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G-Bombz View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2010 at 15:27
I started listening to prog bands at a very young age. When i was about two, my dad would play his Pink Floyd albums as well as some Yes and other bands. I would also listen to the local classic rock radio station that played these songs and many other popular ones, so i just figured them to be classic rock.
 
It wasnt until about '07 or '08 that i was browsing iTunes and found bands i had never heard of related to these bands i already knew. so i bought Freefall by Camel, and once i started checkin them out on the internet, it was then i started to discover what prog rock is.  From '08 on i kept gathering songs and now i have over a thousand great prog songs on my iPod!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2010 at 21:08
My first experience listening to progressive music was tool's Aenema album back in high school.  After that I discovered Rush's 2112 in college.
"The things that we're concealing, will never let us grow.
Time will do its healing, you've got to let it go.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2010 at 21:14
Originally posted by Johnnytuba Johnnytuba wrote:

My first experience listening to progressive music was tool's Aenema album back in high school.  After that I discovered Rush's 2112 in college.

Well, that explains a lot! LOL Kidding. Welcome back, Johnny. Been a while???
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2010 at 21:14
Originally posted by AerosolKid74 AerosolKid74 wrote:

When did prog first draw you in? I remember sitting in school when I was about 10 by myself with a crappy mp3 player i got off ebay that could only fit about 10 minutes of music on it and I just listened to Roundabout by Yes over and over again and that was a truely magical time, I unfortunately didn't really discover Yes for another 3 years
Similar to my experience, except I was on an airplane and Roundabout was on the set list on the "pop" "station". As soon as that vacation was over, it was off to the record store for Fragile. Then Relayer came out, and off I went. . .
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2010 at 09:04
I have a friend who lives in Ohio who I talk to about jazz and Led Zeppelin a lot. About a year ago I was stuck with classic rock artists like Zeppelin, Sabbath, Jethro Tull, etc. Then my friend sent me a video of And You And I - Yes. I kept coming back to it to listen to it until I went out and bought Close to the Edge. I knew what progressive rock was but I always avoided it. Yes introduced me to a series of other bands and so on. I went to see Yes last July. Great experience. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 20 2010 at 05:49
i was 16  when i heard first time deep purple - made in japan. after this experience i jump in the middle of the 70' music and there i found king crimson , yes , van der graaf etc.

don't give up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 20 2010 at 11:18
Originally posted by Manuel Manuel wrote:

Originally posted by O666 O666 wrote:

I realy want to talk about this topic but I afraid. I'm sure after I write ANYTHING, Some guys attack to me and insult me without any REASON. I like to dicuss and I respect to opposite opinion but I cant undrestand why INSULT?
See you next time.

Don't be afraid of me. I really would love to hear your experience and I will not be critical about it, since it's quite personal, and if it's something that brought you to be a pro fan, why would I do such a thing as insult you?
In 1981 my friend gave me "The Wall" in my birthday when I was 11. I didn't listen to music like that before "The Wall". I have a musician uncle. He play keyboard and drumms professionally and he worked with Iranian Rock stars in Rock clubs before Islamic revolution. I told him about  "The Wall" and my feelings about that. He gave me "ELP: Tarkus". WOW. Fantastic experience. I never forget that day. "Tarkus" changed my life. I tried to found other progressive bands and artists and my uncle helped me. In Iran after Islamic revolution, Islamic people and goverment  banned western music and arts (unfortunately) . You cant imagine atmospher  in Iran after revolution specially 1980-1990.
I found guys who import western music and copying and selling cassettes. They worked undercover and I bought albums and rock magazines like POP and Kerrang undercover too. I risked so much but I Loved ( and Love) PROGRESSIVE music. I arrested twice with cassettes and VHS but I was a die-hard fan. Price of music cassettes was very high and I must worked to found money. My parents specially my dad never undrestand me and he didn't gave me enough money. He was a rich man( My father died in 2004) but money for music NO.NEVER.   
Pink Floyd and ELP was my first Prog experience. Now Progressive music is most important part of my life and my family and friends undrestand me. Atmospher of Iran is very better than 80's and we can buy our fav music . BUT finding Progressive music is difficult yet. If you living in free countries, you must thanks god
for this. Sorry for this long story and forgive me because of poor English.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 20 2010 at 15:47
Originally posted by O666 O666 wrote:

Originally posted by Manuel Manuel wrote:

Originally posted by O666 O666 wrote:

I realy want to talk about this topic but I afraid. I'm sure after I write ANYTHING, Some guys attack to me and insult me without any REASON. I like to dicuss and I respect to opposite opinion but I cant undrestand why INSULT?
See you next time.

