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Your Music Evolution
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Chocobo


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Old May 18, 2006, 02:12 PM Local time: May 18, 2006, 11:12 AM #1 of 35
Your Music Evolution

When we first get into music, it's either from our parents or the great.
channel of MTV to expose us to bands that we will then hate and look more into the underground for music.

You start with one band, then you get tired of their music for awhile then explore other better artists. Where did you start and where are you now?

Metallica
This is where it all started for me, when I finally was getting seriously into music. I promised myself when I was younger that I would never get into metal because it was to noisy, but well the first band I got into is Metallica. Great Melodic everything and it had everything I liked in the music, I think I got all my anger out from listening to their cd's in my pre/young teen years.

Blind Guardian
After getting tired of Metallica after pretty much three straight years of listening to them, I got into a more epic band which happens to be Blind Guardian which was more of a fantasy band with great metal vocalists and the music was just mind blowing with how they presented it. Great amazing band

Nightwish
What do you do, when you like epic music and heavy music such as Metallica and Blind Guardian but at the same time want something completely different? The answer- Nightwish, still this is one of my favorite bands, only releasing one horrible cd (their debut album) most of their music is flawless. To bad Tarja is gone now.

HIM
This band gets made fun of a lot, mostly for the female looking male singer, but great band either way. The lyrics mostly about love as everyone knows, after Nightwish they were interesting to get into.

Dream Theater
A band that combines everything from every past band mentioned in this thread- Epic music/great solo's/great atmosphere/great lyrics/many album. One of my favorite bands and probably always will be. I have most of their cd's and I enjoy listening to each one. Currently what I listen to most.

I am into more than those few bands, those have just been the most important bands that stood out to me.

Jam it back in, in the dark.


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Krelian
everything is moving


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Old May 18, 2006, 02:36 PM Local time: May 18, 2006, 07:36 PM #2 of 35
System of a Down
Yeah, fuck you. A friend got me their debut for my tenth birthday (lol) and I loved it for a year or two. Then I suddenly had no musical taste whatsoever for a long time!

Nightwish
I bought Once in September '03 and wound up orgasming all over it and hating SOAD soon afterwards. Funnily enough, I really don't listen to them much anymore.

HIM
Oops! Step in the wrong direction. I was into this shitheap of a band for about a month before I realised what I was doing and became tr00 again.

Dream Theater
First band I went around preaching to everyone. Now I own all their albums, all their lives and two DVDs. I still like them.

Agalloch
Oh lord. Utterly epic, bleak, atmospheric folky-progressive-doom-metal galore. Haughm is probably one of my favourite vocalists.

Pain of Salvation
K, this band is the reason I don't listen to DT much anymore. I've had Remedy Lane for about half a year and I still can't stop listening to it.

Massive Attack
I discovered trip-hop a few months ago, and now I listen to just as much of it as I do metal. Win. Can't help but get an odd look whenever I mention it to friends though.

There's nowhere I can't reach.
knkwzrd
you know i'm ready to party because my pants have a picture of ice cream cake on them


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Old May 18, 2006, 05:12 PM Local time: May 18, 2006, 04:12 PM #3 of 35
There's no possible way I could do this with bands, it would take up pages upon pages. Ergo, I'll do it by genre.

My interests branched out. I started with classic rock. That got me interested in jazz, country, blues, folk, and metal. Jazz got me interested in modern orchestral music and hiphop. Metal branched into punk, and punk lead to interest in the avant-garde.

This isn't a "this and THEN I went onto something else" kind of thing, it's "this and then ALSO I started listening to that". Like I said, I could never list enough bands, but I'll give the first artist I started listening to in each genre: classic rock was Black Sabbath, jazz was Eric Dolphy, country was Hank Snow, blues was Leadbelly, folk was Pete Seeger, metal was Celtic Frost, for modern composers it was Erik Satie, rap was Slick Rick, punk was Black Flag, and the avant-garde was John Zorn. Now, these aren't my favorite artists or the one's I'd be first to recommend, just the ones that got my interests up.

This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it.
guyinrubbersuit
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Old May 18, 2006, 07:16 PM Local time: May 18, 2006, 05:16 PM #4 of 35
Originally Posted by Krelian
[
Agalloch
Oh lord. Utterly epic, bleak, atmospheric folky-progressive-doom-metal galore. Haughm is probably one of my favourite vocalists.

Agalloch is fucking awesome.


Korn

Yeah that's right, the band that kick started the nu-metal genre was the first 'heavy' band I got into. And I got into them thanks to MTV. I still do occasionally listen to them from time to time. My path down nu-metal continues with...

Slipknot

I think my friends got me into them. I was a fanatic for along while, though I really only like their current album right now.

Slayer

I got into them after listening to the Tattoo the Earth live CD. Stain of Mind and Chemical Warfare were both on there and kicked my ass. Thus began my descent into thrash and other metal genres.

