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We celebrate the 80s prog revival with the help of Marillion, Pallas, Twelfth Night, Solstice, IQ, Pendragon and loads more on the cover of the latest issue of Prog Magazine, which is on sale now ...
Jethro Tull grace the cover of the new issue of Prog Magazine, which is on sale now! Jerry Ewing. Fri, March 7, 2025 at 6:30 AM UTC.
In Britain, in the early 1970s, the Keyboard God was an honored member of the rock ensemble. They were scattered across the firmament of British rock ‘n’ roll, more popular than the guitarists ...
Cynical, maybe. Observant, definitely. “Like a 1970s prog rock album cover” is a perfectly pithy way to convey what this new generative AI art scene frequently mimics.
But while “Melody Makers” covers the way the magazine’s preference for glam and prog rock left them slow to respond to punk, this is still a story without much of an arc.
There is a lot that drives Rush to make music, but the biggest motivating factor is their passion. So, what happens when that goes?
What Major Art Magazine Has an ’80s Rock Band Named ... of the aesthetic of contemporaneous prog rock bands like Yes, but focuses on radio-ready, three-minute pop tunes. The cover of the self ...
2. Yes, Tormato British design firm Hipgnosis was responsible for some of the most memorable sleeves in prog-rock history: They hooked up with Pink Floyd early on, helping to create indelible visuals.
“We are the most uncool people in Miami.” So begins, promisingly enough, David Weigel’s The Show That Never Ends: The Rise and Fall of Prog Rock. Weigel, along with 3,000 fellow Yes-heads ...