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Topic ClosedHow did you find Prog?

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Kazuhiro View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 20 2009 at 22:05
I recommended and my friend recommended me KC at high school student's time. Because it suddenly appeared to my presence, I felt the unknown world. It is my favorite since then "Discipline".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 20 2009 at 22:09
My dad recognized that I was a big music lover when I was a young teenager as I became fascinated with the Beatles and several other more modern rock bands. He took me aside and said he wanted to show me his favorite band, and he put on Octopus by Gentle Giant. I was blown away immediately and my dad was thrilled and proceeded to play me every single Gentle Giant album. After that, he moved on to Yes and finally Genesis.

But, I still thirsted for more prog and really wanted to know if there was prog being made nowadays. After a search on amazon, I discovered the supergroup Transatlantic. I found out that it was formed by members of four different popular prog bands, so I decided this would be a good place to start and downloaded a song from each band. I downloaded "The Glass Prison" by Dream Theater, Some Marillion song, I don't remember now, "I Am The Sun (Part 1)" by The Flower Kings, "Thoughts" by Spock's Beard and finally "Duel With The Devil" by Transatlantic. I showed my dad these songs, and he was particularly impressed with The Flower Kings and Spock's Beard, so we went out right away and bought "Back In The World of Adventures" and "The Light" at the local record store.

My dad got busy and we weren't able to listen to these albums for quite some time, so I went and borrowed them to listen to alone and I was blown away. I proceeded to get every album by both these bands, and went from there to become the huge Prog fan I am today!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2009 at 13:26
i got into death metal at 14 years of age and that quickly led to atmosheric death/doom bands such as old Anathema/katatonia/My Dying Bride which led to keyboard driven black metal such as Emperor. Shortly after I got into Pink Floyd but never really considered myself a fan of progressive rock becuase until i discovered Porcupine Tree Signify at 22 years old,I thought progressive rock was only stuff like Dream Theatre and Yes. I never realized how broad Progs scope was. So I will say P.T. but the groundwork was laid many years earlier when I started seeking out bands with keys and dark atmosphere.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2009 at 13:33
Originally posted by natewait natewait wrote:

My dad recognized that I was a big music lover when I was a young teenager as I became fascinated with the Beatles and several other more modern rock bands. He took me aside and said he wanted to show me his favorite band, and he put on Octopus by Gentle Giant. I was blown away immediately and my dad was thrilled and proceeded to play me every single Gentle Giant album. After that, he moved on to Yes and finally Genesis....

You are certainly unique. When I played Octopus for my 16yo, he told me I was weird. Yet he is a huge fan of Rush, The Beatles, Dream Theater, tool, and Porcupine Tree these days. He likes some Genesis and I'm getting him into Yes. So he likes some Prog and pre-Prog, but if it is obscure, it's simply noise to him.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 22 2009 at 14:23
I found prog when I heard Pink Floyd for the first time. It was Echoes - The Best of Pink Floyd bought by my father. He said "Just put it into the player from the very beginning, to the end!". And I found various musical style brought up by the band... I think "This is cool!" So, I addicted  to Pink Floyd, and started to question my father what else groups sound like this... Then my father introduced me Yes.

