Saturday, October 28, 2006
V- Mark Wilkinson & Marillion
Friday, October 27, 2006
IV- The Worlds of Roger Dean
III- Paul Whitehead & Genesis
Although artist Paul Whitehead is also well-known for multiple achievements in the fields of music and cinema, he remains best-known for the album covers he created for GENESIS. The album cover of ''Trespass'' is among the most beautiful and surprising: at first glance evoking medieval world imagery, the front cover also contains a black line superimposed on the drawing like a gash. Only when the album cover is unfolded do we see that the line is the notch of a dagger seemingly embedded in the album cover. According to Whitehead, the notch and the knife are real. This dichotomy between the bucolic universe of the drawing and the brutal tear of the knife corresponds to the music of this album, wherein the peaceful innocence which prevails in the majority of the compositions is abruptly broken by ‘The Knife,’ one of the most aggressive songs ever recorded by the group.
Thursday, October 26, 2006
II- Kim Poor: diaphanism
I- Hipgnosis: surrealism and mystification
Tuesday, October 24, 2006
PROGRESSIVE ART
Written by Pierre Dulieu, BELGIUM
http://www.dragonjazz.com/progart.htm
Improved and adapated in English by Ian Alterman, USA
II- Kim Poor: diaphanism
III- Paul Whitehead & Genesis
IV- Worlds of Roger Dean
V- Mark Wilkinson & Marillion
VI- Hugh Syme: exploiting the words
VII- Simon Williams: the carnival of the masks
VIII- Single works
IX- The changing
Saturday, October 21, 2006
The Art of Ed Unitsky
ESSENTIAL MINI-GUIDE TO
PROGRESSIVE ROCK
- PART II -
... COMING SOON ...
Belarussian artist Edward Unitsky lives in a small town some 90 km away from Chernobyl. At the age of 40, he developed a passion for computer generated arts; being a Progressive Rock music lover as well, it was natural that he took to combining both passions. It was Roine Stolt from the FLOWER KINGS who introduced him to Andy Tillison, leader of PARALLEL OR 90 DEGREES and founder of Anglo-Swedish project THE TANGENT. The result was this extraordinary sleeve for the supergroup’s first album; not only one of the best, it was one of the most original album artworks of recent years.
Inspired by the magical worlds of Roger Dean (the arches inside the booklet inevitably invite such a comparison), Mr. Unitsky’s imagery sets itself apart by through a maelstrom of colours, special effects that simulate aerial movement and the abounding life that his landscapes suggest. All this, plus an inclination for vortices and cosmic swirls, can be found on his web site.
Written by Pierre Dulieu, BELGIUM
Improved and adapted in English by BOB McBeath/Easy Livin, SCOTLAND
BUY NOW...!
FEATURING:
- 176 pages of essential PROGRESSIVE ROCK references and historical notes that follow the complex development of this musical genre
- A description of 30 of the most influential PROGRESSIVE ROCK bands and their best albums
- An in-depth review of the 20 all-time best PROGRESSIVE ROCK albums
- A comprehensive A-Z listing of over 3000 PROGRESSIVE ROCK bands and their brief musical description
''Progressive Rock is a music made for the dreams,
the escape, to feel a multitude of emotions.''
Let me tell you that I have just finished reading your Essential Mini-Guide To Progressive Rock, great work!
Many thanks for the book, all your efforts and intentions to give people a better way to get into this fabulous world of progressive rock. I enjoyed a lot the book, the development, the history and the reviews are great, and helpful to all of us, the craziest part is the A-Z index, where you have pointed so many bands, and of course so many unknown bands for me which I will discover sooner or later.
I just wanted to let you know this.
Go ahead for the second edition!
memowakeman
Discographies Editor (ProgArchives.com)
Friday, October 20, 2006
(1st Wave) - LE ORME
ITALIAN & SYMPHONIC PROGRESSIVE ROCK
Italy produced several excellent progressive rock groups during the 1970s, and then again in the 1990s. LE ORME is one of the oldest and best known. Created by bassist Aldo Tagiapietra, keyboardist Toni Pagliuca and drummer Mike Dei Rossi, the band harkens back to some of the Seventies groups built upon keyboard parts (e.g., RARE BIRD, The NICE, ATOMIC ROOSTER), as well as BANCO DEL MUTUO SOCCORSO, due to the Italian vocals. The group stayed together during the 1970s, during which time they evolved into an EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER-type progressive rock band, cutting four albums in that vein.
Re-formed as a quartet (keyboards/sitar, bass, keyboards, drums), and with a guest guitarist for the album “Il Fiume,” LE ORME returned to what they did best: elaborate symphonic style with a classical touch, enhanced lyricism, and development of complex, delicate themes with lots of breaks, including dreamy or nostalgic ambiences. The group still records, and recently released “Elementi” (2001) and “L’Infinito” (2004). Indeed, “Elementi” has proven to be one of the group’s best albums ever!
DISCOGRAPHY:
Ad Gloriam (69) / L'Aurora Delle Orme (70) / Collage (71) / Uomo Di Pezza (72) / Felona E Sorona (73) / In Concerto (74) / Contrappunti (74) / Smogmagica (75) / Beyond Leng (75) / Verita' Nascoste (76) / Canzone d'amore (76) / Storria O Leggenda (77) / Le Orme Antologia 67-69 Vol.1 (78) / Florian (79) / Piccola Rapsodia Dell'Ape (80) / Venerdi (82) / Le Orme (70s collection) - 1983 (83) / Orme (90) / Antologia 1970-1980 (93) / Biancaneve (95) / Il Fiume (96) / Amico Di Ieri (97) / Elementi (01) / L'infinito (04)
BEST ALBUMS:
Collage (71), Uomo Di Pezza (72), Felona E Sorona (73), Contrappunti (74), Florian (79), Elementi (01)
Thursday, October 19, 2006
(1st Wave) - The STRAWBS
This well-known group’s progressive rock of the early 70s differed from their more successful compatriots, like The MOODY BLUES, KING CRIMSON and PINK FLOYD. Their sound originated from a more traditional British folk style blended with enough rock to form a unique sound. STRAWBS have recorded over 15 albums through the years, with various line-ups around the core of David Cousins, who is the main songwriter and driving force of the band. He has also released a couple of excellent solo albums. STRAWBS’ most interesting period began with “Just A Collection Of Antiques And Curios” and ended with “Ghosts,” their best album probably being “From The Witchwood.”
STRAWBS’ musical path can be described in three successive steps, starting from a completely folk group to a very impressive and credible progressive folk rock duo around the personalities of Dave Cousins and Tony Hooper. The arrival of Rick Wakeman and a rock rhythm section brought the group to an impressive level of recognition, not least due to Wakeman’s very flashy profile and their the three albums (“Antiques And Curios”, “Witchwood”, and “Grave New World”) are classics of the genre. After the transitional “Bursting At The Seam”, that saw the full band being changed after original member Tony Hooper left, the new group including (RENAISSANCE’s John Hawken) changed to sound dramatically but they had two more classic albums but more mainstream (like RENAISSANCE or MOODY BLUES), albums such as “Hero And Heroine” and “Ghosts” are the references. Further albums gradually disperse their former glories. STRAWBS still exists today and is the vehicular name for Dave Cousins’ career. The group’s early albums are a textbook case of folk prog the same way GRYPHON, THE PENTANGLE and STACKRIDGE.
