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- Path: sparky!uunet!auspex-gw!johnf
- From: johnf@Auspex.COM (John Fereira)
- Newsgroups: alt.music.progressive
- Subject: Re: A simple question
- Message-ID: <16119@auspex-gw.auspex.com>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 20:48:56 GMT
- References: <16095@auspex-gw.auspex.com> <1992Dec29.153807.12075@shearson.com>
- Sender: news@auspex-gw.auspex.com
- Organization: Auspex Systems, Inc.
- Lines: 118
- Nntp-Posting-Host: acdelco.auspex.com
-
- In article <1992Dec29.153807.12075@shearson.com> dmandl@shearson.com writes:
- >In article 16095@auspex-gw.auspex.com, johnf@Auspex.COM (John Fereira) writes:
- |>In article <1992Dec23.213317.576@shearson.com> dmandl@shearson.com writes:
- |>>In article 16061@auspex-gw.auspex.com, johnf@Auspex.COM (John Fereira) writes:
- |>|>I'm not going to go into any specific bands but you pose an interesting
- |>|>question. Someone awhile back was talking about classical composers writing
- |>|>music that will endure with that in mind. Since many progressive bands
- |>|>have a classical influence one would believe that progressive music would
- |>|>endure. Compare that to much popular music that seems only to be produced
- |>|>for the quick buck and it seems to validate the importance of progressive
- |>|>rock as a musical genre.
- |>|
- |>|Wooohoohoohoohoohoo. This defies logic. Let's see..."A Fifth
- |>|of Beethoven" (disco version of Beethoven's Fifth, ca. 1975)--
- |>|yes indeedy, a timeless classic!
- |>
- |>Huh? What does a disco song from the '70's have to do with that timelesses
- |>of progressive rock?
- |
- |Simple. You mentioned that since it has been suggested that classical
- |music will endure, and many progressive bands have a classical influence,
- |"one would believe that progresssive music would endure." I was pointing
- |out that a "classical influence" doesn't mean much, and cited that trashy
- |disco song as evidence.
-
- And "A Fifth of Beethoven" has a classical influence?
-
- |>| Listen, I can't _think_ of
- |>|anything more dated than "In the Court of the Crimson King" (and
- |>|I'm a Crimson fan). First ELP album? "Tarkus"? "Tales from
- |>|Topographic Oceans"? ANYTHING by an Italian progressive rock
- |>|band of the early 70s? This music was embarrassingly dated
- |>|by 1978 or earlier.
- |>
- |>Pick any genre, and you're going to find some crap. You mention the
- |>three most popular progressive rock groups around and then pick specific
- |>examples and then claim that the genre is dated? My definition of progressive
- |>rock goes far beyond Yes/King Crimson/Pink Floyd/ELP.
- |
- |Right. I was generalizing, just like you. I was trying to show that
- |a lot of this stuff _is_ crap, including some of the bands that are
- |considered the greatest practitioners (or best examples) of the style.
-
- Any my point was you can always find an example of something that is crap
- but that doesn't prove that everything in the genre is crap.
-
- |>|ANYTHING by an Italian progressive rock
- |>|band of the early 70s? This music was embarrassingly dated
- |>|by 1978 or earlier.
- |>
- |>This this include groups like Le Orme? Ossana? Just what do you mean by
- |>"dated"? That is sounds like the music of a certain time? Does that make
- |>it any less timeless?
- |
- |Aha. So what does "timeless" mean, then? Does it simply mean that you
- |still like it, even though it "sounds like the music of a certain time"?
-
- Timeless to me means that it endures. That is still sounds as good (or
- bad) as it did when it first came out. Yes, "I like it" is subjective, but
- that doesn't enter into why I think it is timeless.
-
- |Then you're making a purely subjective judgement. I think Procol Harum's
- |first LP and Lene Lovich's "Stateless" are great and "timeless"; others
- |think they're both badly dated junk. I assumed that by claiming that
- |progressive rock "will endure" you were using some more objective measure.
-
- Yes, I was. I think that "in general" many progressive rock bands were
- writing music for themselves, and because they were attempting to satisfy
- their own musical goals, and not those of some marketing type who decides
- what the public will buy, that it will contain an inherent quality which
- will make it more timeless.
-
- |People may still like it. Fine. But that doesn't make the music inherently "timeless."
-
- No it doesn't. I agree.
-
- |>|As for "progressive rock" being pure art versus the cheap disposable
- |>|commodities of popular music, don't kid yourself.
- |>
- |>I didn't say *all* progressive rock was pure art. I said, in general that
- |>compared to todays popular music which seems to be only produced to make
- |>a quick buck progressive rock has qualities to it that are inherently more
- |>timeless.
- |
- |I don't agree. I don't know what makes a particular quality of music
- |"inherently timeless," and I wonder whether _anyone_ could list those
- |secret ingredients. The popular music of the late 60's and early
- |70's was made for profit too (I don't necessarily support this; I'm just
- |pointing it out). What about it? It's common for people to dismiss the
- |music of "today" as cheap, mass-produced trash compared to the great music
- |of the past.
-
- You mean wearing your pants backwards or you underwear on the outside of
- your pants really does improve music?
-
- | True, mainstream bands and producers had a lot more leeway
- |to be creative back then, but there's plenty of creative music being made
- |today. Maybe more--who knows?
- |
- |I was basically baiting you, and you bit. Sweeping generalizations
- |like this about styles of music are pointless and usually wrong. In
- |my experience, fans of "progressive rock" are some of the worst musical
- |snobs around, and a lot of them have become old fuddy-duddies, just like
- |classical and jazz snobs before them.
-
- Some see it as snobbery others see it as one that is exploring challenging
- music.
-
- | _I_ think there's a lot of music
- |that is _much_ more "timeless" than 90% of prog rock. So there.
-
- Considering the percentage of prog rock compared to all other genres I'd
- have to agree.
- --
- +==========================================================================+
- | John Fereira | Auspex Systems | "Ask me about my vow of silence." |
- | johnf@auspex.com | Santa Clara CA | |
- +==========================================================================+
-