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Our first fifteen favorite Prog Archives-albums

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David_D View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote David_D Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2024 at 14:40
Originally posted by mellotronwave mellotronwave wrote:

One point for The slider :-)

This T. Rex album was maybe the only much Pop-influenced one I liked as a teenager.

                      quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote essexboyinwales Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2024 at 04:32
The fort 15 prog albums I listened to? These, I think:

War Of The Worlds - definitely heard this in 1978 - scared the crap out of me (I was 7!)

Some years later, a I got into rock and metal:

The Wall
Invisible Touch!
Nomzamo
Out Of The Silent Planet
Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son
…And Justice For All
Seasons End
ABWH
Can’t Look Away
Gretchen Goes To Nebraska
Are You Sitting Comfortably?
The Real Thing
A Momentary Lapse Of Reason
Once Around The World

Something like that anyway!!!
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Saperlipopette! View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Saperlipopette! Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2024 at 09:54
^Well it says first fifteen favorite so that's what I'm most curious about. As in the ones that really stuck with you at an early stage, or "formative prog years". But there's nothing wrong with your approach. I just think it's been done many times before.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote essexboyinwales Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2024 at 13:02
Originally posted by Saperlipopette! Saperlipopette! wrote:

^Well it says first fifteen favorite so that's what I'm most curious about. As in the ones that really stuck with you at an early stage, or "formative prog years". But there's nothing wrong with your approach. I just think it's been done many times before.


Hmm, I see what you’re saying. I’ve picked out 15 albums that I only now regard as prog, I certainly didn’t back then as I didn’t even know what it was! But apart from Invisible Touch, which is OK, I still really like the rest of these….so take out IT and put in When Dream And Day Unite, and there’s 15 albums that I still love and that have been hugely influential in my subsequent love of prog, which only truly kicked in about 23 years ago when I got Genesis’ Platinum Collection and heard their early stuff….
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote progaardvark Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2024 at 09:27
My introduction to prog rock was from my Dad, who had an eclectic range of music he liked. He grew up with 1950s American rock, but also liked big band music and some prog rock from the 1970s (though at the time, at least in our circles, never knew it as prog rock. My first favorites were albums my Dad regularly played in the late 1970s. These included:

1. Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon
2. Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here
3. Electric Light Orchestra - A New World Record
4. Electric Light Orchestra - Out of the Blue
5. Electric Light Orchestra - Olé ELO
6. The Moody Blues - This Is the Moody Blues

As we progressed into the early 1980s, my curiosity led to dig deeper into my Dad's collection for albums I can't recall him ever playing for us. These included:

7. Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffiti
8. Electric Light Orchestra - On the Third Day
9. Pink Floyd - Animals
10. The Beatles - 1967-1970 (the blue album)

This one is not on PA, but has tracks from several prog bands, including my first listen to Yes (Starship Trooper)
Various - Heavy Metal - 24 Electrifying Performances

My Mom at this time listened to the same ELO albums, but also listened to Disco compilations and the Carpenters. I still like the Carpenters to this day.

Around 1983 I started my own record collection. The first records I added were through the the Columbia House mail order thing at the time. I believe the deal was 12 albums for a penny and then I had to buy 5 or 6 albums at full price within a year (anyone remember the exact details?). Columbia House was advertising this on TV at the time and I believe this marketing gimmick went into the 1990s. I believe I submitted my selections on a form I got out of a magazine. I don't actually recall all 12 of those albums, but some expanded my journey into prog:

11. Yes - 90125
12. Yes - Classic Yes
13. Genesis - Genesis (the shapes album)
14. Electric Light Orchestra - Time
15. Electric Light Orchestra - Secret Messages

So, that takes me to my first 15. Additional albums came through listening to local Philadelphia radio stations WMMR and WYSP in the 1980s (like the Alan Parsons Project and Rush). The bands from the 15 above were also explored backwards to their debuts. By 1990 I had about 330 LPs. I took a break from buying during my college years, but returned to buying around 1995. At first this was replacing my LPs with CDs but I started discovering newer prog bands initially through the covers compilations that Magna Carta records produced and the online Gibraltar Encyclopedia of Progressive Rock which existed many years before Prog Archives.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote omphaloskepsis Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2024 at 17:47
Yes- Fragile
King Crimson- In The Court Of The Crimson King
Jethro Tull- War Child
Pink Floyd- Wish You Were Here
Al Di Demeola- Elegant Gypsy
Emerson, Lake, and Palmer- Brain Salad Surgery
ELO- Debut 

Rush- Hemispheres
Gentile Giant- Octopus
Jeff Beck- Wired
Frank Zappa- Over-Nite Sensation
Pink Floyd- Animals
Kansas- Left Overture 
Santana- Festival
Jethro Tull- Heavy Horses

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