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  1. Avant-prog is an umbrella term which refers to any progressive rock artist with a strong leaning towards avant-garde and highly experimental approaches to music. Therefore, it includes the sub-genres of Rock In Opposition (see below) and Zeuhl in addition to general avant-prog artists.

  2. Dec 4, 2021 · Most avant-prog artists are highly unique and eclectic in sound and consequently tend to resist easy comparisons." **I listen to a lot of prog, but I also listen to a lot of classical. Mostly classical from the 2nd half of the 20th century, up through the current era. I have no problems switching between avant-prog and modern classical composers.

  3. The new-old-school movement is busy trying to bury its more promising acts genuinely carrying on the creativity of the 90's under scene-clout oriented revisionist worship bands, war metal is lol, caverncore is still a thing for some reason, the dissodeath movement has gone from alien to mundane to tediously narrow post-skronk garbage, tech death still hasn't finished jacking itself off in one ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Avant-progAvant-prog - Wikipedia

    Avant-prog (short for avant-garde progressive rock) is a music genre that appeared in the late 1970s as the extension of two separate progressive rock subgenres: Rock in Opposition (RIO) and the Canterbury scene. History and characteristics

  5. Progressive: try to innovate with what is already available with regular music theory. Avant garde: rip music theory apart and put it back together in a way that hopefully makes sense. Technical: if you don't have carpel tunnel at the end of each song you're playing it wrong. Experimental: throwing stuff at a wall and seeing what sticks.

  6. Avant-Prog is short for avant-garde progressive rock. This style appeared in the late 1970s as the extension of two separate prog rock sub-styles: Rock in Opposition (RIO) and prog of the Canterbury scene.

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  8. Avant-Prog. Avant-Prog is short for avant-garde progressive rock. This style appeared in the late 1970s as the extension of two separate prog rock sub-styles: Rock in Opposition (RIO) and prog of the Canterbury scene. The latter, with groups like Egg, Soft Machine, Caravan, and Hatfield & the North (all based in or around the town of Canterbury ...

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