What decade did you first get into prog? |
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Prog_Traveller
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 29 2005 Location: Bucks county PA Status: Offline Points: 1474 |
Posted: April 05 2014 at 02:09 | ||||||||
^You can dance to Rush? Who knew.
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Mirror Image
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 13 2011 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2111 |
Posted: April 05 2014 at 00:01 | ||||||||
The '80s for me as my parents used to have Rush dance nights and my dad would play Moving Pictures, Signals, or Grace Under Pressure on his record player. Ah, the smell of vinyl!
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Prog_Traveller
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 29 2005 Location: Bucks county PA Status: Offline Points: 1474 |
Posted: April 04 2014 at 23:34 | ||||||||
[Not in America anyway. ]
Not anywhere anyway. That term wasn't used until the seventies which was kind of my point. |
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Gryphon
Forum Groupie Joined: April 15 2007 Location: norway Status: Offline Points: 85 |
Posted: April 04 2014 at 22:53 | ||||||||
1969, when my brother (7 years older than me) came home one day with "in the court of the crimson king", played it really loud, and it blew our minds.
I was 12...
Edited by Gryphon - April 06 2014 at 10:30 |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: April 04 2014 at 18:21 | ||||||||
Not in America anyway.
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What?
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Prog_Traveller
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 29 2005 Location: Bucks county PA Status: Offline Points: 1474 |
Posted: April 04 2014 at 18:11 | ||||||||
I'm personally glad you didn't vote sixties. As far as I'm concerned it would be almost like voting for which decade did you first get into heavy metal and then having an option for sixties. I think people got into music and bands that became prog in the sixties but I think most of it was psychedelic or proto prog. That's just my opinion of course. I only added sixties to the poll because there seemed to be a demand for it(a small one but it was there nonetheless). "Hey man, we're going to see some groovy bands before we protest the Vietnam War then we're going to hang out and smoke some pot in front of a lava lamp. Yeah we'll listen to some prog too. " I guarantee that conversation never happened. Not in the sixties anyway. Edited by Prog_Traveller - April 04 2014 at 18:12 |
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Svetonio
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 20 2010 Location: Serbia Status: Offline Points: 10213 |
Posted: April 04 2014 at 13:35 | ||||||||
1970's
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silverpot
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: March 19 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 841 |
Posted: April 04 2014 at 12:08 | ||||||||
Be proud to be a dinosaur, they are one of the most successful species to ever roam our green Earth. It also seems very tough for the young acts to push their way into the upper part of PA top 100. |
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dr wu23
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 22 2010 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 20623 |
Posted: April 04 2014 at 09:22 | ||||||||
But I had already been buying the Doors, Moody Blues, Procol Harum, Tull, Traffic, etc since 1967.
At any rate I was one of those here who listed the 60's as when I first started listening to 'prog'.
Old yes.....but I hope I'm not a dinosaur.
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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: April 04 2014 at 03:52 | ||||||||
I should have votededed 60s
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What?
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Kazza3
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 29 2009 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 557 |
Posted: April 04 2014 at 03:47 | ||||||||
2000s, around 2008. After a childhood of jazz and nothing but jazz, I had already been moving into fusion, but then a friend introduced me to The Mars Volta, and then Muse- who, though not prog, the way they branched out a bit made me want to investigate music that did that kind of thing, I saw the label 'prog' applied to that approach, I found my way to PA, discovered Beardfish (SiT II being the top album of the year) and then discovered the seventies. And my Dad's Floyd collection.
