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Cloud Forest
Forum Groupie
Joined: August 13 2012
Location: Milky Way!
Status: Offline
Points: 52
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Posted: August 14 2012 at 05:50 |
The virus got me when i was 14,i heard a song on the simpsons played by jethro tull thick as a brick,and i made some researches and so i found prog rock
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All Hail Geddy Lee!
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Terra Australis
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 03 2006
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 809
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Posted: August 14 2012 at 05:33 |
I first got into prog when in the late 70s, I missed the original wave (just) by being too young and living in Australia. I was engrossed by 'In the Court of the Crimson King' and I progressed to many other bands that I found in a specialist music shop which imported weird and wonderful music. Then it disappeared for a long time. How happy was I when I found prog still lived via the internet and sites such as progarchives. I have so much great music now!
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Mirror Image
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 13 2011
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2111
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Posted: August 13 2012 at 21:55 |
nobodysheroine wrote:
Several years ago, my husband (then my boyfriend) took me to see Rush. I had no knowledge of 'prog' as a genre, and had never even heard Tom Sawyer or Spirit of Radio, but I watched them spellbound.
After that, I've been picking up bits and pieces here and there.
And on that note, it's my first forum post. /wave
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Welcome aboard! Who have you been getting into lately?
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“Music is enough for a lifetime but a lifetime is not enough for music.” - Sergei Rachmaninov
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nobodysheroine
Forum Newbie
Joined: August 13 2012
Location: Pittsburgh
Status: Offline
Points: 1
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Posted: August 13 2012 at 21:21 |
Several years ago, my husband (then my boyfriend) took me to see Rush. I had no knowledge of 'prog' as a genre, and had never even heard Tom Sawyer or Spirit of Radio, but I watched them spellbound.
After that, I've been picking up bits and pieces here and there.
And on that note, it's my first forum post. /wave
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lmaorofllollmao
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 06 2012
Location: New Mexico
Status: Offline
Points: 113
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Posted: August 13 2012 at 17:21 |
it was when i was 10 i belive when i played Pull Me Under (dream theater for those who dont know) on Guitar Hero world tour. It persuaded me to get the album and then i slowly started covering the entire dream theater discography. Afterwards, once i was completely knowing of Dream Theater, i began exploring the older stuff and i completely forgot about the new stuff. I started listening to pink floyd, yes, king crimson, VDGG, Jethro tull, and MUCH MUCH more. i went back to the modern scene in a matter of time and discovered Pain of Salvation, Spocks Beard, Transatlantic, Fates Warning, Queensryche, and so many more, and here i am, 13 and in love with all genres of prog.
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EATTTT YOUURRR BEEEEEETTTSSSSS!!!!!
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Mirror Image
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 13 2011
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2111
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Posted: August 13 2012 at 16:31 |
Progressive rock might as well been apart of my musical DNA from the beginning. As I mentioned in my introductory thread, we used to have Rush dance nights at my house when I was a kid. I can hear the crackle of those LPs now.
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“Music is enough for a lifetime but a lifetime is not enough for music.” - Sergei Rachmaninov
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DisillusionedGiraffe
Forum Newbie
Joined: August 13 2012
Location: USA
Status: Offline
Points: 3
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Posted: August 13 2012 at 16:00 |
Let's see. A bit more than a year ago. I was 16 (18 now). It was when I first really started getting into music. Scoping out bands on youtube. Saw a comment about Pink Floyd. Had heard Another Brick in the Wall b4 so checked them out again. Imediately fell in love, but didn't really get into any other prog bands right away and didn't even know they belonged to that genre. The Cure stayed my top favorite for a while (now 3rd), but Pink Floyd eventually over took and still remain my favorite band. I discovered some more prog rock bands and eventually Camel, who are now my second favorite band.
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HURBRET
Forum Newbie
Joined: January 27 2012
Location: USA
Status: Offline
Points: 22
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Posted: August 12 2012 at 23:42 |
I'm 15 now, and I was 13 then. As I recall, from an early age my Dad had played ELP and I hated it with a passion, and he also had a couple Gentle Giant records which I enjoyed very much. But the real clincher that started a total obsession was probably (believe it or not) "Owner of a Lonely Heart," which I still very much enjoy, but not as a prog song. Anyway, I got into more Yes, bought out the entire discography of Gentle Giant (who is now my favorite band) and his King Crimson collection. However, I'm still discovering new music every day, Cardiacs and Tortoise being the "Bands of the month."
