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I've actually got Tool's Lateralus album playing on my iPod right now. I'm a sucker for odd time signatures. Personally, and way off topic, I really enjoy when a band can do complicated time signatures in a way that it doesn't really stand out, but just fits the song and so doesn't sound odd. That's especially impressive if they can change signatures multiple times without creating a "jerky" feel. Radiohead has done a little of that. --Josh > Tony wrote: > " It is interesting to note that there is a very active and very good > modern > prog scene going on." > > I really love the later Porcupine Tree and have seen them twice now. > They are pretty proggy > but also he is a fantastic melodist and singer (and a great guitarist to > boot). > > Interestingly too, in the grunge scene, Tool has really taken on a bit > of > a prog vibe. Their last two records > have very few even time signatures on them. The second to last (which I > think is a powerful record) is > almost entirely in 5/4, 5/8 or 10/8). It's very dark, somber, > melancholy > and mono melodic if you are a Yes fan, though, so > be sure and know I told you so. Great drummer, by the way. > > *************************************** > > Yeah, Prog Rock: > > > I was a huge prog fan in my later high school years and the first year of > college ('71') > but I must confess that I grew out of it in the much the same way that I > grew out of Jazz Fusion > (which I was a slavish fan of at it's inception). > > I guess in the long run for me, it always comes down to composition and > I'm > a song fan, so > gratuitous riffage really leaves me cold these days. It's ironic >because > having played all my life > I finally have the chops to play in both of those styles really well but >I > find that record producers > are starting to ask me if I will please play more on a song these days > when > I do studio work. > > Personally, I love groove music and I always tell my students: when >you > are playing groove > styled music of any kind you can only be doing one of two things at a > time: > 1) playing the groove or > 2) commenting on the groove > > and, if you are commenting on the groove (riffing, filling) then you are > NOT > playing the groove. > Because the groove is so trancey, I think a lot of musicians forget that > it > does not necessarily continue if you quit playing it. > The musician playing the groove feels it more, I believe than the >audience > hearing it which makes it more important to be > more conservative and minimal when attempting to leave the groove as a > rhythm section player. > > Bill and I once saw Wah Wah Watson get 5,000 people dancing in 30 seconds > with one L5 Gibson and a wah wah pedal. > He WAS the groove. > > Now, I know this makes me a bit of an old fashioned player and this > precludes the lion share of the Jam Bands that have proliferated so much > but that's how I see it. > > Personally, I"d rather listen to a structured Prog Rock band than a > meandering Jam Band (no matter how stellar the chops of the musicians). > > Okee dokee.................you can start flaming now.............lol > > >