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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 7559
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 03:15 |
goose wrote:
What of Diamond Head's songs are proggy? The only one I heard which I suppose could be called prog was "The Prince", and based on that I bought the best of (for £2.99) and wasn't too impressed. It didn't help that only one song I'd heard and liked that was actually on it was "Am I Evil?" but still, The first two or three tracks just seemed like the same stupid lyric line over and over again... I'm not judging all of their output on that, I've heard at least three or four tracks I liked. |
Diamond Head were the first prog metal band. OK, there's no Mellotron or Hammond - but neither is there in, say, Dream Theater.
DH released 3 "Genuine albums", apart from the recent stuff which I haven't kept up with; "The White Album", "Living on Borrowed Time" and "Canterbury". Of these, only the very rare White Album truly shows what Diamond Head were made of, as their career was extraordinarily badly managed for such an obviously gifted band, and even the superb "Living on Borrowed Time" is a pale shadow of the might of the White Album (AKA Lightning to the nations). "Canterbury" suffered from the fact that the band were going through musical differences, and one early batch of pressings was faulty, rendering it unplayable (although to be fair, with the musical differences, the result bordered on the unlistenable).
DH's "White Album" was way beyond anything that had appeared under the umbrella title of metal, with "more good riffs in a single song than on any Black Sabbath album" (to quote Geoff Barton of Sounds magazine - NOT my opinion!). Note that we are not talking prog a la Genesis, KC et al, but a new form that Heavy rock/metal had hinted at for ages in the hands of Led Zep, Deep Purple, Sabbath etc. With the latter 3, the music strayed into prog territory regularly, but was intrinsically rock'n'roll. With Diamond Head, things suddenly got a bit more pretentious, and rock'n'roll was more incidental, as they moved heavy rock into heavy metal proper for the start of the NWOBHM - but avoided the simple structures adopted by later metal bands.
Note also that Diamond Head were one of the main influences on Metallica, who produced an amazingly tight, if somewhat sterile cover of "Am I Evil" on the flip side of "Creeping Death" back in 1984.
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James Lee
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: June 05 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 3525
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 04:30 |
Any Hum fans here? I think they may have a little prog in them. Great live show, too.
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Man Erg
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: August 26 2004
Location: Isle of Lucy
Status: Offline
Points: 7456
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 05:08 |
Practically everything by
Pere Ubu
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James Lee
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: June 05 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 3525
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 05:43 |
Good call, man-erg...Pere Ubu is a great example of the 'prog side of punk' that many people miss. "Dub Housing" is my favorite of their albums.
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Dragon Phoenix
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 31 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 1475
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 05:53 |
How about Kate Bush' The ninth wave (the B-side from Hounds of love)?
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer
Joined: June 22 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 16130
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 06:00 |
Dragon Phoenix wrote:
How about Kate Bush' The ninth wave (the B-side from Hounds of love)? |
Cant argue, there DP. Ninth Wave is very conceptual, atmospheric and epic. 
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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James Lee
Special Collaborator
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Joined: June 05 2004
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Points: 3525
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 06:22 |
The whole second side of the "Hounds of Love" album sounds like a conceptual sequence to me. And, of course, there was the Gilmour connection...
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Man Erg
Special Collaborator
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Joined: August 26 2004
Location: Isle of Lucy
Status: Offline
Points: 7456
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 07:58 |
James Lee wrote:
Good call, man-erg...Pere Ubu is a great example of the 'prog side of punk' that many people miss. "Dub Housing" is my favorite of their albums. |
Cheers James.Dub Housing is my favourite too.
On your previous topic re:-Hum.I saw them @96/97ish
at The Garage,Highbury & Islington,London. They were
absolutely brilliant.
Edited by Man Erg
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emdiar
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 05 2004
Location: Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 890
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 11:00 |
threefates wrote:
November Rain - Guns & Roses 
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NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO! Never in a million billion trillian gazillion years. Here's what I wrote on the subect in an identical thread a couple of months back...
>>GUNS N' ROSES: 'November Rain'
PROG? Are you MAD??? My god, if you think a string section and 11 minutes of repetitious dreary, pretentious and above all corny "please take us seriously" style rock ballad warbling is prog, then you are sadly mistaken, my friend.
