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How to define and classify progressive rock?

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Topic: How to define and classify progressive rock?
Posted By: David_D
Subject: How to define and classify progressive rock?
Date Posted: October 26 2010 at 15:49

 

 

                    HOW TO DEFINE AND CLASSIFY PROGRESSIVE ROCK?  (V3)

 

 

What can be regarded as a global Prog community often makes use of several, or even quite a lot, different sub-genres of Progressive Rock, but is it also possible to give some theoretical grounds for doing so?

 

By DAVID HELIN, November 2010

 

The subject of what has to be considered as Progressive Rock has surely been one of the big battles in the history of the genre, and still seems to need a lot of more clarifying. It also seems to me as a rather large part of the debating has somehow had wrong starting point and because of that, has not been particular fruitful.

    How so? Well, I think that many of the discussions made assumed Progressive Rock to be a certain music, and then the involved parts could not agree whether, for instance, a certain band, let us say Pink Floyd, played this kind of music. But in my opinion, we have to start with understanding Progressive Rock as first and foremost a word, a term, and then, depending on how we define this term, we can determine whether a certain band can be characterized as progressive or not.

 

What is it all about?

 

I better explain this further because, before trying to make a definition, it is a very good idea to have a quite clear notion of what all this defining business actually is about and what shall be the theoretical purpose of it. So, let us start to state that the concrete reality of the music world consists, among other things, of bands (or solo artists, but for convenience’s sake, let us just say bands), each playing in some way different music. Some parts of these bands have certain similarities and a part play even very similar kind of music. These similarities can be described and named, or labeled. As we surely know, many musicians for different reasons don’t like being labeled, but for fans and other persons interested in music, it can be very convenient to have terms to describe different kinds of music. And if these terms have to be useful in a good way, we need to define them more or less precisely.

    To define them means to classify or to bring in, in our heads, some order and get a general view of the concrete reality of the very complex world of bands and different music; and it is, as already mentioned, like to invent some labels which we can use to describe the music being played. These labels can have different sizes, so they either can be small and only used in connection with those bands who play very similar kind of music -- in that case we talk about narrow definitions. Or they can be larger and used with less similar bands and then called broader definitions.

    Making definitions, we also try to put focus on or demarcate a specific part of the concrete reality of the music world, and depending on whether our definitions are narrow or broad, the demarcated parts are smaller or bigger. When we have made a specific definition by clarifying which criteria shall be applied by using a certain term, for instance progressive rock, we can in principle more or less exactly decide which bands we are talking about; and then further find out what is specific about these bands and their music. So, as regards to the very beginning of this article, I will conclude here that all the discussions of the characteristics of Progressive Rock have to start with the question of the definition of the genre.

    Two more aspects are needed to be mentioned in these initial considerations: 1. The question of the definitions in general, and concerning Prog-Rock in particular, is in my opinion to some extent a matter of, if not just taste, certainly some subjective preferences, especially as regards whether to use a more narrow or a broader way of defining – which is very important for my approach. On the other hand, it cannot be said to be arbitrary, so one definition is as good as another. A good definition must possess inner obvious logic and coherence, just as some definitions can be more practical and have other advantages comparing with other definitions.

    2. The process of defining can be very complex. When a definition is made, it has to be evaluated with that part of reality it is supposed to concern, which I guess in most cases leads to some need of improvement, evaluating again, and so on. In connection with music styles, the process must be still on-going due to the never ending changes of the music over the time. So, all of you theoretically minded friends welcome to a show that never ends.

 

Some definitions made/used in the past

 

Looking now at some definitions made/used in the past, the main books written in English, which have attempted to describe progressive rock as a genre, seem to be:

Edward Macan: Rocking the Classics: English Progressive Rock and the Counterculture. Oxford University Press 1997.

Paul Stump: The Music’s All that Matters: A History of Progressive Rock. Quartet Books 1997.

Bill Martin: Listening to the Future: The time of progressive rock, 1968-1978. Open Court 1998.

Jerry Lucky: The Progressive Rock Files. Collector’s Guide Publishing 2000.

    To start with, Edward Macan, who indeed offers the most thorough analysis of his subject, in the matter of definition and as the title of the book suggests, Macan sticks to the tradition which limits progressive rock to being symphonic rock; that is “…mainly a classical/rock fusion with some folk and jazz elements included…” (p. 27).  It has to be added though that even as Macan considers Jazz-Rock and Folk-Rock as styles different from Progressive (Symphonic) Rock, he finds some parts of them to be related to the latter. This applies to a lesser extent to some of Heavy Metal, too, and avant-garde electronic music and Minimalism (pp. 126-143).

    Paul Stump’s definition has rather different focus point than Macan’s and finds similarities among progressive bands in what he calls shared ideology: in their considering themselves as not just musicians but as artists “…driven by high Romantic notions of personal expression and originality, individual authenticity, honesty and similar praiseworthy universals.” (p. 10). The term Progressive contains also in Stump’s point of view the phenomenon that the music is in a state of permanent evolution. This way of regarding Progressive Rock allows Stump to apply much broader musical scope than Macan, including some bands playing Jazz-Rock, Folk-Fock, Avant-Prog, Space-Rock and even a bit of Electronic Rock. On the other hand, I would say it is more precise and can be altogether better to define Prog-Rock by means of music styles, like Macan does.

    Bill Martin’s criteria for qualifying the genre results in an almost as broad musical scope as Stump’s, except from Electronic Rock. Also in a way similarly to Stump, he has some claims that the music has to be visionary and played “…by musicians who have consummate instrumental and compositional skills…” (p. 121) - that is, in fact, be virtuosos. Further, Martin considers Progressive Rock as in its core a phenomenon of English culture, which he, by the way, shares with Macan and Stump, and “…expressive of romantic and prophetic aspects of that culture.” (p. 121). Should the latter be used as criteria in the definition of Progressive Rock, it will of course limit the genre quite a lot.

    The last of the here presented authors, Jerry Lucky, defines Prog-Rock by means of 10 strictly musical criteria (4th edition, p. 132, 133). They offer indeed a very precise definition as they are very specific, concerning the type of styles, compositions, arrangements and instruments used. Looking at his book as a whole, it is not quite obvious for me which styles Lucky will include under the banner of Progressive Rock. I’m afraid though, his 10 claims, if all or maybe even just most of them to be fulfilled, will exclude a quite large part of the experimental rock music.

 

The possibility of a broad definition

 

Even as the four authors have quite a lot in common in their description of Progressive Rock, as it can be seen of my short account, their definitions of the genre are rather different. On the other hand, if they have to be compared to what quite often is considered as Progressive Rock in what might be called “the global Prog community”, one thing can in my opinion be concluded: their definitions are more narrow, and I think it is also the case with most books written on the genre; including maybe the latest in Charles Snider’s The Strawberry Bricks Guide to Progressive Rock (2007), even though this guide reviews other music than Snider defines as Prog-Rock, too.

    Nevertheless, the broader “Prog community definition,” as, for instance, used but not really formulated in the co-founder of ProgArchives, Ronald Couture’s Essential Mini-Guide to Progressive Rock: Past & Present (2006), have obvious advantages: it includes more different music and makes “the Prog movement” wider and thus stronger. On that account, the interesting question needs to be answered: is it possible to formulate and argue for a broad definition of Progressive Rock?

    Well, as it already could appear from my initial considerations, that is my conviction and what I will try to begin in this article. For that purpose, let us first have a look at the following styles: Symphonic Rock, Jazz-Rock, Folk-Rock, the more experimental Electronic Rock and Avant-Prog. What do they all have in common? You probably already know it: as their names suggest, they are all a synthesis of Rock and very pronounced elements from mainly one of some other main genres, namely Classical Music, Jazz, Folk and the electronic avant-garde or other avant-garde music, respectively. And should all these Rock styles be a part of Progressive Rock, must that kind of synthesis be one of the criteria of the definition. Krautrock, Zeuhl and the more avant-garde influenced part of Post-Rock can be characterized in the same way except from, they are typically more eclectic. 

    So far so good, but at this point I guess there are a huge number of Prog aficionados who miss Progressive Metal and some Psychedelic Rock here. Well, that is no problem because the syntheses of Rock and the other main styles mentioned above give possibilities for these styles, too – Progressive Metal being mainly a synthesis of Heavy Metal and Symphonic Rock/Classical Music, while Progressive Psychedelic surely is a synthesis of Psychedelic Rock, but then, there are different possibilities: electronic avant-garde, Folk, Jazz and others.

    Now we have got really a lot of different music to offer, but as a matter of fact, too much. That is because the criterion suggested so far includes all kinds of, for instance, Jazz-Rock, Folk-Rock and Space-Rock, and thus a lot of almost mainstream music, which an average Proghead does not seem to be interested in. Therefore, I will further suggest an additional criterion for some music to be labeled Progressive Rock, and that shall be that the music is rather complex or at least to some extent experimental in another way than argued so far.

    OK, if we now in all have enough precise instruments to determine what kind of music we would like to have under our banner is of course a question that will have to be tested in practice. But I suppose everything looks rather OK for a start, except from one problem. Not so few bands play music which is very difficult, if at all, to fit into one of the styles/sub-genres mentioned so far because they are more eclectic and mix several different styles. Therefore, we need an additional sub-genre which can be named Eclectic Prog to label those kind of bands.

 

The proposal

 

Then, I can summarize:

I will propose that some music to be called Progressive Rock has to:

1. be a synthesis of Rock and at least one of the other main genres: Classical, Jazz, Folk, electronic avant-garde or other avant-garde, AND

2. be rather complex or at least to some extent experimental in another way than #1.

”electronic avant-garde” is here primarily Musique Concrete and Minimalism while ”other avant-garde” include Free and Avant-Jazz and Contemporary Classical.

        Further, I propose following main sub-genres:

* Symphonic Prog, incl. Neo-Symphonic (Neo-Prog)

* Progressive Jazz-Rock, incl. most of Canterbury

* Progressive Folk-Rock, defined as Rock fused with Traditional/Folk music from any country in the entire world

* Electronic Prog

* Avant-Prog/RIO and Zeuhl

* Psychedelic Prog, incl. Progressive Space-Rock

* Progressive Metal, defined as all the sub-genres of Heavy Metal which can be considered Progressive

* Eclectic Prog

* Krautrock

and finally

* Progressive Post-Rock, defined as the more avant-garde influenced part of Post-Rock

   and Prog is here of course short for Progressive Rock.

 

What have we then got?

 

I believe that Progressive Rock, defined in this way, depict quite well what mostly is understood by this term today, or, that it at least is worth to consider, if it not should be so. It is obviously not a single style but an umbrella for a number of different styles which have some similarities. The main point of this way of defining is for me to separate a large part of the experimental and more ambitious Rock music from the mainstream in order to strengthen its identity and help building it up as a broad cultural movement. Progressive Rock, again as defined here, has sure gained in popularity over the period of the last 20 years, but I think it is important to support or at least respect each other across the different sub-genres instead of not so rarely almost fighting each other. Those are the main ideas behind this article and some ideas I find very worthy to work for, and I hope some of you do too.

    Something quite else is that the definition, I have proposed here, has some stiffness as Prog-Rock is defined by means of certain specific styles, and it might be said to be best suited to classify the different types of music included in Progressive Rock. An alternative could be a definition which has been presented by Mark Stephens (of Progpositivity Dot Com) as one of topics to discuss in ProgArchives. It suggests

 

Progressive Rock: music springing from or incorporating distinctive elements of the rock genre while expanding beyond its traditional musical limitations and constraints

 

This definition is very dynamic as it can currently incorporate all the new experimental Rock music. On the other hand, it is very broad and not so little broader and including than the one, I propose. Still, it could be a good alternative, if it could be accepted and used by musicians and fans of “the old sub-genres of Progressive Rock” and “the new ones” which it will include as the part of the genre.

 

 

 

Other references

 

Mike McLatchy: The Guide to Progressive Rock Genres. V2.0. 2003

which is a survey or a kind of extensive article, updated and available at http://www.gepr.net./articlesfram.html" rel="nofollow - .

