Looking for some epic prog rock tracks to test your new hi-fi system or separates rack? Then you’re in the right place and among good company.
What Hi-Fi? readers’ ongoing love of prog rock is well documented, with our forums and social channels being full of appreciation posts from our loyal readers discussing the many epic bangers that fall within the genre. Thankfully, the reviews team at What Hi-Fi? shares this passion, with our crack team of audio experts being full of prog rock fans.
As an added bonus, the diverse nature of the genre – which includes everything from incredibly complex rocking concept albums detailing epic battles between robots and cosmic space otters to thoughtful ballads detailing young love on a UK council estate – makes it a great genre full of excellent test tracks to gauge your hi-fi’s performance.
The only difficulty is that, while we love prog rock, there’s an awful lot of it out there – Rush’s back catalogue alone would fill most people’s storage racks. This can make knowing which tracks to use pretty tricky, even for ardent fans.
Which is why we’ve penned this guide detailing the top prog rock test tracks our team use most often when reviewing hi-fi. Every track is used in our dedicated listening rooms to gauge everything from rhythmic precision to dynamism and stereo imaging. As an added bonus they also sound awesome!
On the off chance you think we’ve missed any, make sure to get in touch with us either on social media or our forums and we’ll make sure to check the track out and potentially add it to our repertoire.
Emerson, Lake & Palmer – From the beginning
Suggested by What Hi-Fi? reader Derek via email
Emerson, Lake and Palmer are one of the most iconic prog rock supergroups of all time. Founded in 1970 with Keith Emerson from the Nice, Greg Lake of King Crimson fame, and Carl Palmer from Atomic Rooster, the band had some serious talent from the get go. In fact, they’re so famous we were forced to hang our heads in shame after reader Derek emailed us to point out it was odd we didn’t use any of the band's tracks during testing.
Thankfully we’ve since rectified this and if you pass our listening rooms you’ll often hear the band’s epic track, From The Beginning, emanating from them. Featuring a wonderfully catchy acoustic guitar rhythm that’s slowly built upon with electric and layered percussion parts, the song culminates with an iconic synthesiser solo. This makes it a great way to gauge your hi-fi system’s dynamism, rhythmic precision and holistic tonal balance.
Buy Emerson, Lake and Palmer, From the Beginning, on Amazon
UFO – Flying
Suggested by What Hi-Fi? forums user, “RegisterS”
UFO aren’t a band you often hear associated with prog rock. But as pointed out by one What Hi-Fi? forums user, the title track from the band's second album Flying definitely falls into the prog genre. As well as being over 26 minutes long, the song Flying is the finale of what the band itself describes as an epic “hour of space rock”. The song sits in a similar space to Maggot Brain, which is featured further down the list. It features a wonderfully psychedelic, experimental nature compared to much of the band’s other, heavier work.
Starting slow with a rumbling bass and rhythm section, the track slowly builds until guitarist Mick Bolton’s instrument goes wild and is recorded in a way to make it sound like he’s flying around your brain as he plays – listen to it and you’ll see what we mean. This makes it a particularly great test track to gauge any hi-fi’s ability to create an accurate stereo image, dynamics and general agility.
Genesis – Firth Of Fifth
Suggested by What Hi-Fi? Facebook page subscriber, Christopher Star
Many fans may favour Peter Gabriel and his solo work as a more important contributor to prog rock. But before he went off on his own, Genesis was a huge part of the genre with Gabriel at the helm. The iconic song Firth Of Fifth is a great example why and, after being suggested by reader Christopher Star, an increasingly common track we use to review hi-fi.
The epic track starts with a classical sounding piano part featuring atypical time signatures, before graduating into a full on prog-tastic epic instrumental in its middle and epic ballad section, full of swooning, violin-like guitar parts at its end – complete, of course, with Gabriel’s fantastic vocals. This not only makes it a wonderful song to listen to, but also a great way to holistically gauge the performance of your hi-fi. If your system’s weak in any area this track will lay bare its shortcomings.
Buy Genesis, Selling England By the Pound, on Amazon
Marillion – Lavender
By Alastair Stevenson
British legends Marillion are a staple in any prog-rock fans library, and within its vast back catalogue Lavender is probably one of its best-known tracks. It’s the second single from the band’s Misplaced Childhood concept album and the source of one of Top Of The Pops’ most “memorable” performances.
But more importantly, it’s also a fantastic track to test any hi-fi system. The short but sweet track starts with a simple intro played on a grand piano that crescendos into a full-on power ballad including epic vocals, slamming drums and one of the most iconic lead guitar parts ever played. This helps gauge how well your set-up deals with every part of the frequency range and gives a great test of its dynamism. As an added layer of appeal, rather than detailing cosmic battles, the track tells the story of young love on a UK council estate.
