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Can someone please tell me what progressive rock is
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| spiralhelix |
| because I have no idea:conf: I told someone the other day that I liked progressive and he thought I meant progressive rock. I admit I haven't the foggiest what it means. Can someone fill me in? |
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| SugarShack |
| Pink Floyd, Emerson Lake & Plamer, Genesis |
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| DarkFall01 |
Progressive Rock/Metal is quite different from normal Rock or Metal, it changes alot (the song progresses).
Check out:
Dream Theater
Joe Satriani
Steve Vai
Deep Purple
Racer X
If you listen to Dream Theater and Metallica for instance, you'll see what I mean, the song structure is completely different. |
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| lücid |
Dream Theater  |
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| mto |
Or the almighty TOOL!
TOOL OWNZ U BITCH!!! |
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| Magnetonium |
| Pink Floyd :eyespop: |
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| Sorrow |
| quote: | Originally posted by DarkFall01
Progressive Rock/Metal is quite different from normal Rock or Metal, it changes alot (the song progresses). |
Try Genesis - Driving the last spike.
:eyes: |
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| alffla |
| Liquid Tension Experiment is a damn good prog. rock band... get their song Acid Rain. :) |
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| DarkFall01 |
| quote: | Originally posted by alffla
Liquid Tension Experiment is a damn good prog. rock band... get their song Acid Rain. :) |
Yeah, LE is really good too. Actually they're almost the same band as Dream Theater, same guitarrist, keyboardist and drummer, but with a different bassist and no singer, def check them out :)
Also, check out Planet X, Symphony X, Blind Guardian, Stratovarius... |
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| XeQtOr |
| quote: | Originally posted by DarkFall01
If you listen to Dream Theater and Metallica for instance, you'll see what I mean, the song structure is completely different. |
Metallica are not progressive metal/rock they're Trash Metal... |
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| shoXx |
Taken from allmusic.com (which happens to be a fantastic site):
Progressive rock and art rock are two almost interchangeable terms describing a mostly British attempt to elevate rock music to new levels of artistic credibility. The differences between prog-rock and art rock are often slight in practice, but do exist. Prog-rock tends to be more traditionally melodic (even when multi-sectioned compositions replace normal song structures), more literary (poetry or sci-fi/fantasy novels), and more oriented toward classically trained instrumental technique (with the exception of Pink Floyd). Art rock is more likely to have experimental or avant-garde influences, placing novel sonic texture above prog-rock's symphonic ambitions. Both styles are intrinsically album-based, taking advantage of the format's capacity for longer, more complex compositions and extended instrumental explorations. In fact, many prog bands were fond of crafting concept albums that made unified statements, usually telling an epic story or tackling a grand overarching theme. In addition to pushing rock's technical and compositional boundaries, prog-rock was also arguably the first arena where synthesizers and electronic textures became indispensable parts of a rock ensemble. The earliest rumblings of progressive and art rock could be heard in the poetry of Bob Dylan and conceptually unified albums like the Mothers of Invention's Freak Out! and the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, all of which suggested that rock was more than just teenagers' music and should be taken seriously as an art form. Prog-rock began to emerge out of the British psychedelic scene in 1967, specifically a strain of classical/symphonic rock led by the Nice, Procol Harum, and the Moody Blues (Days of Future Passed). King Crimson's 1969 debut In the Court of the Crimson King firmly established the concept of progressive rock, and a quirky, eclectic scene was taking shape in Canterbury, led by the jazzy psychedelia of the Soft Machine. Prog-rock became a commercial force in the early '70s, with Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Yes, Jethro Tull, Genesis, and Pink Floyd leading the way. Meanwhile, a more avant-garde scene (dubbed Kraut-rock) was developing in Germany, and eccentric, unclassifiable bands continued to emerge in the U.K. By the mid-'70s, a backlash was beginning to set in; prog-rock sometimes mistook bombast for majesty, and its far-reaching ambition and concern with artistic legitimacy could make for overblown, pretentious music. Its heyday soon came to an end with the advent of punk, which explicitly repudiated prog's excesses and aimed to return rock & roll to its immediate, visceral roots. Still, prog-rock didn't completely go away. A number of AOR bands used prog ideas in more concise songs; plus, Pink Floyd, Yes, and Genesis all had number one singles in the '80s by retooling their approaches. A small cult of neo-prog bands catered to faithful audiences who still liked grandiose concepts and flashy technique; the first was Marillion, and many more popped up in the late '80s and early '90s.
Important albums:
Can - Tago Mago (1971)
David Bowie - Scary Monsters (1992)
Captein Beefheart and the Magic Band - Lick My Decals Off, Baby (1970)
Jethro Tull - Living With the Past (2002)
Japan - Din Drum (2003)
Asia - Asia (1992) |
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| spiralhelix |
| awesome! thanx for all the repies guys |
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