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Tom Ozric
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 03 2005
Location: Olympus Mons
Status: Offline
Points: 15926
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 04:25 |
Tom Ozric wrote:
I guess, for me it would've been Floyd's DSOTM cassette - back in the very early 80's - I must've been around 8-10 years old. I didn't know it was 'Prog' but always loved it. My first real Prog vinyl would've been Wish You Were Here, my 14th birthday, 1986. |
Actually - December 1985 - The Wall - waaaay before I received WYWH as a vinyl gift. But I am hard-pressed accepting The Wall as a truly 'Prog' work. It's fantastic, no doubt, but not what I've come to know about PROG in its essence..........
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Sean Trane
Special Collaborator
Prog Folk
Joined: April 29 2004
Location: Heart of Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 20450
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 04:44 |
Does my father's Stand Up count?? (I was 6, but played that album constantly )
My first album ever (bought with my own money from newspaper delivery) was Crime Of The Century, in sept 74 (age 11)... then came DSOTM, SEBTP (I didn't dig or get that one for a while) , Harmonium's debut, etc...
within a year, I had Aqualung, TAAB, ITOTCK, In Rock, Paranoid, ITLOG&P, 5θ Saison, etc...
Edited by Sean Trane - March 24 2016 at 04:47
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Necrotica
Special Collaborator
Honorary Colaborator
Joined: July 28 2015
Location: California
Status: Offline
Points: 3407
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 04:50 |
Tom Ozric wrote:
Tom Ozric wrote:
I guess, for me it would've been Floyd's DSOTM cassette - back in the very early 80's - I must've been around 8-10 years old. I didn't know it was 'Prog' but always loved it. My first real Prog vinyl would've been Wish You Were Here, my 14th birthday, 1986. | Actually - December 1985 - The Wall - waaaay before I received WYWH as a vinyl gift. But I am hard-pressed accepting The Wall as a truly 'Prog' work. It's fantastic, no doubt, but not what I've come to know about PROG in its essence.......... |
I consider The Wall a prog album, but I can definitely see what you mean. A lot of websites classify the album as "progressive pop," and with songs like Another Brick in the Wall and In The Flesh, that certainly makes sense.
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Take me down, to the underground Won't you take me down, to the underground Why oh why, there is no light And if I can't sleep, can you hold my life
https://www.youtube.com/@CocoonMasterBrendan-wh3sd
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Cookie13
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 10 2016
Location: Poland
Status: Offline
Points: 473
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 05:23 |
Probably Images & Words - Dream Theater at 1996.
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"Clipside of the pinkeye flight I'm not the percent you think survives I need sanctuary in the pages of this book."
Son Et Lumiere - The Mars Volta
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someone_else
Forum Senior Member
VIP Member
Joined: May 02 2008
Location: Going Bananas
Status: Offline
Points: 24673
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 05:24 |
Pink Floyd's Relics on my 13th birthday.
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Tom Ozric
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 03 2005
Location: Olympus Mons
Status: Offline
Points: 15926
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 05:51 |
Necrotica wrote:
Tom Ozric wrote:
Tom Ozric wrote:
I guess, for me it would've been Floyd's DSOTM cassette - back in the very early 80's - I must've been around 8-10 years old. I didn't know it was 'Prog' but always loved it. My first real Prog vinyl would've been Wish You Were Here, my 14th birthday, 1986. | Actually - December 1985 - The Wall - waaaay before I received WYWH as a vinyl gift. But I am hard-pressed accepting The Wall as a truly 'Prog' work. It's fantastic, no doubt, but not what I've come to know about PROG in its essence.......... |
I consider The Wall a prog album, but I can definitely see what you mean. A lot of websites classify the album as "progressive pop," and with songs like Another Brick in the Wall and In The Flesh, that certainly makes sense. |
It was that BRILLIANT lead solo in ABITW II that blew my young mind. There was just soooo much soul and feeling (which I never 'got' at that age, but knew this was something really special......) that sold me........ Then it was Obscured, AHM, then the Barrett stuff. Now it's anything from Magenta to Meshuggah, Ciccada to Igra Staklenih Perli, back to Il Tempio delle Clessidre, through Elephant9, Dungen and Kosmos, to Etron Fou Le Loublan and Shub Niggurath. This list goes on by dozens, and dozens.......and dozens............... .............then I come across P.A...................