My father's job finished there. I bymyself search for another ones rocks! I discovered ProgArchives and its monster database. From this site, I drew mp3s from the artists like Genesis, ELP, Frank Zappa, etc.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 23 2009 at 07:35
A bunch of my friends listen to prog and always hyped about how good it was. So naturally I checked it out. I started with Protest The Hero, worked my way to Mastodon, and yeah. This is all very recent by the way. I just started listening to prog and Ive definetly fell in love with it.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2009 at 03:01
I've always been a fan of "classic" rock, I guess (the first music I ever heard was Elvis ). I like stuff from the 60s and 70s. I'm into The beatles, The Doors, Fleetwood mac, ELO, Eagles, Led Zeppelin, America (yes... I know... XP), Billy Joel, Stevie Wonder, Kate Bush, Carole King, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Cream, Alice Cooper, The Who, Peter Frampton, Queen, David Bowie, T.Rex, Jefferson Aiplane, Deep Purple, Janis Joplin... yeah, that sort of stuff. I could go on forever! But I've been a Floyd fan since I was about nine. At the time I was only aware of Dark Side of the Moon, WYWH and Animals, which my Dad had on vinyl (it wasn't until a few more years that I began to discover s'more of Floyd's work). So I gues that's where it all began. I also love Jethro Tull and King Crimson at a youngish age, and I discovered more and more "classic" prog stuff when I hit 12 or 13. Nothing's been the same since!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 13:38
Ten years ago or so, when I was thirteen and had just gotten a broadband connection, I downloaded (yeah, I was a menace to society back then!) a collection of the songs in Guitar World's top 100 guitar solos list. I quickly started to appreciate songs like Aqualung, Time, Lazy and Zoot Allures, all of which I had only heard the artists' names. Still there were two songs that totally blew me away, namely 21st Century Schizoid Man and Starship Trooper. When I noticed that all these songs were actually sorted under the same genre, I quickly began to dig for more but got scared off by the experimentalism (I was only 13) and it wasn't until I found this page a couple of years ago, that I started to dig really deep. My girlfriend must hate this page with all her guts! Big smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 15:11
^
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 21:40
the song "Shevanel cut a flip" when i was younger i went through a metal scene and stubled upon that song and they had an awesome jazz breakdown i almost sh*t bricks when i first heard it.

and also peter gabriel was another driving force
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 05 2009 at 04:38
Age 11, i bought Rush's Moving Pictures Smile 
Havent looked back!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 05 2009 at 05:00
Believe it or not, I got my prog tastings from the influence of my friends as a teenager. (I still am one)

Who says that young people today listen to only crap, eh?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 06 2009 at 12:01
My friend introduced me to Bright Eyes. That was the first real band I ever listened to. One day, my brother's friend brought over Guitar Hero. That introduced me to Kansas, The Police, and Rush. You have to find out about good music somehow.. lol..

At my middle school's library, I picked up a book about guitarists, written by Eric Clapton. I'm pretty sure it featured my current favorite guitarist, Robert Fripp, but I took no interest in him. I was deeply interested in Jimmy Page's use of a violin bow on guitar. I looked up some Zeppelin songs on Youtube and was hooked. Led Zeppelin remains my favorite band.

My initial interest in prog started out with art rock I believe. I remember looking up art rock, thinking it was the genre I so desperately desired (rock inspired by paintings-art), and being dissapointed. I checked out prog's wiki page, but things like "diverse song structure" and "odd time signatures" really set off my OCD. I avoided prog for a while, until I came across a band called Yes. My friend sent me a video on Youtube called "And You And I". It featured art work by Roger Dean.. I was very fascinated. Artwork inspired by music. I then began looking up more on this genre. My love for prog grew and grew, and it still is.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 06 2009 at 12:50
Originally posted by Tengent Tengent wrote:

...
My initial interest in prog started out with art rock I believe. I remember looking up art rock, thinking it was the genre I so desperately desired (rock inspired by paintings-art), and being dissapointed. I checked out prog's wiki page, but things like "diverse song structure" and "odd time signatures" really set off my OCD. I avoided prog for a while, until I came across a band called Yes. My friend sent me a video on Youtube called "And You And I". It featured art work by Roger Dean.. I was very fascinated. Artwork inspired by music. I then began looking up more on this genre. My love for prog grew and grew, and it still is.
Tengent, you and the other young'ns in this thread give me a thrill and a smile every time!  Prog on!!
 
Btw, if you're looking for fusion of painterly sense with music you could do much worse than look at the Italian scene of the 1970's.  (If you've never heard of this, then get ready to fall head over heals.)  Rock Progressivo Italiano, or RPI, is a subgenre that is thoughtful, symphonic and even picturesque, by a people with a real sense of the place of art in life.  Don't worry about not understanding Italian; you'll babelfish a few titles and have idea enough of the rest from the music.
 
