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Topic: Belated Intro Posted: April 18 2012 at 05:06
Hi,
I’m Geoff! I’ve been on this forum for a while, but always looked
around in the sections at the top so I never noticed this section until
now. Thought maybe I should introduce myself, though it is belated.
I
grew up with two music snobs for parents, so I had listened to a lot of
classical and jazz. In my early teens I discovered Prog when I found
Pictures at an Exhibition buried in a draw that had some of my Dad’s old
records. I was hooked, and quickly started buying up all of ELP’s
albums. I was also rebelling and listening to Classic Rock radio at the
time…. I didn’t really understand Prog at this point and, while I had
bought a couple Yes, Jethro Tull, and Kansas albums, I had only done so
for the hits they played on the radio and thought some of these bands
other songs were a bit…weird. I later developed a fascination with
guitarists. This may be due to the fact that growing up, having had
music snobs as parents, I hadn’t really heard much guitar music –
ESPECIALLY not electric guitar. So I was fascinated by the likes of
Hendrix and Van Halen. In my freshman year of college, I was hanging
out with some guys downtown and our ride was playing Surfing with the
Alien by Joe Satriani. I was amazed at his technical ability, and
started buying all of his CD’s. I eventually bought a couple Steve Vai
cd’s as well, but at first, once again, found much of his music to
be…weird. That summer, I went to the G3 show featuring Satriani, Vai,
and… John Petrucci. The semester after this, my roommate was the
president of the film club. One fateful day, I was listening to
Satriani while studying, and a member of the film club came by looking
for my roommate, and said “hey, is that Satriani?” We got to talking, I
told him about G3, and he asked me if I had listened to Dream Theater.
Well, I had listened to some of their samples on Amazon (this was in
the early days of Amazon, immediately after they had began to even offer
the feature of listening to samples of songs) and didn’t like the 80’s
sound of the singer so I had never tried them out. I politely told him
as much, but he insisted I had to listen to them, and later on let me
borrow Once in a Livetime. On a side note: this guy who introduced me
to DT is now my best friend, and I met my other best friend through him,
who is also a DT fan. Once again, as I’m listening I thought they
were…weird. But when I got to Take the Time, I enjoyed it very much,
especially the part at the end where they played the instrumental parts
from the end of Freebird. This was enough to get me to buy the live
album, and I decided to give it a bit more of a shot and bought the Live
Scenes From a Memory album as well. I discovered I liked these
guys…but I still didn’t “get” Prog yet, though I might’ve thought I
understood it. See, up to this point, my understanding of Prog was that
it was supposed to sound like a mix of Classical and Rock. The day I
truly began to understand Prog was sometime after I started listening to
Images and Words by Dream Theater. I remember HATING Metropolis Pt.
1. But for some reason, part of the instrumental section stuck in my
head and kept repeating over, and over, and over again. So…I had to
listen to the song again. I HATED IT! But I liked that section of the
instrumentals for some reason even though it just seemed…weird. After
listening to this song a few times, just because of the darn thing being
stuck in my head, I had an epiphany. I began to realize that the time
signature was unusual, that it kept changing, and that there were even
parts where different members of the band were in different time
signatures. Wow…that’s really cool, I thought, and I had a much bigger
appreciation for the song after that. This was a major turning point for me, one that led to me going back and finding I really liked some of the stuff I had earlier found to be...weird.
I eventually owned the whole DT
collection at the time, and started searching for more music like this.
But in my search, I wanted bands to sound as close to DT as possible.
So I was always just a bit disappointed. But I did discover a few
things I liked, such as Symphony X, Pain of Salvation, Transatlantic,
and I experimented with a few others during this period as well. My
second epiphany occurred as a result of a festival called ProgPowerUSA.
My two DT fan friends I told you about earlier had gone with me to a
few concerts in Atlanta and we kept seeing ProgPowerUSA shirts. We
weren’t Prog experts, but knew some of the names on the shirts and
thought “wow, Prog actually comes to the states?” So we went to Prog
Power VI, not knowing a single band on the lineup. Seeing all the bands
we didn’t know and really liking some of them, along with going to the
vendor area and seeing just how many Prog and Prog related discs were
being sold opened my eyes (actually, all of our eyes – meaning myself
and my two friends) to the fact that there was a BIG world of Prog out
there that we knew nothing about. I began to experiment a lot more and
over the years after, discovered a LOT of bands I liked. My two friends
and I have made it a tradition now to go to ProgPowerUSA every year.
As a result, you can tell from my signature image (made it myself, thank
you very much) my tastes gravitate a bit more to the heavy side.
However, I have experimented outside my comfort range quite a bit and
found bands that I liked, such as Anglagard. Some bands I love that
didn’t make it into my signature image include (but are not limited to):
Sieges Even Zero Hour Flower Kings Transatlantic Jethro Tull Agents of Mercy Ayreon Ark Beyond Twilight Porcupine Tree
I know! I'm so close! I dunno why, but I'm very excited about my status switching to "senior". I'd love to be considered a collaborator too...but after reading what it entails I dunno if that'll ever happen - 1) I don't have that much time so it will take me quite a while to write that many reviews, 2) so far I only write reviews for stuff I REALLY like or stuff that has a super high rating on the site but I REALLY didn't like (or in one case because I got a freebie, haha), and 3) because I've only been reviewing stuff I really like or really disliked, I haven't reviewed a wide variety of sub-genres....
Oh well.
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