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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Five albums that changed your life
    Posted: October 18 2009 at 12:42

Yes: Fragile    (First prog album I ever bought. That was in the mid eighties)

King Crimson: In the court of the crimson king    (Guaranteed that I always be a prog fan)

Rush: Permanent waves    (Before listening to this album I thought Rush was lame heavy-band...)

Le Orme: Felona e sorona    (First really impressive theme(conceptual)-album that I heard)

Riverside: Out of myself    (It hit so hard when i listened to it for the first time, that I would remain Riverside-fan even if it would have been their only 'gem'... fortunately other gems followed)

Don't panic
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 03 2009 at 05:36
Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon, The Wall
YES - Close to the Edge
Deep Purple - Made in Japan
Genesis - Foxtrot
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2009 at 21:51
following some sort of timeline:

Incubus - Make Yourself



The first band I fell in love with was Incubus, and what an amazing record Make Yourself is. I guess it was like, 10 years ago when I first listened to this album and I still love it how I did back in those school days.

Helloween - Keeper of the seven keys part II



Oh man so many memories come to my head with this album. Amazing record, great and funny songs. A completely enjoyable ride and one of my favourite metal closers ever. Also, Michael Kiske was a big inspiration for me in my singing (2 years ago I could sing almost every Helloween song, now I have some problems with the high notes due to cigarretes LOL)

Symphony X - The Divine Wings of Tragedy



My first prog metal record. Nothing to say here.

Pain of Salvation - Entropia



Amazing record and one of my favorites thus far. It was the first PoS record I bought, and really got me into prog.

King Crimson - In the Court of the Crimson King



Well my first prog rock record. Completely changed my perception of music.
But now my branches suffer
And my leaves don't bear the glow
They did so long ago
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2009 at 20:46
Yes - Fragile
Mothers of Invention - Uncle Meat
Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffiti
Caravan - In the Land of Gray and Pink
Jethro Tull - A Passion Play
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2009 at 13:48
1- ELP: Tarkus
2-KING CRIMSON :  Descipline
3-GENESIS : The Lamb Lies Down on the Broadway
4-PINK FLOYD : The Wall
5-MARILLION: Fugazi
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 28 2009 at 19:41
1. Pink Floyd - Animals

This was probably the first album I ever became truly addicted to. Every day I'd put it on and listen to it repeatedly, especially "Dogs" which is still one of my all time favorite songs to date. When I'd go to bed I'd put it on and wake up with some random track playing off the album. Even five years after first hearing it I can still enjoy this album thoroughly through and through.

2. Rush - The Spirit of Radio (Greatest Hits 1974-1987)

When my dad first bought this for me back in 2006 I liked about half the tracks, but it wasn't anything I paid much attention to. About six or seven months later I dug it out of a dresser drawer and gave it a listen again. From that point on I knew Rush was going to be one of my favorites. Every song captivated me in some way that I can't explain. The Canadian trio has remained, and will remain, my favorite artists of all time.

3. Blue Öyster Cult - Secret Treaties

I actually bought this on a whim. I had a best of for BÖC and was looking to get into studio albums. I browsed around some forums and kept seeing that Secret Treaties was being hailed as the best album. So I went to my local store and bought it. From start to finish, this instantly became a classic for me. I couldn't find a single thing wrong with this album, and even to this day can't find a flaw.

4. David Gilmour - On An Island

I have always been a David Gilmour fan. Even when I didn't know about his solo career I obsessed over his guitar work and vocals with Pink Floyd. When I heard about the Remember That Night concert was going to be played in theaters, I knew I had to go. As soon as I left the concert presentation I went out and bought this album. A few months later I picked up guitar like I had always wanted to do because of him.

5. King Crimson - Islands

I had heard of King Crimson for a while but had never looked into them. While I really enjoyed every single album for its own creativeness that came from the band at the time, this album has always intrigued me most. I'm not sure why really, but I typically come back to this one album every so often and give it a good listen. 