Meshuggah

I was thirsty for more heavy bands and someone from the Minibosses message board recommended Future Breed Machine. That was the heaviest shit I've heard at that point and I was really into the future sounding tone the guitars had.

Death

This band helped introduce me into into the more underground scene of metal. Symbolic was one of my most played albums in the latter half of high school. Still one of the greatest bands around.

There are other notable bands, but these were the important ones I suppose.

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Little Brenty Brent Brent
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Old May 18, 2006, 07:35 PM Local time: May 18, 2006, 04:35 PM #5 of 35
Metallica

This is where it all started for me, too. The black album was the first CD I ever bought, back when I was ten years old or so. I quickly started to explore their older stuff, which I also loved. Metallica was the first band I saw live, as well. I loved the guitar solos, and quickly sought more music with the same energy and riffage, which led me to:

Iron Maiden

Due to the influence of my older brother and the music I would hear him listening to, I started to get into NWOBHM stuff. Still one of my favorite bands to this day. The solos, the galloping riffs, the wailing. It was all perfect. I listened to them a LOT, and while I wanted more, I didn't know where else to find it. However, one day I stumbled across:

Iced Earth

I actually heard some of their stuff on an internet radio station in a class back in highschool once, and dug it. Through that, I discovered Demons and Wizards, which brought me to Blind Guardian. A whole new world opened up. I realized that music was still being released in places that weren't North America (this was before Iron Maiden got back together, and I sort of forgot that Europe existed). Luckily for me, there were lots of good bands still releasing things in Europe, like:

In Flames

Listening to their old stuff, along with that of Dark Tranquillity, Amorphis, and Children of Bodom, is what first got me into the growled vocals. I really didn't like it at first, but the instrumentality was just so good that I kept listening anyway. Eventually I stopped minding the vocals, and then eventually began to like them. They have a certain subtlety to them, ironically. Speaking of subtlety, you know a band is good when you've been listening to them for years and are still noticing new and interesting things they've done in their songs. For example:

Death

This was a huge one for me. Chuck was and is one of the greatest visionaries to ever pick up a guitar, and his memory lives on with all the bands drawing an influence from his music. I'd never listened to anything quite so technical before, which brought me to...

Cacophany

Along with Jason Becker's and Marty Friedman's solo stuff, Cacophany made me appreciate classical and technical guitar in a way I had never known before. Branching out to other like-minded musicians (Yngwie, Vai, etc).

At this point, I notice a problem that knk mentioned, being that this is way WAY too linear. Along the way after Metallica, I also got into Black Sabbath, another band that my brother listened to extensively. This led me to things like Van Halen, the Cult, and other classic rock acts. This more mellow side further chilled out as time went by, and got me into stuff like Sublime, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, and lots of Spanish guitar. I could probably linearize everything, but right about now is the point where I started to get lazy, so that's all you get!

I was speaking idiomatically.
Luminaire
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Old May 18, 2006, 07:42 PM #6 of 35
Stabbing Westward
A good friend of mine lent me their "Darkest Days" album when I was very young and it was a definite stepping stone into the harder stuff I listen to now. They were my favorite band for a while -- I got all of their CD's -- but now I can't really listen to them anymore.

The Smashing Pumpkins
They're kind of a sentimental favorite of mine; my best friend loved them, introduced me to their music, and has since passed away. The "Adore" album always makes me think of him.

Opeth
My first foray into European metal. I eased into it with "Blackwater Park" and "Damnation." My favorite is now "Orchid."

Pain of Salvation
Still my favorite band ever. I listened to "Remedy Lane" once and was instantly hooked. "The Perfect Element I" pulled me in even more. Daniel Gildenlow's vocal range is amazing, and I even had the connections (thank you, Adrian) to get the opportunity to hang out with him once a few years ago.

Evergrey
Really good dark metal that got me into concept albums (before I realized Pain of Salvation's RL and TPE were concept albums). I'm not as happy with their latest, "Monday Morning Apocalypse," but "The Inner Circle" and "Recreation Day" were so fanfuckingtastic that I can forgive them. I adore Tom Englund. And I'm going to get to see them when they come to ProgPower USA this September!

And this brings us to . . .
Jorn Lande
My favorite power singer. EVAR. I own all of his solo albums and tons more from other bands he's been in, such as Masterplan, Ark, The Snakes, Leatherwolf, and Mundanus Imperium. He'll also be at ProgPower this year, too .

(Also included are various death metal bands including Dark Tranquility, Strapping Young Lad, Behemoth, and Axamenta.)

How ya doing, buddy?
Prepare the PLANET SMASHAA
Little Brenty Brent Brent
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Old May 18, 2006, 07:45 PM Local time: May 18, 2006, 04:45 PM #7 of 35
Best metal singer ever = Eric Adams!

