The 10 Greatest PROG VISIONARIES | Ranked

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июл 2024
  • Become a Patreon! / andyedwards
    Andy is a drummer, producer and educator. He has toured the world with rock legend Robert Plant and played on classic prog albums by Frost and IQ.
    As a drum clinician he has played with Terry Bozzio, Kenny Aronoff, Thomas Lang, Marco Minneman and Mike Portnoy.
    He also teaches drums privately and at Kidderminster College
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Комментарии • 247

  • @armyofmoths
    @armyofmoths Год назад +10

    Thank you for including Tim Smith.
    A genius and a truly beautiful man.
    Cardiacs are in a league of their own.

  • @MattCarter67
    @MattCarter67 Год назад +14

    Thanks for including the genius Tim Smith, and also Mike Oldfield whose 70s albums are just beautiful.

  • @beta14ok
    @beta14ok Год назад +5

    So good to see Todd on this list.

  • @vdggmouse9512
    @vdggmouse9512 Год назад +3

    Top 10 prog visionaries - tough to do just 10 - but I'll try. Listed Alphabetically.
    Ian Anderson
    Holger Czukay
    Keith Emerson
    Robert Fripp
    Edgar Froese
    Peter Gabriel
    Peter Hammill
    Andy Latimer
    Vittorio Nocenzi
    Klaus Schulze
    There are MANY more - but I'll stick with this for now.

  • @Darrylizer1
    @Darrylizer1 Год назад +6

    Magma are a band best experienced live. Their series of DVDs shot in Paris in the mid 2000s called Mythes et Legends Vol 1 to (I think 5) which featured members of the band from their entire history are mind blowing. Vander is a freaking force. Edit: I saw them live at Slims in San Francisco and Jello Biafra of the Dead Kennedys introduced the band. Their show was a semi religious experience.

    • @h.m.7218
      @h.m.7218 Год назад +2

      I agree although I would say "spiritual" experience rather than "religious". Not that I have anything against religion but "spiritual" is broader than "religious".

    • @ericmckayrq
      @ericmckayrq Год назад

      Will check that out

    • @Darrylizer1
      @Darrylizer1 Год назад

      @@h.m.7218 Yes I agree, spiritual is a better descriptor.

  • @simonkeefe8653
    @simonkeefe8653 Год назад +7

    As a massive Zappa and CARDIACS fan I appreciate and share your passion. Your words concerning both of them were eloquent and very moving. I was fortunate enough to see Zappa live on more than one occasion but was too late to the party to see CARDIACS, a sadly missed opportunity, Tim Smith was a unique talent and a true genius.

  • @david.leikam
    @david.leikam 2 месяца назад +1

    Fripp and Zappa are two of my favourite artists too. Cheers! 🥸👍

  • @stuartfishman1044
    @stuartfishman1044 Год назад +3

    Hi Andy,
    I'm with you on Cardiacs and Tim Smith. I didn't discover Cardiacs until last year, when I was 64 going on 65. I had a natural reaction: Why the hell have I not heard of these people?!?!? For them to mash together so many different influences in such an organic way is the definition of brilliance.
    I also appreciated seeing Robert Fripp on your list (not that you would have ignored him). In the early 70s, he saw the creative stagnation that was coming in Prog and decided to stay ahead of it while others either drowned within their chosen formulas or simply couldn't adjust. He basically made that clear in an interview for Musician Magazine he did with Joe Strummer. And those two got on really well.

  • @ganazby
    @ganazby Год назад +7

    Daevid Allen!!!
    Delighted to see Francis Dunnery getting his dues. Frank Zappa is, without doubt, the ultimate visionary. Great list, Andy (except for the omission of the aforementioned Mr. Allen).

  • @thekeywitness
    @thekeywitness Год назад +6

    Before I watched this channel I never even heard of the Cardiacs and It Bites.
    I’m surprised Ian Anderson didn’t make the cut. He’s a true original.

  • @ericmckayrq
    @ericmckayrq Год назад +2

    Love the list. I think Primus were one of the most progressive American rock bands ever...They didn’t sound like anyone before them...they basically created a new form of music. Super dissonant, odd time signatures, the bass is being strummed like a rhythm guitar, the Les Claypool doesn’t have much of a voice so he makes up for it by affecting all kinds of hick Americana stereotypes...like a carnival barker... or an auctioneer (without the speed) ....Uniquely American lyrics too (ballads of truck drivers, Hicks and methheads) They managed to have huge commercial success and cultural significance for a time too despite being having the least commercial sound imaginable...
    I think they were so progressive that they transcended the term and sadly never get talked about by prog fans much..
    Currently on tour playing farewell to kings with Rush’s blessings

  • @Rick-jg8vx
    @Rick-jg8vx Год назад +5

    Well done Andy, putting Zappa number one I completely agree with. I love all those Prog artists you highlight but about 25 years ago I really discovered Zappa on a deep level and bought a ton of his albums and learned so much about other great 20th century avant garde composers because of him. Completely expanded the way I look at music and art.

