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Earliest ProtoProg Beatles Song?

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Forum Name: Proto-Prog and Prog-Related Lounge
Forum Description: Discuss bands and albums classified as Proto-Prog and Prog-Related
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=97263
Printed Date: April 25 2024 at 01:53
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Topic: Earliest ProtoProg Beatles Song?
Posted By: brainstormer
Subject: Earliest ProtoProg Beatles Song?
Date Posted: February 23 2014 at 22:05
"And Your Bird Can Sing" (1966) has guitar work which I think is the proggiest sounding
music I've heard on such an early album.  




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Robert Pearson
Regenerative Music http://www.regenerativemusic.net
Telical Books http://www.telicalbooks.com
ParaMind Brainstorming Software http://www.paramind.net





Replies:
Posted By: Horizons
Date Posted: February 23 2014 at 22:33
Tomorrow Never Knows. 

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Crushed like a rose in the riverflow.


Posted By: Tom Ozric
Date Posted: February 24 2014 at 00:16
Originally posted by Horizons Horizons wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows. 
^ Without me going any further into this thread, TNK is a masterpiece of what was to become 'Progressive Rock'. I really don't think the guys ever topped this one.


Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: February 24 2014 at 07:03
Originally posted by Horizons Horizons wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows. 
Yes, it has to be TNK as it's on the same album as "And Your Bird Can Sing".


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: February 24 2014 at 07:05
Strawbery Fields Forever / Penny Lane the single.


Posted By: Stool Man
Date Posted: February 24 2014 at 07:29
Earliest? 
 
To quote from their wiki page:
"In mid-October 1965, the Beatles entered the recording studio; for the first time in making an album, they had an extended period without other major commitments.Released in December, Rubber Soul has been hailed by critics as a major step forward in the maturity and complexity of the band's music.Their thematic reach was beginning to expand as they embraced deeper aspects of romance and philosophy.Biographers Peter Brown and Steven Gaines attribute the new musical direction to "the Beatles' now habitual use of marijuana", an assertion confirmed by the band—Lennon referred to it as "the pot album", and Starr said, "Grass was really influential in a lot of our changes, especially with the writers. And because they were writing different material, we were playing differently."  After Help!'s foray into the world of classical music with flutes and strings, Harrison's introduction of a http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sitar" rel="nofollow - sitar on " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_Wood_%28This_Bird_Has_Flown%29" rel="nofollow - Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) " marked a further progression outside the traditional boundaries of popular music. As their lyrics grew more artful, fans began to study them for deeper meaning. "
 
"We Can Work It Out" (also recorded in October 1965) keeps changing tempo and has a waltz in the middle.
 
So in October '65 they were heading in progesque direction (increased complexity, artful lyrics, expanding themes, sitar, and pot)
"Tomorrow Never Knows" wasn't recorded until six months later.


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rotten hound of the burnie crew


Posted By: M27Barney
Date Posted: February 24 2014 at 08:59
Hm, the Beatles may have been proto-prog - but of which Genre? They certainly were not proto-symphonic prog - The reason - I think that Genesis/Yes/ELP were far more influenced by classical music - thus proto-symphonic prog really couldn't happen because the classical music that it's mainly derived from was classical music - thus I think that proto-prog probably led to other genres!


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Play me my song.....Here it comes again.......


Posted By: Rick Robson
Date Posted: February 24 2014 at 09:30
Originally posted by M27Barney M27Barney wrote:

Hm, the Beatles may have been proto-prog - but of which Genre? They certainly were not proto-symphonic prog - The reason - I think that Genesis/Yes/ELP were far more influenced by classical music - thus proto-symphonic prog really couldn't happen because the classical music that it's mainly derived from was classical music - thus I think that proto-prog probably led to other genres!

 
If we think that way we can't even call Genesis/Yes/ELP "symphonic" given their musical distance from a polyphonic classical musica piece...


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"Music is a higher revelation than all wisdom and philosophy." LvB


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: February 24 2014 at 11:22
^ In ex-Yugoslavia, we were called all of them 'sympho-rock' because of that Mellotron sound. We knew for 'progressive rock' term but it was used rarely for the big four. It was like that untill Discipline - what we could not called 'sympho-rock' at all, lol.


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: February 24 2014 at 21:42
"She Loves You", which The Beatles released in German as "Sie Liebt Dich", thus creating Krautrock. LOL

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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: Kati
Date Posted: February 25 2014 at 00:15
Originally posted by brainstormer brainstormer wrote:

<span style="color: rgb51, 51, 51; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.800000190734863px; line-height: 17px;">"And Your Bird Can Sing" (1966) has guitar work which I think is the proggiest sounding</span>
<span style="color: rgb51, 51, 51; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.800000190734863px; line-height: 17px;">music I've heard on such an early album.  </span>
<span style="color: rgb51, 51, 51; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.800000190734863px; line-height: 17px;"></span>
<span style="color: rgb51, 51, 51; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.800000190734863px; line-height: 17px;"></span>


I love that song, Brainstormer
And to me also the first metal track was by The Beatles with Helter Skelter another


Posted By: smartpatrol
Date Posted: February 25 2014 at 00:49
i don't see how the Beatles were proto prog, maybe except for A Day in the Life

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Posted By: Kati
Date Posted: February 25 2014 at 00:57
Originally posted by smartpatrol smartpatrol wrote:

i don't see how the Beatles were proto prog, maybe except for A Day in the Life



Smartpatrol
Please define proto prog for me? I was under the impression that it meant one of the first and foremost ahead of others in music terms. The Beatles were way beyond anyone else I believe, in terms both rock and experimental music i.e. adding the sitar, French horns etc.


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: February 25 2014 at 01:13
Originally posted by Kati Kati wrote:

Originally posted by smartpatrol smartpatrol wrote:

i don't see how the Beatles were proto prog, maybe except for A Day in the Life



Smartpatrol
Please define proto prog for me? I was under the impression that it meant one of the first and foremost ahead of others in music terms. The Beatles were way beyond anyone else I believe, in terms both rock and experimental music i.e. adding the sitar, French horns etc.

As Knobby explained to us earlier in this sub-forum, Proto Prog was a term used by British vinyls dealers in their ancient catalogues for the specific sound of late 60s - early 70s rock bands who were created that Hammond organ driven sound; Mellotron was also gratefulness but Hammond organ sound was a general rule. If a music is to containing synths, it's not proto prog. Early Deep Purple is maybe the best example of proto prog sound Smile


Posted By: Kati
Date Posted: February 25 2014 at 01:35
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:



Originally posted by Kati Kati wrote:

Originally posted by smartpatrol smartpatrol wrote:

i don't see how the Beatles were proto prog, maybe except for A Day in the Life



Smartpatrol
Please define proto prog for me? I was under the impression that it meant one of the first and foremost ahead of others in music terms. The Beatles were way beyond anyone else I believe, in terms both rock and experimental music i.e. adding the sitar, French horns etc.

As Knobby explained to us earlier in this sub-forum, Proto Prog was a term used by British vinyls dealers in their ancient catalogues for the specific sound of late 60s - early 70s rock bands who were created that Hammond organ driven sound; Mellotron was also gratefulness but Hammond organ sound was a general rule. If a music is to containing synths, it's not proto prog. Early Deep Purple is maybe the best example of proto prog sound Smile


Thank you very much for the feedback Sventonio,

I have not seen nor was I aware of any sub forum topic posts in regards to this on this site, however to me as a Latin speaking person who equally studied ancient Greek, this term makes no sense at all. Proto means the beginning, when the change began, this by no means is related to mellotron, novatron etc.
I do believe proto prog might have a bit of jazz and psychedelic influences unlike Italian prog which tends to be more symphonic (orchestration)   


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: February 25 2014 at 02:35
Originally posted by Kati Kati wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:



Originally posted by Kati Kati wrote:

Originally posted by smartpatrol smartpatrol wrote:

i don't see how the Beatles were proto prog, maybe except for A Day in the Life



Smartpatrol
Please define proto prog for me? I was under the impression that it meant one of the first and foremost ahead of others in music terms. The Beatles were way beyond anyone else I believe, in terms both rock and experimental music i.e. adding the sitar, French horns etc.