FELIPE NO
Will
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Old May 18, 2006, 09:41 PM #8 of 35
Growing up I was exposed to a lot of "smooth jazz" 'cause that's what my dad had on the radio. He also played a lot of Santana...Oye Como Va, hell yeah. Then there were the dark years of pretending to like rap while not really listening to music at all. Next I discovered video game and anime sound tracks and that's all I listened to for most of high school. The only actual band I listened to was Incubus. Finally I discovered The Mars Volta, and from there it was a slippery slope into obscure alt rock, metal, and anything progressive. First it was stuff like Dream Theater or Mahavishnu Orchestra, lately I've been getting into math rock.

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Morrigan
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Old May 18, 2006, 09:41 PM #9 of 35
I got into metal at a young age. My older brother gave me a compilation tape of various metal and hard rock artists. I was instantly into Judas Priest, King Diamond and Testament. I had also heard a few Iron Maiden, Black Sabbath, Metallica and Slayer songs, but this tape is what really got me into it.
At that age I also listened heavily to Guns N Roses, but even then I was trying very hard to ignore their filler. I eventually got bored with them and now only like a handful of songs. I also enjoyed Pink Floyd, Animals is the first record I ever bought myself (and Appetite for Destruction the first CD I owned, received on my birthday).

It took some time before I delved more seriously into the genre, and the more "underground" artists I discovered after were Anacrusis, Bathory, Overkill, Amorphis in the early 90's, and in the mid-90's I got into more euro-metal: Blind Guardian, Therion, Moonspell, Emperor, Storm, Tiamat. At the same time I started to discover darkwave/ambient and neo-folk, such as Mortiis and Wongraven, but I am still today very much a n00b.

All across those years, I also listened to a lot of assorted movie scores, video game soundtracks, new age (Kitaro) and classical. And more recently (less than 5 years or so) I started to discover folk music. Stille Volk and Garmarna are two big favourites.

I still like all of the above, or at least their classic material. The only band I was heavily into at the time, and now I barely listen to at all, even their classic stuff, is GnR. Too much filler, really.

So, today... mostly metal, I'd say around 75% of what I listen to (very approximate estimation, but I reckon it's at least that much). The rest is comprised of folk, neo-folk, darkwave/gothic, ambient, movie scores, game scores, classical, classic or progressive rock, and the odd new age artist here and there. Tried as I might, there's very little music outside of those that I like.

Jam it back in, in the dark.
Helloween
aguywholikestovideogames


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Old May 18, 2006, 10:14 PM Local time: May 18, 2006, 09:14 PM #10 of 35
I'm not even sure how my musical evolution plays out. I'll do my best to start from as early as i can remember.

Ice Cube
Yeah, i sorta went through a rap thing. Music was never really pitched to me when i was young by my parents, i was left to find my own taste in music. Me, not having a solid base in any form of music was left to listen to what my friends listened to. For a long time i thought the only bands out there that weren't classical music were Limp Bizkit, Ice Cube, DMX, and so forth. I remember the one CD my friend had that wasn't rap, or that kind of stuff was Big Shiney Tunes album 2. The very first song i heard off of it was Beautiful People by Marilyn Manson. That song really caught me, and i wanted that album, even just for that song (yeah i was really impressionable).

Big Shiney Tunes 2
This compilation probably played the largest role in my musical development. I loved each song on this album, some more than others. It opened the doors for me to bands such as Red Hot Chili Peppers, Third Eye Blind, Smashmouth, and other such mainstream stuff, but nothing that really stuck with me, except for The Tea Party. I wasn't huge into them, mostly because the sound of the song on that Compilation kind of scared me.

Crash Test Dummies
It was around this time that i got hooked on the folk band Crash Test Dummies. They had a terrific singer, and great instrumentalists to boot. Their song writing was creative. I lived off of this, and other bands my dad had lying around until i took another shot at the more mainstream stuff.

The Tea Party, and Creed
I bought myself a Creed album not long after starting grade 7. I was instantly hooked. After this i decided to try and branch out. I tried The Tea Party head on, along with Weird Al, and Smashmouth's less popular hits. None of the other ones stuck, but the Tea Party did grow on me over time, but Weird Al was an instant hit.

Rammstein
I was at a friend's house, and i was introduced to the dark Industrail sound of Rammstein. I couldn't understand it, but i didn't care, i loved the sound. I bought two of the albums and set down for a while just enjoying their music. After that, i discovered a website that listed almost every German born musical artist in existance. That's where i discovered...

Helloween
This band was an instant hit. I heard the song I Want Out, and i went right into downloading more of their stuff. Over the course of two days i had downloaded over 30 individual songs off Kazaa by them. They opened the door to the more talented side of music. Along with them came Rush, Dream Theater, the other two pillar bands to my taste in music. I went along with basically these three bands with some stragglers running along the side until for christmas i was given a rather strange gift that i was not expecting at all. I got a CD for christmas not too long ago, it was called...

