[net.music] How 70's music sounds in the 80's

jeff@dciem.UUCP (Jeff Richardson) (07/11/85)

> It's amusing reading all the Yes postings.  I had assumed that most netters
> were too young for that.  I used to be a BIG Yes fan but their music seems 
> irrelevent now.  A year ago I tried listening to "Tales from Topographic 
> Oceans" followed by the Genesis album "The Lamb Lies ..." and it seemed 
> that Yes's sound (at least on Tales) was obsolete but that Genesis still 
> sounded fresh.  Maybe that's because Peter Gabriel sounded close to the 
> edge (clever gag) like a lot of 80's music, while Yes was mushy.  Funny how
> Roxy Music used to sound sharp in the 70's, and now sound glazed over.

I'll have to agree that Yes's music sounds somewhat dated (though I can still
enjoy it), more so than Genesis's.  (I think of all the big "progressive rock"
acts, ELP is the one that to me sounds the most dated.)  However, I have to
disagree about Roxy Music.  To me, their early work sounds much fresher today
than pretty well any of the other groups of that era, including Genesis.  At
first, I thought maybe it was because I hadn't played my Roxy Music records as
much as my Yes, Genesis, ELP and Pink Floyd, but now I think it's because Roxy's
music has more in common with a lot of the 80's music than the other groups
do.  Perhaps Eno's assistance (mainly as producer) to a lot of new groups during
the past eight years has something to do with that.
-- 
Jeff Richardson, DCIEM, Toronto  (416) 635-2073
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