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Stool Man
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 30 2007
Location: Anti-Cool (anag
Status: Offline
Points: 2689
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Posted: February 15 2012 at 13:29 |
Pink Floyd's "Atom Heart Mother" and "Ummagumma" were (in that order) the first two prog albums I ever heard, when I was about ten years old. My dad played them to me when I asked about the weird sleeves. That was almost forty years ago.
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rotten hound of the burnie crew
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PolarWolf
Forum Newbie
Joined: February 14 2012
Location: Finland
Status: Offline
Points: 24
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Posted: February 18 2012 at 14:50 |
Well, can't remember for sure if it was Pink Floyd's Animals or Kingston Wall's II.
Anyway, in the early 90's I got Animals from a friend who didn't like it at all (he said it was extremely boring and songs were too long). I, however, was captivated by the album. I had never heard anything like it. It was very sad and brooding and there was such a surreal feeling when I listened to it. Especially I liked (and still do) how the songs begin so slowly and hypnotizingly. The Wright's keyboards in the beginning of "Pigs (Three Different Ones)" felt especially foreboding. Kingston Wall's II was released somewhere around the same time. I heard one of the songs on the radio and went to the record store next day. The eastern-flavoured, shamanic psychedelia had (and still has) a great effect on me.
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rdtprog
Special Collaborator
Heavy, RPI, Symph, JR/F Canterbury Teams
Joined: April 04 2009
Location: Mtl, QC
Status: Online
Points: 5503
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Posted: February 18 2012 at 15:15 |
Listening to "Dark Side of The Moon" on a 60'S turntable fascinated at first by the mesmerizing effect of the helicopter. Then seduced by the special effect at the beginning of "Money". Then i discovered the rest with further attention like i was discovering a new world by the most enjoyable experience with music. In these times LP covers had also a special beauty that has been lost with today's virtual music. Not a big Pink Floyd fan anymore, i can't deny the influence that this LP had on my future experience with progressive rock music.
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catfood03
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 24 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 785
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Posted: February 18 2012 at 23:40 |
If A Momentary Lapse of Reason counts as a prog-album, then that's the intro point for me.
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Sagichim
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: November 29 2006
Location: Israel
Status: Offline
Points: 6632
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Posted: February 19 2012 at 02:54 |
it's nice to try and remember... the first one for me is jethro tull thick as... and aqualung which i bought together on vinyl in 1994. only some years later i found out that it's a part of a genre called progressive rock. but if i'll dig some more i would say that the first thing i heard (without knowing it's prog of course ) was pan.thy.monium couple of songs from their debut. it was on a radio metal program in 1993 which i recorded on cassette every week , i heard it a million times maybe , it was so weird.
Edited by sagichim - February 19 2012 at 02:56
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stefro
Prog Reviewer
Joined: August 23 2007
Location: East London, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 17
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Posted: February 19 2012 at 18:10 |
First prog album I ever heard was 'Animals' by Pink Floyd. I was tripping off my face on acid at a friend's house - we'd both skipped school that day(I think it was a friday..) - at it sounded simply incredible. I'll never forget it. Funnily enough, 15 years later, what is my favourite album? Yes, you guessed it.
STEF
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Stefro x
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dude
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 30 2004
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 1338
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Posted: February 20 2012 at 05:39 |
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm my first prog album? well it was thier only album!!, "Clockwork Revenge" by Airlord :) no story behind it really,i just wanted domething different to listen to instead of the bands commonly heard on radio, i saw the album in a record store(as was the style at the time) liked the bands name and bought it,the rest is history !! :D
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LinusW
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: September 27 2007
Location: Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 10665
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Posted: February 20 2012 at 13:18 |
I was already moving about in the fringes of progressive rock (what the site define as some prog-metal, a lot of proto-prog and prog-related), when I in my quest for more of that kind of music remembered my dad's record collection and his liking of two certain bands. Promptly I laid my hands on  and  to try them both out. Then I just took it from there.
