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cledussnow
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 23 2015
Location: Alabama, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 119
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Posted: February 05 2016 at 12:49 |
2112 Dark Side of the Moon The Yes Album In the Court of the Crimson King Trespass Wish You Were Here
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Rednight
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 18 2014
Location: Mar Vista, CA
Status: Offline
Points: 4812
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Posted: February 05 2016 at 13:32 |
The.Crimson.King wrote:
Rednight wrote:
Nursery Crymes - Genesis Foxtrot - Genesis Genesis Live - Genesis A Trick of the Tail - Genesis Chocolate Kings - PFM Watercourse Way - Shadowfax Fish Out of Water - Chris Squire Symphonic Slam - Symphonic Slam Maxophone - Maxophone
Had to go nine here due to some underlying circumstances: The first three were released as part of very poorly manufactured album compilations on the old Buddah label and were readily available in the cut-out section (which I regularly perused) of the Wherehouse Records store down the way, so I got a good dose of them then. 'Trick and Chocolate Kings were simultaneously presented to me for consideration around the time I graduated from high school in '76. And the last three arrived at the previously mentioned record store around the same time in '75 and were heavily delved into. The Shadowfax offering was the last of the bunch to gain my attention and was worthy of many listenings.
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I remember buying Nursery/Foxtrot in a budget 2lp compilation album I think was called, "Genesis: Rock Theater" or something 
As far as Shadowfax, amazing album and extremely hard to find on LP...did you actually buy that at The Wherehouse? FYI: that was rereleased on CD many years ago but the intro to Linear Dance is different than the original vinyl. Part of the synth solo is totally missing!
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Yeah, Watercourse Way was indeed purchased at The Wherehouse Records back in the day. I heard about the omissions on the CD release and have stayed away. Besides, the band jumped over to Windham Hill Records, I believe, and really went downhill. I remember a former girlfriend taking me to a Shadowfax concert in the mid-'80s, and it really blew. So much for their freshman effort.
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"It just has none of the qualities of your work that I find interesting. Abandon [?] it." - Eno
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The.Crimson.King
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 29 2013
Location: WA
Status: Offline
Points: 4596
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Posted: February 05 2016 at 13:55 |
Rednight wrote:
Yeah, Watercourse Way was indeed purchased at The Wherehouse Records back in the day. I heard about the omissions on the CD release and have stayed away. Besides, the band jumped over to Windham Hill Records, I believe, and really went downhill. I remember a former girlfriend taking me to a Shadowfax concert in the mid-'80s, and it really blew. So much for their freshman effort. |
Wow, if I would've walked into a Wherehouse and seen Watercourse Way stuck between the Sex Pistols and Simon & Garfunkel I probably would've dropped dead of heart failure on the spot 
I actually had a few of their Windham Hill albums and I don't think it's that they went downhill, rather they knowingly swapped their prog style for 80's acoustic new age. It remained great musicianship, but in a restrained new age framework so you'd never have imagined it was the same band. As far as the Watercourse Way CD, the only difference I've ever been able to hear is the missing synth line at the beginning of Linear Dance. I've tried to figure out what happened because other parts of the synth solo remain...maybe the tapes they remixed from dropped the synth track at that spot? Of course, doubly frustrating since Linear Dance is my fave song 
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Intruder
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 13 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 2210
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Posted: February 05 2016 at 15:08 |
Got the Yes Album for Xmas as a wee lad - was one of my first LPs period (the very first was the Who's Meaty, Beaty, Big and Bouncy - got caught stealing it from the Sunrise Mall on Long Island; security called my parents over the loudspeaker to come get their son from the brig.....my bottom is still red from that encounter.....my parents felt guilty and made me pay for the album but it sat in its wrapper for months before they finally let me give it a spin). Anyway, my first five prog albums were (surmising here): - The Yes Album - ELP - Works, Vol. 2 - Crimson - Islands - Moody Blues - Caught Live +5 - Procol Harum - Live with the Edmonton....
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I like to feel the suspense when you're certain you know I am there.....
