Drinky Wrote:
Spade Kitty Wrote:
Drinky Wrote:
Spade Kitty Wrote:
Why does Can get a free pass to wank but Genesis does not?
Can, much of the time, ROCKED. Genesis, never. Ever.
I would put them at completely opposite ends of the spectrum of what could be considered prog.
Are you famiiar with the Genesis song "Return of the Giant Hogweed"?
It's almost a heavy metal song, for christ's sake.
How bout any of the album "Foxtrot"?
I've listened to bits of
Foxtrot, and none of what I heard "rocked". I'm not gonna get all in-depth in their catalog to try and prove myself wrong so I'll just go ahead and admit that I may be generalizing based on fairly limited knowledge.
Still, these are two bands with very different aims who I believe were drawing on some widely different influences. I think a lot people who like stuff like Funkadlic and Sly & the Family Stone are often also into Can. Their music is more rhythmic and generally is propelled by more of a groove structure than bands like King Crimson, Genesis, and Yes that seemed to be aiming for pseudo-classical composition and complexity. Can was simple and direct while much of prog tried to be very cerebral.
Really, I shouldn't have to explain this to anybody with ears.
Well that's pretty a dismissive way of putting it.
The major influences of the first two Yes albums were Crosby Stills and Nash, the Beatles, and jazz artists, before they got Steve Howe from Tomorrow and went more into the arena you're talking about. Even after Howe and Wakeman joined, songs like "Heart of the Sunrise", "South Side of the Sky" and "Roundabout" from Fragile rock a hell of a lot more than most Can songs. Sorry, but they do. Same for most of the material on "Close to the Edge". Actually, same for "Relayer". Yes rocked a lot harder than they get credit for, mostly because of their 1972-3 excesses. A lot of it was written out, but don't tell me that Yes didn't rock because they were a very loud band despite their effeminate frontman.
King Crimson was pretty cerebral, but their early proto-ELP albums aren't anything like what they became in their mid 70s period. By the time 1974 rolled around, their live set (as evidenced by the live boxed set The Great Deceiver) was half-based on groove-improvisation, especially with that rhythm section of Wetton and Bruford. It was more angular improv, but it was along the same lines as Can. They did at least 20-30 minutes of completely free improv every night!
Genesis is perhaps the most classically-influence of those bands, but to say they didn't "rock" is not really fair. They had their moments, even if they did become sort of wispy and pop-oriented after Gabriel left.