Get Behind Me Satan
This album blew down all the walls surrounding my musical taste. Ever since receiving that album i've been going for almost anything i can find if it's recomended to me. I've gotten so much more adventerous, and i'm not afraid of new styles. I still listen to the three "pillar" bands in my taste more than anything, but i'm extending the pillar system to other such bands as The Tea Party (i'm now officially a fan), The White Stripes, Blind Guardian, Iced Earth, and so on.

That's pretty much where i am now.

How ya doing, buddy?
Skexis
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Old May 18, 2006, 10:46 PM Local time: May 18, 2006, 10:46 PM #11 of 35
For most of my adolescent life I remember being hip to the Michael Jackson fad. I had Thriller on tape, I bought Moonwalker, I played the hell out of the Moonwalker arcade game. There was a lot of music out there in the 80's but the pop rock he did when Bad came out really struck a proverbial chord with me. It was catchy, and he had a great singing voice, and hell, we all know it, he had badass dance moves. I still listen to Bad when I need an MJ fix.

I remember the first two CDs I spent money on were Alice In Chains' self titled album and Soundgarden's A-Sides. Though I pretty much got tired of Soundgarden after I played out Pretty Noose and Burden in my Hand...

1997. Alice in Chains was my introduction to hard rock. I listened mostly to my local rock station, but they were a band that I really invested myself in. I liked their melodies, I liked their style, and enough that I figured I'd buy one of their albums.

1998, I heard The Prodigy's album Fat of the Land, as well as The Matrix Soundtrack and the Blade Soundtrack. Up until that point I had really dismissed a lot of techno music as the dance type, with super-happy female vocalists and cheesy effects. For lack of a better term, this blew me away. I was really sucked into the world of electronica. I delved into trance, breakbeat, trip-hop, and all kinds of different genres thanks mostly to MP3.com.
This was also the year I realized that game music was good, dammit, based mostly on my experiences with Diablo, Final Fantasy 7, and Super Mario RPG. I began actively seeking out songs on Napster running the gamut from Static-X to Diablo.

Fast forward: grunge, alternative, standard rock, and...
2001, I listened to Sevendust's album Animosity, and Soilwork's Natural Born Chaos album. They couldn't really be farther apart in style, but they both represented a real departure from what I was used to. I liked melodic singers with a hard rock base, bands like Finger Eleven, Stabbing Westward, Linkin Park, and others. When I stumbled upon these two albums, though, it let me step outside the box for a minute and ask myself how important my strict rules for melody really were. The truth was, I enjoyed the occasional screaming or growled lyrics, because it allowed me to contrast against the beautiful harmony. That year I also visited a certain forum that happened to be associated with a certain GFA3 project that was just coming online. Exposure, exposure, exposure. I ate it all up. Video game music beame my life for months, when I would often download something without any idea what it was just to find out if it was maybe any good. Lastly, I heard Juno Reactor's album, Bible of Dreams. As if the video game music wasn't enough, here I was being treated to a wonderful mishmash of cultural and electronic elements that really sent me spiralling. I got exposed to a lot of interpretational and experimental styles as a function of this, probably my favorite year in music, but at this point I was still under the impression that certain things were off limits.

Fast forward to 2003, when I bought my first Iced Earth CD (Burnt Offerings) from a used CD store. I had heard many good things from GFF members, and I figured I'd give them the benefit of the doubt. I found that I really liked it. Despite the wailing vocals and the melodramatic presentation of the album, I was digging it. I opened myself up to other avenues that I had only known by reputation before.

Early 2004, I gave Opeth a real chance. I had downloaded some of their material before, and wasn't very impressed with the death vocals. This time I listened to them for real, and found that if I was going to make concessions, and listened to the band not just for the melody, but for the combined effort of rhythm and melody (this goes towards the claim I've made before about death vocals being more of a rhythm instrument than a melody instrument) then I could enjoy myself a whole lot more.

Death and (mostly because of the rhythm component), hardcore music, began to work its way into my regular playlist. 2005 saw me buying albums from everyone from As I Lay Dying and Unearth to Into Eternity (Now one of my favorite bands), Juno Reactor, Dredg, The Mars Volta, The Haunted, and everything in-between.

My most recent attempts have included dipping my toes into classic & soft jazz, emo, as well as ambient and environmental music. I don't feel like I ever really tossed anything aside, so I'd say my musical evolution has been, in a general sense, outward rather than linear.

This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it.

Last edited by Skexis; May 18, 2006 at 10:49 PM.
Mana Dragon
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Old May 19, 2006, 12:20 AM Local time: May 19, 2006, 12:20 AM #12 of 35
Well I have jumped from genre to genre trying to fin new things to absorb and enjoy. I start with as far back as I can remember, and when my musical evolutions really took off. I'll list bands/artists I feel were stepping stones.

Back in my early teens, in middle school was around the time music became enjoyable for me.