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Rednight
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 18 2014
Location: Mar Vista, CA
Status: Offline
Points: 4812
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Posted: February 05 2016 at 15:43 |
The.Crimson.King wrote:
Rednight wrote:
Yeah, Watercourse Way was indeed purchased at The Wherehouse Records back in the day. I heard about the omissions on the CD release and have stayed away. Besides, the band jumped over to Windham Hill Records, I believe, and really went downhill. I remember a former girlfriend taking me to a Shadowfax concert in the mid-'80s, and it really blew. So much for their freshman effort. |
Wow, if I would've walked into a Wherehouse and seen Watercourse Way stuck between the Sex Pistols and Simon & Garfunkel I probably would've dropped dead of heart failure on the |
It was one of those open box sales - you know - on special display, a cut open box of like 100 or so sparkling, shrink-wrapped records that Wherehouse employees were directed to present as the newest thing on the horizon. I never followed up later to see if they ever gave Shadowfax its own slot between Los Sex Pistols and the "Hello Darkness My Old Friend" Bros. I'm sure they got it with Windham Hill.
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"It just has none of the qualities of your work that I find interesting. Abandon [?] it." - Eno
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wilmon91
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 15 2009
Location: Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 698
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Posted: February 05 2016 at 16:23 |
I didn't buy music until I was 15 or so, so it begins in about 1994..
Saga Silent Knight 1994-1995 Saga Worlds Apart 1994-1995 Saga Images at Twilight 1994-1995 Saga Generation 13 1995-1996 Saga Heads or Tales september 1995
Gentle Giant Gentle Giant feb-june -96
"Generation 13" could have been a present, not sure.. In that case, we can add this instead:
Gentle Giant Aquiring the Taste feb-july -96
So that's the main albums, but just for fun, I bought this the same year:
Gentle Giant Octopus 19th sept 1996
and got these wishlist items for birthday and christmas the same year:
Genesis Selling England By the Pound 4/10 -96 Marillion Brave 4/10 -96 Genesis Nursery Cryme 24/12 -96
But there's one album missing , "Saga - Saga", which I don't know when I got, it could be one of the first 6, not sure..
Edited by wilmon91 - February 05 2016 at 16:29
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Cristi
Special Collaborator
Crossover / Prog Metal Teams
Joined: July 27 2006
Location: wonderland
Status: Online
Points: 45921
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Posted: February 05 2016 at 16:35 |
you're asking for things I was listening 25 something years ago, let me see... there was Pink Floyd with Wish You Were Here, Animals and Dark Side of the Moon. And then there was Yes with Time and a Word, and the Yes Album. And then there was Supertramp with Crime of the Century. Last but not least, Marillion with Misplaced Childhood. oh, wait, I can't count, there are 7
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gr8dane
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 11 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 1127
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Posted: February 05 2016 at 16:51 |
In Rock Paranoid Master Of Reality Tarkus Trilogy
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Shake & bake.
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Formentera Lady
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 20 2010
Location: Germany
Status: Offline
Points: 1840
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Posted: February 06 2016 at 19:33 |
infocat wrote:
How on earth do you even remember? |
Exactly  . I only remember the first one: Yessongs, used vinyl on the flee market, and I was around 15. I still have that vinyl!
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King Manuel
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 16 2010
Location: South Africa
Status: Offline
Points: 952
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Posted: April 29 2016 at 01:04 |
If my memory serves me right:
Pink Floyd - A momentary lapse of reason Yes - 90125 Yes - Close to the edge Rush - A show of hands Dream Theater - When Dream and Day Unite Jethro Tull - Aqualung
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Don't Bore Us, Get To The Chorus
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richardh
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 18 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 29689
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Posted: April 29 2016 at 07:59 |
ELP -Pictures At An Exhibition on cassette when I was about 14 (1976). It cost £2 at the time and I absolutely hated it at first. Later I was given as presents all of ELP's albums ( on request as I managed to get past my initial shock  ) but didn't start buying prog albums in general until probably about 1980 or maybe later. At first my listening revolved around ELP. I thought the likes of Genesis and Yes were not very interesting. 
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Michael P. Dawson
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 22 2016
Location: California
Status: Offline
Points: 197
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Posted: April 29 2016 at 08:28 |
1970, as far as I can remember:
Benefit Procol Harum Stand Up A Salty Dog Uncle Meat (and then all the Mothers/Zappa I could get my hands on)
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer
Joined: June 22 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 16130
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Posted: May 03 2016 at 07:29 |
I think...
