Showing posts with label Opinions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Opinions. Show all posts

Sunday, February 15, 2026

The First Prog Album

Released by Island Records on October 19, 1969, King Crimson's In the Court of the Crimson King creates THE template (and benchmark) for all "progressive rock" albums and music that would come thereafter. (We must remember that the term "progressive rock music" (and/or "Prog") came much later than the albums we will be discussing in this post.) It is virtually irrefutable that In the Court of the Crimson King is the most influential, fully-developed, fully-intentional album of its kind: expressing wildly imaginative musical ideas through uniquely-structured and -engineered sounds and virtuoso-level musicianship. But was it the very first album to express/display/exhibit the kind of musical listening experience that the prog lover would come to associate with his or her beloved musical form?

 I do not think so. 

For me, the progressive rock album is more about a listening experience: one that transports the listener into a world that is far from the reality one is used to experiencing. Yes, In the Court of the Crimson King did this, but there were others before it that began to evoke that effect. For David Crosby and Roger McGuinn, it was the musics of John Coltrane and Ravi Shankar: these were the artists that expanded Roger's consciousness to the point of being able to create the landmark song "Eight Miles High." For many progressive artists--like Terry Riley, the Red Krayolas, Lou Reed and The Velvet Underground, and Can--it was the influence of avant garde musical theorists like John Cage, LaMonte Young, or Karlheinz Stockhausen. For many guitarists it was the guitar machinations of Jeff Beck on "Shapes of Things" or Jimi Hendrix's sound and playing on Are You Experienced? For many keyboard players it was the work of Jimmy Smith, or perhaps Keith Emerson. For most prog drummers it was the playing of Tony Williams, Buddy Rich, or Billy Cobham. And the list goes on. For some it was a song, for others a sound, for still others a vibe, and for many it was the intriguing lure of technological advances (stereo, multi-track recording, electrical manipulation of sound using engineering effects, synthesizers, sequencers, and, later, computers and sampling, as well as digitized programming and recording techniques). For me it was all about the experience: what mind-altering journey was the music listening experience going to take me on; how would my reality be distorted or, better yet, transformed by the listening experience?  

As to the albums and musics that helped usher in the form that we now identify as "progressive rock music," there have been many. The following is a list of albums that I've read as serious and legitimate submissions for this topic. 

- August 30, 1965: the release of Bob Dylan's Highway 61 Revisited, his first album using electrified instruments.

- May 16, 1966: the release of The Beach Boys' landmark album, Pet Sounds (though I'd vote for their far more advanced September 18, 1967 release, Smiley Smile.)

June 20, 1966: the release of the first ever double album on Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde.

June 27, 1966I've read suggestions going back to The Mothers of Invention's debut album, a double concept album, no less, called Freak Out. It was released a week after Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde.

- August 5, 1966: The Parlaphone subsidiary of Capitol Records released The Beatles' seventh studio album, Revolver. It reflects great changes and experimentation going on in the recording and engineering styles as well as the band's dalliances into psychedelic drugs and expansive experiences from international travel.

 - August 17, 1966: Verve Records released Holy Music, an album of music composed and performed  by John Morgan Newbern under the working name of Malachi. Influenced by Indian music, it was an album intended to create elevated spiritual consciousness--as was the expressed purpose of a lot of Indian music at the time.

- October 17, 1966: release of The 13th Floor Elevators' cohesive debut, The Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators seems quite apropos.

January 7, 1967The Doors' self-titled debut album is released. The Doors is the first album on this list that gives me that transportive listening experience that I associate with the progressive rock music listening experience--but only on a song-by-song basis; not the whole album.

- February of 1967: Reprise Records released The Electric Prunes' debut album, The Electric Prunes. A listening experience that is more transportive in a psychedelic pop way, not as a progressive rock event.

March 1967: release of The Free SpiritsOut of Sight and SoundRecorded in early 1967, Larry Coryell and Bob Moses dynamic live jazz-rock fusion band tried to capture their dynamic live sound against the oppressive demands and restrictions of a very conservative record producer (who had specialized in producing jazz albums), one Bob Thiele. The band disavowed the album (entitled ) and broke up soon after its release. For a more accurate rendering of the band's tremendous power and impact, one can listen to the 2011 release of a live nightclub performance of the band from 1967 entitled, Live at The Scene.

