Author |
Topic Search Topic Options
|
Chus
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: Venezuela
Status: Offline
Points: 1991
|
Posted: March 13 2007 at 21:14 |
Prometheus wrote:
haha...i'll offer my story since i'll be the first person not from the 70's. a modern prog story:
i was probably 14 and caught a listen of Tool...became obsessed with them for probably two years and then desperately wanted more. my girlfriend was learning The Mahavishnu Orchestra on the piano ("dance of the maya" --eccentric music teacher) and she burned me the CD..i loved it. then a friend of mine suggested Radiohead, picked up Kid A, as a fluke, and became obsessed with it. then, just by chance i found this site...and you people have made me spend too much money.
(oh..and now i have a college roomate who listens to thrash and death metal...so being subject to his music allowed me to see the merits of extreme prog like Meshuggah and Ephel Duath. that's been the biggest evolution for me since prog itself; every other prog genre came easily)
|
Whoa... a girl who likes Mahavishnu?? I don't hear that often (unless it's Ghost Rider )
EDIT: oh she was just learning it?? damn
Edited by Chus - March 13 2007 at 21:31
|
Jesus Gabriel
|
|
polyrythmic
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 02 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 112
|
Posted: March 13 2007 at 21:29 |
I got into Prog 2 years ago when I was 14, my aunt bought the Yes extended versions for me on Christmas.
|
|
Fight Club
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 21 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 572
|
Posted: March 13 2007 at 21:36 |
Back a few years ago (13-14) I used to listen to stuff like Linkin Park. After a little while I got an interest in music and started exploring classic rock. I discovered all the important bands like Zeppelin and Floyd and dove into "good rock". I was into Rush and Floyd and certain popular prog bands for a while, but I didn't really know what progressive rock was and didn't explore it.
Then one day I was exploring a site called digitaldreamdoor.com which basically compiled lists of rock's greatest musicians: guitar, drums, bass, etc. I noticed that these guys from a band named Dream Theater were pretty high on all the lists. Petrucci being like #14 in rock's greatest guitarists, Portnoy being like #8, Myung being like #20, etc. I was like damn these guys sound really damn talented but how come I have never heard of them? So I downloaded a song called Pull Me Under. That hooked me instantly. After that I went out and bought Images & Words and Scenes From A Memory. It was instaneous amazement. I just listened in awe and thought "what the hell genre are these guys considered? This is like metal, but incredibly technical and atmospheric, with techno or something!" Discovered they were included under Progressive Rock. The rest is history.
|
|
|
Padraic
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: February 16 2006
Location: Pennsylvania
Status: Offline
Points: 31169
|
Posted: March 13 2007 at 22:23 |
When i was in 7th grade, Rush and Yes came on the scene simultaneously. They were just so much better than pretty much anything I had been exposed to at that point. This was around 1990.
|
|
NJprogfan
Prog Reviewer
Joined: April 15 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 27
|
Posted: March 13 2007 at 22:26 |
I can remember vividly! It was 1977 and I was 17. Our english teacher allowed us to listen to the radio, (can't remember why). When "Roundabout" started I was immediately immobile. Mesmorized, hypnotized, I was rivited. I never heard anything like it. Of course, after the song was over, the DJ played another song without mentioning who the previous band was. I asked one of my classmates who the band was and of course the rest, for me, is history. I will say that I listened to Kansas having both "Leftoverture" and "Point Of No Return", but neither album gave me the reaction that this one particular song did. In hindsight, maybe listening to Kansas made me appreciate longer songs, kinda softening me up for more complex song structures. I remember going to the local record store, buying "Fragile" and had to have everything else Yes did. I never did thank my english teacher ;-)
|
|
Chris H
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 08 2006
Location: Charlotte, NC
Status: Offline
Points: 8191
|
Posted: March 13 2007 at 22:27 |
When I was 7, my dad bought me a CD player for my birthday and he gave me a bunch of his CD's to listen to, namely the Yes, Pink Floyd, and Jethro Tull remasters. I really got into avant stuff when I found my grandpa's vinyls in his storage room in his basement. The rest is history I guess.
