneaks its way into this site.  Balances out the metal. 

Uh-oh, someone just reviewed Someday My Prince Will Come.  There goes the neighborhood. Tongue


Edited by Slartibartfast - August 22 2008 at 13:02
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: August 22 2008 at 13:19
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

 
Well, as long as I remember, Mahavishnu was always considered a Prog band.
 
I know all of this is technicall, maybe we should work the forum in three separete fields as Proggnosis:
 
  1. Progressive Rock
  2. Progressive Metal
  3. Progressive Jazz Fusion.

Each one with it's related and Proto categories, because as I see, in the actual way it's not working.

Iván
 


Clap This is also what I always thought ... I also see these three major categories. *Maybe* Avant-Garde would make sense as a 4th major category.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 13:33
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

'Jazz rock' has always been about the fusion of 'jazz' elements and 'rock' elements into the hybrid. 'Progressive music' was originally the fusion of 'rock' with any one or more types of music, in the 60's often for the first time - whether folk, jazz, classical (here  including either use of classical compositions or classical music structures to a new composition), folk, various world (folk) musics, etc.  In other words 'jazz rock 'was both a sub-division of 'progressive music' and 'jazz'. . Around 1970 there was a parting of the ways of 'progressive music', into the more familar commonplace 'progressive rock', 'folk rock', 'heavy rock', etc. - and certainly MO, RTF, WR released albums afterwards which still retained creditability as 'progressive rock'. To a large extent is is the slow loss of much and often all of the rock elements, (apart from the element of amplification) moved 'jazz rock' into 'jazz fusion' (to added confusion since 'jazz rock' was literally a fusion of genres...... hence the better term  'jazz-rock-fusion') . But then a lot of Soft Machine's recording catalogue into the 70's has less rock than most other examples of the "'jazz-rock' fraternity.... (BTW I'm remain confused as to where 'Art -Rock' fits in here???)
 
Until there I follow you Dick, that's what I thought, as a fact as few know I'm a fan of Jazz and Fusion since I inherited my whole gradfather's Jazz and Fusion collection when he died in 1981, more than 300 original LP's.
 
I remember all then problems I had to add Jean Luc Ponty to the Archives about two years ago, but I believe his post Mahavishnu works are 100% Prog.
 
 
I think see where you're coming from Ivan, but I am sticking with the 60's original useage of 'jazz rock', rather the useage corrupted by the rethink of what/who defined 'progressive rock' circa 1972-3, when the big players were becoming established, e.g. Yes, KC, GG, Genesis, VdGG, and definitions got really narrowed down. Hence, I'm looking/listening for a  fusion of jazz and rock, not more specifically jazz and progressive rock. One problem is many of the jazz rock musicians shifted into jazz-fusion sans rock late 70's early 80's to retain their jazz creditials - and we are stuck with that policy: the complete discography - which means very strangely Kind Of Blue greets you on the opening page to this site this week????????????????????????????????????????????????? Fortunately we have had musicians whohaven't bowed down to fashions, and jazz rock has continued to progress to this very day. BTW I would feel very unhappy if prog fusion became dominant, since since too often this is no more than instrumental progressive rock, lacking jazz..
 
 
But my main question (which you obviously get) is:
 
  1. Is it enough for a Jazz band to blend Jazz and Rock to be here? No of course not. I know of a hundred jazz-rock bands/artists who I havent even bothered trying to add here since the prog element is somewhat lacking, or there isnt enough of it. Miles Davis and Herbie Hancock, i feel, have these elements (whatever you want to call them). I also think there's a couple of JR bands who shouldnt be here or should be in different place. Not to mention Davis and Hancock were big parts in the progressive music movement of 1969-1974.
  2. Do we need a special and additional Prog element to add a band-

Iván

 


also, i dont particularly like the idea of the jazz-rock/fusion genre being split up. there would be so much arguing because it is such a varied genre. also having 'prog-jazz' and 'jazz-rock/fusion' might cause newbies to only check out prog-jazz and not the other, which probably would include prog jazz bands anyway. I also agree with whoever said prog-jazz is nothing more than instrumental progressive rock without the jazz. there are a few culprits on this site (not whole discographies, just an album or 2)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 13:45
Although I understand the gravity of such distinctions, I believe the more urgent question is whether it's jazz-blues or blues-jazz.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 13:46
Personally I  think in a confused and accidentally  way we have come out with a good compromise, affected by the policy limitations of this site. Jazz rock fusion might be bent and buckled to fit mnay variations of terminology but it is functional and it isn't broke. So let's not trying fixing, until some majority thinking and refurbishment is done to the whole of the site.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 17:46
jazz is like a shape shifter. It can become anything it want to. It can blend in with your favorite music genre. Metal, rock, world music, funk, rap, hip hop, folk, pop, and so many others can be under the disguise of jazz and vise-versa. this may be why there has been a lot of debate about recent Jazz-rock/fusion additions and possible additions.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 18:22
John Scofield is a jazz-rock/fusion artists. Been making jazz-rock since the 70s. Same with a guy like Mike Stern. But would they make more sense to be added to this site if we split the genre up? i think so. Right now they wouldnt make sense because they are not necessarily prog. And they both played with Miles Davis, but it would be ridiculous to add them as 'prog-related', since they are jazz musicians.

my point is, is that if the genre was split up, i think a lot more non-prog jazz-rock/fusion bands and artists would be able to be added because the 'jazz-fusion' section would be open for basically anyone who made any kind of jazz-fusion, prog or not. the 'prog-jazz-rock' section would actually be more strict on who gets in, because a certain kind of standard is set for that sub-section.

The way it works right now is fine IMO because bands and artists can get in, as long as there are some criteria met.

