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Topic ClosedWhen were you infected by Prog?

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Ytse_Jam View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 23 2012 at 07:53
Originally posted by BassoonAng BassoonAng wrote:

I'm 19, so like many of my generation, I went around listening to heavy metal and variants for awhile.  I went from Iron Maiden, early Slayer, Kreator, Anthrax, and Behemoth to Rush and Yes.  I remember it was quite sudden a change.  Not that I didn't still appreciate the metal vibe, I just grew tiresome of every song being oppressively repetitive.  There are a good number of metal bands that aren't, but in the bigger picture, prog bands build a genre upon the idea of never doing the exact same thing twice.
This!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2012 at 23:42
I'm 15 now, and I was 13 then. As I recall, from an early age my Dad had played ELP and I hated it with a passion, and he also had a couple Gentle Giant records which I enjoyed very much. But the real clincher that started a total obsession was probably (believe it or not) "Owner of a Lonely Heart," which I still very much enjoy, but not as a prog song. Anyway, I got into more Yes, bought out the entire discography of Gentle Giant (who is now my favorite band) and his King Crimson collection. However, I'm still discovering new music every day, Cardiacs and Tortoise being the "Bands of the month."
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2012 at 16:00
Let's see. A bit more than a year ago. I was 16 (18 now). It was when I first really started getting into music. Scoping out bands on youtube. Saw a comment about Pink Floyd. Had heard Another Brick in the Wall b4 so checked them out again. Imediately fell in love, but didn't really get into any other prog bands right away and didn't even know they belonged to that genre. The Cure stayed my top favorite for a while (now 3rd), but Pink Floyd eventually over took and still remain my favorite band. I discovered some more prog rock bands and eventually Camel, who are now my second favorite band.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2012 at 16:31
Progressive rock might as well been apart of my musical DNA from the beginning. As I mentioned in my introductory thread, we used to have Rush dance nights at my house when I was a kid. I can hear the crackle of those LPs now. Smile
“Music is enough for a lifetime but a lifetime is not enough for music.” - Sergei Rachmaninov
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2012 at 17:21
it was when i was 10 i belive when i played Pull Me Under (dream theater for those who dont know) on Guitar Hero world tour. It persuaded me to get the album and then i slowly started covering the entire dream theater discography. Afterwards, once i was completely knowing of Dream Theater, i began exploring the older stuff and i completely forgot about the new stuff. I started listening to pink floyd, yes, king crimson, VDGG, Jethro tull, and MUCH MUCH more. i went back to the modern scene in a matter of time and discovered Pain of Salvation, Spocks Beard, Transatlantic, Fates Warning, Queensryche, and so many more, and here i am, 13 and in love with all genres of prog.
EATTTT YOUURRR BEEEEEETTTSSSSS!!!!!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2012 at 21:21
Several years ago, my husband (then my boyfriend) took me to see Rush.  I had no knowledge of 'prog' as a genre, and had never even heard Tom Sawyer or Spirit of Radio, but I watched them spellbound.

After that, I've been picking up bits and pieces here and there.

And on that note, it's my first forum post.  /wave
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2012 at 21:55
Originally posted by nobodysheroine nobodysheroine wrote:

Several years ago, my husband (then my boyfriend) took me to see Rush.  I had no knowledge of 'prog' as a genre, and had never even heard Tom Sawyer or Spirit of Radio, but I watched them spellbound.

After that, I've been picking up bits and pieces here and there.

And on that note, it's my first forum post.  /wave

Welcome aboard! Who have you been getting into lately?
“Music is enough for a lifetime but a lifetime is not enough for music.” - Sergei Rachmaninov
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 14 2012 at 05:33
I first got into prog when in the late 70s, I missed the original wave (just) by being too young and living in Australia. I was engrossed by 'In the Court of the Crimson King' and I progressed to many other bands that I found in a specialist music shop which imported weird and wonderful music. Then it disappeared for a long time. How happy was I when I found prog still lived via the internet and sites such as progarchives. I have so much great music now!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 14 2012 at 05:50
The virus got me when i was 14,i heard a song on the simpsons played by jethro tull thick as a brick,and i made some researches and so i found prog rock 
     
All Hail Geddy Lee!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 14 2012 at 11:12
Originally posted by hughmilitee hughmilitee wrote:

hi . new to the forum, thought i would start here .. my folks are heavy prog fans, to this day my mom and dad wax philosophical on all things prog .. so i come by it honestly.  my real first date with prog was when my dad gave me "in the court of the crimson king" and "godbluff" for my 5th birthday in '76 .. two of his favorites at the time ...

additionally, my mom bought me a bass the next year because i would mimic Chris Squire's bass riffs (Close to the Edge, Fragile ... ) because i loved the sound so much.. a few years later i had the opportunity to thank him personally for getting me into playing bass .. it was an epic moment in my life..


You met Chris Squire? You lucky b**d!  LOL
EATTTT YOUURRR BEEEEEETTTSSSSS!!!!!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2012 at 21:15
At age 14, the best age.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 21 2012 at 03:23
Originally posted by mostever mostever wrote:

At age 14, the best age.
 
