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Topic ClosedWhen were you infected by Prog?

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Pastor Rex Cat View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 09 2013 at 02:15
Originally posted by ElectricPoetry ElectricPoetry wrote:

I first got into prog in about the year 2000... I was about 15 years old, in a band playing covers of bands such as Blink 182 Confused...and got into Prog by listening to Metropolis part 2: Scenes from a Memory by Dream Theater. Having just recently started to play the guitar, my Dad suggested giving Dream Theater a go..
 
I grew up with prog playing around the house as my Dad always listened to it... The good thing is that once I realised that this Prog Rock stuff was pretty good, I started listening to more of it and realised I already knew most of it subconsciously.
 
I am happy to say I've moved on from the days of covering Blink 182 songs and play in a Prog Rock band Big smile!!!

Interesting you mentioned Blink 182. They got turned on to Prog Rock not too long ago. Out of that influence came "Neighborhoods". Not really Prog but Prog inspired.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 13 2013 at 00:56
When I was a kid around 9 or 10(I know) I used to listen to the local alternative rock stations that would play bands like Bush, Nirvana,Puddle of Mudd and Nickleback(yeah I know those post grunge bands are lame especially Bush and NicklebackLOL). Later, I was turned on to Heavy Metal bands like Rage Against The Machine(by my sisters) and Metallica(on my own), this soon evolved into other Classic Metal bands like Sabbath, Maiden, and Priest who have a prog sensibility, ever since I obsessed over Maiden's Seventh Son album I've been hooked onto Prog Rock or Prog Metal, I was always searching for that lost chord something not suitable for the radio and I found it in Rush when I heard the Spirit of Radio(although I heard it on the radio) at where I used to work I have never gone back to the radio, 4/4 is so boring to me and useless after a while that I want to explore weird time signatures like 9/8 6/4 7/4/  7/8 or 5/4LOLLOL. I love Prog from Rush,Pink Floyd, Genesis, Yes, Mastodon, Dream Theater, ELP, VDGG, GG, and many more nowadays I can't live without itHeart. Looking back there has always been a Prog sensibility in my musical tastesWinkWink

Edited by ProgMetaller2112 - January 13 2013 at 01:01
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 13 2013 at 09:12

Probably when I got into Rush when I was 17.  Not sure but it was probably the Spirit of Radio that caused me to have the great awakening.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2013 at 15:07
In the past, childhood through adolescence my hearing was...shall we say distorted and most music genres were intolerable to me.  Instrumental music, mainly New Age with a bit of a rhythm was the only thing I could listen to that didn't hurt.  Badly.  So although my New Age listening was relatively varied, my entry into prog started with Kitaro and Vangelis.

I listened to very little music with actual lyrics, since words sounded and still sound fairly garbled to me (though it's not nearly as bad as it used to be).

Vangelis worked directly with Jon Anderson, and likewise Kitaro did as well on one album (Dream).  And so one day I was watching TV and heard background music with a voice I actually recognized.  So began my listening to Yes and Jon Anderson independently of New Age music, though at that time the sound was still fairly abrasive to me for much of Yes's music.  Journey and Asia drew me with their cover art, too, but I didn't get into them until much later, when my hearing finally shifted *(see sidenote at the end if you want to know how and why my hearing changed).  I believe I listened to Rush at that time, too, a little.  Tracked down a Far East Family Band CD (Japanese prog group that Kitaro started as a member of).  

I didn't have a term for it at that point, not in a community or family of proggers, rather small town where it's either Gospel, Country Western, or Metal that is popular.  It wasn't until I was a grad student and taking Italian classes that the bug finally took over in a big way.  Not with the introduction of English prog, no, but with hearing Italian prog on vinyl.  PFM, Le Orme, etc.  About six years ago.

At the time I had little money, but I had internet access, discovered, rather late, Emerson Lake and Palmer (by way of their connection with PFM), Camel, Renaissance, a few others that they had on CD at the local library. 

Built a very small collection then (yes, the poor college student pirated music which he has since replaced with actual legal CDs now that he can afford it), and now with a decently paying job my collection has grown.  Interestingly, I've since seen other groups I've was drawn to at various points occasionally categorized loosely as prog--Nightwish, Tangerine Dream, etc.  So apparently I was a progger for a while without realizing it.