This happened to the prog metal section and the site is now flooded with IMO too many non-prog metal bands. It seems any metal band with a lot of technical skills and 'epic' songwriting can get in.

If this happens to the jazz-rock section, any jazz artist or band that uses an electric piano, and a rock beat would be able to get in.

you dont see John Scofield, Mike Stern, Jaco Pastorius, Herbie Mann, Steve Jenkins, George Duke, Scott Henderson (Tribal Tech), George Benson, Joe Farrell, and many more who made many excellent jazz-rock recordings, on this site. But they ARE jazz-rock artists. And some played with bands or artists who ARE here. But their music does not really have many 'prog' elements.

But if the split were to happen, you will easily see most (if not all) of these artists added, and this will give rise to even MORE arguing and disagreements. I would love to see one or 2 of those guys I mentioned added, but I know there would not be enough support.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 18:40
Originally posted by darkshade darkshade wrote:

John Scofield is a jazz-rock/fusion artists. Been making jazz-rock since the 70s. Same with a guy like Mike Stern. But would they make more sense to be added to this site if we split the genre up? i think so. Right now they wouldnt make sense because they are not necessarily prog. And they both played with Miles Davis, but it would be ridiculous to add them as 'prog-related', since they are jazz musicians.

my point is, is that if the genre was split up, i think a lot more non-prog jazz-rock/fusion bands and artists would be able to be added because the 'jazz-fusion' section would be open for basically anyone who made any kind of jazz-fusion, prog or not. the 'prog-jazz-rock' section would actually be more strict on who gets in, because a certain kind of standard is set for that sub-section.

The way it works right now is fine IMO because bands and artists can get in, as long as there are some criteria met.

This happened to the prog metal section and the site is now flooded with IMO too many non-prog metal bands. It seems any metal band with a lot of technical skills and 'epic' songwriting can get in.

If this happens to the jazz-rock section, any jazz artist or band that uses an electric piano, and a rock beat would be able to get in.

you dont see John Scofield, Mike Stern, Jaco Pastorius, Herbie Mann, Steve Jenkins, George Duke, Scott Henderson (Tribal Tech), George Benson, Joe Farrell, and many more who made many excellent jazz-rock recordings, on this site. But they ARE jazz-rock artists. And some played with bands or artists who ARE here. But their music does not really have many 'prog' elements.

But if the split were to happen, you will easily see most (if not all) of these artists added, and this will give rise to even MORE arguing and disagreements. I would love to see one or 2 of those guys I mentioned added, but I know there would not be enough support.


exactly...  the way it works now is fine... the site has a lot of knowledgeable people who know the distinction...  think it is no coincidence that those who know jazz best... and know those subtle distinctions.. are the ones spearheading the current wave of J-R additions and proposals and not bitching about it hahha.. and note.. not one so far has been rejected since this wave was unleashed with the addition of Davis by the ultimate rear-guard in all this....  the sites two experts par excellence... Martin and Richard.  All the additions.. and so far all the proposals.. have been excellent ones.. and one's within the scope of the site.  Well done everyone...

ClapClap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 18:45
I don't like where this is heading.

Let me try to rephrase Iván's question:

"Is all of Jazz-Fusion Prog?"

I don't think so. Imagine that the prog metal team would say: All technical Thrash/Death metal is prog. I don't think this is a sane thing to do, and neither is to include all Jazz Fusion or Jazz-Rock. Just my two cents ... since I'm still a newbie when it comes to Jazz-Fusion, feel free to ignore this post, but maybe some of you might agree.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 18:52
what kind of answer are you looking for... this is just a creative way to bitch about Miles Davis or a direction you don't like isn't it..

the answer is a simple one

no...  all fusion is not prog... that is what we have genre teams for.. they evaluate the music on it's merits.. and decide if it belongs on the site or not. 

you should know that.... is all complex metal prog?   Ask Ivan... is all symphonic rock prog?  We all evaluate it.. based on our notion of the sub.. and prog. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 18:53
^ So you agree with my statement? (not all Jazz-Fusion is prog)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 18:56
read the last post in the HH thread... of course I agree... but note... I am not an official member of that team... I only propose.. they dispose.  My opinion is irrelevant. I trust the team to decide what is best for the site... just as I do with you and PM addtions.  I do hope that trust is mutual on your end.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 19:55
Shame about the jazz rock fusion artists John Scofield and Mike Stern not quite fitting in the jazz rock fusion category.....Similarly, while Return To Forever slots in neatly, Bill Connors gets left out in the cold.

Edited by mr70s - August 22 2008 at 20:00
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2008 at 20:37
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

I don't like where this is heading.

Let me try to rephrase Iván's question:

"Is all of Jazz-Fusion Prog?"

I don't think so. Imagine that the prog metal team would say: All technical Thrash/Death metal is prog. I don't think this is a sane thing to do, and neither is to include all Jazz Fusion or Jazz-Rock. Just my two cents ... since I'm still a newbie when it comes to Jazz-Fusion, feel free to ignore this post, but maybe some of you might agree.


i said that in my earlier post not all jazz-rock/fusion is prog. but all the non-prog ones would be added if the genre was split the way Ivan described. And i meant no offense to what I said about the prog metal split, but it's true.





Originally posted by mr70s mr70s wrote:

Shame about the jazz rock fusion artists John Scofield and Mike Stern not quite fitting in the jazz rock fusion category.....Similarly, while Return To Forever slots in neatly, Bill Connors gets left out in the cold.


all those artists could technically be added under prog-related, because they are. But it wouldn't quite make sense because they would be under jazz-rock if not for the fact that this is a prog rock site. They all have a few prog songs, but i dont think that's enough to be added, unless im mistaken??Wink
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