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Gallifrey
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 15 2011
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 588
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Posted: February 23 2012 at 23:53 |
Well. I'm a bit of a prog noob (only known for just over a year), but looking back, I always loved this style, just never knew about it.
Before I knew of it, I used to love albums like Queen II, Made In Japan, Delicate Sound Of Thunder and others.
But it really started when I found Muse about 3 years ago. They're not that prog, but the bits I loved about them (piano midsections, weird timing etc) were all elements of prog.
But the album that really pushed me to do some googling of this genre was actually Linkin Park's A Thousand Suns.
Because it's one of those albums that just flows through and it was all on the same subject and it had meaning. All the critics had likened it to progressive music, so I went out and found some.
And so, my first true prog album, and still my favourite, was Porcupine Tree's Fear Of A Blank Planet.
And then I found this site and discovered some more.
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crimson87
Prog Reviewer
Joined: January 03 2008
Location: Argentina
Status: Offline
Points: 1818
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Posted: February 24 2012 at 23:24 |
I had a glimpse of prog when I was very little and my father played Supertramp on the cassette player. Later when I was 14 I bought a record from the Argentinean band Seru Giran and Pedro Aznar s fretless bass and charly garcia s synths sounded incredible to me. Still , I didnt have a clue of what prog was about.
Then I may have listened to my first epic , Child in time by Deep Purple it was an incredible piece of music I couldnt believe how a 10 minute song could feel so short!
Some of you will laugh but another prog related moment that I had was when I first heard Stratovarius , their power metal felt like anything I had heard before. The vocals , speedy guitars and keys were a pleasure to hear.
Finally I had a contact with real progressive rock when my father bought a copy of a Yes compilation. At first I did not want to listen to it since Owner of a lonely heart was a really awful tune and that s all I knew from the band back then.
But when I listened to I VE SEEN ALL GOOD PEOPLE I had a strange feeling inside me , like hey this is the music I have been looking for!
Of course the rest is history
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progprogprog
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 05 2011
Status: Offline
Points: 279
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Posted: February 25 2012 at 07:54 |
Unfortunately I'd been introduced with Yes by Owner of a lonely heart as well.It took me a while to discover the real Yes.
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broseidon
Forum Groupie
Joined: November 14 2010
Location: Seattle
Status: Offline
Points: 46
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Posted: February 25 2012 at 16:45 |
I was strictly Classic rock for a while, I would listen to the local radio station at my dad's shop. For wasting my time being there he gave me $5 to buy a cd about every week and it progressively got, you guessed it, more progressive. I wanted to get the best cd I could find based on what I had heard on the radio, it started with Pink Floyd, then to Styx, to Supertramp, to Joe Satriani, then Rush, and then Yes. After that I was a prog addict and bought everything from Savatage to Steve Vai to Behold.. the arctopus. My collection has come a long way and is probably large enough to induce a year long acid trip.
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Less can't mean more that doesn't make sense, more is more - Yngwie Malmsteen
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wjohnd
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 16 2011
Location: Scotland, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 327
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Posted: February 25 2012 at 17:03 |
It was a while ago now but I'm guessing it was Pink Floyd - Animals. First one I owned was Rush 2112.
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Fox On The Rocks
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 10 2011
Location: Toronto, Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 5012
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Posted: February 25 2012 at 19:31 |
Other than Pink Floyd, I think it was Rush's Gold compilation album or Yes's Classic Yes compilation. Also, at the the time I got either one of those 2, my friend introduced me to Dream Theater.
Edited by Fox On The Rocks - February 26 2012 at 13:51
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prog4evr
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 22 2005
Location: Wuhan, China
Status: Offline
Points: 1455
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Posted: February 25 2012 at 23:59 |
I told my friend in high school (in 1975) that I thought Yes - Roundabout was a cool song. He said, yeah, that one's okay, but that I should really get Yes - Relayer (the album) because that is their best work to date (he thought it was better that Fragile, CtTE, or ToTO). Since I didn't make much money in those days, I bought it and wore it out (vinyl album). That was my first prog album experience...