Buy Marillion, Misplaced Childhood on Amazon
King Crimson – 21st Century Schizoid Man
By Harry McKerrell
King Crimson’s 1969 masterpiece In The Court Of The Crimson King stands tall as a classic of the genre, with 21st Century Schizoid Man providing a perfect showcase of the band’s experimental, forward-thinking proclivities. Within this seven-minute epic (not that long for a prog track), there’s a smorgasbord of music textures and effects for your system to unpack, including piercing, brassy horns, scratchy guitars and Greg Lake’s heavily distorted vocal delivery.
Tracks such as these are perennial testing favourites, mainly because they’re fantastic for elucidating how a system can pick out each instrument’s place and personality, or whether it lets things degenerate into a cacophonous, amorphous muddle. For a real testament to Schizoid Man’s credentials, you only need to see how it’s continued to be sampled and reworked by subsequent artists. The key refrain pops up in Kanye West’s Power, while Bad Religion’s 1990 hit 21st Century (Digital Boy) reworked the track to make a semi-ironic comment on an increasingly meaningless, materialistic age. It’s a belter.
Buy King Crimson, In The Court Of The Crimson King on Amazon
Peter Gabriel – Red Rain
By Alastair Stevenson
Peter Gabriel may be famous to most people as Genesis' original frontman, or for his iconic rock song Sledgehammer, but if prog’s your game, Red Rain is a great track to test your hi-fi system.
It’s the opening track on Gabriel's fifth solo studio album So (1986) and details a recurring dream involving red wine and some weirder items we won't detail here. The heavily percussive track was recorded by two famous drummers – Gabriel’s standard bandmate Jerry Marotta and The Police’s Stewart Copeland. The latter created the song’s rain effect using a drum’s hi-hat. The strong percussion coupled with its attacking scoop bass make it a great song to gauge any hi-fi kit’s rhythmic precision and ability to deliver energetic audio with plenty of gusto.
Buy Peter Gabriel, So on Amazon
Funkadelic – Maggot Brain
By Alastair Stevenson
Maggot Brain is the titular track on the third studio album of American funk rock legends Funkadelic. Released in 1971, it’s a haunting track that was recorded while guitarist Eddie Hazel was heavily under the influence of LSD and producer George Clinton told him “to play like his mother had died”.
While the LSD led to some interest swells in the guitar’s timing and rhythm, it also helped create one of the most iconic prog guitar solos of all time. Featuring swooping wah and haunting tape delay effects that are extenuated by screaming guitar parts, it's a great prog rock song to gauge the character and soul of any hi-fi system. Which is why it’s a staple entry in the What Hi-Fi? team’s test track arsenal. Just make sure you get the full-fat recording, not the reduced EP version. It’s worth the extra time, trust us.
Buy Funkadelic, Maggot Brain on Amazon
Pink Floyd – High Hopes (The Division Bell, 1994)
By Harry McKerrell
Our list of the best British rock test tracks saw Pink Floyd’s melancholic epic Time earn its place within that only slightly jingoistic rundown, so we thought it would be nice to mix things up here and opt for a similarly heart-tugging anthem in the shape of High Hopes from 1994’s The Division Bell. That seemingly optimistic title belies High Hopes’ more piercing explorations of regret, disillusionment and the loss of a sort of bucolic idyll.
Nice and cheery it ain’t, but there’s something captivating about how the track builds from a brooding, tentative outset to a rolling, disenchanted crescendo that just makes it ideal for testing out dynamics, tone and what I’m going to term “full emotional transparency”. Vocals, too, need real conviction and clarity, especially Dave Gilmour’s mournful, yearning chorus refrain of “the grass was greener, the light was brighter, with friends surrounded, the nights of wonder”. Feel that nostalgic lump in your throat choke you up as you remember simpler days…
Buy Pink Floyd, The Division Bell on Amazon
Yes – Changes
By Alastair Stevenson
Changes is one of the best-known tracks from prog legends Yes’ 1983 masterpiece 90125. While it may not get the same airtime and attention as Yes’ even better-known Owner Of A Lonely Heart, which is also a common track you’ll hear blasting out of our test rooms, it’s a fantastic song that tests any system's ability to deliver dynamic, detailed audio. Starting with a basic xylophone intro, the track builds into an incredibly complex ballad full of shimmering guitar sections, weeping synths and haunting vocals detailing the feelings of alienation and melancholy resulting from a failed relationship. If you want a classic prog track to holistically test your system, this is a great place to start.
