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Tossing in some other recommendations for classics: Van der Graaf Generator - H to He, Who Am the Only One Mahavishnu Orchestra - Birds of Fire Renaissance - Scheherazade and Other Stories Magma - Mëkanïk Dëstruktïẁ Kömmandöh Electric Light Orchestra - Eldorado
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 06:03 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 15:55 |
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^^^E: Thanks! I'm throwing together a playlist of albums on google play to work through Iucounu posted:Here is a concise list of important progressive bands and one album you should listen to by them: You are a bolder man than I, to give Zappa a genre. I already know Hot Rats quite well, I'll give the others a listen (and probably Hot Rats too because Hot Rats). That is also exactly the type of list I was hoping for, thanks! I just threw Fragile on streaming. I'm definitely familiar with Yes and Rush on an individual song level, but I don't know that I've ever listened to a whole album by either of them. Just finished listening to Fragile: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Af8ltlcZNi0&feature=youtu.be&t=1m10s (But seriously I'm excited to listen to the next stuff, that was really enjoyable) surc fucked around with this message at 06:57 on Jul 31, 2015 |
# ? Jul 31, 2015 06:12 |
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Vulture Culture posted:Tossing in some other recommendations for classics: These are solid picks as well.
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 06:28 |
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surc posted:^^^E: Thanks! I'm throwing together a playlist of albums on google play to work through Add some Italian prog to that. Semiramis - Dedicato a Frazz Maxophone - s/t Banco del Mutuo Soccorso - Io Sono Nato Libero Premiata Forneria Marconi - Per Un Amico Osanna - Palepoli for starters. One of the most dependable countries for good prog. If you want something weird but very fun, Koenjihyakkei - Angherr Shisspa is a good way into more avant-garde prog. If you want to hear a really good supergroup effort with Allan Holdsworth on guitar, U.K. - s/t.
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 07:17 |
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You might also want to listen to some krautrock, like Neu! or Can or Faust or all the other usual suspects. You've also got cool RIO stuff like Henry Cow or Art Zoyd.Gamma Nerd posted:Add some Italian prog to that. imo the best italian prog is Museo Rosenbach - Zarathustra. Area are also extremely good although more similar to a lot of the RIO bands than symphonic prog. A human heart fucked around with this message at 09:35 on Jul 31, 2015 |
# ? Jul 31, 2015 09:31 |
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Listened to Aqualung after Fragile before going to bed last night. My previous Jethro Tull experience has been through Guitar Hero and people going "DUDE CHECK OUT THIS SWEET JETHRO TULL SOLO", so this was something of a revelation and I really dug it. I didn't mind the switch to less synthy stuff from Yes, in fact it worked really well as a follow up. I totally would have put Jethro Tull off until way later on my own based on my preconceptions, I bow to your organization of builiding radness, Iucounu.A human heart posted:You might also want to listen to some krautrock, like Neu! or Can or Faust or all the other usual suspects. You've also got cool RIO stuff like Henry Cow or Art Zoyd. Gotta be honest, if a recommendation is for an artist without an album, I'm just gonna ignore it at this point. I really appreciate it and will try and check them out down the line, but there's just so much stuff out there that I need to start more focused or I'll never get anywhere. I did throw Zarathusa onto my playlist though, thanks! Also, does RIO stand for Real Instrument Orchestral or something similar? Never seen it before but I'd assume since it's contrasted to synths. Google Play doesn't have the Magma album, the Camel album, or a couple of the italian ones recommended by Gamma Nerd (All Access my rear end!), but other than that....
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 16:42 |
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Continue along on your prog journey, but since you liked Yes and Jethro Tull the next albums from those bands you should check out are: The Yes Album and Close to the Edge (Yes) and Thick as a Brick (Tull).
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 16:55 |
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IMO a good Yes album to start with is Yessongs, since it contains better versions of most of the tunes from Close to the Edge, The Yes Album, and Fragile
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 17:01 |
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That's a good point, but I feel like I appreciate killer live versions of tunes more when I've fully digested the studio versions.
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 18:15 |
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surc posted:Also, does RIO stand for Real Instrument Orchestral or something similar? Never seen it before but I'd assume since it's contrast to synths. Nah, it's Rock in Opposition. It's sort of a hard style to define, but it tends to be really cerebral, often dissonant, and influenced by modern classical chamber music. It started out as a group of bands (led by Henry Cow) who were fed up with the music industry not recognizing them, but the overall stylistic similarities, combined with the addition of more bands to the roster, made it a more recognizable style, so some modern bands like Yugen get tagged with the term, as well as anything Fred Frith of Henry Cow is involved in.