As Knobby explained to us earlier in this sub-forum, Proto Prog was a term used by British vinyls dealers in their ancient catalogues for the specific sound of late 60s - early 70s rock bands who were created that Hammond organ driven sound; Mellotron was also gratefulness but Hammond organ sound was a general rule. If a music is to containing synths, it's not proto prog. Early Deep Purple is maybe the best example of proto prog sound Smile




(...) this term makes no sense at all. (...) 

Of course, because that term does not mean anything by itself. However, the term was used by dealers for reasons to mark that sound on their lists. As you know, in that ancient time, you're receiving a mail with a dealer's list and then you choose LP, and orderrng. In these lists were only the names of the bands & albums, style, a record company name & price.





Posted By: brainstormer
Date Posted: February 25 2014 at 11:08
I picked up the term from literary history when defining the Proto-Surrealists of late
19th Century France.  I just moved it over to music.  It can be used, and is used
academically, to define any early instance of a trend in all the arts.


-------------
--
Robert Pearson
Regenerative Music http://www.regenerativemusic.net
Telical Books http://www.telicalbooks.com
ParaMind Brainstorming Software http://www.paramind.net




Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: February 26 2014 at 11:11
Talking about proto prog there is a proto prog thread here;....your favorite proto prog album and the Beatles were mentioned several times on the thread.
http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=94100" rel="nofollow - http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=94100
 
I  never really thought of the Beatles as doing any 'proto prog', since it did refer to a specific type of style and sound as many have already mentioned,  but they certainly used psychedelic rock with many new approaches to recording and sound effects as in orchestration , etc. But then Tomorrow never Knows, Strawberry Fields , and I Am The Walrus could certainly fit into one's definition of proto prog.
 


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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin


Posted By: Horizons
Date Posted: February 26 2014 at 11:17
Originally posted by Kati Kati wrote:

Originally posted by smartpatrol smartpatrol wrote:

i don't see how the Beatles were proto prog, maybe except for A Day in the Life



Smartpatrol
Please define proto prog for me? I was under the impression that it meant one of the first and foremost ahead of others in music terms. The Beatles were way beyond anyone else I believe, in terms both rock and experimental music i.e. adding the sitar, French horns etc.

Perfectly said for me, Sonia.


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Crushed like a rose in the riverflow.


Posted By: brainstormer
Date Posted: February 26 2014 at 12:31
I think because it's the Beatles, some don't want to give them much credit for being anything else but teenybopper
icons.  It's interesting to contrast the solo careers of Lennon and McCartney.  Dream #9 by Lennon seems to be
his most prog song.   I'm not saying it's his most "avant garde" song.  


-------------
--
Robert Pearson
Regenerative Music http://www.regenerativemusic.net
Telical Books http://www.telicalbooks.com
ParaMind Brainstorming Software http://www.paramind.net




Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: February 26 2014 at 13:37
Originally posted by Stool Man Stool Man wrote:

Earliest? 
 
To quote from their wiki page:
"In mid-October 1965, the Beatles entered the recording studio; for the first time in making an album, they had an extended period without other major commitments.Released in December, Rubber Soul has been hailed by critics as a major step forward in the maturity and complexity of the band's music.Their thematic reach was beginning to expand as they embraced deeper aspects of romance and philosophy.Biographers Peter Brown and Steven Gaines attribute the new musical direction to "the Beatles' now habitual use of marijuana", an assertion confirmed by the band—Lennon referred to it as "the pot album", and Starr said, "Grass was really influential in a lot of our changes, especially with the writers. And because they were writing different material, we were playing differently."  After Help!'s foray into the world of classical music with flutes and strings, Harrison's introduction of a http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sitar" rel="nofollow - sitar on " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_Wood_%28This_Bird_Has_Flown%29" rel="nofollow - Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) " marked a further progression outside the traditional boundaries of popular music. As their lyrics grew more artful, fans began to study them for deeper meaning. "
 
"We Can Work It Out" (also recorded in October 1965) keeps changing tempo and has a waltz in the middle.
 
So in October '65 they were heading in progesque direction (increased complexity, artful lyrics, expanding themes, sitar, and pot)
"Tomorrow Never Knows" wasn't recorded until six months later.
It's not just the sitar on Norwegian Wood that singles it out as being proto-prog, its tune is in a pentatonic mode that obeys the rules of Indian raga. 


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What?


Posted By: Stool Man
Date Posted: February 26 2014 at 13:47
There ya go then

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rotten hound of the burnie crew


Posted By: Earendil
Date Posted: March 01 2014 at 20:28
Originally posted by Horizons Horizons wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows. 


is one of the greatest rock songs ever recorded.


Posted By: Kati
Date Posted: March 01 2014 at 23:39
I am still not sure what proto-prog means in terms of The Beatles but I am guessing it's their earliest music ground-breaking songs, here in this case I think "Fool on the Hill" might be one   


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: March 02 2014 at 07:58
Originally posted by Kati Kati wrote:

I am still not sure what proto-prog means in terms of The Beatles but I am guessing it's their earliest music ground-breaking songs, here in this case I think "Fool on the Hill" might be one   

Listen for proto-prog elements in Eleanor Rigby (Oct. 1966), a complete departure from standard rock in that there are absolutely none of the elements one might find in a rock song of the period (no guitar, bass, drum or keys). Instead, Paul McCartney and George Martin (who scored Paul's song) used a classical ensemble, in this case an octet made up of  4 violins, 2 violas and 2 cellos. The score was definitely influenced by Bernard Herrmannn and to a lesser extent Vivaldi. 

This is not what rock and roll fans were used to or expecting in 1966 (not to mention the utter despair and desolation of the lyrics):



 


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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: March 02 2014 at 11:19
Love those Beatles tracks that were ahead of their time regarding style and studio technique but...is it 'proto prog'..?
As some have pointed out in the past  (including the infamous Mr Knobby) proto prog was a genre style  and classification that encompassed an organ and early prog format to categorize some early bands and  not just use of different instruments and orchestration.
Confused


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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin


Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 02 2014 at 11:57
Knobby was, and probably still is, wrong.

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What?


Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: March 02 2014 at 12:54
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Knobby was, and probably still is, wrong.
Perhaps.....perhaps not , but for me those Beatles tracks aren't what I consider proto prog but as always it's a matter of opinion on what is and isn't prog.
Being the PA expert , what is your opinion on what was meant by proto prog when the term was first used?


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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: March 02 2014 at 13:26
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Knobby was, and probably still is, wrong.

I tend to agree. The terms "prog" and "proto-prog" were used as terms after-the-fact , and not by some enlightened wholesaler sorting album bins: ex post facto rather than ipso facto.

Originally posted by </span>dr wu23<span style=color: rgb0, 0, 0; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; line-height: 1.2;> dr wu23 wrote:

Perhaps.....perhaps not , but for me those Beatles tracks aren't what I consider proto prog but as always it's a matter of opinion on what is and isn't prog.
Being the PA expert , what is your opinion on what was meant by proto prog when the term was first used?

Allegedly, "progressive rock" was first used by Lester Bangs or some other rock critic at the end of the 60s, who borrowed the term from the "progressive jazz" of the 50s, denoting a stylization (some would say over-elaboration) of earlier American "rock and roll", synthesizing elements of jazz, folk and European classicism. Prog is the rococo of rock. Wink 

At least, that's what I gleaned from Music in the Late Twentieth Century: The Oxford History of Western Music and Progressive Rock Reconsidered (edited by Kevin Holm-Hudson). Personally, I don't remember hearing the term until much later in the U.S., possibly early/mid-70s? But I didn't have a spiffy Internet site to argue the point back then, and I was much too stoned to argue specifics had I the chance. In any case, the term "proto-prog" had to come much later, as the term "prog" was not a household word in the 70s.