Korn - Yeah, this was a group I loved back in the 90's, my younger brother actually got me interested. This would later help propel me into harder stuff, but I rarely ever listen to them anymore.

Stabbing Westward - Another group I discovered during my Korn phase was this. I found their album, Darkest Days, to be very good. Solid instrumentation, decent vocals, a good mix, a good group. I still listen to them from time to time, but I often have them on a backburner for top songs.

Video Game Music - For a period of several years and most all of high school, VGM was my music obsession. I built A huge album collection, ranging from games I had played to games I hadn't but liked the music. It is still my largest area of music, but slowly others are catching up. Haven't had many new VGM albums as of late.

Billy Joel - I can thank my dad for introducing me to this guy. It was late in high school when I was looking through my dads old music, and found Billy Joel. I easily liked most of his work, he is a great songwriter and piano player, and not a bad vocalist. I still listen to him from time to time.

Porcupine Tree - This was after high school, but a friend of mine reccommended that I listen to this band. I picked up their newest album at the time, In Absentia, and I was hooked. The lyrics were good, the musicianship was flawless, a good mix of progressive and rock elements. I eventuall spread out and started getting their older, more experimental albums, and they are still a favorite of mine today.

King Crimson - I found out about this group from a friend, and I went and bought the album Red, and became addicted, this was one of the godfathers of Prog rock, and still in heavy rotation with my other music.

Dream Theater - This band I found out about a bit after finding Porcupine Tree, a bit different in style, but I grew to love DT as Well. I began with Scenes From A Memory, and it is my favorite album to this day from them. Though, Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence comes close. This band was a platform to my current music obssession, Metal.

Metallica Yeah, I had heard them earlier in my life, but for the first time, I actually enjoyed them. I got most of their albums in a quick span of time, and the quickly became a good group for me, I haven't listened to them as much as of late.

Opeth - This was a bit of a long call for me at first. I had heard metal before, mostly thrash/speed metal, but I decided to expand my horizons. So I come across a song from Opeth, Harvest from Blackwater Park, and I really liked it. So I bought the album, and along came my first understanding of the growling vocals. I had a bit of adjusting to do to like it, but in time, I branched out even further into the death/black metal underground.

Sunn 0))) - After playing around with the black metal scene for some time, I discovered doom metal, specifically Sunn 0))). It struck me as odd first, like a mix of death metal with post rock, both ambient yet chilling. This expanded my views on metal even further, and now I really like the doom genre one of the most unique metal types.

Kamelot - I had heard some power metal before, but I mostly did not like what I heard. So I cross this album, Epica, one day at a music store, and just for fun, decided to purchase it, not knowing what to expect. I was surprised when it came to be one of my favorite albums of all time though. Everything about this band clicks with me, the guitars, the drumming, and I must say, Roy Khan is now one of my favorite vocalists. The album was awesome, nary a song I deemed as skip-worthy, so I went and gobbled up their other albums, even the ones with their old vocalist, though he is not as good. This is one of my all time favorite groups now.


There is much more in this cycle, but these were the important steps, my collection of over 14,000 song would have not been possible without evolution. My biggest area is till VGM, which trumps my second biggest genre metal, by several thousand songs. There's even some genres I did not mention such as classical, jazz, ambient, noise, and folk that I also enjoy. Most of my music is just diverse to say the least.

I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body?
Meth
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Old May 19, 2006, 02:19 AM Local time: May 19, 2006, 01:19 AM #13 of 35
How awesome! We've got some Stabbing Westward fans, and a Smashing Pumpkins fan. That's the shit! I'm still a huge Pumpkinhead at heart. I know you guys like Darkest Days as far as SW goes, but I've gotta give props to Ungod as being my fav of theirs. Also props to Helloween for listening to The Tea Party. My fav of theirs has gotta be The Edges of Twilight.

I started in on classical and baroque stuff when I was really little. And I still play a lot of it when the mood suits.

For me I think Weird Al was a big gateway into all the stuff that I listen to now. When I was 11 my friend played Nirvana In Utero for me. That led me to Peal Jam, STP, NIN, Pumpkins, and about a million others.

Later I moved into the following:

Dream Theater
Radiohead
Tool
The Flaming Lips
Oingo Boingo
David Bowie
Michael Jackson
The Shins
Depeche Mode
and a ton of others that I can't recall at the moment.

Currently I've been listening to The Magnetic Fields, which kicks ass and I'm very surprised that it hasn't caught my attention earlier. The 69 love songs album is awesome, but my current favorite is Get Lost.

I was speaking idiomatically.
Helloween
aguywholikestovideogames


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Old May 19, 2006, 12:49 PM Local time: May 19, 2006, 11:49 AM #14 of 35
Originally Posted by MetheGelfling
Also props to Helloween for listening to The Tea Party. My fav of theirs has gotta be The Edges of Twilight.
Yay, i love props. Also totally agreed on the Edges of Twilight thing. It's definitely my favourite of their albums. Splendor Solis is catching up though, that's a fine album.