  • @ClassThrash
    @ClassThrash Год назад +2

    Couldn’t agree more with that Tim Smith section, the man truly was king!

  • @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328
    @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328 Год назад +7

    Good callout on Todd Rundgren! A catalogue worthy of exploring. "Healing" is incredible. "A Capella" album has all the arrangements done with overdubs of just his voice! "Road to "Utopia" SHOULD have been as big as "Breakfast in America". Every song while still true to the Utopia esthetic, could have been a radio hit.

    • @iangelling
      @iangelling Год назад +3

      There is nothing more prog than Singring and the Glass Guitar.

  • @keithhannigan8507
    @keithhannigan8507 Год назад +6

    Love your list, very moving tribute to Tim Smith, so happy you put him on it!!!

  • @jdewey8841
    @jdewey8841 Год назад +2

    I often feel alone in my love for the Cardiacs, so it was nice to hear your effusive comments about the late Tim Smith. And you're right, there really is a winsome quality to his compositions, however complex they may get.

  • @pascaldeshayes5459
    @pascaldeshayes5459 9 месяцев назад +1

    Sheik Djerbouti -> shake your booty.
    Oh my… I finally get it.
    Thank you.

  • @Hartlor_Tayley
    @Hartlor_Tayley Год назад +2

    That was fun and interesting. Thanks

  • @markperry9427
    @markperry9427 2 месяца назад

    Great video, as soon as I saw the title I thought of Fripp and Zappa, they have to be the two greatest musical geniuses ever.
    Fripp never did the same thing twice, he wanted to push himself and other musicians around him. When Bruford joined Crimson Fripp told him to forget everything he'd done with Yes, Bruford had to develop a completely new style, and be continually changing it.

  • @JohnnyRecently
    @JohnnyRecently Год назад +2

    Resplendent list. Fantastic description and justification.

  • @jacquesfinster5034
    @jacquesfinster5034 Год назад +2

    I started see this video now after see Francis i yous last gig. Two videos became to me acidentaly....belive or not....

  • @Brian-jv5me
    @Brian-jv5me Год назад

    Andy, good evening and thank you for this wonderful, thought provoking presentation!! You've listed some real favourites of mine and offered some new choices for my listening adventures! (And all with a smile!!) Keep up the fine work. Cheers from Owen Sound Canada
    Brian

  • @TheProgCorner
    @TheProgCorner Год назад +4

    Well done, Andy!!! Fantastic episode.

  • @edgeofnow
    @edgeofnow Год назад +4

    Yet another brilliant video my good Sir. I was just thrilled to see Tim Smith and Cardiacs! I only stumbled upon them several years ago and just can’t get enough of them. I also loved their videos.

  • @ericmckayrq
    @ericmckayrq Год назад +1

    I’m an instant new fan of It Bites. Thank you 🙏

  • @mudge102661
    @mudge102661 Год назад +4

    Always a intelligent take on various music genres my current favorite channel always on point loved the Jeff beck tribute big fan of Zappa and Todd another great video 👍

  • @alfredoreynoso7184
    @alfredoreynoso7184 Год назад +2

    Muchas gracias Andy de darnos tus opiniones de estos grandes artistas y darme la oportunidad de conocer un mundo musical diferente ! Saludos

  • @urniurl
    @urniurl Год назад +1

    What a great list, a balance of some of my faves, Wilson, Tim Smith, Magma, Barrett and some I need to explore - Cheers.

  • @davidwylde8426
    @davidwylde8426 Год назад +1

    Having seen it bites multiple times in small West Midlands venues in the mid to late 80’s and supported Wilson in the mid nineties this vid has properly pulled me off my ren immersion and reminded me of how good your judgement is. 👍

    • @davidwylde8426
      @davidwylde8426 Год назад +1

      Ps
      Ignore the intersectional guys commenting on your English aesthetic vids.
      I like your concept( regardless of the specifics), if nothing else, and it’s definitely worth considering and reflecting on, without culture war warriors trying to bully you into submission

  • @ambientideas1
    @ambientideas1 Год назад +9

    You are so right to point out that Keith Emerson really understood the value of showmanship and performance art as much as the value of the music. When he starts stabbing his keyboard with knives.. fuck yeah!

    • @frankfertier34
      @frankfertier34 9 месяцев назад

      I saw him with PJ Arnold, then at the Marquee club in 1967: the knife was used to hold the keys down and get a sustain, not to stab this poor L100 !

    • @girthbloodstool339
      @girthbloodstool339 5 месяцев назад

      When he starts stabbing his keyboard, I think "what a fekkin prat." Good for a larf, I guess.

