Rock music subgenre that emphasizes complexity and form.
Grammatical contrast of present tense verbs.
1Do we know what to make of the prog-folk-bedsit priestess of pop?
2If anything, their post-prog theramin and bagpipes compositions seem to sow disunity.
3Then that infernal valet has taken the lion's share of the prog!
4I'm strictly prog rock and the nineteenth-century romantics, said Dr Walid.
5And you don't get many psychedelic prog-folk albums to the dozen these days.
6You'd make Our Lord move over to make room for prog-
7Her two biggest loves are apparently Jim Henson and prog rock.
8Pope Francis took on a heavy duty prog by choosing that name, Wenders said.
9When you connect, the key command is prog, which you use in this form:
10Musically, it is entertaining and carries the listener away as any good prog should.
11Sam chokes back tears while some prog keyboards fire up to soundtrack the dumping.
12On the edge where metal, prog and punk meet up for a echilada mole.
13Matt Berry's adventures in pastoral prog are something else again.
14Is that prog and that bottle of porter private property?
15This is Mullin's, and he's gone off with our prog.
16Could a deaf, dumb and blind kid really have been responsible for prog rock?