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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 06:38
Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:

 
I would like to hear some great non-Western music if you have any in particular to recommend!  

As an Indian deeply interested in both Indian and Western music, fusion done right is something that really excites me.  Prasanna, the Indian guitarist, made a great album with Victor Wooten called Be The Change.  Some of the best I have heard in years. I would also suggest Ilayaraja's How To Name It, a brilliant fusion of Carnatic and Western classical music with nods to jazz/funk.  To me, the master of fusion. His film soundtracks are often superlative, but the language and rendering may be too much to handle first up for an unaccustomed listener so would recommend initiation through How To Name It, which is instrumental, barring some vocalised (sans words) sections. 


Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:

 I suppose. But combinations in that vein can sometimes make something that sounds new - not massively innovative, but still good.  

Well, it is a matter of degree.  I personally do not find very obvious influences, even if from different bands, very interesting.  I think it is very important to disguise your influences since doing so is essentially to find a new context for it.  It may sound like nothing more than a sleight of hand when I put it down in words but it makes a hell lot of difference to my listening experience when the influences are well disguised and the final output sounds quite like nothing I've heard before, even if I am able to place its genre.   Cliche is probably the right word for what I've described as a problem here. Everything under the sun may have been done one way or the other but there are always different ways to do it and I like those bands who at least attempt to find their own way. I mentioned OK Computer earlier. That is actually an album with a lot of 70s influence but generally used in a refreshingly different way, resulting in a different and fresh experience.  I cannot really say that about whatever Flower Kings I've heard, more or less every songwriting choice is exactly the way I would have expected, predictable and derivative to the core.  I don't necessarily expect the next Can or Magma when the word progressive is used to describe a band, but stuff like Karnataka (of Rachel Cohen days and not the new album) I cannot honestly say is any more interesting than run of the mill mainstream pop/rock.    


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 07:02
Just because an artist makes music similar to "classic" prog doesn't make it not prog.  Of course I've probably repeated what has already been expressed by others in this thread already, so my opinion is not as good as theirs and not valid even though I may have expressed this opinion differently.
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: April 22 2011 at 07:06
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

As an Indian deeply interested in both Indian and Western music, fusion done right is something that really excites me.  Prasanna, the Indian guitarist, made a great album with Victor Wooten called Be The Change.  Some of the best I have heard in years. I would also suggest Ilayaraja's How To Name It, a brilliant fusion of Carnatic and Western classical music with nods to jazz/funk.  To me, the master of fusion. His film soundtracks are often superlative, but the language and rendering may be too much to handle first up for an unaccustomed listener so would recommend initiation through How To Name It, which is instrumental, barring some vocalised (sans words) sections.
 

Cool! I'll be sure to check these out!

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Well, it is a matter of degree.  I personally do not find very obvious influences, even if from different bands, very interesting.  I think it is very important to disguise your influences since doing so is essentially to find a new context for it.  It may sound like nothing more than a sleight of hand when I put it down in words but it makes a hell lot of difference to my listening experience when the influences are well disguised and the final output sounds quite like nothing I've heard before, even if I am able to place its genre.   Cliche is probably the right word for what I've described as a problem here. Everything under the sun may have been done one way or the other but there are always different ways to do it and I like those bands who at least attempt to find their own way. I mentioned OK Computer earlier. That is actually an album with a lot of 70s influence but generally used in a refreshingly different way, resulting in a different and fresh experience.  I cannot really say that about whatever Flower Kings I've heard, more or less every songwriting choice is exactly the way I would have expected, predictable and derivative to the core.  I don't necessarily expect the next Can or Magma when the word progressive is used to describe a band, but stuff like Karnataka (of Rachel Cohen days and not the new album) I cannot honestly say is any more interesting than run of the mill mainstream pop/rock.

