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Topic ClosedYour biggest discovery of the year!

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peskypesky View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2008 at 23:03
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

Terry Reid's 1967-1972 output

Yeah, he had an astounding voice. When you hear him, you understand why he was Jimmy Page's first choice for Led Zeppelin's singer position.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2008 at 23:27
Originally posted by aapatsos aapatsos wrote:

For me I think is VDGG... I had an idea before, but Godbluff blew me away...

I'm with you. VDGGG is my prog discovery of 2008.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2008 at 02:12
Gentle Giant 
For years I have delved with the idea of listening to GG music but have found various reasons to put it off until recently, when I picked up a copy of "Three Friends." Now I can not get enough!!


"Music is the Wine that fills the cup of Silence"
- Robert Fripp


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2008 at 10:00
Alex Carpani BandWaterline album cover




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2008 at 14:19
Anekdoten, by seeing them live.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2008 at 14:41
Like I remember what I discovered in what yearEmbarrassedEmbarrassed

From what I do remember... as weird as this will seem... Sublime, since their s/t album actually made its way into my top 10... I learned how to smoke weed whilst listening to them, they helped me open up my mind to the whole CA scene of reggae-surf-rock-hip-hop metal-whatever. It's really soulful, creative and emotional music, a perfect balance to all the serious dark stuff I listen to. RIP BradCry




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2008 at 15:25
Originally posted by manofmystery manofmystery wrote:

Originally posted by ClassicRocker ClassicRocker wrote:

Originally posted by The Whistler The Whistler wrote:

OH! And, I went through a brief, not terribly profitable, Krautrock period. Now I have some spare Amon Duull II, Can and Kraftwerk lying around.

Hey, you reminded me of my own Kraut explorations earlier this year!
I'm with you both on Can, Kraftwerk, and for the most part Ash Ra too.  Either bored or annoyed listening to them. 

Before I became a zombie prog pod person as a teenager I really liked Autobahn, when it was new.  Haven't really taken an interest in exploring Kraut these days.  Big fan of Stereolab though, which is supposed to have Kraut influences.  May have to revisit for nostalgic reasons.

Edited by Slartibartfast - December 08 2008 at 15:50
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2008 at 15:39
Rediscovering Guru Guru's Dance of the Flames after 30-odd years while enjoying PSY at the same time.
 
And back to whoever said early in the thread about Bowie: Try the Rich Kids, produced by Mick Ronson. Mainly the outtrack/remix CD on Cherry Red. A prog/punk/pop genre? No, knew nobody would go for it!
It's not that I can't find worth in anything, it's just that I can't find worth in enough.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2008 at 15:52
Originally posted by halfmanhalfcrab halfmanhalfcrab wrote:

- Krobak

Originally posted by burritounit burritounit wrote:

Krobak



The biggest discovery is that at least two persons from this thead liked my stuff

My list is pretty much close to Seb's one: The Chameleons, The Smiths, Fall of Efrafa, The Postman Syndrome/Day Without Dawn, Equus, Kurki, DEADBIRD, Battle of Mice, Jeff Buckley, Clann Zu, some sludge and drone stuff as well. Musically 2008 is a nice year, and it's terrible in personal issues
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2008 at 16:05
Too many to mention - I'm a completely different progger than I was at the beginning of 2008.  Big smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2008 at 17:14

I was around for the birth and early years of prog but in 1971 I stopped listening to rock music just in time to miss out on the golden period for prog, so this past decade has been an adventure as I have been reconstructing the '70s and discovering many great artists and bands that I missed. The past year and a half has especially been fruitful because I discovered the radio show "Progressions" on Sirius's The Vault (now Deep Tracks since they merged with XM). Through that program I have become a fan of Camel, Caravan, the Alan Parsons Project, Mike Oldfield, Steve Hillage, and Todd Rundgren, among many others.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2008 at 23:35
I discovered pop music! And I mean the terrible stuff that floods our radio, the antithesis of prog, the enemy of intellegence, the symptom of societal decay. I love it! Shakira, madonna, mary j blige, even britney spears (however, depends on who wrote the song for her). To be a bit less shallow, I also listened to french pop (alizee), latin american pop (aterciopelados, La Oreja de Van Gogh , shakira), and respected pop (kate bush, game theory, fiona apple). I love all of it, and I can't believe it took me so long to realize how much goes into pop music. I think that in some ways prog is easier than pop, because with prog music you don't have to make eveything so catchy. There is a fine art to pop music. Anyways, I also discovered the joys of female fronted metal like nightwish, After forever, or even within temptation. And, I discovered tons and tons of classical music. I took a class of western art music, and I am now officially a classic music affecionado. I particularly love fanny mendelssohn for some reason, the secret genius prodigy sister of felix mendelssohn. I've also become quite the fan of schoenberg's violin concerto, though that's such a taxing listen I haven't listened to anything else of his yet. As for prog, all I've really discovered is lots of prog metal bands (I mentioned 2 already). It's not so much prog metal as it is progressive in nature metal but not connected to the prog rock movement like lots of other prog metal.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2008 at 01:42
I've been following this band since 2005, but they've been making music together since 1999 and I recommend to everyone on this board to listen to Animal Collective's entire discography.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2008 at 11:09
This was my Prog re-entry year, so LOTS of stuff was new to me and lots of wonderful revisits to old faves.
New to me were:
Harmonium
Conventum
Pure Reason Revolution
Porcupine Tree
Willowglass
Camel' s Snow Goose
Mediaeval Baebes

