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  • Guest

    #16
    Originally posted by beowulf
    for me its jazz.......3 blokes all playing different tunes at the same time lol
    I'm a musician and as a non-musician I can fully understand that this is what some types of jazz and progressive music can sound like.
    The difference between jazz & prog and country & western is that the two first ones can really play their instruments whereas the latter hardly at all... hehe... :tongue-out:

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    • Ian M
      Administrator
      • Dec 2008
      • 18272
      • Ian
      • Falster, Denmark

      #17
      I just sit in the quiet and enjoy the peace.
      Group builds

      Bismarck

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      • Guest

        #18
        Originally posted by Jens Andrée
        You're not alone there but out of respect for the remote chance that someone actually listens to that stuff I'm not saying anything more...
        Each to his own, I guess! I've come to the conclusion that whatever floats your boat etc... As a result of this thread, I've just worked my way through a LOT of Prog Rock, a bit of Jazz and some dirty Dub Electronica on YouTube whilst working. You've started something here...

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        • Guest

          #19
          I've not listened to The Lamb Lies down for at least 40 years, yet I still know all the lyrics, go figure!!

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          • Steve O
            • Dec 2017
            • 327

            #20
            Music sometimes, Wishbone, Yes, Pink floyd, Santana, and all the old stuff to many to mention but when painting peace and quiet.

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            • Guest

              #21
              Ooh, wishbone, now that has been a very long time!

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              • Guest

                #22
                Originally posted by John Rixon
                Each to his own, I guess! I've come to the conclusion that whatever floats your boat etc... As a result of this thread, I've just worked my way through a LOT of Prog Rock, a bit of Jazz and some dirty Dub Electronica on YouTube whilst working. You've started something here...
                I'm probably one of the more fanatic prog rockers here in Sweden, listening to bands even some Brits didn't know existed, but that's what floats my boat!
                Prog rock has had an upswing the last 10 years which has paved the way for some new prog bands, but nothing beats the original ones.
                King Crimson is on the road again although Fripp said he'd retired for good. Saw them in Brighton in 2016 and in Copenhagen in 2017 and they're better than ever - on all levels!
                I even brought my kids to the last concert just so that they could experience them before it's too late and it was a success.

                Dub Electronica isn't something I've had a go at. Is it any good? Who to listen to?

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                • rickoshea52
                  SMF Supporters
                  • Dec 2011
                  • 4076
                  • Rick

                  #23
                  Originally posted by Jens Andrée
                  I'm probably one of the more fanatic prog rockers here in Sweden, listening to bands even some Brits didn't know existed, but that's what floats my boat!
                  Prog rock has had an upswing the last 10 years which has paved the way for some new prog bands, but nothing beats the original ones.
                  King Crimson is on the road again although Fripp said he'd retired for good. Saw them in Brighton in 2016 and in Copenhagen in 2017 and they're better than ever - on all levels!
                  I even brought my kids to the last concert just so that they could experience them before it's too late and it was a success.

                  Dub Electronica isn't something I've had a go at. Is it any good? Who to listen to?
                  Funny. You listen the British prog rock while I quite like Swedish indies rock/pop.
                  On the bench: Airfix 1/48 Sea King HC4, Revell 1/24 Trabant.
                  Coming soon: Airfix 1/72 Phantom FGR2.
                  Just finished: Airfix 1/48 Stuka & Airfix 1/72 Sea King HC4.

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                  • Guest

                    #24
                    Originally posted by Jens Andrée
                    I'm probably one of the more fanatic prog rockers here in Sweden, listening to bands even some Brits didn't know existed, but that's what floats my boat!
                    Prog rock has had an upswing the last 10 years which has paved the way for some new prog bands, but nothing beats the original ones.
                    King Crimson is on the road again although Fripp said he'd retired for good. Saw them in Brighton in 2016 and in Copenhagen in 2017 and they're better than ever - on all levels!
                    I even brought my kids to the last concert just so that they could experience them before it's too late and it was a success.

                    Dub Electronica isn't something I've had a go at. Is it any good? Who to listen to?
                    Fripp played at the festival I used to work for - 3 half-hour lunchtime sets, it was sublime!! As for Dub electronica, here would be a good place to start! In fact, the Dubmission label has an amazing array of talent.

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                    • Guest

                      #25
                      Originally posted by John Rixon
                      Fripp played at the festival I used to work for - 3 half-hour lunchtime sets, it was sublime!! As for Dub electronica, here would be a good place to start! In fact, the Dubmission label has an amazing array of talent.
                      I can imagine it must've been a fantastic experience!
                      Not many people actually knows this but Fripp was hired by Microsoft to create all the sounds for Windows Vista!
                      The OS sucked but the sounds were good - especially for us who knew who were behind them

                      Thanks for the link!
                      It sounds to me like evolved Brixton/ska music with modern electronic music with lots of roots in 80's reggae/ska.
                      I liked some of the tracks for some "mood music" and I will dig a bit further.
                      Some days softer, less complicated, music is also nice where you don't have to analyse every tempo shift and 16:th note but I mostly prefer the really complex and exhausting music only prog rock and prog fusion metal can provide. It's the modern version of Mozart, Bach and Paganini if you ask me...

                      Here is one of the best concerts ever recorded in the history of music thanks to the wonderful people at BBC sound&vision in 1978
                      GG at GG (Gentle Giant at Golders Green)



                      A few of them are still active playing the songs of Gentle Giant as Three Friends. Not supported by the Shulmans but we fans love it!

                      I grew up in a musical home where everyone played several instrument, mostly folk music. As the young rebel I was listening to Deep Purple, Rainbow, Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden etc growing up before finding prog rock and fusion metal - which suited me as a predominantly guitarist very well - and it certainly made me popular amongst the girls coming to our gigs
                      The once long hair is now swapped for a beard and I only play at home, but music is a central role in everything I do!