I guess this makes sense, but when I listen to the Flower Kings, I don't really hear cliches and can't predict the songwriting all that much. Just sounds good to me (well, except a lot of Flower King's songs are similar to other Flower King's songs...). Usually when I listen to bands, I don't hear much influence unless it's painfully obvious. It just kind of annoys me when people say Big Big Train are Genesis ripoffs (which I don't hear at all) or that (insert any progressive metal band here) are Dream Theater ripoffs.


Edited by Nathaniel607 - April 22 2011 at 07:13
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 07:12
Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:

 
I guess this makes sense, but when I listen to the Flower Kings, I don't really hear cliches and can't predict the songwriting all that much. Just sounds good to me (well, except a lot of Flower King's songs are similar to other Flower King's songs...). Usually when I listen to bands, I don't hear much influence unless it's painfully obvious. It just kind of annoys me when people say Big Big Train are Genesis ripoffs (which I don't hear at all) or that (insert any progressive metal band here) are Dream Theater ripoffs.


 

I have heard very little of Big Big Train. It didn't strike me as too much of a Genesis rip off (maybe I simply haven't heard those songs which do evoke Genesis a lot, I don't know) but remember that Marillion are often called Genesis rip offs when Rush and Pink Floyd were arguably more significant influences on their songwriting.  I think people tend to call anything with a lot of keyboard arpeggios Genesis ripoffs.   


Edited by rogerthat - April 22 2011 at 07:20
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 07:14
Originally posted by Textbook Textbook wrote:

You know the albums/bands around here where people say in the reviews "This doesn't really sound like much else I've ever heard"?
 
(One example is Cardiacs and their monstrous Sing To God double album, where that remark or something like it becomes something of a catchphrase.)
 
When that happens, you're listening to progressive music.
 
If rattling off a list of established prog acts adequately conveys your impression of a band, you're listening to karaoke.
C'mon, that would make any emergent style of music "progressive music"; that would make the first song of any music style "progressive music" and the second song "karaoke". You appear to have ruined you own argument for the sake of a cheap jibe.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 07:29
I thought we've been over the whole "progressive" vs. "prog rock" thing many times.  Apparently not.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 07:32
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Textbook Textbook wrote:

You know the albums/bands around here where people say in the reviews "This doesn't really sound like much else I've ever heard"?
 
(One example is Cardiacs and their monstrous Sing To God double album, where that remark or something like it becomes something of a catchphrase.)
 
When that happens, you're listening to progressive music.
 
If rattling off a list of established prog acts adequately conveys your impression of a band, you're listening to karaoke.
C'mon, that would make any emergent style of music "progressive music"; that would make the first song of any music style "progressive music" and the second song "karaoke". You appear to have ruined you own argument for the sake of a cheap jibe.
 


I completely agree with Dean here. It appears some people think that "Prog Rock" is the one and only "home" of all innovative and progressive rock music.
It's just a style of music and that's it.
Lots of innovative rock music is not Prog at all, but listens to multiple names such as indie, new wave, techno, and so on and so on.
Just pick up a Wire magazine and you will be struck by the massive amounts of new music there that has nothing ado with Prog.





Edited by Bonnek - April 22 2011 at 07:33
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 08:23
Dean: Well maybe I did go a bit too far but really I'm just being reactionary against what I see as a deeply entrenched fuddy duddy musical taste here, on a site that should by definition be anything but fuddy duddy.
 
PS Add Glenn Branca already.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 08:54
I think we all love music, we're adventurous listeners in that we love hearing and finding out about music that we had not heard or known of before. I doubt if any participant of this thread--or member of PA--listens to--and has listened to--only "prog." I love music by Telemann and Brahms, Newcleus and early Run-DMC, soul/R&B from the 1971-74, some Dwight Yoakum and Barbra Streisand, try to comprehend Astor Piazzollo and Django Reinhardt, enjoy all periods of Jane Siberry and kd lang, am blown away by Hans Zimmer soundtracks, love to try to keep up with Mickey Hart, John McLaughlin, Bill Bruford and now John Zorn and Tobey Driver, laugh at Cake and Primus, Zappa and Clutch. And I could go on and on and on--as most of us could.

