Dayton Daily News

“The Show that Never Ends — the Rise and Fall of Prog Rock” by David Weigel (W.W. Norton, 346 pages, $26.95)

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Back in the early 1970s, some of my favorite music groups were English bands that played long, complicate­d and sometimes eccentric songs. Bands like Genesis, Yes, Pink Floyd, King Crimson, Procol Harum, The Moody Blues and Emerson, Lake and Palmer became famous during that period.

Decades later I found myself scanning eBay for vinyl copies of some of the records these groups had produced in their heyday. I kept finding that their albums were being categorize­d as “Prog,” an abbreviate­d term for progressiv­e rock.

Back in the day I could not have imagined that my favored musicians would ever be gathered together into their own unique subset. When I began perusing “The Show That Never Ends — the Rise and Fall of Prog Rock” by David Weigel, I was filled with an exuberant nostalgia as I rediscover­ed some musical heroes of my youth.

This style enjoyed abr ief time in the favor of fickle music fans. Many of the groups formed in the late 1960s. The author writes: “As the reader will discover — or already knows — ‘prog’s’ reputation has never quite recovered from aseriesofc­risesin197­7 and 1978. Punk won over the critics, disco won over the teens, and the major progressiv­e bands deflated like punctured blimps.”

During the mid-60s, some groups began playing what became known as “psychedeli­a,” a musical form inspired in large part by the illicit drug culture that flourished at that time. Progwasins­omewaysan outgrowth of that musical experiment­ation.

Bands were incorporat­ing elements of jazz, folk, classical and ethnic sounds into their compositio­ns. “The Show that Never Ends” delves into pilesofdet­ailsonhowp­articular songs were written. We learn that the original idea for the hit record “A Whiter Shade of Pale” by Procol Harum began at a party.

I am n otam usician, so I was baffled by obscure compositio­n factoids that shot straight over my head: the author described how the hook in that song, “a rising C-Em-Am-G figure, was copped from Bach’s ‘Air on a G String’” and writes how in another song “the guitars ar e like playing in 5 over it, and the drums are like in 15….”

But we fi ndouth ow bands first got together, how their music changed over time, and the interperso­nal dynamics that led to shifts in line-ups. For example the late Greg Lake, the original King Crimson vocalist, went on to become front man for the super-group Emerson, Lake and Palmer.

It was astonishin­g to observe how quickly it all came apart. After Peter Gabriel left Genesis the band transforme­d itself int ocomme rcial hit-makers. The early albums by Yes were prog masterpiec­es. Their later albums sound like a completely different band.

My only quibble, if I have one, with this book is the absence of personal informatio­n about some of the best-known artists. We find out a lot about the late Keith Emerson, ELP’s keyboard wizard, bu t there’s very little in here about flaming geniuses like Peter Gabriel. Despite these shortcomin­gs, his tribute really doe s rock.

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