Too many bands to recommend.  Let me suggest another thread in ProgArchives.
 
 
This will kick you actually to a post of mine concerning lots of records of a certain type with links to info, but you should tour around as much of the thread as you can take in.  Listen to what Finnforest, Todd, Raff, Andrea and 1967/76 have to say (hope I'm not missing anybody).  Remember you can hear lots of tracks to get a taste at last.fm.  And of course there's a Rock Progressivo Italiano page on ProgArchives.
 
Enjoy!

Why must my spell-checker continually underline the word "prog"?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 06 2009 at 15:56
Originally posted by American Khatru American Khatru wrote:

Originally posted by Tengent Tengent wrote:

...
My initial interest in prog started out with art rock I believe. I remember looking up art rock, thinking it was the genre I so desperately desired (rock inspired by paintings-art), and being dissapointed. I checked out prog's wiki page, but things like "diverse song structure" and "odd time signatures" really set off my OCD. I avoided prog for a while, until I came across a band called Yes. My friend sent me a video on Youtube called "And You And I". It featured art work by Roger Dean.. I was very fascinated. Artwork inspired by music. I then began looking up more on this genre. My love for prog grew and grew, and it still is.
Tengent, you and the other young'ns in this thread give me a thrill and a smile every time!  Prog on!!
 
Btw, if you're looking for fusion of painterly sense with music you could do much worse than look at the Italian scene of the 1970's.  (If you've never heard of this, then get ready to fall head over heals.)  Rock Progressivo Italiano, or RPI, is a subgenre that is thoughtful, symphonic and even picturesque, by a people with a real sense of the place of art in life.  Don't worry about not understanding Italian; you'll babelfish a few titles and have idea enough of the rest from the music.
 
Too many bands to recommend.  Let me suggest another thread in ProgArchives.
 
 
This will kick you actually to a post of mine concerning lots of records of a certain type with links to info, but you should tour around as much of the thread as you can take in.  Listen to what Finnforest, Todd, Raff, Andrea and 1967/76 have to say (hope I'm not missing anybody).  Remember you can hear lots of tracks to get a taste at last.fm.  And of course there's a Rock Progressivo Italiano page on ProgArchives.
 
Enjoy!
The only italian prog I've listened to was PFM, which I didn't exceptionally enjoy. I'll give some of these guys a listen, thanks. :D
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 11 2009 at 11:05
I got into Heavy Metal with Iron Maiden. From there I started to explore and got into Power Metal, and from there I got connected with Symphony X. I liked it. From there I heard about this awesome band called Dream Theater and their amazing guitarist. And from there it was simply a fall through the rabbit's hole. Orphaned Land, Amaseffer, King Crimson, Jethro Tull, Rush, Arena, YES...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2009 at 18:09
I found Prog from my dad. I was twelve years old and my dad said he thought I should listen to some of the stuff he listened to when he was a teenager. He showed me the Necromancer by Rush and I was hooked. At that point I wasn't really into music as a whole but when I heard Progressive Rock I felt like a new realm had been opened up for me or something. I took up playing the Bass guitar and now my musical tastes range from Psychedelia, and Progressive Rock to Jazz and Funk. I will always thank my father for showing me Prog.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 14 2009 at 17:41
Bands like Yes, Kansas, ELP, Pink Floyd, Rush, Marillion, Genesis, Steely Dan, Fleetwood Mac etc. were all very popular radio bands when I was growing up. It really wasn't until later, when things like *alternative* and *hair metal* became popular, that we looked back and started calling some of our favorite bands prog. That's what we listened to - along with disco. It wasn't really prog back then. It was just Good Music that many of us loved.
It seems like the naming of genres and categorizing of music has become much more popular in recent times. I am not always sure that's a good thing.....
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2009 at 21:46
My one friend was raving about progressive music and he gave me a dream theater and ayreon album. Now I want to get everyone I know into prog, lol.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2009 at 21:51
Well when your born in Canada Rush automatically becomes a major part of your heritage so i expanded my musical horizons from there
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