Notable bands/albums that are not prog related:
They Might Be Giants - Dial-A-Song 
Sentenced - Crimson
Iron Maiden - Seventh Son of a Seventh Son
The Killers - Sam's Town
Iced Earth - Dark Saga
"If the universe is the answer, what is the question?"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 28 2009 at 14:00
I can't say that any album changed my life outside of music so I will try to fulfill the requirements of this thread as best I can.

1. The Flower Kings Paradox Hotel album cover
Paradox Hotel - The Flower Kings:
This is the first album I ever anticipated. I bought it on it's release date, which was a particularly beautiful spring day. I got home from high school, instantly hopped in my car and drove to my local FYE. I hadn't preordered or requested this at all and in retrospect I shouldn't have expected them to carry it. Luckily they did. I put it on in the car, instantly fell in love with it, drove to a park on the lakefront and sat on a bench listening for a couple hours. I now equate the album with a beautiful warm sunny day. Some specific songs also have other thoughts tied with them. Fantastic day.

2.Yes Fragile album coverFragile - Yes:
The first prog album I ever listened to (it happened to be on vinyl). In the spring of 2004, I was at the tender age of 14. My friends and I would usualy spend time after school at Brian's house. One spring day we were outside doing whatever kids that age do and Kyle decided to put on some music. He had a CD with "Yours is No Disgrace," "Starship Trooper," " I've Seen All Good People," and "Don't Stop Believin," "Separate Ways," "Lights" and "Anyway You Want It" by Journey. The Yes portion of that CD was my first introduction to prog. I brought it up at home and my mom had Fragile and Close To The Edge on vinyl. I listened to Fragile first and loved it.

3.King Crimson Lizard album cover
Lizard - King Crimson:
This was my first introduction to a jazzy sound in music. I loved the sax and thought it was all instantly accessible outside of the titular track. It was fall of 2004 and my friend Aaron had gotten this album one day then lent me a burnt copy the next day (although at the time I didn't know it was the next day). After I had given the album a listen, I jokingly accosted him in the halls (I still remember quite well where) and questioned him as to why he kept such a musical gem from my ears.

4.
MDK - Magma
My first introduction to Zeuhl. I heard "Da Zeuhl Wortz Mekanïk" from the free mp3 stream here on PA to try expand my horizons and I liked it fairly quickly. I got the album shortly thereafter and got pretty much what I was expecting. Not particularly memorable or anything but it introduced me to one of prog's more obscure genres so I guess that's good.

5.
And I really can't think of a fifth one. MDK was even tough to think of and I'm not entirely sure it deserves a place on this list. Maybe "Meet The Flower Kings" because I have never fallen in love with a song quicker (less than a second with the opening track "The Truth Will Set You Free." Sophomore year of high school probably late fall of 2004), maybe "Wish You Were Here" as the biggest letdown. I really don't know. Also, no non-prog album can be in here. I have probably less than 20 non-prog CDs, and I can count on a hand how many I actually like.


Edited by TheCaptain - September 28 2009 at 14:49
Curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 28 2009 at 11:12

Not so much change my life, rather severely changed  and broadened my musical tastes: (in chronological order wrt to my hearing and then buying these albums)

Cream: Fresh Cream
Dave Brubeck Quartet: Carnegie Hall Live Volume 2
Soft Machine: Volume 2
Tony William's Lifetime: Turn It Over
Miles Davis: Bitches Brew
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 28 2009 at 10:51
So I've been watching this thread bounce across the main forum page for a few weeks now and never really had anything constructive to add.  I could never think of any one album that truly changed my life or had a life changing impact.  Sure, there's a slew of albums that have strongly influenced my musical tastes but I couldn't think of anything that actually had a profound and life changing impact on me . . . until last night.

I rented a concert video from one of my favorite bands and was instantly taken back to high school, my very formative years if you will.  As I watched the video I realized that my sense of fashion was still rooted in the late eighties.  Every day I wear a jacket to work, at times with a pair of jeans.  I prefer the dark jacket with a white shirt or turtle neck.  Generally an upscale look, and it all comes from what I will now consider a life changing album:



Yes, for as derided as it is on this website, Invisible Touch was probably the most influential album in my life.  This really was the moment in my life when I adopted so many of my current mannerisms, yet I hadn't considered it until I saw the video last night.  The video for the title track and Tonight Tonight Tonight in particular were both examples of how a band should look. 