And in the last year, by way of market saturation with some CDs, and by way of new releases on MP3, I've acquired (for an American) a moderately sized collection of the Italian prog that first got me truly into the genre.

*Sidenote: If anyone really wants to know, it seems that the malabsorption issues that are associated with gluten intolerance can for some people affect neurological function, I found some of the nutritional issues before figuring out th gluten intolerance,a nd at that point some of the hearing issues resolved themselves (about 5-7 years ago, over time).  When I discovered the gluten sensitivity, within six months my hearing all but normalized.  Long drawn out tones still....make me twitch a little, so slow violin playing is uncomfortable and likewise high pitched abrasive sounds, alto sax was up until the last year or so problematic, and during childhood it hurt so bad it made me cry...now it's fine and I'm acquiring a bit of a jazz collection in addition to prog.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2013 at 17:48
In the late 60's FM radio had a little (lot) more freedom and would play complete albums. I heard Yes, King Crimson, Genesis, ELP, Pink Floyd........and I've been listening ever since. Though I never hear any new Progressive music on the radio now. I dropped Sirius as it had 70 or 80 "stations" to choose from and not one progressive stattion.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 14 2013 at 17:46
My addiction to progrock began in 1971 at the age of 15 with the first time I heard "I've Seen All Good People, I. Your Move II. All Good People"  by Yes on the local FM rock station in Dallas. My interest grew with the subsequent release of "Fragile" and "Close to the Edge" in rapid succession. I had never heard such music before and it intrigued me to no end. Truly a life-changing event. My interests spread out from there to encompass the standard spectrum the top prog acts thru the 70s.

Somewhat related topic:
I saw Yes perform at Austin, TX in 2002 and they were great. It was the Anderson, Squire, Howe, Wakeman and White lineup. Sounded as good as they ever did in their peak days of the 70s. Sad to see so many of the musical heroes of my youth are now quite old, in bad health or already deceased. Makes me realize I'm not too far behind them. SIGH! 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 14 2013 at 20:08
My first exposure to the genre occurred between the ages of 13 and 14.  A friend and I went to a Buddhist convention to trip on the people and the chanting.  After the convention we were hanging out at my friend's house.  He held up a record album and asked me if I had heard it.  I said "no" so he put it on.  That was the first time I ever heard "21st Century Schizoid Man" and the rest of King Crimson's "In the Court of the Crimson King" album.  And from that point on I was hooked on prog music.

That was 1971.  And after that I discovered Yes and ELP, and it was off to the races from there!


Edited by Larree - March 14 2013 at 20:12
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 19 2013 at 14:13
I'm 62 so I grew up with the Beatles, Stones , Doors, Jefferson Airplane, Who, Moody Blues, etc and all the other great classic bands of the time but in Aug 1969 I started college at Indiana University in Bloomington IN....that spring of 1970 I was visiting my brother on the dormitory floor below me and we went to listen to music in his friends room next door and he played KC-ITCOTCK......that was it for me..I immediately was hooked and went hunting for music in that style and just eventually got into all kinds of prog rock.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2013 at 17:53

Glam rock was big in the UK in the early seventies. That was my first interest in music. Then I heard some music around my friend's house . His older brother played us some Caravan and Pink Floyd. Bit strange to young ears but interesting. However, I really got infected when I discovered Yes watching the Old Grey Whistle Test on the BBC. It blew me away. That was the start of my lifelong passion for this type of music .

"Music was my first love and it will be my last" - John Miles "Music"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 04 2013 at 09:17
OK, I'm new here, just discovered the forum.
Was never really into pop/rock as a youngster, the radio in our house was always on Radio 4 (talk radio, "worthy" subjects like politics!) Grew up playing classical music at school as a trumpet player and organist.
When I was about 16, a friend at school lent me an album he'd just got out of the local record library.
 
The album was "And then there were three" - it blew me away! I went out and bought it (curiously on the day "Duke" came out). From there I started exploring rock music, particularly prog although I didn't know it was called that at the time. Soon had the entire back catalogue of Genesis, quite a few of Yes, ELP, Pink Floyd, plus a few heavier bands such as Rush, Deep Purple.
 
