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Litl View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2005 at 12:02
Thieves Kitchen: 'Sheboleth'.  Gives thundering unendurable boredom a whole new lease on life.

(Of course someone was going to mention Close To The Edge.  Just to be weird.  I recommend the above to them.)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2005 at 12:25
Korn, Eminem, Will Smith, from my retarded six year old youth.  Cry for my ruined youth, people.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2005 at 15:24

I still don't know why, but I had high hopes for Rhapsody's "Symphony of Enchanted Lands."

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2005 at 15:32
I don't think I own a prog album I don't like, but the one I've listened to the least is probably Camel's The Snow Goose. Whenever I listen to it, I feel I have to listen to the whole of it, and a lot of the time I can't be bothered to. It is a good album, though.

A lot of you might be surprised at that, since I own Big Generator, which I love, so shoot me
"Sadder still to watch you die than never to have known it..."

Rush - Losing It
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2005 at 16:57
Although I am a huge Yes fan (Relayer and TFTO are some of my favorite albums) I just don't like Close to the Edge that much. It's decent, but I hardley ever play it anymore.

Jethro Tull's Too Old to Rock n Roll, Too Young to Die was a huge dissappointment for me. I thought well, Songs from the Wood is great and so is Minstrel in the Gallery, and this album came out right between them, so it must be good. I was wrong. Way too poppy for me (although I do like Pied Piper and Quizz Kid). Even though I had it on CD and didn't like it that much, I still traded a copy of Back in Black on vinyl to my friend for a copy of it on vinyl so I could complete my Tull vinyl collection.

Pink Floyd is my favorite band, but I think I got a really bad deal when I payed 30 Euro for a copy of P-U-L-S-E in the Charles de Gaulle airport. Just a bad album in general.

Eye in the Sky by Alan Parsons Project is not what I was expecting. My friends told me it was one of their best, but I really can't get into any of it (except for the two instrumental tracks).


Edited by kingofbizzare
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2005 at 17:01
Too many 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2005 at 17:14

I'm currently advertising a couple of Magnitude 9 CDs on ebay...

I wouldn't touch them if I were you!

Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 00:53
The one and only Katatonia album I bought "Tonight's Decision"

A CD from a band called Mind's I which was mistaken for a prog metal band listed here as Mind's Eye. (Lots of harmonica, not so metal)
You can't possibly hear the last movement of Beethoven's Seventh and go slow. ~Oscar Levant, explaining his way out of a speeding ticket
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 01:09

Worst progressive rock album, I'd have to say Shadowlands by Glass Hammer.

"Don't listen to me."

[IMG]http://www.freewebs.com/shahath/shadowid.jpg">
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 01:14

I forgot to say that these albums also were a big disappointment when I bought them:

Genesis: the "Genesis" album from 1983. Sounds like a "contractual obligation album". Their worst album, IMO.

Genesis: "Calling All Stations". Only a bit better than the "Genesis" album.

YES: "Tales from Topographic Oceans". Great cover design. But the best songs of this album are "The Revealing Science of God" and  "The Remembering", IMO. "The Ancient" and "Ritual" have some good parts, but are mostly noisy. So, one good L.P. for the price of two.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 01:18
In prog terms, the most disappointing was Season's End by Marillion. I bought it when it came out, and being the generally uninformed sort, I had no idea they had switched vocalists. As I was a HUGE Fish fan, I was just so crushed, I couldn't bring myself to listen to it for months. Gradually, I got to the point where I thought it was OK, but that initial disappointment was one of the biggest album let downs for me.Cry

As far as non-prog, I was a huge Kiss fan when I was young, and I saved up my allowance for weeks so I could buy Dynasty when it came out. I got it home and was like, "What the hell is up with this disco album in my Kiss record sleeve?". Within a few months, all my Kiss posters came down and were replaced with Rush not a year or two later.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 01:33

Originally posted by Nipsey88 Nipsey88 wrote:

In prog terms, the most disappointing was Season's End by Marillion. I bought it when it came out, and being the generally uninformed sort, I had no idea they had switched vocalists. As I was a HUGE Fish fan, I was just so crushed, I couldn't bring myself to listen to it for months. Gradually, I got to the point where I thought it was OK, but that initial disappointment was one of the biggest album let downs for me.Cry

As far as non-prog, I was a huge Kiss fan when I was young, and I saved up my allowance for weeks so I could buy Dynasty when it came out. I got it home and was like, "What the hell is up with this disco album in my Kiss record sleeve?". Within a few months, all my Kiss posters came down and were replaced with Rush not a year or two later.