                      So THANK YOU Brits for inventing Prog Rock!!! (also for inventing British hard rock/metal and the Marshall amplifier!)

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                      • Guest

                        #26
                        Wow, not heard GG or years, I was always a little surprised that they never really got the full-on success that others did. They had a massive cult following, but always seemed to be on the edge of things, but this is not at all taking away how great they were!
                        One piece I used to use a lot for working to (back in the painting days) is Fripp and Eno's "No Pussyfooting" a heady combination of talent! Thanks for that link, that'll be on during my next bench session!

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                        • Guest

                          #27
                          Originally posted by John Rixon
                          Wow, not heard GG or years, I was always a little surprised that they never really got the full-on success that others did. They had a massive cult following, but always seemed to be on the edge of things, but this is not at all taking away how great they were!
                          One piece I used to use a lot for working to (back in the painting days) is Fripp and Eno's "No Pussyfooting" a heady combination of talent! Thanks for that link, that'll be on during my next bench session!
                          Derek Shulman wanted fame and glory and decided the band had to change for a more "commercial" sound in 1977 resulting in The missing piece, Giant for a day and finally Civilian which made the band cave in due to total commercial failure. I do not own these albums nor will I ever do.

                          They still have a large following and the vast number of attempts to get the band back together have all failed, but some members of Gentle Giant always turned up to the yearly fan meetup GORGG (Global On-Reflection Giant Gathering) where they would play music with their fans which eventually sparked the band Three Friends with Gary Green, Malcolm Mortimore and initially also Kerry Minnear from Gentle Giant together with some musicians from the cover band Rentle Giant. Sadly Kerry was "forced" to leave the band by the Shulman brothers (read; Derek) so they continued without him.
                          If you liked Gentle Giant back in the days please lookup Three Friends! I've only been to one of their concerts, and they don't do many, but it was fantastic!

                          Gentle Giant was one of the most talented group of musicians out there and they often each played several instruments per song, but that was also one of the prog rock trademarks.

                          Haven't listened to Fripp and Eno in a very long time to be honest but it's a pure showcase of Frippertronics for sure!

                          Last year I compiled a live album with King Crimson and took one live song from each concert they did and made a compilation.
                          Due to obvious copyright reasons I can't publish it anywhere, but I can make a zip file of the mp3's available for download as "personal usage" for those who want?
                          The songs were released for free, one at a time, for a limited time for us members and that's why I sort of don't mind letting others having it since it's not pirated in any way, but still...

                          One of my favourite prog rock acts that shows how silly you were able to be is King Arthur on ice by Rick Wakeman! It's 10x more bonkers than ELP and their rented trucks and the lettering on top!
                          Or Ian Anderson being the flute jester in Jethro Tull!!!

                          Musicians today are either far too serious or just lack the talent needed to pull it off

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                          • Guest

                            #28
                            Wow, that is an amazing find - thoroughly enjoyed that, and a reminder of how damned talented these guys were! It also answered the "why weren't they more commercially successful - in a word, Genesis! As I recall, a lot of prog-rock folks had strong allegiance to one band - you have to remember, albums were very expensive back then for most mortals, so a big Prog-Rock habit could be ruinous! I'm gonna have to look up what Kerry Minnear got up to after GG, as he is a true virtuoso, and no mistake.

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                            • Guest

                              #29
                              ...any band sacking a musician like Minnear has a real problem! And Derek Shullman does come over as a bit of a knob anyway...;-)

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                              • Guest

                                #30
                                Three Friends didn't sack Kerry Minnear, it was Derek Shulman who "strongly adviced" him to leave the band because he was butthurt that Gary Green & co were doing well and people stopped asking for reunions...
                                One has to remember that Derek is a record label director and if he's not making any money on GG music then it should be stopped and Kerry was caught in-between and backed out...
                                A really sad story to be honest but I managed to see them whilst Kerry was still in the band and they were as good as ever - which is a lot more than Derek could say!!!

                                Fun fact #1: Gentle Giant albums and merc are released under Alucard. Every album and thing you buy are packed by hand by Kerry Minnear and his wife - and they write a hand-written thank you note to each and every customer!!!
                                I'd like to see any other band member of such (former) fame do that!

                                GG at GG was Gentle Giant at their very peak - both musically and fame. These concerts (as you all probably already know) were secret. People were only given tickets to Sound&Vision but the artist was a secret.
                                The people in the audience knew every song and that tells a lot!

                                I don't know how much, or not, people only listened to one band, or bought just one artists albums. Most of my prog rock friends tells me about every concert and band they listened to back in the days and it seems to be a lot of them, but there were sub-factions within prog rock for sure, like the Canterbury scene that came out of classical music, or the more harder rock ones like King Crimson. Some were more purist than others but they all agree on one thing and that's that punk killed the prog.
                                I agree but I also think the smell of money had a hand in it because very few had major commercial success like ELP and possible YES? Genesis had it but much later imho, at least post Peter Gabriel.

                                The fact that prog rock still sounds as good today, in a world where rap music has overtaken rock (I'm shrugging just writing this), makes me happy and that there's still some hope for real music by real musicians out there!!!

                                (Not so) fun fact #2: I've read a really sad an alarming report that kids today don't learn to play an instrument any longer. They seem to think that Guitar Hero on XBox is an adequate "instrument"...

                                I haven't got an instrument in every room in my house but I've got more than enough to do so if I'd want to - and I can play them! (which I can't say about the XBox guitar controller thingy... )

                                I'm glad you enjoyed it!

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