  • @jackg5893
    @jackg5893 Год назад +1

    Hey Andy, great job on the visionary video, I really enjoyed it! May I offer an honourable mention: Radiohead. Thom York and Johnny Greenwood are incredible visionaries from the 90’s and into the new millennium. And as you have mentioned on many occasions that Radiohead is Prog. When you look at their history they start out with a mediocre AM song, but massive hit in 1993 “Creep”. Then we hear “Paranoid Android” (1997) from OK Computer which is an absolute prog classic. Then we are treated to “National Anthem” in 2000 from the amazing album “Kid A” where the instrumental section features an incredible Ornette Colman like wind solos, that crescendos to the end of the piece. In 2003 “Hail the Thief” pushes musical envelopes even further, experimenting with found sounds, odd meters and new unconventional forms. I believe that Thom York and Johnny Greenwood are worthy of honourable visionary mention.
    Keep up the great work!
    Jack G from Canada

  • @croydonmassive
    @croydonmassive Год назад +1

    I saw It Bites at The Warehouse in Leeds in the late 80's. They were ace 🙂

  • @janvrolijk9126
    @janvrolijk9126 4 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for including Tim Smith, Francis, Frank and Todd. I only miss Peter Gabriel.

  • @johannhauffman323
    @johannhauffman323 Год назад +5

    Slam dunk on no. 1 & 2 Andy
    I completely understand how Zappa can elude a list….. Sometimes he is above and beyond.
    Wonderful bio on Fripp, and the inclusion of Todd Rundgren I find is absolutely deserved.

  • @pascaldeshayes5459
    @pascaldeshayes5459 9 месяцев назад +1

    I'm totally with you on Frank Zappa.

  • @anthonysilva5312
    @anthonysilva5312 Год назад +3

    I know you like Fripp (I personally think he’s overrated)
    Agree with Zappa , however! Nice video , mate.

  • @Darrylizer1
    @Darrylizer1 Год назад +1

    Cardiacs! Wow, I just got Sing To God Vol. 1 and 2 and it is freaking crazy! I mean that in the best way.

  • @mainzergirl9610
    @mainzergirl9610 Год назад +1

    Andy, your description of FZ explains why it seems he is more appreciated now than in the 80s. Many of us didn't get him ... yet.

  • @sdrandazzo
    @sdrandazzo Год назад +4

    Looking forward to this episode Andy! You know that I would include Peter Hammill of Van der Graaf Generator ... know he many not be on your list and that is fine. Deep respect for your expert opinions.

  • @MALCFUNCTION
    @MALCFUNCTION Год назад +1

    I love that you love Tim so much.

  • @magiscichoam
    @magiscichoam 4 месяца назад

    Another informative and thought provoking presentation. I absolutely agree with your analysis and perspectives on Frank Zappa, Robert Fripp and Roger Waters. Bravo!

  • @PhilsGuitar
    @PhilsGuitar 6 месяцев назад +1

    Can't agree more about Tim - he had a huge talent for making crazy chord progressions completely work! I covered Stoneage Dinosaurs this year and its almost like playing jazz when you learn it on guitar for the first time - and thats one of the less mad Cardiacs songs!

  • @garygomesvedicastrology
    @garygomesvedicastrology 9 месяцев назад +2

    I would have included Spirit and Soft Machine as true rules breakers. I also love the Residents and Henry Cow. I realize that Andy's background and mine markedly differ.
    Zappa was an excellent first choice. Fripp I struggle with at times, because after the original King Crimson (ending in 1974), I actually think he recycled ideas people had pioneered earlier (even in 1974, i think of Starless as a cut and paste of earlier King Crimson ideas-I know people love that piece, but I can remember hearing Red and being disappointed that I didn't hear anything new). Brilliant guy, but brilliant at repackaging to a certain extent. Even the Discipline group and the 1990s bands were kind of recycled Soft Machine with electric guitars. So, maybe Emerson as the guy with the original vision that KC smoothed out and made commercially palatable. I love Fripp, but sometimes think he gets too much credit for innovation.

  • @oolongoolong789
    @oolongoolong789 Год назад +1

    In no particular order - Frank Zappa, Don Van Vliet, Peter Hammill, Robert Wyatt, Robert Fripp, Brian Eno.

  • @daicullinane7746
    @daicullinane7746 Год назад +1

    Fun show, Andy. "This next song's To go off and things."

  • @johnreilly9748
    @johnreilly9748 Год назад +1

    Hey I Get so excited I post too early. GREAT VID!

  • @Darrylizer1
    @Darrylizer1 Год назад +1

    Robert Fripp and Toyah's version of Too Drunk Too F*ck by the Dead Kennedys is hilarious.