Same here, but I feel so insignifiant when I see people got into prog at 5 Confused...pheew


Edited by napoca - August 21 2012 at 03:25
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 23 2012 at 04:35
My parents were divorced and I didn't get to spend a lot of time with my dad. When I did, we would listen to progressive music nonstop. One of my earliest memories as a wee lad is cruising with my dad in his '57 Chevy station wagon blasting ABWH.
 
My dad moved away from my town when I was 10 or so, and I only saw him once a year or so after that. This was before internet connections were fast enough to really download music, so I would scour old record shops for weird stuff. My mom was very religious and did not approve of my music, so I had to hide my  interest from her and listen on headphones late at night, and use school computers to look up new bands on GEPR and review sites, hiding any CDs I acquired in my backpack.
 
Finding classic prog albums on CD was a rare treat, and I would be very very excited to listen to them after having only been able to read about them for months or years. It also felt like I was connecting with my dad, who wasn't that big a part of my life at the time.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 23 2012 at 04:52
Wow! You really had to work at it...
Allomerus. Music with progressive intent.

http://allomerus.bandcamp.com
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 23 2012 at 09:52
I think the roots of it started when I was a child. My Dad used to listen to poppy Genesis, The Moody Blues, etc. The first time I myself started to progress towards progressive music was with Tool's 1998 release Ænima. My friend then introduced me to Dream Theater with the song A Change of Seasons in 1999, and I was instantly hooked. It progressed to Liquid Tension Experiment, Transatlantic, Spock's Beard, Flower Kings, Marillion, King Crimson (was VERY hard to get into at first for me, until I made the connection to Tool with the song "Three of a Perfect Pair"). Then from there it just exploded retroactively into the past... Yes, Gentle Giant, Kansas, Genesis, etc. etc.

It's been a long journey :)
Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 25 2012 at 11:46
A few years a go I guess. I was always interested in bands like Yes and Camel even before I knew what prog music was, really. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 03 2012 at 21:31
Oh god, I can remember prog smacking me in the face. It was when I was 14 (so, two years ago). I had already been getting into the classic rock/prog-related vein, so stuff like Led Zeppelin, the Beatles, and Deep Purple were relevant to my interests. However, at the end of 8th grade, I met this amazing girl. We talked for a long while, and hit it off really well. One day, we were talking about music and she mentioned Pink Floyd. Being a classic rocker, I had already heard the radio staple "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2" so it wasn't a new name. She spoke very highly of them, so off I went looking for some Floyd.

Of course, my search led me to the two staples: Dark Side, and the Wall. I fell in love immediately. I found myself listening to the entirety of Dark Side religiously every day.  Near the end of that summer, I viewed "The Wall" film. It absolutely blew my mind, and I ravenously wanted more. As a side note, during the Pink Floyd obsession, I constantly listened to Rush's "Moving Pictures" and the Yes song "Roundabout" as well. As school started, I always came home with a dorky smile on my face, sitting down and listening to the Pink Floyd.

However, one day, everything changed. The girl and I got into a major fight, and I found myself in a really bad spot. A few days after our fight, we tried to console our differences through text. I asked her since the "relationship" was over, did she ever like me? She replied with a simple "no." While this was happening, I was listening to my copy of Wish You Were Here. The title track was her favorite Floyd song and was playing at the time, and... well, I cried to put it simply. Even after our spat, we solved our differences and remain friends. But her love of Floyd stuck with me, and I constantly found more Floyd in the form of Atom Heart Mother and Meddle. I wasn't done with prog yet.

The next summer, I was surfing through YouTube when suddenly a band called Emerson, Lake, and Palmer came up in the suggestions. I was infatuated with the piece "Tarkus", due to my newfound love of lengthy tracks in the form of "Echoes". I took a listen, and was blown away. By the end of that summer, I was hooked on ELP. My 10th grade year started, and I began visiting a chat room on a Wiki website. A few people in there loved ELP, and directed me towards bands such as King Crimson, Genesis, and more Yes. Everything began escalating from there!

Through my friends at the Wiki, I have discovered hundreds of excellent artists, especially Dream Theater, Iron Maiden, Sunn O))), Earth, Big Big Train, Devil Doll, Keith Tippett, Camel, Transatlantic, Spock's Beard, Anglagard, and so many others. It has been an amazing journey, and I'm discovering more and more each day!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 03 2012 at 21:39
^ Great story mate, glad you're here. You'll find plenty of other material to be infected with!
Crushed like a rose in the riverflow.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2012 at 15:17
When I was 13 (two years ago), the only music I was listening to was the Chemical Brothers, Orbital, LCD Soundsystem, and other weird trance music. Soon enough my dad gave me Rush's Moving Pictures and I was completely hooked on prog and its mind-bending nature. Pretty soon I was listening to Dream Theater, Kansas, Porcupine Tree, Tool, Yes, and King Crimson. It got to the point where my video gaming turned into book-reading, and I didn't even know the definition of "outside" was anymore. Now I'm 15 and already making a life out of prog rock, wasting away countless days just listening to the music and doing the drum covers.
 
I'm probably the only person in my entire generation to say that "ECHOLYN RULES!" but I'm proud of that Big smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2012 at 08:09
I got into Prog primarily because of Opeth a year back and I never felt the urge to look into something else after that.
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