I didn't know the Tea Party ever made it down to the states.

What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now?
Meth
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Old May 19, 2006, 01:02 PM Local time: May 19, 2006, 12:02 PM #15 of 35
A buddy of mine turned them on to me. As far as I know, I've never heard of them getting any kind of radio airplay or media exposure here. It's a shame though cause they're a badass band that could've made it big here in the states.

FELIPE NO
knkwzrd
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Old May 19, 2006, 02:18 PM Local time: May 19, 2006, 01:18 PM #16 of 35
Originally Posted by MetheGelfling
A buddy of mine turned them on to me. As far as I know, I've never heard of them getting any kind of radio airplay or media exposure here. It's a shame though cause they're a badass band that could've made it big here in the states.
This is why the CRTC is such a mixed blessing here in Canada. Good bands like the Tea Party and the Tragically Hip get airplay because of them, but we would never have heard of Nickelback without it, the bastards.

What, you don't want my bikini-clad body?
omglasplagas
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Old May 19, 2006, 03:40 PM #17 of 35
Everything really started for me back in 3rd grade or so with MTV

Back in the day MTV used to be pretty damn cool as you all might have guessed. I started off listening to bands like Green Day (dookie was probably one of my first albums), the Red Hot Chili Peppers (I still recall their video for Aeroplane), Oasis, and the Smashting Pumpkins. They were pretty good retrospectively and I still consider the RHCPs my favorite modern band.


Then I moved into Videogame music starting off with Final Fantasy Soundtracks and whatnot which eventually led me to OCremix and (of course) Gamingforce. Ocremix basically exposed me to electronica. I began listening to a lot of stuff like DJ Mystik, Armin Van Buren, and other random groups based on suggestions.


Not all that significant thus far right?


Then came the BEATLES. They changed everything.
Everything about them. Every album I got my hands on was pure gold.
From the genius therein, I began listening to a lot of oldies and classic rock from Bob Dylan to Al Green. Everything just kind of branched out from there espeically into Reggae and also a lot of Jazz.

Jam it back in, in the dark.
I STAND UP NEXT TO A MOUNTAIN...
... AND I CHOP IT DOWN WITH THE EDGE OF MY HAND

Last edited by omglasplagas; May 19, 2006 at 03:43 PM.
Gratch
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Old May 20, 2006, 12:08 PM #18 of 35
I could write pages on this, so we'll just do the condensed version with a few of the important albums that really piqued my interest in what makes up most of my music collection:

Men Without Hats/"Pop Goes the World": Hey, fuck you. Pure 80's new-wave sugar-pop, but no album brings back better memories of growing up.

Metallica/"...and Justice for All": I went through a rather embarrasing hip-hop/rap phase (yes, I bought a Vanilla Ice album), but AJFA was was brought me back to my senses with a swift kick to the head. Thank god...

Alice in Chains/"Dirt": This album was basically the soundtrack to my formidable high school years. And yes, if you do the math that means I'm an old bastard. I hadn't heard anything quite as powerful before, and I'm not sure I have since.

Nine Inch Nails/"Broken": This was the first CD I ever bought. Hell, I still have the version with the mini-CD.

Bad Religion/"Suffer": A friend and I went into a small independent record shop in Colorado and told the clerk to give us something that would blow us away. She picked this album and Helmet's 'Meantime', both of which opened my eyes to punk & hardcore. Although it's completely watered down now, I've been a fan of both genres ever since.

Skinny Puppy/"Too Dark Park": My next door neighbor in the dorms picked up this tape from an obscure band out of Canada, and it absolutely blew my mind. It was basically my first instroduction to industrial, and SP's brand of musical sculpture was nothing short of brilliance. They have been far and away my favorite band ever since.

Bauhaus/"The Sky's Gone Out": Oddly enough, the only reason I bought this album is because a review for the original Diablo in PC Gamer said the game music sounded very similar to Bauhaus. I was late getting into the genre, but were it not for this album I would have never started listening to some of the classic 80's-90's 'Goth' bands (Joy Division, Sisters of Mercy, Clan of Xxymox,etc.). I actually get to see them open for Nine Inch Nails next weekend, and am giddy as the proverbial schoolgirl.

So, most of my current collection is made up of these genres (industrial, goth, metal, 80's new-wave, & punk) with more than a few game soundtracks and classic rock albums (I'm especially a sucker for Jethro Tull) sprinkled throughout. Makes for a pretty good mix, I think.

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Old May 20, 2006, 10:38 PM Local time: May 20, 2006, 10:38 PM #19 of 35
Originally Posted by Gratch
Bauhaus/"The Sky's Gone Out": Oddly enough, the only reason I bought this album is because a review for the original Diablo in PC Gamer said the game music sounded very similar to Bauhaus.
My interest is piqued. =o

Do you think any of these bands sound like the Diablo soundtrack? I like the instrumental stuff in the game, but if they overlay it with the doom-like vocals (see Type O Negative) it's kind of a turn-off for me.