- May 26, 1967 sees the release of The Mothers of Invention's highly-creative and sophisticated album, Absolutely Free. This is definitely a huge step forward on the road to the birth and establishment of "progressive rock" as its own musical idiom--much moreso than their previous Freak Out!

- June 1, 1967: release of The BeatlesSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.

- August 5, 1967: release of Pink Floyd's Piper at the Gates of Dawn. Definitely ground-breaking, innovative and even revolutionary, but still not a fully-formed whole-album listening experience.

September of 1967Procol Harum's debut album, Procol Harum was released in the United States (only) in  with its monster Summer of Love hit "Whiter Shade of Pale." There is definitely a feeling of progressive rock emanating from this album. A qualifier. Procol Harum is one of my nine candidates for "The First Prog Album."

- May of 1967: the Strawberry Alarm Clock bursts onto the scene with its mega-hit, "Incense and Peppermints"--which turns out to be a very misleading representation of the kind of music the band would create for the October release of the album that would encapsulate it, also titled Incense & Peppermints. Like Days of Future Passed, this amazing album has the kind of flow-thru that I've come to associate with the progressive rock album listening experience. Incense and Peppermints is another one of my nine candidates for "The First Prog Album."

- November of 1967: Deram Records issues The Moody Blues' Days of Future Passed. This is the first album I ever heard that truly transported me to a world foreign to the one I'd been living in. Days of Future Passed is definitely one of my nine candidates for "The First Prog Album."

December of 1967Traffic's Heaven Is in Your Mind comes out in the UK.

January 6 of 1968Ultimate Spinach's self-titled debut album was recorded in 1967 but released in 1968. Ultimate Spinach was Bostonian Bruce Douglas' East Coast response to the West Coast/Bay Area Psychedelic music scene.

- Early 1968Fifty Foot Hose's debut album, Cauldron, was recorded in 1967 but its release date is obscured by history. This wonderful album is more of a psychedelic trip than progressive rock.

- March 1, 1968: the release date of The Nice's The Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack. Nice with quite a bit of that forward-thinking proggy feel but also steeped in bubble-gum pop, psychedelia, and a whole host of other recent and current sounds and trends (much of which is based in classical music training and traditions). A qualifier; definitely close. The Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack is one of my nine candidates for "The First Prog Album."

March of 1968The lone album of the L.A.-based band, The United States of America, is released. Entitled, The United States of Americait is one of my nine candidates for "The First Prog Album."

- April 19, 1968: the release date of The Zombies' Baroque pop / psychedelic masterpiece, Odessey and Oracle.

May 13 of 1968Frank Zappa's orchestra-interspersed album of musique concrète, Lumpy Gravy, is re-released. A version of the album was first released on August 7 of 1967 only to be recalled due to proprietary disputes from the record label that Frank was under contract with. It was recalled, reworked, and re-released in the version you can hear today nearly a year later. Lumpy Gravy is one of my nine candidates for "The First Prog Album."

- June of 1968: release of Arthur Brown's The Crazy World of Arthur Brown.

- June 28, 1968: EMI Columbia records releases Pink Floyd's sophomore album, A Saucerful of Secrets. The album has that consistent flow, consistent feel, both spacey and psychedelic with highly creative sound experimentation, from start to finish, that I think constitutes a true progressive rock album. Saucerful of Secrets is another one of my nine candidates for "The First Prog Album."

- July 19, 1968: Reprise Records releases Family's Music from a Doll's House.

- August of 1968: Phillips Records releases Blue Cheer's sophomore album, Outsideinside. A far more sophisticated and organized album than their debut (published earlier in the same year), it is an album that many laud as the "birth" of "stoner rock."

- August of 1968Ultimate Spinach releases its second album in the same calendar year. Behold & See is a much smoother, more contrived and polished collaborative affair than the band's debut, but then, a little less bold and singular than the original.

October of 1968: the release of David Axelrod's Song of Innocence, is mentioned for its landmark fusion of cinematic jazz rock and use of LA's famous "Wrecking Crew" with orchestration. Song of Innocence is definitely one of my nine candidates for "The First Prog Album."

- November 1, 1968: Electra Records releases Arthur Lee's third and most evolved Love album, Forever Changes. It is an album that illustrates just how influential the sounds of The Moody Blues had been.