DISCOGRAPHY:
Strawbs (69) / Strawberry Sampler Number 1 (69) / Dragonfly (70) / Just A Collection Of Antiques And Curious (70) / From The Witchwood (71) / Grave New World (72) / Bursting At The Seams (73) / All Our Own Work (73) / Hero And Heroine (74) / Strawbs By Choice (74) / Early Strawbs (74) / Nomadness (75) / Ghosts (75) / Deep Cuts (76) / Burning For You (77) / Classic Strawbs (77) / Deadlines (78) / The Best Of Strawbs (78) / Don't Say Goodbye (87) / Preserved Uncanned (90) / Ringing Down The Years (91) / A Choice Selection Of Strawbs (92) / The Strawbs' Greatest Hits Live (93) / Heartbreak Hill (95) / BBC In Concert (95) / Halcyon Days - UK release (97) / Halcyon Days - USA Release (98) / Concert Classics (99) / The Complete Strawbs - Chiswick '98 Live (00) / Acoustic Strawbs Baroque & Roll (01) / 30 Years In Rock, Classic Rock Legends (01) / The Collection (02) / Tears And Pavan - An Introduction To Strawbs (02) / Blue Angel (03) / 20th Century Masters - Millenium Collection (03) / Strawbs Live In Tokyo '75 - Grave New World The Movie (03) / Deja Fou (04)
BEST ALBUMS:
From The Witchwood (71), Grave New World (72), Bursting At The Seams (73), Hero And Heroine (74), Ghosts (75)
(1st Wave) - YES
SYMPHONIC PROGRESSIVE ROCK
Along with GENESIS and PINK FLOYD, YES is considered one of the most influential progressive rock bands of all time. Along with those two plus KING CRIMSON, EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER and other popular bands that have helped shape today’s progressive music scene, YES have long been a prog fan favorite, and stand out for their unique blend of styles. Their “golden age” started at approximately the same time as GENESIS’, in 1971, with the line-up of Jon Anderson (vocals/lyrics), Chris Squire (bass/vocals), Steve Howe (guitar/vocals), Tony Kaye (keyboards) and Bill Bruford (drums). However, it wasn’t until the replacement of Tony Kaye with keyboardist extraordinaire Rick Wakeman a year later that the band truly reached its peak.
Anderson, Squire, Howe and Bruford’s input alone were enough to make the music the most harmonious prog rock of the day. Anderson’s distinctive high-pitched vocals, Squire’s jazzy, rhythmic bass lines, Howe’s delicate guitar work, and Bruford’s highly progressive drum skills spoke of things that sprung from the collective minds of dreamers, and was filled with joyful, expansive harmonies. By incorporating orchestral works into their music to varying degrees over the years, YES redefined what Rock’n’Roll could be. Their fresh ideas and their ability to think beyond Rock’s 3-minute, standard 12-bar structure turned much of the band’s catalogue into classic prog. Their concept albums and lengthy live jams earned them a huge fan following, as well as massive commercial success: between 1972 and 1977, they had five top-10 albums, with “Close To The Edge” peaking highest at #3 in 1972*. At that point in time, YES comprised perhaps the most versatile, virtuoso group of musicians in the history of progressive rock.
*Source: “Progressive Rock Reconsidered,” by Kevin Holms-Hudson, Ed. (2002).
DISCOGRAPHY:
Yes (69) / Time And A Word (70) / The YES Album (71) / Fragile (72) / Close To The Edge (72) / Yessongs (73) / Tales From Topographic Oceans (74) / Relayer (74) / Yesterday (75) / Going For The One (77) / Tormato (78) / Drama (80) / Yesshows (80) / Classic Yes (80) / 90125 (83) / 9012 Live: The Solos (85) / Big Generator (87) / Union (91) / Yesyears (box set) (91) / Yesstory (92) / The Very Best Of Yes (93) / Symphonic Music Of Yes (93) / Talk (94) / Solo Family Album (94) / Keys To Ascension (96) / Keys To Ascension 2 (97) / Open Your Eyes (97) / BBC Sessions 1969-1970 Something's Coming (97) / Yes, Friends And Relatives (98) / The Ladder (99) / The Best Of Yes (00) / House Of Yes: Live From The House Of Blues (01) / Yes Symphonic (01) / Keystudio (01) / Magnification (01) / Yes, Friends And Relatives – Volume Two (01) / We Make Believe (01) / Yestoday (02) / In A Word (02) / Ultimate Yes: 35th Anniversary Collection (04)
BEST ALBUMS:
The Yes Album (71), Close To The Edge (72), Fragile (72), Relayer (74), Going For The One (77)
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
(1st Wave) - VAN DER GRAAF GENERATOR
HARD PROGRESSIVE ROCK
I am far from an expert on this group. However, it would be difficult to omit them if only for their album, “Pawn Hearts,” which I know well. VDGG is not the best-known of groups, but “Pawn Hearts” is not only worth listening to, but also historically significant. Peter Hammill, singer and lyricist of the group, has a unique voice, one which influenced several prog vocalists. His lyrics plumb the depth of literature, while his music, epic in nature, benefited from the band’s original arrangements. “Pawn Hearts” features piano, keyboards and saxophone, as well as guitar work from KING CRIMSON founder Robert Fripp. VDGG’s sound (already unique because it was driven by saxophone and keyboards, guitar and drums) cannot be easily related to the archetypes of folk, blues, rock or jazz, despite the fact that it contains elements of all of these.
DISCOGRAPHY:
The Aerosol Grey Machine (69) / The Least We Can Do Is Wave To Each Other (70) / H To He, Who Am The Only One (70) / Pawn Hearts (71) / 68-71 (72) / Godbluff (75) / Still Life (76) / World Record (76) / The Quiet Zone - The Pleasure Dome (77) / Vital - Live (78) / First Generation - Scenes From 1969-1971 (86) / Second Generation - Scenes From 1975-1977 (86) / I Prophesy Disaster (93) / Maida Vale - The BBC Radio One Sessions (94) / Darkness '76 (99) / The Box (00) / Present (05)
BEST ALBUMS:
H To He, Who Am The Only One (70), Pawn Hearts (71), Godbluff (75), Still Life (76)
(1st Wave) - GENESIS
SYMPHONIC PROGRESSIVE ROCK
Before changing itself into a “pop-rock” group in the early to mid-1980s, GENESIS was one of the most highly beloved, even “worshipped” progressive bands. The group entered its “golden age” in 1971, when drummer Phil Collins and guitarist Steve Hackett joined founders Peter Gabriel (vocals/lyrics), Tony Banks (keyboards) and Mike Rutherford (bass). The music of the group became highly melodic and theatrical, propelled primarily by Peter Gabriel’s unique lyrics and theatrics, and Tony Banks’ keyboards, particularly the heavy use of Mellotron. GENESIS was arguably one of the two or three most influential progressive rock groups, and that influence is likely to be felt for a long time.
Singer-lyricist Peter Gabriel (who would go on to a considerably successful solo career) was the original theatrical frontman. After his 1974 departure from GENESIS following the release of their magnum opus – the double concept album “The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway” – drummer Phil Collins took the reins; shortly after this, the band’s progressive career sadly went “pop” (pardon the pun).
Their best works were produced while Peter Gabriel was with the band, and for a year or two after he left. Here is a guide to the band’s work from three “periods”:
Early Period: “Trespass” (1970) was the band’s second album. There are six songs here, all of which show glimpses of the power the band was to develop for fully later.