I love music:  interesting, emotional, even challenging or "new" (to me) music. I think we all do here at PA. Most of all I think we all love to study, deconstruct, try to compare and contrast, assimilate and accommodate music. Especially with or through others. We're trying to share, as social beings we are, our personal experiences with the psycho-spiritual experience that music, rhythm and sound provide to we who are more sensitive or attuned to it. Maybe we're all wannabe musicologists. Maybe music is our mystical connection to our infinite spirits. "We are spirits in the material world." Maybe we're just addicts. Maybe we're just scared sh*tless of the real world and find escape and outlet of our angst through music. It's all good!
  
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https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 09:12
Originally posted by Textbook Textbook wrote:

Dean: Well maybe I did go a bit too far but really I'm just being reactionary against what I see as a deeply entrenched fuddy duddy musical taste here, on a site that should by definition be anything but fuddy duddy.
 
PS Add Glenn Branca already.
 
have you any experience with the post punk/new wave/industrial metal/alternative metal/gothic punk band Killing Joke, they are a constanly changing band, and have some relation with New Zealand as well
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 09:55
Originally posted by Textbook Textbook wrote:

Dean: Well maybe I did go a bit too far but really I'm just being reactionary against what I see as a deeply entrenched fuddy duddy musical taste here, on a site that should by definition be anything but fuddy duddy.
 
PS Add Glenn Branca already.
I must move in different circles to you (hmmm, tries to avoid thinking "ever-decreasing"... and fails) for I don't see much in the way of fuddy duddy musical taste here when taking the membership as a whole and not concentrating on individuals, who in the main take no part in the additions process except to moan about it after the event. Then generalisations are tricky things because no matter how broad a brush you use to sweep them out of the way, there will always be a undercurrent of thought who believe they are part of some a silent majority who, if not exactly agreeing or disagreeing with any particular idea or ideology, at least support or reject that idea, regardless of how much of actual evidence there is. The simplest observation that we have more here than just the Big Seven, their derivatives and their imitators would suggest to me that the additions process at any rate is far from fuddy or duddy, which would imply that the musical tastes of those who suggested, evaluated, added and reviewed those non-derivative non-imitators was equally ill described. Even using your own example of the Cardiacs, this band was added six years ago in the "first-wave" of bands added to this site, indicating that 'the site' accepted the notion of progressive (adj) and Progressive (n) as two distinct and separate concepts from the get-go.
 
 
As to Glenn Branca, don't know the chap, but a quick cram using the idiot's guide to everything (Wikipedia) makes me think that perhaps avant garde isn't quite the same as Avant Prog in this instance. However, should you wish the ZART team to look into it, then perhaps an informative and knowledgeable thread in Suggest New Bands And Artists would be something you could consider (already).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 10:00
Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:

 
There are only so many notes, you know? Only so many chords. 12 Major, 12 Minor, and about 100 variations (but usually, they don't sound too different). 

You obviously have no music theory background. There are thousands of chords.


Edited by andyman1125 - April 22 2011 at 10:01
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 10:10
Originally posted by andyman1125 andyman1125 wrote:

Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:

 
There are only so many notes, you know? Only so many chords. 12 Major, 12 Minor, and about 100 variations (but usually, they don't sound too different). 

You obviously have no music theory background. There are thousands of chords.


That is definitely not true, at least not in the Western diatonic tradition. There are thousands of ways to voice chords, depending on the range of the instrument, but even allowing for extended harmonies (which are only really I chords imposed with vii chords or ii chords and so on, you're still drawing from the same set of notes, just at different times. Ok, so you can just stack notes around for the sake of making really obscure chords, but these will not be very musically useful--not in the way out ears prefer at least. Same with micro-tonal music.