November 4, 1968: release of the Canadian band The Collectors' self-titled debut album. The Collectors is definitely a fully-fledged prog album and, thus, another one of my nine candidates for "The First Prog Album."

November of 1968: the obscure psychedelic band Touch releases its lone album, Touch. This album has received many mentions in conversations about the first prog album. As highly touted as this experimental psychedelic album is, I still find it limited in its dimensionality--with a heavy reliance on organ at its center.

November of 1968: The Nice's album Ars Longa Vita Brevis is released

December 1, 1968: The Pretty Things' release their fourth studio album, S.F. Sorrow. Though showing advances in songwriting and studio engineering techniques, it is mired in the imitation of the sounds of The Beatles, The Who, and The Rolling Stones.

December 6, 1968After an extensive American tour as Jimi Hendrix's opening act, The Soft Machine's debut album, The Soft Machine, was recorded and released in the United States.

- December: the release of Dutch band Group 1850's debut album, Agemo's Trip to Mother Earth. It is a psychedelic concept album in the same league with Pink Floyd's Saucerful of Secrets

I've even made independent cases for Strawberry Alarm Clock's debut, Incense & Peppermints, The Don Ellis Orchestra's live capture of their genre-shattering September 18, 1966 performance at the Monterey Jazz Festival--released as 'Live' at Monterey !--as well as Pink Floyd's 1968 sophomore album release, Saucerful of Secrets.

By the time we reach 1969, I think the form had been incubating, congealing, and realizing itself. There are a whole slew of albums that were released in 1969 that seem to qualify as a full "progressive rock album"--many of which appeared long before In the Court of the Crimson King made its earth-shattering entrance in late October. The ones that have received the most mention include:

- In January of 1969, Caravan's self-titled debut.

- In February of 1969, East of Eden's Mercator Projected.

- The first "Krautrock" albums from Germany: the first published version of a recorded "stream-of-consciousness" "sit in" (which would become known in Germany as "Kosmische Musik," in England as "Krautrock") was released by Amon Düül on Metronome Records some time in early or mid-1969 as Psychedelic Underground. Amon Düül 2's Phallus Dei came out on June 1, 1969 while Can's debut, Monster Movie didn't come out until August.

Personally, the albums that give me the strongest realization of the reality-transforming whole-album listening experience that I equate with the progressive rock listening experience include:

- Procol Harum's self-titled debut, Procul Harum,

- UK release -
1. "Conquistador" (2:38)
2. "She Wandered Through The Garden Fence" (3:24)
3. "Something Following Me" (3:37)
4. "Mabel" (1:53)
5. "Cerdes (Outside The Gates Of)" (5:03)
6. "A Christmas Camel" (4:49)
7. "Kaleidoscope" (2:53)
8. "Salad Days (Are Here Again)" (3:38)
9. "Good Captain Clack" (1:30)
10. "Repent Walpurgis" (5:02)

Total Time 34:27

- North America release -
1. "A Whiter Shade Of Pale" (4:04)
2. "She Wandered Through The Garden Fence" (3:18)
3. "Something Following Me" (3:37)
4. "Mabel" (1:50)
5. "Cerdes (Outside The Gates Of)" (5:04)
6. "A Christmas Camel" (4:48)
7. "Conquistador" (2:38)
8. "Kaleidoscope" (2:53)
9. "Salad Days (Are Here Again)" (3:38)
10. "Repent Walpurgis" (5:04)

Total Time 36:54

Line-up / Musicians:
- Gary Brooker / lead vocals, piano
- Robin Trower / guitars
- Matthew Fisher / Hammond organ
- David Knights / bass
- Barrie James Wilson / drums & percussion

- The Strawberry Alarm Clock's debut, Incense & Peppermints

Side 1
1. "The World's on Fire" (S.A. Clock) ((8:21) 
2. "Birds in My Tree" (George Bunnell, Steve Bartek) (1:53) 
3. "Lose to Live" (Mark Weitz, S.A. Clock) (3:13)
4. "Strawberries Mean Love" (Bunnell, Bartek) (3:01) 

Side 2
1. "Rainy Day Mushroom Pillow" (Bunnell, Bartek) (3:05) 
2. "Paxton's Back Street Carnival" (Bunnell, Bartek) (2:01) 
3. "Hummin' Happy" (Bunnell, Randy Seol) (2:25) 
4. "Pass Time with the SAC" (S.A. Clock) (1:21) 
5. "Incense and Peppermints" (John S. Carter, Time Gilbert, Mark Weitz, Ed King) (2:47) 
6. "Unwind the Clock" (Lee Freeman, Ed King) (4:10)

