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bobbyb5
Gender: Male
Location: New York
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- #1
- Posted: 09/23/2017 22:15
- Post subject: Is 70s progressive rock too overblown?
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Question: Is 70s prog-rock too overblown? Answer: Of course not!!!! The bigger the better!
What are your favorite 70s progressive rock albums? I like these ones.
Emerson Lake and Palmer. Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends, Brain Salad Surgery
Yes. Tales From Topographic Oceans, Close to the Edge
Nektar. Remember the Future
Rick Wakeman. Journey to the Center of the Earth, The Six Wives of Henry VIII
Procol Harum. Live with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra
David Meesham and the London Symphony Orchestra. Tommy
Moody Blues. A Question of Balance, Seventh Sojourn, Every Good Boy Deserves favour
Jeff Wayne's War of the Worlds
Electric Light Orchestra. Eldorado, On the Third Day, Face the music
King Crimson. In the Wake of Poseidon
What do you think are the best ones?
Last edited by bobbyb5 on 09/24/2017 10:07; edited 3 times in total
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Tha1ChiefRocka
Yeah, well hey, I'm really sorry.
Location: Kansas
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Repo
BeA Sunflower
Location: Forest Park
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- #3
- Posted: 09/23/2017 22:40
- Post subject:
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lol. Nice!
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bobbyb5
Gender: Male
Location: New York
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- #4
- Posted: 09/23/2017 22:41
- Post subject:
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RoundTheBend
I miss the comfort in being sad
Location: Ground Control
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- #5
- Posted: 09/24/2017 06:10
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I don't really know any of that music you listed intimately, but I'm pretty sure the definition of progressive rock is overblown rock.
So Tha1ChiefRocka's reply is absolutely appropriate. That's the answer to bloated progressive rock: punk rock.
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bobbyb5
Gender: Male
Location: New York
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- #6
- Posted: 09/24/2017 07:38
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True, but what albums dominate the BEA charts today 40 years later? Pink Floyd or the Damned?
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Graeme2
Gender: Male
Location: The Upside Down
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- #7
- Posted: 09/24/2017 08:36
- Post subject:
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sethmadsen wrote: | I don't really know any of that music you listed intimately, but I'm pretty sure the definition of progressive rock is overblown rock.
So Tha1ChiefRocka's reply is absolutely appropriate. That's the answer to bloated progressive rock: punk rock. |
This thing about punk being an answer to prog is something always mentioned when talking about the origins of British punk. Prog had long since had its prime and was fading in popularity by 1976. There may be something to it but I'm not sure it's as big a factor as has been insinuated. Uk punk was more inspired by the pub rock scene in London than being a movement against prog.
The best of prog isn't overblown at all. The worst of ELP most certainly is but that doesn't represent prog.
My faves
Moonmadness by Camel
Si On Avait Besoin D'Une Cinquième Sai... Harmonium
In The Land Of Grey And Pink by Caravan
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Yann
Gender: Male
Location: France
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- #8
- Posted: 09/24/2017 08:41
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bobbyb5 wrote: | True, but what albums dominate the BEA charts today 40 years later? Pink Floyd or the Damned? |
True, but there a sort of bluesy economy of means in Pink Floyd that makes them stand out from regular progressive music like ELP
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Graeme2
Gender: Male
Location: The Upside Down
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- #9
- Posted: 09/24/2017 08:45
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Yann wrote: | True, but there a sort of bluesy economy of means in Pink Floyd that makes them stand out from regular progressive music like ELP |
Still prog. Maybe only just. What makes ELP the definition of prog?
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bobbyb5
Gender: Male
Location: New York
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- #10
- Posted: 09/24/2017 08:46
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Graeme2 wrote: | sethmadsen wrote: | I don't really know any of that music you listed intimately, but I'm pretty sure the definition of progressive rock is overblown rock.
So Tha1ChiefRocka's reply is absolutely appropriate. That's the answer to bloated progressive rock: punk rock. |
This thing about punk being an answer to prog is something always mentioned when talking about the origins of British punk. Prog had long since had its prime and was fading in popularity by 1976. There may be something to it but I'm not sure it's as big a factor as has been insinuated. Uk punk was more inspired by the pub rock scene in London than being a movement against prog.
The best of prog isn't overblown at all. The worst of ELP most certainly is but that doesn't represent prog.
My faves
Moonmadness by Camel
Si On Avait Besoin D'Une Cinquième Sai... Harmonium
In The Land Of Grey And Pink by Caravan |
Exactly. Thats just a cliche that punk was a reaction against prog.. As if people could only like one or the other. And you're right, there's so much variety within prog that it could never alll be lumped together. I happen to like all kinds from the more minimal to the more overblown. What I have also discovered is that people who bad-mouth Prog are often the same people whose favorite album is Dark Side of the Moon or OK Computer. They don't know what the fuck theyre talking about.
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