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Statutory-Mike
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 15 2008
Location: Long Island
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Points: 3737
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Posted: July 05 2008 at 16:16 |
TRAPPED INSIDE THIS OCTAVARIUM!, Selkies solo, In the Name of God solo
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song_of_copper
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 20 2008
Location: UK
Status: Offline
Points: 1065
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Posted: July 05 2008 at 17:49 |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group
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Joined: April 05 2006
Location: Vancouver, BC
Status: Online
Points: 37141
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Posted: July 05 2008 at 18:20 |
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Weston
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 26 2008
Location: Tennessee
Status: Offline
Points: 188
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Posted: July 06 2008 at 03:09 |
In Platos Halo's Riding the Dragon, about 4:00 minutes into the song the vocals have a more profound physiological effect on me than just about anything I've experienced. The woman (Marija Rawlins) is a living Theremin.
I love the ending to A Passion Play, the "Hail Son of Kings - ' section. So joyous.
The ending harmonies and sonorites of Three Friends always gets me. It's too short though.
The penultimate guitar riffage in Utopia (the song) by Utopia - the part where the guitar is just pounding away by itself working the crowd into a frenzy before the rest of the band comes in one by one before the final recapitulation of the opening themes.
The multi orgasmic climaxes near the end of Awaken. Nothing tops that for me.
I could go on at length. These are but a few of the goose bump moments for me in prog.
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psychomonkey62
Forum Newbie
Joined: March 21 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 2
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Posted: July 07 2008 at 11:22 |
The part at 1:50 in DT's In the Name of God, where Portnoy shifts the beat around. I love little things like that. Also, in that same song, the keyboard/guitar unison and Petrucci's natural harmonic in the riff right after the solo. The sweeps in Selkies by BTBAM are epic as hell, too. I also love the chorus of The Suffering by Coheed and Cambria for some reason. Maybe because when it comes in, it's more than halfway through the song, and the song has built up to it a bunch of times but never went into it. Hooray for first post!
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preqT0THEseq7
Forum Groupie
Joined: March 02 2008
Location: Pominville
Status: Offline
Points: 94
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Posted: July 07 2008 at 12:09 |
[/QUOTE]
Another moment would be in Porcupine Tree's "Trains," after the banjo(?) interlude when Steven sings by himself with just his acoustic. What a beautiful voice. [/QUOTE] Indeed, a better voice than MJK.
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Idk, My BFF Steve.
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Moatilliatta
Prog Reviewer
Joined: December 01 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 3083
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Posted: July 07 2008 at 12:52 |
The last minutes of "White Walls" (or the whole song)
The first few minutes of "Ants of the Sky"
Guitar solo in "Trial of Tears"
The final chorus of "Cygnus....Vismund Cygnus"
Basically the whole second track of "Cassandra Gemini," but I always especially liked they go into the "she fell for the whispers" part
I could go on and on.
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www.last.fm/user/ThisCenotaph
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Bj-1
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: June 04 2005
Location: No(r)Way
Status: Offline
Points: 31644
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Posted: July 09 2008 at 21:28 |
I have so many to list it would take days to write a list. A notable one in the top of my head right now is the creepy and repetetive 11/8 section in Present's 'Promenade au Fond D'un Canal' from around 4:45 to 6:25 with that scraping sound in the background. It's very dark and sinister sounding, and it's so hypnotic to listen to. I can't help but thinking of it whenever Im out late at night.
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RIO/AVANT/ZEUHL - The best thing you can get with yer pants on!
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Roj
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Joined: July 02 2008
Location: Manchester, UK
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Points: 3126
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Posted: July 21 2008 at 12:18 |
All of Awaken is amazing, but from the start of Wakeman's church organ solo until the crescendo has to be the ultimate. The hairs on the back of my neck stand up and gives me goose bumps. Even now, 30 years later, if I'm driving my car and this comes on I have to pull over and listen. It still moves me so much and I get so carried away I'd probably crash.
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YesGoblin
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Joined: December 07 2007
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 63
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Posted: July 22 2008 at 16:54 |
Near the end of Dream Theatres Erotomania, there is an amazing bass driven riff
As well, in Roundabout when they return to the main theme which is slightly altered after the " Next too your deeper fears.... " part
When the synth, drums and bass come in on trilogy
During Castle in the Air, by Eloy, when they go into that amazing bass riff with the singers vocals
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: July 22 2008 at 17:01 |
Hm. new one. The guitar solo and humming thing off Maneige's Douce Amere.
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burtonrulez
Forum Groupie
Joined: September 13 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 51
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Posted: July 23 2008 at 17:41 |
The church organ solo in CTTE, surprised no one's mentioned that yet.
The 'Fast and Bulbous' intro to 'Pena' by Captain Beefheart. it always cracks me up.
In the song Time by David Bowie where there's a moment of silence before everything comes cascading in.
The last verse of Man-Erg.
The solo from Willie the Pimp.
A lot more, those are just the ones from CDs that are on my desk right now.
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Negoba
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 24 2008
Location: Big Muddy
Status: Offline
Points: 5210
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Posted: July 29 2008 at 12:13 |
The fast break in "Dancing with the Moonlit Knight" - it's where I learned that Phil Collins was actually a musician.
Several in Mindcrime "Eradicate the Fascists, Revolution will Grow" How can you not get riled by that?