Middle Period: “Nursery Cryme” (1971) shows the band struggling with their new mix of talent, and has a couple of weak songs. “Foxtrot” (1972) shows a more confident and accomplished band. “Selling England By The Pound” (1973) finds the band in a slightly mellower mood, with more acoustic work on piano and guitar than before. “The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway” (1974) is arguably the band’s finest album. It is a 90-minute theater piece filled with a wide variety of music and moods.
Late Period: The first two albums after Peter Gabriel’s departure managed to preserve enough of the band’s progressive qualities to make them interesting to older fans. “A Trick Of The Tail” (1975) is a very strong album that still sounds good today. “Wind And Wuthering” (1976) is the last album made by the “old” GENESIS.
DISCOGRAPHY:
From Genesis To Revelation (1969) / Trespass (1970) / Nursery Cryme (1971) / Foxtrot (1972) / Genesis Live (1973) / Selling England By The Pound (1973) / The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway (1974) / A Trick Of The Tail (1976) / Wind And Wuthering (1977) / Seconds Out (1977) / And Then There Were Three... (1978) / Duke (1980) / Abacab (1981) / Three Sides Live (1982) / Genesis (1983) / Invisible Touch (1986) / We Can't Dance (1991) / Live - The Way We Walk Volume One - The Shorts (1992) / Live - The Way We Walk Volume Two - The Longs (1993) / Calling All Station (1997) / Archive - Volume 1: 1967-1975 (1998) / The Original Album (1998) / Turn It On Again - The Hits (1999) / Archive - Volume 2: 1976-1992 (2000) / The Platinum Collection (2004)
BEST ALBUMS:
Trespass (70), Nursery Cryme (71), Foxtrot (72), Selling England By The Pound (73), The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway (74), A Trick Of The Tail (75)
(1st Wave) - KING CRIMSON
HARD PROGRESSIVE ROCK
Founded by guitarist Robert Fripp, KING CRIMSON has undergone many personnel changes over the course of its 35-year span (with Fripp at the core), but has always remained innovative. Some of the notable musicians who played with the group at one time or another include drummer Bill Bruford, guitarist Adrian Belew, and bassists Greg Lake, John Wetton and Tony Levin. Fripp also entered into numerous collaborations on the side, including with Brian Eno, Peter Gabriel and David Bowie, in addition to recording several solo albums.
As noted, the “germs” of prog were present since at least 1966. The BEATLES, PINK FLOYD, The MOODY BLUES and PROCOL HARUM had “prepared the way” between 1967 and 1969. However, many people mark the beginning of progressive rock in 1969 when a young English group called KING CRIMSON, together for only a few months, gave us “In The Court Of The Crimson King.”
Although there had been other trailblazers, “ITCOTKC” was the first full-blown progressive rock album, and KING CRIMSON the first true progressive rock band. Led by the technically gifted Mr. Fripp, KING CRIMSON married blazing fiery guitar, deep lyrical concepts, and free jazz improvisation and solos into a musical mix unlike anything heard before. The music had a dark, majestic, sometimes chaotic quality. “ITCOTKC” is not only a great album, but a piece of musical history and a true monument of the genre.
DISCOGRAPHY:
In The Court Of The Crimson King (1969) / In The Wake Of Poseidon (1970) / Lizard (1970) / Islands (1971) / Earthbound (1972) / Larks' Tongues In Aspic (1973) / Starless And Bible Black (1974) / Red (1974) / USA - Live (1975) / The Young Persons Guide To King Crimson (1976) / Discipline (1981) / Beat (1982) / Three Of A Perfect Pair (1984) / The Compact King Crimson (1986) / The Essential King Crimson: Frame By Frame (1991) / The Great Deceiver: Live 1973 - 1974 (1992) / Sleepless: The Concise King Crimson (1993) / THRAK (1995) / B'Boom Official Bootleg - Live In Argentina (1995) / THRaKaTTaK (1996) / Epitaph - Live In 1969 Volumes One & Two (1997) / The Night Watch (1997) / ProjeKct Two - Space Groove (1998) / Absent Lovers - Live In Montreal, 1984 (1998) / CIRKUS - The Young Persons' Guide To King Crimson Live (1999) / The ProjeKcts (1999) / The ConstruKction Of Light (2000) / Heavy ConstruKction (2000) - VROOOM VROOOM (2001) / Ladies Of The Road (2002) / The Power To Believe (2003) / EleKtriK (2003) / 21st Century Guide: Volume One 1969-1974 (2004)
BEST ALBUMS:
In The Court Of The Crimson King (69), Lizard (70), Islands (71), Larks’ Tongues In Aspic (73), Red (74)
Tuesday, October 17, 2006
(1st Wave) - CARAVAN
Their music established the mix of humor and progressive sounds (with warm and pleasant vocal parts; long instrumental flights; guitar, organ sounds, and piano work, etc.), taking its roots from classical music via jazz and traditional English influences. CARAVAN is still active today, playing many live dates in Britain and Holland. The year 2000 saw the beginning of renewed activity for the band (festivals, concerts, etc.). In 2002, the band played its first performance in the United States in 28 years, at NEARfest 2002.
BEST ALBUMS:
Monday, October 16, 2006
(1st Wave) - JETHRO TULL
FOLK PROGRESSIVE ROCK
Although JETHRO TULL (named after an 18th-century farmer/inventor of the British Industrial Revolution) features an excellent group of musicians, its primary focus is on its creator, singer, lyricist and flutist extraordinaire, Ian Anderson. Indeed, Anderson’s flute playing is one of the most characteristic elements of the band. Their music is a mixture of folk, medieval, blues, jazz, rock, traditional, and almost anything else.
One of the reasons for JETHRO TULL’s enduring appeal is their dedication to recording and performing that spans over nearly four decades. Truly one of progressive rock’s “dinosaurs,” they are also one of the most consistent groups of the folk prog era, with 60 million albums sold since their beginnings in 1968. In fact, they consistently released one album every year between 1968 and 1980, with at least 6 of them confirmed prog classics. They have also played over 2,500 concerts in 40 countries, and are still averaging 100 shows per year.
Their best albums are “Aqualung,” “Thick As A Brick,” “A Passion Play,” “War Child,” “Minstrel In The Gallery,” “Songs From The Wood” and “Heavy Horses.” All are considered cornerstones of any prog collection, the latter being a serious candidate for the best progressive rock album of all time.
DISCOGRAPHY:
This Was (1968) / Stand Up (1969) / Benefit (1970) / Nothing Is Easy: Live At The Isle Of Wight 1970 (1970) / Aqualung (1971) / Thick As A Brick (1972) / Living In The Past (1972) / A Passion Play (1973) / War Child (1974) / Minstrel In The Gallery (1975) / M.U. - The Best Of Jethro Tull (1976) / Too Old To Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young To Die! (1976) / Repeat - The Best Of Jethro Tull - Vol. II (1977) / Songs From The Wood (1977) / Heavy Horses (1978) / Live - Bursting Out (1978) / Stormwatch (1979) / A (1980) / The Broadsword And The Beast (1982) / Under Wraps (1984) / Original Masters (1985) / Crest Of A Knave (1987) / 20 Years Of Jethro Tull (1989) / Rock Island (1989) / Live At Hammersmith '84 (1990) / Catfish Rising (1991) / A Little Light Music (1991) / Nightcap (1993) / The Best Of Jethro Tull: The Anniversary Collection (1993) / Roots To Branches (1995) / In Concert (1995) / J-Tull Dot Com (1999) / The Very Best Of Jethro Tull (2001) / Living With The Past (2002) / The Jethro Tull Christmas Album (2003)
BEST ALBUMS:
Stand Up (69), Benefit (70), Aqualung (71), Thick As A Brick (72), A Passion Play (73), Minstrel In The Gallery (75), Songs From The Wood (77), Heavy Horses (78)
(1st Wave) - PINK FLOYD
PSYCHEDELIC & SPACE ROCK
PINK FLOYD is not simply one of the progenitors of progressive rock, but is probably the most popular group in the entire genre. The band’s name (chosen by original founder/lyricist Syd Barrett) refers to the first names of two bluesmen (PINK Anderson and FLOYD Council), and the joining of the two names is translated into English as “Pink Flamingo.” The first line-up consisted of guitarist/vocalist Syd Barrett, bass player/vocalist Roger Waters (who left the group in 1983), drummer Nick Mason and keyboard player Rick Wright. Guitarist and vocalist David Gilmour (who was partly responsible for the group's change of direction) joined PINK FLOYD in 1968. Four months later, Syd Barrett left the group to play in solo career then to disappear from the public eye. The band originally formed in the mid-1960s during the “psychedelic” rock period, but then helped to develop what we now know as “progressive rock” – and particularly “space rock” – through the use of sound textures, effects, and emerging recording studio tricks and techniques.
