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gerdtheater
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 03 2011
Status: Offline
Points: 298
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Posted: May 29 2012 at 00:22 |
I've seen Dream Theater twice, but I've never seen Rush, Transatlantic nor Porcupine Tree! Hope someday!
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Playing a three-hour Rush show is like running a marathon while solving equations.
Neil Peart
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Eria Tarka
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 17 2011
Location: BC, Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 5856
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Posted: June 25 2012 at 01:31 |
Wow! Some of these lists have been quite interesting, keep it up guys As for me, I saw Rush on June 30th, 2011 on the Time Machine Tour. I just bought the Tickets for Sepember 30th in Edmonton.
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Gerinski
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 10 2010
Location: Barcelona Spain
Status: Offline
Points: 5154
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Posted: June 25 2012 at 11:00 |
Dean wrote:
Jbird wrote:
prog/prog metal bands that are still together that I'd like to see someday:
Vanden Plas
Seventh Wonder
Myrath
Threshold
Circus Maximus
Andromeda
Enchant (they still play the occasional festival |
I've only seen Threshold from that list, and Vanden Plas would be on my wishlist.
/ |
I saw both Threshold and Enchant together, well.... kinda.
Threshold was playing as supporting act for Enchant, it must have been 1995 or 1996 in Barcelona.
After 2 or 3 songs Threshold's singer got pissed off by bad sound, he started complaining to the mixing table guy, then started cursing blaming the venue (it was in very a normal small venue were many concerts were organised) and suddenly threw the microphone to the ground and left the stage. The rest of band members looked to eachother and decided to also stop and follow him to the backstage.
I do not remeber the sound itself being particularly bad but they were very loud and the gitarists played heavily distorted.
A bit later Enchant played their show and it was magnificient, they sounded crystal clear, so powerful yet so clean and with such finesse, Douglas A Ott really impressed me. They were so cheered by the audience, which must have pissed Threshold's Glynn Morgan off even more
This must have made the Threshold guys realise that if they did not sound well it was their own fault only and they must have felt guilty because at the end of the show to compensate the audience they gave each of us one of the albums which they had intended for merchandising, I got Psychedelicatessen. I found it nice of them.
So with only 3 or 4 songs I don't really think I can say that I have seen Threshold live (although I did include them in my list )
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AlexDOM
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 02 2011
Location: Indianapolis
Status: Offline
Points: 775
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Posted: June 25 2012 at 11:41 |
Yes I've seen both Neal Morse and Transatlantic
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Glucose
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 16 2012
Location: Czech Republic
Status: Offline
Points: 160
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Posted: June 25 2012 at 12:22 |
Nope. But there are not so many opportunities in Czech Rep. I' ve seen only Deep Purple and although it was great, i missed Jetro tull, VDGG or Jon Anderson and Dream Theater and I will always regret. And Rush will probably never come.My bro was more succesful (he's older and has more money) and he has seen almost all of those.
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Under the rocks and stones, there is water underground
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Stomach Cheese
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 26 2012
Location: murca
Status: Offline
Points: 175
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Posted: June 25 2012 at 13:30 |
hell yeah! I saw tera melos live in madison some months ago, and hopefully I'll get to see them again when they tour in the states next
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elp
Forum Newbie
Joined: November 30 2010
Location: Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 32
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Posted: June 25 2012 at 14:53 |
I've seen Pink Floyd, Jethro Tull and also Mr Waters when he hold the Wall concert in Berlin.
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Evolutionary Sleeper
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: December 30 2008
Location: Berkeley, CA
Status: Offline
Points: 7037
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Posted: June 25 2012 at 15:23 |
No. I may never see Ulver live in concert.
I've seen Hiromi twice tho, and I even met her/side hugged her.
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wjohnd
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 16 2011
Location: Scotland, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 327
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Posted: June 25 2012 at 16:27 |
Nov wrote:
Genesis - many times
Camel - many times
The Flower Kings - a few times
Yes - a few times
Pink Floyd - a few times
Rush - a few times
Spock's Beard - a few times
Porcupine Tree - a few times
Marillion - a few times
IQ - a few times
Dream Theatre - a few times
Transatlantic - twice
Caravan - once
Jethro Tull - once
Strawbs - once
ELP - once
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suffering sever gig envy now....
for myself i've seen Rick Wakeman
Marillion (Fish era only – going to see them later this year
though)
Genesis – sadly a late one L post Gabriel & Hackett
Steve Hackett (three times – best one was an acoustic gig
with his brother way back in the 80s)
Rush (three times – 1981, 2004 and 2007)
Dream theatre (twice)
Opeth
Symphony X
Fish
The Reasoning
Mostly Autumn
Prog-related : Hawkwind (twice), Nightwish, Within Temptation (twice), Iron maiden
Would love to see: Transatlantic, Flower kings, Spock’s
Beard, Riverside & IQ
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: June 25 2012 at 16:58 |
Gerinski wrote:
I saw both Threshold and Enchant together, well.... kinda.