To other younger listeners, what's your musical relationship like with your parents? Growing up, music around the house was jazz, and Dad's music was just 'Dad music' that he kept to himself (Floyd, Zep, Beatles, Stones, Bowie). He says he finds it a little strange that I listen so much to the music of the 70s ('aren't children are supposed to hate their parent's music!') but he likes it, and there have been multiple occasions when I've pulled out Yes or something and he'll go, "oh, I remember that band!", or I discover he had SeBTP in his record collection (mainly because he liked I Know What I Like) long after I got into Genesis, and one day it turned out we had both, without being aware of the other's actions, independently downloaded Fripp's Exposure. Same day, coincidence. I've even gotten him into Volta a bit. Edited by Kazza3 - April 04 2014 at 03:55 |
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Prog_Traveller
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 29 2005 Location: Bucks county PA Status: Offline Points: 1474 |
Posted: April 04 2014 at 00:56 | ||||||||
Me too. Most of those 9 votes were pretty early on. Since I rebooted this thread a few days ago nobody has voted for the 90's. I'm not sure why there are so few but my guess is that most people were getting back into prog in the 90's(ie rediscovering it and not so much discovering it). Other than maybe Dream Theater I can't think of any really major band that would have drawn someone into the genre for the first time in that decade. I know lots of prog fans discovered Anglagard, Echolyn, Spock's Beard, The Flower Kings, Glass Hammer etc for the first time in that decade but I think most of those fans were already prog fans(from the previous two decades). For me personally, I first got into prog in the 80's. In the 90's I was back and forth as to being into prog. There wasn't a whole lot going on in that decade. But then towards the end of the 90's I found two books on prog. One was called "the music is all that matters" and the other was "the progressive rock files." The latter book had links for prog on the internet and that is how I discovered prog online. This was kind of late though probably around 98/99. I had revisited and ordered some prog cds right before that though in the spring of 98 so that is when I started to get back into prog after taking about a three or four year break from it(my college years). |
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verslibre
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 01 2004 Location: CA Status: Offline Points: 17176 |
Posted: April 03 2014 at 22:58 | ||||||||
I checked the '80s but I'm surprised there are so few votes for the '90s.
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Prog_Traveller
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 29 2005 Location: Bucks county PA Status: Offline Points: 1474 |
Posted: April 03 2014 at 20:34 | ||||||||
I added it reluctantly and retroactively(I think). I realize there were some "progressive" albums in that decade but the genre wasn't really official until the seventies. I think of the sixties as the proto progressive era(the albums that led up to the full blown prog scene). |
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Progosopher
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 12 2009 Location: Coolwood Status: Offline Points: 6467 |
Posted: April 02 2014 at 20:16 | ||||||||
The early 70s, when Yes, ELP, and Tull were commonly heard on the radio. At first, it was the edited and short songs on AM radio but I quickly moved to FM and heard the full length versions. Then when I started collecting records in '75 I listened largely to proto and related bands like Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, and Black Sabbath. By the time I got my first Yes and Tull albums, probably in '78, those songs I used to listen to on the radio were like old friends. I would not consider myself a full Prog fan until the late 70s.
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The world of sound is certainly capable of infinite variety and, were our sense developed, of infinite extensions. -- George Santayana, "The Sense of Beauty"
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Tedhead
Forum Newbie Joined: December 23 2009 Location: H-town Status: Offline Points: 5 |
Posted: April 02 2014 at 19:02 | ||||||||
1987 with Pink Floyd The Wall on VHS. I rented the movie that summer from some newly opened video store called Blockbuster, which I drove to with my new drivers license (I was 16).
I was fascinated with the Gerald Scarfe animation I had seen in clips and commercials, and grabbed it with Bakshi's Lord of the Rings. I was addicted ever since. This more led to psychedelic rock, which I spent exploring and never stopped. However in 1989 I was introduced to King Crimson and ABWH Yes, followed by Tarkus. By the 90's I was a full on prog nut, especially the during the first half of the decade. I never got into any neo-prog. It just sounds like overly produced w**ky metal with no feeling, Genesis/Radiohead clones, or a European model lead singer backed by some guys (The "Curved Air" formula?). So now I collect 5.1 mixes of my favs thanks to Steven Wilson.
Edited by Tedhead - April 02 2014 at 19:03 |
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all men must die...
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Metalmarsh89
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 15 2013 Location: Oregon, USA Status: Offline Points: 2673 |
Posted: April 02 2014 at 17:37 | ||||||||
And then you've got folks like me. Freak Out was released before my dad was even born... |
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Want to play mafia? Visit here.
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Olape
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 28 2013 Location: Chile Status: Offline Points: 2169 |
Posted: April 02 2014 at 08:45 | ||||||||
I came into Prog in the 80's, with Pink Floyd's DSOTM and The Wall and the chileans Los Jaivas.
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silverpot
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: March 19 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 841 |
Posted: April 02 2014 at 07:59 | ||||||||
This poll makes me feel absolutely ancient. Only five dinosaurs voting the 60s.
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Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator Retired Admin Joined: January 22 2009 Location: Magic Theatre Status: Offline Points: 23104 |
Posted: April 01 2014 at 12:54 | ||||||||
1954.
It was in Orson Welles' sauna.
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“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams |
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