Don't be afraid of me. I really would love to hear your experience and I will not be critical about it, since it's quite personal, and if it's something that brought you to be a pro fan, why would I do such a thing as insult you?
In 1981 my friend gave me "The Wall" in my birthday when I was 11. I didn't listen to music like that before "The Wall". I have a musician uncle. He play keyboard and drumms professionally and he worked with Iranian Rock stars in Rock clubs before Islamic revolution. I told him about  "The Wall" and my feelings about that. He gave me "ELP: Tarkus". WOW. Fantastic experience. I never forget that day. "Tarkus" changed my life. I tried to found other progressive bands and artists and my uncle helped me. In Iran after Islamic revolution, Islamic people and goverment  banned western music and arts (unfortunately) . You cant imagine atmospher  in Iran after revolution specially 1980-1990.
I found guys who import western music and copying and selling cassettes. They worked undercover and I bought albums and rock magazines like POP and Kerrang undercover too. I risked so much but I Loved ( and Love) PROGRESSIVE music. I arrested twice with cassettes and VHS but I was a die-hard fan. Price of music cassettes was very high and I must worked to found money. My parents specially my dad never undrestand me and he didn't gave me enough money. He was a rich man( My father died in 2004) but money for music NO.NEVER.   
Pink Floyd and ELP was my first Prog experience. Now Progressive music is most important part of my life and my family and friends undrestand me. Atmospher of Iran is very better than 80's and we can buy our fav music . BUT finding Progressive music is difficult yet. If you living in free countries, you must thanks god
for this. Sorry for this long story and forgive me because of poor English.
I'm sure everyone reading this understands perfectly. You embody what a real Prog fan is--risking jail for it! You have my utmost admiration.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 20 2010 at 16:55
Originally posted by O666 O666 wrote:

Originally posted by Manuel Manuel wrote:

Originally posted by O666 O666 wrote:

I realy want to talk about this topic but I afraid. I'm sure after I write ANYTHING, Some guys attack to me and insult me without any REASON. I like to dicuss and I respect to opposite opinion but I cant undrestand why INSULT?
See you next time.

Don't be afraid of me. I really would love to hear your experience and I will not be critical about it, since it's quite personal, and if it's something that brought you to be a pro fan, why would I do such a thing as insult you?
In 1981 my friend gave me "The Wall" in my birthday when I was 11. I didn't listen to music like that before "The Wall". I have a musician uncle. He play keyboard and drumms professionally and he worked with Iranian Rock stars in Rock clubs before Islamic revolution. I told him about  "The Wall" and my feelings about that. He gave me "ELP: Tarkus". WOW. Fantastic experience. I never forget that day. "Tarkus" changed my life. I tried to found other progressive bands and artists and my uncle helped me. In Iran after Islamic revolution, Islamic people and goverment  banned western music and arts (unfortunately) . You cant imagine atmospher  in Iran after revolution specially 1980-1990.
I found guys who import western music and copying and selling cassettes. They worked undercover and I bought albums and rock magazines like POP and Kerrang undercover too. I risked so much but I Loved ( and Love) PROGRESSIVE music. I arrested twice with cassettes and VHS but I was a die-hard fan. Price of music cassettes was very high and I must worked to found money. My parents specially my dad never undrestand me and he didn't gave me enough money. He was a rich man( My father died in 2004) but money for music NO.NEVER.   
Pink Floyd and ELP was my first Prog experience. Now Progressive music is most important part of my life and my family and friends undrestand me. Atmospher of Iran is very better than 80's and we can buy our fav music . BUT finding Progressive music is difficult yet. If you living in free countries, you must thanks god
for this. Sorry for this long story and forgive me because of poor English.


All my respect to you. I don't think any decent person would try to insult you for your story. On the contrary, you are indeed a real prog fan. I had it hard in Central America, since prog was not popular, or even accessible, but I never risked jail time for listening or buying prog, just some of my friends though I was weird or crazy. I must say you are indeed a very remarkable person.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 21 2010 at 14:22
Thank you friends. Fiest time I arrested for Jon and Vangelis( The friends of Mr cairo) and second time for Frank Zappa (Sheik Yerbouti), Jane ( Live ), Mahavishnu ( Birds of fire) . We copied albums on 90 min cassettes and 2 albums in each cassette. In second time I was 16 and they shaved my hairs!!! I remember clearly and this time is one of my bad memorys. Now I have long hairs!!!!!! I realy Thank you.Thumbs Up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 21 2010 at 20:09
Probably around eight years of age - so, 1981-ish, I discovered my older brother's LP collection that he kept in milk crates, as I suspect many people did. I was fascinated by the cover art, the gatefold sleeves, the lyrics and song titles, the band photos... he had a lot of prog, but only because those bands were big when he was growing up (12 years older than me). He also had lots of other stuff like Kiss, Queen, Elton John, etc. etc...