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Ytse_Jam
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 08 2011
Location: Italy
Status: Offline
Points: 502
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Posted: July 23 2012 at 07:53 |
BassoonAng wrote:
I'm 19, so like many of my generation, I went around listening to heavy metal and variants for awhile. I went from Iron Maiden, early Slayer, Kreator, Anthrax, and Behemoth to Rush and Yes. I remember it was quite sudden a change. Not that I didn't still appreciate the metal vibe, I just grew tiresome of every song being oppressively repetitive. There are a good number of metal bands that aren't, but in the bigger picture, prog bands build a genre upon the idea of never doing the exact same thing twice. |
This!
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smartpatrol
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 15 2012
Location: My Bedroom
Status: Offline
Points: 14169
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Posted: July 23 2012 at 03:02 |
My infection was slow, from birth.
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Earthmover
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 03 2012
Status: Offline
Points: 1509
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Posted: July 23 2012 at 01:52 |
Not long ago, maybe 6 months ago. I was listening to Pink Floyd and found out about progressive rock. I though:" It must be a cool genre because PINK FLOYD IS THE BEST!!!!11!1oneone". I researched a bit and found about other 70s bands.
Listened to 2112. Was blown away.
However, my full conversion into prog lover was after the first listening to (guess what album?) In the Court of the Crimson King. I was hooked. I still am, although my love for ItCotCK is not as big as it used to be.
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BassoonAng
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 22 2012
Location: MD
Status: Offline
Points: 112
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Posted: July 23 2012 at 01:17 |
I'm 19, so like many of my generation, I went around listening to heavy metal and variants for awhile. I went from Iron Maiden, early Slayer, Kreator, Anthrax, and Behemoth to Rush and Yes. I remember it was quite sudden a change. Not that I didn't still appreciate the metal vibe, I just grew tiresome of every song being oppressively repetitive. There are a good number of metal bands that aren't, but in the bigger picture, prog bands build a genre upon the idea of never doing the exact same thing twice. As I grew as a musician and began to pursue a degree in music education (primary instrument bassoon), I learned that I really valued the originality of sound, instrumentation, and ESPECIALLY rhythm and time.
TL;DR: To say precisely, I got to about my junior year and heard my dad reminiscing with Close to the Edge. Then I borrowed that CD and played the living sh*t out of it. I tend to listen to one thing for a really long time and am slow to explore new things, so I went in a straight line with bands in the order of Yes -> Rush -> King Crimson -> Genesis -> Renaissance -> Gryphon.
My all-time favorite band (and standing with an unshakable force of will) is Renaissance. When I was first exploring their discography, I could pick out snippets of everything from Rimsky-Korsakow's Scheherezade to various Bach nocturnes to Debussy's La Cathedrale Engloutie. Having taken formal music history classes for my degree has made this band a real treat to listen to. Gryphon gets special mention. The folky sounds aren't exactly my favorites, but they use bassoon and crumhorn. As a bassoon MUED major, I owe them my allegiance, hah.
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smartpatrol
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 15 2012
Location: My Bedroom
Status: Offline
Points: 14169
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Posted: June 01 2012 at 12:56 |
My "infection" began at an early age. I grew up with Rush, as both my parents were fans. they also were big fans of Yes. I started inheriting albums from my parents and buying Rush and Beatles albums. Then I got on the internet and explored diffant kinds of music. Now I'm a fan of arround 50 bands that belong to about 20 genres.
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ole-the-first
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 03 2012
Location: Russia
Status: Offline
Points: 1534
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Posted: June 01 2012 at 09:21 |
Listening to Queen, I understood that I usually prefer their prog moments. So I became interested in that kind of music.
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This night wounds time.
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ScorchedFirth
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 16 2012
Status: Offline
Points: 257
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Posted: June 01 2012 at 02:17 |
The first proper prog moment was when the crimson king got me, when i was about 13 maybe? before then i'd sort of skirted around the edges with a few songs from pink floyd, dream theater, rush.
My friend has really cool parents who brought him up on Van Der Graaf Generator, i am so jealous.
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breathing, eating, defecating, screwing, drinking, spewing, sleeping...
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ProgWytch
Forum Newbie
Joined: April 11 2012
Location: Biloxi, MS
Status: Offline
Points: 10
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Posted: April 11 2012 at 10:45 |
For me, I always had some interest in some prog-ish elements before I had never heard of Prog, I liked a lot of rush i heard on the radio and I loved some of the interesting time signatures in Led Zeppelin and by extension, late Soundgarden. However it was a sort of pre-history moment for me when I first heard DT's Pull Me Under in guitar hero world tour. I checked out the album and it blew my mind.
After that I checked out some other Prog metal bands but wasn't finding much that grabbed me so I tried Prog rock, starting with Genesis and Yes since they were names I knew. Foxtrot and Close To The Edge completely changed how I look at music. Now while I may not listen to Prog exclusively, it's darn close to it, as I find most other music (with a few guilty pleasure exceptions like REM) to be rather vanilla and boring in comparison.