Lineup / Musicians:
- Mark Weitz / organ, piano, harpsichord, vocals
- Randy Seol / drums, bongos, vibraphone, vocals
- Ed King / lead guitar, vocals
- Lee Freeman / rhythm guitar, harmonica, vocals
- George Bunnell / bass, vocals
- Gary Lovetro / bass, vocals
- Steve Bartek / flute
- Greg Munford / lead vocals on "Incense and Peppermints"
- Gene Gunnels / drums, cowbell on"Incense and Peppermints"

- The Moody Blues' Days of Future Passed

1. "The Day Begins" (5:49) :
- a. "The Day Begins" (4:07)
- b. "Morning Glory" (1:42)
2. "Dawn" (3:49) :
- a. "Intro" (0:39)
- b. "Dawn Is A Feeling" (3:10)
3. "Morning" (3:55) :
- a. "Intro" (0:21)
- b. "Another Morning" (3:34)
4. "Lunch Break" (5:33) :
- a. "Intro" (1:53)
- b. "Peak Hour" (3:40)
5. "The Afternoon" (8:23) :
- a. "Forever Afternoon (Tuesday?)" (5:06)
- b. "(Evening) Time To Get Away" (3:17)
6. "Evening" (6:40) :
- a. "Intro" (0:38)
- b. "The Sun Set" (2:39)
- c. "Twilight Time" (3:23)
7. "The Night" (7:24) :
- a. "Nights In White Satin" (5:38)
- b. "Late Lament "(1:46)

Total Time 41:33

Line-up / Musicians:
- Justin Hayward / acoustic & electric guitars, piano & electric piano, sitar, lead vocals (2-b, 5-a, 7-a)
- Michael Pinder / piano, Mellotron, tambura, lead vocals (6-b), spoken voice (1-b, 7-b)
- Ray Thomas / flute, horn (?), piano, percussion, lead vocals (3-b, 6-c)
- John Lodge / bass, acoustic guitar (?), lead vocals (4-b, 5-b)
- Graeme Edge / drums, percussion, backing vocals
With:
- The London Festival Orchestra
- Peter Knight / conductor & arranger

- The Nice's The Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack

1. "Flower King of Flies" (3:56)
2. "Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack" (2:47)
3. "Bonnie K" (3:22)
4. "Rondo" (8:25)
5. "War and Peace" (5:13)
6. "Tantalizing Maggie" (4:30)
7. "Dawn" (5:07)
8. "The Cry of Eugene" (4:30)

Total Time: 37:50

Line-up / Musicians:
- Lee Jackson / lead vocals, bass, guitar, timpani
- David O'List / guitar, flute, trumpet, backing vocals
- Keith Emerson / organ, harpsichord, piano, backing vocals
- Brian Davidson / drums, timpani, tubular bells
With:
- Billy Nicholls / harmony vocals (2)

- The United States of America's self-titled debut, The United States of America,

1. "The American Metaphysical Circus" (4:56)
2. "Hard Coming Love" (4:41)
3. "Cloud Song" (3:18)
4. "The Garden Of Earthly Delights" (2:39)
5. "I Won't Leave My Wooden Wife For You, Sugar" (3:51)
6. "Where Is Yesterday" (3:08)
7. "Coming Down" (2:37)
8. "Love Song For The Dead Ché" (3:25)
9. "Stranded In Time" (1:49)
10. "The American Way Of Love" (6:38)

Total time 37:02

Line-up / Musicians:
- Dorothy Moskowitz / lead vocals (1-4,7,8)
- Joseph Byrd / piano, electric harpsichord, organ, Calliope, electronics, lead vocals (5,10), arranger
- Gordon Marron / electric violin, ring modulator, lead vocals (6,9)
- Rand Forbes / bass
- Craig Woodson / electric drums, percussion
With:
- Ed Bogas / organ, piano, Calliope

- David Axelrod's Song of Innocence

1. "Urizen" (4:01)
2. "Holy Thursday" (5:32)
3. "The Smile" (3:26)
4. "A Dream" (2:30)
5. "Song of Innocence" (4:33)
6. "Merlin's Prophecy" (2:44)
7. "The Mental Traveler" (4:02)

