Tuesday, February 20, 2007

My Musical Journey: Part II (Fallen Angel)

By listening to Floyd I decided that I had been holding myself back over all these years in fear of being scrutinized for the music I listened to. Who would have known that it would be the “cool” to listen to Floyd just a few years later?

Anyway, I decided my musical horizons needed to expand further than Floyd and I sought out to find other great classic rock bands. The first two bands other than Floyd I stumbled across were Led Zeppelin and The Doors, both of which I fell in love with. The Doors especially captured my attention, Jim Morrison and his conceptual and mysterious lyrics created this burning infatuation in me. I became obsessed with Jim Morrison; I bought Jim Morrison biographies, posters, even blankets. I was starting to love music on an even deeper level; I loved everything it stood for and every detail in its history. I wanted to learn everything I could about every band I listened to, listening just wasn’t enough anymore. I wanted to know why the music they created sounded like it did, what each song meant, the music in the context of the times, and anything else I could possibly know.

Throughout the years I have explored numerous classic rock and modern bands but none struck me like Floyd and very few bands were able to produce that rich abstract sound that Floyd created. Later on in High School a member of the track team introduced me to King Crimson and he told me that I really needed to listen to “In the Court of the Crimson King.” Right after track practice I went right home and downloaded the album, and it was incredible, this was exactly what I was looking for, they were just like Floyd, long compositions, songs that took me on a journey, they had that amazing mixture of rock and free jazz, the album was just so powerful and moving. This is when I learned the splendor of progressive rock. I snatched up every album I could by bands like Yes, ELP, Jethro Tull, Genesis, and even the modern band Tool (who I listened to but with less appreciation.) Progressive Rock immediately became my favorite genre of music and that is where I stand to this day. Maybe my musical journey will continue to follow me into different genres but for the past few years it has been fairly stagnant, which necessarily isn’t a bad thing. You can never have too much time spent appreciating the complexities of the greatest music ever made.

6 Comments:

Blogger Layla said...

just left you a really long comment....i think it got dumped!

UGH! I hate that!

To sum it up, I was telling you how much I appreciate your passion for music and that I hope you can someday have a career that involves writing about it - or something.

Layla

7:19 PM  
Blogger Neo said...

Jeff - Man, I wonder what being at one of those door's show was like. The movies probably don't do it justice.

Surprised you didn't mention "Rush," in the progressive list. One of the greatest drummers EVER Neal Peart baby!

Peace,

- Neo

7:35 PM  
Blogger Jeff said...

Layla - I know what ya mean, that is reallllly annoying and frustrating. Thanks a lot for all your support because of your comments it always keeps me going.

Neo - From their live CD's it sounds amazing. I love when Jim improvises on "The End" it's so incredible. It took me a little while to get into Rush mainly because of Geddy Lee's voice, now I've come to love it!

8:02 PM  
Blogger Neo said...

Jeff - I know what you mean, but the music is so incredible. Too bad you can't just buy a CD with the control to take out Ged's voice and just listen to the instrumentals.....

I can hope right????

L8r

5:05 AM  
Blogger David Amulet said...

Prog rules--it's the most underappreciated genre of rock! Personally, I appreciate the guitar-based prog (Steve Hackett, ealry Rush, some Yes) more than the synthesizer-saturated stuff (ELP, 80s Rush), but I'll take most of it over pop schlock anyday.

-- david

5:00 PM  
Blogger Ray Van Horn, Jr. said...

that's the important thing, is to always seek outside of your core interest...I've spent so much time invested in metal and punk and the best thing that happened to me was when I was threatened to have my music column cut if I didn't broaden my horizons to seek other genres...of course, the revelation has made me broke since I'm a freakin' music addict, but anyway...

12:08 AM  

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