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 18:35 |
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surc posted:I'm just diving into prog rock, and could use some guidance. I have a copy of Brain Salad Surgery I picked up back in the day, and I've liked the prog stuff I've heard around. I've got some King Crimson on the way, any other consensus on where a good place to start is, or is it going to be 50 different answers from 50 different people? I tried reading the start of the thread to get some idea, but that was most definitely everybody recommending different personal faves. If you want to listen to an awesome live prog album I recommend Genesis - Seconds Out. Still one of my favorite live albums of all time.
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 19:06 |
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Gamma Nerd posted:Nah, it's Rock in Opposition. It's sort of a hard style to define, but it tends to be really cerebral, often dissonant, and influenced by modern classical chamber music. It started out as a group of bands (led by Henry Cow) who were fed up with the music industry not recognizing them, but the overall stylistic similarities, combined with the addition of more bands to the roster, made it a more recognizable style, so some modern bands like Yugen get tagged with the term, as well as anything Fred Frith of Henry Cow is involved in. Gentle Giant also briefly went in a RIO direction with Interview, which I still consider the greatest thing they ever did, and one of the best progressive rock albums of all time. Be sure to check it out if you really like Knots, once you get around to listening to Octopus. Also Gryphon's Red Queen to Gryphon Three was one of the albums that really got me into progressive rock as a genre, and I highly recommend it if instrumental prog with a medieval folk influence sounds interesting to you. Their first two albums (although less prog) are excellent too, and I've never heard a rendition of The Unquiet Grave I like more than theirs.
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 20:52 |
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Yeah I love Interview, I've listened to their whole discog except The Missing Piece, Civilian and Giant for a Day. And I would definitely back up that Gryphon rec, amazing band.
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 21:14 |
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Interview is a great album. My introduction to GG was that and Free Hand (another great album, and their only one to chart in the US if I'm not mistaken) on a CD together. A buddy of mine uploaded this video of them performing "Proclamation" featuring John Weathers basically being the sexiest drummer alive: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UWfmfgHXAfE
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 21:52 |
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surc posted:Gotta be honest, if a recommendation is for an artist without an album, I'm just gonna ignore it at this point. I really appreciate it and will try and check them out down the line, but there's just so much stuff out there that I need to start more focused or I'll never get anywhere. Henry Cow - Legend Art Zoyd - Symphonie pour le jour ou brul Area - Arbeit Macht Frei Can - Future Days Faust - Faust IV Neu! - Neu! 2 I don't think you'll find the RIO bands or Area on a streaming app, but I might be wrong.
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 23:58 |
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spiralbrain posted:If you want to listen to an awesome live prog album I recommend Genesis - Seconds Out. Still one of my favorite live albums of all time. On the note of live albums, Hawkwind's Space Ritual. Noodle-y in spots, but great energy. I'll also throw in Curved Air's Phantasmagoria, Genesis' Nursery Cryme and Hawkwind's The Hall of the Mountain Grill.
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# ? Aug 1, 2015 04:01 |
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Saw Aristocrats last night here in Toronto. Marco Minnemann is a true monster. I've seen him drum for a couple acts (normally SW) but playing his own music was another level of insanity behind the kit. Only minuses were weak opening acts (really expected more from Travis Larson) and the burnout standing next to me who talked all the time *during* songs to his friend. I asked him to stop but he declared he wasn't 'a sheep at concerts'. Sigh.
