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Fragile is Superestimated?

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moshkito View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22 hours 45 minutes ago at 10:14
Originally posted by Big Sky Big Sky wrote:


...
Even among enthusiasts of Progressive Rock, it has been my experience that RIO and Zeuhl genres of Prog Rock, for example, are just a bridge to far for them. I'm one that doesn't really like the bands in those categories, but I don't dismiss them as untalented hacks. Some of the artists in these genres I have great respect for even if I don't like much of their music. Frank Zappa would be foremost among those artists.
...


Liking or not liking is interesting. I have not, for over 30 years found any music, I did not enjoy, and the "like" and "dislike" thing that modern users love to agree on (gives them more of a socialist feel being in agreement with others!!!) is not something that I indulge in, or appreciate.

ART, of any kind, is about appreciating the human spirit, and its expression, thus not liking this or that, is simply an emotional perception on our own, and HAS NOTHING TO DO with the art work, generally speaking!

That there are different genres, or ideas or styles, is not a problem ... unless you think that everyone has to sound the same, and then ... you would not belong in a progressive therapy group like PA.

You, at least, say you appreciate their talent ... but I think that your comments would be much different if that were true, though ... I might be wrong here, but the tone is not favorable in my reading this.

Originally posted by Big Sky Big Sky wrote:


...
In my opinion, only ELP at that time was putting out music like Yes that was uncompromising and displayed top level musicianship but sold in the millions and made them a top touring band. King Crimson never had that level of success.
...


Strange that you mention KC and don't realize that no band has had more changes and experiments (even on stage) than you have suggested. ELP was not as much of a lack of compromise on stage, because a lot of what they did was difficult and required timing and attention. You don't do a Copland on an empty stadium so beautifully without knowing what you are doing and being detailed and attentive to the work you are doing ... though I think that there are/were moments that were left open for a ween bit of improvising or stretching the piano or the guitar.

YES, in my book, quit after TFTO and kinda copied RW's comments, that the curry was better than the music. For me, RELAYER was a finger to a lot of fans, and SH going nuts, was probably another finger ... because he had a few moments that he flew in TFTO that folks did not like! The stunning part of it, was that the album did magnificently and they ate crow from it, and ended up having to play it! By then, I had already fallen off YES, because it wasn't exactly about the music, but about (supposedly) being really hip and cool and SELLING!

Originally posted by Big Sky Big Sky wrote:


...
Pink Floyd never displayed the levels of musicianship that other Prog bands did and generally, their music was more digestible, being much less complex. One can see how they hit it big.
...


Starting with DSOTM, PF was NEVER about the musicianship show off that rock'n'rollers cheap bands like to showcase ... with solos that supposedly make them better than all the others.

With DSOTM, PF was able to add their sound bites and bits together with the music, and create a sort of "musical", which was a problem ... in one thought/idea. The show ended up being mechanical so it could stay/follow the movie and all the effects and not get disjointed and looking bad. As such, it took away the freedoms for improvising and having more fun, and you had to stay attentive to be "right there" where you needed to be. AND, in a few years time, the visuals created a complete show ... called THE WALL.

You can not define PF without finding out about their history with bits and sound bites which went right back to the first days after Syd Barrett, whose many sound bites were used A LOT ... scream your last scream old fan without a basket!!!!! And then realize how much of a story these visuals became. Sadly, you would not know about this ... unless you had the PF bootlegs at the time, which included all the bits between the pieces of music ... my thoughts are that the keyboards, and early synths and equipment, were being setup for the next piece ... PF was (probably) quite ahead in terms of the technology of things, or a DSOTM and following work, would just have been another song!

Sadly, if all one can do is look at PF as a bunch of songs, the rest of its history is not necessary or important!
...

One last note. I think your evaluation of a bands stature is strange, and it was not the same everywhere. Paris, London, LA, NY would have very different ideas, and sold differently. TFTO did really well in the East Coast because it was appreciated. Here in the West Coast it was trashed, and YES only got an ovation at the Long Beach Arena (TFTO show I saw!) when they played the first bars of Roundabout ... which was SICK. I started crying and left the arena ... the MUSIC was not important, because only the song mattered ... the sickest moment in my whole life, right up there with the locusts and idiots that were fighting for pieces of the pig at Anaheim Stadium ... and PF should have stopped the show and request those fans be removed ... they were not there for the music ... PERIOD.

Yo have to draw a line somewhere ... if you're not there for the music and what it inspires you inside, what are you there for?