Katherine Charlton: Rock Music Styles: a history, 5th edition. Mc-Graw Hill 2008.

Bradley Smith: The Billboard Guide to Progressive Music. Billboard Books 1997.

Kevin Holm-Hudson (edit.): Progressive Rock Reconsidered. Routledge 2002.

Dag Erik Asbjørnsen: Scented Gardens Of the Mind. A guide to the golden era of progressive rock (1968-1980) in more than 20 European countries. Borderline Productions 2000.

 
 

 

Now, the time has come to test the proposed definition and see what music it can bring with itself. For that purpose, I have made a list of some of the highest acclaimed (rated) and well-known albums, classified by the proposed main sub-genres. This list is based on all ratings as they appeared in RateYourMusic and ProgArchives November 2009 and November 2010.

 

Here it goes.

 

Symphonic Prog ,  incl. Neo-Symphonic (Neo-Prog)

 

Yes  (UK) :   Close To The Edge  (1972) 

Genesis  (UK) :   Selling England By The Pound  (1973)

Camel  (UK) :   Mirage  (1974) 

Marillion  (UK) :   Misplaced Childhood  (1985) 

Emerson, Lake & Palmer  (UK) : Brain Salad Surgery  (1973)

Änglagård  (S) :   Hybris  (1992)

Premiata Forneria Marconi  (I) :   Per Un Amico  (1972)

Kansas  (CAN) :   Leftoverture  (1976) 

Steve Hackett  (UK) :   Voyage Of The Acolyte  (1975) 

Banco Del Mutuo Soccorso  (I) :   Io Sono Nato Libero  (1973)

Le Orme  (I) :   Felona E Sorona  (1973)

Museo Rosenbach  (I) :   Zarathustra  (1973)

Spock’s Beard  (US) :   V  (2000)  (alt. Eclectic)

Rick Wakeman  (UK) :   The Six Wives Of Henry VIII  (1973)

Focus  (NL) :   Moving Waves  (1971)

U.K.  (UK) :   U.K.  (1978) 

Bacamarte  (Bra) :   Depois Do Fim  (1983)

Il Balletto di Bronzo  (I) :   Ys  (1972)

Neal Morse  (US) :   ?  (2005)

IQ  (UK) :   Dark Matter  (2004) 

Triana  (ESP) :   El Patio  (1975)

Ange  (F) :   Au-Dela Du Delire  (1974)

 

 

Eclectic Prog

 

King Crimson  (UK) :   In The Court Of The Crimson King  (1969)

The Mars Volta  (US) :   De-Loused In The Comatorium  (2003)

Rush  (CAN) :   Moving Pictures  (1981)

Porcupine Tree  (UK) :   In Absentia  (2002)

Van Der Graaf Generator  (UK) :   Pawn Hearts  (1971)

Mike Oldfield  (UK) :   Tubular Bells  (1973)

Gentle Giant  (UK) :   Octopus  (1972)

Anathema  (UK) :   Judgement  (1999)

Traffic  (UK) :   John Barleycorn Must Die  (1970)

Dredg  (US) :   El Cielo  (2002)

Gong  (F) :   You  (1974)  (alt. Canterbury (Jazz-Rock))

Renaissance  (UK) :   Scheherazade And Other Stories  (1975)  (alt. Symphonic)

The Gathering  (NL) :   How To Measure A Planet  (1998) 

Transatlantic  (US) :   Bridge Across Forever  (2001)

Peter Hammill  (UK) :   The Silent Corner And…  (1974)

Aphrodite’s Child  (Gre) :   666  (1972)  (alt. Psychedelic)

Khan  (UK) :   Space Shanty  (1972)  (alt. Canterbury (Jazz-Rock))

Atomic Rooster  (UK) :   Death Walks Behind You  (1970) 

Ozric Tentacles  (UK) :   Erpland  (1990)  (alt. Psychedelic or Folk-Rock)

Pavlov’s Dog  (US) :   Pampered Menial  (1974)

Indukti  (PL) :   S.U.S.A.R.  (2005)  (alt. Progressive Metal)

 

 

Progressive Jazz-Rock ,  incl. most of Canterbury

 

Frank Zappa  (US) :   Hot Rats  (1969) 

Miles Davis  (US) :   Bitches Brew  (1970) 

Robert Wyatt  (UK) :   Rock Bottom  (1974)

Herbie Hancock  (US) :   Head Hunters  (1973)

Caravan  (UK) :   In The Land Of Grey And Pink  (1971)

Mahavishnu Orchestra  (US) :   Birds Of Fire  (1973)

Soft Machine  (UK) :   Third  (1970)

Santana  (US) :   Caravanserai  (1972)

Al Di Meola  (US) :   Elegant Gypsy  (1977)

Colosseum  (UK) :   Valentyne Suite  (1969)

Billy Cobham  (US) :   Spectrum  (1973)

Liquid Tension Experiment  (US) :   Liquid Tension Experiment 2  (1999)

Return to Forever  (US) :   Romantic Warrior  (1976) 

Hatfield and the North  (UK) : The Rotter’s Club  (1975)

Weather Report  (US) :   Black Market  (1976) 

 

 

Progressive Metal

 

Opeth  (S) :   Blackwater Park  (2001)

Dream Theater  (US) :   Images And Words  (1992)

Death  (US) :   Symbolic  (1995)

Queesryche  (US) :   Operation : Mindcrime  (1988) 

Mastodon  (US) :   Leviathan  (2004) 

Agalloch  (US) :   The Mantle  (2002)

Cynic  (US) :   Focus  (1993)

Atheist  (US) :   Unquestionable Presence  (1991)

Pain of Salvation  (S) :   The Perfect Element I  (2000)

Riverside  (PL) :   Second Life Syndrome  (2005)  (alt. Eclectic)

Arcturus  (N) :   The Sham Mirros  (2002)

Edge of Sanity  (S) :   Crimson  (1996)

Ayreon  (NL) :   The Human Equation  (2004)

Devin Townsend  (CAN) :   Terria  (2001)

Orphaned Land  (Isr) :   Mabool : The Story Of The… (2004)

Kayo Dot  (US) :   Choirs Of the Eye  (2003)

Gojira  (F) :   From Mars to Sirius  (2005) 

Maudlin of the Well  (US) :   Leaving Your Body Map  (2001)

 

 

Psychedelic Prog ,  incl. Progressive Space-Rock

 

Pink Floyd  (UK) :   The Dark Side Of the Moon  (1973)

Boredoms  (J) :   Vision Creation Newsun  (1999)  (alt. Krautrock)

Hawkwind  (UK) :   Space Ritual  (1973) 

Flower Travellin’ Band  (J) :   Satori  (1970)

Captain Beyond  (US) :   Captain Beyond  (1972)

Oceansize  (UK) :   Effloresce  (2003)

Kingston Wall  (Fin) :   II  (1993)

Eloy  (D) :   Ocean  (1977) 

Nektar  (UK) :   A Tab In The Ocean  (1972) 

T2  (UK) :   It’ll All Work Out In Boomland  (1970)

Steve Hillage  (UK) :   Fish Rising  (1975)

Manfred Mann’s Earth Band  (UK) :   Solar Fire  (1973)

High Tide (UK) : Sea Shanties  (1969)

Älgarnas Trädgård  (S) : Framtiden är ett svävande skepp... (1972)  (alt. Folk-Rock)

Gila (D)  :   Gila  (1971)  (alt. Krautrock)

 

 

Avant-Prog/RIO and Zeuhl

 

Mr. Bungle  (US) :   California  (1999)  (alt. Progressive Metal)

Magma  (F) :   Mekanik Destruktiw Kommandoh  (1973)  (alt. Jazz-Rock)

Area  (I) :   Arbeit Macht Frei  (1973)  (alt. Jazz-Rock)

Sleepytime Gorilla Museum  (US) :   Of Natural History  (2004)

Univers Zero  (B) :   Heresie  (1979)

Henry Cow  (UK) :   In Praise Of Learning  (1975)

Dün  (F) :   Eros  (1981)

Samla Mammas Manna  (S) :   Maltid  (1973) 

Aksak Maboul  (B) :   Un Peu De L’ame Des Bandits  (1980) 

Koenjihyakkei  (J) :   Angherr Shisspa  (2005) 

Alamaailman Vasarat  (FIN) :   Kaarmelautakunta  (2003)

Eskaton  (F) :   4 Visions  (1981)  (alt. Jazz-Rock)

Art Bears  (UK) :   The World As It Is Today  (1981)

 

 

Progressive Folk-Rock

 

Jethro Tull  (UK) :   Thick As A Brick  (1972)  (alt. Symphonic)

Comus  (UK) :   First Utterance  (1971)

Harmonium  (CAN) :   Si On Avait Besoin…  (1975)  (alt. Symphonic)

Fairport Convention  (UK) :   Unhalfbricking  (1969)

Roy Harper  (UK) :   Stormcock  (1971)

Gryphon  (UK) :   Red Queen To Gryphon Three  (1974)  (alt. Symphonic)

Strawbs  (UK) :   Grave New World  (1972) 

Mellow Candle  (IRL) :   Swaddling Songs  (1972) 

Third Ear Band  (UK) :   Third Ear Band  (1970) 

The Trees  (UK) :   The Garden Of Jane Delawney  (1970)

Los Jaivas  (CHL) :   Alturas De Machu Picchu  (1981)

Marek Grechuta  (PL) :   Korowod  (1971)  (alt. Psychedelic) 

Yatha Sidhra  (D) :   A Meditation Mass  (1974)  (alt. Krautrock or Psychedelic)

Hoelderlin  (D) :  Hoelderlins Traum  (1972)

Osibisa  (Ghana) : Osibisa  (1971)  (alt. Jazz-Rock)

 

 

Progressive Post-Rock

 

Sigur Ros  (ISL) :   Agætis Byrjun  (1999)

Godspeed You! Black Emperor  (CAN) :   Lift Yr. Skinny… (2000)

Talk Talk  (UK) :   Sporit Of Eden  (1988) 

Explosions in the Sky  (US) :   The Earth Is Not...  (2003)

Mogwai  (UK) :   Young Team  (1997)

Tortoise  (US) :   Millions Now Living...  (1996)

A Silver Mt. Zion  (CAN) :   He Has Left Us...  (2000)

Yndi Halda  (UK) :   Enjoy Eternal Bliss  (2006) 

God is an Astronaut  (IRL) :   All Is Violent...  (2005)

Mono  (J) :   You Are There  (2006) 

Do May Say Think  (CAN) :   Winter Hymn Country...  (2003) 

Mono & World’s End Girlfriend  (J) :   Palmless Prayer...  (2005)

The Evpatoria Report  (CH) :   Golevka  (2005)

 

 

Krautrock

 

Can  (D) :   Tago Mago  (1971)  

Neu!  (D) :   Neu!  (1972)

Kraftwerk  (D) :  Autobahn  (1974)

Amon Düül II  (D) :   Yeti  (1970)  (alt. Psychedelic)

Faust  (D) :   Faust  (1971)

Popol Vuh  (D) :   Hosianna Mantra  (1972)

Ash Ra Tempel  (D) :   Ash Ra Tempel  (1971)  (alt. Psychedelic)

Agitation Free  (D) :   Malesch  (1972)  (alt. Psychedelic)

Guru Guru  (D) :   UFO  (1970)  (alt. Psychedelic)

Cluster  (D) :   II  (1972)  (alt. Psychedelic)

La Dusseldorf  (D) :   La Dusseldorf  (1976) 

Cosmic Jokers  (D) :   The Cosmic Jokers  (1973)  (alt. Psychedelic)

 

 

Electronic Prog

 

Tangerine Dream  (D) :   Phaedra  (1974)

Jean-Michel Jarre  (F) :   Oxygene  (1976)

Kraftwerk  (D) :   Radio-Aktivität  (1975)

Klaus Schulze  (D) :   Irrlicht  (1972)

Manuel Göttsching  (D) :   E2-E4  (1984)  (alt. Krautrock)

Harmonia  (D) :  Musik Von Harmonia  (1974)  (alt. Krautrock)

Ashra  (D) :   New Age On Earth  (1977) 

Vangelis  (GRE) :   Heaven And Hell  (1975)

Michael Hoenig  (D) :   Departure From The Northern Wasteland  (1978)

Edgar Froese  (D) :   Ypsilon In Malaysian Pale  (1975)

Heldon  (F) :   Stand By  (1979)

 

 

This list must of course be taken with some reservation. The sub-genres, as they appear here, might look like some boxes, we can put albums in. They have though to be understood like labels, we can put on an album, and it happens quite often that an album needs more than one label to be characterized with. Nevertheless, this way of setting it up have some advantages, not least it is well-arranged.