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# ? Aug 2, 2015 13:39 |
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Iucounu posted:Here is a concise list of important progressive bands and one album you should listen to by them: I'd throw Roxy Music's first two albums into the list, as well. To me at least, the link between glam/art/prog rock is similar enough that I consider them among this ilk. Also, despite Ian Anderson's best efforts they still lay claims to 'best use of flute in rock' via Virginia Plain. And yes, I know this group had a bigger influence on punk than later prog but I digress. Also seconding Hot Rats. It's one of the few Zappa albums I can actually listen to even though I have a lot of respect for him. Other bands/albums that aren't listed/not necessarily considered prog but are in fact prog: Traffic (any album post-Blind Faith), Television (Marquee Moon) rest his guts fucked around with this message at 15:23 on Aug 2, 2015 |
# ? Aug 2, 2015 15:11 |
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Prog rock 101 King Crimson In The Court of the Crimson King In the Wake of Poseidon Lizard Islands Larks Tongues in Aspic Starless and Bible Black Red USA Discipline Absent Lovers Thrak The Power to Believe Yes The Yes Album Fragile Close to the Edge Yessongs Tales From Topographic Oceans Relayer Going For the One Jethro Tull Benefit Aqualung Thick as a Brick A Passion Play Warchild Minstrel In the Gallery Pink Floyd Meddle Dark Side of the Moon Wish You Were Here Animals The Wall Genesis Trespass Nursery Cryme Foxtrot Selling England By the Pound The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway A Trick of The Tale Wind and Wuthering Emerson Lake & Palmer Emerson Lake & Palmer Tarkus Pictures at an Exhibition Trilogy Brain Salad Surgery These are "The big 6" prog rock bands IMO. By that I mean the most popular ones that came to define the genre in the 70s. That's not to say they were the first. Bands like The Beatles, The Beach Boys, Frank Zappa and The Moody Blues were probably the truly "first" prog rock bands in the 60s, not to mention all the psychedelic rock bands in LA like Jefferson Airplane, The Doors, and the jam bands like Grateful Dead and The Allman Bros Bands that sort of represented the spirit of prog rock before it became a thing. Progressive Rock came more out of British psychedelia though (the term was first coined in 1966 in reference to bands that played the UFO club). But I think the above six were the most popular prog rock bands that came to define the genre in the early 70s. Other honorable mentions include Rush, Renaissance, Gentle Giant, Strawbs, Electric Light Orchestra, Nektar, Hawkwind, Traffic, Kansas, Chicago, David Bowie, Roxy Music, Blood Sweat and Tears, Led Zeppelin, The Nice, Queen, The Who, Fairport Convention, Magma, Caravan, Focus, Camel, Curved Air, Van Der Graaf Generator, Mike Oldfield, and many others that I can't think of off the top of my head. And that's only the first two waves or so. Part of the difficulty of pinning down prog bands is that prog isn't really a genre, it's more of a movement to push pop/rock music beyond established boundaries. It only became identified with a sound after the fact, but every time someone tries to pin down "a sound" it goes and changes again. There was another wave in the late 70s (called new wave strangely enough, a lot of the old prog rock bands adopted the new wave sound in the early 80s too). Then again in the early 80s there was sort of reactionary neo-prog wave and the progressive metal wave sort of came with it (even though it was kind of always around the heavier prog that was played in the late 60s and 70s by most bands, just never really made into its own subgenre until the 80s). Then there was the alternative genre which preceded the whole indie rock scene which was very reminiscent of prog. Post Rock also has a lot of prog leanings. Gianthogweed fucked around with this message at 05:15 on Aug 5, 2015 |
# ? Aug 2, 2015 19:43 |
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Is there like a late period proggy Blood Sweat & Tears I missed?
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# ? Aug 2, 2015 20:36 |
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BigFactory posted:Is there like a late period proggy Blood Sweat & Tears I missed? I think their second self titled album was very progressive for its time (1968). It ran the gamut of different musical styles and it's bookended nicely by the classically inspired "Variations on a theme".
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# ? Aug 2, 2015 23:16 |
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rest his guts posted:Traffic (any album post-Blind Faith) If anyone here hasn't cranked the John Barleycorn Must Die LP, they are missing the gently caress out.
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# ? Aug 2, 2015 23:42 |
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Gianthogweed posted:I think their second self titled album was very progressive for its time (1968). It ran the gamut of different musical styles and it's bookended nicely by the classically inspired "Variations on a theme". I guess it's the same progressive vs prog rock argument. I love that album but it's hard to put it on the same shelf as Topographic Oceans or something.
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# ? Aug 2, 2015 23:44 |
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BigFactory posted:I guess it's the same progressive vs prog rock argument. I love that album but it's hard to put it on the same shelf as Topographic Oceans or something. It was American prog of 1968 which was a very different landscape from British prog of 1974.
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# ? Aug 2, 2015 23:57 |
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Gianthogweed posted:Prog rock 101 The problem with just listing the canon bands is that like half of them aren't very good. Like you could be listening to some weirdo italian crap or some krautrock and it would be better than ELP or Pink Floyd for instance.
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# ? Aug 3, 2015 00:37 |
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lol if you don't unironically love the Tarkus title track
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# ? Aug 3, 2015 00:44 |
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Gamma Nerd posted:lol if you don't unironically love the Tarkus title track It could stand to be edited down by a few minutes.