Trashing FRAGILE is really sad ... and not necessary, unless folks think that bands are their toilet paper and nothing else!


Edited by moshkito - 22 hours 34 minutes ago at 10:25
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Big Sky Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 20 hours 36 minutes ago at 12:23
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Big Sky Big Sky wrote:


...
Even among enthusiasts of Progressive Rock, it has been my experience that RIO and Zeuhl genres of Prog Rock, for example, are just a bridge to far for them. I'm one that doesn't really like the bands in those categories, but I don't dismiss them as untalented hacks. Some of the artists in these genres I have great respect for even if I don't like much of their music. Frank Zappa would be foremost among those artists.
...


Liking or not liking is interesting. I have not, for over 30 years found any music, I did not enjoy, and the "like" and "dislike" thing that modern users love to agree on (gives them more of a socialist feel being in agreement with others!!!) is not something that I indulge in, or appreciate.

ART, of any kind, is about appreciating the human spirit, and its expression, thus not liking this or that, is simply an emotional perception on our own, and HAS NOTHING TO DO with the art work, generally speaking!

That there are different genres, or ideas or styles, is not a problem ... unless you think that everyone has to sound the same, and then ... you would not belong in a progressive therapy group like PA.

You, at least, say you appreciate their talent ... but I think that your comments would be much different if that were true, though ... I might be wrong here, but the tone is not favorable in my reading this.

Originally posted by Big Sky Big Sky wrote:


...
In my opinion, only ELP at that time was putting out music like Yes that was uncompromising and displayed top level musicianship but sold in the millions and made them a top touring band. King Crimson never had that level of success.
...


Strange that you mention KC and don't realize that no band has had more changes and experiments (even on stage) than you have suggested. ELP was not as much of a lack of compromise on stage, because a lot of what they did was difficult and required timing and attention. You don't do a Copland on an empty stadium so beautifully without knowing what you are doing and being detailed and attentive to the work you are doing ... though I think that there are/were moments that were left open for a ween bit of improvising or stretching the piano or the guitar.

YES, in my book, quit after TFTO and kinda copied RW's comments, that the curry was better than the music. For me, RELAYER was a finger to a lot of fans, and SH going nuts, was probably another finger ... because he had a few moments that he flew in TFTO that folks did not like! The stunning part of it, was that the album did magnificently and they ate crow from it, and ended up having to play it! By then, I had already fallen off YES, because it wasn't exactly about the music, but about (supposedly) being really hip and cool and SELLING!

[QUOTE=Big Sky]
...
Pink Floyd never displayed the levels of musicianship that other Prog bands did and generally, their music was more digestible, being much less complex. One can see how they hit it big.
...


Starting with DSOTM, PF was NEVER about the musicianship show off that rock'n'rollers cheap bands like to showcase ... with solos that supposedly make them better than all the others.

With DSOTM, PF was able to add their sound bites and bits together with the music, and create a sort of "musical", which was a problem ... in one thought/idea. The show ended up being mechanical so it could stay/follow the movie and all the effects and not get disjointed and looking bad. As such, it took away the freedoms for improvising and having more fun, and you had to stay attentive to be "right there" where you needed to be. AND, in a few years time, the visuals created a complete show ... called THE WALL.

You can not define PF without finding out about their history with bits and sound bites which went right back to the first days after Syd Barrett, whose many sound bites were used A LOT ... scream your last scream old fan without a basket!!!!! And then realize how much of a story these visuals became. Sadly, you would not know about this ... unless you had the PF bootlegs at the time, which included all the bits between the pieces of music ... my thoughts are that the keyboards, and early synths and equipment, were being setup for the next piece ... PF was (probably) quite ahead in terms of the technology of things, or a DSOTM and following work, would just have been another song!

Sadly, if all one can do is look at PF as a bunch of songs, the rest of its history is not necessary or important!
...

One last note. I think your evaluation of a bands stature is strange, and it was not the same everywhere. Paris, London, LA, NY would have very different ideas, and sold differently. TFTO did really well in the East Coast because it was appreciated. Here in the West Coast it was trashed, and YES only got an ovation at the Long Beach Arena (TFTO show I saw!) when they played the first bars of Roundabout ... which was SICK. I started crying and left the arena ... the MUSIC was not important, because only the song mattered ... the sickest moment in my whole life, right up there with the locusts and idiots that were fighting for pieces of the pig at Anaheim Stadium ... and PF should have stopped the show and request those fans be removed ... they were not there for the music ... PERIOD.