Life was never the same again!
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 04 2013 at 09:20
Well, I was really drunk one night and picked up this woman in a bar and...Oh wait, you said infected by prog.  NM. Embarrassed
I can understand your anger at me, but what did the horse I rode in on ever do to you?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2013 at 16:32
I was 14 in 1974 and I was into Slade, T.Rex, Sweet etc. My older sister would tell me on a regular basis that I would grow out of this and would start to listen to 'proper music'. One day, in early 1975, her boyfriend gave me his copy of Argus by Wishbone Ash. This album set me on my way and to the type of music that I would like for the rest of my life, for which I shall be eternally grateful. (Even though her boyfriend turned out to be a total sod) Looking back on all this, however, I think Slade and Sweet were excellent bands. I saw Sweet at a Rock Against Prostate Cancer gig near Devizes last summer, and they were brilliant.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2013 at 17:30
I grew up a huge Queen fan, but eventually I stop listening to them and I started listening to lots of rock (Guns n' Roses) then became a huge Metallica fan (still a fan today but not nearly as much). It wasn't until one day in a rage of new music discovery that I decided to check out Dream Theater (I had heard Pull Me Under, but never went past that). So I checked out Metropolis Pt. 1 and hated it (times have changed).

Eventually I started playing piano and found I had a natural thirst for knowledge on music theory. This of course inevitably lead back to Dream Theater and I've been rockin' in polymeters ever since.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2013 at 15:14
I remember it well. I was at my dad's house, we were putting records on, and then Wish You Were Here came on. I still remember how amazing the opening synths of Shine On sounded to me.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 12 2013 at 22:08
It happened in 1974 when I was 14, in this order:

Aqualung
Dark Side of the Moon
Relayer
In the Court of the Crimson King

after that it's a blur.

My older sister bought Aqualung because she played flute in band. I was only familiar with Bungle in the Jungle at the time because it was a big radio hit, but I thought it was kind of stupid. When she played Aqualung I recognized the title song, which was ok, but she kept playing side 1 and never turned it over. So one day I flipped it. My God started out so dark and serious sounding, followed by a heaviness I associated with Black Sabbath. Then came the chanting and the flute solo, while I was looking at the gatefold painting of the band ransacking the church. This was the first time music affected me in a way far beyond just liking a song.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 13 2013 at 08:41
When I was 12, I heard ELP's "Lucky Man" on the radio and the synth solo got me.  Didn't get my first prog album until 3 years later when I bought "Brain Salad Surgery" then "Welcome Back My Friends to the Show that Never Ends".  Tull's "Minstrel in the Gallery" was next and I was on my way Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 25 2013 at 17:27
I was looking for bands and music that were like Queen  (Smile ) on youtube, then I played the Fragile, full album, (mostly because of the  cover) and, well, it really cacht'd me!!! Big smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 14 2013 at 16:22
I learned about progressive rock when I was 16-17 I think, through internet. before that I had never heard that term before.

My first obsession with music happened at about age 5 , maybe 6 when I heard Peter Baumann's Transharmonic Nights. Listening to that album was among the strongest music expreiences I've had. Maybe it is enhanced by experiencing stuff more vividly when you are just a kid. But no other music had the same effect. I would just stare at the LP cover while listening.

But I wasn't actively exploring music as a kid, I just responded to whatever I heard, a lot of stuff I heard through my brothers .  I had a cassette with favourite songs, mostly pop oriented with synth elements. Scotch -  "Primitive Man" became my favourite song for some time. It's italy disco but their biggest imfluence was actually progressive music. My brother introduced me to Jean Michel Jarre which I heard at 8 or 9 years old, which I liked , although not quite the same as the Baumann album. But I loved "Ethnicolor" which I had on cassette, 11 minutes, dark and very sci-fi-ish. I also liked some classical stuff like the 4 seasons and an album with Hugo Alfvén.

I had a period were I was crazy about A-ha and the Hunting High and Low album, about 11 or 12 years old. I wasn't too fond of the happier song "Love is reason", but otherwise it's a pretty dark album. I also liked Howard Jones after being given "Human's Lib". I liked stuff by sisters of mercy and The Mission,  which my brother listened to. The other brother listened to Saga among other stuff and I only caught some of it but some melodies stuck in my head. But I wouldn't get into Saga until I was 14-15, by finding a cassette in the kitchen table drawer with "Silent Knight" recorded on it. I played it everyday. I was obsessed with it. Then I moved on to the other albums. Started playing drums and Saga inspired that a lot. When I was around 16 I got the opportunity to look up Saga at the internet in school. I wasn't even expecting to find anything for some reason, and was surprised to find a fan page and many  fans of them.