I bought "Seasons End" after I listened in a FM Radio Station the song "Easter", which is  great, IMO. So when I bought the album I knew that Fish wasn`t Marillion`s singer anymore. There are 2 songs from that album that I don`t like very much:"Berlin" and "The Space...". But it is a good album in comparison to "Holidays in Eden".

One day I was curious to see KISS discography in the Internet. So I found a website :http://www.kissfaq.com/  I never have been a fan of them but I had curiosity about their long discography. I read there that in "Dynasty" the drummer in most tracks is Anton Fig, not Peter Criss, who had a that time some health problems and a car crash. In their next album "Unmasked" he doesn`t appear at all:he left the band. But his "Cat" make-up appears in the "comic" which is in the cover of the album. IMO, KISS is a very successful  bussiness machine. There are some KISS albums from the 90s that were made only by Gene Simmons with a little help from Paul Stanley, and other albums done by Stanley with a little help from Simmons.



Edited by Guillermo
Avatar: Photo of Solar Eclipse, Mexico City, July 1991. A great experience to see. Maybe once in a lifetime.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 06:10
star one-space metal...terrible albulm...sounds just too similar to his other work
im not insane, im not insane... im just smarter then you
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 09:17
It's not prog, but my worst purchase has to be "I Should Coco" by Supergrass.  A horrible CD.  I think somebody had compared them to Radiohead somewhere on another forum (but not here...) and it had a full 5-star rating on amazon.com (and still does today for that matter) .  So looking for something new to listen to, I decided to purchase it.  Basically the whole CD is "we're young, we're brit, we rock" pop crap.  Really boys, who cares?  You suck.  Blah 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 10:14
marillion - misplaced childhood and aina - days of rising doom
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 10:42
Rick Wakeman - The Myths and Legends of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 10:44
Oh, and Patrick Moraz - The Story of i.  I have sorta gotten into a few tracks, but there are some really just cheesy melodies and lyrics.  The music really isn't reflective of the interesting story Moraz tries to tell.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 12:07

Tormato by Yes springs instantly to mind - so uninspired after the brilliant Going for the One.

A more obscure one is Rough Diamond - I bought their LP because it had Clem Clempson (ex-Colosseum) and David Byron (ex-Uriah Heep) on it, which seemed a pretty reliable pedigree. Little did I expect the thoroughly bland and unambitious 70s rock it contained. It's years since I heard it so I don't know if time has improved its appeal.

"It's 1973, almost dinnertime and I'm 'aving 'oops!" - Gene Hunt
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 12:14
Green Day - American Idiot
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2005 at 12:18
Indubitably, it was The Comfort of Strangers by Spock's Beard.
 
I had just moved to a new country, just gotten a job and was poor as dirt, but I needed some new music. After the many, many raves SB had gotten online, I figured it was a safe bet. These were positives from people who liked Gentle Giant, Yes, Genesis and VDGG, right? So, what could possibly go wrong?
 
I brought my portable CD player to work, and on my lunch hour, I ran expectantly to buy the album and popped it in as I headed to get some food.
 
While I was munching my Kung Pao Chicken, I was stunned. Floored. Oh. My. God.
 
This was the single most embarassing thing I had heard since The Shaggs (which at least had the virtue of being funny). It was like some kids who hade heard Prog descibed to them by someone but never actually heard it for themselves, meanwhile growing up on a diet of AOR and middle-of-the-road radio music. Like someone had taken all the clichés of why Prog sucks and shoved it into one album of bland Pop Rock.
 
Alright, it's probably not that horrendous, just kind of lame. But as a saved-for purchase when I was at my very poorest, and with all the hype surrounding it, it certainly was the greatest disappointment ever.
 
I remember trying to give it three or four more chances before trading it off for Future Sounds of London's Dead Cities. Classier and more interesting album, that.
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