Yo have to draw a line somewhere ... if you're not there for the music and what it inspires you inside, what are you there for?

Trashing FRAGILE is really sad ... and not necessary, unless folks think that bands are their toilet paper and nothing else!
[/QUOTEto "

Moshkito,

I think you miss the point of my post, nor was I attempting to address every issue with each band. Some responses to your points.

1) The Art / Music / etc question. I don't enjoy certain types of music or movies or art. Art is entirely subjective whether you "like" it or not. I don't care for rap or most country music. There are some tracks that I have "liked", but those are two types of music I don't usually "enjoy" to listen to.

Among movies, musicals and love stories are not something I generally enjoy. My wife doesn't like most sci-fi movies. My son and I are big into sci-fi. This has nothing to do with the "appreciation" of the arts or your reference to "socialist feel." It's just not my cup of tea. I really don't care if it's something you will not "indulge" in or "appreciate." Seriously I don't care.

2) I'm quite aware that King Crimson has had many changes to their lineup. That has nothing to do with my post. Yes had quite of few lineup changes too. My mention of Crimson was only they did not achieve near the level of success, in popularity or music sales of albums, that Yes or ELP enjoyed. Yes and ELP were selling out large arenas such as Madison Square Garden or filling out football fields. Their album sales dwarf King Crimson. They were doing this while recording music that was for the most part not radio friendly.

3) Pink Floyd. I was not attempting to define their music. I was not making a point about their use of experimenting with technology, their history or whether Syd Barrett was off his rocker. My only point was that it's understandable why Floyd became popular. Their music was not nearly as complex as most of their Prog bretheren. As a band, they did not have the musical chops associated with Prog and therefore that was never a highlight of their music.

It was songs, such as Money, Have a Cigar, Run Like Hell and Comfortably Numb that most people heard on the radio and gravitated to. My wife bought DSOTM long ago ( late 80s when she was in high school) before we ever met. I just asked her why she bought DSOTM. Friend of hers liked Floyd and played their music in the car often. In particular, she said she liked the song "Time" and "Money." Found out those songs were on DSOTM and bought the CD. Nothing more or less.

4) You have a different opinion on Yes than I do. It seems that with Tales going forward you had "fallen off Yes" and did not "like" their music going forward. I'm fine with that. No philosophical puffery needed to explain why.

5) Popularity was addressed only in a general sense. In the US, Prog artists usually have been more popular in the NE of the United States than other sections of US. The US is quite large though. By comparison, Great Britain is about the same size as Oregon. Many reasons why music ( or any interest) may be more popular in one region or country. In sports, NASCAR has long been more popular in the South. Lacrosse was for much of it's history popular only in the Mid-Atlantic States and Long Island. Cricket is not even a thought in the US. But, it is quite popular in India, Pakistan, Australia, New Zealand and Great Britain to name a few.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Jaketejas Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 20 hours 9 minutes ago at 12:50
Originally posted by verslibre verslibre wrote:

But is Fragile supercalifragilisticexpialidocious?


Hmmm … okay … at the risk of sounding precocious … Fragile is supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Hrychu Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 hours 53 minutes ago at 13:06
Originally posted by verslibre verslibre wrote:

But is Fragile supercalifragilisticexpialidocious?
I'd say it's more supercalifragilisticexpialidocious than it is southernplayalisticadillacmuzik
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 9 hours 31 minutes ago at 23:28
Originally posted by Big Sky Big Sky wrote:


...
1) The Art / Music / etc question. I don't enjoy certain types of music or movies or art. Art is entirely subjective whether you "like" it or not. I don't care for rap or most country music. There are some tracks that I have "liked", but those are two types of music I don't usually "enjoy" to listen to.

Among movies, musicals and love stories are not something I generally enjoy. My wife doesn't like most sci-fi movies. My son and I are big into sci-fi. This has nothing to do with the "appreciation" of the arts or your reference to "socialist feel." It's just not my cup of tea. I really don't care if it's something you will not "indulge" in or "appreciate." Seriously I don't care.
...

Hi,

The sad side of this (as I see it!!!!), is that one could say that this was black, that was blue and that was green ... and that they could not be "people", because they can't be that different!

I don't concern myself with "like" or "dislike", since for me the expression by each human is as important as anything else, even if I do not exactly like it ... and doing this prevents me from saying that my God is right and no one else's is, which is a very ridiculous notion! We don't even try to appreciate the other point of view!