Personally, I have always believed that PINK FLOYD is an overrated group. They have some good albums, but also some very average albums. For me, PINK FLOYD is not as good as GENESIS or JETHRO TULL, yet they are undoubtedly more popular, better recognized, and more respected by the masses and critics. “Dark Side Of The Moon” is one of PINK FLOYD’s more famous albums, and was a big turning point in their career. They established many more fans after releasing the album, and became literally exhausted for quite a while. All together, they have sold over 140 million records worldwide, perhaps earning them the title of being one of the best classic rock bands of the latest century.
Roger "Syd" Barrett, co-founded the seminal psychedelic rock band PINK FLOYD, has died at the age of 60 from complications related to diabetes. The guitarist/vocalist was the architect of PINK FLOYD's influential early sound. He was an inspiration to many people...
DISCOGRAPHY:
The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn (1967) / A Saucerful Of Secrets (1968) / More O.S.T. (1969) / Ummagumma (1969) / Atom Heart Mother (1970) / Meddle (1971) / Relics (1971) / Obscured By Clouds OST (1972) / Dark Side Of The Moon (1973) / Masters Of Rock Vol. 1 (1974) / Wish You Were Here (1975) / Animals (1977) / The Wall (1979) / A Collection Of Great Dance Songs (1981) / The Final Cut (1983) - Works (1983) / A Momentary Lapse Of Reason (1987) / The Delicate Sound Of Thunder (1988) / Shine On (1992) / Division Bell (1994) / P-U-L-S-E (1995) / Is There Anybody Out There? (2000) / Echoes - The Best Of Pink Floyd (2001) / Dark Side Of The Moon (30th anniversary edition) (2003)
BEST ALBUMS:
The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn (67), Meddle (71), Dark Side Of The Moon (73), Wish You Were Here (75), Animals (77), The Wall (79)
(1st Wave) - The MOODY BLUES
SYMPHONIC PROGRESSIVE ROCK
IMITATION…INNOVATION…SENSATION…!
For some experts, The MOODY BLUES are credited as the pioneers of what we now call “Proto-Prog” - a subgenre that blends psychedelic-era and pop rock done in a classical style. Their music was influenced by American music (Motown and blues) and Eastern influences (e.g., use of the sitar), but their roots were in the rhythm & blues combos of the British invasion. They are consequently respected as one of the most innovative and long-lasting groups to emerge during the 1960s. The MOODY BLUES created one of the first concept albums for an orchestral/psychedelic format, incorporating their union of melodic guitar, pioneering percussion, rolling bass, and the haunting Mellotron (which was new to rock at the time). They captured the imagination of music fans around the world with the landmark album, “Days Of Future Passed” - one of the earliest “classical rock” records, featuring the London Festival Orchestra as musical accompanists. To my mind, this album works as well as The BEATLES’ “Sgt. Pepper” and early PINK FLOYD offerings.
During the years 1967-1974, The MOODY BLUES recorded seven very successful albums, all of which went “gold,” including “On The Threshold Of A Dream” and “A Question Of Balance.” During this period, their music was ambitious, pastoral and philosophical, with songwriting contributions from all five members (Justin Hayward (guitar/vocals), John Lodge (bass/vocals), Mike Pinder (keyboards/vocals), Ray Thomas (flute/harmonica/vocals), Graham Edge (drums/percussion). Hibernation of a sort followed in the mid-70s, as each member of the band released solo albums (Hayward and Lodge having the most success with their effort, BLUE JAYS).
The band regrouped in the 80s and picked up where they left off (commercially, anyway) with “Long Distance Voyager.” Though the 90s found the band less a commercial force than a cult band, the group still tours and releases albums on occasion (including 1999’s “Strange Time”).
DISCOGRAPHY:
BEST ALBUMS:
Days Of Future Passed (67), In Search Of The Lost Chord (68), On The Threshold Of A Dream (69), To Our Children’s Children’s Children (70)
Sunday, October 15, 2006
2- FIRST WAVE - 1970s
Whereas The BEATLES were of “working class hero” status, several musicians of progressive rock came from the lower middle and middle classes. They often had training in classical music, and attended colleges or universities. They were ready to make rock their own way. Towards the end of the Sixties, English groups wanted to “exceed” the musical format imposed on them by the industry. They wanted to do something different - something that required more than short 3-minute songs with verses and choruses. Some turned to psychedelic rock, others to the example of The BEATLES, still others gave birth to “metal” rock (BLACK SABBATH). They chose to amalgamate various combinations of rock, classical, folk, electronics, contemporary, medieval, and other forms. They chose to give up the couplet/refrain structure for the greater freedom of more complex structures. These young musicians wanted to profit – musically – from new techniques, both instrumental and recording.
Jerry Lucky, author of “The Progressive Rock Files,” enumerates some of the elements that mark “progressive rock”:
“Longer songs, changes of tempo, Mellotron, use of symphony orchestra, words like ‘cosmic’ or ‘philosophical,’ etc.”
If these are the elements that began the history of progressive rock, then October 10, 1969 is the date that marks the true beginning of the progressive rock movement, as KING CRIMSON’s “In The Court Of The Crimson King” smashed to pieces virtually every standard and norm of rock, in as “monstrous” a fashion as the hallucinogenic face on its cover (which was painted by 23-year-old English artist Barry Godber in 1969; Godber died of a heart attack the following year).
KING CRIMSON
[INSERT ALBUM HERE]
“In The Court Of The Crimson King”
- October 1969 -
Around this time, rock music was incorporating elements of the rigid structure and discipline of classical music, along with various jazz, folk and, in some instances, neo-classical styles. This paved the way for pioneering prog bands of the 1970s such as EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER, GENESIS, GENTLE GIANT, JEHTRO TULL, KING CRIMSON, PINK FLOYD and YES – among the most famous names in prog – as well as dozens of lesser-known bands. These artists skillfully exhibited their experimentation through an increase in such elements as musical virtuosity, extended song lengths (sometimes taking up an entire two-album set), complex compositions, and imaginative/sophisticated lyrical concepts which were sometimes difficult to comprehend. The experimentation which was central to progressive music in the 1970s was being applied to virtually every aspect of the music: rhythmic, melodic, harmonic, lyrical, instrumental.