Total Time 26:48

Line-up / Musicians:
- David Axelrod / vocals
- Gary Coleman / vocals
- Gene Estes / percussion
- Freddie Hill / trumpet
- Howard Roberts / guitars
- Carol Kaye / bass
- Richard Leith / trombone
- Arthur Maebe / horn
- Lew McCreary / horn
- Ollie Mitchell / trumpet
- Earl Palmer / drums
- Vincent DeRosa / horn
- Don Randi / keyboards

- Frank Zappa's Lumpy Gravy

1. "Lumpy Gravy Part One" (15:48) :
- a. "The Way I See It, Barry"
- b. "Duodenum"
- c. "Oh No"
- d. "Bit of Nostalgia"
- e. "It's from Kansas"
- f. "Bored Out 90 Over"
- g. "Almost Chinese"
- h. "Switching Girls"
- i. "Oh No Again"
- j. "At the Gas Station"
- k. "Another Pickup"
- l. "I Don't Know If I Can Go Through This Again"
2. "Lumpy Gravy Part Two" (15:51) :
- a. "Very Distraughtening"
- b. "White Ugliness"
- c. "Amen"
- d. "Just One More Time"
- e. "A Vicious Circle"
- f. "King Kong"
- g. "Drums Are Too Noisy"
- h. "Kangaroos"
- i. "Envelops the Bath Tub"
- j. "Take Your Clothes Off"

Total Time 31:39

Line-up / Musicians:
- Frank Zappa / composer, arranger, conductor & producer
With:
- Tommy Tedesco / guitar
- Al Viola / guitar
- Dennis Budimir / guitar
- Tony Rizzi / guitar
- Jimmy "Senyah" Haynes / guitar
- Lincoln Mayorga / piano, celesta, harpsichord
- Pete Jolly / piano, celesta, electric harpsichord
- Paul Smith / piano, celesta, electric harpsichord
- Michael Lang / piano, celesta, electric harpsichord
- John Rotella / woodwind, percussion
- Arthur Maebe / French horn
- Richard Parissi / French horn
- Jimmy Zito / trumpet
- Kenny Shroyer / trombone
- Roy Estrada / bass, chorus
- Bob West / bass
- Chuck Berghofer / bass
- Jimmy Bond / bass
- Shelly Manne / drums
- Frank Capp / drums
- John Guerin / drums
- Alan Estes / percussion
- Victor Feldman / percussion
- Gene Estes / percussion
- Emil Richards / percussion
- "Abnuceals Emuukha Electric Symphony Orchestra" / contracted strings, woodwinds & chorus

Percussion includes: gongs, bells, vibes, marimba, timpani, timbales & assorted insanity.
Woodwinds include: flute, bass flute, piccolo, oboe, English horn, Eb clarinet, Bb clarinet, bass clarinet, contrabass clarinet, alto saxophone, bass saxophone, bassoon & contrabassoon.

- Pink Floyd's Saucerful of Secrets,

1. "Let There Be More Light" (5:38)
2. "Remember a Day" (4:33)
3. "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun" (5:28)
4. "Corporal Clegg" (4:12)
5. "A Saucerful of Secrets" (11:57)
6. "See-Saw" (4:36)
7. "Jugband Blues" (2:59)

Total Time 39:23

Line-up / Musicians:
- Syd Barrett / acoustic & slide guitar (2), guitar (3, 7), lead vocals (7)
- David Gilmour / guitar & kazoo (1, 3-6), vocals (1, 4), voice (5)
- Richard Wright / organ, piano, Mellotron, vibraphone, xylophone, tin whistle (7), lead vocals (2, 6), vocals (1, 4), voice (5)
- Roger Waters / bass, percussion, lead vocals (3), vocals (1)
- Nick Mason / drums, percussion, vocals (4), kazoo (7)
With:
- Norman Smith / drums & backing vocals (2), voice (4), producer
- Stanley Myers Orchestra / brass (4)
- International Staff Band (Salvation Army) / brass band (7)

The Collectors' lone album, The Collectors, 

1. "What Is Love" (3:45)
2. "She (Will of the Wisp)" (3:45)
3. "Howard Christman's Older" (5:10)
4. "Lydia Purple" (2:45)
5. "One Act Play" (3:40)
6. "What Love" (19:15)

Total Time 38:20

Line-up / Musicians:
- Howie Vickie / lead vocals
- Bill Henderson / guitar, recorder, vocals
- Claire Lawrence / tenor saxophone, flute, recorder, organ, vocals
- Glenn Miller / bass, vocals
- Ross Turney / drums, percussion
With:
- Larry Knechtel / piano & harpsichord (4)
- Jesse Ehrlich / cello (4)
- Norm Jeffries / vibes (4)


I will probably never give anything released in 1969 any credit due to the fact that such a large number of qualifying albums released earlier than that year.