But strictly by definition, The Beatles would be considered proto-prog for their many instances of drawing from classical music, Indian music and avant-garde elements, many of which were cutting edge for rock in the mid-60s.



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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 02 2014 at 18:29
Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Knobby was, and probably still is, wrong.
Perhaps.....perhaps not , but for me those Beatles tracks aren't what I consider proto prog but as always it's a matter of opinion on what is and isn't prog.
Being the PA expert , what is your opinion on what was meant by proto prog when the term was first used?
As Mr Elf has pointed out, proto-prog is an after-the-event term and, along with all other popular music terms, has no formal definition. 

My argument against Mr Wally "Knobby" Wallace Bunbury is simple - if "proto" anything is a genre style then that style would have been identifiable as a distinct genre-style at the time, not thirty or forty years later, and it would have been given a musicological genre/style name at the time and not thirty or forty years later. But no such genre-style existed in the mid-sixties. We only identify certain "sounds" from that era as being "proto" anything because we retrospectively go looking for it based upon what we understand the sound of emergent style to be. The argument, "Oh, Prog Rock has organ, therefore all Proto-Prog must have organ" is a thin argument. Also, Wally's definition is a very modern creation invented by traders at vinyl record fairs - it's much easier to unload an unwanted pile of obscure organ-based psych rock albums if you can slap a Proto-Prog sticker on them¹. None of those albums are Proto-Prog by PA's usage of the term, they're just Psych Rock albums.

Since here at the PA we have to put an introduction on each genre page by way of an informative description, that tends to be an informal definition of each subgenre, though they are not accurate formal musicological definitions. Here we do not regard Proto Prog as a genre style so do not give a description of the style of music in the Proto Prog category. With Proto Prog we were not looking for a style, not are we looking for the inventors or instigators of Progressive Rock, we are looking for the bands that were influential on the formative years of the genre's musical styling. So here we look to broader musical styles over a narrower time interval than those vinyl traders. Also, nor are we looking to list every rock band that played the same styles of music as those bands that were a formative influence on the emerging genre. So, if it is obscure or was only heard by twenty people in Hicksville, AZ, then it could not have been of influence and it is not Proto Prog by our usage of the term.

Other websites can have other definitions and other usages, that's not our concern because it is not a genre/style of music.


¹ vinyl junkies are like jazz album collectors - the more obscure the album the more they'll pay for it.



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What?


Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 02 2014 at 18:35
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

 

Allegedly, "progressive rock" was first used by Lester Bangs or some other rock critic at the end of the 60s, who borrowed the term from the "progressive jazz" of the 50s, denoting a stylization (some would say over-elaboration) of earlier American "rock and roll", synthesizing elements of jazz, folk and European classicism. Prog is the rococo of rock. Wink 

At least, that's what I gleaned from Music in the Late Twentieth Century: The Oxford History of Western Music and Progressive Rock Reconsidered (edited by Kevin Holm-Hudson). Personally, I don't remember hearing the term until much later in the U.S., possibly early/mid-70s? But I didn't have a spiffy Internet site to argue the point back then, and I was much too stoned to argue specifics had I the chance. In any case, the term "proto-prog" had to come much later, as the term "prog" was not a household word in the 70s.
Since Progressive Rock emerged first in the UK then Lester Bangs would be very low on my list of people who may have first coined the term.

In the later half of the 60s in the UK, (where this damn music genre was first invented after all), the term Progressive Music came first, based upon (as you say) the phrase Progressive Jazz from there it was contracted to simply "Progressive" and could mean Progressive Jazz, Blues or Rock. At this stage the word "Progressive" could be used both as an adverb to describe the music and a noun to name it. So bands like Crimson and Floyd were simply called Progressive bands because they played Progressive music. (At that time there were even bands who were tagged as Progressive Blues). Towards the end of the 60s/early 70s when more rock bands emerged playing this Progressive Music the term Progressive Rock was applied to them. While not reaching as far as the USA, this was certainly in common usage in London and the home counties at the beginning of the 1970s. [The phrase "Art Rock" meant something else, possibly being a contraction of "Art School Rock" rather than an adaptation of "Art Music", in the UK this was never synonymous with Progressive Rock like it was in the USA].
 



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What?


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: March 02 2014 at 19:23
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

 

Allegedly, "progressive rock" was first used by Lester Bangs or some other rock critic at the end of the 60s, who borrowed the term from the "progressive jazz" of the 50s, denoting a stylization (some would say over-elaboration) of earlier American "rock and roll", synthesizing elements of jazz, folk and European classicism. Prog is the rococo of rock. Wink 

At least, that's what I gleaned from Music in the Late Twentieth Century: The Oxford History of Western Music and Progressive Rock Reconsidered (edited by Kevin Holm-Hudson). Personally, I don't remember hearing the term until much later in the U.S., possibly early/mid-70s? But I didn't have a spiffy Internet site to argue the point back then, and I was much too stoned to argue specifics had I the chance. In any case, the term "proto-prog" had to come much later, as the term "prog" was not a household word in the 70s.
Since Progressive Rock emerged first in the UK then Lester Bangs would be very low on my list of people who may have first coined the term.

In the later half of the 60s in the UK, (where this damn music genre was first invented after all), the term Progressive Music came first, based upon (as you say) the phrase Progressive Jazz from there it was contracted to simply "Progressive" and could mean Progressive Jazz, Blues or Rock. At this stage the word "Progressive" could be used both as an adverb to describe the music and a noun to name it. So bands like Crimson and Floyd were simply called Progressive bands because they played Progressive music. (At that time there were even bands who were tagged as Progressive Blues). Towards the end of the 60s/early 70s when more rock bands emerged playing this Progressive Music the term Progressive Rock was applied to them. While not reaching as far as the USA, this was certainly in common usage in London and the home counties at the beginning of the 1970s. [The phrase "Art Rock" meant something else, possibly being a contraction of "Art School Rock" rather than an adaptation of "Art Music", in the UK this was never synonymous with Progressive Rock like it was in the USA].

Hence I used the word "allegedly" in reference to Lester (who was particularly merciless with bands like ELP). The book I referred to, Progressive Rock Reconsidered (not a bad book, but not complete and more for acadamecians, perhaps) said the following:

Quote Indeed, progressive rock, as the term was first used in the late 1960s, had an even broader meaning than it does today. The phrase was first used by critics such as Lester Bangs to collectively describe a number of the emerging styles in the late 1960s, from the 'jazz-rock' of Blood, Sweat and Tears to the Southern rock of the Allman Brothers Band.

Not completely in context and there was no citation to support the claim about Bangs, so I gladly defer to our friend across the pool.



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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: brainstormer
Date Posted: March 02 2014 at 20:09
Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Knobby was, and probably still is, wrong.
Perhaps.....perhaps not , but for me those Beatles tracks aren't what I consider proto prog but as always it's a matter of opinion on what is and isn't prog.
Being the PA expert , what is your opinion on what was meant by proto prog when the term was first used?

I don't think one can take a word that has a common definition in the study of all the arts
and completely re-invent it for a genre. 


-------------
--
Robert Pearson
Regenerative Music http://www.regenerativemusic.net
Telical Books http://www.telicalbooks.com
ParaMind Brainstorming Software http://www.paramind.net




Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: March 02 2014 at 21:14
Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

Talking about proto prog there is a proto prog thread here;....your favorite proto prog album and the Beatles were mentioned several times on the thread.
http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=94100" rel="nofollow - http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=94100
 
I  never really thought of the Beatles as doing any 'proto prog', since it did refer to a specific type of style and sound as many have already mentioned,  but they certainly used psychedelic rock with many new approaches to recording and sound effects as in orchestration , etc. But then Tomorrow never Knows, Strawberry Fields , and I Am The Walrus could certainly fit into one's definition of proto prog.
 