 

Something else is that not so rarely, the same album might be classified differently by different persons, as they might put the main focus on diverse elements of the music. My classification here is highly based on the way of classifying by RateYourMusic and ProgArchives and anyway, as already said, the whole thing is best to be taken with some reservation and best to be understood as contribution to further considerations and discussions.

 

May Progressive Rock be with you!

 

 




Replies:
Posted By: darksideof
Date Posted: October 26 2010 at 16:28
2 simple words. Robert Fripp (King crimson)

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http://darksideofcollages.blogspot.com/
http://www.metalmusicarchives.com/
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Darksideof-Collages/


Posted By: nandprogger
Date Posted: October 26 2010 at 20:28
Black Metal has long songs, there are artists who are virtuous and have long songs but are not progressive. And ELP has no eletric guitar...they are progressive...but do not play rock?( Despite putting a Greg Lake a bass distortion)


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 26 2010 at 21:37
Quote  .... miss the term “kraut-rock” here. Well, in my opinion the kind of music, which has been connected with this term, consist of several different styles mentioned just above and can be classified by those. So, to define prog we don’t really need “kraut-rock” even we agree that it is a part of prog-rock as defined here.
 
I would suggest you read up on the studies done in Germany around Stockhausen some of the Berlin Conservatory of Music, which brought us many of the "krautrock" folks, before you decide on that.
 
The basic precept in the artistic way of the time, was not just in "krautrock" but also in film and in theater ... at the time ... and in film it was quite visible with the "new wave" and specially Godard's famous words "anti-film" ... which had tremendous fun with the "ideas" that we have about film, and its physical ideas of shooting.
 
Music, and theater did the same thing. And it was about "anti-music" and creating something that did NOT involve any of those concepts at all ... and basically you are stating that it is not a valid process ...
 
So sad that all you can describe is basically a London scene of music and not have the guts to see how other people know, see, and love, and study and learn music elsewhere in the world. Might also study the bigger concepts of music around "raga" and others musical processes that are thousands of years old ... that your concept of music will not accept.
 
Why, is your idea afraid of the "unknown" ... or the "unknowable" ... when it comes to the arts?


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Easy Livin
Date Posted: October 27 2010 at 02:47
Hi David, welcome to the forum. Big smile
 
Could you confirm whther you are the David Helin who wrote the article, or that you have permission from him to reprint it here?
 
Thanks, Admin


Posted By: Mushroom Sword
Date Posted: October 27 2010 at 08:24
This works great. But one thing... from this new definition, a few albums fall out of that category of progressive now. for example:

  • The Dark Side of the Moon
... in fact, pretty much all of Pink Floyd.

  • 2112., Moving Pictures, and Permanent waves. They. has none of the above elements. But, a farewell to kings and hemispheres are prog because they include folk-rock references and that's the only reason why.

  • All Tool.

  • All Dream Theater.

So, it seems like you should add, "Hard Rock" to that list of genres to mix. And it also seems like #2 can't happen until #1.

I would say... add a #3, "concept albums and very long songs".

Idk, I'm tired of hitting enter every sentence, and this is just my view on it. Other then that it works great.




Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: October 31 2010 at 10:08
A good definition of progressive rock necessarily has to be broad because by nature it is NOT limited to a few musical styles.  It can be argued that the musical styles going into it is not important now and was not in the 70s and it is a certain compositional approach that those bands shared.  It would also be hard to come up with a definition that is actually able to accommodate all of classic prog AND all of prog metal because they are entirely different, not just stylistically but in the compositional approach.  Actually, a lot of modern prog outside of Avant/RIO does not, in general, share the compositional approach of classic prog.  The only possible means by which they could be argued to be of the same kind of music is in defining progressive as an ideal, i.e., to progress or evolve music. But on doing so, it becomes difficult to accept the notion of bands like Shadow Gallery or Mostly Autumn as being progressive and on the other hand the case of left field artists who don't tick favourite prog boxes like long compositions and time signature changes(as distinguished from odd time signatures!) to be considered prog becomes stronger.  In summary, a satisfactory definition of prog that encompasses everything that is as of now considered prog not just here but in other websites and mags is very difficult to come up with.


Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: October 31 2010 at 14:08
Well I hope the guy didn't spend too long trying to figure it out.  I mean, all he really had to do is visit this site.  We got it covered. LOL

I started to read it, but then my eyes glazed over.  And then there is the realization that I don't really give a rat's ass how you define it.


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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...



Posted By: progpositivity
Date Posted: November 01 2010 at 19:40
Are these the kinds of thoughts on your mind?
 
* Do we need subgenre designations for RIO and Zeuhl when they both could fit under Avant Prog?
* Does Italian Prog really need its own subgenre? 
* One could certainly ask the same question about Canterbury. 
 
From my perspective these terms provide added conversational benefit and it doesn't cost me anything extra to use them so I'll gladly accept them.  But I can certainly understand the other points of view.


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Positively the best Prog and Fusion 24/7!
http://www.progpositivity.com


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: November 02 2010 at 09:44
its rock thats progressive or you can say its progressive rock too

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Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 02 2010 at 13:01
 
 
Catcher10, I must say I don't understand your question


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 02 2010 at 14:18

Progpositivity asks:

 
Originally posted by progpositivity progpositivity wrote:

Are these the kinds of thoughts on your mind?
 
* Do we need subgenre designations for RIO and Zeuhl when they both could fit under Avant Prog?
* Does Italian Prog really need its own subgenre? 
* One could certainly ask the same question about Canterbury. 
 
 

Well, I'll distinguish between the main sub-genres and some other “sub-genres”.

 
The main sub-genres in my proposal either
1. come logically from my way of defining prog as syntheses of some main music styles - those sub-genres are symphonic, jazz-rock, folk-rock, electronic, eclectic and avant-prog
or 2. are some very large and well established genres like psychedelic and what I propose to call "heavy prog". - And yes, for the sake of simplicity I've wanted to keep those main sub-genres at lowest number possible but also to emphasize what I'll consider as main styles.-
 
But then we can talk about other “sub-genres” which can be very useful to have, and which can be part of the main subgenres, like for example, RIO, Zeuhl and Canterbury, and which properly, if to follow my proposal, should be called sub-subgenres. These sub-subgenres may also be said to have the character of styles.
 
Then we can have some terms like Italian Prog which can consists of several of the other sub-genres/styles, and which are thus no single styles but for instance can have specific national characteristics. 
 
So, it's the question of how to use the term "sub-genre", i.e. the question of distinguishing between the main sub-genres/styles constituting prog and some other terms, to be best aware of what is most similar to each other, and not least what can be considered as a certain style.

And all that for the purpose of getting a good overview on what we have to do with.



Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: November 02 2010 at 14:36
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

Catcher10, I must say I don't understand your question
Its not a question...basically call it what you want...there are 10,000 suggestions on what "progressive rock" is....take your pick.
 
Most people just care that its good music.


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Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 02 2010 at 15:18
 
 
Some people are obviously not interested in this subject. That is of course OK, I just don't understand why they bother to comment. It should be easy enough to keep out of it and let us other, who are interested in it, discuss it.


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: November 02 2010 at 16:01
^ Well because this topic has been discussed probably 10,000 times here on the PA Smile. As you see you only have what about 8 members post a reply, its an old topic that has been beat up too much and some of us are tired of the discussion.
Also you should go here for the PA definitions
 
http://www.progarchives.com/Progressive-rock.asp - http://www.progarchives.com/Progressive-rock.asp
 
Have a good time around the forums!
Cheers


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Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 02 2010 at 17:32

I know that this topic has been much discussed. But as I write in the beginning of my article, I’d also say that

“..I think that many of the discussions made assumed progressive rock to be certain music, and then, the involved parts could not agree whether for instance a certain band, let us say Pink Floyd, played this kind of music. But in my opinion, we have to start with understanding progressive rock as first and foremost a word, a term, and then, depending on how we define this term, we can determine whether a certain band can be characterized as progressive or not.”

So you see, I want to discuss with the specific, and I think rather new, approach that try to define prog as a term, and discuss how it can be done in the best way. As far as it concerns the PA definition, I know it very well but I don’t find it satisfactory. And as I also comment in my article, neither all the other definitions which have been put forward or used in the main books about progressive rock. Therefore, in my opinion, there's still a good need of discussing how to define prog.

But if you have read my article and can say, there's nothing new in my approach, I'll understand your point. That's just not how things look seen with my eyes.
 
But OK, anyway, I can also understand people can be tired of debating what they consider as the same topic.


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 03 2010 at 17:31

A bit late answer/comments to your concerns, Mushroom Sword:

1.Whether Pink Floyd will be included in my proposal for prog definition?

Well, I don’t know what you have been thinking at in this matter, but it should be quite obvious that yes. As Pink Floyd is agreed to be characterized as space-rock and this style I explicitly mention as a part of the main sub-genre “psychedelic prog”.

2. The question of including Rush, Tool, Dream Theater and “hard rock”.

As the main thing here, I would not consider “hard-rock” as a major style equal to “my” main sub-genres/styles. So, I’ll suggest that we either have to do with some music where the heavy elements are very pronounced, and in that case we classified it as a part of the main sub-genre, I have defined as “heavy prog”. – And here I’ll surely include Dream Theater. - Or, we have to do with some music where other elements are more dominating, and in that case we classified it as one of “my” other main sub-genres. But in that case we can talk about sub-subgenres, for instance “hard symphonic prog” which I think would be a proper characteristic of Rush. Or another examples could here be “hard jazz-rock”, as for instance label for Liquid Tension Experiment, or “hard folk-rock” as the characteristic of the peruvian band Flor de Loto.
As far as it concerns Tool, I’ll prefer not to comment them here, because they are not so little quirky.

3. Concept albums and very long songs as a necessary criterion to be called “progressive”?

Well, you see, my whole proposal for prog definition is meant as an attempt to formulate a broad definition because that, as far as I know, haven’t been done yet, even it’s, in my opinion, quite important to attempt. To formulate a broad definition, we must avoid very specific criteria, because they limit what we will define as prog. If we demand concept albums and very long songs as a necessary condition to be called “progressive”, we’ll exclude very much of experimental rock music – for instance much of avant-prog quite often doesn’t have very long songs/compositions; similarly with concept albums.
That’s why the criteria, I have proposed, are not very specific and that’s why I find Jerry Lucky’s definition not satisfactory – and that definition is often regarded to be the so far best.



Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 04 2010 at 17:11
Progpositivity, I've just read about your search for a definition possessing "at least some measure of restraint and elegance", when comparing with the usual rather lengthy definitions. And I wonder if you have found any inspiration in my attempt for definiton, as simplicity, and maybe also some elegance, have been quite important for me, too, and I would say myself that my proposal is not that bad comparing with other definitions. On the other hand, I've also tried to reach something quite informative which I would say is a weak point in the definition, you've chosen as your starting point.


Posted By: progpositivity
Date Posted: November 04 2010 at 19:27
Hi David! 
 