The best way to be useful in Western music is to make a good melody or delve deep into interesting timbres (re: synthesis and experimenting with various combinations of ethnic instruments). Even if most interesting combinations of chords and progressions have been done already (protip: they have), it's the style in which they're used and the timbres they employ that make it unique.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 10:13
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

As to Glenn Branca, don't know the chap, but a quick cram using the idiot's guide to everything (Wikipedia) makes me think that perhaps avant garde isn't quite the same as Avant Prog in this instance. However, should you wish the ZART team to look into it, then perhaps an informative and knowledgeable thread in Suggest New Bands And Artists would be something you could consider (already).
Addendum: doing a bit more research, apparently Glenn Branca has been approved by Philippe for Krautrock (don't ask - it's too complicated). If you feel up to writing a biography I'm sure someone will add him.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 10:19
So, if you walked into a pub and saw a band playing Genesis, Yes, Rush, Dream Theater, John Wetton, Avenged Sevenfold songs etc, you would walk out? Much rather find another band covering SEX ON FIRE and BORN TO BE WILD and some Bon Jovi eh? For me, such a band would be a breath of fresh air, but I don't suppose its a situation that I'm ever likely to stuble on.
 
Whatever happened to putting a record on and saying you like it?
 
Also, I would personally put COLDPLAY in as a prog' band as their music 'progresses'. Not all of their stuff, but the last two albums deffo' show signs of arrangements that would st alongsdie those of PINK FLOYD, GENESIS, RADIUOHEAD, DREAM THEATER. Prog' rock doesn't have to expand the envelope of what a category contains as far as I'm comcerned. It simply progresses within itself. The tune, the arrangement, whatever. YES is still progressive because that is what the music does. It isn't required that different styles be mashed together to create something 'new' for it to be prog' or anything else. Styles have been combines wholesale by musicians for as long as music has existed. Check out Haydn, Beethoven, Vivaldi. All great proggers!!!
 
A prog' category is there to simply help a person find music they might like. And the categories are getting stupid. There are about 45 or more 'metal' categories. I bet there are more for prog' though, just to prove it's a more 'serious' music form.
 
But then, you talk to the people that write this stuff and to them it's just music.  Their music. And often they hate being put in a box, whether it's marked PROG or not. And you tell a muso his or her music is irrelevent, then I suggest you better have yer Nike's on or at best be prepared to have the piss taken out of you wholesale. Unless of couse you can prove your credentials with an instrument. And if you can, well, you most likely won't be having that discussion because you will 'KNOW'.
 
All this remids me of the TUBES song 'I was a Punk before You were a PUNK'. Ah!! The TUBES. Wgat a great progressive band!!! One of the best prog' gigs I ever saw.
 
"..... I was a prog' before you were a prog!!! You don't beleive me? Then step outside and see me, baby!!!
I was a prog' before you were a prog'. You want some action? I'll put yer ass in traction!!!....."
 
 
Cheers, NOVAK Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 10:31
I recall when the term "Progressive" was introduced, and it was used to described the music that went beyond the boundaries of its genre, bringing influences from other styles, and therefore, it was said the music had "Progressed"  beyond it boundaries. It was not intended to describe a "growth, development or innovation" as the world progressive would suggest. I guess, as many mentioned before, it's an inappropriate term to describe the music.
Ultimately, also as many mentioned before, it's about the music and your personal taste/preferences, so if you like it, who cares what name is given to it, either progressive, regressive or anything else?    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 10:34
The definition of prog being used in the OP is relatively misguided, because it simply equates prog rock with being progressive and innovative. But the simple fact of being rock band in some way is not the most innovative thing to do, given rock's development and relative dominance of popular music over the last 50-60 years.

The problem emerges if one considers the first two waves of Detroit Techno. There was some extraordinarily innovative music coming out of that scene at the time, but referring to it as progressive or including it on this site would be relatively silly, because what holds prog genres together is less an uncompromising attitude towards innovation, rather than a historical accident. Although I say this without denying that the music was certainly innovative. 