I agreed. Imo The Beatles never was proto-prog. Proto-prog were heavy, greasy and Hammond organ driven sound of early Deep Purple, Rare Bird, Iron Butterfly and so on. Imo The Beatles was Pop, Rock, Psychedelic Rock and  the first  Progressive Rock band ever, but regarding Strawberry Fileds / Penny Lane the single only. However, due to the fact that Strawberry Fields  / Penny Lane is just a single which was released in 1967 - it's a two years before ITCOCK the album - one could say that  Strawbery Fields Forever / Penny Lane is a proto prog single as same as one could say that Steve Miller Band's Children of the Future and (or) Spirit's debut is proto-prog for the same reason as well; both albums were released in 1968 and that's a year before ITCOCK the album which is widely accepted as the corner stone of Progressive Rock; that theory is also valid in its own way as more or less a common opinion at present day as well. History is always changing according to one's needs, and certainly those who write on the progressive rock genre - wanting to bring more substance created by themselves - did not match that simple and logical fact that the proto prog is a term coined by vinyl dealers just to mark that Hammond organ driven sound on their lists - not a genre, just a sound.






Posted By: earlyprog
Date Posted: March 03 2014 at 05:10
^Svetonio, I have read your post several times and continue to understand only a minute fraction of it. (Perhaps you should stick to the "Svetonio's suggesting new bands" forum Wink). Please help me:

For instance, what theory are you referring to when you say " that theory is also valid in..."?

And the Beatles were never proto prog but progressive rock?! when did they become progressive rock? 


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: March 03 2014 at 05:59
Originally posted by earlyprog earlyprog wrote:

^Svetonio, I have read your post several times and continue to understand only a minute fraction of it. (Perhaps you should stick to the "Svetonio's suggesting new bands" forum Wink). Please help me:

For instance, what theory are you referring to when you say " that theory is also valid in..."?

And the Beatles were never proto prog but progressive rock?! when did they become progressive rock? 
You didn't understood what I said? Oh, your English is worst than mine (just kidding, of course).

1) There's a main theory that the Progressive Rock was started with ITCOCK the album; ITCOCK the album as a corner stone for Progressive Rock.
2) The Beatles become prog with Strawberry Fields Forever along with Penny Lane at the same single; before that single, the Beatles were recorded psychedelic songs. As you can hear, the Beatles'  "proto-prog" (original 1967) version is more proggy than Gabriel's cover which was recorded ( i think ) in 1976 for a movie soundtrack. the Beatles were recorded some proggy songs later, but imo & although I love them, there's not their song which is proggier than Strawberry Fields Forever. 




The Beatles never were sounded proto prog.

This is proto prog sound




Posted By: earlyprog
Date Posted: March 03 2014 at 07:34
Oh, what you probably mean is that otCotCk started progressive rock as an album genre? I tend to agree although there are other albums that can be argued as being "full-album prog" before that one. One can say that itCotCk was the conceptualization of album long prog. It was soon followed by other prog albums and the development of prog was in full action.

Before the prog album, prog on a song basis was developed starting with an ideation process that the Beatles among others contributed to. Strawberry Fields Forever is a great example of how this evolution took place first through segments of songs being prog (-ish). Hence, that song is (at most) proto-prog but not prog. (If it was prog, what genre then?)

But not proto-prog by your definition of the term: organ-driven rock. You can define it as you like, but it seems unlikely that bands like the Animals will be included in what PA 'defines' as proto prog. The term fits perfectly in PA terminology irrespective of how you and others reinvent the term. Record dealers' usage of the term - as claimed by you - is interesting although remains undocumented as far as I know (not that it will affect the number and quality of proto prog artists on our site). 

Notwithstanding this, '64's and '65's organ driven R&B sheds some important light on proto-prog (PA definition). 


Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: March 03 2014 at 08:25
Originally posted by brainstormer brainstormer wrote:

Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Knobby was, and probably still is, wrong.
Perhaps.....perhaps not , but for me those Beatles tracks aren't what I consider proto prog but as always it's a matter of opinion on what is and isn't prog.
Being the PA expert , what is your opinion on what was meant by proto prog when the term was first used?

I don't think one can take a word that has a common definition in the study of all the arts
and completely re-invent it for a genre. 
What's the 'common' definition and who is re-inventing it?

-------------
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin


Posted By: brainstormer
Date Posted: March 03 2014 at 11:16
See my comments above.  

-------------
--
Robert Pearson
Regenerative Music http://www.regenerativemusic.net
Telical Books http://www.telicalbooks.com
ParaMind Brainstorming Software http://www.paramind.net




Posted By: BaldFriede
Date Posted: March 03 2014 at 12:03
I think even songs like "Girl", "Nowhere Man" and "Michelle" have slight prog qualities due to their melodic lines and their harmonics which go beyond the standards of the average pop song of those days. It may not be much, but it shows the direction they were going 

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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: March 03 2014 at 21:30
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by earlyprog earlyprog wrote:

^Svetonio, I have read your post several times and continue to understand only a minute fraction of it. (Perhaps you should stick to the "Svetonio's suggesting new bands" forum Wink). Please help me:

For instance, what theory are you referring to when you say " that theory is also valid in..."?

And the Beatles were never proto prog but progressive rock?! when did they become progressive rock? 
You didn't understood what I said? Oh, your English is worst than mine (just kidding, of course).

1) There's a main theory that the Progressive Rock was started with ITCOCK the album; ITCOCK the album as a corner stone for Progressive Rock.
2) The Beatles become prog with Strawberry Fields Forever along with Penny Lane at the same single; before that single, the Beatles were recorded psychedelic songs. As you can hear, the Beatles'  "proto-prog" (original 1967) version is more proggy than Gabriel's cover which was recorded ( i think ) in 1976 for a movie soundtrack. the Beatles were recorded some proggy songs later, but imo & although I love them, there's not their song which is proggier than Strawberry Fields Forever. 




The Beatles never were sounded proto prog.

This is proto prog sound



Ummm...Svetonio, how can a band be "proto-prog", by any definition, if they were not formed until 1969 (the band did not function as a full group until August, 1969) and they did not release an album until the very end of 1969? If, as you stated, the theory is that King Crimson began the progressive rock genre with their debut release in October, 1969, wouldn't that make Rare Bird post-proto-progLOL 

And your limited definition of proto-prog does not fit within any accepted general delineation of the term. The Moody Blues release of Days of Future Passed in December, 1967 is not only proto-prog, I daresay it is downright progressive in hindsight. So too is Procol Harum's debut release. Neither of them have a "heavy, greasy and Hammond organ driven sound" (which sounds more like something one gets indigestion from). The Hammond organ is not the single most important aspect of a proto-prog song. If that were the case, King Crimson's mellotron would be disqualified and they would be listed as a pop band.

Additionally, your view that "Strawberry Fields" is somehow the only Beatles song that deserves a "prog" or "proto-prog" stamp of approval is clearly in error. You claim before that The Beatles "recorded psychedelic songs", when in fact "Strawberry Fields Forever" was, by anyone whoever defined the composition, a "psychedelic song". You really think a song like "Eleanor Rigby" is not proto-prog? It is certainly not psychedelic, which runs counter to your mystifying conclusions. I suppose "Norwegian Wood" could be designated as "psych-folk" or "raga-folk", but there is, as other posters have identified, elements of proto-prog that definitely influenced the genre. How about "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite"? Not only is a Hammond organ played (quite greasily, I might add), but a Lowrey organ, a harmonium, and a friggin' glockenspiel!

I believe you should be a bit more expansive in your definition of proto-prog because, as it currently stands, it makes little sense.


-------------
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: March 03 2014 at 22:40
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Ummm...Svetonio, how can a band be "proto-prog", by any definition, if they were not formed until 1969 (the band did not function as a full group until August, 1969) and they did not release an album until the very end of 1969? (...)