Threshold was playing as supporting act for Enchant, it must have been 1995 or 1996 in Barcelona.
After 2 or 3 songs Threshold's singer got pissed off by bad sound, he started complaining to the mixing table guy, then started cursing blaming the venue (it was in very a normal small venue were many concerts were organised) and suddenly threw the microphone to the ground and left the stage. The rest of band members looked to eachother and decided to also stop and follow him to the backstage.
I do not remeber the sound itself being particularly bad but they were very loud and the gitarists played heavily distorted.
A bit later Enchant played their show and it was magnificient, they sounded crystal clear, so powerful yet so clean and with such finesse, Douglas A Ott really impressed me. They were so cheered by the audience, which must have pissed Threshold's Glynn Morgan off even more
This must have made the Threshold guys realise that if they did not sound well it was their own fault only and they must have felt guilty because at the end of the show to compensate the audience they gave each of us one of the albums which they had intended for merchandising, I got Psychedelicatessen. I found it nice of them.
So with only 3 or 4 songs I don't really think I can say that I have seen Threshold live (although I did include them in my list ) |
I've seen so many support bands suffer from poor sound I do wonder whether it is the band's fault. Sometimes I know it is if the band did not turn up for a sound check, but usually the sound engineer can get the sound sorted within a few minutes of the first song. Again, the band being overly loud or distorted is the sound engineer not the band themselves, a band's onstage back-line equipment is simply not powerful enough to be loud. This happens far too often to be "co-incidence" - I can't recall one single gig I've been to where the support act sounded perfect and the headline sounded crap - it's the other way around every time.
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What?
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sleeper
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 09 2005
Location: Entropia
Status: Offline
Points: 16449
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Posted: June 25 2012 at 17:08 |
Dean wrote:
Gerinski wrote:
I saw both Threshold and Enchant together, well.... kinda.
Threshold was playing as supporting act for Enchant, it must have been 1995 or 1996 in Barcelona.
After 2 or 3 songs Threshold's singer got pissed off by bad sound, he started complaining to the mixing table guy, then started cursing blaming the venue (it was in very a normal small venue were many concerts were organised) and suddenly threw the microphone to the ground and left the stage. The rest of band members looked to eachother and decided to also stop and follow him to the backstage.
I do not remeber the sound itself being particularly bad but they were very loud and the gitarists played heavily distorted.
A bit later Enchant played their show and it was magnificient, they sounded crystal clear, so powerful yet so clean and with such finesse, Douglas A Ott really impressed me. They were so cheered by the audience, which must have pissed Threshold's Glynn Morgan off even more
This must have made the Threshold guys realise that if they did not sound well it was their own fault only and they must have felt guilty because at the end of the show to compensate the audience they gave each of us one of the albums which they had intended for merchandising, I got Psychedelicatessen. I found it nice of them.
So with only 3 or 4 songs I don't really think I can say that I have seen Threshold live (although I did include them in my list ) |
I've seen so many support bands suffer from poor sound I do wonder whether it is the band's fault. Sometimes I know it is if the band did not turn up for a sound check, but usually the sound engineer can get the sound sorted within a few minutes of the first song. Again, the band being overly loud or distorted is the sound engineer not the band themselves, a band's onstage back-line equipment is simply not powerful enough to be loud. This happens far too often to be "co-incidence" - I can't recall one single gig I've been to where the support act sounded perfect and the headline sounded crap - it's the other way around every time. |
It also has to be remembered that what the band hear through the monitor speakers is not what the audiance hears. Those are set up specifically for each musician to hear the rest of the band in specific mix so they can hear their cues from each other. If Glynn couldn't hear the drums or the bass or whatever clear enough then he probably would have got annoyed. Its a shame, these days Threshold give an absolutely storming performance live. And I have to agree with Dean, too many sound engineers couldn't care less about the opening acts.