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# ? Aug 3, 2015 00:58 |
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Let me be the first to say that Traffic are loving awful
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# ? Aug 3, 2015 01:34 |
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A human heart posted:The problem with just listing the canon bands is that like half of them aren't very good. Like you could be listening to some weirdo italian crap or some krautrock and it would be better than ELP or Pink Floyd for instance. I know Pink Floyd is a little overrated but kinda mean to lump them in with ELP
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# ? Aug 3, 2015 02:16 |
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Gamma Nerd posted:lol if you don't unironically love the Tarkus title track I always get the feeling with ELP that they're not serious about any of the stuff they've done--just having a good time and sort of winking at you and just more or less taking the piss. Now, if you want to pin me down to an honest opinion as to what I think was going on in their heads when they did that stuff, what their actual intentions were, I really don't know. But I can and do give them the benefit of the doubt because I really like the music when I approach it that way. That said, nothing after "Works" should be acknowledged in any regard, for any reason. More recs: Univers Zero -- 1313, Heresie. Gong - The Radio Gnome Invisible trilogy (Flying Teapot, Angel's Egg, and You). Thinking Plague - In This Life. Miriodor - Elastic Juggling. Seconding recs for Henry Cow and RIO bands in general, as well as Magma.
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# ? Aug 4, 2015 00:07 |
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Spotify just surprised me with a whole new Echolyn album out of nowhere (I Heard You Listening). If it's anything like their self-titled that came out a few years ago, it'll be an awesome new piece of prog rock. Here's one of the tracks: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DgDfPRtEzWc velvet milkman fucked around with this message at 20:22 on Aug 4, 2015 |
# ? Aug 4, 2015 20:15 |
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Worth considering at the outer edges of PR Ten Years After. This British rock band you'll know from their amazing performance of "Going Home" in the Woodstock film. They started out as an R&B/blues band but their organist was jazz-trained. It has been a while since I heard their first eponymous album but if you want to see PR in its formation then you might want to listen to Stonedhenge, their second (1969) album. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zEKXcqtU7fU Actually, it is a really mixed album - it doesn't hang together because the songs are so disparate. But it definitely has its moments. After about 1970/1 they became a lot more heavy rock and less interesting. I think 69-70 was a very small sweet spot where they play, write and record brilliantly. Virtuoso guitarist Alvin Lee died a few years ago so they aren't much of a live proposition anymore (though they do play).
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# ? Aug 4, 2015 22:35 |
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Gamma Nerd posted:lol if you don't unironically love the Tarkus title track ELP was unironically a great band. Yeah, they kind of sucked after the works albums, and works vol. 1 wasn't too great (but I stand by works vol. II as being a solid album and almost included it in my list), but when they were good, they were really good.
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 08:31 |
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They're probably the prog band that most inspired video game boss music and I can't help but like that. Tarkus sounds like some SNES Final Fantasy soundtrack at times.
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 08:52 |
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Gamma Nerd posted:They're probably the prog band that most inspired video game boss music and I can't help but like that. Tarkus sounds like some SNES Final Fantasy soundtrack at times. https://youtu.be/JbXVNKtmWnc?t=12m5s https://youtu.be/WKNOlDtZluU?t=30s
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 08:59 |
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Some good modern prog recs: Echolyn - mei (2002) Glass Hammer - The Inconsolable Secret (2005) Birds and Buildings - s/t (2008) Koenjihyakkei - Nivraym (2001) I'd say these are as good as any of the classics listed above. Echolyn in particular are really really great, can't wait to hear this new album they've got.
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 13:24 |
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JAMOOOL posted:Some good modern prog recs: mei is a fantastic album, but I just hate it when the whole album is lumped into one track. It's not even like different songs seemingly transition into one another, there are actual pauses between them. I know it's a minor and quite stupid thing to complain about, but it annoys me to no end when I want to listen to a particular song and have to quick search through the whole thing for a minute.
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 14:41 |
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Gianthogweed posted:ELP was unironically a great band. Yeah, they kind of sucked after the works albums, and works vol. 1 wasn't too great (but I stand by works vol. II as being a solid album and almost included it in my list), but when they were good, they were really good. I mean they were certainly very good musicians but a lot of their stuff even during their good period was completely ridiculous
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 15:12 |
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JAMOOOL posted:Some good modern prog recs: Thanks for this!
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 16:01 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 15:55 |
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I haven't heard any Glass Hammer that didn't sound like diet Yes
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 16:03 |