Because 'proto-prog' was a term that was created by vinyls dealers to mark the sound, not a genre. Knobby, as a serious LPs collector as well, already explained to us what  'proto prog' really was.

Quote Originally posted by Knobby

(...)
 
What has happened here is what I call "cow bird" - the cow bird waits till another species builds it nest then  takes over that nest.
 
The true meaning of "proto-prog" was laid down maybe as much as two decades before Progarchives came up with vastly generalizing the term to mean basically anything that developed out of psych (not "psyche" guys - psyche is "the soul"), pop and ROCK and embryonically began to wiggle towards what was to be progressive rock.
 
 
Think - where you think the TERM first came out of: web forums? I can assure you it did not.
 Books on prog?
Of course not - it predated all that.
 
I lay odds it came out of those old (in some cases, yellow-brown  paper)  lp dealer catalogues  that came in the mail to (serious) collectors.
 
The true meaning of "proto-prog"  is it is simply a DISTINCTIVE SOUND that was pushed to make it easier for collectors to get what they were after.
 
It is NOT a genre (as progarchives would have it). It was mainly Hammond-organ-driven. (General rule, I would say - if its got synth in it, its not proto.). Mellotron can be there also. It was mainly a UK thing, but American proto CAN be identified.
It was mainly  A VERY SLIM PERIOD in  music's history, usually '69 but you CAN have clearly identifiable proto in '70 and even further on, due to fact that some countries were  bit back in time - remember we are stressing THE SOUND here. The INITIAL  appearance of the SOUND on vinyl. So you have "backward" countries like Denmark  with (compared to the population number) a surprizing wealth of proto being put out as late as '71.
 
 
I repeat. Progarchives has taken the dealer-term , built their nest there, gave it their own spin ; made something other of it.
Perfectly alright, I expect. But I wish they would call it something else other than PROTO prog. (Maybe Burgeoning Prog?)
 
 
For instance The Who would NEVER be considered proto - they never had the Vertigo,Dawn,Nepentha - etc record label sound.
And for Progarchives in their "best proto lp " picture section to stress something like Deep Purple "Machinehead" and overlook the only one that is remotely proto, "Book of Talysein". (spelt wrong- yeah, who f**ks) is misleading in the least.
 
 
 
What you are speaking of in this thread is simply  pop ,bluesrock , psych and ROCK wot began to merge into the oncoming prog.
Your speaking of something very broad, a parameter . Something that varies in different cases.
 
 
Whereas the origional, REAL meaning of protoprog is something extremely select and finite.
 
 
 
 
I dont want to go into it right now, (because it takes some digging on my part and I gots a lawn to mow), but if you seriously want to know what the proto sound is and why it is IMMEDIATELY recognizable on hearing  (although difficult to pin down in words) search old Progressive Ears posts for the list of 100 protoprog lps.

http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=94100" rel="nofollow - http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=94100


p.s another great example of proto prog sound from 1970:









Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: March 04 2014 at 03:03
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:


Because 'proto-prog' was a term that was created by vinyls dealers to mark the sound, not a genre. Knobby, as a serious LPs collector as well, already explained to us what  'proto prog' really was.


As I believe Dean already said, you can't believe everything Knobby said and, regardless of what it might or might not be, it is defined on PA as follows, and therefore this is the definition we should be using - 

"These bands normally were formed and released albums before Progressive Rock had completely developed (there are some rare Proto Prog bands from the early 70's, because the genre didn't expanded to all the Continents simultaneously"



Posted By: Atavachron
Date Posted: March 04 2014 at 03:14
One of the things the Beatles did that marked a progressive direction was the juxtaposition of time signatures, an early example would be 'We Can Work it Out'.






Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 04 2014 at 03:18
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Ummm...Svetonio, how can a band be "proto-prog", by any definition, if they were not formed until 1969 (the band did not function as a full group until August, 1969) and they did not release an album until the very end of 1969? (...)

Because 'proto-prog' was a term that was created by vinyls dealers to mark the sound, not a genre. Knobby, as a serious LPs collector as well, already explained to us what  'proto prog' really was.
For the very last time. It is not a genre, it is not a sound. It is just a non-denominational category.
  
Such a narrow definition of Proto Prog as being just "a sound" is not even widely accepted among record dealers. Every other music site on the internet uses the broader non-genre, non-"sound" definition.

As Robert has tried so very hard to explain, the prefix "Proto" is an academic term used to define any early instance of a trend in all the arts, it has a very specific meaning that you cannot change. In a specific musicological sense it is a prefix applied to a genre of music to identify its historical origins in terms of style and chronology, such as proto-baroque, proto-jazz, proto-metal, proto-punk etc. - none of them are "a sound" and none of them post-date the actual genre they are "proto" of. 



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What?


Posted By: Atavachron
Date Posted: March 04 2014 at 03:25
Which is another way of saying Protoprog does not exist.  It never did.  It's a description of what, in retrospect, had influence on something else.


Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 04 2014 at 03:31
Anyway, 

Back to topic

Ignoring Psych Rock and Psych Pop for a moment, Baroque Pop¹ is one of the stylistic progenitors of Progressive Rock (more so than Psych if the truth will ever out²) and The Beatles have an abundance of Baroque Pop moments that begin on Rubber Soul and progress through to The Beatles (aka the white album).










¹ Aphrodite's Child, Bee Gees, David Axelrod, Emitt Rhodes, Harpers Bizarre, Lee Hazlewood, Left Banke, Love, Margo Guryan, Nick Drake, Pop Tops, Procol Harum, Sagittarius, Scott Walker (and The Walker Brothers), The Beatles, The Byrds, The Free Design, The Kinks, The Millennium, The Rolling Stones, The Zombies, Van Dyke Parks.... The Beach Boys...
² Perhaps then we can seriously consider The Beach Boys et al.


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What?


Posted By: The Jester
Date Posted: March 04 2014 at 04:48
Originally posted by Horizons Horizons wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows. 

that!


-------------
If anybody wants please visit: http://www.gfreedomathina.blogspot.com/

This is my Blog mostly about Rock music, but also a few other things as well.

You are most welcome!

Thank you. :)


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: March 04 2014 at 12:26
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Ummm...Svetonio, how can a band be "proto-prog", by any definition, if they were not formed until 1969 (the band did not function as a full group until August, 1969) and they did not release an album until the very end of 1969? (...)

Because 'proto-prog' was a term that was created by vinyls dealers to mark the sound, not a genre. Knobby, as a serious LPs collector as well, already explained to us what  'proto prog' really was.

Quote Originally posted by Knobby

(...)
 
What has happened here is what I call "cow bird" - the cow bird waits till another species builds it nest then  takes over that nest.
 
The true meaning of "proto-prog" was laid down maybe as much as two decades before Progarchives came up with vastly generalizing the term to mean basically anything that developed out of psych (not "psyche" guys - psyche is "the soul"), pop and ROCK and embryonically began to wiggle towards what was to be progressive rock.
 
 
Think - where you think the TERM first came out of: web forums? I can assure you it did not.
 Books on prog?
Of course not - it predated all that.
 
I lay odds it came out of those old (in some cases, yellow-brown  paper)  lp dealer catalogues  that came in the mail to (serious) collectors.
 
The true meaning of "proto-prog"  is it is simply a DISTINCTIVE SOUND that was pushed to make it easier for collectors to get what they were after.
 
It is NOT a genre (as progarchives would have it). It was mainly Hammond-organ-driven. (General rule, I would say - if its got synth in it, its not proto.). Mellotron can be there also. It was mainly a UK thing, but American proto CAN be identified.
It was mainly  A VERY SLIM PERIOD in  music's history, usually '69 but you CAN have clearly identifiable proto in '70 and even further on, due to fact that some countries were  bit back in time - remember we are stressing THE SOUND here. The INITIAL  appearance of the SOUND on vinyl. So you have "backward" countries like Denmark  with (compared to the population number) a surprizing wealth of proto being put out as late as '71.
 
