Author |
Topic Search Topic Options
|
himtroy
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 20 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 1601
|
Posted: February 27 2009 at 18:37 |
Did anybody else just straight up read through all nine pages of that?
|
|
himtroy
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 20 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 1601
|
Posted: February 27 2009 at 18:45 |
And I'd also like to add (I gave my story about 400 pages back), that the first time I heard Gentle Giant it changed my life. I'd heard progressive, but Gentle Giant is DAMN progressive. Late at night, all alone, found Three Friends and Power and the Glory on vinyl. Never the same again.
|
|
Krautrocker
Forum Newbie
Joined: March 04 2009
Location: UK
Status: Offline
Points: 8
|
Posted: March 04 2009 at 17:22 |
1976, first wage packet well spent on Warrior on the Edge of Time, Neu! (1st) Yeti, Flying Teapot, Tubular Bells and Monster Movie. My friend owned a Record Shop, for years he let me buy Mud, Sweet, Gary Glitter et al. I never forgave him!!
|
|
Laszlo
Forum Newbie
Joined: December 10 2008
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 23
|
Posted: March 11 2009 at 00:37 |
Rush 2112 heard sometimes back in 78 on very decent vinyl rig. My jaw dropped to the floor then.
Before it was the standard late 70's hard rock stuff like Deep Purple, Led Zep, Sabbath, you name it.
|
|
glasshouse27
Forum Groupie
Joined: October 24 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 50
|
Posted: March 11 2009 at 06:48 |
For me it all started with Zeppelin and Sabbath then slowly winding my way through the Classic Rock genre I stumbled upon bands such as YES, ELP, Gentle Giant, and Genesis. Then I found Italian Prog through PA and after Banco del Mutuo Soccorso's Cento Mani o Centi Ochi (please pardon the spelling) I was hooked...
|
|
chemebien
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 05 2009
Location: Chile
Status: Offline
Points: 206
|
Posted: March 12 2009 at 18:17 |
my mom always told me that I have to listen Rush, then I listened and here i am :P
|
|
|
chemebien
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 05 2009
Location: Chile
Status: Offline
Points: 206
|
Posted: March 12 2009 at 18:17 |
my mom always told me that I have to listen Rush, then I listened and here i am :P
|
|
|
progadicto
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 19 2005
Location: Chile
Status: Offline
Points: 4316
|
Posted: March 14 2009 at 02:27 |
I'm sure there was a similar thread before... Whatever...
First: My father... A huge fan of classical music...
Second: My friend Mauro: Love this moth** f***er... Really... He introduced me into UK, Yes, Pink, Deep Purple, Klaus Schulze, Gong and many others... I was just 12 y/o...
Third: Joso and Perro... Two older friends... They were hypnotised fans of the classic 70 prog rock amongst other alternative styles... So, since then, my soul was sold to prog rock, mwahahahahahaha...
|
... E N E L B U N K E R...
|
|
XunknownX
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 02 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 158
|
Posted: March 14 2009 at 10:18 |
...in the kitchen on a monday morning
|
|
Spammer21
Forum Newbie
Joined: March 12 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 21
|
Posted: March 14 2009 at 10:28 |
I was "saved in the womb" as they say.
|
|
herojoe
Forum Newbie
Joined: March 14 2009
Location: Indianapolis
Status: Offline
Points: 21
|
Posted: March 15 2009 at 00:01 |
I'd say i first got into it because of my dad. He played kansas, rush, and yes around me all the time when I was a kid. When I got older I started getting into metal and found bands like Dream Theater and Opeth.
|
|
RunawayBoy
Forum Newbie
Joined: February 22 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 26
|
Posted: March 27 2009 at 16:53 |
I have to thank my father for getting me into prog. As a tvelve-year old I remember beeing on vacation with my family, driving around the countryside. I was getting tired of listening to a Absolute music cd, or was it maybe best of Modern Talking(?) Back in those days I owned 3 CD's or so.
My father had this Marillion Compilation cd laying around in the car, so I inserted it in my Discman and pressed play.
I had never heard anything like it, and remember beeing really fascinated by the vocals. How can anyone sing like that I thought, playing the disc over again.