Yes, my post searching for a most elegant definition of prog was indeed inspired during my response to this post.  I decided to ask for more information about your particular quest in this post and to then create my minimalist quest as a different topic for 2 reasons:
 
1) The goal I was seeking was quite different from yours in this thread.  It is neither "better" nor "worse".  Just different.  I think you are seeking to create a precise and detailed structure of classification of prog.  I am seeking to make a cogent statement that is generally informative about prog without patently excluding anyone that should be included.
and
b) I didn't want to "single out" your approach as particularly more verbose than any of the many others. 
 
Overall, I do think that most attempts to "define" prog tend to become encyclopedic in scope and detail.  But that doesn't mean yours is "too long" nor that it is any longer than average.
 
Anyway, over on my other post, I will be happy if we are able to generally agree on a minimalist definition which provides an accurate depiction of the essence of prog.  My challenge will be to omit as much detail as possible without losing anything essential.  Kind of a different approach to the whole enterprise.
 
All the best on your classification quest as well! 
 
Keep on proggin on!  Tongue


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Positively the best Prog and Fusion 24/7!
http://www.progpositivity.com


Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: November 04 2010 at 20:08
Hi David, interesting article, there are many issues I would like to discuss, but today I will center in the proposal:

I will make my comments in blue in order to separate your article from my thoughts instead of quoting you repeatedly:

Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

The proposal

 

Then, I can summarize:

I will propose that some music to be called progressive rock has to:

1. be a synthesis of rock and at least one of the other main styles: classical music, jazz, folk, electronic or other avant-garde, and

I believe there are clear exceptions, for example I just made a couple of reviews about "Tohpati Ethnomission" and "Simak Dialog" from Indonesia. Both bands are clearly a form of Progressive Jazz Fusion, but yet they hardly add any rock element, as a fact they don't even use drums, giving absolute priority to Jazz and Ethnic Indonesian music, but would be a sin not to include them here.


There are other bands as Karda Estra, who play some sort of Neo Classical Prog with very few Rock elements in most of their albums, but I believe we all agree that they belong here.

2. be rather complex or at least to some extent experimental in another way than 1.

    Further, I propose following main sub-genres:

* symphonic prog, incl. neo-prog

Use to believe this, but lets face it, things have changesd since Esward Maccann wrote "Rocking the Classics", In the 80's a new form of more commercial and simple Symphonic was called Neo Prog (New Prog), being that Prog was almost exclusively Symphonic.

But today many more sounds, styles and sub-genres have appeared that have nothing in common with that specific 80's sound, so I believe Neo Prog should stay, even when with a different name like Neo Symphonic, which would be much more accurate according o their roots.

* progressive jazz-rock, incl. Canterbury

No way, Canterbury is the pioneer of Prog sub-genres, it comes from the mid 60's and some even say from 1963 with "The Wilde Flowers", so when Symphonic was in diapers, Canterbury already existed, we can't forgetthe existence of the grandfathers of Progressive Rock.

                 * progressive folk-rock

Agree

* electronic prog

Agree

* avant-prog, incl. Zeuhl

Sorry, but Zeuhl IMO has nothing in common with Avant Prog, if you tell me that RIO can go with Avant, I would say OK, but bands like Magma can't be placed in any other place except maybe eclectic 

                 * psychedelic prog, incl. progressive space-rock

This is a question I always made, why Psyche and Space Rock together? I believe that he only reason is that Pink Floyd evolved from Psyche to Space Rock, never understood it.

* heavy prog, incl. all the sub-genres of heavy metal which can be considered progressive

Heavy Metal or Prog Metal are  a completely different specie that Heavy Prog (which IMO should be called Hard Prog to make a difference), bands like Uriah Heep or Titanic, have nothing in common with Dream Theater.

What I do believe is that 3 different sub-genres for Prog Metal is way too much, there should be only one Prog Metal.

and finally

                 * eclectic prog

Agree

and “prog” is of course short for progressive rock.

    Now I hope many of you, prog aficionados, are quite content but I can also imagine not so few of you fellows will miss the term “kraut-rock” here. Well, in my opinion the kind of music, which has been connected with this term, consist of several different styles mentioned just above and can be classified by those. So, to define prog we don’t really need “kraut-rock” even we agree that it is a part of prog-rock as defined here.

Many will want to hang me, but I agree that national or regional based sub-genres like Kraut Rock and Italian Symphonic, shouldn't exist individually, but that's a decision taken by the site and I respect it.


Cheers

Iván


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Posted By: nandprogger
Date Posted: November 04 2010 at 21:24

The italian prog is very peculiar that, but when we think of this ecletic prog is very comprehensive. But we could open up a subgenus for exemple: would be the IONA CELTIC PROG instead of folk prog



Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 05 2010 at 08:12

Hi Ivan!

Thanks a lot for your engaged and detailed comments. It has been very fruitful to get them.
But it looks like, you think my proposal is about how ProgArchives should look and what it should include or not include. That’s not the case. Actually, I’ve written the article even not specially for the members of PA, and my proposal concerns the matter of a quite general definition and classification of progressive rock. Saying this, I guess, “answers” some of your comments, so I’ll stick only to some of them. And please, keep it in mind, it’s not about how PA archive should be organized, I mean that’s not my intention here.

1. What to do with “neo-prog”?

Well, in my opinion it’s best to keep the definition from the 80’s, so “neo-prog” is equal to the symphonic style from the 80’s. And that we classify all the newer prog according to their styles and not just call all of it “neo-prog”. But I better write “neo-symphonic (neo-prog)” instead of just “neo-prog” in my proposal. Thanks.

2. How to classify Zeuhl?

As the first thing here can I say that for the sake of simplicity, I think it’s good to keep the number of the main sub-genres as low as possible. Then, I’d say that comparing with the other styles/sub-genres, Zeuhl is more avangardish. So, wouldn’t it be OK to put it together with the usual “avant-prog”? Also because some bands, like for instance Happy Family and other Japanese, play music in the middle between Zeuhl and the usual “avant-prog”. So, there is already an overlap between Zeuhl and the usual “avant-prog”.

3. Space-rock as a part of psychedelic?

Here, I just don’t understand your objection as both to me and almost everbody else, space-rock is psychedelic. So you’re more than welcome to write more on that.

4. Your objection to that of “my” sub-genres which I have called “heavy prog”and described as
* heavy prog, incl. all the sub-genres of heavy metal which can be considered progressive”.

 

You write:

Heavy Metal or Prog Metal are  a completely different specie that Heavy Prog (which IMO should be called Hard Prog to make a difference), bands like Uriah Heep or Titanic, have nothing in common with Dream Theater.

Yes! I understand very well your objection, as I’ve defined “heavy prog” (for myself) in a quite different way then the usual one but I’ve described it misleading where I mention it. I should have written: “* heavy prog, defined as all the sub-genres of heavy metal which can be considered progressive”, because that’s how I’ll suggest we define it. Thanks again.

More about, how I’d like to define “heavy prog” and how, I’ll suggest, we classify what you’d like to call “Hard Prog”, have I written in one of my previous comments (posted 4 November European time), and that is: 

 
“As the main thing here, I would not consider “hard-rock” as a major style equal to “my” main sub-genres/styles. So, I’ll suggest that we either have to do with some music where the heavy elements are very pronounced, and in that case we classified it as a part of the main sub-genre, I have defined as “heavy prog”. – And here I’ll surely include Dream Theater. - Or, we have to do with some music where other elements are more dominating, and in that case we classified it as one of “my” other main sub-genres. But in that case we can talk about sub-subgenres, for instance “hard symphonic prog” which I think would be a proper characteristic of Rush. Or another examples could here be “hard jazz-rock”, as for instance label for Liquid Tension Experiment, or “hard folk-rock” as the characteristic of the Peruvian band Flor de Loto.” Yes, including a note about some of your countrymen.
 
Well, that’s what I’ll write in this post but I’ll be very glad to hear some more from you, and can you tell me if there is any other Peruvian band similar to Flor de Loto or maybe less hard. Or maybe from one of your neighbouring countries, that is except Los Jaivas which I know already and also am quite fond of.

Cheers
David

 

 



Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: November 05 2010 at 08:17
Actually I endorse the idea of making it one heavy prog category rather than the separate prog metal category because it is indeed all heavy rock end of the day, even if metal has its own unique nuances that make it different from other hard rock based music.  It would remove the fiction of Black Sabbath being in a prog related category and Nightwish being in prog metal. Of course, the reason the site has to have different categories is simply that a bunch of people thought up the name prog metal for, probably, Dream Theater in the 80s and it has caught on and is regarded as entirely different from the likes of Rush, Heep etc.  To lump them into heavy prog now would cause a lot of confusion.  


Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: November 05 2010 at 11:25
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

Hi Ivan!

Thanks a lot for your engaged and detailed comments. It has been very fruitful to get them.
But it looks like, you think my proposal is about how ProgArchives should look and what it should include or not include. That’s not the case. Actually, I’ve written the article even not specially for the members of PA, and my proposal concerns the matter of a quite general definition and classification of progressive rock. Saying this, I guess, “answers” some of your comments, so I’ll stick only to some of them. And please, keep it in mind, it’s not about how PA archive should be organized, I mean that’s not my intention here.

Thanks David, I know it's not a proposal for PA, but mainly a simpler defininition of the sub-genres, a division that IMHO has been abused, but let's check that.

Some sites as Proggnosis reach unsuspected limits, if I'm not wrong they have about 100 sub-genres (They mix, genres, sub-genres and other classifications), which is way too much.

Other sites as Progressor go to the other extreme having r five sub-genres (Art Rock, Progressive Metal, Jazz Fusion, Rock in opposition and The Fifth Element) which is way too short.

But most sites share more or less our structure, most of which I agree completely except.

  1. Tech/ Extreme Prog Metal and Experimental Post Metal: Way too much IMO, and leads to the overpopulation of Metal bands and division of genres because of what I feel as subtle differences...But hey, I'm not an expert and as a fact I don't care at all about this genres or even know about them, so all the bands here sound exactly the same to me.
  2. Indo Prog/Raga Prog: Why not Peruvian Prog/Andean Rock or French Theatric Symphonic or whatever sub-region of the world that has 40 bands?
  3. Italian Symphonic: In this case I'm not so sure, I'm not a fan of national or regional based genres, but being that Italy has almost 300 bands, I don't see how we can ignore them.
  4. Crossover Prog: I don't know if it's a light Eclectic or a an elaborate Prog Related, in my opinion, the bands here could go to the two previously mentioned genres and nothing would change.
But again, this is not my call.

1. What to do with “neo-prog”?

Well, in my opinion it’s best to keep the definition from the 80’s, so “neo-prog” is equal to the symphonic style from the 80’s. And that we classify all the newer prog according to their styles and not just call all of it “neo-prog”. But I better write “neo-symphonic (neo-prog)” instead of just “neo-prog” in my proposal. Thanks.

That's exactly my point, Neo Prog is basically a sound that was popular between 1981 and 1987 mainly, and it's totally different from the "newest" Prog or newest Symphonic from the 90's and specially 00's, so Neo Prog or better Neo Symphonic, should stay.

2. How to classify Zeuhl?

As the first thing here can I say that for the sake of simplicity, I think it’s good to keep the number of the main sub-genres as low as possible. Then, I’d say that comparing with the other styles/sub-genres, Zeuhl is more avangardish. So, wouldn’t it be OK to put it together with the usual “avant-prog”? Also because some bands, like for instance Happy Family and other Japanese, play music in the middle between Zeuhl and the usual “avant-prog”. So, there is already an overlap between Zeuhl and the usual “avant-prog”.

I honestly have troubles with Zeuhl, which IMO is MAGMA and the rest (sorry to be harsh, but that's my opinion) and being that the word Zeuhl and the genre were created by Christian Vander, the other bands should sound more or less like MAGMA, but that's not the case, I see the French band leaded by Christian Vander as a unique expression in that sub-genre....So maybe in Eclectic would fit better.

3. Space-rock as a part of psychedelic?

Here, I just don’t understand your objection as both to me and almost everbody else, space-rock is psychedelic. So you’re more than welcome to write more on that.