This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it.
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Old May 21, 2006, 06:59 PM Local time: May 21, 2006, 05:59 PM #20 of 35
I was really into music when I was very young (read: pop), so like in Kindergarten I was getting George Washington confused with George Michaels. And I liked/hated Madonna. Then around 4th grade I didn't listen to anything really, save for oldies, classic rock and whatever until 7th grade. A friend got me into listening to music while drawing and *boom* I was hooked.

::My Dad's Music::
Metallica
My dad's old fave band, definitely a big influence. My mother hated it, my dad and I loved it. I still like them, regardless of what other people say (well, even I can't really bring myself to like St. Anger).
Led Zepplin
God I love them. The ultimate classic, and I love their lyrics.
also, Black Sabbath/Van Halen/Dire Straits

::My Mom's Music::
The Beatles
Can't hate the Beatles...their sound evolved so much over the years that there's little not to like.
Aerosmith
Classic American rock. Period.
Queen
OMG my favorite band ever. Freddie Mercury has one of the greatest voices, and the band itself has a very operatic sound.
also, Tom Petty/David Bowie/REM

From this, I derived a base and got into other things, some of which are quite embarassing now:

Korn, Limp Bizkit (OMG), SoaD, Pearl Jam, Nirvana, Creed

Out of these, the only ones I still listen to are SoaD and Pearl Jam, on occasion. PJ is actually quite good, in my opinion. But all this was a stepping stone to my senior year, when I was introduced to many things besides different music. At this time I also got into Apocalyptica, which was most definitely not a bad thing.

E Nomine/In Extremo/Nightwish/Rammstein/Therion/Luca Turilli
German bands, symphonic metal, etc. etc. Started me on a path of looking for similar bands, like Corvus Corax, Janus, Parzival, Ulver and others. Around the same time I was also turned onto non-metal bands, like QOTSA, Muse, Squirrel Nut Zippers, Moi dix Mois/Malice Mizer, Royal Crown Revue, Flogging Molly, Seven Nations and other things.

With the discovery of orchestra fused with metal, I accidentally stumbled onto the greatest band evah, KAIZERS ORCHESTRA. And that just caused all sorts of things to do with Norway and Scandinavia, like Folk metal and stuff.
Ulver, Finntroll, Einherjer, Dimmu Borgir, Cloroform, Skambankt, and Tom Waits, along with a desire to learn Norwegian.

Going to England brought about a brief flirt with UK bands, like The Darkness, Muse (which still continues), the Divine Comedy, HIM(not UK, I know, but I bought my first album of theirs while there), but ultimately I lost interest in a lot of it.

I still listen to a huge variety of different groups, languages and genres, as well as expanding my classical music composer interests; I didn't feel like that was worth putting down as well. Really, if it's a good song, then I'll listen to it.

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Old May 21, 2006, 07:34 PM #21 of 35
What got me into music really was my first concert when I was six, I saw the Rolling Stones in Toronto and from there on it gradually evolved.

Rolling Stones - First band I ever really listened too, listened to them with my family from since I can remember until now.

NIN & KoRn - When I was in around 1st or 2nd grade, my brother being much older than me already developed his own taste in music, which rubbed off on me. This was my first exposure to hard rock and the industrial sound of NIN.

*Insert random pop/rap groups here* - From around 4th - 6th grade I hit a spot where all I listened to was pop and rap...dont remember much.

Rammstein - 7th grade, watched CKY2K and the opening song, Du Hast I believe by Rammstein got me hooked. It was a style I had never heard before, ever. This is when I got into heavy music a lot more. Rammstein, Cradle of Filth, Cannibal Corpse, etc.

Misfits - In 8th grade my brother then introduced me to punk, first The Misfits. And I fell in love, but my love for punk didnt expand much, I listened to some older punk like the Sex Pistols and Ramones but nothing tickled my fancy. To this day I still only enjoy Balzac and Misfits. Horrorpunk I guess is my thing.

Turbonegro - My latest musical evolution, in 9th grade I discovered Turbonegro and totally fell in love. The lyrics, the style, and the whole feel of the music. It is its own genre I believe. Its almost like Turbonegro fans have there own cults (aka Turbojugends), gotta love it.

As of now I listen to everything from DJ Tiesto, Turbonegro, lots of NIN, lots of Misfits and Balzac, Celldweller, Bravery, and some rap like DMX and Young Buck. But the list is huge, to big to type all down.

I was speaking idiomatically.
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Old May 21, 2006, 08:09 PM Local time: May 21, 2006, 06:09 PM #22 of 35
I never got into music until high school. For me it was all like "wow, those people are crazy with music" I've heard so much hip hop/rap and oldies 80's music so much along that time period, that I can't stand listening to it. Heres the main music I got into, from order of revelation.