Numerous Opeth spots with clean vox in harmony over heavy guitars (first time in "Drapery Falls" comes to mind)
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Padraic
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Joined: February 16 2006
Location: Pennsylvania
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Points: 31169
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Posted: July 29 2008 at 12:19 |
Because I'm listening to it now, the end of Henry Cow's "Living in the Heart of the Beast" - Dagmar Krause's passionate vocals along side Chris Cutler's relentless "marching" drums and some simple piano chords... * chills *
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AmericanKhatru
Forum Newbie
Joined: January 26 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 21
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Posted: July 29 2008 at 16:56 |
Roj M30 wrote:
All of Awaken is amazing, but from the start of Wakeman's church organ solo until the crescendo has to be the ultimate. The hairs on the back of my neck stand up and gives me goose bumps. Even now, 30 years later, if I'm driving my car and this comes on I have to pull over and listen. It still moves me so much and I get so carried away I'd probably crash. |
I didn't even think about that until you mentioned it, but you're absolutely right. During the Tormato tour (I believe), they played something called The Big Medley, which was like 5 or 6 Yessongs spliced together. Right as Jon, Chris and Steve finish the Perpetual Change part with "Saying we have the whole world in our hand" and just BAM! Right into the end of the battle sequence of Gates. Oh man, I get chills. Look for it on The Word is Live because words don't do it justice.
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Philip
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 13 2007
Location: Porto, Portugal
Status: Offline
Points: 413
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Posted: August 07 2008 at 07:06 |
David Gilmour's solo in Comfortably Numb.
Steve Hackett's solo in Firth of Fifth
Andrew Latimer's solo in The Snow Goose (it can be in the whole album)
Chopin's Nocturne no. 9, almost in the end when the piano plays "con forza"
For now, these are the ones I remember.
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J-Man
Prog Reviewer
Joined: August 07 2008
Location: Philadelphia,PA
Status: Offline
Points: 7826
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Posted: August 10 2008 at 20:23 |
For me my favorite moment was in Octavarium (Dream Theater). It was near the end when the metal section kicked in and LaBrie was screaming "TRAPPED INSIDE THIS OCTAVARIUM!!!!!" over and over again, and then suddenly it ends and the strings come in for an emotional section. That part was just pure gold. Another favorite was also in Octavarium when the French Horn came in at the very end. It was composed perfectly, and closed the song wonderfully.
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musicnotes16
Forum Newbie
Joined: August 14 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 2
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Posted: August 14 2008 at 17:39 |
lovebug, pushin me away, burnin up all by Jonas Brothers
Into ya by Jessie McCartney
Karma and Hollywood by NLT
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Toaster Mantis
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 12 2008
Location: Denmark
Status: Offline
Points: 5898
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Posted: August 15 2008 at 10:12 |
Out of those that haven't been mentioned yet: Pink Floyd's The Wall has lots of them: "We don't need no education", the modulated commands in Waiting for the Worms and The Trial. In general I have an unhealthy affection for ominous modulated narration especially when it's some kind of tyrannic command. It's one of those things I'll never find goofy or clichéd no matter how disillusioned I otherwise get. ![LOL](smileys/smiley36.gif)
The "whoosh" sound effect that opens Deep Purple's Fireball. Speaking of Purple - Ian Gillan's screams on Child in Time, any of the solos in Child in Time... screw that, Child in Time is basically a 10-minute-long favourite moment. ![LOL](smileys/smiley36.gif) And the solo that opens Speed King on the European version of In Rock... back in 1970 it must have been even more spine-chilling, but today it's still one of the best ways an album has ever opened. Beltane, the bonus track on 2003 reissue of Jethro Tull's Songs from the Wood (why the hell didn't it get on the album first time, it's as good as the title track or Hunting Girl) has one of my favourite lyric lines ever: "It's just the old gods getting older". I think it's mostly the way Ian sings it that makes it so great. ![Big%20smile](smileys/smiley4.gif) Another Jethro Tull moment: "Old Charlie stole the handle, and the train it won't slow down" in Locomotive Breath. The flute solo and intro of the same song as well. The climax of Hawkwind's Brainstorm, you know the part that starts with the chant of "This is it! This is it! This is it!". The moment on the Space Ritual live version where one of the members suddenly begins gargling furiously in the background I also happen to quite like no matter how random it probably is, it actually adds to the frenzied chaos of that song. Brainstorm also has another of my all-time fave lyric lines: "You're gonna help me or there'll be an explosion!" It's so... to-the-point. Back to Pink Floyd... I've always been very partial to that creepy sound effect (I think it's made using the guitar, but I can't remember right now ![Confused](smileys/smiley5.gif) ) coming after "Neptune, Titan, Stars can frighten" in Astronomy Domine. Not to mention the sample of ducks quacking that ends Bike and hence their first album. Yeah, I have a weird sense of humour.
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"The past is not some static being, it is not a previous present, nor a present that has passed away; the past has its own dynamic being which is constantly renewed and renewing." - Claire Colebrook
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Bj-1
Special Collaborator
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Joined: June 04 2005
Location: No(r)Way
Status: Offline
Points: 31644
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Posted: August 15 2008 at 20:29 |
NaturalScience wrote:
Because I'm listening to it now, the end of Henry Cow's "Living in the Heart of the Beast" - Dagmar Krause's passionate vocals along side Chris Cutler's relentless "marching" drums and some simple piano chords... * chills * |
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RIO/AVANT/ZEUHL - The best thing you can get with yer pants on!
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