4. Your objection to that of “my” sub-genres which I have called “heavy prog”and described as
* heavy prog, incl. all the sub-genres of heavy metal which can be considered progressive”.

 

You write:

Heavy Metal or Prog Metal are  a completely different specie that Heavy Prog (which IMO should be called Hard Prog to make a difference), bands like Uriah Heep or Titanic, have nothing in common with Dream Theater.

Yes! I understand very well your objection, as I’ve defined “heavy prog” (for myself) in a quite different way then the usual one but I’ve described it misleading where I mention it. I should have written: “* heavy prog, defined as all the sub-genres of heavy metal which can be considered progressive”, because that’s how I’ll suggest we define it. Thanks again.

More about, how I’d like to define “heavy prog” and how, I’ll suggest, we classify what you’d like to call “Hard Prog”, have I written in one of my previous comments (posted 4 November European time), and that is: 
“As the main thing here, I would not consider “hard-rock” as a major style equal to “my” main sub-genres/styles. So, I’ll suggest that we either have to do with some music where the heavy elements are very pronounced, and in that case we classified it as a part of the main sub-genre, I have defined as “heavy prog”. – And here I’ll surely include Dream Theater. - Or, we have to do with some music where other elements are more dominating, and in that case we classified it as one of “my” other main sub-genres. But in that case we can talk about sub-subgenres, for instance “hard symphonic prog” which I think would be a proper characteristic of Rush. Or another examples could here be “hard jazz-rock”, as for instance label for Liquid Tension Experiment, or “hard folk-rock” as the characteristic of the Peruvian band Flor de Loto.” Yes, including a note about some of your countrymen.

I believe that the difference between Hard Rock and Heavy Metal is substantial, lets start with the fact that Heavy Metal started some years after Hard Rock already existed, so the term Heavy could leave iconic bands from the late 60's and early 70's away or at least mislead.

Well, that’s what I’ll write in this post but I’ll be very glad to here some more from you, and can you tell me if there is any other Peruvian band similar to Flor de Loto or maybe less hard. Or maybe from one of your neighbouring countries, that is except Los Jaivas which I know already and also am quite fond of.

Here you have a short list that you should check:

  1. Laghonia: Pshychedelia  http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=2144 - http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=2144

  2. Fragil: Symphonic  http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=113 - http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=113  Focus only in "Avenida Larco" and "Sorpresa del Tiempo"
  3. Traffic Sound:  Proto Prog:  http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=2156 - http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=2156
  4. Supay: Folk- Andean Prog (OUTSTANDING). 
  5. Kharmina Buhrana: Heavy Prog  http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=3881 - http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=3881
This are my top 5.

Iván



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Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: November 05 2010 at 11:30
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

 
  1. Indo Prog/Raga Prog: Why not Peruvian Prog/Andean Rock or French Theatric Symphonic or whatever sub-region of the world that has 40 bands?]

No idea about native Peruvian music and to what extent it is part of Peruvian prog but unlike French Theatric Symphonic, Indian music is a whole system of music completely separate from and evolved independently of the broad Western music system, so there's no question that it is a more unique case. However, the more innovative of those artists blending Western and Indian music influences tend to go for jazz or even classical rather than rock, which puts them out of the bounds of this website.


Posted By: The Truth
Date Posted: November 05 2010 at 11:50

There is no truer way to define prog other than "that weird sh*t I listen to".

That's how all my friends describe it anyways.
 


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http://blindpoetrecords.bandcamp.com/" rel="nofollow">


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 05 2010 at 16:49
Sorry for my misunderstanding about PA and thanks for your new comments and the band list, Ivan. I'm looking forward to check the bands out.
David


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 05 2010 at 18:12
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

No idea about native Peruvian music and to what extent it is part of Peruvian prog but unlike French Theatric Symphonic, Indian music is a whole system of music completely separate from and evolved independently of the broad Western music system, so there's no question that it is a more unique case. However, the more innovative of those artists blending Western and Indian music influences tend to go for jazz or even classical rather than rock, which puts them out of the bounds of this website.
 
Similarly to prog folk, which I prefer to call prog folk-rock, I'll propose that we define symphonic prog in a global scope, meaning that it include the "classical music" from the entire world. But that pressumes of course  syntheses with rock.
 
How about that?


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: November 05 2010 at 23:03
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

No idea about native Peruvian music and to what extent it is part of Peruvian prog but unlike French Theatric Symphonic, Indian music is a whole system of music completely separate from and evolved independently of the broad Western music system, so there's no question that it is a more unique case. However, the more innovative of those artists blending Western and Indian music influences tend to go for jazz or even classical rather than rock, which puts them out of the bounds of this website.
 
Similarly to prog folk, which I prefer to call prog folk-rock, I'll propose that we define symphonic prog in a global scope, meaning that it include the "classical music" from the entire world. But that pressumes of course  syntheses with rock.
 
How about that?

I highly doubt that classical in the context of symphonic prog means all styles of classical from the world and am quite certain that it refers to Western classical music. That is, if it does not have elements of Western classical music, it is not symphonic prog.  Indo prog could sorta go into eclectic, I don't know, never understood what exactly that term means.  


Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: November 06 2010 at 00:37
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

No idea about native Peruvian music and to what extent it is part of Peruvian prog but unlike French Theatric Symphonic, Indian music is a whole system of music completely separate from and evolved independently of the broad Western music system, so there's no question that it is a more unique case. However, the more innovative of those artists blending Western and Indian music influences tend to go for jazz or even classical rather than rock, which puts them out of the bounds of this website.
 
Similarly to prog folk, which I prefer to call prog folk-rock, I'll propose that we define symphonic prog in a global scope, meaning that it include the "classical music" from the entire world. But that pressumes of course  syntheses with rock.
 
How about that?

I always believed that the term Prof Folk or Folk Prog is too identified with Celtic or British Pastoral influenced music, and misleads, like for example, somebody who finds Los Jaivas could feel disappointed because they don't sound as Jethro Tull or The Strawbs.

That's why I propose to change it to ETHNIC PROG, which covers more the variety of national influences.}}

Iván


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Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 06 2010 at 16:17
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

[
 
Similarly to prog folk, which I prefer to call prog folk-rock, I'll propose that we define symphonic prog in a global scope, meaning that it include the "classical music" from the entire world. But that pressumes of course  syntheses with rock.
 
How about that?

I always believed that the term Prof Folk or Folk Prog is too identified with Celtic or British Pastoral influenced music, and misleads, like for example, somebody who finds Los Jaivas could feel disappointed because they don't sound as Jethro Tull or The Strawbs.

That's why I propose to change it to ETHNIC PROG, which covers more the variety of national influences.}}

Iván
 
That's a splendid idea, Ivan, which I'll try to incorporate in my article as soon as possible but that requires some bigger changes. Do you maybe have a similar proposal concerning symphonic prog, so it covers the "classical music" from the entire world?


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 06 2010 at 16:32
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

[
 
Similarly to prog folk, which I prefer to call prog folk-rock, I'll propose that we define symphonic prog in a global scope, meaning that it include the "classical music" from the entire world. But that pressumes of course  syntheses with rock.
 
How about that?

I highly doubt that classical in the context of symphonic prog means all styles of classical from the world and am quite certain that it refers to Western classical music. That is, if it does not have elements of Western classical music, it is not symphonic prog.  Indo prog could sorta go into eclectic, I don't know, never understood what exactly that term means.  
 
What "classical" means is a matter of convention. Now I suggest that we define it as the "classical" music of the entire world, but maybe it would be better then to call the symphonic prog for something else. Do you have any suggestions?
 


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 06 2010 at 17:23
Now I think that I've got a pretty good idea. What would you guys say to call this "global symphonic prog" simply classical prog? Does that sounds as OK to you as it does to me?


Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: November 06 2010 at 22:33
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

Now I think that I've got a pretty good idea. What would you guys say to call this "global symphonic prog" simply classical prog? Does that sounds as OK to you as it does to me?

As you can read in the Symphonic definition I wrote, I'm not very happy with the name Symphonic, being that the term means nothing IMO, but it's so spread and well known, that would be impossible to change it.

Iván


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Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: November 06 2010 at 23:06
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

 
What "classical" means is a matter of convention. Now I suggest that we define it as the "classical" music of the entire world, but maybe it would be better than to call the symphonic prog for something else. Do you have any suggestions?
 

Indeed it is, and strictly speaking, classical is not even supposed to imply general Western orchestral music, but we'll leave that aside for the moment.  Indian classical music is not really referred to as CLASSICAL by its own exponents here because classical is a Western attribute to begin with. We just call it Carnatic and Hindustani here.  And I must stress again, there is no comparison between British or Italian classical music on the one hand and Carnatic and Hindustani on the other because the former are still only forms of WESTERN classical music, the latter are completely different.  Rock or jazz fused with Indian classical music would not resemble rock fused with Western classical music at all.   There is also no scope imo to accommodate rock-Indian classical synthesis within the umbrella of symphonic prog.


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: November 06 2010 at 23:09
However, I don't necessarily advocate a separate Indo prog category for the same reasons that Ivan gave, it's just too small. It could be lumped in fusion imo, no harm done!  


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 02:56
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

Now I think that I've got a pretty good idea. What would you guys say to call this "global symphonic prog" simply classical prog? Does that sounds as OK to you as it does to me?

As you can read in the Symphonic definition I wrote, I'm not very happy with the name Symphonic, being that the term means nothing IMO, but it's so spread and well known, that would be impossible to change it.

Iván
 
Come on Ivan, say never "never". I know it's not gonna be easy and take time but that's the case with changing "prog folk" to "ethnic prog", too. The most important thing is that we believe they're the right thing to do, and, as I just wrote in my article many people around the world will be very happy with these changes. So we gonna give it a try. And yes, I've already made the required changes in my article for the "new" classical prog and ethnic folk - as I just couldn't wait with that.


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 04:06
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

 
What "classical" means is a matter of convention. Now I suggest that we define it as the "classical" music of the entire world, but maybe it would be better then to call the symphonic prog for something else. Do you have any suggestions?
 

Indeed it is, and strictly speaking, classical is not even supposed to imply general Western orchestral music, but we'll leave that aside for the moment.  Indian classical music is not really referred to as CLASSICAL by its own exponents here because classical is a Western attribute to begin with. We just call it Carnatic and Hindustani here.  And I must stress again, there is no comparison between British or Italian classical music on the one hand and Carnatic and Hindustani on the other because the former are still only forms of WESTERN classical music, the latter are completely different.  Rock or jazz fused with Indian classical music would not resemble rock fused with Western classical music at all.   There is also no scope imo to accommodate rock-Indian classical synthesis within the umbrella of symphonic prog.
 
As the first thing, again, I'm talking not only about including the Indian music but in principle the "classical music" of the entire world - which means for instance also Japanese and Chinese. Then, I can't see it as a big problem the differences from Western classical. We can say that what they have in common is their origins as the historical music of upper classes, and that's how we can define "the new", global in scope, classical music. As we could say, folk, or the global in scope ethnic music, has it's origin in lower classes.
 
Neither can I see a big problem in the fact that non Western "classical music" fused with rock will have some differences from the classic symphonic prog. I mean that should not be so relevant in the matter of justice classification. Contrary, the most important thing here must be that we use the same logic, and, I'll say, that we don't discriminate.
 
Further, I'm not talking just about purely theoretical terms. Syntheses of non Western "classical" and rock exists. And that is the case with Japanese, Chinese, Indian, Andalusian, Indonesian and some other too.
 
So, I think, we should give it a chance.
 
Something entire else is that I just wrote at the other, "minimalist", prog definition debate that from my, surely speciel, point of view the essence of prog is making syntheses. And now when we discuss these different things, I've found more syntheses than before, if used a broad prog definition: syntheses of different styles, past (folk) and future (avantgarde), upper classes (classical) and lower classes (rock, folk), synthesis of different countries and surely also some other.
Wow! Now I'm even more impressed with prog than before - veery interesting music!