And yes, even today I accept that the song Invisible Touch is a little cheesy and that the album itself is not on the same level as some of their earlier works, but you know what . . . at that time and place, they were amazing and, apparently, highly influential.



-------someone please tell him to delete this line, he looks like a noob-------

I don't have an unnatural obsession with Disney Princesses, I have a fourteen year old daughter and coping mechanisms.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 28 2009 at 01:14

1. Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here
2. King Crimson - Red
3. Joy Division - Unknown Pleasures
4. Brian Eno - Ambient 4: On Land
5. Tom Waits - Bone Machine

The Pink Floyd record represented for me in my teens the entire Universe. There I was sitting in my lonely little room with my turntable and on it was the record which just seemed to open all the hitherto unknown possibilities, excitement and maybe even danger... I've never been the same again, sort of lost the innocence then and there. The KC's Red struck me (I was about 18 then) quite physically... after a night of relentless listening to Starless and some beer I ended up unconscious on the floor. The doctors had no clue what happened, but I knew. It was the Starless. Unknown Pleasures were not unknown at all, the music kind of depicted exactly what was deep inside, and it hurt so damn nice, as it still does, almost three decades on. Moving on, at some point I had to become a bit more mature and I guess find some "zen like" peace... and On Land (and similar ambient stuff) ushered me into that era quite handsomely.  But the zen calm did not stay for very long, soon everything started going pear-shaped, including the environment in which I was living then. The early 90s were really horrible (don't want to remember, so don't ask), but it was the time to separate the men from the boys... so I went thru the Bone Machine, got some tattoos, made sure that I make an ugly, masculine face, brushed up on my karate and Voodoo, and went out west, where they'll appreciate me... so to speak.

---------------- Now playing: Mahavishnu Orchestra - Miles Beyond via FoxyTunes
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 27 2009 at 22:42
Judas Priest - Sad Wings Of Destiny
Queensryche - Operation:Mindcrime

Dream Theatre - Images & Words
King Crimson - Three Of A perfect Pair
Rush - Signals
The bitter harvest of a barren land, I'm painting pictures you don't understand.
(Fates Warning)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 27 2009 at 19:14
1. Yessongs - Yes. The reason why I like the music I do.
 
2. Lateralus - Tool. The reason why I like modern music, and metal.
 
3. Somewhere along the Highway - Cult of Luna. Metal with emotion and atmosphere that cannot be beaten thus far.
 
4. Two Hunters - Wolves in the Throne room. THE black metal album, no compromise.
 
5. ( ) - Sigur ros. Reason why I got into post rock, and my favorite album to sleep to.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 27 2009 at 19:07
5. Lumpy Gravy, Frank Zappa-- The album that got me a taste of the more experimental side of prog, as well as into jazz fusion.
File:Voyage 34 (2000).jpg
Voyage 34: The Complete Trip, Porcupine Tree-- The album that really turned me into a space rock listening stoner. It really got me interested in psychedelia and space rock and other forms of more psychedelic prog.


The Court of The Crimson King, King Crimson-- Important to me for two reasons: this is the album that introduced me to Symphonic rock and helped me discover a flute could be used in rock music and also, it was the album I was listening to the first time I smoked marijuana.... Good times

 
 

Ramones-- The first album that I bought with my own money.  My cousin introduced me to rock music, and the ramones were my favorite band of the ones he showed me.  It really introduced me to a whole world beyond the local radio station, and if it weren't for this album I could have turned out a lot different.
 File:Rush A Farewell to Kings.jpg
A Farewell to Kings, Rush-- Growing up in Canada, your basically born into loving either Rush or Neil Young. I chose to listen to Rush, and they not only introduced me to the world of prog, which has been my favorite genre since, they have been my favorite band ever since I listened to a farewell to kings on my friend's record player.
 
