IronWing
No Lifer
- Jul 20, 2001
- 69,077
- 26,973
- 136
Three, Kansas was mentioned. Technically accomplished and boring. Of the three, Rush is the most interesting.Oh great two boring bands
Three, Kansas was mentioned. Technically accomplished and boring. Of the three, Rush is the most interesting.Oh great two boring bands
Three, Kansas was mentioned. Technically accomplished and boring. Of the three, Rush is the most interesting.
Of all the insults one could level at Rush, it's weird to hear "boring" be one of them.Oh great two boring bands
Nah, they're both progressive rock. It's more of a contrasting term, as opposed to hard rock, with straight-forward chord progressions and time signatures. Progressive rock plays with the formula more, often with longer songs, and often times conceptual elements.Both bands are talented, and I like neither of them. Pink Floyd was mentioned as a "progressive rock" band, which I've heard before, but I can't reconcile that with the sound of every other "progressive rock" band. Either Floyd is progressive rock, or Yes is, but it can't be both. I like Pink Floyd.
Yes blows. Rush is fine.
Owner of a Lonely Heart is one of the most annoying songs ever.
Both bands are talented, and I like neither of them. Pink Floyd was mentioned as a "progressive rock" band, which I've heard before, but I can't reconcile that with the sound of every other "progressive rock" band. Either Floyd is progressive rock, or Yes is, but it can't be both. I like Pink Floyd.
Yes blows. Rush is fine.
Owner of a Lonely Heart is one of the most annoying songs ever.
Both are amazing bands. The original Yes line up is essential progressive rock, its interesting that the more radio friendly bands that Yes splintered across in the 80s (Asia, Yes-west and even ABWH) all started to sound like Rush.
I think we're just going to have to agree that you're wrong.Pink Floyd...kinda after the Beach Boys in a way, but truly were the first to "create music from noise" using synthesizers and cut tracks that way. No one really did that to the level and understanding of Floyd, before DSOTM was released. It's that important. Pretty much there is like, Before DSOTM, and After DSOTM, when it comes to making "modern rock/pop albums," or whatever you want to call it.
Yes also prefigures a lot of hard rock and metal in ways that a lot of ignorant diaper-wearing "I love scandinavian death metal!" idiots think music is about. It's all evolutionary. If you can't see what those guys were doing at that time and understand what it means now, to fans that like other genres, then that is a detriment to taste (Not you--just a general comment). No one has to like or be a fan of this stuff, just "get it."
Obviously, PF is the best of all, and they are clearly Progressive by "the standards of how we label genres," and they are the standard bearers. Rush and Yes fall into this category, because they were all "making noise with non-standard means," and fiddling with driving rhythms that hadn't really been heard before. (people get confused because PF was pretty much the middle of Psychedelic for maybe 5 years, then Barret ate a shot of acid...stuff happened and he went byebye...and viola! they basically created progressive by mistake!)
Later Yes is pretty cheesy (I mean, just like The Grateful Dead--the greatest American R&R-Folk-Blues-all band ever and there really is no debate about this, but I digress), but you can't listen to Roundabout and All Good People and their cover of Something's Coming (Sondheim) and not understand how fucking brilliant and influential they were for a spell.
And Rush is fucking awesome too...whom I much prefer to Yes...but I mean, I get the criticism.
What about the voice of Geddy Lee
How did it get so high
I wonder if he talks like an ordinary guy
etc....
I think we're just going to have to agree that you're wrong.
If the gameplay, art, story, and mechanics weren't enough to persuade you that Homeworld was an absolutely fantastic game, Relic had Yes perform the end credits song to push it over the top.
God I am losing so much respect for posters in this thread. I should unsubscribe.
^^^ Don't ask me what I think about people who listen to 'rap'. You won't like it.
^^^ I stumbled on a group doing something called 'doom metal'. Band is The Skull and some of their stuff is pretty good ... mellow, dramatic, but still musical enough to mix in with other rock.