The genre of progressive rock as a category is a historical accident and thus it really cannot be reduced to being innovative or some other set of criteria, because what falls under the category generally shares certain characteristics. But there are nearly always exceptions. For instance, if rock instrumentation was viewed as central to prog rock, than progressive electronic would be contradicting. If prog is about innovation while then much Prog Metal, bands emulating classic prog, post rock, and neo-prog would contradict the criteria to be used. Thus the only thing that really holds prog rock together is that we use the term to refer to certain things, and we as prog rock fans understand what falls under that category.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 10:49
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by andyman1125 andyman1125 wrote:

Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:

 
There are only so many notes, you know? Only so many chords. 12 Major, 12 Minor, and about 100 variations (but usually, they don't sound too different). 

You obviously have no music theory background. There are thousands of chords.


That is definitely not true, at least not in the Western diatonic tradition. There are thousands of ways to voice chords, depending on the range of the instrument, but even allowing for extended harmonies (which are only really I chords imposed with vii chords or ii chords and so on, you're still drawing from the same set of notes, just at different times. Ok, so you can just stack notes around for the sake of making really obscure chords, but these will not be very musically useful--not in the way out ears prefer at least. Same with micro-tonal music.

The best way to be useful in Western music is to make a good melody or delve deep into interesting timbres (re: synthesis and experimenting with various combinations of ethnic instruments). Even if most interesting combinations of chords and progressions have been done already (protip: they have), it's the style in which they're used and the timbres they employ that make it unique.

So then hundreds Wink
Variations aside, there are still many more than just 24 chords. Consider,
12 major
12 minor
12 M7
12 m7
12 dom7
12 half dim7
12 dim7
12 M9
12 m9


and I could keep going, and going...

But yes, I admit thousands is a bit of an exaggeration for actual chords. But voicing, yes, there are thousands of variations!
And I completely agree about the timbre and tone of a progression that makes it unique.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 11:04
Originally posted by Novak Novak wrote:

 
But then, you talk to the people that write this stuff and to them it's just music.  Their music. 

I don't believe this. I think there definitely are modern bands who want to be identified with the prog scene and have often tributed older bands on stage.  You don't have to ask me. Read the excerpts from that Wetton interview posted by cstack on the first page of this thread. The man speaks the truth and I really appreciate that he's politically incorrect and candid enough to do so.  If one starts to write music predominantly influenced by classic prog rock bands, it's already a sea change in approach from what classic prog was, even if the musician is not consciously trying to write prog as a genre.  Watered down, so to speak, for want of a better term.    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 22 2011 at 11:10
Originally posted by andyman1125 andyman1125 wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by andyman1125 andyman1125 wrote:

Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:

 
There are only so many notes, you know? Only so many chords. 12 Major, 12 Minor, and about 100 variations (but usually, they don't sound too different). 

You obviously have no music theory background. There are thousands of chords.


That is definitely not true, at least not in the Western diatonic tradition. There are thousands of ways to voice chords, depending on the range of the instrument, but even allowing for extended harmonies (which are only really I chords imposed with vii chords or ii chords and so on, you're still drawing from the same set of notes, just at different times. Ok, so you can just stack notes around for the sake of making really obscure chords, but these will not be very musically useful--not in the way out ears prefer at least. Same with micro-tonal music.

The best way to be useful in Western music is to make a good melody or delve deep into interesting timbres (re: synthesis and experimenting with various combinations of ethnic instruments). Even if most interesting combinations of chords and progressions have been done already (protip: they have), it's the style in which they're used and the timbres they employ that make it unique.

So then hundreds Wink
Variations aside, there are still many more than just 24 chords. Consider,
12 major
12 minor
12 M7
12 m7
12 dom7
12 half dim7
12 dim7
12 M9
12 m9


and I could keep going, and going...

But yes, I admit thousands is a bit of an exaggeration for actual chords. But voicing, yes, there are thousands of variations!
And I completely agree about the timbre and tone of a progression that makes it unique.


I'm not well-versed in music theory.  Here's an interesting article, though, on the issue: http://ezinearticles.com/?How-Many-Chords-Are-There,-Anyway?&id=59841
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