These are the 5 albums that changed my life though, as far as my 5 favorite albums are, well I barely listen to the Ramones anymore, voyage 34 isnt the best psychedelia album out there and I've come to love hemispheres more than AFtK. Just as a taste, here are my 5 favorite albums, which also really changed my life.
5. Emerson, Lake and Palmer-- ELP
4. Fragile-- Yes
3. Red-- King Crimson
2. Hemispheres-- Rush
1. Fear of a Blank Planet-- Porcupine Tree

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 27 2009 at 04:35
1.Meshuggah - NothingClap
completely changed my view on music, absolute masterpiece (even though it took me about a half year of listening to get into) before nothing I just thought they were a regular good prog-ish metal band

2.Dream Theater - Awake
I'll go with awake, but i&w comes close, I have listened to these records since i was like 5 years old and dt got me into prog music overall

3.Megadeth - Rust in Peace
first record i bought, masterpiece

4.Tool - Lateralus
their best record, very experimental and cool

5.Porcupine Tree - In Absentia
got me later into softer an more mellow music, though I had been listening to PT since I didn't even go in school



Edited by hagguhsem - September 27 2009 at 04:38
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 26 2009 at 23:03
1. The Beatles - Magical Mystery Tour.  The Beatles were the band that really got me into music.  I was obsessed with them.  While I owned Anthology 2 first, MMT is the first "real" Beatles album I had.

2. Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon.  Floyd was my second musical love and DSOTM is probably the album that cemented that for me.

3. Savatage - Streets.  While I don't really enjoy them much anymore, and the band has done a lot of things to irritate me, this album really opened up the world of metal to me and melodramatic type stuff.  From this I really got into european power metal, thrash metal, etc. 

4. Dream Theater - Images and Words - DT became possibly my all time favorite band and got me into modern prog.  After this came Spock's Beard, Shadow Gallery, and lots of others...

5. Rahsaan Roland Kirk - Blacknuss.  This got me to really start looking into jazz (along with Mingus Black Saint and the Sinner Lady).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 26 2009 at 03:11
Thread originator here.
 
This is the thread that just refuses to die, and there is some great stuff in here.  Read through the whole thing when you have time.
 
Just checking in with an update.  I listed Back to the World of Adventures -- The Flower Kings as my number 4 track, and mentioned that I often play the title track on my way to work.  Well, I got out of the habit, but I started up again two days ago, and I got just the best news at work that I've gotten in quite some time.  I was smiling all day.
 
Then, last day, I broke the habit again.  Needless to say, the day was absolutely rotten.
 
So of course I played World of Adventures on my way to work today.  It put me in the right mood and it was another good day.
 
The Flower Kings work magic.  Play them!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 26 2009 at 02:46
 
Sgt Pepper - This album really did change  my life from black and white into glorious colour!
 
 
Are You Experienced - an experience that literally blew me away!
 
 
Led Zeppelin - the start of a lifetime obsession.
 
 
Trespass - absolutely beautiful sound that still haunts me to this day.
 
 
 
Deep Purple - still crazy after all these years!
 
 
wish it was 20 albums that changed my life, i could go on! Wink 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Edited by mystic fred - September 26 2009 at 03:02
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 26 2009 at 00:35
Led Zeppelin - II
Black Sabbath - Paranoid
Rush - 2112
Iron Maiden - Killers 
Tool - Lateralus


Edited by TheProgtologist - September 26 2009 at 00:37


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 24 2009 at 04:53
BLACK SABBATH ~ Paranoid
YES ~ Close to the Edge
PINK FLOYD  ~  Animals
IRON MAIDEN ~ Piece of Mind
MORBID ANGEL ~ Covenant

there are really sooo many others I'd like to add ( Rainbow ~ Rising , ELP ~ Tarkus etc. ) but oh well....LOL

but just recently in the last week  
ANEKDOTEN ~ Vemod ( just got me back into prog again in a big way )

Edited by PeyoteWereWolf - September 24 2009 at 06:41
That which is shall always be
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 22 2009 at 23:28
My top 5 albums that made an impact on me are:
 
1. King Crimson - In The Court Of The Crimson King
2. Pink Floyd - The Dark Side Of The Moon
3. The Moody Blues - On A Threshold Of A Dream
4. Super Session - Bloomfield, Kooper & Stills
5. The Blues Project - Projections
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