I recently bought In the courth of the Crimson king and Godbluff by VDGG, and have got into new sides of prog. At the moment I'm trying out different prog-bands. (Because of the though that I might not have discovered all the greatest bands yet)
|
Hey Stan, come see what your old man made
|
|
A Person
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 10 2008
Location: __
Status: Offline
Points: 65760
|
Posted: March 27 2009 at 21:47 |
himtroy wrote:
And I'd also like to add (I gave my story about 400 pages back), that the first time I heard Gentle Giant it changed my life. I'd heard progressive, but Gentle Giant is DAMN progressive. Late at night, all alone, found Three Friends and Power and the Glory on vinyl. Never the same again. |
I had a similar experience with Godspeed You! Black Emperor, I fell in love with them from the first time I listened to the sample here on PA, I wish I remember who reviewed F#A#∞ the first day that I saw it on the front page so that I could thank them.
|
|
prog4evr
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 22 2005
Location: Wuhan, China
Status: Offline
Points: 1455
|
Posted: March 28 2009 at 00:00 |
I would have to say my dad (RIP). He was into jazz in the 50s and early 60s (I was born in 1959). He really likes Brubeck's Time Out, probably "the" precursor to odd time signatures in prog (except for some select classical music). At the tender age of 8, dad brought the first Doors album into the house. Manzarek's playing on that Vox organ was proto-prog at some of its best (along with Procol Harum, of course). When BS&T's second self-titled album came out in 1968, I heard it all the time - that, and Chicago's first album. In the early 1970s, dad digressed to getting into Bread, the Carpenters, and other sappy pop, but then my younger brother and I brought in Kansas' first self-titled album in 1975 - a year after it came out. Dad was right there with us loving what we were hearing. After that we bought Song for America, and then (upon school friends' advice) brought in Yes, Fragile; JT, Minstrel in the Gallery; and Yes, Relayer. By then, all of us - dad included - were hooked on early 70s prog. To this day, it is my favorite prog genre (though, I like Fish-era Marillion, too)...
|
|
cronholm
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 26 2009
Location: Northern Wastes
Status: Offline
Points: 105
|
Posted: March 28 2009 at 19:15 |
Like so many others here: my dad. I started riffling through his record collection when I was about six (1979) and it happened to include Yes, Tull, Uriah Heep, Zeppelin, Purple and a few others. And I never looked back. Even wrote a song about that experience a few years back.
|
|
Rockmansters
Forum Newbie
Joined: March 30 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 3
|
Posted: March 30 2009 at 11:02 |
I saw that video too! That was amazing!
|
|
|
Rockmansters
Forum Newbie
Joined: March 30 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 3
|
Posted: March 30 2009 at 11:10 |
I like Death Metal too and...hm...almost all type of rock!
|
|
|
Rockmansters
Forum Newbie
Joined: March 30 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 3
|
Posted: March 30 2009 at 11:17 |
I was 13 y/o when I got a Led Zeppelin album from my father.
|
|
|
Marty McFly
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: March 23 2009
Location: Czech Republic
Status: Offline
Points: 3968
|
Posted: March 31 2009 at 00:36 |
Hello, I'm new to this site so I'll probably start here, nice topic anyway.
In my childhood, I used to listen many classic & prog rock bands, there are marked as proto-prog, or prog-related. Deep Purple, The Beatles, Queen or proggers Pink Floyd and Jethro Tull. In my teen years, I went thru pop times, but still I've loved rock. But it was just one of genres. I used to go clubbing in these times too, but not with much success. So because of my not so bad relationship with rock (still not prog rock only), I've turned myself to books, quiet life and rock music. And it was caused by my dad, who gave me the basics about this genre. Who knows, maybe I was born with some gene, which takes me to highness, the heavenly good state of mind when I hear rock. Or I just like to doing something which I believe that is quality.
So I were moving thru classic/psychedelic/early prog/hard rock music and heavy metal too. I stayed there with almost no change for years till about one year ago.
Because in april 08, I've discovered Dream Theater and I instantly fell in love with 41 minutes epic from Score tour, Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence. Then The Flower Kings, Ayreon and then long string of Porcupine Tree, Yes and others. You can say that I'm new in this whole business, that I'm too young to understand this, or to be good enough to bring something new here, or just talk about these things well. But you can be respectfull to newbie too. If I am one of course :-)
Well, I'm able to listen Script For a Jesters Tear (track) 10 times, or I didn't knew Rush two weeks ago and now I like them a most (because till now, I've loved their every record, from classic rock first ones, to this unique Rush sound of late 70s-80s or more metalistic/hard rock late 90s - just my opinion)
|
|
Razorback
Forum Newbie
Joined: March 31 2009
Location: Scotland
Status: Offline
Points: 2
|
Posted: March 31 2009 at 11:16 |
Hi All, First posting on this forum. Sylvia by Focus led me to the album Focus 3 and from there a whole new world opened up. I was 14 at the time -so it wasn't yesterday.
|
Throw down the sword, the fight is done and over.
|
|
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.