Some of the characteristics of the major bands were: EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER – classically diverse and futuristic; GENESIS – pastoral, humorous and whimsical; GENTLE GIANT – under-appreciated, aseptic, socio-political, exuberant experimentation; JETHRO TULL – contentious, productive, sophisticated structures and styles; KING CRIMSON – unique, different, ground-breaking, innovative and original sonic sculptors; PINK FLOYD – symphonic, melodic and socialist anthems; YES – pretentious, overblown, complex virtuosity and lyrically obscure. In considering all this, one begins to realize that the true diversity and value of progressive rock remains unsung.
All of these “Big Seven” were completely different in style, composition, format and execution. In this regard, the “progressive” appellation does all of them a disservice, as it groups them together under one umbrella, thus diluting the readers’ attention. In essence, each of them are worthy of a genre of their own.
Other bands – who, while never becoming as well known, are still fine examples of the genre – include ANGE, FOCUS, GONG, GROBSCHNITT, HAPPY THE MAN, HARMONIUM, HATFIELD AND THE NORTH, HENRY COW, MAGMA and THE SOFT MACHINE. All of these bands touch on elements of the “core” progressive bands, but also push forward with their own styles.
What follows are some of the great groups who were part of the enthralling and promising “First Wave.” The bands are listed in chronological order of their appearance on the scene; the year noted in parentheses is the year in which their debut album appeared.
[Please Note: This is NOT meant to be a complete list of all bands, just an example of some – so don’t be offended if I leave your favourite one out!]
1- PROTO-HISTORY - 1960s
Sometimes called Proto-Prog (“proto”: first-formed, primary), this pre-genre describes the groups and musicians who were the first to blend classical and/or artistic elements with Rock music: some of them only in the arrangements, though others went further.
The mid-1960s “British Invasion” groups, in an apparent attempt to surpass one another in “vanguardism,” began to utilize instruments and stylistic elements drawn from both the British music hall and European art music (commonly known as “classical” music, even when that is not a 100% accurate term) traditions. They were the logical step in musical evolution after the psychedelic explosion. The doors of perception were opened by psychedelic rockers such as PINK FLOYD on “The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn” and THE BEATLES on “Revolver” and “Sgt. Pepper” who dared to explore further and break boundaries.
The earliest traces of progressive rock can be seen in the wake of FRANK ZAPPA AND THE MOTHERS OF INVENTION’s “Freak Out!” (early complex, even disturbing, project), The BEATLES’ “Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” and other late 60s albums that incorporated elements of classical music, unconventional song structure, and/or overarching thematic concepts.
With its parodies of pop music, its dissonances, its avant-gardism, its odd effects, and its unpredictable arrangements, FRANK ZAPPA’s “Freak Out!” explored all the conventions of popular music.
FRANK ZAPPA
& THE MOTHERS OF INVENTION
[INSERT ALBUM HERE]
Freak Out!
- August 1966 -
The real ground-breaking, however, took place “across the pond” in April 1967, when The BEATLES released “Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” – a blend of early rock ballads and music never heard before – to an unsuspecting and enraptured public. Along with its predecessor (“Revolver”), the most famous rock album of all time is a starting point that is impossible to disregard.
The BEATLES
[INSERT ALBUM HERE]
Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
- April 1967 -
Psychedelic rock at its best, PINK FLOYD’s “Piper At The Gates Of Dawn” represents the finest that British psychedelia has to offer: simple, but weird and catchy, short psychedelic songs and some long early “progressive” hymns blended by the genius of Syd Barrett and the other then-members of PINK FLOYD (Roger Waters, Nick Mason and Rick Wright). The outsized instrumental “Interstellar Overdrive” is the first true example of what will later become known as “Space Rock.”
PINK FLOYD
[INSERT ALBUM HERE]
The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn
- August 1967 -
Progressive rock is generally accepted as having appeared in the United Kingdom around the second half of 1967. It was manifested in post-psychedelic bands that evolved into a new hybrid genre, born of the mixing of rock music with classical and neo-classical elements by composers such as Bach, Mozart, Copland, Bartok and Stravinsky – in other words, an early form of Symphonic Prog. The main exponents of this were The NICE (featuring Keith Emerson on keyboards), The MOODY BLUES (“Days Of Future Passed”), and the Baroque-inspired PROCOL HARUM (“A Whiter Shade Of Pale” – literally “Bach and Rock”). KING CRIMSON’s “In The Court Of The Crimson King” (1969) is the first fully-developed example of this new genre, and the album that defines the true starting point for Symphonic Prog.
At the same time, a different strain of Progressive Rock developed in the region of Canterbury, where bands such as SOFT MACHINE and CARAVAN blended psychedelic elements with jazz influences (such as John Coltrane and Miles Davis) instead of classical music, as in the case of Symphonic Prog.
Unlike more melodic bands, VAN DER GRAAF GENERATOR’s debut, “Aerosol Grey Machine” (originally a Peter HAMMILL solo project), brought a new and fresh stream, much more complex than the other bands of the period. This album represents a fresh new sound, tormented by its own demons (VDGG’s roots are “hard prog”), which seems to be something of a leftover from the Psychedelic years rather than the normal evolution that might have been expected.
Although the following albums are not yet productions of “progressive rock” as that term is used these days, they are nevertheless the first discs of “art rock” – or, if one prefers, the first “tests” intended to raise rock music to a higher level of artistic credibility. By experimenting with sound texture, electronics, modern instruments, and new studio techniques, and “importing” sounds and ideas from a variety of global musical sources, these groups “opened up the doors” of rock…for better and for worse - but mostly for better!
[INSERT ALBUM HERE]
PROCOL HARUM
Procol Harum – September 1967
A fusion of rock, blues and classical influences with unforgettable surreal lyrics. An important album: less British psychedelia, more the basis of progressive rock. With Matthew Fisher on organ and Robin Trower on guitar.
[INSERT ALBUM HERE]
THE MOODY BLUES
Days of Future Passed – November 1967
Psychedelic rock is combined with the orchestral arrangements of the London Festival Orchestra (conducted by Peter Knight) to sound like the band’s own orchestra, using the band’s signature Mellotron string sounds, flutes, timpani and multiple “vox” (vocals). “Days of Future Passed,” an ambitious and unique conceptual album, is a classical symphonic pop album (or proto-prog release) of the 60s that, on its own, created a road towards the symphonic rock movement. The concept of the album is a reasonably clever one, tracing “a day in the life,” from dawn (“Dawn Is A Feeling”) to night (the classic “Nights In White Satin”). “Days…” is essential listening for anyone interested in the Mellotron’s history, and is a good document of its era to boot.
[INSERT ALBUM HERE]
THE NICE
Ars Longa Vita Brevis – February 1968
With this second release of a trio, Keith Emerson presents the basis of his vision of progressive rock: an amalgam of rock and traditional music which is certainly pretentious, but which lacks neither ambition nor quality. This is one album to discover if you like EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER.
[INSERT ALBUM HERE]
GILES GILES & FRIPP
The Cheerful Insanity Of Giles Giles & Fripp – September 1968
Before the famous album “In The Court Of The Crimson King,” Robert Fripp and the Giles brothers had recorded an insane disc on which one finds anything and everything, but also some of the first steps to what would later become KING CRIMSON. Recommended, especially for the curious.
[INSERT ALBUM HERE]
CARAVAN
Caravan – October 1968
A subtle mixture of jazz and psychedelic rock, this album from the “Canterbury” school is among the first to have given direction to the concept of progressive music.
[INSERT ALBUM HERE]
THE SOFT MACHINE
Volume Two – April 1969
English humor, dissonances, avante-garde, jazz, and Robert Wyatt as well. A melting pot in the form of musical chaos perpetually on the fringe.