 


Sunday, June 1, 2025

"Iconic" vs. "Masterpiece"

For me, the use of the word "iconic" applies more to classic albums that serve as historical guideposts, landmarks of music history, albums whose collective value to the genre or collective consciousness outweighs their actual quality in terms of music. A "masterpiece," on the other hand, deals with a publication that contains a cohesive, balanced collection of songs whose overall quality stands up well over time--over the scrutiny of so-called "experts," critics, and fans, as having the ability, over time, to continue to earn high scores based on merit, interest, and respect. 

For example: many members of Gen X or Gen Z are obviously discovering "classic prog" or "classic jazz-rock fusion" as "oldies," that is, these humans were not alive when these "ancient" artists were producing those albums and must, therefore, look at the album due to some historical importance or significance that history has assigned to them. Yet, it is totally up to them to judge whether or not they like the music--whether or not they understand the reasons for their historical significance--and then to judge whether or not they find value in these albums and musics now, some of them 50+ years on.

When I joined ProgArchives in 2007, I was opening myself up to a vast world of music of which I had never had any knowledge. I was, therefore, pretty much like a babe in a toy store (or a sugar-aholic in a candy store). 90% of the music I've discovered since joining PA has been totally new to me. I had never heard of any of the European Continental bands other than Focus, Passport and those on Manfred Eicher's ECM label, I'd never heard of a Canterbury Scene, Zeuhl, Post Rock, Avant Garde/RIO, Heavy Prog, NeoProg, Prog Metal, Tech/Extreme Metal, Krautrock, Indo-Prog/Raga Rock, or Rock Progressivo Italiano much less heard any albums by any of the bands associated with any of those sub-genres. So, I can definitely relate to having to approach all of "classic prog's" and highly-acclaimed albums on purely historical terms. Whether or not I like or even appreciate these albums the way history seems to value them is up to my personal values and standards. As a case in point, there are currently 61 of PA's Top 100 Progressive Rock Albums of All-Time that I do not consider masterpieces; 159 of the Top 250! I understand the majority of value them, I understand their historical significance and value to others, I just do not see that their music, production, quality and consistency stand up to the scrutiny of the "masterful" level (a lot of them may in fact have been accidental--just achieving such notoriety because they were novel, fresh and/or innovative for their time). 

My point is that I think it important to distinguish between these "classic" landmark albums in music history and whether or not they continue to present themselves as "masterpieces" of human ingenuity. For example, I think there is no question that Terry Riley's A Rainbow in Curved Air, Amon Düül II's Phallus Dei, Iron Butterfly's In-a-gadda-da-vida, The Nice's Ars Longa Vita Breva, and Tony Williams Lifetime's Emergency! were landmark albums in the formation and building momentum of that which would become known as "progressive rock music," but do they stand up over time--55 years later--as "great" or even "good" music? These iconic albums mark great steps in the evolution of music but, if released (for the first time) today, what kind of attention and awe would they generate (if any)?

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Prog Is Dead! Long Live Prog!

It's official! The old formats, the old style of making music, the exploration of new sounds made possible from technological advances in electronic and computerized equipments is done, finished, kaput! The only things left to music artists are musicianship and the creation and manipulation of rhythm, melody, and groove. Music no longer requires collaborators or studios or record labels or even concert venues in order for artists to gain a following and, thereby, income. And, while loyalty to a known/set team of collaborators may still work, it is just as easy to A) create music on one's own (thanks to highly-advance computer software) or B) create music via cybernetic data sharing with other musicians (sharing files). Heck! Even the old concept of creating an album with the same core unit of collaborators (once called "a band") is outdated and obsolete. Now an artist can easily create and release (and realistically hope for sales) of single songs, live videos, "Zoom"-like video collages of "live" in the studio performances, or "albums" of lengths in which anything goes! ("New releases" get announced every day of songs or song collections that might be 3-minutes, 10-, 14-, 20-, 30-, 72-, or even more than 150 minutes [as well as "entire discographies"] through media sites like Bandcamp, YouTube, iTunes, AppleMusic, Reddit, Spotify, or the very few specific record labels that persist in existing.) 

