sorry, too furious to point out that whoever pointed out that post Okey Dokey Computer is beholden to Prog was right and if this doc didn't address that then it was eating its own bollocks
― I Was a Teenage Armchair Hongro Fan (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 3 January 2009 11:51 (fifteen years ago) link
there is no "gnome and wizard" shit in the genre to the best of my knowledge.― Pashmina (Pashmina), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 13:54 (4 years ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
THIS GUY KNOWS WHAT HE's ABOUT
Honest to God, FUCK PUNK and its fuckshit idolators
― I Was a Teenage Armchair Hongro Fan (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 3 January 2009 11:53 (fifteen years ago) link
It didn't really go beyond 1980, apart from some piss-taking footage of Yes playing "Owner of a lonely heart".
― Neil S, Saturday, 3 January 2009 11:53 (fifteen years ago) link
I Was a Teenage Armchair Jagger Fan :/
― da cryypiä (DJ Mencap), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:00 (fifteen years ago) link
Grimly, what they didn't tell you in their simplistic "every prog band started honourable but got progressively (fnarr) more pretentious and bad" narrative is that Yes' best album came out AFTER "TFTO". Namely the completely overlooked and totally incredible Relayer. CTTE is fucking brilliant too tho, you should definitely lay hold. If only for "And You And I". ;-)
Noodle bringing some heavy jurisdiction.
― REMOVE THEIR EARS (country matters), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:05 (fifteen years ago) link
Relayer didn't feature choice talking-heads Bruford or Wakeman, of course, so it was never going to get a mention.
― REMOVE THEIR EARS (country matters), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:06 (fifteen years ago) link
I'm with your Relayer love LJ, but you cd advance the argument further by citing Going for the One which is canonically a Great Yes Album from 77, before we even have to hit people over the head with 90125's awesomeness in a oh shit mom they're making pop music style.
I love the way shit like this pretends the first 3 or 4 Roxy albums weren't Prog because it doesn't fit the lol behemoths story arc also.
― I Was a Teenage Armchair Hongro Fan (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:30 (fifteen years ago) link
Re the late 70s "OMG punk destroyed prog" bit I thought they could have talked more about the fact that a lot of the punks actually liked prog, e.g. John Lydon, but all we got was Phil Collins talking about Rat Scabies saying he was a big fan of his drumming.
I was a bit surprised about the lack of VdGG. Also no Gong or Here & Now. I guess Hawkwind you could claim are "space rock" and don't count for some reason.
― I KNOW WHAT YOU'RE UP TO (Colonel Poo), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:39 (fifteen years ago) link
They did mention Roxy Music at one point I think but I was in the kitchen so I can't add much more than that unfortunately (xpost)
Oh yeah, they mentioned Roxy as part of an entirely different thing, without realising that their concrete definitions of prog were BS. It was a very fluid 'movement'. Much like some of the stuff they were spouting.
I don't actually have those two Yes albums, something I gotta rectify. :-/ Also, seriously, no VdGG, no cred, and I've still only got two of their albums. (Still Life is so *perfect* that I can't really imagine anything else living up to it, but I really should investigate.)
― REMOVE THEIR EARS (country matters), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:40 (fifteen years ago) link
I'd look this up online but I'd probably just get annoyed by it. They slagged off prog rock lyrics? Prog rock lyrics are no worse than any other genre's IE 99% is shit as per usual. No prog lyric is worse than "don't look back in anger" anyway. "Going for the One" is v v patchy but OTOH has "Awaken" which I think is hands down the best thing they ever did.
― Pashmina, Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:43 (fifteen years ago) link
Godbluff I think is better than Still Life, Louis.
― Pashmina, Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:44 (fifteen years ago) link
You watch footage of any 77 era Punk gig and I guarantee there'll be some longhairs moshing down the front. What's so annoying about the "Punk killed Prog" story is that only the crassest of lazy journos and 17 year-old NME fundamentalists still spout that shit, everybody else knows it's bollocks and can trot out the Lydon loved Hammill story and list the riffs that Magazine copped, before you even begin to think about how Fall-group and Pere Ubu and Television et al make the whole sorry myth ridiculous.
― I Was a Teenage Armchair Hongro Fan (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:44 (fifteen years ago) link
I hear ya re: Godbluff Pash but I'll still rep for Still Life uber alles.
― I Was a Teenage Armchair Hongro Fan (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:45 (fifteen years ago) link
Am now gonna spend the evening trying to make Wii Music prog jams btw
― I Was a Teenage Armchair Hongro Fan (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:47 (fifteen years ago) link
― I KNOW WHAT YOU'RE UP TO (Colonel Poo), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:51 (fifteen years ago) link
It was amusing listening to them talk about the "energy" of Punk, having just been exposed to equivalent energy, thrashing riffs and aggressive musicianship from a load of "soft Proggers". The two weren't polar opposites, they were different expressions of the same impulse, and far from fighting one another, they ultimately amplified one another.
