Albums that changed your view about the band |
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andreol263
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 28 2014 Location: Terra de Cabral Status: Offline Points: 790 |
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Yeah, i'm gonna continue trying to relisten A Little Man and a House and the Whole World Window, maybe some time, it's gonna click on me like others albums that only after a long expousure i could 'get it'. And i also remembered another event in what that happened, with the band Can; I always heard of this band when i was first learning about Krautrock, then i picked Tago Mago, and well..., it's good, but not REALLY good if you know what i mean, tried it again atleast 4 times every oportunity i had to listen to it, but never was 'game-breaking' to me you know, i prefered Amon Duul II and Ash Ra Tempel music, and then i tried to listen Ege Bamyasi, it was really unpleasant, the only song i've found tolerable was Vitamin C, the rest was really boring and unmemorable, but then i've found Future Days, and man, the moment i heard that music, i was in shock, never heard music so organic and beautiful like this, soo different from what they have done in the past and the music from other bands in the same Genre, i got addicted to it the first time i heard it, and then i tried Monster Movie, it sounded soo raw and mechanic, the opposite of the delicated and organic sound of Future Days, but i really loved it too, got me on the second listen if i remember, for an entire week it was the only album that i listened, there was no space to other sounds, then after maturing in the genre and other areas of music, i begun to like Tago Mago better, and today's it sounds really good actually, but i can't get to like Ege Bamyasi anyway at all.
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35886 |
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^ I like all Cardiacs albums, but On Land and in the Sea is the most special to me now. I found it less accessible than some others, but when it clicked, wow! It was actually your first post that made me really obsess over it -- not sure if I should thank you, but I will. ;) I would have pegged it a little lower than some others before reading that, and I was going to say so in this topic, but thought, so as not to regret saying anything later, that I should put the album on again before posting, and was immediately blown away and kept on loving the whole thing (it is an album that I had been playing of late off-and-on, but I had over obsessions to contend with). I love it when a post makes me put on an album and I hear it in a fresh light (maybe I'm quite suggestible, but sometimes that forces me to really listen and take in the music, much as writing reviews would for many people). I have a very obsessive personality (that comes through in my posting too often). I can play the same album over and over and over again. Over the last few days I have listened to it so many times, and even when I'm listening to it it keeps playing over and over in my head (massive album earworm). Sometimes I listen to a band or album so much that unfortunately I burn out on it.
Can is another that I also should have mentioned. My experience was different, I started with Future Days, and while I din't dislike it, it left me cold. I then got Ege Bamyasi and liked that one. Then Tago Mago. I think Soundtracks made me a big fan, especially with the song "Mother Sky" which really hooked me. Often it's one track or one passage in a track -- it could even be a few notes or one sound -- that hooks me and opens up my appreciation for a band or artist. Unlike Moshkito, as I think I have understood it over the years (my memory is not what I was three years ago though it's improving somewhat), I can be a fan of tracks outside of the context of a greater work, and I don't necessarily need to listen to a whole album any more than I can't enjoy a particular episode of an anthology series (Twilight Zone for instance) without binging the whole thing. A piece of music/ song/ track/ can stand alone and be appreciated outside of the context of an album/ greater composition, and indeed the greater oeuvre of an artist. When I put on Beethoven's 7th, I will often only listen to the second movement. If I loved only that by Beethoven, it would be enough for me to say that I love Beethoven (the 9th is what turned me onto Beethoven, which has a little something to do with Clockwork Orange -- associations matter). I do now love Future Days, but it just didn't suit me at the time (my tastes shifted and expanded a lot over a few years as I discovered more and different things -- this was not that long before joining PA). I'm sure at another time had I started with it, it would have hooked me immediately (I was furiously collecting and consuming music back then). I do try to be more careful about passing judgement on a band after only hearing a limited portion of the discography now, but Can was something that struck me as something worth pursuing from the beginning (as with Tangerine Dream). I got the sense from the beginning that I "should" like Can more than I did, and I was intrigued enough to want to delve into more material. I'm glad I did, but being a part of this forum, I was bound to get into Can since so many with similar tastes to mine love Can and would have played their part in turning me onto the music. Edited by Logan - January 24 2019 at 10:58 |
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14742 |
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Swans - The Seer hit me really really hard. I had heard the odd song of them before and none had made an impression on me, but The Seer is such a monster, I realised from the first minute I heard anything of it (which wasn't the beginning). I love everything that came later to pieces and I'm exploring what came earlier (with some but not that much success). And then, some may find it hard to believe, for me Bowie was a few hits and many many misses up to Blackstar, but when that came out it left a big mark and I really started to get what the man was about.
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35886 |
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^ I already loved so much Bowie stuff (my brother introduced me to Bowie when I was very small), but over the last decade my appreciation has grown much more still (the album that made me a really big fan was Hunky Dory).
I can get that, Blackstar is a very good album methinks, and what an amazing send-off for the man. I've heard it said here that people were overrating it because of the circumstances, but I don't buy that. That said, that does make it all the more poignant to me. Robert Wyatt's Rock Bottom is more poignant still because of Wyatt's circumstances, but I loved the album before I even knew the story around it. Blackstar was and remains my favourite album of 2016, and is one of my favourite modern albums period (I return to it often). Edited by Logan - January 24 2019 at 17:13 |
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cstack3
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: July 20 2009 Location: Tucson, AZ USA Status: Offline Points: 7272 |
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It seems that I either loved a band when I first heard them, or just ignored them.
The only one I can think of is the album "Avalon" by Roxy Music. I didn't much care for the band before "Avalon" was released.
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I am not a Robot, I'm a FREE MAN!!
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I prophesy disaster
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 31 2017 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 4780 |
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The only album that I can think of at the moment that changed my view of the band is Mirage (Camel). Prior to first hearing this album, descriptions and initial tastings of their music suggested to me that their music is too light for my tastes. But I found Mirage to rock. Although I haven't explored Camel further, I do like Mirage a lot.
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No, I know how to behave in the restaurant now, I don't tear at the meat with my hands. If I've become a man of the world somehow, that's not necessarily to say I'm a worldly man.
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dwill123
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 19 2006 Status: Offline Points: 4460 |
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I couldn't stand John McLaughlin or fusion UNTIL I heard this album. Well, I'm sure you know the rest of the story.
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Jzrk
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 21 2014 Location: Chicago Status: Offline Points: 126 |
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Well going in the reverse.Early Journey before Steve Perry
Loved the early Journey as more progressive rock.. Santana has changed so many times so that has been a back and forth thing. But a real change from when the original band broke up after Caravansari. Chicago same thing as they morphed into balladry and soft rock |
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Midori
Forum Newbie Joined: January 30 2019 Location: Kansas City Status: Offline Points: 19 |
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I had always liked the Wetton-era King Crimson, and bits and pieces of the Mk. I King Crimson, but never gave them much more attention than that. Once they put their live albums on Spotify, I gave Absent Lovers a chance after seeing how much praise it got as a live album. That alone pretty much kicked my KC affinity into high gear and got me further into both the Belew-era from Discipline through THRaK as well as the earlier stuff in general.
Edited by Midori - February 01 2019 at 09:21 |
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