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Topic ClosedHas prog ever made you cry?

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Manuel View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2012 at 10:01
More than once in the past, for sure in the present, and no doubt it will happen in the future.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2012 at 12:36
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

It's probably embarrassing how often I've teared up at IQ's "Guiding Light" and "Came Down".
 
I can see exactly why Guiding Light would affect someone - a truly glorious but sad song.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2012 at 14:06
Originally posted by cstack3 cstack3 wrote:

Originally posted by Guldbamsen Guldbamsen wrote:

Originally posted by cstack3 cstack3 wrote:

Yes' "To Be Over" helped me through the ordeal of the death of my grandmother, it was a perfect song for that.  

When my mom died a few years ago, I couldn't get the Pink Floyd song "Comfortably Numb" out of my mind.  Comfortably numb is exactly how I felt. 

The songs themselves didn't bring tears, but they were part of the grief experience, and for this I am grateful.  


Great post monsieur stack. 
Very forthright and something I can relate to. 
I truly treasure when PA gets "real" and "tangible", and your words just did that for me.

Thank you for that!  They were two of the most traumatic, yet amazing, moments of my life, and I was glad to have this music with me.   I'm sure others on PA have similar experiences, it would be nice to hear them as well! 

Cheers, friend! 




Well, I have had a similar experience where music acts like some kind of old labrador of yours licking your wounds. The past 2 years, I have lost two of my dear friends to suicide. Something I'd wish I'd never have experienced first hand, was to look into the eyes of a mother who has just lost her child. Indescribable and terrifying. 
On those occasions, I am infinitely thankful for the music of Klaus Schulze. I must have listened to his Timewind and Body Love a gazillion times walking around down by the ocean side. There is just something soothing about this kind of music - floating like water. I feel the same about the sounds of the sea to be honest, and I guess a lot of people do. Here it is just conveyed through electronic music.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2012 at 14:29
I meant to add this to my previous post-Though not prog, i connected and cried when i listened to the Grand Funk Railroad album "Born To Die", after loosing a young friend to cancer years ago.
          I still remember the line from the title song-"You were born for it to happen to you"-it helped me at that time


Edited by presdoug - April 15 2012 at 14:32
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2012 at 15:29
I've only cried over a few songs (and only a couple of those were solely due to the song). None of them were actually prog:

-Father and Son, Cat Stevens
-I Don't Wanna Grow Up, Tom Waits
-Love's in Need of Love Today, Stevie Wonder (I didn't cry, but I came real close). In general, Stevie Wonder hits my heart like a mortar.
-Martha, Tom Waits (though not fully because of the song)
-Gravity Rides Everything, Modest Mouse
-Somewhere in Time/Alone You Breathe, Savatage (the bonus-track edition released on the newest Wake of Magellan album). This one doesn't and hasn't made me cry, but has come close from time to time.
-Tifa's Theme, Nobuo Uematsu (This song, as strange as it may seem, is my favorite song of all time. For some reason it always beats me over the skull with pure nostalgia. It makes me think of my childhood and my mom when I was really young.)

Pink Floyd hasn't made me cry, but it sure has made me feel some powerful things - quite consistently, too!
John Lennon's post-Beatles material tends to grip my heart real hard.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2012 at 18:34
I just got done mowing the lawn and teared up during Phideaux's "Microdeath Softstar". First time in awhile prog has done that. I was just listening to one of the more epic movements where the lyrics go

"Once upon a time there was some writing on the wall we all ignored
Until the time when there was war and feasts of famine at our door
Once upon a time there was a line that we had drawn we wouldn't cross
'Cause it was wrong, but lines are bendable and seldom very long."


and I just teared up because being in a suburban housing development, you do kind of ignore the writing on the wall and I thought it was just surreal that there I was mowing my lawn while all of that was going on. Very intriguing I thought. Maybe Phideaux would like to hear that. LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2012 at 20:33
Yes' "To Be Over." I read somewhere that it may be about dying/the afterlife. That sitar part caused me to shed a tear.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 02:38
Peter Gabriel moved me to tears at his New Blood concert, particularly on "Mercy Street" (my favorite Gabriel track) and "The Book of Love."  I was under the influence of nothing but the music and his performance.