Edited by Zappa88 - March 13 2007 at 22:33
|
Beauty will save the world.
|
|
rileydog22
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 24 2005
Location: New Jersey
Status: Offline
Points: 8844
|
Posted: March 13 2007 at 22:31 |
About 2 years ago, I wasn't terribly into music, just barely stumbling my way through some really shallow classic rock. My friend recommended I picked up this really weird album from 1969 by some group called King Crimson.
|
|
|
Floydian42
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 846
|
Posted: March 13 2007 at 22:33 |
13, my dad showed me Pink Floyd.
|
|
enteredwinter
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 05 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 501
|
Posted: March 13 2007 at 22:37 |
My prog evolution had three distinct stages:
Around age 14: Through friends and my father, I got into classic rock, which led me to The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, and Pink Floyd. I also got into 80's thrash at this time. My only true prog album then was Selling England By The Pound. I also discovered Tool at this point.
At age 21: I discovered Opeth, randomly while messing around on the Internet. This led me to Porcupine Tree, Meshuggah, Dream Theater, and others.
At age 24: I was desparately searching for new music, and managed to discover Muse, The Mars Volta, Rush, Ayreon, Riverside, and others. I eventually stumbled upon this website in May of 2006, and now I have a 300+ CD collection that is made up of mostly prog, prog-related stuff, and metal.
|
|
|
Walker
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 20 2005
Location: Atlanta
Status: Offline
Points: 824
|
Posted: March 13 2007 at 22:59 |
I was about 13 and the older guy next door joined the Army. This was about '77 or so. He told me I could have all his LP's while he was gone. The first one I listened to was Relayer. That was it for me and I haven't looked back since.
|
|
Man With Hat
Collaborator
Jazz-Rock/Fusion/Canterbury Team
Joined: March 12 2005
Location: Neurotica
Status: Offline
Points: 166178
|
Posted: March 14 2007 at 00:12 |
Approx. three/four years ago.
Before then I knew of the popular stuff...Dark Side Of The Moon...Yes' Roundabout...etc...but that was all. Then one day, my unlce let me listen to KC's Discipline. I was more stunned then anything, and it didn't really sink it with first listen. But I knew there was something I liked about it. After that, he let me listen to a few more prog classics: Zappa's One Size Fits All, Spock's Beard The Kindness Of Strangers, Gente Giants Interview, Genesis' The Lamb...Eventually I started to buy the albums on my own...and the rest as they say, is history.
|
Dig me...But don't...Bury me I'm running still, I shall until, one day, I hope that I'll arrive Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect.
|
|
Unix
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 11 2007
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 253
|
Posted: March 14 2007 at 00:20 |
About 14 for me, I was already into Pink Floyd and Rush then, and a friend of mine helped me with the rest from there...
|
|
|
kazansky
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 24 2006
Location: Indonesia
Status: Offline
Points: 5085
|
Posted: March 14 2007 at 00:26 |
about 3 years ago, when i was in high school. i was in a friend's place and he apparently just bought Dream Theater's Train of Thought. after a few listening, the album clicked with me, and i bought one myself.
|
The devil we blame our atrocities on is really just each one of us.
|
|
NotSoKoolAid
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 24 2006
Status: Offline
Points: 507
|
Posted: March 14 2007 at 00:46 |
How old? 11. How was it? Better than sex!
Since, I've gone progressive sub-genre to sub-genre. Eventually I dove into jazz and related it to progressive rock as much as I could. I do these things to this day.
|
|
asimplemistake
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 840
|
Posted: March 14 2007 at 00:49 |
enteredwinter wrote:
At age 21: I discovered Opeth, randomly while messing around on the Internet. This led me to Porcupine Tree, Meshuggah, Dream Theater, and others.
|
yaaa opeth and PT . I have a similar story...kinda. About 3 years ago i was really into Yngwie Malmsteen (not prog obviously) and my friend and his brother (who was also my guitar teacher) told me about Symphony X. I listened to Symphony X for a while just cause it was awesome. I also listened to bands that were related to Symphony X but didnt quite discover Prog then. It wasnt until I found this website that I realized that Symphony X was part of a genre that had intelligence behind it that I discovered Prog. From then i got into Dream Theater, Adagio, Kamelot, and more recently I've gotten very into Opeth and Porcupine Tree (PT was recommended to me from my dentist!). I've loved actual Prog for about oh 1.5 to 2 years now and i dont think ill stray too far away from it.