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Meltdowner
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: June 25 2013
Location: Portugal
Status: Offline
Points: 10279
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 06:05 |
If I count Proto Prog and compilations it's Deep Purple's Platinum Collection that I got for Christmas in 2009, I think. Then I bought most Led Zeppelin albums and The Doors' boxset. The first Prog album I bought was DSOTM on CD in 2011. Then I continued the Floyd collection, bought every Supertramp album from COTC to BIA, Tubular Bells, Hergest Ridge and CTTE.
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer
Joined: August 09 2015
Location: Italy
Status: Offline
Points: 15216
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 06:40 |
Manfred Mann's Earthband - first Watch on tape at the age of 12, then Nightingales and Bombers, the first album that I bought and still have.
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A_Flower
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 18 2015
Location: 2112
Status: Offline
Points: 1199
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 08:05 |
I was 13 in 7th grade when I listened to the best or Pink Floyd. That was when I heard Echoes. After that moment, my life was never the same...
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User Banned for this Post
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zravkapt
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 12 2010
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 6451
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 08:53 |
If we're including proto, related and crossover stuff here...I had albums by the Beatles, Radiohead, Nine Inch Nails and Primus before I was into 'prog'.. I just remembered shortly after Zappa died I bought Hot Rats. I probably had that before I bought DSOTM.
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Magma America Great Make Again
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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: March 24 2016 at 10:20 |
As far as purchased for me, I got Sgt Peppers as a surprise present a few weeks after it was released in '67. As far as bought with my own hard-earned-allowance cash...I road my 10 speed on a cool 1975 July morning to the local record store. Was randomly looking through the shelves and stumbled on Brain Salad Surgery. One look at the cover and it was all over...I wasn't leaving without it
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AlanB
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 19 2013
Status: Offline
Points: 1216
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 11:28 |
Argus by Wishbone Ash. I bought it on cassette in 1973 then when that wore out I bought the vinyl, then later on the CD.
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Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin
Joined: January 22 2009
Location: Magic Theatre
Status: Offline
Points: 23104
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 14:33 |
I must've been 9 or 10 when I made a tape of my aunt's vinyl copy of The Wall. It's still around somewhere, but I tend to go for my cd nowadays. My first prog purchase though? Delicate Sound Of Thunder the year after methinks.
Edited by Guldbamsen - March 24 2016 at 14:34
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“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams
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Nightfly
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: August 01 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 3659
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 16:09 |
I think it was The Yes Album...or was it Barclay James Harvest Live.
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TheLionOfPrague
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 08 2011
Location: Argentina
Status: Offline
Points: 1069
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 17:50 |
Dark Side and Trilogy.
The Division Bell and The Wall a bit before but don't consider them "prog".
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I shook my head and smiled a whisper knowing all about the place
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miamiscot
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 23 2014
Location: Ohio
Status: Offline
Points: 3630
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 18:24 |
Fragile
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Cambus741
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 12 2015
Location: Chelmsford
Status: Offline
Points: 1226
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 18:55 |
Depends if Queen are considered prog; if so then it would have been A Night at the Opera.
Otherwise it would be Marillion's Real to Reel
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Necrotica
Special Collaborator
Honorary Colaborator
Joined: July 28 2015
Location: California
Status: Offline
Points: 3407
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 19:29 |
Cambus741 wrote:
Depends if Queen are considered prog; if so then it would have been A Night at the Opera.
Otherwise it would be Marillion's Real to Reel
| Yeah, I consider Queen's first four albums prog
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Take me down, to the underground Won't you take me down, to the underground Why oh why, there is no light And if I can't sleep, can you hold my life
https://www.youtube.com/@CocoonMasterBrendan-wh3sd
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Pastmaster
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 23 2015
Location: Spiderwood Farm
Status: Offline
Points: 1774
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 20:27 |
I don't remember what the first one I heard was, but the first one I got was Rush's Moving Pictures.
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TheLionOfPrague
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 08 2011
Location: Argentina
Status: Offline
Points: 1069
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Posted: March 24 2016 at 21:08 |
Necrotica wrote:
Cambus741 wrote:
Depends if Queen are considered prog; if so then it would have been A Night at the Opera.
Otherwise it would be Marillion's Real to Reel
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Yeah, I consider Queen's first four albums prog |
First five I'd say (thought not sure I'd say they're prog). The first big stylistic change was in News of the World, although it'd be more radical in The Game.
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I shook my head and smiled a whisper knowing all about the place
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