  • @cafe.cedarbeard
    @cafe.cedarbeard Год назад +1

    Speaking of cold, camping in PNW as the temp freezes. Lockdown crushed income, still trying to recover. Ugh me mateys, it's cold here now. As for the list, you got Robert Fripp. He's a key favorite of mine as guitar has become my main finger based instrument behind vocals as main focus in recent years. Guitars in cases to survive the upcoming dip in the temperature to far below water's freezing point.

  • @markoliver630
    @markoliver630 Год назад +1

    1. Keith Emerson 2. Greg Lake 3. Carl Palmer 4. Jon Anderson 5. Chris Squire 6.Rick Wakeman 7. Steve Howe 8. Bill Buford 10. Alan White

  • @paulclarkson2614
    @paulclarkson2614 Год назад +1

    Maybe Peter Gabriel should be there? Not for his genesis stuff, but after. His sampling stuff, his popularity after, that video? Listening to him now you can see his influence on so many things. That’s me view. I agree with your 1 and 2 though.

  • @garygomesvedicastrology
    @garygomesvedicastrology 9 месяцев назад +2

    Nazz was never just a garage band. They were extremely polished and their drummer, Thom Mooney was virtuosic.
    (He later went into studio work.) Mike Oldfield was influenced by groups like Soft Machine (and Terry Riley, to my mind the most important minimalist), who were also visionary.

  • @h.m.7218
    @h.m.7218 Год назад +4

    There's a lot more to TR than AWATS and TR's Utopia. Initiation ( 1975 ), he personally tagged as his best to date at the time. Noone bought it of course... Too much pushing of bounderies, both structurally and sonically. Some of his best complex pop songs though ( Real Man, Initiation ) + the second half which happens to be electronic prog. First 17 minutes of it are genius. Not a fan of the end of it, the rythmic patterns. But anyone interested in challenging music must take a listen to it. As far as I'm concerned, it's as much a unique album as AWATS. More of the same with his 81 ( ? ) album, Healing.

  • @rogermansour6085
    @rogermansour6085 4 месяца назад

    Let's not forget The Vanilla Fudge who were a big influence on many of the English bands namely YES, ELP, King Crimson,Deep Purple, ect
    Evangelist Roger Mansour former Leslie West Vagrants Drummer

  • @drytool
    @drytool 4 месяца назад

    Totally with you on Tim Smith!

  • @zeuhl5840
    @zeuhl5840 Год назад +1

    Nice of you to come back to Magma and Christian Vander...🙏

  • @bertkarlsson1421
    @bertkarlsson1421 Год назад +1

    Some great choices. I'm glad Vander made the list! I think J. A. Caesar should be considered on a list like this! Kokkyou Junreika and Shintokumaru are masterpieces!! J. A. Caesar combined prog, zeuhl, psych, opera, japanese traditional music with theater plays! No one has ever done that before or since!

  • @thrak9
    @thrak9 11 месяцев назад +1

    Fist side of OMMADAWN is a masterpiece. World Music, Before World Music.
    and the guitar orgasm is really an orgasm.

  • @wagstaff6135
    @wagstaff6135 Год назад +1

    Great episode. Even though I can no way make a "10 greatest" or "top 10" list of almost anything in music, and therefore wouldn't want to critique or rearrange ANYTHING here -- for me, I would have to include Mike Keneally.

  • @bwanitobwanito2722
    @bwanitobwanito2722 Год назад +2

    Agree about Franck Dunnery and Tim Smith, sooo underrated visionaries...
    imo Kevin Gilbert & Casey Crescenzo could be in a US prog unknown geniuses ranking ;)

  • @F.O.H.
    @F.O.H. Год назад +1

    Check out Pat Leonards band Trillion. Prior to writing all of Madonna's songs, Pat had a prog tock band in his home of Chicago. They released 2 albums the debut Trillion and the follow up Clear Approach. I prefer the later but you can add them to the U.S. list of prog rock bands.

  • @quoc-cangtran2260
    @quoc-cangtran2260 Год назад +2

    Bill Laswell !

  • @arnaudb.7669
    @arnaudb.7669 Год назад +1

    1- Frank Zappa
    2- Christian Vander
    3- Robert Fripp
    4- Daniel Denis
    5- Frank Wyatt
    6- Dave Stewart
    7- Jon Anderson
    8- Todd Rundgren
    9- Peter Hammill
    10- Kerry Livgren

  • @psychicdriver4229
    @psychicdriver4229 Год назад +2

    One of the most proggy and most underrated... and certainly a pioneer... poor old Joe meek, of telstar Fame...the 1st incarnation of Brian Eno....eno even swiped some of his sounds... I'm kind of shocked too...eno has never spoken of him or givin him any credit that I'm aware of.

  • @jasonshort1437
    @jasonshort1437 Год назад +2

    Heartwarming to see Tim Smith in this list.