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Spending more than I should on Prog since 2005
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Gerinski
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 10 2010
Location: Barcelona Spain
Status: Offline
Points: 5154
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Posted: June 27 2012 at 13:01 |
Dean wrote:
I've seen so many support bands suffer from poor sound I do wonder whether it is the band's fault. Sometimes I know it is if the band did not turn up for a sound check, but usually the sound engineer can get the sound sorted within a few minutes of the first song. Again, the band being overly loud or distorted is the sound engineer not the band themselves, a band's onstage back-line equipment is simply not powerful enough to be loud. This happens far too often to be "co-incidence" - I can't recall one single gig I've been to where the support act sounded perfect and the headline sounded crap - it's the other way around every time. |
Yes you're right, I didn't really mean it must have been their fault, and indeed the problem was likely in the monitoring.
With hindsight it's funny that Threshold was the supporting act, as I said this was I believe 1995, at that time Threshold had already released 2 albums and Enchant only 1 (2 if it was 1996, not really sure).
It's not nice to interupt a concert in front of an audience who have paid, but as I said the fact that they gave away a CD for free to the audience as compensation made me forgive them. No hard feelings.
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Morningrise
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 18 2009
Location: Buenos Aires
Status: Offline
Points: 2766
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Posted: June 27 2012 at 13:15 |
I haven't seen Genesis live and I seriously doubt I ever will. But, luckily, I did saw Peter Gabriel and Opeth twice.
I also had the chance to see other favorites such as: Rush, Kansas, Dream Theater (twice), Ian Anderson, Focus, Yes, and many others.
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Codera the Great
Forum Groupie
Joined: June 29 2012
Location: Irvine, CA
Status: Offline
Points: 91
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Posted: July 01 2012 at 02:21 |
If only I was alive when Genesis was a progressive rock band, because they are by far my favorite progressive rock group. I want to see songs like "The Cinema Show", "Supper's Ready", and "White Mountain" performed live. I'm tired of songs like "Invisible Touch", "Illegal Alien", and "I Can't Dance". I hope The Musical Box shows up in my area soon, they are the best Genesis Tribute band out there.
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Eric Mallory
Forum Newbie
Joined: July 23 2012
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 29
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Posted: July 23 2012 at 10:34 |
Several of them actually. Jethro Tull twice, Fish, Procupine Tree and Opeth once. Quite surprised that these great artists are even better live.
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Lofcaudio
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 04 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 444
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Posted: July 23 2012 at 12:04 |
My favorites would be Neal Morse and Pain of Salvation.
I have seen Morse twice and Transatlantic once with Gildenlow supporting, but otherwise have not seen Pain of Salvation.
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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: July 26 2012 at 18:26 |
I've certainly seen a lot, if not most of my favourite bands (around 5 - 700 gigs in total), some a lot or at least a few times like Yes - 10 times at least, J Tull - about 12 times, Rush - 3 times, Genesis - twice (sadly not with Gabriel). Prog bands I'd love to see that I haven't already would include Echolyn, Anekdoten, Anglagard, Threshold, PFM and numerous Italian bands, Nemo, King Crimson, Beardfish and Symphony X. Non-prog - always wanted to see Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers.
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Master of Time
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 30 2012
Location: UT, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 374
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Posted: August 11 2012 at 02:12 |
Just got back from my first prog concert, Yes with Procol Harum. So I can now say I have seen my favorite prog band live. Now we just need Peter Gabriel to get back with Genesis and come to Utah along with Beardfish, Spock's Beard/Neal Morse, and The Enid.
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BlackenedGass
Forum Groupie
Joined: July 19 2012
Status: Offline
Points: 40
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Posted: August 12 2012 at 05:06 |
[QUOTE=Master of Time]Just got back from my first prog concert, Yes with Procol Harum. So I can now say I have seen my favorite prog band live. Now we just need Peter Gabriel to get back with Genesis and come to Utah along with Beardfish, Spock's Beard/Neal Morse, and The Enid.[/QUOTE
Spock's, Neal and the Enid are awesome live!
I've seen a lot pf prog bands that I'm fond of that I thought I'd never see, such as ELP, Caravan and UK. The only favorites that I haven't seen are Pink Floyd and King Crimson (Probably never get to see those!) Though I'm sure there are many more I'm forgetting.
Something always prevents me home from seeing Hawkind as well....
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The Bearded Bard
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: January 24 2012
Location: Behind the Sun
Status: Offline
Points: 12859
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Posted: August 12 2012 at 07:07 |
Saw Ian Anderson live for the first time in Arendal a couple of weeks ago, and I will se him again in Oslo in November. In Arendal IA & Co. dished out TAAB and TAAB2 packed in one hour of awesomeness, plus Living in the Past, Beggar's Farm, Bouree, My God, Budapest, Locomotive Breath and parts of Aqualung. IA did most of the vocals, and his voice is, of course, not what it used to be, but still...great fun! So to answer the OP's question: Yes, I have seen my favourite prog artist live in concert
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