But it was the Genesis ones that drew me in. Nursery Cryme, Foxtrot, The Lamb, Seconds Out... those are ones I remember staring at for what seemed like hours.

When he moved out a few years later, he left a lot of those records at home, and I became the proud owner of them. Big smile

That split-second of the needle meeting the vinyl to reveal the opening strains of "The Musical Box" was the moment my lifelong love affair with prog began.

Genesis/Yes/Rush/Marillion/VDGG&PH/The Flower Kings/Zappa/Änglagård/Wobbler/PFM/Banco/Le Orme/Jethro Tull/Spock's Beard/Transatlantic/Ayreon/Beardfish/IQ/Dream Theater/Opeth/P.Tree/Arena/Camel/Kaipa!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2010 at 09:30
1977. I was 12. Rush's "Closer to the Heart" was all over AM radio,and I asked for the album A Farewell to Kings for Christmas. It was the second rock album I ever owned, and it was love at first listen--a defining experience in terms not only of musical appreciation but of overall aesthetic sensibility.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2010 at 10:03
Mum's a big PF fan so I was listening to them pretty much from the womb. But I didn't starting listening to them willingly until 2006 odd, and I didn't start liking them to 2007.

I found out they were prog around the time I was 16/17, so 2008 LOL

And I've only became a prog addict in the last 6 months or so, I was a bit late on music obsession ;)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2010 at 10:45
I was taking electric guitar lessons in Iran, and my teacher (Reza Yazdani) taught me a few songs by Pink Floyd and Camel. I fell in love (with the musicStar
SebK
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2010 at 19:38
It was 1973, I  was in high school and had just discovered music in the last year (Zeppelin, Doors, Sabbath, CSNY, early Elton John, Spirit, etc).
I went to visit a friend with my just-purchased copy of Led Zeppelin's House of the Holy and he said he wanted to play something for me. He played King Crimson's Court of the Crimson King and I was totally blown away. I'd never heard anything like it. When the song Epitaph came on, I knew I had to have this, that this was music that went right to my soul.
So I asked my friend if he'd be willing to trade, KC for my LZ. And he did it. The fool!
I remember walking home, clutching that record in my hands, thinking how I'd ripped him off!!
PROGMATIC
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2010 at 21:41
I was always into classic rock, and my dad, although not into prog as such, was a huge Pink Floyd fan and when I started playing guitar, he encouraged me to listen to them.  And from there I think it was primarily Internet browsing that turned me on to a lot of the other stuff.  I learned on AllMusic, for example, that there was a band "related" to Pink Floyd called Camel.  So I looked up their MySpace and loved the song "Never Let Go" and followed links to King Crimson, Gentle Giant, Catapilla (overlooked!!), and others.  I didn't like Gentle Giant at all, but a guy at a concert had a shirt on and I recognized the Giant and said something.  He nearly flipped his sh*t that I had ever even heard of the band at my age and I thought if this guy is that fanatic maybe I'll give them another listen, and so much the better - they're one of my favorite bands now.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 23 2010 at 09:12
Originally posted by Ronnie Pilgrim Ronnie Pilgrim wrote:

Originally posted by Johnnytuba Johnnytuba wrote:

My first experience listening to progressive music was tool's Aenema album back in high school.  After that I discovered Rush's 2112 in college.

Well, that explains a lot! LOL Kidding. Welcome back, Johnny. Been a while???

Indeed it has.  I do some posting over in the polls section, otherwise it has just been a crazy summer!  Lots of concerts and camping!
"The things that we're concealing, will never let us grow.
Time will do its healing, you've got to let it go.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 23 2010 at 10:18
my guitar teacher showed me Dream Theater. I payed 30 dollars for the lesson but we only listed to Dream Theater that day. Best lesson ever!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 23 2010 at 10:32
When I was younger, I guess around 12 years old, I found a copy of Turn It On Again lying around (a Genesis greatest hits CD). I thought it was pretty enjoyable.

Anyway, a while after I was at the CD store and I saw Selling England By The Pound on sale for a very low price. I recognized it from the hits compilation, which contained I Know What I Like, and picked it up.

I was instantly hooked. This was an entirely new kind of music that I'd never heard before and I was completely blown away by it. Never really went back to that hits CD.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 23 2010 at 11:36
Some of you here are quite lucky...
My parents and family listened to ZERO music. At home, my parents didn't own any kind of device that played music.
I got into music with a friend who was as excited about listenning to new music as I was (around 14). I only really got into prog when I came to France (2003) for my studies.
In 2003, I  "absorbed" more music than I ever had known...
https://soundcloud.com/why-music Prog trio, from ambiant to violence
https://soundcloud.com/m0n0-film Film music and production projects
https://soundcloud.com/fadisaliba (almost) everything else
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