  • @tonymonahan1185
    @tonymonahan1185 Год назад +3

    Jon Anderson

  • @loonylotto4363
    @loonylotto4363 Год назад

    Bravo Andy! Worthy of Laudation sir! #TimSmith #Cardiacs 🌼

  • @FeliciteThosz
    @FeliciteThosz Год назад +2

    Although I take exception to his ranking in your list (if you knew the range of the music, I think you'd place him right after Zappa), I think your description of Christian Vander and Magma was spot on. I'd recommend anyone not familiar with the band to start with Kohntarkosz, although Theusz Hamtaahk and Wurdah Itah (live versions) are also great, and more typical of the hypnotic chant style that you described. The album you mentioned, with Didier Lockwood on violin, was Live '75, and the version of Kohntarkosz there (called Kontark) is fuller than the studio version.

    • @AndyEdwardsDrummer
      @AndyEdwardsDrummer  Год назад +1

      Recently I discovered Attahk which is mindblowing. More fusiony I suppose....

  • @MisterWondrous
    @MisterWondrous Год назад +2

    Well done! I would upvote Jon Anderson, Peter Gabriel, John McLaughlin and Lisa Gerrard but your one and two are practically incontestable.

    • @squinteyedmangle
      @squinteyedmangle Год назад +1

      Lisa Gerrard,that`s more like it.She`d definately be on my list,along with McLaughlin.

  • @toddbulky
    @toddbulky Год назад +2

    Tim and Francis in the same list? You have my subscription, right there. Both utter geniuses. ♥
    Re: American prog though...have a listen to Bubblemath. You'll thank me if you do, because they (for me) are the finest and most original US prog act ever 😁👍

    • @ganazby
      @ganazby Год назад +2

      Just checked out Bubblemath. Man, they are brilliant. Thanks for the heads up.

  • @duringthemeanwhilst
    @duringthemeanwhilst Год назад +1

    34:15 - I actually shouted, no cheered out "YES".

  • @sicko_the_ew
    @sicko_the_ew Год назад +2

    That's a great list. It's even almost "The List", if one remembers that it's people who've opened things up, expanded the world, transgressed against whatever new conformities arrive, that you're talking about. It was good to see Tim Smith there. I can understand those who disagree with this, because I was very slow on the uptake with Cardiacs. Tim's music is truly unique, so you can't make use of all the familiar "anchor points" (even though it's also so down-to-Earth and familiar, too). To see what dragons there be down there takes a bit of time for some of us. In a way, it's easier to appreciate someone like Frank Zappa, for all his avante-ness (or avanted-ness? I always forget), because it's more obvious and presented as such - where Tim tried to make his music as approachable as possible - even when it was The Duck and Roger the Horse. Cardiacs tomfoolery is to make people comfortable with all the "pop" that comes popping out of them. De-intimidation, someone called it in his seminal paper on something, now forgotten. Either that or I'm a compulsive liar.

    • @AndyEdwardsDrummer
      @AndyEdwardsDrummer  Год назад +1

      Surprisingly no one is questioning that choice.

    • @sicko_the_ew
      @sicko_the_ew Год назад

      @@AndyEdwardsDrummer I think over here you might have some silent dissent, or " disagreement by omission", so that might be partly down to people just being nice (and maybe a bit too delicate/ conflict avoiding - but then who wants avoidable conflict?).
      And then "out there" is the occasional person Cardiacs rubs up exactly the wrong way. And I don't blame them. They're wrong, but I can't blame them. Tarred and Feathered was made to ruffle feathers, to some extent, I think, for instance. That said, well done human race for liking it best of them all. :D

  • @beta14ok
    @beta14ok Год назад +1

    Agree that FZ is above this list and beyond any genera based categorization. Thanks for an interesting show.

  • @sanjayjani8099
    @sanjayjani8099 4 месяца назад +1

    The Gilmour-Waters row and the ensuing cynicism could be wonderful material for a concept album… especially by a newly reunited Pink Floyd. Haha!!!! Not a chance in hell!

  • @ericarmstrong6540
    @ericarmstrong6540 Год назад +5

    Frank Zappa and Robert Fripp are 1A and 1B in my book. Captain Beefheart is an underappreciated musical and artistic savant. He would be my 3rd choice.

    • @AndyEdwardsDrummer
      @AndyEdwardsDrummer  Год назад +3

      I agree about Beefheart's visionary-ness. Just noy sure how prog he is

    • @ericarmstrong6540
      @ericarmstrong6540 Год назад +3

      @@AndyEdwardsDrummer I view him as being progressive (more blues and avant garde influenced), however he doesn't fit neatly into the prog rock of the English. EDIT: I would posit this proposition: If someone as eclectic as Tm Smith can make this list, then Beefheart is a candidate.