Gone are "live" in-the-studio recordings with their negotiated engineering dialogues/arguments and spontaneous instances of magical invention and whole-group entrainment grooves. Almost gone are the requirements of performing your own tracks on individual instruments (most of which have been rendered unto computers and/or synthesizers that are MIDI-tracked to the on-screen compositions that you've programmed) that are tried to be kept "in tune" (whatever that means) (thanks to Autotune) and that are lined up with the song's other individual tracks by the skill of the other participating artists' musicianship not though digitalized engineering controls. Yes, compositional knowledge and skill are as important as ever, but sound palettes are no longer dependent on instrumentally-replicable (or -treated) sounds but only on what sounds you can create with wave manipulation software on your computer(s). While it is exciting, the new sounds and structures one can create, as well as the fact that music-making, start to finish, has been democratically rendered into the hands of the individual, but I strongly fear the disappearance of the art of live collaboration (other than in pure, unstructured jam forms). Yes, there will always be a preponderance of dedicated artists who purposely replicate the music (and stage performances) of the old masters ("cover bands" and "tribute bands"), but I believe we are the end of the period of progressive rock music in which new music can and will be made that expands the lexicon of sound and style beyond anything that has already been created. Exploration and replication will continue but innovation and "pushing boundaries" will be relegated to production and engineering in lieu of style and spontaneous mental and physical dexterity. 

I think that these feelings that I'm expressing are one of the reasons I'm being so drawn back into the music of the "Classic Era" of Progressive Rock and Jazz-Rock Fusion: these are the recorded samples of humans, exploring, creating, and playing together. You can feel the connections, the way the individual musicians feed off of the others. You can hear the creativity and moments of improvisational triumph, anguish, frustration, and failure! while at the same time also feel those moments of supra-human synchronization--that spirit-based phenomenon that all musicians know as "entrainment" (which athletes refer to as "The Zone")--a magical place in which your efforts and expression seem to be so "locked in" as to feel "out of body," transcendent of that which requires human thought or skill, where the music just plays itself and you find yourself more of a conduit for some Higher Power of creativity--one that unites, unifies, and empowers the individual with the confidence of a "Oneness of all things." (Yes, I have been blessed with experiencing this feeling of "entrainment"--on multiple occasions--the most of which have occurred while playing a musical instrument with other musicians. What a blessing!) 

Maybe that's why I get so little enjoyment out of my listens to the music on Miles Davis' Bitches Brew--my attempts to feel/hear the genius and innovation of this music: it's not a presentation of pure live music captured on tape; it's the result of the tape manipulations of a risk-taking engineering genius by the name of Teo Macero. What the music of those sessions really sounds like, we will probably never know. The record we have, called Bitches Brew, is one man's fabricated, altered, highly-individualized expression of music that was recorded on August 19, 20, and 21 of 1969. The album wasn't released until March 30 of 1970--seven months after the music was rendered unto tape--which is no small indication of how much cutting and splicing Teo did before it was released as a "Mile Davis" album. This particular case is also a perfect reflection with some of my dissatisfaction with the "progressive rock" music being created and released in the last 20 years (in all of the subgenres but especially within the NeoProg, Rock Progressivo Italiano, Post Rock, and Symphonic Prog subs); its almost all cold, soul-less, computer-processed repetition of old (tired) forms, sound palettes, styles, and motifs. And even the often-brilliant RIO/Avant Garde, Tech/Metal, and  stuff coming out is beginning to sound like repetitions of its older self. The only subgenres occasionally generating interesting, sometimes innovative, new music are the Crossover, Canterbury (rare), Progressive Electronic, and Experimental/Post Metal subs. 

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

WARNING! ACHTUNG! AVERTISSEMENT! There has been a secession!

 Some of you readers may notice the sudden absence of posts singling out "Jazz-Rock Fusion" (especially "Classic Era" J-R F). This is the result of a new and sudden event: I've created not one but two entirely new and separate blogsites dedicated exclusively to Jazz-Rock Fusion.