Have been really digging Magazine of late fwiw. They maybe merited a mention here. But too concrete, too cliched.
Still Life is actually perfect and devastating from start to finish, ferocious and totally epic. It doesn't feel like they were striving for epicness, it just feels inevitable, like it had to happen that way, even as "La Rossa" or "Childlike Faith..." spiral off into their jawdropping, spectacular closing swells
― REMOVE THEIR EARS (country matters), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:56 (fifteen years ago) link
"Childlike Faith" is back on as my funeral song. I'd guess that the Graafers refused to play ball, or where dismissed as too obscure. Also three of them made a complete fucking headkick of an album this year and there's no footage of them being anything other than thunder gods of the apocalypse so it wouldn't fit into the lol Keith Emerson on a Persian rug arc.
― I Was a Teenage Armchair Hongro Fan (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 3 January 2009 12:59 (fifteen years ago) link
ELP should be fucking written out of music history if it means they give VdGG the airing they deserve
Ah yeah, apparently the 10+ minute song on the new record is absolutely astonishing, and the rest ain't far behind
― REMOVE THEIR EARS (country matters), Saturday, 3 January 2009 13:06 (fifteen years ago) link
Ah man ELP are their own thing and I can get with it, they're just as distant from VdGG in one direction as Atomic Rooster are in another. It probly helps to get ELP if you listen to The Nice first, they did a lot of tasty Psych-Pop tunes and are worth hearing even if you do hate ELP.
― I Was a Teenage Armchair Hongro Fan (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 3 January 2009 13:11 (fifteen years ago) link
Incidentally The Nice were allegedly named after the first word heads would say after coughing up their lungs on a doobie, and how Prog is that?
― I Was a Teenage Armchair Hongro Fan (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 3 January 2009 13:12 (fifteen years ago) link
It doesn't help that the only ELP I've heard is that fucking interminable live album. But they just seem to have nothing of VdGG's sophistication, righteousness, majesty.
(Or compositional skill)
― REMOVE THEIR EARS (country matters), Saturday, 3 January 2009 13:17 (fifteen years ago) link
Er ... people who didn't watch the doc: don't get pissy about it :)
also anything put together from a "whoa wasn't Prog funny and hippy and rong" perspective = BULLSHIT
Not a fair criticism (unlike some of your others, which are absolutely OTM): it was more from a "why is this so badly maligned, then?" perspective, or even just "OK, let's try to do something about prog in 90 minutes".
They slagged off prog rock lyrics?
Nobody was slagging off anything per se. There was a reasonably short discussion -- led by Tony Banks, IIRC -- about how they tended to look to Greek myth and sci-fi for inspiration because, umm, they were public schoolboys who didn't know any girls. A lot of the "ho ho it wasn't very sexy" or "ho ho he's dressed as a flower" stuff came from the interviewees themselves.
lol Keith Emerson on a Persian rug arc
Not mentioned. Sadly.
17 year-old NME fundamentalists
Ha. See, in 1991 that was me all over. But I have a vivid memory of Mark Radcliffe playing VdGG on Out On Blue Six one night and it blowing my (closed) mind. (I've just had a look and the only VdGG album I appear to have is Pawn Hearts, which surprises me, and suggests I need to go shopping.)
I'll admit I know very little about this stuff, but for fuck's sake: any documentary that inspires me to go and download a Yes album has to be doing something right. Yes, there did appear to be a lot of tooling going on by the mid-seventies, and I still think there's a reasonably good reason that ... Topographic Oceans became a byword for everything that was wrong about music. But fuck it, that was -- despite its flaws -- a bloody good documentary. Go watch.
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 13:30 (fifteen years ago) link
(ELP, meanwhile ... nah, I've a feeling I was right about them. 1. Carl Palmer was a tool. 2. Greg Lake looked like the most punchable man of the 1970s in every piece of footage they showed.)
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 13:31 (fifteen years ago) link
Yeah, for me ELP seemed to be the only act deserving of some of the vitriol displayed towards "prog rock" since the 70s. Wakeman is a prat, but a pretty clear-headed prat.
― Neil S, Saturday, 3 January 2009 13:38 (fifteen years ago) link
Ach, I thought Rick Wakeman was actually a likeable dude throughout the whole thing.
But yeh, ELP ... comparing Palmer and Bruford is interesting, because you've got the former sitting there looking smug in his daft shirt basically saying: "Yeh, we were making an artistic statement and we were the best thing ever", interspersed with footage of him making a racket on his stainless-steel drumkit and ringing a bell with his teeth ... and then you've got Bruford going: "Yeh, we just wanted to see if we could make more complex music," interspersed with footage of Yes and King Crimson sounding absolutely magnificent.
