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Slartibartfast
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam
Joined: April 29 2006
Location: Atlantais
Status: Offline
Points: 29630
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Posted: March 13 2007 at 20:07 |
I actually remember Focus Hocus Pocus getting airplay on the local radio, when I was about 8 or so, I think. My first prog albums were Rick Wakeman's Journey to the Center of the Earth and King Aurthur. I guess I was 11 or 12 then. I didn't become a real addict until the summer of 1978 when I was 13. I credit an uncle, my older brother, and his circle of friends who got hooked before me.
It was almost a family thing because my Mom really liked Kansas, Santana, and the Dixie Dregs. I was fortunate to get into see more than few shows in places I was too young to go to alone, including King Crimson (Discipline tour), Steve Hackett (Cured tour), Pat Metheny (Offramp tour). Being in the Atlanta area, I also got to see so many Dixie Dregs shows that I lost count.
Of course this site is a very dangerous place for me. Too much stuff to even digest it all. So much devil worshipping music so little time!
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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proggy
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 27 2006
Status: Offline
Points: 590
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Posted: March 13 2007 at 20:05 |
I was always into Yes and Kansas and Rush during my childhood but a buddie of mine lent me UK - Danger Money in 1994 when I was 24. Next was King Crimson - Red, Chris Squire - Fish out of Water and Eddie Jobson - Zinc. The Rest was history.........
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Failcore
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 27 2006
Status: Offline
Points: 4625
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Posted: March 13 2007 at 20:00 |
Kansas leads more people to prog than any other band I know of, at least as far as the States' is concerned.
EDIT: Rush is a a close second.
Edited by Deathrabbit - March 13 2007 at 20:01
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E-Dub
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: February 24 2006
Location: Elkhorn, WI
Status: Offline
Points: 7910
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Posted: March 13 2007 at 19:59 |
I was really into Kansas when I was in the 7th grade. I recall asking for 3 albums for Christmas that year: Kansas' Monolith, Steve Walsh's Schemer Dreamer, and Styx's Cornerstone (I got all 3 that year, too). Within the next couple of years I started getting into Rush and Yes (Rabin era and worked my way back from there). So, I guess I've been listening to the genre since 1979 when I was 11 or 12.
E
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Trademark
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 21 2006
Location: oHIo
Status: Offline
Points: 1009
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Posted: March 13 2007 at 19:51 |
He went hard into New Riders of the Purple Sage, Flying Burrito Bros. and all that Coutry influenced rock side of things. About as close as we could get to agreement for a number of years was Charlie Daniels and Lynyrd Skynyrd.
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Failcore
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 27 2006
Status: Offline
Points: 4625
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Posted: March 13 2007 at 19:38 |
Sounds like your brother needs a prog intervention. (or would that be an AOR intervention?)
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Ryth
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 22 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 285
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Posted: March 13 2007 at 19:37 |
Christ, your family needs to chill a little.
Well, I first listened to prog when I had just become thirteen, a little over a year ago. My first albums were Pink Floyd's Meddle, Rush's 2112. and Coheed And Cambria's In Keeping Secrets Of Silent Earth - 3 (Yes, that is an odd man out if I've ever seen one xD). I swear, they were like magic. I loved all of them and soon expanded my collection. King Crimson, Yes, more Rush, more Pink Floyd, more Coheed, The Mars Volta, Tool, Ayreon, Dream Theater, Genesis, Jethro Tull, Frank Zappa, The Moody Blues, Wishbone Ash, Opeth, and well, I could go on all day. I'm still missing a good number of artists and albums, but thats ok. I have time. Prog is a wonderful genre and I can't imagine myself in the future not loving it.
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Trademark
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 21 2006
Location: oHIo
Status: Offline
Points: 1009
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Posted: March 13 2007 at 19:27 |
I was 17. My older brother and I were playing in a band and sharing a house. We were into basic AOR hard rock and a dash of country rock at the time. I liked Nick Lowe a lot and had read an interview where he said "bands like ELP and Yes are about as exciting as used Kleenex", and that pretty much summed up our opinion at the time.
Another friend (our drummer) had expressed an interest in Genesis and since I lived in town (nearer to the record stores) he asked me to pick up Foxtrot and Nursery Cryme for him. I found them in a bargain bin for $1.99 each and bought them. The only mistake I made wasd deciding to listen to them before I gave them to him. Needless to say my friend never got his records.
A few days later I was telling my brother about this radical discovery. I told him, "We've been wrong about this whole prog-rock thing."
His reply. "Maybe you were wrong, I wasn't".
We continued to play music together for several years afterward, but that was the end of me seeing my big brother as THE source of wisdom in music.
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darksideof
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 22 2007
Location: Newark N.J.
Status: Offline
Points: 2318
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Posted: March 13 2007 at 19:15 |
I was 13 almost 14 years old when I discovered progressive music. I remember when my dear uncle brought some Maxell tapes into the house. He went into his bedroom; actually it was all the men in the house bedroom. We were very poor and we had to share beds. So anyway the first tapes I remembered listening was YES: Drama, Rush some compilation from moving pictures to hermpherues. Pink Floyd: animals Genesis: Second out and them they were three and Kansas: Two for the show. At that time as a kid I was into what was current beside carabeam music because that where I am from. I was into Michael Jackson and that 80's stuff. I vividly remember listing those tapes it was like religious experiences. It brings tears to my eyes just to remember the great joy and unbelieble satisfaction that this music brought into my life. I never was the same kid ever again. Scene that day I can’t live without listening to progressive music. I even got a couple of kid form the neighbor into these prog-bands whao. Seriously From that day on I never stopped listening to prog Years later I stared building a rich and varieties collection of progressive and Jazz, Fusion.
I first it was so weird at first especially pink Floyd animals and some genesis songs. I loved Rush scene the first time I listen to them as well as Kansas. Floyd and Genesis had to grow on us for awhile.Now I listen more Floyd andGenesis more that any other prog band.
Well not everything was perfect and still isn’t .I had to deal with the same things over and over these days. My family was not too happy specially my grand- mother because she thought that me and my uncle was getting devil worshipping music. Imagining all these people that were only expose to their only kind of music the whole life. That sh*t was too weird for them. My uncle and I felt like outcast every where we went with the family and in the neighborhood. We still we feel like outcast to these days 22 years later. When we have to hang out with friends and family, that won't tolerate it for even 30 minutes... Prog means so much to us that we had to tolerated bad comment and criticism from anybody all the time., but we did not give and still we don’t give a f**k what people think, because the joy we get from prog is incomparable, well maybe I can compare with sex. We live to listen this kind of music that all. May God Bless Progressive rock musicians and the fans all around the world we are a big family and an international one?
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http://darksideofcollages.blogspot.com/
http://www.metalmusicarchives.com/
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Darksideof-Collages/
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