    • @garygomesvedicastrology
      @garygomesvedicastrology 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@ericarmstrong6540I think most Progressive fans are very restrictive in their view of what constitutes Prog. Captain Beefheart was a big influence on Jethro Tull. The subdivisions are pretty meaningless to me. You don't need long solos or classical quotes to be Progressive. You need to do something new, that breaks barriers.
      Beefheart was revolutionary in what he put together.
      The vision of what is progressive is very limited.

    • @garygomesvedicastrology
      @garygomesvedicastrology 9 месяцев назад

      Nazz was never just a garage band. They were extremely polished and their drummer, Thom Mooney was virtuosic.
      (He later went into studio work.) Mike Oldfield was influenced by groups like Soft Machine (and Terry Riley, to my mind the most important minimalist), who were also visionary.

  • @dombradshaw1015
    @dombradshaw1015 Год назад

    Came here for Tim Smith, wasn't disappointed, thank you - think I'll put Sing To God on now!

  • @palacerevolution2000
    @palacerevolution2000 Год назад +2

    I too came upon the Cardiacs rather late. Just insane, and brilliant. Not just Tim Smith. The band surrounding him is up to the job. I am a little surprised to not see Black Midi mentioned. There is a whole lot of Cardiacs in their contemporary performance.

    • @AndyEdwardsDrummer
      @AndyEdwardsDrummer  Год назад +1

      Yes...discussed them on my history of prog videos....

    • @palacerevolution2000
      @palacerevolution2000 Год назад

      @@AndyEdwardsDrummer Very cool. I must've missed that clip. Am going to watch it.

  • @jeremiahmartens6008
    @jeremiahmartens6008 Год назад +1

    Bob Moog - what would Prog be without his invention
    Peter Gabriel - putting the Victorian/English theatre style in Prog
    Jon Anderson - the New Age/Guru thing. Did he got that from Mahavishnu? Because he said after seeing them they needed to rehearse a lot more haha. He said the same after seeing Crimson in '69.
    Ian Anderson - putting a more down to earth economic songwriting style in Prog. I think that's why a lot non-Prog fans like Tull.
    From our time maybe Mikael Akerfeldt. Apart from Steven Wilson.

  • @dlsamson
    @dlsamson Год назад +2

    I'm particularly gratified for your mention of Tod Rundgren, I'm a huge TR fan & the particular charm for me is that TR has eschewed any particular format & has in fact, made a point of exploring multiple formats. Yes he did some great prog stuff & you really need to explore him further for your own edification. I personally believe that the three album arc: Something/Anything, AWATS & Todd is one of the most remarkable musical arcs of any musical artist. (Having listened to AWATS, you really should listen to side one (of 4) of Todd & contemplate the particular juxtaposition of songs. While AWATS & Todd are indulgent at times they make a remarkable statement of independence as a follow on to Something/Anything which most people regarded as a masterpiece - which it is - but TR declared that he was not going to get niched out like so many other artists.
    In the progressive vein - you should really listen to Initiation & RA although "Another Live" is also worthwhile.
    As a producer, you must, must, must listen to "A Capella" & make note of the fact that he created this album using 1985 tech!
    Genres:
    Pop(?): Hermit of Mink Hollow
    New Age: Healing
    Broadway musical (style?): Nearly Human, 2nd Wind
    Bossa Nova: With A Twist
    Blues: Todd Rundgren's Johnson
    Grunge(?): Arena
    With Utopia:
    Hard rock: "Oops, Wrong Planet" & "Swing to The Right"
    Metal: Oblivion
    Beatles paean (or satire, take your pick): "Deface The Music"
    Disco (satire): Disco Jets
    Arguably, a big reason for TR's lack of popularity is the fact that he almost never repeats himself & (as you know) the general public likes predictability. With a TR album, you never know what you are going to get. Invariably, even the albums which I didn't particularly like at first listen have a knack for growing on you over time. In most of his solo work, TR also plays most of the instruments.
    As a side note, did you know that in TR's financing & production of Meatloaf's "Bat Out of Hell" album, Todd thought of it as a satire of Bruce Springsteen - even to the point of having several E St. Bandmembers (Max Weinberg and Roy Bittan) playing on it?
    As a producer yourself, you owe it to yourself to learn more about Todd

    • @h.m.7218
      @h.m.7218 Год назад

      Hi there, my fellow TR fan ! I read what you've written and there's something I really don't get. Oblivion ( an alltime favorite of mine, btw ), a "metal" album ? "metal" ? WTF ? For me it's a fabulous power pop album with 3 killer slower tracks thrown in for good measure. Actually my alltime favorite in that particular genre. I love it as much as I love TR's Utopia. Love the sound of it, the production.
      Wouldn't say either that Ooops and Swing are "hard rock"... I had to go and see the songs on both. Apart from Trapped, it's ecclectic pop rock to my ears...
      Oh, and most of Arena I would tagg as "hard rock"... Or at least hard rocking.

