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  1. You can find the progressive rock music discographies from 12,509 bands & artists, 75,767 albums (LP, CD and DVD), 2,064,127 ratings and reviews from 69,360 members who also participate in our active forum.

  2. You can find the progressive rock music discographies from 12,508 bands & artists, 75,760 albums (LP, CD and DVD), 2,064,040 ratings and reviews from 69,356 members who also participate in our active forum.

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  4. PROG ARCHIVES intends to be the most complete and powerful progressive rock resource. You can find the progressive rock music discographies from 12,508 bands & artists, 75,736 albums (LP, CD and DVD), 2,063,893 ratings and reviews from 69,354 members who also participate in our active forum.

  5. Discover the most collected and trending Prog Rock music. Connect with Prog Rock collectors across the globe and complete your collection.

    • Jon Dolan
    • Happy the Man, ‘Happy the Man’ (1977) Formed in a James Madison University dorm room, Washington, D.C.- based Happy the Man recorded three venerated, mostly instrumental prog albums in the late 1970s, striking a seductive middle ground between sax-driven jazz-fusion lunacy (circa Zappa's One Size Fits All) and synth-heavy meditative twittering.
    • Ruins, ‘Hyderomastgroningem’ (1995) Beaming down from the far reaches of the prog-rock galaxy, this Japanese drums and bass duo slam together mathematically improbable meters and dissonant blasts of rhythm with nonsense wails or demonic growls.
    • FM, ‘Black Noise’ (1977) Superficially, Toronto-based FM had a lot working against them: Aside from Rush, Canada was never a prog hotbed, and the band released its debut album in 1977, as many of the genre's originators were fading.
    • Crack the Sky, ‘Crack the Sky’ (1975) American rockers aren't known for their prog ambitions, and the bands that did push the boundaries usually slipped through the commercial cracks.
  6. Jun 24, 2021 · Top 50 Progressive Rock Albums. From 'The Lamb' to 'Octopus' to 'The Snow Goose' — the best LPs that dream beyond 4/4. 50. Hatfield and the North - 'Hatfield and the North' (1974) It's the ...

  7. A (mostly) progressive rock discography. Jon & Vangelis make the music, but it’s David Coker’s impressions of James Cagney and Peter Lorre that steal the show.

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