Edited by JediJoker7169 - April 16 2012 at 02:39
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 03:47
Pretty much everytime I listen to dark side of the moon I cry during the great gig in the sky.
Come on you target for faraway laughter,
Come on you stranger, you legend, you martyr, and shine!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 06:21
Porcupine tree- lazaru  awesome song with awesome lyrics 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 07:42
All the goddam time. Usually Post-Rock hit's me harder than most Prog, but it can do it too, and frequently does :) Can't think of an example right this second but there are many.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 10:00
I have Viking blood therefore no progrock song will ever make me cry.





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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 10:20
Kind of off-topic, but David's mention of his friends that passed on reminded me of a loss of my own.  I was at a friend's house when he put on Savoy Brown's "Blue Matter" album, and it really made a deep impression on me, particularly the opening song "Train to Nowhere".  Just a sad, trudging blues song that builds gradually into a full arrangement by the end.  Soon after that, I bought my own copy, and I was listening to it when I got a phone call and heard that my friend had been found dead on his couch.  So that album will be forever engrained in my head, inseparable from the memory of that night, and it fills me with a kind of sad rage.  Which is kind of what the music was about in the first place. Powerful.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 11:08
My dad use to play The Yes album like crazy when I was much younger. I've Seen All Good People has put me in tears a number of times, even once at work in the middle of a crowd LOL. Start picturing our old house, the love of my folk, the beauty of innocence, etc, etc.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 11:32
Originally posted by Vibrationbaby Vibrationbaby wrote:

I have Viking blood therefore no progrock song will ever make me cry.





  ...however, Odin loves progrock, and he'll remember your words when you attempt to enter his hall in Valhalla.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 12:26
I'm not afraid of that sissy wimp.

I think the first time I wanted to cry is when I heard The Inner Mounting Flame for the first time. It was then that I realized that I would never be the greatest guitar player in the world so I switched to drums and then Bill Bruford came along etc. etc.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 12:37
I still find it impossible to listen to Big Big Train's Victorian Brickwork without crying. To see the reasons why, my review of the album gives the full story -  http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=300120

I also still tend to well up at the sheer beauty of Turn of the Century.

Gabriel's Mercy Street also has this effect.

Crying is a necessary part of the human condition, and can bring peace and release. It is also fine for a true man to cry.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 13:15
Not prog this song is hard to not choke up on (if Christian music offends you, please don't click on the link below), especially if you expand to see the lyrics (btw, Misty Edwards is a part of IHOP and much of their music seems to have somewhat of a european art rock twinge at times)...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f2ZCIp0HiRo


As per prog, i find myself euphorically *almost* crying tears of joy on Locanda Delle Fate's Forse album.

The Strawbs tend to have some pretty "chokable" tunes as well (ie, The closer on "Grave new world") amongst others.

Parts of the melodies on Wapassou's "Messe.." (from 1976) hit some chokeable spots as well.

And another album is "Fold Eq Eq" by After Crying with the majestic 13+ minute closer.








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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 13:53
Originally posted by lazland lazland wrote:

I still find it impossible to listen to Big Big Train's Victorian Brickwork without crying. To see the reasons why, my review of the album gives the full story -  http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=300120

I also still tend to well up at the sheer beauty of Turn of the Century.

Gabriel's Mercy Street also has this effect.

Crying is a necessary part of the human condition, and can bring peace and release. It is also fine for a true man to cry.


Not if you're a Viking.

Seriously I can't get choked up over a piece of music. Maybe when my first dog died, yes maybe I almost cried. But he was 16 years old and had a good life. Do you think that Slipknot or Motorhead  fans get all teary eyed ? 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 16 2012 at 15:34
'The Road Much Further On' by Big Big Train, from the album 'Gathering Speed'.
Haiku

Writing a poem
With seventeen syllables
Is very diffic....
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