A Compendium of "Classic Era" Jazz-Rock Fusion (https://j-rfusioncompendium.blogspot.com/) and The Supernova that was Jazz-Rock Fusion (https://explorationsinjazzrockfusion.blogspot.com/) have been created in order to offer lists and reviews of the albums from the "Classic Era" of Jazz-Rock Fusion (the Compendium) and research articles and opinion pieces regarding the artists and albums, trends and forces, and historical perspectives of that amazing ten-year period (Supernova), respectively. 

While I personally still feel that the Jazz-Rock Fusion subgenre was very much a part or product of the progressive rock movement, I see enough readers who do not/will not include the artists and/or their albums when discussing or searching for their progressive rock. Thus I have separated J-R F from my prog publications with the intention of both extricating that information from the prog lover's musical searches but also celebrating J-R Fusion as its own entity. Making its information and discussion more its own will hopefully attract people who are more enthusiastic to J-RF specific topics.

Prog Is Alive and Well in the 21st Century will chug along acting as if business is usual, but we all know that a passion for Jazz-Rock Fusion has diminished considerably my interest and attention to Prog World. Only time will tell how well I split my time between the two. 

Thursday, February 8, 2024

Why 2023 might be The Best Year for Progressive Rock Music in this 21st Century.

    Year:    # Mastrpieces   - # of Minor  -  # Near-Master-  - # Other Excellent - # "Indespensible"                                                Masterpieces             pieces                 Albums                    Albums

 _______   ________         __________        _________      _________       ____________

2000:        0        -          5         -        1        -        10          -     16/9

2001:        0        -          7         -        3        -        13          -     23/18

2002:        1        -          3         -        3        -          7          -     14/8

2003:        1        -          1         -        2                 9          -     13/12

2004:        1        -          5         -        2        -          6          -     14/12

2005:        4        -          5         -        2        -          5             16/18

2006:        2                9         -        1        -          9          -     21/20

2007:        2        -          8         -        3        -          8          -     21/26

2008:        1        -          8         -        4        -          6          -     19/28

2009:        2        -         11        -        1        -          7          -     21/29

2010:        0        -         10        -        3        -          8          -     21/34

2011:        6👏        -     12        -        3        -          6          -     27/35

2012:        2        -         14        -        3        -          7          -     27/30

2013:        6👏        -     10        -      12👏    -          5          -     33/38

2014:        4        -         15        -        3        -          7              29/30

2015:        4        -         15        -        5        -        10          -     34/40

2016:        7💪    -         19        -      12👏    -        13          -     51/45

2017:        4        -         25👏    -      10        -        19          -     58/42

2018:        3        -         22        -        6        -        28👏          59/39

2019:        1        -         19        -        7        -        15          -     42/33

2020:        3        -         12        -      10        -        26          -     51/40

2021:        3        -         15        -        9        -        13          -     40/47

2022:        2        -         23        -        9        -        23          -     56/48

2023:        4        -         33💪    -      14💪     -        32💪      -     83/49


While 2023 does not present Prog World with the most outright masterpieces of the 21st Century, it does have the most "minor masterpieces," the most "near-masterpieces," and the most "excellent albums." Also, having 49 albums that I've designated as "indispensable" to my music collection puts the year at one more than 2022--a year I do not consider to be in the conversation for "Best Year of the 21st Century." While it is true that I have reviewed more albums in the last 14 years than the previous nine, (in 2016, my most dedicated year, I listened to over 350 new album releases, averaging about 200 for the other years since 2008), this does not, however, seem to skew the ratings results as the number of albums that I consider "indispensable" from my music collection fares no better than the years in which I listened to half as many albums, i.e. quantity does not predict quality. The number of quality albums that I heard (and reviewed) in 2023 was 83. This is 24 more than the previous best years (2018; 25 more than 2017). While I cannot argue that I may have missed some great albums in the years 2000 through 2008 due to my having not been engaged in the world of progressive rock music during those years (thus, everything I've come to know has been retroactively), I would argue that I have tried, that quality (and quantity) in those years was lacking when compared to more recent years. I mean, I've only found 11 true masterpieces and 46 "minor" masterpieces from those first nine years of the 21st Century--and I can guarantee you it's not from lack of trying!