[INSERT ALBUM HERE]
VAN DER GRAAF GENERATOR
The Aerosol Grey Machine – September 1969
The dark and very emotional voice of Peter HAMMILL, his stories, “mystical sciences,” and the very personal music of the group constitute an alloy with an important place in the history of progressive music. This album, far below the standards of the next albums, was to become the most elusive of all of VDGG’s releases.
Around this time, other groups were starting to build unique, sophisticated and inventive “sounds,” including EMERSON LAKE & PALMER, GENESIS (then fronted by Peter Gabriel), GENTLE GIANT, JETHRO TULL, KING CRIMSON, PINK FLOYD and YES. They became the “kings” of this musical realm in both composition and performance by pioneering a style of popular music developed in the late 1960s and early 1970s, primarily by British rock musicians. Forty years later, innumerable “progressive” groups would name these bands when laying claim to the “heritage” of progressive rock.
At this point, the “skates” of Progressive Rock are solid. The curtain can then fall on the Sixties. Indeed, one has already entered the Seventies.
INDEX C - The History
In this mini-guide to progressive music, I hope to have you discover this genre by means of four “chronicles,” each one covering one “wave” of the progressive movement. The four chronicles correspond approximately to: the end of the Sixties (PROTO-HISTORY), the Seventies (THE GOLDEN AGE), the Eighties (THE SILVER AGE and the birth of NEO-PROGressive rock), and the Nineties to the present (rebirth, and the new PROGressive METAL).
For certain groups, one will find a selection of their best albums. The interested reader will also find here some tools to dig a little deeper into the history of progressive rock. The idea here is to put maximum information at the reader’s fingertips so that, while having profited from the information provided, he can choose to add to that information.
In conclusion, I could never have written this article by myself. I relied heavily on the Web and a gigantic network and exchange of information regarding progressive rock, all of which led to the majority of the information provided below. As noted above, after an “eclipse” in the Eighties (progressive rock having had its “glory days” in the Seventies), progressive rock has been seeing a formidable rebirth - which I invite you to be part of! If you have not already done so, it is high time to discover this musical universe full of passion and unexpected richness.
Gradually yours….!
''The music’s playing, the notes are right
Put your left foot first and move into the light
The edge of this hill is the edge of the world
And if you’re going to cross you better start doing it right –
Better start doing it right''
“Dance On A Volcano” (Rutherford/Banks/Hackett/Collins)
GENESIS, “A Trick Of The Tail'' (1976)
INDEX B - The development
Written by Lucas Biela, France
I. Late 60s and beginning of the 70s
I would say it all began with psychedelic music, i.e., essentially Jimi Hendrix and early PINK FLOYD (all their stuff with Syd Barrett). Some people say that THE BEATLES also contributed to the prog movement. Then came bands such as KING CRIMSON and YES at the end of the Sixties. KING CRIMSON, along with VAN DER GRAAF GENERATOR (VDGG), helped define a subgenre of progressive music called “hard prog” (“hard” referring to the tormented atmosphere of the combined music and lyrics. However, “In The Court Of The Crimson King” is symphonic prog). YES were playing symphonic prog, so called because of the use of a symphonic orchestra. GENESIS were already recording at the end of the Sixties, but their link to progressive rock was not yet defined. With the album “Trespass,” things became clearer about GENESIS. YES and GENESIS remain icons in symphonic rock music. Other bands followed their steps later: e.g., GENTLE GIANT and CAMEL, among others. At the same time as symphonic rock was developing in Great Britain, many Italian bands were writing and performing a similar type of music: e.g., BANCO DEL MUTUO SOCCORSO (BDMS), PREMIATA FORNERIA MARCONI (PFM), Le ORME, and QUELLA VECCHIA LOCANDA (QVL), among others. These two countries were the most prolific as far as progressive rock is concerned.
Let’s go back to England to focus on another subgenre that comes from the Canterbury country. CARAVAN defined that subgenre with their second album, and bands like HATFIELD AND THE NORTH, and later NATIONAL HEALTH, followed (plus a band that didn’t come from England, but from the USA: HAPPY THE MAN). The first GONG album (“Camembert Electrique,” featuring drummer Pip Pyle, who later joined HATFIELD and NATIONAL HEALTH) also belongs to this subgenre. Daevid Allen (who later founded GONG), along with Robert Wyatt, formed SOFT MACHINE, a band that could be regarded as belonging to the Canterbury scene for their first three releases, but which, with their next release (“Third”), turned to jazz-fusion, another subgenre that later included drummer Bill Bruford (who played with KING CRIMSON and YES) and BRAND X (featuring drummer Phil Collins from GENESIS) and, in the USA, Frank ZAPPA.
So, by the beginning of the Seventies, three subgenres of progressive rock were already established: symphonic (YES, GENESIS), Canterbury (CARAVAN, early GONG), and hard prog (KING CRIMSON, VDGG).
II. The 70s
After Syd Barrett left PINK FLOYD, their music became softer, with ethereal passages, thus defining a new subgenre: space rock. GONG were also following this path (but with humour) with “Angel Egg,” their best release to date. After the YARDBIRDS split, Keith Relf and his wife, Jane, formed the band RENAISSANCE, a group that blended folk music with progressive rock. Along with JETHRO TULL, RENAISSANCE helped define another subgenre: folk progressive. The popularity of RENAISSANCE grew after Annie Haslam replaced Jane Relf on vocals, and the band released the great “Scheherazade and Other Stories” in 1975. JETHRO TULL released “Aqualung” in 1971, an album that is considered a classic today, though I would more highly recommend the follow-up, “Thick As A Brick,” as an introduction to their contribution to the folk prog scene.
Another subgenre of progressive rock was also developing in the Seventies – art rock – led by such bands as SUPERTRAMP, ROXY MUSIC and 10CC. These groups were playing a “simpler” music than other progressive subgenres. In Germany, TANGERINE DREAM was playing a music based exclusively on electronic instruments, hence their music falls under the “Electronic” (or “New Age”) subgenre, although that subgenre may include many non-electronic instruments (as is the case with Mike OLDFIELD). VANGELIS and SYNERGY also belong to this subgenre.
Many of the German bands that appeared at the beginning of the Seventies were classified as “Krautrock,” an additional subgenre of progressive rock, which includes GROBSCHNITT, Amon DUUL, and ASH RA TEMPEL. A minimalist form of “electronic” music also appeared in the Seventies: ambient. Artists such as KRAFTWERK, Brian ENO and CLUSTER belong to this category. Moreover, in England, a new subgenre based on improvisation, with a jazz background, appeared in 1973 with the release of HENRY COW’s “Leg End.” This subgenre was labeled “Rock In Opposition,” or R.I.O.
Not to be forgotten is EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER (ELP), a band that gathered members from KING CRIMSON, ATOMIC ROOSTER and The NICE, whose albums (“Tarkus” often being regarded as their best) belong to a subgenre called “classical prog,” as they often feature songs that are adaptations of both well-known and obscure classical compositions (“Pictures At An Exhibition,” for example). The NICE and Rick WAKEMAN also belong to this subgenre. In North America, some groups mixed hard rock with progressive elements, creating a subgenre called “pomp prog,” as the intros and outros of some of their songs are “pompous.” RUSH and STYX are among the bands in this subgenre (KANSAS could also be added to this category, though they are also close to the English symphonic prog scene).