 
I repeat. Progarchives has taken the dealer-term , built their nest there, gave it their own spin ; made something other of it.
Perfectly alright, I expect. But I wish they would call it something else other than PROTO prog. (Maybe Burgeoning Prog?)
 
 
For instance The Who would NEVER be considered proto - they never had the Vertigo,Dawn,Nepentha - etc record label sound.
And for Progarchives in their "best proto lp " picture section to stress something like Deep Purple "Machinehead" and overlook the only one that is remotely proto, "Book of Talysein". (spelt wrong- yeah, who f**ks) is misleading in the least.
 
 
 
What you are speaking of in this thread is simply  pop ,bluesrock , psych and ROCK wot began to merge into the oncoming prog.
Your speaking of something very broad, a parameter . Something that varies in different cases.
 
 
Whereas the origional, REAL meaning of protoprog is something extremely select and finite.

What, are you Knobby's doppelganger? Who in the hell was a troll like Knobby to ordain what a term is, particularly when the prefix "proto" is, academically speaking, a specified definor used musically to refer to "that which came before". Please provide detailed citations that bolster your point (or Knobby's, rather).

When someone says "proto-punk" that does not mean three bands located in Birmingham, England who all had inverted mohawks and played with cheap Squier guitars during the period of 1972 to 1977 (because, obviously, one can be proto-punk after the fact), all because some London used-record reseller sought to spruce up his album bins, while ignoring Lou Reed and the Velvet Underground, The Kinks, The Stooges, The New York Dolls, The MC5 and The Who, which he simply placed under the "rock" category -- because they did not have the proper sound and the wrong hairstyle.

As far as this entire idea that Deep Purple is the end-all, be-all of the "proto-prog sound", don't you find that a bit laughable? Sure, they had their proggy moments, like Led Zeppelin did, but in the end none of the great prog bands emulated that sound; on the contrary, Yes, ELP, Genesis, King Crimson, Jethro Tull, Floyd or whichever prog icon you wish to name ever sounded even remotely like Deep Purple, even when using a Hammond organ. 

And that leads me back to the topic, in that The Beatles certainly had heavy proto-prog credentials. Listen to the elements of "A Day in the Life" (1967), with its changing time signatures, the chiaroscuro of dark and light elements, the novel use of heavy orchestration that takes the place of standard electric guitars:



Or the Baroque pop of "For No One" (1966), and the use of French horn and clavichord:



"Tomorrow Never Knows", "Eleanor Rigby", "Norwegian Wood" -- these all had inherent elements that became part of the progressive rock lexicon. Certainly, they were forced to compress these elements into the record industry standard 2:30 minutes, but they even broke that hurdle when they had the audacity to release "Hey Jude", all 7:11 minutes of it, as a single, which naturally went to #1 in 1968. I think the song allowed for a greater variance, industry acceptance and marketability of longer rock songs ("In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida", released earlier the same year, was 17:05 minutes on the album but the 45 single was edited down to 2:53, not so with "Hey Jude").





-------------
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: King Crimson776
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 05:43
Tomorrow Never Knows is much too simple. Nothing before Pepper can be seriously considered here.


Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 06:05
Originally posted by King Crimson776 King Crimson776 wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows is much too simple. Nothing before Pepper can be seriously considered here.
Can you be more specific? We're NOT talking about full-blown Prog here.


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What?


Posted By: BaldJean
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 06:36
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by King Crimson776 King Crimson776 wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows is much too simple. Nothing before Pepper can be seriously considered here.
Can you be more specific? We're NOT talking about full-blown Prog here.

also "simple" is by no means excluding prog


-------------


A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta


Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 07:13
Originally posted by King Crimson776 King Crimson776 wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows is much too simple. Nothing before Pepper can be seriously considered here.
It may be simple in terms of one chord and repetitive drum pattern but it was quite complicated to record, as it was mixed live with a number of people operating the various tape loops.


Posted By: brainstormer
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 17:29
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

Talking about proto prog there is a proto prog thread here;....your favorite proto prog album and the Beatles were mentioned several times on the thread.
http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=94100" rel="nofollow - http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=94100
 
I  never really thought of the Beatles as doing any 'proto prog', since it did refer to a specific type of style and sound as many have already mentioned,  but they certainly used psychedelic rock with many new approaches to recording and sound effects as in orchestration , etc. But then Tomorrow never Knows, Strawberry Fields , and I Am The Walrus could certainly fit into one's definition of proto prog.
 

I agreed. Imo The Beatles never was proto-prog. Proto-prog were heavy, greasy and Hammond organ driven sound of early Deep Purple, Rare Bird, Iron Butterfly and so on. 

But this isn't what prog rock came to mean.  There are many gentle prog bands.  Just look at the bands
included at this site and put a Proto (Latin word?) before them.  You can't say prog is "heavy, greasy, and Hammond
organ" driven completely as a genre.




-------------
--
Robert Pearson
Regenerative Music http://www.regenerativemusic.net
Telical Books http://www.telicalbooks.com
ParaMind Brainstorming Software http://www.paramind.net




Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 17:52
Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:

Originally posted by King Crimson776 King Crimson776 wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows is much too simple. Nothing before Pepper can be seriously considered here.
It may be simple in terms of one chord and repetitive drum pattern but it was quite complicated to record, as it was mixed live with a number of people operating the various tape loops.
One and a bit chords - there's a B♭ in there too.


-------------
What?


Posted By: Polymorphia
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 18:10
Originally posted by M27Barney M27Barney wrote:

I think that Genesis/Yes/ELP were far more influenced by classical music
Or Simon and Garfunkel Wink


Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 18:10
Originally posted by Polymorphia Polymorphia wrote:

Originally posted by M27Barney M27Barney wrote:

I think that Genesis/Yes/ELP were far more influenced by classical music
Or Simon and Garfunkel Wink
Or the Bee Gees.


-------------
What?


Posted By: Polymorphia
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 19:40
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Polymorphia Polymorphia wrote:

Originally posted by M27Barney M27Barney wrote:

I think that Genesis/Yes/ELP were far more influenced by classical music
Or Simon and Garfunkel Wink
Or the Bee Gees.
Probably not. It seems Genesis, Yes, and ELP had no interest in rock or pop music.

"Fra-jee-lay." Must be Italian.


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 20:38
Originally posted by King Crimson776 King Crimson776 wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows is much too simple. Nothing before Pepper can be seriously considered here.

And your reason for formulating such an opinion is based on...what?


-------------
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 21:58
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Ummm...Svetonio, how can a band be "proto-prog", by any definition, if they were not formed until 1969 (the band did not function as a full group until August, 1969) and they did not release an album until the very end of 1969? (...)

Because 'proto-prog' was a term that was created by vinyls dealers to mark the sound, not a genre. Knobby, as a serious LPs collector as well, already explained to us what  'proto prog' really was.

Quote Originally posted by Knobby

(...)
 
What has happened here is what I call "cow bird" - the cow bird waits till another species builds it nest then  takes over that nest.
 
The true meaning of "proto-prog" was laid down maybe as much as two decades before Progarchives came up with vastly generalizing the term to mean basically anything that developed out of psych (not "psyche" guys - psyche is "the soul"), pop and ROCK and embryonically began to wiggle towards what was to be progressive rock.
 
 
Think - where you think the TERM first came out of: web forums? I can assure you it did not.
 Books on prog?
Of course not - it predated all that.
 
I lay odds it came out of those old (in some cases, yellow-brown  paper)  lp dealer catalogues  that came in the mail to (serious) collectors.
 
The true meaning of "proto-prog"  is it is simply a DISTINCTIVE SOUND that was pushed to make it easier for collectors to get what they were after.
 