Rush – Tom Sawyer
By Becky Roberts
An album opener to rival The Who's Baba O’Riley and Led Zep's Whole Lotta Love, Tom Sawyer from Rush's 1981 Moving Pictures is a lyrical, musical, anthemic riot – "the quintessential Rush song", in the words of frontman Geddy Lee. And to think it nearly didn't make the album! There's plenty of percussive stomp for your system to put its authority on, and drum grooves and fills to flex its dynamic and rhythmic skills, but how those spacey electric guitars and iconic, track-defining synths fizz and sweep through the soundstage – that's what will really hold the mirror up to a system's rendition.
Buy Rush, Moving Pictures on Amazon
Dream Theater – Metropolis - Part 1: The Miracle And The Sleeper
By Alastair Stevenson
Dream Theater is one of the world's most technically accomplished progressive metal bands, featuring an all-star line of virtuosos that have delighted prog fans for over 30 years. And in their vast library of epic ballads, there are plenty of great test tracks. But the one our test team keeps going back to is Metropolis - Part 1: The Miracle And The Sleeper. This is the fifth track on the band's break-out album, Images And Words.
The epic is a rhythmically complex arrangement with rapid time signature changes and incredibly tight intertwining parts that test a system’s precision. Additionally, the complex layered arrangement makes it a great gauge to see how the system handles every part of the frequency range. Only the best set-ups will do justice to the band's insanely tight playing and overt virtuosity.
Buy Dream Theater, Images And Words on Amazon
Kansas – Dust In The Wind
By Kashfia Kabir
It’s all about the fingerpicking. There are no wildly hilarious or overly complex arrangements here, just a beautiful melody, meditative and emotively sung lyrics about mortality, and one of the more technically adept examples of guitar-plucking that aims more for the heart than the head.
This is still a prog rock band so you get an electric violin thrown in, but the best system – whether desktop, hi-fi or headphones – should fully convey the intimate, tactile nature of fingers plucking at guitar strings. There should be depth and detail to the resonance and shape of each note, the subtle dynamics should flow fluidly and hold your attention and emotions throughout, and it’s a terrific test of your audio system’s rhythmic agility, too. It may be a more hummable tune than other prog tracks, but such an easy-flowing melody isn’t easily done – it’s more intricate the more you listen.
Buy Kansas, Point Of Know Return on Amazon
Porcupine Tree – Arriving Somewhere But Not Here
By Alastair Stevenson
Porcupine Tree’s Arriving Somewhere But Not Here is a haunting track originally released on the English prog legends’ 2005 album Deadwing. The track’s a slow burner that starts with haunting synthesised organs, and moody sound effects that create a wonderfully immersive layer of ambience as the instrumental layers build. Like a lot of prog songs, it completely switches gears partway through turning into a full-on metal song with rocking palm-muted guitars and high-gain solos. The heavily interlocked guitar parts created a textured sound that tests any system’s detail. All too often cheaper systems will lose entire sections of the song’s heavily textured interlocking guitar parts making it a great test track for any audio fan looking to put their set-up through its paces.
Buy Porcupine Tree, Deadwing on Amazon
Coheed And Cambria – In Keeping Secrets Of Silent Earth: 3
By Tom Parsons
In Keeping Secrets Of Silent Earth: 3 is the 8-minute second track from the album of the same name, which is Coheed And Cambria’s second album, which serves as the third part of an epic sci-fi story called The Amory Wars, which is also a series of comics and graphic novels. No wonder Coheed’s frontman and the creator of the overarching story, Claudio Sanchez, is considered the poster child for the New Prog genre that emerged in the 2000s.
Twenty years later, this track is still epic. A story within a story, it is essentially Coheed’s Battle of Helm’s Deep, describing a huge clash in The Amory Wars. The chorus is in fact a yelled, rousing shout from a general to his troops: “Man your own Jackhammer! Man your battle stations!”
As with most Coheed And Cambria tracks, In Keeping Secrets… is in many moments a heady mix of chugging guitar riffs, noodly embellishments, hammered drums and Sanchez’s Geddy Lee-inspired vocals. But, like a battle, it also has many phases, with the ‘action’ waxing and waning over the course of the track. While the recording is more compressed than it should be (a remaster would be very welcome), it still provides a decent test of a hi-fi system's detail and dynamic range – but how it rhythmically organises the track’s most chaotic moments is the real challenge.
Buy Coheed And Cambria, In Keeping Secrets Of Silent Earth: 3 on Amazon
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