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SpaceMonkey
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Topic: Your Growing Roots Posted: December 14 2007 at 19:05 |
What was your first prog album purchase and where did it branch off from there.
Dream Theater's "A Change of Seasons" was my first purchase and I slowly purchased the other ones. Some how I stumbled onto Symphony X shortly afterwards and later became very much acquainted with the LTE's. Then I looked for all of the side projects each member of Dream Theater did, such as Transatlantic and solo albums they did, and slowly started searching out albums from the artists they worked with. Than all of a sudden started purchasing album after album of random artists looking for something new. Slowly becoming an exspensive hobby.
So how about all of you?
Edited by SpaceMonkey - December 14 2007 at 19:06
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Evans
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Posted: December 14 2007 at 19:20 |
Be prepared for some flak, since this is the second most common thread theme on the forums, just before "Which Dream Theater musician is best?" and "Phil Collins killed Prog!"
Anyway, for me it was the wall. I had no idea what prog was, and i did not know any Floyd at all, but i remember the exact moment i was totally blown away by what i thereafter considered the best album ever for about a year or so. So i tried to hear all i could by Pink Floyd, and then one day i listened to Peter Gabriel's "UP" and the opening track was so powerful for one who has never heard anything past Floyd and ELO in his whole life, and it made a real impact on me. Shortly thereafter i decided it was time for me to check into some Genesis, since someone had told me before that's where he had his roots.
But that was really it for me for a while, before i one day was on the imdb forum for "Pink Floyd's the Wall", reading an argument about something when one of the posters linked to this site. I started by reading the "what is prog?" introduction and then went straight into the hellfire. : )
First there was a lot of Symph, all the classics, when i decided (like all noobs) to explore the avant-garde side of the genre, because it sounded so cool. Unfortunately, i never got much farther than VDGG and Kraut into that section before i discovered that i much preferred Led Zeppelin and Fleetwood Mac to all that... umm... "Challenging, progressive and intellectual" music..
There. You got more than you asked for, now i'm up way past my bedtime, hahaha...
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Bj-1
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Posted: December 14 2007 at 19:31 |
Stuff like Supertramp, Jean-Michel Jarre, Mike Oldfield and later Pink Floyd quickly grabbed my attention as a kid.
It wasn't until I saw the cover art for In The Court... that my real journy started though. I got it and loved it and started to look for other stuff in the same vein. Genesis was my second love and I quickly started aqcuiring stuff like Yes, ELP and Strawbs etc.
A few months later, I got into stuff like Gentle Giant, Henry Cow, Soft Machine, Can, Gnidrolog, Passport, Gryphon and Soft Machine before finally dicovering this site somewhere in the spring of 2004. The rest is history!
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RIO/AVANT/ZEUHL - The best thing you can get with yer pants on!
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micky
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Posted: December 14 2007 at 19:57 |
Evans wrote:
Be prepared for some flak, since this is the second most common thread theme on the forums, just before "Which Dream Theater musician is best?"
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amen brother..... My vote is for ...oh what's his name... oh yeah.. Jack Myung.
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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ProgBagel
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Joined: May 13 2007
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Posted: December 14 2007 at 20:02 |
A Change of Seasons, then Rush, then Yes and then every damn direction from there at the same time.
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Snipergoat
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Joined: September 22 2007
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Posted: December 14 2007 at 20:46 |
Pink Floyd - DSoTM.
I was actually looking for psychedelic music and had no idea what prog was.
PF basically led to everything I listen to now
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prog4evr
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Joined: September 22 2005
Location: Wuhan, China
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Posted: December 14 2007 at 22:03 |
I liked songs I heard on the radio from Leftoverture, so that got me into Kansas in 1976 ('Song for America' is actually my favorite from that period for them). Then, my friend said if you like Kansas, listen to Yes Relayer. I still don't see the connection, but I am glad he connected me to that album - a true prog classic! From there, I got totally into Yes (from Time and a Word to Tormato - after that, I lost interest). Then, another friend introduced me to Genesis Foxtrot. I thought that was a strange album at first; I actually liked TOTT better for almost a year. Nowadays, I am a die-hard Gabriel-era Genesis fan, though TOTT and W&W get honorable-mention. In the late 1970s, UK caught my attention (since I had been familiar with Bruford and Wetton from King Crimson). In the early 1980s, I stumbled upon Marillion - the group under Fish put out some superb albums until 1987. In the 1990s, I was overseas and out-of-touch (internet was not yet as pervasive as it is today). By this decade, the first one of the 2000s, I was led to Spock's Beard, Flower Kings, and even Dream Theater and Symphony X (though prog metal is not really my thing). At the risk of that being "too much information," that's the short-version of my journey into prog...
Edited by prog4evr - December 14 2007 at 22:03
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King Crimson776
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 01:17 |
My first prog album purchase was "Unfold the Future" by The Flower Kings (I figure if I can't find it on Limewire, the band needs the money ![](smileys/smiley2.gif) ). The first prog album I heard, however was DSOTM by Pink Floyd. ![](smileys/smiley4.gif) I didn't know it was prog back then, I was pretty much just into classic rock. One day my mom mentioned how she hated this band called ELP that made this song about necrophelia (Still... You Turn Me On), she had just heard it on the radio. So of course I immediately had to check the band out. I heard Tarkus and Trilogy (the songs) first and I thought it was the weirdest music ever, but I was intruiged, so I listened more and they quickly became one of my favorite bands. I learned it was called prog and I found out about the classics and then went on to more kinds of music like jazz and classical and then I found out about newer prog and now I'm into and all kinds of sh*t, all thanks to ELP. Thanks guys.