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 13:43 (fifteen years ago) link
Only two bits of music they broadcast in that doc I liked = Crimson Hyde Park footage and 'Owner of a Lonely Heart'.
Don't worry its BBC Four they'll repeat this doc another few times and it'll get broadcast on BBC two. After Newsnight, of course.
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 3 January 2009 14:08 (fifteen years ago) link
It surprises me that someone could really like Close to the Edge and also find Tales from Topographic Oceans totally worthless. They're different but not that different to my ears. (And what makes them different certainly isn't the degree of "pomposity" or "self-indulgence".)
I like ELP's "The Barbarian". The Nice = classic.
― Sundar, Saturday, 3 January 2009 15:44 (fifteen years ago) link
Well, I've not listened to CTTE yet. I might hate it. And if I love it, I will go, kicking and screaming, to that topographic ocean. I'm basing my desire to hear the former on two things: 1) The fact the bits that were played from it on the documentary sounded top; 2) The fact Bill Bruford repped for it so hard. My dislike of the latter is based, fundamentally, on the fact that anything I've heard from it (including a couple of seconds last night) seemed bloody awful.
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:02 (fifteen years ago) link
It surprises me that someone could really like Close to the Edge and also find Tales from Topographic Oceans totally worthless
Actually: has anyone said this, at any point, ever?
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:04 (fifteen years ago) link
(Actually, yes: it seems several contemporary reviewers did. Ha. And I'm not saying I won't, either.)
Fuck it, I was going to listen to the London Chamber Orchestra playing Vivaldi while I did some work, but I'm going to whack on Yes instead. Here goes ...
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:11 (fifteen years ago) link
GRIMLY'S CLOSE TO THE EDGE LIVEBLOG
1'57" Good grief, this is widdlesome. Not necessarily unpleasantly so.
2'00" Hah, Comedy "aah" noise ... here, they're Battles' granddads, aren't they?
4'00" This is absolutely fucking mental. Again, not necessarily in a bad way.
/mfl
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:16 (fifteen years ago) link
6'31" Some GOOD FUCKING BASS going on here.
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:19 (fifteen years ago) link
11'00" OK, this is patently absurd. But in a really, really good -- and, so far, occasionaly lovely -- way. I'm sold.
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:22 (fifteen years ago) link
11'25" Actually, this bit (I Get Up I Get Down) is a bit like Mercury Rev dream of being. Probably.
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:23 (fifteen years ago) link
12'13 ORGAN!
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:24 (fifteen years ago) link
12'30" If this organ goes on for the next six minutes, I will be a happy dude.
12'50" Bugger.
13'07" ORGAN!
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:25 (fifteen years ago) link
18'46" OK, that was staggeringly impressive and I really want to play it at ear-splitting volume quite soon.
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:31 (fifteen years ago) link
Currently BBC iPlayer TV programmes are available to play in the UK only, but all BBC iPlayer Radio programmes are available to you
PISS
― Naive Teen Idol, Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:32 (fifteen years ago) link
(and nice, grimly -- wait till you get to And You and I's climax...)
― Naive Teen Idol, Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:32 (2 minutes ago)
Heh, exactly what i was thinking!
― Pashmina, Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:37 (fifteen years ago) link
(My old popular music prof felt this way too.)
Glad you enjoy "CTTE" though!
― Sundar, Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:38 (fifteen years ago) link
29'46" Actually, I didn't think And You And I was quite as revelatory as Close To The Edge itself, magnificent though it was (and sorry for the lack of updates; I'm actually busy reading about children's symbolic representations, and realising I should be paying rather more attention to that than to ILX, or indeed Yes).
32'00" OK, I wouldn't even have guessed that Yes could sound like this (Siberian Khatru). Off the top of my head: it's like 10cc meets Talking Heads meets ... actually, I've no idea. Which is what I'm really liking about this: I don't necessarily have the reference points for it, and that's fucking refreshing.
Here. It's a surprisingly short album, this. So much for self-indulgence ;)
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:45 (fifteen years ago) link
-1' 20" (easier now to count down from the end) HOLY SHIT that throbbing/chanting bit is incredible!
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:48 (fifteen years ago) link
OK, that was immense. Fucking hell, I'm going to have to listen to TFTO, I guess. Wow.
― Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 3 January 2009 16:50 (fifteen years ago) link
Official liveblog prog albums thread?
― President Keyes, Saturday, 3 January 2009 17:07 (fifteen years ago) link
I started off not going near Prog because it had such a bad reputation,, but after I got the internet, I discovered that a lot of my favorite music got taken the piss out of in a similar way. So I developed a perverse pleasure in finding music that people hated((hated in a certain way)) and always ended up loving it. I decided to risk it with Yes and my mind was BLOWN by Close To The Edge. I still believed that most Prog was probably crap, but I just kept on buying more and more,, and eventually I decided to screw whatever anyone said about any Prog band and give them all a chance. I loved all the Yes albums I bought((about 7 of them)) and the solo albums I loved too, despite all the hate I had heard((Six Wives, Song of Seven)). I liked some of what I heard of ELP so I think they deserve a fair chance from me.