I mentioned previously the development of a jazz-fusion scene, with BRAND X (featuring Phil Collins), Bill BRUFORD and Frank ZAPPA (ZAPPA’s music could be considered as a unique subgenre, mixing jazz, doo-wop, rock, classical, etc.). Another band also strongly rooted in jazz, but including influences ranging from Karlheinz Stockhausen to Duke Ellington, via opera, is MAGMA, who created the Zeuhl subgenre, with a language intelligible only by them (“Kobaïa”).
So, at the end of the Seventies, we now have 10 subgenres in progressive rock: art rock, folk progressive, classical progressive, R.I.O., jazz-fusion, Zeuhl, ambient, electronic, krautrock, and pomp progressive.
III. The 80s
At the end of the Seventies, progressive rock was “supplanted” by the “punk” movement, a “music” which aimed to prove, among other things, that anyone could play music. “Punk” gave rise to the “cold wave” in the Eighties, and prog rock was reduced to what was called “neo-progressive” (a simpler form of symphonic prog, but with more “present” drums), and an embryo of what became, at the beginning of the Nineties, progressive metal. SAGA were probably the first to play neo-progressive rock, but MARILLION, IQ and PENDRAGON are the best representatives of this subgenre. Landmark albums include “Misplaced Childhood” (MARILLION), “Masquerade Overture” (PENDRAGON) and “Ever” (IQ).
IV. The 90s
The newest subgenre of progressive rock - progressive metal - became fully developed with DREAM THEATER’s “Images and Words.” However, some groups in the Eighties were already playing a heavy metal-based progressive music, including QUEENSRYCHE, FATES WARNING and WATCHTOWER. (Much thanks here is due to Mike Varney, who founded the prog label “Magna Carta” in the USA and the “Inside Out” label in Europe.)
Also in the 90s, SPOCK’S BEARD was playing a symphonic prog with references to GENTLE GIANT and GENESIS. ECHOLYN and IZZ were playing a music closer to neo-prog. In Northern Europe, a Scandinavian symphonic prog scene developed, with bands such as The FLOWER KINGS, ANGALGARD and SINKADUS. A post-R.I.O. scene also developed with DJAM KARET and THINKING PLAGUE, among others. There were also new groups playing jazz-fusion, including KENSO, CARTOON and DEUS EX MACHINA. As well, PORCUPINE TREE and OZRIC TENTACLES were playing space rock, and COLLAGE and CLEPSYDRA were playing neo-prog that was strongly influenced by IQ and MARILLION.
Thus, in the Nineties, you have a revival of the prog scene not only with the appearance of a new subgenre - progressive metal - but also with bands playing the styles developed in the Seventies.
INDEX A - The definition
“Progressive rock - also known as “prog rock,” “classical rock” or “art rock” – is a unique form of rock and roll music, occurring at the interstice between rock, jazz and classical music.”
The problem of “those words” is back – “progressive music” or “progressive rock” (or “prog,” for close friends) – with you to choose! The etymology of those terms has become almost “evil,” creating such a “headache” that it is difficult even to think, much less catalogue this diverting genre of music. But isn’t the “essence” of something specific to each one of us? After all, what good is it to disparage an album if one hasn’t listened to it? With “progressive rock,” one often only enjoys an album after having listened to it several times. Our tympanums are interpreters, but the “spirit” is our only judge.
It would take quite an astute mind to define it clearly. Many such minds have tried, with varying degrees of success. But ultimately each person has his/her own definition. Given human nature, there is nothing surprising about that. And yet even I have not yet offered a definition to anyone…yet. Now I do so, with, inevitably, an ounce (or maybe more…) of partiality:
“Progressive rock was largely a European movement, and drew most of its influences from classical music and jazz fusion, in contrast to American rock, which was historically influenced by rhythm & blues and country music. Over the years, various subgenres of progressive rock – or “prog” – have emerged, such as symphonic rock, art rock, neo- progressive and progressive metal.”
I would like to dispense with the myth that “Progressive Rock” emerged in England like a phoenix from the ashes. Indeed, the majority of bands who were newly formed at the end of the 60s and beginning of the 70s were very much inspired by the examples of Anglo-American acts such as CREAM, HENDRIX, VANILLA FUDGE, FRANK ZAPPA, KING CRIMSON and PINK FLOYD, to name but a few. As well, there were other bands who were looking for totally new forms and methods of playing together, such as SAGRADO CORACAO DA TERRA (Brazil), HARMONIUM and RUSH (Canada), ANGE, ATOLL and MAGMA (France), AMON DUUL, CAN, ELOY and TANGERINE DREAM (Germany), BANCO DEL MUTUO SOCCORSO and PFM (Italy), GERARD and KENSO (Japan), ABRAXAS and COLLAGE (Poland), FLOWER KINGS and PAIN OF SALVATION (Sweden), and DREAM THEATER and SPOCK’S BEARD (USA), to name but a few.
By pushing the research a little further, one realizes that, in general, most definitions of “progressive rock” share in common such terms as “EVOLUTION,” “PROGRESSION,” “INNOVATION” and “UNCOMMERCIAL,” and include a completely different approach to composition from other rock formats – particularly a “goodbye” to three-minute compositions constructed of verse-chorus-verse-chorus. Instead, one finds new musical structures (pieces from 6- to 20-minutes long, with intricate melodies and harmony), new instruments (electric guitars, violin, flute), and various keyboards (Mellotron, Hammond B3, synthesizers, piano, ARP, Moog) – all of which combine to create “musical odysseys” that call to mind jazz, musicals, or classical music, the latter of which gives us “symphonic prog.”
With regard to musical structure, “prog” usually offers complex arrangements – often including long, beautiful instrumental sections – and virtuoso musicianship, combining technical mastery and emotional solos. An early example is the 23-minute “Echoes” by PINK FLOYD. Other famous examples include YES’ “Close to the Edge” (18 minutes) and GENESIS’ “Supper’s Ready” (23 minutes). When not forced into using “mainstream” structures, artists have freer reign to integrate their individual and collective cultures and influences – classical, jazz, traditional – into the “energy” of their music.
“My ears are lucky to hear
These glorious songs
Of inspiration
And voices crafted from
Thunder
The power of life”
- Happy Rhodes, “Feed The Fire” (Warpaint version)
This “progressive current” – particularly developed in England at the end of the Sixties – moved away from traditional structures of rock and blues roots to explore European music in a broader way. Like any music, “progressive rock” has subgenres, defined according to the way in which various artists interpreted the new “current.” Ultimately, if one wanted to complicate matters, one could “define” an almost unlimited number of subgenres. However, without being completely exhaustive, the primary subgenres are:
Experimental (SOFT MACHINE, KING CRIMSON), psychedelic (PINK FLOYD), theatrical (GENESIS), traditional (EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER), symphonic (YES, CAMEL, GENTLE GIANT), and art rock/“pomp prog” in the Seventies (SUPERTRAMP). There are also the Canterbury School (CARAVAN, GONG), jazz-fusion (BRAND X, FRANK ZAPPA), Italian Progressive Rock (BANCO DEL MUTUO SOCCORSO, LE ORME, PFM), German Progressive Current (ELOY – space rock; AMON DUUL II – krautrock), progressive electronics (TANGERINE DREAM), Rock In Opposition, or R.I.O. (HENRY COW), and Zheul (MAGMA). There is even Progressive Instrumental (MIKE OLDFIELD), Folk Progressive (JETHRO TULL, RENAISSANCE, THE STRAWBS), Hard Progressive (RUSH), Neo-Progressive (MARILLION, ARENA, PENDRAGON), and Progressive Metal (DREAM THEATER, AYREON, PAIN OF SALVATION).