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 04:18
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

 
As the first thing, again, I'm talking not only about including the Indian music but in principle the "classical music" of the entire world - which means for instance also Japanese and Chinese. Then, I can't see it as a big problem the differences from Western classical. We can say that what they have in common is their origins as the historical music of upper classes, and that's how we can define "the new", global in scope, classical music. As we could say, folk, or the global in scope ethnic music, has it's origin in lower classes.


I only focused on Indian because there's an Indo prog category.  I think there would be problems with lumping Japanese, Chinese, Indian etc all in one basket as 'classical'.  Reason being that apart from the socio-cultural factor of classical music forms historically being upper class music - would like to verify this but will accept the assumption for the sake of discussion - there is not much musical common ground between these styles.  I think Ivan's idea of an ethnic prog category for all music styles that are not rooted in the Western medium is a better one.
 
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

Neither can I see a big problem in the fact that non Western "classical music" fused with rock will have some differences from the classic symphonic prog. I mean that should not be so relevant in the matter of justice classification. Contrary, the most important thing here must be that we use the same logic, and, I'll say, that we don't discriminate.


But the classification then is on some historical basis which does not directly relate to some musical basis of classifying the music.  Ok, we could put all prog rock with strong influence of some or other classical music in one category but it would not be particularly helpful. For instance, prog that is Western classical based, say Renaissance, may be less improvised in nature but Indo-Western fusion would lean towards jazz because improvisation is a very key element of Indian classical music.  Even on classifying such cross-country synthesis as ethnic, we are only putting them in a sort of geographical basket but at least this would establish that said basket includes music that involves synthesis of rock/folk/jazz with some or other non-Western classical/non-classical music.  That leads to the other problem with a global classical prog category: what happens to music that draws Oriental or Eastern elements without the same necessarily being the classical music of those countries?  Say, qawali. 
 




Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 08:49
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

 
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

Neither can I see a big problem in the fact that non Western "classical music" fused with rock will have some differences from the classic symphonic prog. I mean that should not be so relevant in the matter of justice classification. Contrary, the most important thing here must be that we use the same logic, and, I'll say, that we don't discriminate.


But the classification then is on some historical basis which does not directly relate to some musical basis of classifying the music.  Ok, we could put all prog rock with strong influence of some or other classical music in one category but it would not be particularly helpful. For instance, prog that is Western classical based, say Renaissance, may be less improvised in nature but Indo-Western fusion would lean towards jazz because improvisation is a very key element of Indian classical music.   

 
A good explanation of the problem, rogerthat, and now I can see it, too. Thanks.
 
But then again, what do you think of a term for traditional ("folk") music in a global scope, because that's how Ivan has proposed that we use "ethnic prog". He has written:
I always believed that the term Prog Folk or ,Folk Prog is too identified with Celtic or British Pastoral influenced music, and misleads, like for example, somebody who finds Los Jaivas could feel disappointed because they don't sound as Jethro Tull or The Strawbs.

That's why I propose to change it to ETHNIC PROG, which covers more the variety of national influences.}}


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 08:50
Ivan intended it for folk prog maybe but no harm done in having a general ethnic basket imo.


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 09:36
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

 
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

Neither can I see a big problem in the fact that non Western "classical music" fused with rock will have some differences from the classic symphonic prog. I mean that should not be so relevant in the matter of justice classification. Contrary, the most important thing here must be that we use the same logic, and, I'll say, that we don't discriminate.


But the classification then is on some historical basis which does not directly relate to some musical basis of classifying the music.  Ok, we could put all prog rock with strong influence of some or other classical music in one category but it would not be particularly helpful. For instance, prog that is Western classical based, say Renaissance, may be less improvised in nature but Indo-Western fusion would lean towards jazz because improvisation is a very key element of Indian classical music.   

 
A good explanation of the problem, rogerthat, and now I can see it, too. Thanks.
 
 
As a matter of fact, thanks a lot because I'd say, I really learned something new here. And now, I guess, I better understand why the music I have, fused with Indian, all is jazz fusion, and why I've had substantial difficulties with finding some more complex and rocky music fused with Indian. It has even been a bit easier with Japanese and even Chinese. You're very welcome to recommend, if you know some more elaborate and rocky Indian fusion.


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 11:22
 
 
rogerthat, if you have somehow followed the discussions at the other quest for prog definition, could you maybe give a briefing concerning the headlines for discussions?


Posted By: Ivan_Melgar_M
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 11:57
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Ivan intended it for folk prog maybe but no harm done in having a general ethnic basket imo.

You are right Rogerthat, I believe that Prog Folk or Folk Prog are misleading terms due to the large history of Celtic or British pastoral bands being identified with this terms.

So I proposed to change Prog Folk to Ethnic Prog...No relation with Symphonic.

Iván


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Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 13:13
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Ivan intended it for folk prog maybe but no harm done in having a general ethnic basket imo.

You are right Rogerthat, I believe that Prog Folk or Folk Prog are misleading terms due to the large history of Celtic or British pastoral bands being identified with this terms.

So I proposed to change Prog Folk to Ethnic Prog...No relation with Symphonic.

Iván

Prog Folk or Folk Prog is always English, British, or Celtic for me.  Folk proper does compose a much broader range of music around the world.


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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...



Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 15:41
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Ivan intended it for folk prog maybe but no harm done in having a general ethnic basket imo.

You are right Rogerthat, I believe that Prog Folk or Folk Prog are misleading terms due to the large history of Celtic or British pastoral bands being identified with this terms.

So I proposed to change Prog Folk to Ethnic Prog...No relation with Symphonic.

Iván
 
No, the question was whether your "Ethnic Prog" term concerned the traditional/ethnic music of the entire world?


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 16:20
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

Prog Folk or Folk Prog is always English, British, or Celtic for me.  Folk proper does compose a much broader range of music around the world.
 
Does that mean that you could appreciate the idea of calling it "Ethnic Prog" when the talk is about the subject consisting of the synthesis of rock and folk/ethnic music in the entire world?


Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: November 07 2010 at 17:17
Sometimes things you like just have to be appreciated in their own right and don't need to be considered prog.  Make your case, if it goes nowhere, move on.  

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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...



Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 09 2010 at 15:18
 
Ok, now I think it's better for the time being to drop the idea of renaming symphonic prog to classical prog. But we could at least clearly define symphonic prog as consisting of more than only a synthesis of rock and European classical music. That more is surely Andalusian (flamenco) rock but maybe also fusion with Japanese, Chinese, Indonesian (Gamelan), Ottoman (Turkish) and some other "classical" music. I agree though with rogerthat that the condition for being classified as symphonic prog must be an appropriate stylistic resemblance with the classic symphonic prog. Otherwise it'll be some mess.
 
If somebody could be interested in which classical and art music exists in the entire world, Wikipedia have made an suggestion for an overview - follow the link:
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_classical_and_art_music_traditions - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_classical_and_art_music_traditions


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 16 2010 at 16:19
 
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

A good definition of progressive rock necessarily has to be broad because by nature it is NOT limited to a few musical styles.  It can be argued that the musical styles going into it is not important now and was not in the 70s and it is a certain compositional approach that those bands shared. 
 
Can making syntheses of styles not be said to be a certain compositional approach?


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: November 16 2010 at 19:08
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

 
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

A good definition of progressive rock necessarily has to be broad because by nature it is NOT limited to a few musical styles.  It can be argued that the musical styles going into it is not important now and was not in the 70s and it is a certain compositional approach that those bands shared. 
 
Can making syntheses of styles not be said to be a certain compositional approach?


You misunderstood me,the point is prog is not by its nature limited to a few musical styles. I haven't been keeping tabs on the progress Wink of this thread but the original definition you proposed was of a synthesis of rock,classical, jazz and folk or something on those lines. I submit that there may  even be music that is a synthesis of these styles and yet not prog.


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 16 2010 at 20:52
 
No, the original definition was
 

I will propose that some music to be called progressive rock has to:

1. be a synthesis of rock and at least one of the other main styles: classical music, jazz, ethnic music, electronic or other avant-garde, and

2. be rather complex or at least to some extent experimental in another way than 1.

 
except from that instead of "ethnic music", it said "folk", and #2 shall secure excluding of those syntheses which are not supposed to be characterized as progressive rock.


Posted By: progpositivity
Date Posted: November 17 2010 at 18:11
Hi David!  I see some things that I like about your definition. 
 
At your request, I'm posting some concerns or questions that might be used to "fine tune" the wording a bit - if you wish to do so.  If not, that's certainly "OK" too!  Of course, they could be a result of me misunderstanding something.  I hope they don't sound too critical.
 
Here is my current understanding of your definition.
 
1) Prog creates a synthesis of rock music plus at least 1 of the main genres of music.  The main genres are: classical music, jazz music, ethnic music, electronic music, and avant-garde music.
 
2) Prog must be either
a)"rather complex" OR
b) experimental in some way other than - above and beyond the mere fact that it has synthesized rock with another main genre of music.
 
I certainly can see how this recipe could create some very excellent Progressive Rock music!  Smile
 
My concerns are mostly about some important music that I think gets "left out" and the lack of clarity regarding the basis for which we make the decision to include or leave out certain music.
 
Music that seems like it could get "left out" but which I think should be included:
 
* What about rock music that becomes very complex without achieving a synthesis with another main genre?  Music like Rush and Dream Theater and Pink Floyd?  I don't think they really draw very much from the other main styles but they still seem worthy of being included in "progressive rock".
 
* What about music that is a synthesis of rock and a genre that is not one of the main styles?  What if music is complex, is written in a 7/8 time signature and yet it is essentially a synthesis of rock and soul - like a progressive Stevie Wonder type of music?  I think it would be worthy of including in the domain of "progressive rock".
 
For these type reasons, my preference would be to not require a true synthesis and to not quantify a list of required "main styles" in the definition.  But that is just my preference.  This is your approach to defining prog and I'm just stating my own opinion and preference.
 
* What if music is a synthesis of rock and jazz, but the resulting jazz-rock fusion is not "rather complex" nor is it "experimental" in another way than #1?  It sounds like it would not qualify according to your definition. But I think all jazz-rock fusion should qualify.  This leads me to my final question/concern.
 
The basis on which we make the decision to include or not to include.   
 
* This definition leaves us decide whether music is "rather complex" or "experimental" but it doesn't provide a guiding reference point for making such a determination. 
 
For this reason, I would be interested in having an indicator or "reference point" to help in the definition.  As you know from our previous discussions, I believe a good such reference point is "beyond the traditional boundaries or limitations of the rock genre".
 
Of course, it is OK if you just say it is complex and/or experimental.  You don't "have" to quantify it.  I just think it helps solidify the definition in one's mind if we are able to provide a reference point.


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Positively the best Prog and Fusion 24/7!
http://www.progpositivity.com


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 18 2010 at 13:33
Hi Progpos!
 
Thanks a lot for your very good remarks.
They do of course bear the mark of our to a certain degree diverse point of view in the matter of the best way of defining Progressive Rock. Nevertheless, I'm very glad that you with your comment have made me think at the lack of clarity in the question of the basis on which I had decided what to include in my definition, and now I want to improve it.
 
As far it concerns Pink Floyd, Rush and Dream Theater, I must say, we have quite different opinions, and what I find most correctly appears from one of my previous posts in this thread, which states:
 
"A bit late answer/comments to your concerns, Mushroom Sword:
 
1.Whether Pink Floyd will be included in my proposal for prog definition?
 
Well, I don’t know what you have been thinking at in this matter, but it should be quite obvious that yes. As Pink Floyd is agreed to be characterized as space-rock and this style I explicitly mention as a part of the main sub-genre “psychedelic prog”.
 
