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Petrovsk Mizinski ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: December 24 2007 Location: Ukraine Status: Offline Points: 25210 |
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So I guess that makes it reasonable to not find 5 seconds to use the search function and if in the event they found the thread could be locked due to being old, asking an admin to re open it right? Because you know in this society it's too hard to take that effort, using the mouse to click on the search function IS JUST TOO DAMN HARD ![]() |
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Petrovsk Mizinski ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: December 24 2007 Location: Ukraine Status: Offline Points: 25210 |
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Get a load of this guy ![]() You can make some good informative and well thought out posts when you want to, but seriously take elitist crap somewhere else dude, it really doesn't reflect well on the site. As has been said, I don't think anyone is claiming to an expert. Some here are more knowledgeable than others, but ain't no self proclaimed experts here, look elsewhere for that. I haven't heard Mahler, nor Albinoni (But am familiar with works from the others you mentioned) and to be honest I'm not that interesting in going out of my way to hear them either. And shock horror shock, some people around here probably aren't classical music fans at all, so it is unreasonable they haven't heard them ( Albinoni, Bach, Beethoven, Mahler, Puccini, Stravinsky)? |
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ExittheLemming ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: October 19 2007 Location: Penal Colony Status: Offline Points: 11420 |
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Perhaps one of the disincentives for unearthing an old thread on the same topic is that it would contain opinions subsequently relinquished by the original posters. Like many others, my opinions on a variety of musical subjects has changed over time. Another perspective is that PA has many new members who joined after such previous threads, and 'fresh eyes on old ideas' etc. Is storage space on the server a burning issue for you ? However perhaps the biggest reason for not revisiting an old thread on the same subject is the distinct possibility that you may have contributed to same, thus precluding the onerous chore of having to wade through the sort of self rightous indignation as encapsulated in the quoted example above. We should be thankful for small mercies, as this is probably just a titbit from your caps locked arsenal of spleen. Hope both your day and life improves immeasurably in the interim |
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verslibre ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: July 01 2004 Location: CA Status: Offline Points: 19233 |
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Do you mean Harmonic Ascendant? That album was promoted as being listenable at both turntable speeds? First time I've heard of that, interesting...
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Conservationist ![]() Forum Newbie ![]() Joined: September 29 2009 Status: Offline Points: 6 |
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Absolutely! The inheritance of song structure in prog and soundtracks is clear, as is much of the obsession with quality of phrasing. |
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DEATH METAL ftw
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jampa17 ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: July 04 2009 Location: Guatemala Status: Offline Points: 6802 |
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I guess... if you think of Pink Floyd and King Crimson... they don't seem to be influenced by classical music... they just explore moods and routes on their instruments as well as explore with production and recording... there´s no classical reference... and then they influenced everybody else... so I don't think the prog itself is influenced... some bands could think about it... like Yngwie or Dream Theater... but is just a small part in the prog world... right...???
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el böthy ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: April 27 2005 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 6336 |
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Wow classical music influenced prog? Never thought about it before!!! Thank you for opening my eyes, kind sir
Such sarcasm |
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"You want me to play what, Robert?"
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Conor Fynes ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: February 11 2009 Location: Vancouver, CA Status: Offline Points: 3196 |
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It's the MAIN influence of prog-no, any real good music.
If Beethoven, or Mozart were around today, they'd be considered prog musicians... I mean, the ninth symphony is more or less, a 60 minute 'epic.'
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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![]() As much as we would like the idea of them becoming Prog musicians, they would have entered into the world of Classical music just as they did in the 18th century.
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What?
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Trianium ![]() Forum Groupie ![]() ![]() Joined: October 03 2009 Location: Moaña - Spain Status: Offline Points: 91 |
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I Think classical music influenced Prog. For instance, Pink Floyd has always been influenced by Wagner.
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Trianium ![]() Forum Groupie ![]() ![]() Joined: October 03 2009 Location: Moaña - Spain Status: Offline Points: 91 |
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YES, King Crimson, Genesis, Jethro Tull...have some influence of classical music.
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Trianium ![]() Forum Groupie ![]() ![]() Joined: October 03 2009 Location: Moaña - Spain Status: Offline Points: 91 |
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Ivan_Melgar_M ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
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I used to thnk like this when a kid, always tried to convince my friends that Wakeman wiould be coinsidered a 20 Century Classical musician, but I was wromng.
There's still a strong Classical movement that has no relation with Rock music, and Rick Wakeman will always be considered a Rock musician.
As a prove of this, musicians like Steve Hackett and Tony Banks, despite their works, never had an album accepted as Classical, until they released Midsummer Night Dream and Seven, in which they abandoned every reference to Rock in order to be accepted by the elitist Classsical universe.