Edited by King Crimson776 - December 15 2007 at 01:22
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E-Dub
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 01:48 |
Probably my first one was Kansas' Monolith (well, got it for Christmas in 1979, along with Styx Cornerstone and Steve Walsh Schemer Dreamer), then I branched off to Rush and Moving Pictures.
E
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SpaceMonkey
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Joined: November 13 2007
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 02:44 |
I knew it was one of those common thread topics and was expecting expecting the worse for the first few replies. If it happens, oh well, I wasn't apart of the last how ever many times the question popped up so I figured one more wouldn't hurt too much. Thanks so far.
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Raff
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 03:06 |
My very first prog album was Italian, namely Delirium's Dolce Acqua - bought at the age of 11, when it was first released. In the following couple of years I got The New Trolls' Concerto Grosso, UT and Searching for a Land. As to my first foreign prog album, it was definitely something from Pink Floyd, bought a few years later, when I was in my late teens.
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King Crimson776
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 03:16 |
Ghost Rider wrote:
My very first prog album was Italian, namely Delirium's Dolce Acqua - bought at the age of 11, when it was first released. In the following couple of years I got The New Trolls' Concerto Grosso, UT and Searching for a Land. As to my first foreign prog album, it was definitely something from Pink Floyd, bought a few years later, when I was in my late teens.
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Naming Italian prog and then calling Floyd foreign prog, I guess you're from Italy? That's some pretty obscure stuff for just starting out, and age 11, wow. I was rocking Smash Mouth at that point. ![](smileys/smiley36.gif) I know you're older than me but that's pretty intense.
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Raff
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 03:21 |
Yes, I am from Italy (Rome to be precise), and at the time (early Seventies) Italian and foreign prog were HUGE there. They got lots of exposure on the radio, and kids who started bands were mainly inspired by the likes of Genesis, PF and KC. It was another age indeed...
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King Crimson776
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 03:33 |
Italian prog on the radio. Whoa, that seems like an alternate universe nowadays. I always thought only mainstream stuff was on the radio back then like it is today, but I guess it really was a more open minded time for music like people are always saying.
Cool cat, by the way.
Edited by King Crimson776 - December 15 2007 at 03:35
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Abstrakt
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 03:38 |
My "roots" were based in hard rock basically.
I loved Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Ozzy Osbourne, Metallica, AC/DC and the likes...
But while later, i found out that the hard rock from the 70's was so much more interesting. It had longer songs and sometimes even included organ! Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin & later Pink Floyd were my favorites for about a year.
I had periods when i was deeply into one of these bands, and in spring 2005, it was pink floyd mainly. (and BTW, a friend of mine got me into Zappa around this time, but all he knew was his most famous songs)
So after searching Pink Floyd on the net, i found PA. Then i found out that the genre was called "Psychedelic/Space Rock". So i started downloading the samples from PA of bands like PF, Eloy, Nektar, Triumvirat, Yes and maybe something more.
Then i registered to PA, had a short time active. Then, i lost everything on my computer, and didn't log on to PA again until April 2006.
Then that spring/summer i discovered loads of new bands, including Gentle Giant, The Flower Kings, Jethro Tull etc...
Then, i was getting into more and more bands, and then i started buying CD's all the time.
...
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Evans
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 05:35 |
micky wrote:
Evans wrote:
Be prepared for some flak, since this is the second most common thread theme on the forums, just before "Which Dream Theater musician is best?"
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amen brother..... My vote is for ...oh what's his name... oh yeah.. Jack Myung.
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No, man, John Petrucci can do sweep arpeggios really fast!
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'Let's give it another fifteen seconds..'
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paloz
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 07:59 |
I only remember my first prog experience. Wish you were here
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BaldFriede
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 08:37 |
My first experience was "Carpet Crawlers" by Genesis, sounding out of the room of my brother, who is 10 years older than me. I was 5 years old at that time (the album had just been out) and was hooked. I became a constant guest in my brother's room. He was a big collector and showed his little sister the way into the wonderland of prog. He was especially into Kraut, all this weird and trippy music. I heard sounds I had never heard before. Needless to say all this usually happened with the room being filled with "sweet smoke". My brother always had some incense sticks burning to explain the smell, though my parents appeared doubtful lol. He and his friends were a pretty freaky bunch at that time.
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![](uploads/2608/jean_and_friede_at_restaurant.jpg) BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.
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Philéas
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 09:45 |
First purchase? King Crimson's Red, first press vinyl.
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sean
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Posted: December 15 2007 at 10:13 |
for me it started about five years ago with dark side of the moon. i had no idea what prog was but i loved pink floyd, and i also discovered rush and kansas around that time. from there, i just branched out in several directions, but mainly symph and metal, and it wasn't until recently that i discovered the more obscure, avant garde prog.
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