|
|
Guests
Forum Guest Group
|
Posted: March 14 2007 at 03:55 |
I am from Barcelona. I was 15 in 1973 and I was into Cat Stevens or Don McLean . Once I read about ELP's Trilogy in a magazin. They didn't play progressive music in the radios in Spain back then. My friends weren't into music either. One day I was going to buy Elton John's Madman Across The Water but I decided to listen to that record in the department store. I got Trilogy, and from then on their previous records. Since I liked Lake's voice and I heard he was in a group called K.Crimson I got "In the court" . Then I moved to another school, bigger, and got in contact with other boys who were listening to the same music. I was lucky to see the first prog rock concerts in Spain: ELP in 1973 and Genesis in 1974. Those two concerts changed my life, in a way. At least musically.
After that.... well, I think I've written too much.
|
|
Atavachron
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: September 30 2006
Location: Pearland
Status: Offline
Points: 65266
|
Posted: March 14 2007 at 04:19 |
When I was quite young, maybe nine, I saw and immediately liked the Tarkus cover-- the music was way over my head but I loved that a rock band was using a space-age armadillo for a theme. About a year later I bought Hemispheres - again because of the cover - and though the music was a bit much for a ten year old, I kept it and enjoyed it years later when I began to appreciate the music.
|
|
mystic fred
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: March 13 2006
Location: Londinium
Status: Offline
Points: 4252
|
Posted: March 14 2007 at 04:26 |
the thread opener by darksideof is an amazing story ..!!!! that's what Prog is all about - beauty over adversity, though my own story is a humble one compared to that....
i was brought up in a comfortable working class home in London's home county of Middlesex, when i was five i was a very keen music fan (in the 50's) and as the years went by i found i was attracted to the "weird" side of rock from the Hippies and Beatles experimenting with sound to the Moody Blues mellotron magic, things just went along and brought me to where i am today - i'm exactly the same as then,.... though the world has moved on a bit, i must have a look sometime..
Edited by mystic fred - March 14 2007 at 04:28
|
Prog Archives Tour Van
|
|
Christian
Forum Groupie
Joined: August 25 2005
Location: Czech Republic
Status: Offline
Points: 61
|
Posted: March 14 2007 at 04:39 |
I have two distinct prog periods in my life, with a long (less active, but not dead) time inbetween:
First period:
It all started around 1972-73 timeframe. I was a music and record freak and was very much into Bowie, Alice Cooper, Zep, Deep Purple and the likes at the time. I was 13. Then prog started slowly to come into my world, first through Pink Floyd and ELP, but the big breakthrough was in 1973, with SEBTP, DSOTM and TFTTO, and the the ball started to roll!!!!
I was totally immersed in prog for the rest of the 70's, with all the classics (Genesis, Yes, ELP, Crimson, Floyd) and then always trying to find new (at the time) obscure and unknown artists. This continued with Triumvirat, Kansas, UK, PFM, RDM, Tai Phong, Jethro Tull and everything that was prog.
The period got inot to a coma for me as well as for the world when punk took over (I was not into it, but the lack of new good prog of course had an impact)
During the 80's and 90's I was following the development quite passively, busy raising a family and having a career. I continued to listen to Marillion and Pink Floyd but did not find any real interesting new bands.
The caem the second prog wave for me: The entry of the iPod!!!! All of a sudden I had my entire music collection at my fingertips and a I relived a lot of the good moments from the past. Via the internet I found sites like this site and others and slowly started to bild up a hunger for new prog. The first band I listened to was A.C.T and then I got into Spock's Beard, Porcupine Tree, VDGG ( revival coming when Present came out), Transatlantic etc. And now the last two years have been like 1973-74 all over!!! I bought 100's of new prog CDs including the entire catalogue of Tangent, Arena, IQ, Pain of Salvation, Neal Morse, Spc
ock's Beard, and everything else I can find.
As you may guess my favorite genre is Symphonic, followed by art/space/metal
|
|
toolis
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 26 2006
Location: MacedoniaGreece
Status: Offline
Points: 1678
|
Posted: March 14 2007 at 04:40 |
i was 16 and i bought Images And Words - DT and Parallels - Fates Warning.. it was so different sound to me.. it took me a while to get into it but have been a great fan ever since...
|
-music is like pornography...
sometimes amateurs turn us on, even more...
-sometimes you are the pigeon and sometimes you are the statue...
|
|