CONTENTS
INDEX B – The Development
· Late 60s and beginning of the 70s
· The 70s
· The 80s
· The 90s to the Present
INDEX C – The History (1966 to the Present)
· Introduction
· 1 – Proto-History – 1960s
· 2 – First Wave – 1970s
· 3 – Second Wave – 1980s
· 4 – Third Wave – 1990s to the Present
· Conclusion
INDEX D – Top 20 Albums
INDEX E – The A-Z Listing (groups)
Saturday, October 14, 2006
ESSENTIAL MINI-GUIDE TO...
What if a trustworthy companion offered to take you on a journey and guide you through the exciting discovery of albums you’d only dreamt of?
That’s exactly what the Essential Mini-Guide to PROGRESSIVE ROCK will do!
Intended for Progressive Rock aficionados and Classic Rock lovers alike, the Mini-Guide covers the history and development of the worldwide Progressive Rock movement from its origins to the present, with tools to help you dig into its history even further. And here is a first: it clearly defines “WHAT PROGRESSIVE ROCK IS.”
Through four chapters, each covering one “wave” of the Progressive Rock movement, you will re-live: the end of the Sixties (PROTO-HISTORY), the Seventies (the GOLDEN AGE), the Eighties (the SILVER AGE and birth of NEO PROGressive rock), and the Nineties until today (the rebirth and new PROGressive METAL).
Selected from the most famous to the highly obscure, each band comes with a biography and full discography (vinyl and/or CD), some with a recommendation of their best albums. You will also find an in-depth review of the 20 best Prog albums of all time (released between 1967 and 1979). Finally, the Mini-Guide includes a comprehensive A-Z listing of over 3000 Progressive Rock bands, each with a brief musical description.
Yet despite years of enjoyment, dedication and intensive research, not only are there still gaps in my knowledge, but I suspect that there are many hidden Prog treasures still waiting to be unearthed. And although this is the second edition, no doubt you will also find incorrect statements, errors and/or facts that need to be straightened out. Therefore, I will be most grateful for any information, comments or suggestions for improvement that will bring me closer to my goal – that of making this handbook the most comprehensive and truly “Essential Mini-Guide to PROGRESSIVE ROCK.”
ENJOY YOUR READING and HAPPY DISCOVERIES!
DEDICATION
- Diane (47) -
- François (26) -
- Étienne (25) + Mélanie (23) & Thomas (5) -
- Jean-Michel (20) -
Acknowledgements:
Many people have contributed to the making of this mini-guide, without whom it would not have been possible. I would like to express my deepest gratitude to them for their generous and invaluable editing assistance, advice and friendship. For helping to make this second edition a reality, I am particularly indebted to:
Ian Alterman, USA
Improved and adapted in English
Primary editor for First Edition
Bob McBeath, SCOTLAND
Improved and adapted First Edition in English
Peter Rideout, CANADA
Improved and adapted First Edition in English
Lisa Brault, CANADA
The A-Z Listing (groups)
Improved and adapted First Edition in English
Tommy Schønenberg, NORWAY
Reviewer of the Top 20 Best Progressive Rock albums
Vintage Prog - Progressive Rock, and much more…
Lucas Biela, FRANCE
Dominic Francoeur, CANADA
For their inspirational works in the field of progressive rock music
Greg Walker, USA
For his generous assistance in providing band information
Syn-Phonic Music - Progressive Rock
http://synphonic.8m.com
Finally, to the musicians, the fans, and all who support this wonderful music, and to everyone who provided me with information, I extend my warmest thanks.
With love to you all,
Ronald Couture
(founder of ProgArchives.com)
PROG ARCHIVES.com
My knowledge of progressive music has greatly increased in recent years, thanks to good friends like Bruno Aun, a designer who introduced me to the Internet, and my very dear friend, M@X (Prog Archives Administrator and WebMaster). The “archives” were inspired (and continue to be driven) by M@X’s and my desire to promote our passion for this music via our own Web site. Today, PROG ARCHIVES brings me a lot of info, new “net” friends, and pleasure, as I continue to discover many great prog artists from every corner of the earth, and thus learn more and more about the music I love so.
PROG ARCHIVES is the result of some friends’ passion for progressive rock, a kind of music that (in case you didn’t know) crosses and combines many musical genres (jazz, classical, folk), resulting in a unique, original and often challenging style. Our “project” is open to everyone who wants to add his or her own contribution. Anyone who loves prog can review here, exchange opinions, and find other prog lovers with whom to share their thoughts and passion for this excellent music. In fact, the site’s pages have the express purpose of letting you enter step-by-step into the fantastic “prog world.”
Here at PROG ARCHIVES, we are proud to serve fans of progressive music with any information we can: bands, biographies, discographies, song titles and durations, pictures of album covers, helpful reviews and samples* from some of the finest artists of the prog scene, from the time-honoured past to the exciting present. Progressive music is full of vibrant and pleasant memories and associations for fans like me, as we find ever more cross-connections within its (still expanding) scope. Thanks to the Internet, the progressive movement is experiencing a revival of interest from a dedicated, sophisticated and growing audience.
For people wanting a more in-depth list, I’ve included a link to the excellent Prog Archives (English version) below. A warning, though: the site could take a lifetime to read, so don’t plan on having a social life…!
My love to you all,
Keep on proggin!
http://www.progarchives.com
*NOTE: These are not complete albums. If you like what you hear from the samples, please buy the full-length releases.
MY STORY WITH PROGRESSIVE ROCK MUSIC
At Sherbrooke University in Québec, my eagerness to explore progressive music led to quite a large collection of great bands and albums, including GENESIS (Nursery Cryme, Foxtrot, Selling England By The Pound), PINK FLOYD (Dark Side Of The Moon, Wish You Were Here, Animals), ELOY (Dawn, Ocean), The STRAWBS (Hero and Heroine, Grave New World), BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST (Everyone Is Everybody Else, Time Honoured Ghosts), JETHRO TULL (Thick As a Brick, Aqualung), The MOODY BLUES (Days Of Future Passed, On The Threshold Of A Dream), RENAISSANCE (Scheherazade and Other Stories), and SUPERTRAMP (Crime Of The Century), among others. I also became fascinated with Italian progressive rock (BANCO, Le ORME, PFM), as well as other non-English European prog, and the expanding American prog scene.
I continue to expand my knowledge and appreciation for this rock genre which offers so many diverse styles and creative elements. My passion for prog rock has grown to encompass many groups, and lately I’ve realized that more and more of my favorites come from the neo-prog, symphonic prog, prog metal and space rock subgenres. This phase of my musical exploration has taken me into the realms of new groups like MARILLION (Script For A Jester’s Tear, Misplaced Childhood, Marbles), ANGLAGARD (Hybris), ARENA (The Visitor, Immortal?), AYREON (Into The Electric Castle, The Universal Migrator Part 1 & 2), CAMEL (Mirage, Harbour Of Tears), DREAM THEATER (Images & Words, Octavarium), IQ (Subterranea, Dark Matter), LANDS END (Natural Selection), PAIN OF SALVATION (The Perfect Element Part 1), PALLAS (The Dreams Of Men), PENDRAGON (The Masquerade Overture, Believe), PINEAPPLE THIEF (Variations On A Dream), and PORCUPINE TREE (Lightbulb Sun, In Absentia, Deadwing), among others.
In my opinion, recent years have brought us some very good and memorable Prog Rock music!
“Progressive Rock is a music made for the dream, the escape, to feel a multitude of emotions.”