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smokey
Forum Newbie
Joined: January 15 2006
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 33
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Posted: February 26 2012 at 13:55 |
By the time I was 10, I was already listening to The Who's Quadrophenia, Supertramps Crime of the Century, Deep Purples Made in Japan, Queens Night At The Opera and Pink Floyds Wish You Were Here.
I remember being obsessed with Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd when i was 12 and nobody in my school seemed to like any rock let alone anything from the 60's/70's
Once I got into high school, I started listening to Yes' Fragile/The Yes Album, ELP's Brain Salad and KC's In The Court. From there i discovered Yes' Relayer and Close To The Edge, followed by Gentle Giants Three Friends and Genesis' SEBTP.
Now being 23, I still love playing the classics that i have always listened to, as well as other bands I picked up while in high school (VDGG, Anglagard, Frank Zappa, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Refugee etc).
There are still so many albums and artists that I need to listen to (even if I have 1000+ albums) that I dont think I will get to listen to them all in my lifetime.
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Tales From Topographic Oceans
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progprogprog
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 05 2011
Status: Offline
Points: 279
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Posted: February 26 2012 at 14:08 |
I recently got the chance to hear Refugee's album.Amazing
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Always thinking in extremes.That's my way to beat boredom.
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Vibrationbaby
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 13 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 6898
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Posted: February 29 2012 at 10:35 |
I listened to my father's jazz albums and my sister's Elvis albums until I heardHocus Pocus by Focus on the local AM radio station in 1975 on the Dutch Master's compilation. After that I began snapping up every prog album I could lay my paws on. I still listen to jazz and classical and don't confine myself to progrock. Prog actually got me listening to more classical music.
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Sean Trane
Special Collaborator
Prog Folk
Joined: April 29 2004
Location: Heart of Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 20644
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Posted: February 29 2012 at 11:16 |
smokey wrote:
By the time I was 10, I was already listening to The Who's Quadrophenia, Supertramps Crime of the Century, Deep Purples Made in Japan, Queens Night At The Opera and Pink Floyds Wish You Were Here.
I remember being obsessed with Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd when i was 12 and nobody in my school seemed to like any rock let alone anything from the 60's/70's
Once I got into high school, I started listening to Yes' Fragile/The Yes Album, ELP's Brain Salad and KC's In The Court. From there i discovered Yes' Relayer and Close To The Edge, followed by Gentle Giants Three Friends and Genesis' SEBTP.
Now being 23, I still love playing the classics that i have always listened to, as well as other bands I picked up while in high school (VDGG, Anglagard, Frank Zappa, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Refugee etc).
There are still so many albums and artists that I need to listen to (even if I have 1000+ albums) that I dont think I will get to listen to them all in my lifetime.
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Sounds like you could've been my nextdoor neighbour in Toronto back in 73 .... sooo typically a 70's Canadian-teen a profile. ..
then I saw you're not even half my age... 
why the f**k am I laughing, when my life is almost over??  
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let's just stay above the moral melee prefer the sink to the gutter keep our sand-castle virtues content to be a doer as well as a thinker, prefer lifting our pen rather than un-sheath our sword
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N-sz
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 28 2011
Location: NH
Status: Offline
Points: 344
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Posted: February 29 2012 at 11:23 |
Well I'd known Rush and Yes for a long time before I "got into" prog. How I got into progressive rock goes like this:
It was maybe a couple years ago, and my friend showed me a link to a song from Khan's "Space Shanty," and I said, "That's pretty cool" but I actually thought it was really boring. So the next day in school, he gave me a cd copy of Space Shanty and I took it home and gave it a chance and it was just really boring. The only reason I kept listening to it was because of that one super groovy part on Mixed Up Man of the Mountains. Man that part is groovy! And eventually I came to love the entire album and I cannot quite see why I thought it was so boring then. Now Space Shanty is one of, if not, my very favorite prog album, and Steve Hillage is my favorite guitarist.
Then I got into King Crimson, rediscovered my love for Yes, and blah blah blah, good times!
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