2. The question of including Rush, Tool, Dream Theater and “hard rock”.
 
As the main thing here, I would not consider “hard-rock” as a major style equal to “my” main sub-genres/styles. So, I’ll suggest that we either have to do with some music where the heavy elements are very pronounced, and in that case we classified it as a part of the main sub-genre, I have defined as “heavy prog”. – And here I’ll surely include Dream Theater. - Or, we have to do with some music where other elements are more dominating, and in that case we classified it as one of “my” other main sub-genres. But in that case we can talk about sub-subgenres, for instance “hard symphonic prog” which I think would be a proper characteristic of Rush. Or another examples could here be “hard jazz-rock”, as for instance label for Liquid Tension Experiment, or “hard folk-rock” as the characteristic of the peruvian band Flor de Loto.
As far as it concerns Tool, I’ll prefer not to comment them here, because they are not so little quirky."
 
To this I have to add that I consider Progressive Space Rock as being synthesis of Rock and electronic Avant-garde while in Heavy Prog, the way I've defined it, I of course include Progressive Metal and thus Dream Theater. Here, I have again to add that in my opinion, Progressive Metal is, among other things, a fusion with Classical.


Posted By: progpositivity
Date Posted: November 18 2010 at 14:47

I now understand that you consider space-rock as a part of the subgenre "Psychedelic Prog".  "Heavy Prog" is one of your subgenres of Prog as well. 

 

Perhaps you could supply a listing of your "main genres" and "subgenres" as you currently have them envisioned? 

 

Of course, you can still adjust and fine-tune the sub-genres as needed whenever you wish.  But I think seeing your current setup could help me understand where you are with your classification system at the moment.

 

Main Genre list:  Classical music, jazz music, ethnic music, electronic music, and avant-garde music.  Are there any new additions?

 

Sub-genre list:  I know you have Psych Prog and Heavy Prog.  What else is included here?

 

------

 

1) Prog creates a synthesis of rock music plus at least 1 of the main genres of music.  The main genres are: classical music, jazz music, ethnic music, electronic music, and avant-garde music.

 

2) Prog must be either

a)"rather complex" OR

b) experimental in some way other than - above and beyond the mere fact that it has synthesized rock with another main genre of music.

 



-------------
Positively the best Prog and Fusion 24/7!
http://www.progpositivity.com


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 18 2010 at 16:48
 
Progpositivity wrote:
"Of course, you can still adjust and fine-tune the sub-genres as needed whenever you wish.  But I think seeing your current setup could help me understand where you are with your classification system at the moment."
 
Well, I'm rather glad you ask this question, but you can best see it in my article as it's updated now.
 


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 18 2010 at 19:36
Originally posted by progpositivity progpositivity wrote:

 My concerns are mostly about some important music that I think gets "left out" and the lack of clarity regarding the basis for which we make the decision to include or leave out certain music.
................. 
.......
 
The basis on which we make the decision to include or not to include.   
 
* This definition leaves us decide whether music is "rather complex" or "experimental" but it doesn't provide a guiding reference point for making such a determination. 
 
For this reason, I would be interested in having an indicator or "reference point" to help in the definition. 
 
As I wrote in my previous post, I see some lack of clarity in my article regarding on what basis I decided what to include in my definition. I can tell here as much about my approach to the whole defining process that I'd like the definition to be a matter of a wide agreed convention, or a result of a kind of democratic proces which decide what has to be regarded as Progressive Rock. Therefore, I've come with a proposal for a definition, primarily based on what I think mostly is considered as Progressive Rock, and people are supposed to make their choice whether they want to use it or not.
 
Secondly, I deliberatly have not drawn very specific borders concerning what to include and what not, as I would leave this to a certain extent as an individual decision.


Posted By: progpositivity
Date Posted: November 19 2010 at 16:07
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

[QUOTE=progpositivity]  
Secondly, I deliberatly have not drawn very specific borders concerning what to include and what not, as I would leave this to a certain extent as an individual decision.
 
I can see where that could be beneficial.


-------------
Positively the best Prog and Fusion 24/7!
http://www.progpositivity.com


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 20 2010 at 11:47
Something else, Progpos.
 
My proposal for definition, in its current formulation and spelling, says:
 

"I will propose that some music to be called progressive rock has to:

1. be a synthesis of Rock and at least one of the other main genres: Classical, Jazz, Folk, electronic avant-garde or other avant-garde, AND

2. be rather complex or at least to some extent experimental in another way than #1."

 
which you have commented (18 November) more precisely, and among other things, in this way:
 
"This definition leaves us decide whether music is "rather complex" or "experimental" but it doesn't provide a guiding reference point for making such a determination. 
For this reason, I would be interested in having an indicator or "reference point" to help in the definition.  As you know from our previous discussions, I believe a good such reference point is "beyond the traditional boundaries or limitations of the rock genre"."
 
In my opinion and interpretation though, this reference point is clearly implied in my definition, as making complex or otherwise experimental syntheses of Rock and other main genres must obviously be said to transgress "beyond the traditional boundaries or limitations of the rock genre"; while at the same time, my definition describes the character of this transgression.
 


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: November 21 2010 at 22:02
 
Hi everybody!
 
I'd like to tell you that in order to test the definition, I've proposed, and to see what it brings of music with itself, I've made a list of some of the highest acclaimed (rated) and well-known albums, classified by the proposed main sub-genres. This list is based on all ratings as they appeared in RateYourMusic and ProgArchives November 2009 and November 2010, and I've added it to my article.
 
You're of course all welcome to comment it.
 
Meanwhile keep proggin'!
David_D


Posted By: XPEHOPE3KA
Date Posted: December 07 2010 at 07:55

I'd like to post some remarks about the article in its current state.


First of all, I'm the author of the Russian wikipedia article on progressive rock. The article isn't a translation of the English one, but instead is based on a book by Valery Syrov, a Russian music theorist. The English info about the book is http://www.people.nnov.ru/syrov/Eng/Book.htm - here . AFAIK it's unavailable in English. And though he distinguishes between prog and art rock, I'm using in my comment my own interpretation of the issue with both his prog and his art rock being termed "prog".

And in this book, written in 1997, he is using the very same idea of "prog-is-synthesis". I can even remember he probably doesn't attribute this idea to himself, but cites some Western scientists. He uses the idea only to define prog, but the definition of subgenres is straightforward. He doesn't restrain the genres to be fused with only to the top ones, which immediately eases the addition of the Heavy prog subgenre to the classification. However there is no objectively verifyable criterion of prog in the book. He says that prog "is a creative enrichment of rock music via a dialogue with other musical movements" and by "dialogue" he explicitly means something which is the inverse of "shallow copying, simplified reproduction or common blending of genres without attempting their synthesis and comprehension" - some kind of your #2 part of the criterion.

Overall it's a funny read with great ideas like the use of "silence" (interchanging heavy with mellow music - presented in the book by waveform views of the audio filesLOL) pioneered in rock by prog and a lot of factual mistakes like asserting Portnoy being Russian by origin...


And there is also another independent comment on the synthesis hypothesis by the http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=6020 - Arsenal (band legendary in USSR) frontman: "Progressive rock for the rock music is the same as fusion for the jazz music" (my own translation, as is, no warranty, etc). This IMO doesn't include any analogue to your #2 restriction.


And now my own thoughts on the subject.

Skip this paragraph if it bores you, but just a minor issue:

Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

The broader “Prog community definition” has obvious advantages: it includes more different music and makes “the Prog movement” wider and thus stronger.
It's not that obvious an advantage. Surely it becomes wider, but the wider a movement gets the more forces with different, often opposing directions it includes. I even know that it is a must for, say, mathematical models of political parties to model the opposing inner forces influence on the party strength. And for example lots of the heavier prog bands surely abandon the abovementioned use of "silence" in favor of omnipresent riffing like a saw. And this brings me to the another point you made:
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

The main point of this way of defining is for me to separate a large part of the experimental and more ambitious Rock music from the mainstream in order to strengthen its identity and help building it up as a broad cultural movement.
There's not that much of an identity here))) there would probably be a decent prog classification some time, but that would be for sure just about some subtle logic. The identity isn't built on logic (in case of music), it's based on feeling, and the prog subgenres tend to cause different feelings even to those who like them. I like sympho and avant (and others), but I don't feel the identity with the guys who, say, like only avant (too much damage for my brain in Musique Concrete) or like only sympho (too little meat for my brain in most neo).

Actually I'd like to have a classification to support understanding of "another" identity. Sorry for the pun, I've just run out of words, but I'm talking about my own identity as a prog listener. What music traits I tend to like? What other albums might have such traits? This is what, say, last.fm tags are about. And this brings me to my own view of an ideal and thus impossible "classification". Just take the last.fm principle of tags instead of hierarchic classification (this kills the eclectic category, which is anyway just a bin for the yet unclassifiable), then decide to tag primarily albums (but also compositions and bands) and use only the objectively verifiable traits as tags. Some examples of "objectively verifiable traits" so that you see why I call it ideal: apart from easy tags like "from Sweden" or "contains a long track", there is a theoretical way to decide some more interesting traits. You can get an educated person to tell the time signatures and if they are changing, and also the musical modes, characteristic note patterns, etc. Another more theoretical way is to try to devise stochastic algorithms to analyze the music as a signal and to say if it contains all the above, or numerous character changes and if these changes are predictable (like in chorus-verse patters) or not. Same thing to see if there are heavy/mellow changes - the last is clearly doable.



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Just call me "X".


Posted By: Peter
Date Posted: December 07 2010 at 08:03
You can't -- at least, at least, not for anyone besides yourself, because it is a highly subjective concept. Everyone here would agree that it's "good" and "better than other stuff," but those are subjective terms as well.
 
Try to nail it down any further and you get endless argument -- as you'll see if you spend any time here. It's a lousy way to classify music (though the term meant more for a few years after its inception).


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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock?
Come to my arms, my beamish boy!
O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!'
He chortled in his joy.


Posted By: David_D
Date Posted: December 07 2010 at 16:58
Hi XPEHOPE3KA.
 
Thanks a lot for your extensive remarks which I have following comments to:
 
1. The question of identity.
 
What I've been thinking about concerning identity, is the possibility of to a high degree feel as a Prog rocker and at the same time understand Prog as first and foremost syntheses of Rock and some other "main genres". If that could be possible, it would be less relevant whether the question is about, for instance, synthesis of Rock and Classical or of Rock and Jazz. If a Symphonic Prog fan for instance could indentify him self with a Jazz-Rock fan and feel as much respect for his taste of music as for his own, and think of them both as first and foremost Prog rockers then, it could be possible to have an identity as a Prog rocker independently of whether one was most fond of Symphonic, Jazz-rock or Progressive Metal.
 
2. About the classification.
 
First and foremost, the ambition of my wish for classification is not very high. I've just thought about having some tools, so, when even not being in possession of any further technical knowledge of music, one could nevetherless somehow analyze different types of music, see differences between them, changes over time and so on. Secondly, similarly to your ideal, I don't consider sub-genres as boxes, we can put albums in, but as tags or labels we can characterize albums with, and where it'll be quite often that we use more than one tag or label for each album. Due to such point of view, I prefer RateYourMusic's database structure, as it is mainly divided by bands and artists and it classify each album, than ProgArchives'.
 
By the way, I can read a little Russian as I originally come from Poland, but unfortunately not enough to read the russian book, you've told about, even it sounds very interesting. I'll be happy though to read the info about.
My idea of defining Progressive Rock by means of styles comes partly from Edward Macan's definition and partly from the wish to find a definition which could legitimize the including of at least several different sub-genres. Then I thought, why only "allow" a synthesis of Rock and Classical, like Macan does as a result of a historical analysis, and not Rock and some other "main genres"?


Posted By: TheOppenheimer
Date Posted: January 28 2011 at 00:33
The word "progressive" comes from PROGRESS.


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A veces es cuestión de esperar, y tomarte en silencio.