It is NOT a genre (as progarchives would have it). It was mainly Hammond-organ-driven. (General rule, I would say - if its got synth in it, its not proto.). Mellotron can be there also. It was mainly a UK thing, but American proto CAN be identified.
It was mainly  A VERY SLIM PERIOD in  music's history, usually '69 but you CAN have clearly identifiable proto in '70 and even further on, due to fact that some countries were  bit back in time - remember we are stressing THE SOUND here. The INITIAL  appearance of the SOUND on vinyl. So you have "backward" countries like Denmark  with (compared to the population number) a surprizing wealth of proto being put out as late as '71.
 
 
I repeat. Progarchives has taken the dealer-term , built their nest there, gave it their own spin ; made something other of it.
Perfectly alright, I expect. But I wish they would call it something else other than PROTO prog. (Maybe Burgeoning Prog?)
 
 
For instance The Who would NEVER be considered proto - they never had the Vertigo,Dawn,Nepentha - etc record label sound.
And for Progarchives in their "best proto lp " picture section to stress something like Deep Purple "Machinehead" and overlook the only one that is remotely proto, "Book of Talysein". (spelt wrong- yeah, who f**ks) is misleading in the least.
 
 
 
What you are speaking of in this thread is simply  pop ,bluesrock , psych and ROCK wot began to merge into the oncoming prog.
Your speaking of something very broad, a parameter . Something that varies in different cases.
 
 
Whereas the origional, REAL meaning of protoprog is something extremely select and finite.

What, are you Knobby's doppelganger? Who in the hell was a troll like Knobby to ordain what a term is, particularly when the prefix "proto" is, academically speaking, a specified definor used musically to refer to "that which came before". Please provide detailed citations that bolster your point (or Knobby's, rather).

When someone says "proto-punk" that does not mean three bands located in Birmingham, England who all had inverted mohawks and played with cheap Squier guitars during the period of 1972 to 1977 (because, obviously, one can be proto-punk after the fact), all because some London used-record reseller sought to spruce up his album bins, while ignoring Lou Reed and the Velvet Underground, The Kinks, The Stooges, The New York Dolls, The MC5 and The Who, which he simply placed under the "rock" category -- because they did not have the proper sound and the wrong hairstyle.

As far as this entire idea that Deep Purple is the end-all, be-all of the "proto-prog sound", don't you find that a bit laughable? Sure, they had their proggy moments, like Led Zeppelin did, but in the end none of the great prog bands emulated that sound; on the contrary, Yes, ELP, Genesis, King Crimson, Jethro Tull, Floyd or whichever prog icon you wish to name ever sounded even remotely like Deep Purple, even when using a Hammond organ. (...)






Just find this in a bio of an obscure greek prog band who was released two LPs in late 70s, now re-issued as digital albums as well:

Quote (...) With that exquisite basement feel encountered in the early ‘70s British proto-progressive bands, it is one of the essential Greek progressive albums of all times  (...)  
 
http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction" rel="nofollow - http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction


I'm not Knobby's doppelganger. I believe him because his words sounded logical.







Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 22:17
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

 
Just find this in bio of an obscure grreek  prog band who was realesed two LPs in late 70s, now re-issued as digital albums:

Quote (...) With that exquisite basement feel encountered in the early ‘70s British proto-progressive bands, it is one of the essential Greek progressive albums of all times(...)
 
http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction" rel="nofollow - http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction

Two words stand out: obscure and Greek. And as far as the author of the piece, I still question how one can be "proto-progressive" after the fact. You cannot post-date a movement with pre-dated material. Progressive rock was a fact in the early 70s (it was, by all accounts, available in 1969 as you yourself noted), and your boys, Deep Purple, were not proto-prog in the early 70s. Fireball and Machine Head are virtually non-prog. Or perhaps they were post-prog with pre-prog intentions and coeval-prog every Tuesday and Wednesday.


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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 22:25
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

 
Just find this in bio of an obscure grreek  prog band who was realesed two LPs in late 70s, now re-issued as digital albums:

Quote (...) With that exquisite basement feel encountered in the early ‘70s British proto-progressive bands, it is one of the essential Greek progressive albums of all times(...)
 
http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction" rel="nofollow - http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction

Two words stand out: obscure and Greek. And as far as the author of the piece, I still question how one can be "proto-progressive" after the fact. You cannot post-date a movement with pre-dated material. Progressive rock was a fact in the early 70s (it was, by all accounts, available in 1969 as you yourself noted), and your boys, Deep Purple, were not proto-prog in the early 70s. Fireball and Machine Head are virtually non-prog. Or perhaps they were post-prog with pre-prog intentions and coeval-prog every Tuesday and Wednesday.
Why those two words "stand out" for you ? Do you think that these young Greeks in early 70s weren't ordering LPs from British dealers, or what? 

As I already said:  I'm not Knobby's doppelganger. I believe him because his words sounded logical.


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: March 05 2014 at 22:34
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

 
Just find this in bio of an obscure grreek  prog band who was realesed two LPs in late 70s, now re-issued as digital albums:

Quote (...) With that exquisite basement feel encountered in the early ‘70s British proto-progressive bands, it is one of the essential Greek progressive albums of all times(...)
 
http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction" rel="nofollow - http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction

Two words stand out: obscure and Greek. And as far as the author of the piece, I still question how one can be "proto-progressive" after the fact. You cannot post-date a movement with pre-dated material. Progressive rock was a fact in the early 70s (it was, by all accounts, available in 1969 as you yourself noted), and your boys, Deep Purple, were not proto-prog in the early 70s. Fireball and Machine Head are virtually non-prog. Or perhaps they were post-prog with pre-prog intentions and coeval-prog every Tuesday and Wednesday.
Why those two words "stand out" for you ? Do you think that these young Greeks in early 70s weren't ordering LPs from British dealers, or what? 

What I find laughable is that the reviewer refers to the Greek band as sounding like the "prog/psych sound of the mid-period PINK FLOYD and the mellotron school (FANTASY, CRESSIDA, KESTREL, early B.J.H.), resulting in a style heavily relying on mellow soundscapes" -- and this is what they refer to as proto-progressive. 

Have you listened to any of these bands, Svetonio? I have. None of these bands have greasy Hammond organs blaring away. Mellow and mellotron, not hard and Hammond. The reviewer doesn't have a clue, so where does that leave you and your original argument...I mean, Knobby's original argument? 


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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 02:30
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

 
Just find this in bio of an obscure grreek  prog band who was realesed two LPs in late 70s, now re-issued as digital albums:

Quote (...) With that exquisite basement feel encountered in the early ‘70s British proto-progressive bands, it is one of the essential Greek progressive albums of all times(...)
 
http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction" rel="nofollow - http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction

Two words stand out: obscure and Greek. And as far as the author of the piece, I still question how one can be "proto-progressive" after the fact. You cannot post-date a movement with pre-dated material. Progressive rock was a fact in the early 70s (it was, by all accounts, available in 1969 as you yourself noted), and your boys, Deep Purple, were not proto-prog in the early 70s. Fireball and Machine Head are virtually non-prog. Or perhaps they were post-prog with pre-prog intentions and coeval-prog every Tuesday and Wednesday.
Why those two words "stand out" for you ? Do you think that these young Greeks in early 70s weren't ordering LPs from British dealers, or what? 

What I find laughable is that the reviewer refers to the Greek band as sounding like the "prog/psych sound of the mid-period PINK FLOYD and the mellotron school (FANTASY, CRESSIDA, KESTREL, early B.J.H.), resulting in a style heavily relying on mellow soundscapes" -- and this is what they refer to as proto-progressive. 

Have you listened to any of these bands, Svetonio? I have. None of these bands have greasy Hammond organs blaring away. Mellow and mellotron, not hard and Hammond. The reviewer doesn't have a clue, so where does that leave you and your original argument...I mean, Knobby's original argument? 

he actually suggested this band for Neo Prog:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by apps79 apps79 wrote:

Neo it is not in my opinion, I have listened to their works and they are too retro-styled, somewhere between 70's Psychedelic Rock, light Symphonic and Proto-Prog.Hard to find the perfect category for them.Eclectic or Xover are too possible candidates.