Maybe musicians as Mussorgsky or Cui, who broke with the European Orchestral universe, would be¨Prog musicians today, but that's not for sure.
Iván Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - October 03 2009 at 17:44 |
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King Crimson776 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: October 12 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2779 |
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One of the main features of progressive rock is it's classical influence, so one can say that the genre as a whole is influenced by classical. However, it has many other influences such as jazz and folk, so not every song has to be classically influenced.
And take a band like Caravan who is pretty much just jazz and folk influenced... they are here because of that and their extended song-form among other aspects. So, while classical hasn't necessarily influenced every prog song, or even band... it can be said to be one of the main aspects of it, and has large influence on many of prog's subgenres.
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tamijo ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 06 2009 Location: Denmark Status: Offline Points: 4287 |
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Im wondering - didnt classical music influence every modern form of music.
I think what You are asking, did classical music influence Prog. more than it influenced mainstream.
And my answer would be yes i think so, im sure Genesis, Yes And KC, would listen to Classical music,
before they started the Prog. thing, even though they may not admit to it.
On the other hand that dosent nessesarily mean you will find "classical music" on any prog albums.
Regarding someone saying Krim's is not influenced by Classic's, i remember Fripp playing Bach on this one. http://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=9617
Here is a little piece from
ROBERT FRIPP - FROM CRIMSON KING TO CRAFTY MASTER
by Eric Tamm "Some of Fripp's most perplexing comments on other music concern the Western art music tradition. On the one hand, the music of some of that tradition's masters has figured prominently in Fripp's own musical self-education. He has often acknowledged his debt to Bartok, particularly the Bartok of the String Quartets, many of whose movements sound positively Frippian, with their intense linear counterpoint, percussive rhythms, odd metrical schemes, extended tonality, exotic scales, and piquant dissonances. Stravinsky's name comes up from time to time, as when Fripp mentioned the Russian in a discussion of tuning, temperament, and enharmonic pitch notation; on another occasion he called early Stravinsky "really hot stuff." Fripp expressed admiration for Handel, Bach, Mozart, and Verdi in a 1980 essay, but he was not focussing on their music so much as he was making the point that these composers had had to teach themselves how to thrive creatively while working in "very difficult political and economic conditions ... Surely the most surprising point is how much inspired work had prosaic origins."
If this is not pure fiction, seems evident, that Fripp is well into the music of the past.
Edited by tamijo - October 05 2009 at 08:12 |
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Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Rottenhat ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: February 14 2006 Location: Finland Status: Offline Points: 436 |
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Did classical music influence prog? Is that a trick question? :)
Offtopic:
Just heard the lyrics "Getting over overhanging trees" from Yes "Topograhic..." Jesus! :)
Edited by Rottenhat - October 10 2009 at 04:53 |
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Language is a virus from outer space.
-William S. Burroughs |
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Fogon the Tyne ![]() Forum Groupie ![]() ![]() Joined: October 11 2009 Location: Durham Status: Offline Points: 40 |
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I could always see classical influences in prog as I got into the scene ie Genesis and ELP as esp ELP were heavily classically based. However I think Classical only influenced a certain part of the scene Jazz folk rock and well I suppose most other music has helped prog stretch itself outwards.
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I have become comfortably numb
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Fogon the Tyne ![]() Forum Groupie ![]() ![]() Joined: October 11 2009 Location: Durham Status: Offline Points: 40 |
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Re the off topic overhanging trees Jesus indeed I found out long ago that although i love YEs analyzing the lyrics may lead to the couch and medication! " Total mass retain" anyone?
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I have become comfortably numb
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classic not old ![]() Forum Newbie ![]() Joined: July 06 2009 Status: Offline Points: 21 |
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Matt Bellamy of Muse isn't afraid to toss in a little Rachmaninov or Chopin into the mix.
![]() Much of what we call "classical" music was music that pushed back the boundaries in its time... Beethoven, for example did things which hadn't been done before - and which caused a lot of controversy - in that spirit, classical music definitely influences prog.
Insofar as a musician uses everything available to them to express their inspiration, and if they can't find the way to do it with what's available, invent something new or add in something which you wouldn't normally expect (for example Beethoven was the first to use choral voices on a symphony) - then classical composers were the prog-rockers of their day.
I once reviewed a Genesis gig for a local paper (back in 1976 when they were still a 5 piece but with Phil Collins on vocal) and said that Genesis would be "tomorrow's classical music". I'm not sure if I was right about that.
In hindsight, it would have been more accurate to say that about Mike Oldfield or Jean-Michel Jarre perhaps.
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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What?
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