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: January 28 2011 at 18:05
Hi,
Quote

Electronic Prog

 

Tangerine Dream  (D) :   Phaedra  (1974)

Jean-Michel Jarre  (F) :   Oxygene  (1976)

Kraftwerk  (D) :   Radio-Aktivität  (1975)

Klaus Schulze  (D) :   Irrlicht  (1972)

Manuel Göttsching  (D) :   E2-E4  (1984)  (alt. Krautrock)

Harmonia  (D) :  Musik Von Harmonia  (1974)  (alt. Krautrock)

Ashra  (D) :   New Age On Earth  (1977) 

Vangelis  (GRE) :   Heaven And Hell  (1975)

Michael Hoenig  (D) :   Departure From The Northern Wasteland  (1978)

Edgar Froese  (D) :   Ypsilon In Malaysian Pale  (1975)

Heldon  (F) :   Stand By  (1979)

 

I actually can handle this part ... because it gives credit to a style that is quite prolific, but no one can say or do anything about it, and this board ... does not exactly have a place for them. It's hard to discuss Tangerine Dream here, when someone immediately says it's washing machine music, and they think that Rush is progressive and the rest is soap ... or prog!
 
List is missing the likes of Popol Vuh, Eberhard Schonner, Robert Schroeder and many others in Europe, that pretty much came out of the wood work like flies and many other critters at the time.
 
You're going to have to publish what you do, in order to invalidate the discussion (or even harrassment sometimes) of what is said here. What was developed here is the work of several people for many years and while you and I might not agree that it is perfect, and in many ways it does not reflect enough music and is sometimes very wishy washy and determined by a sound effect, is ... better than what is out there in many places ... which is nothing.
 
The problem is that all the study you are making is ... about nothing ... or as I love to give the example ... brainwashing -- a lot of the "progressive" music arose out of movements that came out of the time, the place, the "revolution" and many other anti-establishment things, and too many of these "definitions" are trying hard to make this jsut a musical this or that, and ignore the rest of the work and its inspiration ... and at that point, the whole ting crumbles ... and ProgArchives, does not have, that I have seen, a CHART, that would help show and explain the logic, and the definitions, which for me, right now ... are invisible and just a bunch of words -- not music, or art.
 
One of these days find the film "Isaac Stern goes to China" and then watch it ... and watch a little girl say that ... "the music is too industrialist" ... and I sat there ... and rewound the film ... yeah ... that's what it said. And we're falling into the same category of accepting what is told to us, including this board, even if it does not make sense ... but getting this discussion by some of these folks is a scary proposition, since, in the end, it would be about dismantling a lot of their work ... and since it's "their board" ... it's not gonna happen!
 
I don't think these folks are "wrong". I just think that sometimes trying to justify their opinions by using the words ... is weird, incomplete and sometimes ... crazy ... but if all you get is someone wanting to go find some more Rio ... fine with me ... but I'm going after the girls!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: rwhite
Date Posted: January 30 2011 at 00:57
Trying to exactly define a genre of music will always produce disagreements. That is because the borders of what separate the different genres (and prog is certainly no exception to this) are by nature fuzzy and probably shifting over time too. There will always be certain artists and music that seem to straddle the boundaries and are therefore harder to define. Still I believe genres (and even sub-genres) are a useful tool to help find the music you like since music overall still tends to cluster into various groups even though there are always many exceptions. Now I have bought albums by a good number of prog artists spanning most of the progressive sub-genres mentioned and, even though their approaches can be quite varied, there is definitely something that ties them together and separates them from the rest of the popular music world. That is, if I heard a sequence of songs by artists unknown to me and a few of them were prog, I believe that those would immediately stand out to me as such. Many (probably most) people who weren't aware of what prog was, might sense a difference in these songs too, but would probably only be able to tell you that the songs were unusual in a different sort of way. What is the difference? Well, that's been discussed many times here before, but what I hear is an overall greater complexity, a more ambitious level of composition and/or improvisation along with unusual keys, time signatures, scales, song structures, etc. None of this, of course, diminishes other kinds of music to me, many of which I enjoy immensely. There is endless room for continued variations in these genres too. Still, there is something pretty special about prog to me.



Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: February 02 2011 at 21:37
Hi,
 
The only thing that is really wrong with almost ALL of the books on progressive music, is that they are not educated, and aware that there is a world out there and that the music means something beyond a note, or a chord.
 
And I find it offensive when someone is calling something "progressive" but they can not imagine that someone can create a new piece of music without their knoweldge or idea, or concerns. That academic point of view is highly offensive and is the "high class" point of view of a lot of music that the 20th century spent 75 years trying to break into smithreens, but some academic folks refuse to accept the loss in their war of words and worlds, and the majority of these "rock experts" are not studying each country and their cultural and artistic events to even have any idea of what the whole thing is about ... and separating the music by some musical bullpucky is not wise and basically only shows ... a total lack and concern for the wider view and wider development of the music and its environment ... in a world where the media and advertising became increasingly more open and influential ... you write something that ignores it all ...
 
It doesn't make sense, and is my "fight" on the PA stuff on a lot of bands ... that needs to get improved. But they not asking for help or have any interest in anything but rock music reviews as far as I can tell ... it's better than nothing, but sad in many ways ... the music can't improve when we don't care, and don't know how to color it better than ... "I like it"


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: February 02 2011 at 22:13
After a while definition and classification may no longer be important to you.  Hopefully people won't get too hung up on that kind of thing.  But if you have fun doing that, have at it.  Big smile

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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...



Posted By: Jarvig
Date Posted: February 09 2011 at 16:57
Originally posted by David_D David_D wrote:

 

The proposal

 

Then, I can summarize:

I will propose that some music to be called Progressive Rock has to:

1. be a synthesis of Rock and at least one of the other main genres: Classical, Jazz, Folk, electronic avant-garde or other avant-garde, AND

2. be rather complex or at least to some extent experimental in another way than #1.

”electronic avant-garde” is here primarily Musique Concrete and Minimalism while ”other avant-garde” include Free and Avant-Jazz and Contemporary Classical.

      
(sorry about my writing. Im danish and even though I speak and read english very, very well I dont write it quite as good)

I believe we are in trouble with the above proposal. Though I really understand what you are trying to do I think the problem is the very thing you trying to define.

What I mean?

I think one have to understand that "progressive rock" in reality only makes sense in a historical context.......that context being late 60s to mid 70s.

In popular music we first had Rock & Roll (say Chuck Berry). Then Soft Pop (say early 60s american pop). Then Guitar Pop (say The Beatles). Then Rock (say Rolling Stones).
We are now around 1966. Prog is not born yet. Because its time for summer of love. The psychedelic rock has taken the lead and bands such as The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Beach Boys and The Doors take rock to new and never seen places before.
Already here we see that the most ambitious bands/artist try to make more/better/interesting/ambitious music than the pop and single format brings to the table.

After psychedelic rock then a very broad genre is born and the subgenres have a lot in common.

There are no real title for the genre. But we could call it Classic 70s Rock. The subgenres are:
- Stadion Rock
- Progressive rock
- Album Rock
- Art Rock
- Avantgarde Rock
- Glam Rock
- Beginning Heavy Metal
- Hard Rock
- Blues Rock
- Southern Rock

What all subgenres under Classic 70s Rock shared were:
- Rock was the basis
- Singles and hits off cause to some extent important, but albums more important
- Music have to be more than the "pop" in the 60s
- Music can be more than "just music"....it can be artfull artistic statement about every aspect of life

The subgenre Progressive Rock had the following features:
- Incorporate other styles than just the standard blues progression, pop-standard and rock standard. Inspiration and incorporation on classical music, jazz and all kinds of world music very much needed.
- Song structures much more advanced then just plain pop and rock
- Playing live....a big believing in improvisations on stage
- Many layers in the music
- "Symphonic" sound much wanted. Because of the instruments available at the time we think of Classic Prog Rock in terms of Moog, Mini Moog, Analog Synths, Rhodes, Vox, Harmond Organ and Mellotron
- Players almost allways very skilled in playing their instrument(s)
- Soloing very common
- Polyphonic structures normal
- Concept albums very normal

But even though all above were the directions then Rock and especially Classic 70s Rock were the basis for Progressive Rock.

So far so good.

But around 1975-76 everything changed. Punk was born. Punk was the "Anti Classic 70s Rock". Punk was not an enemy of Pop. Punk was an enemy of Classic 70s Rock. 
Punk believed that Classic 70s Rock and all subgenres of it was fake, phoney, over intellectual, too much engeneered/design/made in the brain, without real feelings, too complicated, not "the poor mans music", not real music and so on.

I hate and love Punk. 
I hate it because their mission succeded. Classic Rock died for good, for ever. I hate because I simply dont like Punk music.
But I love Punk for what it did to music as a whole. Classic Rock was becomming imploding in its own ambitions. Some of the things Punk hated about Classic Rock were true. And Punk killed all that.

And because of that Classic 70s rock thus Progressive died.

Off cause we had small subgenres of Progressive Rock - say Neo-Prog - after the big days Prog in the 70s.. But until mid-90s most of the prog was just attempts of making the old 70s Prog Rock in new clothes. Really, nothing new prog.

The heritage (those I think were the good consequences) of Punk was
- Indie pop/rock
- Alternative rock
- Grunge
- Metal

To me it was Metal who put prog on the map again (in the mid 90s). NOT Rock. Rock havent been played for 30 years. And though I never understand why prog never merged with Indie and/or alternative rock then that never happened and it was Metal who found inspiration in prog to make the second comming of Prog. Metal made something new with prog.
Though not all modern prog have its roots in Metal, then Metal typical is the root in modern prog (as a genre, a development).

To me Progressive Rock is the Classic 70s Prog.

But today I think of the genre Prog as
- those who have the roots in rock (and thus 70s classic rock and prog)
- those who have the roots in metal
- those who have the roots in electronic (the one "little subgenre I didnt touched, but all the stuff from Tangerine Dream, Kraftwerk and stuff like that)
- those who have the roots in post rock (but strangly enough not indie or alt. rock)

Though not sharing all then these subgenres typical have something in common:

- They do not think about mainstream music and do not really make music to "break through"

- Believe in the listener that he/she can and will appreciate more complicated (demanding) music than that of the mainstream music

- Typical a believing among prog musicians and fans that their music is "better" and is "better taste" than other kind of music, especially mainstream music

- Pushing the bounderies, that being
- - Pushing sonic bounderies
- - Pushing harmonic bounderies
- - Pushing rhythmic bounderies
- - Pushing compositional bounderies
- - Pushing instrumential bounderies
- - Pushing song structure bounderies
- - Pushing historical connected conceptual bounderies

The above is my definition of Progressive Music of today.


Posted By: Jarvig
Date Posted: February 09 2011 at 17:14
One could ask: What about Jazz......or math prog?

Well to explain a bit how I would make the prog-subgenre-names then it would be.

Prog is always the second last term.

What the roots are are the last term. I dont believe that any prog have their roots in jazz. Because of that no subgeres ends on jazz.

That have to do with what is in front of Prog.....the first term.

Say you have a metal band who play prog and who really try to put jazz in their songs. Well, a band like that would - for me - be labled

Subgenre: Jazz Prog Metal

Metal is the root. Prog tells its a subgenre of Prog. Jazz tells that the direction is Jazz.

or

Subgenre:

Symphonic Prog Post Rock.

This a Post Rock band who are in the Prog genre. And the bands ambition/direction is to make this proggy post rock in the style/sound/performance symphonic.


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: February 09 2011 at 18:19
Originally posted by Jarvig Jarvig wrote:

...
The above is my definition of Progressive Music of today.
 
Damn ... how many beers did you need to get that done?
 
Even PA doesn't have it that well organized!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: colorofmoney91
Date Posted: October 01 2011 at 21:13
I consider progressive rock to be rock music that generally progresses within itself in any way. Vague is the way I like my definitions on subgenres of music.

Of course, I barely listen to progressive rock anymore; I tend to go for good music, whatever that may be for me at any given moment in time.


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http://hanashukketsu.bandcamp.com" rel="nofollow - Hanashukketsu


Posted By: Atavachron
Date Posted: October 02 2011 at 00:20
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

I started to read it, but then my eyes glazed over. 

happens to me frequently--  is that wrong?



Posted By: skidzophonics
Date Posted: October 05 2011 at 07:16
Awesome article \m/

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If you're into Progressive Metal, feel free to check out my band Morphica - www.facebook.com/morphica



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