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bb1319
Forum Groupie
Joined: February 25 2012
Status: Offline
Points: 84
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Posted: April 08 2012 at 08:49 |
For me, it was Rush. I was one of the many kids who grew up on classic rock radio, and frankly, you don't hear a lot of King Crimson, or even Yes, apart from Roundabout and Owner of a Lonely Heart. But Rush songs did come on the radio, and I quickly came to absolutely love their energy, so I bought some of their albums, most notably 2112 and Hemispheres. Those two records did it for me. They aren't even in my top 10 prog records, but they opened the door to my top 10. I didn't even know bands like Porcupine Tree existed nowadays until I got this "prog fever"!
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"I'd say that what we hear is the quality of our listening." -Robert Fripp
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JediJoker7169
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 05 2009
Location: West Coast, NA
Status: Offline
Points: 195
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Posted: April 08 2012 at 05:55 |
Here's a story I wrote for my Creative Writing class in my senior year of high school:
Radio Somewhere
It
was a perfect shot. The bullet
pierced one temple and fiercely tunneled out the other. But in that instant in which the bullet
found itself between the two temples, Rick found himself in a moment of
clarity. His mind was racing as
fast as the projectile itself.
Time slowed to a standstill, and he was trapped within a memory of his
teenage years.
It
wasn’t when he got his first high school report card and his parents commended
him for doing so well in such a challenging new environment. No. Nor was it the next progress report for which his parents
chastised him. It wasn’t of his
first “date” with across-the-street neighbor Kelly Kalinske. He didn’t remember the many laughs he
had shared with his best friends Michael and Nik, nor the fiasco in which
Michael “stole” Nik’s date, nor how Nik never forgave Michael for it. He didn’t remember falling in love for
the first time with Sarah—the perfect, beautiful Sarah—nor how when they ended
their relationship, he thought he could never be happy again unless she were
back in his arms. None of these
memories mattered; none of them were important.
He
did remember one certain late night ride home from the San Francisco Symphony,
his father in the driver’s seat of the Honda minivan, himself in the
passenger’s as they glided down U.S. Highway 101. As the signs flew by, he saw one that read, “Woodside Blvd –
2;” they were getting close. The
air stank of grease from the In-N-Out Burger fast food dinner they’d eaten
hastily on the way up. He could
still taste the “special sauce” in his mouth, which he swore was just Thousand
Island dressing, and he could feel the hamburger and fries digesting away
inside him.
The radio was set to FM 102.1,
KDFC, the Bay Area’s classical station.
There were times when he would have enjoyed listening to Mozart’s 40th
Symphony, but this was not one of them, so he politely asked his father if he
could change the station. His
response was that pained, ever-so-common, “I guess.…” Rick toggled through presets until he found 98.5 KFOX, his
favorite. He was hoping to hear
some Foreigner, or maybe something by Journey, but the sounds coming out of the
speakers were unlike anything he had ever heard. Guitars oozed out silken melodies while the bass beat out a
triangular harmony and the drums fell like slow water onto the floor, a
veritable smorgasbord of psychedelic delicacies. The music flowed in gentle waves that caressed his whole body with a warmth he couldn’t quite describe; yet at the same time, any icy wind blew up and down his spine. The world left him as the music drew him deeper and deeper into its magic. He thought he had finally found his calling within this Sirens’ song. As the piece came to a close, he was sitting at the edge of his seat, waiting for a revelation from the airwaves. And it was in that instant that the all-too-familiar announcer—that booming, unnaturally low voice—informed him that he was listening to “Stone Trek: The Best in Progressive Rock.”
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KingCrInuYasha
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 26 2010
Location: USA
Status: Offline
Points: 1281
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Posted: April 02 2012 at 23:46 |
I remember when I was five years old and my dad had cassettes of Jethro Tull's Aqualung and Thick As A Brick wondering, "What on earth is this?". I was mainly into the Beatles and never bother to pop either of those albums. When my dad got the CD for Aqualung, he suggested I pop it in my stereo, which I did.
I have to admit, it was probably a good thing, since there was no way I would have gotten into when I was five. Love that album.
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He looks at this world and wants it all... so he strikes, like Thunderball!
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Nick Dilley
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 31 2012
Location: Mordor
Status: Offline
Points: 173
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Posted: April 02 2012 at 23:23 |
For me, I think Metallica's ...And Justice for All was the gateway--got me into complex arrangements, lengthy tunes, etc. Then, the actual prog virus hit when I borrowed three discs from a friend: Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here, Black Sabbath - Paranoid, and Dream Theater - Images and Words. No wise-cracks about ...And Justice for All or Paranoid if you haven't listened all the way through! Sabbath and Metallica are obviously both metal bands (albeit very different), but both of those albums are very prog.
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