Originally posted by Big Sky Big Sky wrote:


...
My only point was that it's understandable why Floyd became popular. Their music was not nearly as complex as most of their Prog brethren. As a band, they did not have the musical chops associated with Prog and therefore that was never a highlight of their music.
...



The bootlegs at the time, pretty much showed that it was more about MOOD, than it was about anything else, and lyrics were not exactly important, though some are hard to not hear or understand. I think they had the "chops" ... but were not exactly interested in showing that stuff off, because it interfered with their idea of what they wanted to do.

That they became "popular" was a sort of underground thing, which the bootlegs showed ... and it was that the concerts were far out, and trippy and neat, not that a lot of smoke was around them ... which, by DSOTM, Roger was complaining that it was too much and it might affect the performances here and there. And during THE WALL, the busts in LA were sick, but I am not sure this would have happened if RW would not have complained about it and help create a group of folks to go bust up a bunch of fans in LA, for example.

The "highlight" was that after DSOTM, the fans were totally different, and those interested in the fame and song, were the ones that ruined a lot of shows, from the nice atmosphere of the earlier times before DSOTM.

Complexity, btw, is not the definition of music by any stretch of the imagination, specially when it is easy for some and the same thing is difficult for others. We keep thinking that a lot of "progressive" music is not an easy pop song, and some of it might be true, but I do not think that is the way to define the music, since a lot of it includes material and touches that are related to the culture and not something that many of us, outsiders, are not exactly aware of and try to define the difference as something intricate or difficult.

Originally posted by Big Sky Big Sky wrote:


...
It was songs, such as Money, Have a Cigar, Run Like Hell and Comfortably Numb that most people heard on the radio and gravitated to.
...


As I said, the fans of the band changed from the music appreciation society to the "hit" society ... I never went to see the band because it was on radio, and I had the albums way before it was played ... in fact, in Santa Barbara, for several months DSOTM was thought to be crap and pompous, until a week later or so, it hit huge in LA thanks to a couple of really big audiences from 2 stations. All of a sudden, "Money" was enjoyed, but in LA it was more The Greatest Gig In The Sky that I remember the best ... while I did not dislike "Money" it was, for me, a come down from the MOOD stuff the band had done ... all of a sudden it was about that fan ... and I think we all resonated with that!

Originally posted by Big Sky Big Sky wrote:


...
4) You have a different opinion on Yes than I do. It seems that with Tales going forward you had "fallen off Yes" and did not "like" their music going forward. I'm fine with that. No philosophical puffery needed to explain why.
...


It was not disliking at all ... maybe a preference. By that time I was completely into the EUROPEAN/INTERNATIONAL scene, and was more interested in the far out stuff out of France, Italy, Germany and other places in Europe that everyone in "radio" seemed to ignore altogether. Sadly, I find that anyone that was "attached" to the radio song and the "hit", was the same fan that rarely ended up learning the appreciation for the rest of the music around the world! And it feels like the whole thing is defined from a radio point of view, and the European music scene, in the 1970's did not start up because of radio ... it came up because of the folks involved were attuned to the art form, a lot more than they were towards the hit ... and this is the hard part of discussing this in America ... folks haven't had "art" in their hearts for 60+ years that the government has removed assistance to public radio and most of the education systems, because the arts were too "liberal" to keep the republicans elected. And to this day, we don't do anything about it and continue electing folks that hate the arts and then some ... but they will show up dressed to the gills for the wine and cheese, of course!

For me, the bands coming out with new music were far superior to what YES, PF and many other folks were doing and a lot more interesting as music, instead of just a song for radio ... and we need to fess up to that and wake up. The progressive thing (specially) was very anti-radio and experimental in its early days, and it wasn't until these became huge in the 1970's with the FM Radio in America, that the FCC made sure that all FM stations were bought by the corporate groups so no more "independent" stations were out there pushing music the corporations did not own. This Great Radio Rape in America took place in 1979/198o, and since then all of the stations became "classic" stations and the music was taped so no DJ's would open their mouth and say anything.

To this day, we have not done anything about this and continue to allow the richest to buy their way into government to change the laws to help themselves ... and we can not be blind, and deaf, to the idea that things won't change that will hurt the appreciation of the arts, and in our case, the music.



Edited by moshkito - 9 hours 25 minutes ago at 23:34
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Disconnect Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 3 hours 44 minutes ago at 05:15
Pedro...I think you might be scaring some of these kids.   
"My own response to King Crimson is one of quiet terror." - Robert Fripp
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