    • @dlsamson
      @dlsamson Год назад

      @@h.m.7218 OK, labels are tricky things. As a fellow TR fan, I'm sure that you appreciate that Todd never seemed like a big fan of them so I hope that you will pardon my attempt to categorize an artist who defies categories. I also love Oblivion & Swing

    • @h.m.7218
      @h.m.7218 Год назад

      @@dlsamson No problem. I'm just happy some of us appreciate his music as much as it deserves to be.

  • @BugsLivesmatter66613
    @BugsLivesmatter66613 Год назад +2

    Godley and Creme, Mondo Video part one two and three, and the album Consequences.

  • @lupcokotevski2907
    @lupcokotevski2907 Год назад +2

    Fripp and Toyah, I think, have music generally worked out in the context of life in terms of fun, seriousness, self-expression and making a living. Good on them. Rundgren is truly brilliant creatively and technically and Frank was clearly a real thinker. If you want to see Frank laugh (rare) see his interview with Australian comedic character Norman Gunston, the model for Borat. Gunston's interviews with many celebrities such as Paul and Linda McCartney Keith Moon etc are hilarious.

  • @ShreveportJoe
    @ShreveportJoe 2 месяца назад

    Can’t argue with anyone on the list. Brian Eno would’ve probably made it onto mine. ✌🏼

  • @Hydrocorax
    @Hydrocorax Год назад +2

    I'd love to hear you go deeper into your idea that ethics come from aesthetics (if I'm paraphrasing you accurately).

  • @bertkarlsson1421
    @bertkarlsson1421 Год назад +1

    I think Frank Bornemann should be considered for a list like this. He is the grandfather of symphonic space rock!

  • @psychicdriver4229
    @psychicdriver4229 Год назад +3

    Bowie-" ain't there one God damn song that can make me break down and cry"....me- "yes, but it won't be a prog song."

    • @johnpace5774
      @johnpace5774 Год назад +1

      Try House With No Door, by Van Der Graf, or Drive, by Steven Wilson, maybe?

    • @psychicdriver4229
      @psychicdriver4229 Год назад

      ​@@johnpace5774 thanks John I will... actually after I thought about it I realized there were a few... old Greg Lake ballads, some Syd Barrett songs I think players that are more concerned with technique and virtuosity tend to lose some Humanity along the way... and once something becomes formulaic, which seems to happen to all bands eventually

    • @psychicdriver4229
      @psychicdriver4229 Год назад

      Yeah the Peter hammill/ Van Der graaf sure did the trick... Hammill could definitely emote when he was on...a little too much veneer on the Wilson stuff though, but it reminded me of some old Genesis that did the trick back in the day...didn't really want to cry today, but oh well🥸thanks!

    • @johnpace5774
      @johnpace5774 Год назад

      @@psychicdriver4229 sorry, brother! Breaks me up every time I hear it.

  • @bakeone4406
    @bakeone4406 Год назад +1

    If it's to be assumed that breaking new ground is the primary criteria for being cited as a visionary there are many artists who arguably have eclipsed Wilson, Rundgren and Oldfield. A few who are conspicuously absent:
    Don Van Vliet
    Fred Frith
    Allan Holdsworth (I know yer a big fan and realize that he was much more than a spectacular guitar player)
    Irmin Schmidt, (Can was a massively influential band and it may be somewhat unjust to single out one player from that group)
    Mike Johnson/Thinking Plague & Hamster Theater (USA)
    Dave Newhouse/The Muffins (USA)
    John Zorn (USA)
    Peter Hammill, (Vander Graaf was unique and they were hugely influential, especially in Italian prog)

  • @Rick-jg8vx
    @Rick-jg8vx Год назад +1

    Looking at your most popular videos, they clearly are the 10 greatest Prog or fusion. I suggest you start doing top 20.

  • @naderzekrya5238
    @naderzekrya5238 Год назад +1

    Brilliant episode
    The Australian Daevid Allen who formed Soft Machine" in the UK + "Gong" in France could've been on the list?
    Here from abroad, we considered ROBERT WYATT as a quintessentially softer British prog visionary.
    I agree Zappa will forever be no1

  • @davestephens6421
    @davestephens6421 Год назад +2

    So where oh where is the brilliant and wonderfully eccentric Daevid Allen??? He created a whole new world!!!!!

  • @REFaust
    @REFaust Год назад

    Good choices all round, the only person that came to my mind who wasn't mentioned is Robert John Godfrey, but I'm not sure if you're familiar with The Enid 👍

  • @Quinceps
    @Quinceps Год назад

    Andrew is probably the only guy out there doing justice to Cardiacs and Tim Smith today.

