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    • The Roots of Progressive Rock - TeachRock
      • Progressive Rock, or simply “Prog,” emerged in Britain during the late 1960s from a specific set of musical, social and technological trends. Early Prog Rock drew on many sources, combining elements of Rock and Roll, Psychedelic Rock, Jazz, Folk, and Classical music.
      teachrock.org/lesson/the-roots-of-progressive-rock/
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  2. Progressive rock (shortened as prog rock or simply prog) is a broad genre of rock music [ 9 ] that primarily developed in the United Kingdom [ 1 ] through the mid- to late 1960s, peaking in the early 1970s.

  3. Oct 10, 2023 · The origins of progressive rock are inextricably bound up with the seismic changes in the British music scene that took place in the mid-60s, when bands that had hitherto forged their reputations playing American rock’n’roll, R&B, blues and soul began writing their own songs.

    • Hugh Fielder
  4. Jul 21, 2013 · Within five short years rock’n’roll began to give way to the beat groups of the early 60s at which point, that strange small little island of Great Britain began to surely but firmly make its...

    • Origins and Meaning of Progressive Rock
    • Progressive Rock in The Mainstream
    • Critics Confusion – What Counts as Progressive?
    • The Future of Progressive Rock
    • Key Moments in The History of Progressive Rock

    Progressive rock, also known as prog rock or just prog, initially began to develop in the UK in the late 60s early 70s. Capturing the experimental, barrier breaking mood of the 60s generation, progressive rock was an inherently exploratory genre, which sought to discover and create new musical planes and unheard sounds. Driving the experimentation ...

    The first fully fledged example of progressive rock, an album by King Crimson titled The Court of the Crimson King, was released at the end on 1969. The album included the use of the Mellotron, utilised the most modern recording techniques, and included elements of classical, jazz, and symphonic music. Having gained exposure by playing in front of ...

    The word progressive has been thrown around by music critics without a great deal of regard for what it refers too. In part, this is due to the shifting styles of the main prog rock bands. Nearly all the early 70s progressive rock acts started out playing different music and went on to play yet another kind of music after dabbling with prog. Lazy m...

    Progressive rock returned in the 1990s with Ozric Tentacles, Big Big Train, Spock’s Beard, and Echolyn. Though these acts never achieved anything close to the commercial success of the 70s prog rock acts, they have continued to be popular among a niche audience and have kept the genre alive and developing. In the 2000s, several of the 70s groups re...

    1969 – King Crimson released The Court of the Crimson King marking the birth of progressive rock as a recognised genre. 1972 – Jethro Tull released Thick as a Brick earning themselves a place among the prog rockers. 1973 – Mike Oldfield produces the best selling progressive rock album of the 70s, Tubular Bells. 1974 – King Crimson break up. 1975 – ...

    • John Heart
  5. Progressive Rock, or simply “Prog,” emerged in Britain during the late 1960s from a specific set of musical, social and technological trends. Early Prog Rock drew on many sources, combining elements of Rock and Roll, Psychedelic Rock, Jazz, Folk, and Classical music.

  6. This ‘progressive’ version of rock music was rooted heavily in influences associated with middle-class culture in Britain: Anglican church music, folk music, medieval, Renaissance, neoclassical and Romantic sources, exotic musics from old colonial sources, and the like.

  7. Progressive rock could have never emerged from the working-class milieu that was responsible for the formation of genres such as heavy metal and later, punk rock; throughout the 1970s, progressive rock's audience consisted largely of a middle-class, post-hippie extension of the counterculture.