 I saw Marillion being recommended as a similar band, which didn't turn out very similar but I liked it. Then I heard about progressive music and found GEPR (gibraltar encyclopedia of progressive rock). That's when I started exploring music more by free will rather than responding to stuff I heard around me. Bought a hifi-system, and got into 70's music, Camel, Genesis, Gentle Giant, Magma and other stuff. This coincided with the time when commercial radio exploded somewhere around -96 or -97 I think, hits oriented radio channels with commercials and crazy jingles which to my horror became extremely popular. I had always believed you could hear all kinds of music on the radio, but it became apparent that in general only singles and hit songs are played, and whole genres are not represented at all on radio. But that was what people wanted, which was very saddening. For example, no one new about Saga, and that's because it was never ever played on radio or in public places. So naturally I ignored contemporary music and culture.

That's my story of getting into prog but in the 2000's I became addicted to internet radio and got into other stuff that I had been missing , a lot of goth related music but also dream-pop, shoegazer, post-rock and indie. But everything I like usually have some progressive elements, showing some ambition for the sake of the music.

Most of the stuff I've liked in the past I still like now. I don't like A-Ha and Howard Jones nearly as much though , but Saga is still a big favourite.


Edited by wilmon91 - May 14 2013 at 16:46
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2013 at 09:14
Im a guitar player since i`m 9 years old.
2 Years ago, within our little musician group in middle school one of our friends that was digging space rock
found Red by King Crimson. At the time I was digging Classic and Thrash Metal.
The album blew my mind but (yeah i was stupid) i forgot the name of the band and the album.
One year ago most of this musician group were diving into prog.
Another firend gave his copys of Thick as a Brick and Fragile to try out.
This time i noted myself the band names and albums and since putting fragile in my stereo im a prog rock fan.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 09 2013 at 01:19
Stage 1: Classic Rock and Rebellion
I grew up listening to what my parents or siblings were into, so it was some okay-ish classic rock (80's) and Christian Rock for the most part. Some secular alternative. Then a friend told me to listen to Led Zeppelin. After them it was all about rebellion for me. I wanted to go against everything I grew up with and love classic rock acts. Beatles, Rolling Stones, Aerosmith. I just wanted something old. Anything old. No real opinions of my own.

Stage 2: First Steps Towards Prog and Something Greater
I wondered why bands didn't try to be epic very often. Why didn't any bands try to write longer, epic music like "Stairway to Heaven" or "A Day in the Life"? I wanted to find better music that leaned towards Prog (which I had no idea of at the time) I searched the Internet for epic songs. Or songs that were considered just the greatest. I found a list, the Arrow Classic Rock Top 500. There were more epics, like "Child in Time" by Deep Purple, "Innuendo" by Queen, "Brothers in Arms" by the Dire Straits, "She Flies on Strange Wings" by Golden Earring, "Halo of Flies" by Alice Cooper. Some Prog tracks included "Shine on You Crazy Diamond" (which I already knew but shockingly didn't like; 13 minutes was hard at the time), "2112", and "Script for a Jester's Tear", but the one that got me was "Firth of Fifth" by Genesis. They didn't have the same sound as Led Zeppelin or anyone, but holy cow!! I finally heard people playing their instruments!

Stage 3: Total Prog Dog and the Quest for Knowledge
I then heard about Prog Rock from more searching of the Internet in my quest to find more songs like "Firth of Fifth". I found King Crimson, Yes, ELP, Jethro Tull, Rush, Renaissance, Van der Graaf Generator, and many others. Since then (about 2 years ago) I'm on a search to know as much great Prog music as possible. I used to prefer the old groups, but am growing to love more of the genre as a whole (including Neo-Prog and Prog Metal and Crossover artists). Finding PA could be a huge milestone, too, since I find most of my music from reference here now.

Anyway, I started out wanting greater music that has real effort and thought put into it, and I've found that in Prog. Other types of Rock are the true pretentious ones, trying to accuse Prog as such while their music has less brain behind it. I can rest knowing I found the genre that I'm almost certain will remain my favorite throughout my life. Glad I found it at a young age!! Prog on. Thumbs Up
"We have grown, but there is still much to be done. Many that live in darkness that must be shown the way, for it is the dawning of a new day."
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