MrSirLordGentleman
05.30.16 | Renaissance |
Idleness
05.30.16 | check new k fed |
TwigTW
05.30.16 | Moody Blues - Days of Future Past |
smaugman
05.30.16 | renaissance yea |
Snake.
05.30.16 | chamber pop > |
Jethro42
05.30.16 | Renaissance [4]
After Crying
The Enid
Clearlight - Clearlight Symphony
Emerson, Lake and Palmer
The Nice
Triumvirat
Harmonium - L'Heptade
Pulsar - The Strands of the Future
England - Garden Shed
Rick Wakeman - The Six Wives of Henry VIII |
Deathconscious
05.30.16 | if you havent heard The Soft Bulletin you should probably do that. |
MrSirLordGentleman
05.30.16 | most 70's hard rock and prog rock have symphonies over it |
Friday13th
05.30.16 | Lots of great choices. I'd echo The Moody Blues, Renaissance, and The Enid. ELO - Eldorado and A New World Record come to mind specifically for "symphonic rock." If you like Red check Skillet's Comatose. Of course there are lots of related sub-genres like symphonic prog, symphonic metal, neoclassical darkwave, baroque pop, chamber pop, brill building etc. I like em all! |
Friday13th
05.30.16 | Here's an underrated track from '67 that represents the start of more bombastic symphonic rock: https://youtu.be/Z6d9k-Nn0P4 |
Jethro42
05.30.16 | ELO is a good call.
Here's an Alan Parsons Project song that contains great symphonic arrangements; ''Silence and I''
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=76n_uE_W31A |
eddie95
05.30.16 | Moody Blues - Days of Future Passed [2] |
bentheREDfan
10.28.16 | 3 is amazing. |
pjquinones747
10.28.16 | Avantasia is metal opera, not sure if that's too much for you. Thank You Scientist is progressive metal with trumpets and violin. |