I still dont own a huge amount of Prog, but from the stuff I have listened to,,, I've found some of the most beautiful music moments ever. I had a difficult time with this modern band called FROST and their album Milliontown,, which I bought because Chris Squire said it was a fine example of great modern Prog. First time I heard it, I hated it because of the almost boyband vocals and the overly clean sound,, but eventually it became one of the finest albums I bought last year.
So I think it's sad and foolish to keep any prejudices. The "punks liked Prog" argument is the best way to swing around a non-believer and Mojo magazine once had a whole article devoted to the Prog bands that punks liked.
Since Yes are my favorite Prog band, I couldnt help but notice some bands mentioning their love for Yes or doing a cover song....
Mark Eitzel -American Music ClubMark Kozelek -Sun Kil Moon/Red House PaintersNobuo Uematsu -Final Fantasy/Lost Odyssey/Blue Dragon (((Uematsu is probably the most successful person who ever worked in videogame music,, and he lists Yes, Wakeman, King Crimson, Vangelis and ELP among his top influences. If you listen to some of the Boss Fight tunes for a lot of his games, you can hear obvious Focus and Wakeman in there. Crazy that all these kids are listening to so much Prog indirectly.)))
BattlesGrizzly BearTodd RundgrenKeith Levene- PIL/Clash (((http://www.furious.com/perfect/keithlevene.html ,,, this Keith Levene interview contains serious praise for Yes....
"""""I've always been into music. When I was eight, I was into ska, rock-steady and skin-heads. When I nine or ten, I was into 'The White Album,' the beginnings of heavy metal and Led Zeppelin and all that kind of stuff as it was coming hot off the press. This culminated in my absolute god-head band, Yes. I did all sorts of naughty things like not going to school. I used to work in a factory but I shouldn't have had a job- it was sort of illegal. They would take the piss out of me, joshing me 'cause I was the youngest. So I would argue with people there that were into Humble Pie and I'd be telling them "Yes is it! Steve Howe was the greatest fucking guitarist in the world." I was so into the band, the music- I didn't really care for Jon Anderson. I wasn't like I was into Emerson Lake and Palmer and every classico-rock band you could get. I was into Yes!
I was into Steve and also Rick Wakeman because he did The Six Wives of Henry the VIII. All my friends were so into music and so was I. By the time I was about 13, I was quite good at playing guitar. I got a couple of my sister's boyfriends to teach me a few things. I learned in one day- one morning I couldn't play and by that evening, I could play a tune like a fucking guitarist. I made one of the guys leave his acoustic guitar with me.
Then I took a rest from it. I was into music but I was just working, being a kid. I went to these five Yes gigs in a row at the Rainbow (London) around '72. It was the English Tales From the Topographic Ocean tour- one of their worst albums. It was the best Yes band- Alan White, Rick Wakeman, Steve Howe, Chris Squire and Jon Anderson. It was just fucking heaven at these gigs.
I wouldn't go at the end- I'd just hanging around at the Rainbow and gradually crept up to the stage and starting helping. Then I discovered that the head boy from my old prep school was working for them. He hated me but I asked them if they needed help on the tour. They told me I could work with this guy Nunu, who was Alan's drum roadie. My job was to clean the cymbals and change the snare. I would sit behind Alan and watch him drum. He had every possible analog/acoustic percussion instrument you could imagine, including a moog drum (you'd plug it into a mini-moog and you didn't know what noise it was going to make). It was just INCREDIBLE, just watching your favorite band that got voted best band in the world, that you've been arguing about with people.
So I was going around with them as a roadie. I was trying to get on the Rick Wakeman "Journey To the Center of the Earth" tour. I saw the gig and I liked it. I was joking around with Rick and he said "Keith, you don't want to do this. While you were working, all you'd do is ask me about synthesizers. All you did was play our fucking instruments- you didn't set them up." So I went home and had a thought about this with my little SG copy (guitar) in my bedroom. I thought "Yeah, I'm gonna get a real Gibson." For me, it was such an audacious thought that I was going to get a GIBSON LES PAUL. """"""
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 3 January 2009 17:08 (fifteen years ago) link
Even as a heterosexual person,, the thing that struck me most about that documentary last night was how attractive that man from EGG was! He was a gorgeous old wizard of a man. Remember that there is also a Timeshift episode about Prog on tonight which was originally shown on 2004 and will probably be very similar, but with different people being interviewed.
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 3 January 2009 17:17 (fifteen years ago) link