Greetings from NYC.
I'm a long-time prog fan and all-around music freak. My older brother
turned me on to prog back when I was just a kid in the 70s, growing up
in San Antonio, Texas. It all started with "The Yes Album", which
turned me into a Yes fanatic. I went on to discover and love Genesis,
King Crimson, Gentle Giant, ELP, Tull and other prog heavyweights.
Since I was learning both classical and rock guitar at the time, prog
just made sense to my brain. My older brothers were also
classically-trained guitarists, so we appreciated the complexities and
musical virtuosities of these bands.
I'll never forget the excitement of those days, waiting for the release
of a new album by one of the great prog bands. Of course, since I only
started to get into this music in 1976 (when I was 10), most of the
greatest albums had already been released, but there were still a few
masterpieces to come. I can still remember when my brother came running
home with Yes's "Going For The One" and how we just sat back and got
blown away.
I remember a similar sensation when the newly-reformed King Crimson
released "Discipline" and blew us away with "Elephant Talk", "Thela Hun
Jinjeet" and the rest. I saw them in Austin on that tour and my God was
it incredible! Like nothing we had ever seen before.
All these years later, I'm psyched that bands like Yes and King Crimson
are still alive and kicking and that there are still other people on
this planet who can appreciate and love albums like "Topographic
Oceans".
Over the years, I've taken a lot of abuse for liking prog (especially
because I got into punk and indie rock and grunge and played in those
types of bands). But I always try to remember what an ex-girlfriend
said about it. I was telling her that it made me sad that prog and
groups like Yes got so much abuse and disrespect, always being called
"pompous" and "self-important" and "overblown". And she said, "Well, in
my experience, the one thing that seems to characterize the guys I've
met who like Yes and progressive rock is that they are all highly
intelligent. So I think it's just a matter of IQ. You have to have a
high one to appreciate this music."
That made me feel a lot better. About myself, prog and other prog fans.
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