Yea, I understandI put * Neo * mainly due to the time frame when the original vinyls were issued.

LOL 


Ermm


LOL

So... to recap    Proto-Prog is greasy hammond sound, inveterate teller of tall-tales and consummate internet troll Wally "Knobby" Wallace Bunburys is believable because his words sounded logical, any album released in the late 70s is Neo Prog and BlandiKampf is now the indisputable fount of all knowledge...

..brilliant. Clap



lol.




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What?


Posted By: King Crimson776
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 02:54
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by King Crimson776 King Crimson776 wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows is much too simple. Nothing before Pepper can be seriously considered here.

And your reason for formulating such an opinion is based on...what?


TNK doesn't hint at any of the inherent elements of prog. I see Eleanor Rigby being mentioned, but I don't think every 60's pop song with prominent classical melodies or strings is necessarily proto-prog. I think when you get to things like A Day in the Life and Good Vibrations, where the structure of the song starts to expand outward and upward, that is when the embryo of prog starts to take recognizable form. I would say Pet Sounds and Eleanor Rigby are a step too far back.


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 04:40
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

 
Just find this in bio of an obscure grreek  prog band who was realesed two LPs in late 70s, now re-issued as digital albums:

Quote (...) With that exquisite basement feel encountered in the early ‘70s British proto-progressive bands, it is one of the essential Greek progressive albums of all times(...)
 
http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction" rel="nofollow - http://peteroyce.bandcamp.com/album/days-of-destruction

Two words stand out: obscure and Greek. And as far as the author of the piece, I still question how one can be "proto-progressive" after the fact. You cannot post-date a movement with pre-dated material. Progressive rock was a fact in the early 70s (it was, by all accounts, available in 1969 as you yourself noted), and your boys, Deep Purple, were not proto-prog in the early 70s. Fireball and Machine Head are virtually non-prog. Or perhaps they were post-prog with pre-prog intentions and coeval-prog every Tuesday and Wednesday.
Why those two words "stand out" for you ? Do you think that these young Greeks in early 70s weren't ordering LPs from British dealers, or what? 

What I find laughable is that the reviewer refers to the Greek band as sounding like the "prog/psych sound of the mid-period PINK FLOYD and the mellotron school (FANTASY, CRESSIDA, KESTREL, early B.J.H.), resulting in a style heavily relying on mellow soundscapes" -- and this is what they refer to as proto-progressive. 

Have you listened to any of these bands, Svetonio? I have. None of these bands have greasy Hammond organs blaring away. Mellow and mellotron, not hard and Hammond. The reviewer doesn't have a clue, so where does that leave you and your original argument...I mean, Knobby's original argument? 

he actually suggested this band for Neo Prog:

Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

Originally posted by apps79 apps79 wrote:

Neo it is not in my opinion, I have listened to their works and they are too retro-styled, somewhere between 70's Psychedelic Rock, light Symphonic and Proto-Prog.Hard to find the perfect category for them.Eclectic or Xover are too possible candidates.

Yea, I understandI put * Neo * mainly due to the time frame when the original vinyls were issued.

LOL 


Ermm


LOL

So... to recap    Proto-Prog is greasy hammond sound, inveterate teller of tall-tales and consummate internet troll Wally "Knobby" Wallace Bunburys is believable because his words sounded logical, any album released in the late 70s is Neo Prog and BlandiKampf is now the indisputable fount of all knowledge...

..brilliant. Clap



lol.



Pete & Royce actually released their magnificent progressive rock albums in early 80s. That's the time frame for Neo as per definition of the sub-genre without a doubt (sorry for my mistake from above post). Is that Neo style or not, that other guy is decided, not you.

Although, I would to read that page again, maybe you already changed the definition of Neo Prog  - it would not be the first time to change the definition of a sub-genre.. -  just kidding, of course.


Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 05:02
lol.

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What?


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 05:06
^ Also, I suggested Pete & Royce for Neo or Eclectic.


Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 05:20
lol.

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What?


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 05:37
^ I'm laughing at you also.





Posted By: Dean
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 05:44
At least we now know what you look like Approve

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What?


Posted By: lazland
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 05:47
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

^ I'm laughing at you also.




I know this bloke.

Sid Bonkers, who wrote, performed, and produced a glorious psych heavy metal proto blues orientated prog album via Bandcamp on a pay as little as you like basis in 2012. The £4.40 raised has guaranteed a follow up to be released next year.

I, for one, cannot wait.


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Enhance your life. Get down to www.lazland.org


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 05:54
^ Yea I know that you think that Sid Bonkers is Eclectic Prog.


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 05:59
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

At least we now know what you look like Approve


Just a vacation pic..


Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 06:55
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

I'm not Knobby's doppelganger. I believe him because his words sounded logical.


If I were you I would be a very worried man.


Posted By: Svetonio
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 07:49
^ Yea of course I would go to see a doctor because I don't recognize the Beatles as proto-prog band as all of normal people usually do as well.



Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 08:08
Originally posted by Svetonio Svetonio wrote:

^ Yea of course I would go to see a doctor because I don't recognize the Beatles as proto-prog band as all of normal people usually do as well.

You said it!


Posted By: earlyprog
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 11:17
Originally posted by King Crimson776 King Crimson776 wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by King Crimson776 King Crimson776 wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows is much too simple. Nothing before Pepper can be seriously considered here.

And your reason for formulating such an opinion is based on...what?


TNK doesn't hint at any of the inherent elements of prog.

Shocked

Using raga and musique concrete as mix ingredients is not an inherent element in the development of prog?! They may not be the dominant elements in prog but they paved the way for other genres to be mixed into what would eventually become prog.


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 21:05
Originally posted by King Crimson776 King Crimson776 wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by King Crimson776 King Crimson776 wrote:

Tomorrow Never Knows is much too simple. Nothing before Pepper can be seriously considered here.

And your reason for formulating such an opinion is based on...what?


TNK doesn't hint at any of the inherent elements of prog. I see Eleanor Rigby being mentioned, but I don't think every 60's pop song with prominent classical melodies or strings is necessarily proto-prog. I think when you get to things like A Day in the Life and Good Vibrations, where the structure of the song starts to expand outward and upward, that is when the embryo of prog starts to take recognizable form. I would say Pet Sounds and Eleanor Rigby are a step too far back.

I mentioned "Eleanor Rigby" as definitely being proto-prog as it was unlike any rock song of its time, but I really didn't mention other bands who used strings or classical arrangements because that was a rarity in 1966, particularly The Beatles choosing to go completely against convention by foregoing the use of guitars and drums and opting instead for a double string quartet. It was unheard of.

In addition, the changing of modes, shifting from Dorian to Aeolian gives the song its unique character. Not to mention the staccato string arrangements bearing the direct influence of Bernard Herrmann's Psycho score as well as Paul McCartney's newfound interest in Vivaldi. This isn't rock with string fills, it is something extraordinary and different. For 1966, it was progressive in the truest sense of the word (but not proto-prog because there was no greasy Hammond organ playing LOL ).

The influence on other musicians was immediate. There aren't many compositions that are covered by a jazz great like Wes Montgomery, a rock band like Vanilla Fudge, a folkie like Richie Havens, a crooner like Tony Bennett and an R&B band like Booker T and the MGs all within a year or two of its release. Breaking musical boundaries is an element of prog. This The Beatles did, while breaking societal boundaries at the same time. Ask your boy Robert Fripp how much he was influenced by The Beatles.

As far as Tomorrow Never Knows being proto-prog or possessing inherent proto-prog elements, I believe earlyprog summed it up quite nicely.




-------------
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: Kati
Date Posted: March 06 2014 at 22:33
Thank you very much, Dark Elf I have a clear understanding now of what proto might be perceived especially in regards to this topic. Again thank you so much.



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