Which band first got you into prog? |
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Cristi
Special Collaborator Crossover / Prog Metal Teams Joined: July 27 2006 Location: wonderland Status: Offline Points: 43717 |
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nice thread
bump!
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JD
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While I'd like to say my heroes ELP were the ones, if was probably, in fact, Arthur Brown. When 'Fire' hit the airwaves it definitely ignited (see what I did there) something in me that drew me to the flame (see, I did it again). But that was just one song among many at the time. However, when I actually heard a full prog album for the first time it was ELP's debut and I was HOOKED !
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Hiram
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Pink Floyd.
I started to get into music in 1991/1992 when I was thirteen. The Queen were my first favourite, and along them came Pink Floyd (who were my second big favourite), Jethro Tull, Mike Oldfield, Genesis, Jarre, Vangelis, Deep Purple, Jimi Hendrix, Doors, Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin within a year or so. I liked some contemporary bands, but usually preferred the above. Many of them were still active and I listened their 90s stuff as well.
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Dark Ness
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Trilogy caught me by the neck once I´ve listened for the first time but the real sickness began with Pawn Hearts
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Jaketejas
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When I first got into music, I liked a lot of Prog bands without knowing about the genre. At the time, they were blended into the melting pot of rock: Yes, Pink Floyd, Kansas, Jethro Tull, etc.
But, the first groups that were Prog or a bit Proggish that I really got into were Styx, Alan Parsons Project, Asia, Rush, Toto, and Gary Numan. I also liked The Beach Boys and The Beatles, which might be considered Proto-Prog. Great question! And, no shame in my answer. I still love listening to those bands today, even Asia! Love that majestic Steve Howe sound! And, those bands have led me to other interesting bands, including unquestionably Prog artists and bands. Disclaimer: Some on my list I consider Gateway to Prog rather than Prog or Prog-related. |
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Psychedelic Paul
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Camel, without a doubt. Moonmadness was on constant "heavy rotation" on my turntable.
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Syzygy
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Genesis, Selling England by the Pound.
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'Like so many of you
I've got my doubts about how much to contribute to the already rich among us...' Robert Wyatt, Gloria Gloom |
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Umeda
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Supertramp, even though I was already aware of Pink Floyd, Rush and the more accessible (a.k.a. Trevor Rabin) stuff by Yes.
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Not for rent. To any God or government.
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siLLy puPPy
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The Shaggs
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https://rateyourmusic.com/~siLLy_puPPy |
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Mascodagama
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Pendragon and IQ.
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Soldato of the Pan Head Mafia. We'll make you an offer you can't listen to.
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wiz_d_kidd
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I agree. The OP's question really doesn't apply to those of us who lived through the formative years. It was just "there", on the radio, at dances, at concerts, everywhere. What we now call prog was just part of the mainstream. "Prog" did not exist as a separate genre at that time, so there was no differentiation -- although some FM radio stations did focus more on the longer, artsier, more rebellious tracks that the AM stations found less commercial. And I also agree with the omission of Genesis. I grew up in the Pittsburgh area, and they just didn't have a following.
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Earl of Mar
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I bought Spertramps COTC when it came out. It was my second album I purchased after a Beach Boys compilation that was my first. Had saved up birthday money for it and the reason was the hit single dreamer which I loved. The music on the album was not indicative of dreamer though. I found COTC to be an extremely different, involving, darker and more interesting album.
A friend gave me a copy of Yes CTTE and that was it. Third purchase was DSOTM I was still listening to Led Zep/Bowie/ Purple etc ( my brother had these albums and I thus had them on tape) but my prog collection was about to grow.
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moshkito
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Hi,
I'm going to say ... NONE OF THESE ... mainly because I was into it from the very first days, of the Beatles and Rolling Stones, and then Bob Dylan in 1965 when I came to America. A couple of years, and the psych's stuff got me interested and when I moved to California it was history. I was already "progressive" without listing any of those, and things like The Nice, were in my collection, and I had heard JT and Fairport Convention, but so were Moodies, Procol Harum, Crosby, Still and Nash, Spirit, Jefferson Airplane, and even some Grateful Dead although I did not realize it was them at the time. Chicago, The Sons of Champlin, The Doors, Janis, Quicksilver Messenger Service, It's a Beautiful Day and Jimi complete the program. I was ready for 1972, so to speak, and when it came, to me, it was a SERIOUS EXTENSION of what a lot of the stuff that you heard at the Fillmore was all about ... not a song ... a wonderful piece of music. And I went to it, since the American Record companies made sure to kill everything that was "music" except what they determined were "songs" that could bring in the money. To this day folks don't see that, when all the advertising and SW excitement notices shows you what is supposed to be good! By the time things were starting to be called "progressive" and eventually "prog" I was way further out and up from this list ... many of them ended up in my collection, but they helped me determine that this whole thing was not accidental, nor was it a wonder hit that got to the radio, or some ridiculous single that sold more than a million farts and pisses. All in all ... I couldn't possibly identify you one ... they were all a part of the history of the music for me, not some separate this or that by folks that don't always look at history for the answer. To them I keep feeling this is just a bunch of "songs" and who really cares about anything else!
Edited by moshkito - January 09 2022 at 09:58 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Heart of the Matter
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Asia! No, just joking, it was Floyd + a bit of Dust In The Wind on the radio + a couple of local bands, like Sui Generis and Pastoral.
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Progmind
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Queensryche (Operation Mindcrime) and Fates Warning (No Exit). I was a teenager thrash metal maniac and those albums blow me away and open a new world to me
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Cristi
Special Collaborator Crossover / Prog Metal Teams Joined: July 27 2006 Location: wonderland Status: Offline Points: 43717 |
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nice!
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A Crimson Mellotron
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Believe it or not, it were The Flower Kings, Spock's Beard and Dream Theater for me
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King Crimson776
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The Moody Blues got me into music, and ELP got me into prog. Tarkus was unlike anything I'd heard before.
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King of Loss
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 21 2005 Location: Boston, MA Status: Offline Points: 16451 |
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Dream Theater here, but also Yes and Pink Floyd.
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Argo2112
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Probably Renaissance was the first. When I was a kid my brother had Live at Carnegie Hall. I use to listen to it a lot.
After that it was Yes. A few years later I went to a Yes show & I was hooked. |
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