This piece of sh*t is cringeworthy from the "aren't we cultured" grand piano opening to the turgid, clumsy and howlingly predictable coda.
Sorry if this upsets anyone, but come on! The song totally parodies its own genre, yet G'n'R, and it seems, their fans, are utterly oblivious to the humour, which makes them fair game for ridicule in my book<<
Sorry 3f8s but I feel very strongly about this one. Still m8s, I hope?
(ps. French and Saunders do an even funnier version, with Dawn French playing Slash, now that's funny)
Edited by emdiar
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Perception is truth, ergo opinion is fact.
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator
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Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
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Points: 7559
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 12:06 |
I agree emdiar - GnR produce one good, OK great album in "Appetite for Destruction" and all of a sudden they can do no wrong, even when everything released posthumously is bland (and that's being nice!).
I am not keen on the habit of rock bands to get in an orchestra to show how far they've come - Metallica, I mean you!!! Those orchestras must love the money, but get bored to tears by all the repetitive drivel they are forced to play.
Now Spinal Tap with an orchestra - that I'd pay money to see 
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goose
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 20 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 4097
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 13:20 |
Regarding Diamond Head:
I was planning on getting the debut album before i saw the best of for £2.99 in HMV. Looks like I should have stuck with my first idea...
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emdiar
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 05 2004
Location: Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 890
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 13:29 |
I've often thought, those orchestra wallas must take the piss something chronic as soon as the bands nip out for a biffta or whatever. You can imagine the huge private joke going on, while the likes of A. Rose is poncing around like a right prima donna, kidding himself that he has as much as a grain of culture under his kilt. (that's another thing Axel, if you aint Scottish, it's a skirt!)
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Perception is truth, ergo opinion is fact.
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Dragon Phoenix
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 31 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 1475
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 13:29 |
I'll stick my neck out a bit further and throw in:
Bat out of hell (title track of the album) - Meatloaf
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emdiar
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 05 2004
Location: Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 890
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 13:48 |
Dragon Phoenix wrote:
I'll stick my neck out a bit further and throw in:
Bat out of hell (title track of the album) - Meatloaf
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I can live with that funnily enough. If not prog, it is at least a masterpiece of theatrical pomp. November Rain, on the otherhand, is unmittigated bollocks.
Edited by emdiar
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Perception is truth, ergo opinion is fact.
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Easy Livin
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
Joined: February 21 2004
Location: Scotland
Status: Offline
Points: 15585
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 14:23 |
I take "November rain" at face value, without any preconceptions about the band behind it or their motives. On that basis, I love the song, and support the suggestion that it is indeed prog.
I reckon Meatloaf's work with Jim Steinman, and indeed Steinman's "Bad for good" album, are very progressive. Ironically, they have probably been tarnished by their massive commercial success, but I reckon they are still worthy of inclsion on this site.
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gdub411
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 24 2004
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 3484
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 14:49 |
Generally speaking I cannot stand Gun's and Roses and that includes November Rain but I must insist that Estranged is quite proggy. That is the one song in their catalog I actually like.
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Marcelo
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 15 2004
Location: Argentina
Status: Offline
Points: 310
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 15:53 |
Russians - Sting
Novocaine for the Soul - Eels
Stairway to heaven - Led Zeppelin
Chariots of Fire - Vangelis
B side of Beatles' Abbey Road LP
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emdiar
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 05 2004
Location: Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 890
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 15:58 |
Here's one for you; "Reggae Fi Dadda" from "Making History" by Linton Kwesi Johnson. Pure poetry set to the sort of reggae which should appeal to any Prog head. Give this one a try!
Edited by emdiar
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Perception is truth, ergo opinion is fact.
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 7559
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 16:49 |
Novocaine for the Soul by the Eels?
Can't hear the prog - but I hear the gob-smacking inventiveness! That is a truly great song, and a hugely imaginative structure, but it's not prog.
Thanks for reminding me of its existence - I MUST go and listen to it NOW!!! 
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richardh
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 18 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 30072
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Posted: September 01 2004 at 16:52 |
Kate Bush - 'The Dreaming' always felt like a prog album to me.She certainly got a lot of criticism from the music press for being too 'experimental' and 'self indulgent'.Must be prog then!
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