  • @urniurl
    @urniurl Год назад +1

    Tim Smith brought the love and euphoria, no doubt about it. None of these other guys brought the big love. You listen to cardiacs music and you just grin with joy.

  • @larrycass3198
    @larrycass3198 Год назад +6

    “Steven Wilson” is Now the Most Visionary Alternative, Prog Rock Artist Performing Today!

    • @stuartraybould6433
      @stuartraybould6433 Год назад

      Lol, that's funny

    • @Quinceps
      @Quinceps Год назад

      I find he’s like the Tim Burton of prog now. A bit too effectist.

  • @shawn6669
    @shawn6669 2 месяца назад

    Your musical preference progression sounds very similar to my own. I think a lot of gen Xers could say the same. FWIW Cheers! S.

  • @johndrayton8728
    @johndrayton8728 Год назад +2

    Great list once again.
    Serious question - would prog as we know it have been possible without Eddie Offord, the ears behind ELP and Yes? Their quality and success made prog popular (and therefore bankable ...)
    Such was his greatness that Greg 'Love Machine' Lake himself invited Eddie to "f--- me all night long" on side 2 of "Tarkus". OK, maybe not visionary, but how many other blokes did Greg acknowledge in that way? Not many, I bet.

  • @narosgmbh5916
    @narosgmbh5916 Год назад +1

    You chose a difficult term: Vision is something diffuse. Is it a look into the near future (e.g. having short-term success with a musical prog rock concept), is it something long-term (with a goal at the end of the road (e.g. everyone will speak Zeuhl) or is it something where you just give advice : go to the doctor Your 10 examples are more or less suitable for the fulfillment of a vision (regardless of how many records have now been sold) I would definitely name Holdsworth as one of the great visionaries of prog rock music. Just where he has always been unsatisfied is an indication of his vision of how to play and that sometimes it fails) And Carlos Santana! Zawinul tells the story of how he first meets Santana to discuss the WR record.. That he, Z, finds that Santana can't read music, but that his explanations are somehow understood by Santana, and he finds himself in an apparently makes notes about it in his own musical language and somehow understands what one could ask of him. Zawinul, certainly not uneducated musically, describes the result that Santana delivers for in as "master of the melody". More vision is not possible. To deliver something that was created in your own world.
    Something similar with Capt. Beefheart, who, with trial and error, has his idea rehearsed by qualified musicians until he is satisfied with the result (realizing the vision).
    And because CAN is mentioned in another comment. How to deal with a band that doesn't insist on being called a rock band or prog rock band. And yes, without a doubt, they don't play rock music either. The German electronic music from Cologne and Berlin as well as the minimalist music has nothing to do with prog rock. It is and remains electronic music and a genre of its own. Some journalists may have drawn the Krautrock drawer a thousand times.
    And sure there are italian hidden champions. But how to speak about something we know nothing about.

  • @tylerboley1786
    @tylerboley1786 Год назад

    another great video, and your Cardiacs, and Tim, comments were more than well deserved and actually quite moving, thank you. Your mention of a possible video about American prog made me jump at the chance to mention these guys, a near secret. Contemporaries of the Vanilla Fudge, who were doing long re-arrangements, they took everything to an entirely new level. “Touch”, one album, about 1969 and then they were gone. Incredible arrangments, energy, performance, 2 epic tracks, classical, jazz, avant garde, psychedelic, a clearly realized sonic vision… you name it. The album is said to have influenced Crimson and Yes in their early years. ruclips.net/video/zcBB3IMSFtg/видео.html

  • @MrMaynardWR
    @MrMaynardWR Год назад +1

    I've always thought that Frank Zappa was in someways the modern day version of Spike Jonze

  • @bertkarlsson1421
    @bertkarlsson1421 Год назад +1

    I think Mr. Doctor from Devil Doll should be considered as well.

  • @grahamnunn8998
    @grahamnunn8998 Год назад +1

    Reading Wilson's Limited Edition of One and he is far more open to admitting he is prog but his first success was with No Man, an art rock band. PT started as a joke until people picked up on Radioactive Toy. His Bass Communion and Blackfield projects are another side of him. The book is a good read and the best way to understand him, though The Album Years podcast with Tim Bowness (No Man) is hugely entertaining.

    • @AndyEdwardsDrummer
      @AndyEdwardsDrummer  Год назад +1

      I am playing with Tim Bowness this summer. I first heard of SW in the No Man project back in the 90s.

    • @grahamnunn8998
      @grahamnunn8998 Год назад

      Well, that's got to be a ticket worth buying! Will look out for dates nearby. I know Tim has connections with Trading Boundaries...

  • @goatuscrow4135
    @goatuscrow4135 11 месяцев назад

    Before I watch: Robt. Fripp #1
    After.. will have to take a look at Cardiacs, RED blows it all out of the water, Zappa? … would have been my choice for “Uncle Meat” alone.