A.F.I.
This was my official first, I'd say, before Linkin park.
Dj Tiesto
Just loved the sound.
ATB
Same
Muse
When Rose Online came out, I was looking for muse class. This apparently popped up.
Infected Mushroom
I was looking for something fast and crazy. Supposedly, the Israeli goa got me hooked.

What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now?
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Old May 21, 2006, 08:24 PM Local time: May 21, 2006, 07:24 PM #23 of 35
Jiraiya, nice call on Turbonegro. I recommend everyone give a listen a.s.a.p.

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Old May 22, 2006, 01:17 AM #24 of 35
I guess I had the most mainstream tastes, which evolved to so much better towards the end.

Jewel - I really liked how mellow, meaningful, and calm "early Jewel" was. Mainstream Jewel is now "sell-out" to me.
|
V
Destiny's Child - From late four-member status to "Emotion"
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V
Shakira - I liked just about every song on Laundry Service. Then she disappeared for a while. I wanted "Poem To A Horse" to be a single, but they chose "Underneath Your Clothes" ad "Obsession" instead =(
|
V
VGM + Anime music - I started to like instrumentals and japanese vocals as opposed to the mainstream "everybody knows this" kind of songs
|
V
Go! Go! 7188 - My current niche which I plan to cling to for a long time is JRock. Actually it's more like Go! Go! 7188, since a good amount have surf rock influence, but it's more like a mix of different styles, with just the right amount of melancholy.

END progression. Unless I venture into Jpop from here.

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Old May 22, 2006, 01:30 AM #25 of 35
Black Sabbath
Ironically enough, the first music I really got into was given to me by my mother. We had an old record player in our living room, and there were very few albums my youngster ears could tolerate. One of those albums was "Paranoid" by Black Sabbath. Iron Man being the main attraction for a six year old. Yeah, what can I say? My mom was an ex-hippie.

Iron Maiden
This is the band that started my adolescent mind toward enjoying music. I first heard them when I was eight years old or so, hanging out with my friend's older brother. After getting "No Prayer For The Dying" on tape, all I asked for was more Iron Maiden albums.

ManOWar
After discovering metal, I wanted more. As this band is recorded in the World Record books as the loudest band ever, they piqued my interest. Once again, I couldn't get enough.

KMFDM
This group came as a surprise to alot of my metal contemporaries. At first, I was resistant, but after awhile, they grew on me. While they have released some craptastic albums, the good slightly outweighs the bad.

ICP/Twiztid
Metal roots firmly intact, I headed off to highschool and was beseiged by a bunch of my peers turning into rap-heads. While, I was still holding up my devil horns proudly. Well, while I was on vacation, I saw a news report about this band, ICP, getting their album pulled from the shelves only hours after it was released. I didn't think much of it, but while I was on the Wildwood boardwalk later that night, I happened upon a music shoppe. I found one of their albums and bought it for about ten dollars and some change. I wasn't very fond of the music at first, but the lyrics were what it was all about. Bloodshed, horror, carnage. Took my highschool mind for a loop that any band could be so blatently violent and cartoonish at the same time. Twiztid happened afterward, and while it was liking by association at first, they grew on me. They were much darker and less cartoonish about their horror-rap, and quickly outshined ICP.

Pennywise
Around the same time in Highschool, the local arcade got this cabinet labeled "Top Skater." You remember the game right? Skateboard simulator with a punk soundtrack. Well, the majority of the songs, if not all the songs, were by this punk band called Pennywise. I hadn't heard of them before, and their music was pretty damned decent. I found as many of their albums as I could with the songs from the game and it continued on from there. Great band right there.

TSOL
This stemmed from my punk researching, and they're one of those bands that many people don't mention. They're amazing, I saw these guys live two years ago, and for a bunch of fourty-somethings, they still kick ass.

Mindless Self Indulgence
Freshmen year of college, this very cute young lady in my Math class starts talking to me about music. I used to wear my headphones into that class and just listen to music throughout, as it was the freshmen class and quite dull. So, this girl asks me about the music I listen to and suggests this band because she was on the street team or some such thing. I, wanting to get into said girls pants, bought the first full length album "Frankenstein Girls Will Seem Strangely Sexy." Sadly, I didn't get into her pants, but the band is kickass.

mc chris/nerdcore
Everyone knows mc chris, or has at least heard of him. I heard a snippet of Fett's Vette on Sealab, and found the rest of his stuff later. Pretty funny and nerdy stuff, what can I say? Through finding him, I also found alot of sweet bands like M.C. Frontalot, The Minibosses, M.C. Steven Hawking, The Protomen, The Advantage, etc.

And for posterity's sake, it would be impossible for me to list every band I've ever listened to or obsessed over. There are plenty more, but I'm getting tired over here.

Jam it back in, in the dark.
Dave Foley is my Hero.
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