The Wall - Pink Floyd Equinox - JJ Jarre Script for a Jesters Tear - Marillion Exit..stage left - Rush A Trick of the Tail - Genesis Chronicle of the blacksword - Hawkwind
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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MullMuzzler
Forum Newbie
Joined: January 27 2006
Location: Poland
Status: Offline
Points: 14
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Posted: May 03 2016 at 09:25 |
Year: 1987 Age: 14
Queen - Sheer Heart Attack Queen - A Night At The Opera Yes - Close To The Edge ELP - Pictures At An Exhibition Queen - Queen II Niemen Enigmatic - Niemen Enigmatic (1970)
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... and nobody played synthesizer.
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ALotOfBottle
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 17 2016
Location: Lublin, Poland
Status: Offline
Points: 1990
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Posted: May 03 2016 at 10:58 |
I can't remember exactly, so I'll just list the ones that I got when I started collecting LPs. 1. Nektar - Remember The Future 2. ELP - Pictures At An Exhibition 3. The Nice - Five Bridges 4. Camel - Mirage 5. Wishbone Ash - Argus 6. Dang, can't remember
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starless2112
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 18 2014
Location: PA
Status: Offline
Points: 108
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Posted: August 14 2016 at 19:58 |
I don't remember what the first album I bought was, but I know when I was 14 is when I got really into Pink Floyd. So that would have been 1990. I know I bought Ummagumma, A Nice Pair and Dark Side sometime in the early 90's. Not sure about other prog. Didin't really get into prog until later in my 30's
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mechanicalflattery
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 08 2016
Location: Seattle
Status: Offline
Points: 1056
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Posted: August 14 2016 at 20:44 |
Pink Floyd: DSOTM/WYWH/Animals/The Wall Jethro Tull: Aqualung/TAAB David Bowie: Low/Ziggy Stardust Yes: Close To The Edge Genesis: Selling England By The Pound
Mainly used this site as a reference when I discovered prog, a few years back. My tastes are thankfully a bit more diverse now.
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Atavachron
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: September 30 2006
Location: Pearland
Status: Offline
Points: 65702
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Posted: August 14 2016 at 20:50 |
Oh gosh, uhhh ..
Hemispheres Tarkus Meddle Yessongs Thick as a Brick Birds of Fire
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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Terrapin Station
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 23 2016
Location: NYC
Status: Offline
Points: 383
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Posted: August 15 2016 at 13:20 |
It's hard for me to say for a couple different reasons:
(1) Albums were shared among my family, and not just my parents and siblings, but a couple aunts and uncles and a grandfather, too (well, although that grandfather didn't collect rock, but still...). I also had music teachers who were regularly giving me albums to take home and listen to for extended periods of time. Add to this that I was a music fan going as far back as I can remember--and I started taking music lessons when I was only six years old--and it's difficult for me to remember who owned what and when (when because albums that music teachers let me borrow, for example, I gave back but then often bought it for myself at that point).
(2) I don't consider there to be any sort of clear distinction between psychedelic music and prog, and I think that stuff like the Grateful Dead, later Beatles, Amboy Dukes from at least the second album on, etc. are clearly prog. This aspect is exacerbated by the fact that we were buying all of this music when it came out--I was six years old/I started taking drum lessons in 1968.
Re the stuff that would non-controversially be considered prog, though, I knew all of the following when they were new: the Nice albums, Zappa from We're Only in It for the Money (I heard the earlier albums by 1969/1970), Jethro Tull pretty much from the start, ELP from their start, and I knew the first three King Crimson albums and Genesis' Trespass by early 1971, the first three Yes albums by mid-1971.
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Modrigue
Prog Reviewer
Joined: January 14 2007
Location: France
Status: Offline
Points: 1127
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Posted: August 15 2016 at 13:35 |
Pink Floyd - WYWH Radiohead - OK Computer Soft Machine - Third Gong - Camembert Electrique Dream Theater - When Dream and Day Unite Tangerine Dream - Phaedra
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