Old Favorites Re-discovered:
RENAISSANCE Novella (!!!)
Anthony Phillips
Nektar A Tab in the Ocean
Uriah Heep Demons & Wizards

What a year!
Thanks ProgArchivists!
Drew Fisher
https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2008 at 02:46
Originally posted by BrufordFreak BrufordFreak wrote:

This was my Prog re-entry year, so LOTS of stuff was new to me and lots of wonderful revisits to old faves.
New to me were:
Harmonium
Conventum
Pure Reason Revolution
Porcupine Tree
Willowglass
Camel' s Snow Goose
Mediaeval Baebes

Old Favorites Re-discovered:
RENAISSANCE Novella (!!!)
Anthony Phillips
Nektar A Tab in the Ocean
Uriah Heep Demons & Wizards

What a year!
 
Thanks ProgArchivists!
 
Yeah, I heard the Snow Goose for the first time in years recently - still sounds good.
 
If you like Tab in the Ocean and you haven;t heard it, try Sounds Like This - live in the studio recordings - by Nektar. It's comparatively hard to get, but worth it!


Edited by el dingo - December 10 2008 at 02:47
It's not that I can't find worth in anything, it's just that I can't find worth in enough.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 06:32
Originally posted by Nuke Nuke wrote:

I discovered pop music! And I mean the terrible stuff that floods our radio, the antithesis of prog, the enemy of intellegence, the symptom of societal decay. I love it! Shakira, madonna, mary j blige, even britney spears (however, depends on who wrote the song for her). To be a bit less shallow, I also listened to french pop (alizee), latin american pop (aterciopelados, La Oreja de Van Gogh , shakira), and respected pop (kate bush, game theory, fiona apple). I love all of it, and I can't believe it took me so long to realize how much goes into pop music. I think that in some ways prog is easier than pop, because with prog music you don't have to make eveything so catchy. There is a fine art to pop music. 


Quite right. Redundancy is a greater problem in pop than prog because it is harder to tell apart short songs with simple ideas, so it's also difficult for an artist to stand out. Unfortunately, this means luck also plays a part in the success or failure of an artist - guess it does anyway but more so in pop.  I'd say this is also true for run-of-the-mill verse-chorus rock.  But you shouldn't let Banks or Rutherford read this, they will then say that making those pop albums in the 80s was tougher than making Nursery Cryme. LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 07:54
Literally in the last week, bowled over by French fusion trio Morglbl
The best eclectic music on the Web,8-11pm BST/GMT THURS.
CLICK ON: http://www.lborosu.org.uk/media/lcr/live.php
Host by PA's Dick Heath.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 18:58
Samla Mammas Manna, how to put them...outrageously outrageous yes that will do.
Robert Wyatt's solo stuff, incredibly human.
Kayo Dot, "Choirs" blew me away.
David Bowie , Nice.
The Alan Parsons Project, I really love Tales of Mystery and Imagination and I robot.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 19:09
Shostakovitch - Leningrad Symphony, 24 preludes and fuguesClap
Scriabin - 9th piano sonata
Peter Hammill - The Future Now
Zappa - Shut Up and Play your guitar
Mahler - Symphony No.5
Behold The Arctopus - All Of ItClap


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 00:01
Making good pop is less of a musical exercise and more of an exercise in psychology/sociology. *rofl's imagining Freud's greatest hits* Maybe he could do a duet with Weber.

Edited by Deathrabbit - December 12 2008 at 00:03
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