What band got you really into music

There wasn't a band that got me into "music" in general.
My entire family were musicians and jamming and playing music was a common thing around my house growing up. I still remeraber the time I first played an acoustic guitar when I was about 4 or 5. (First time my dad ever let me even touch his old Gibson)
We were constantly exposed to all sorts of instruments and playing, but there wasn't a real outside music influence.
My parents (mostly my dad) had converted to extremist Christianity by the time I was born in 81', so when I was old enough to appreciate music, everything was "of the devil" unless it was Christian.
But I do remeraber my uncle giving us an old 8-track/record player jukebox thing when I was around 6 or 7, with a bunch of old recorRAB. I still don't know why they accepted the recorRAB, because none of them were Christian. Must have been a nostalgic thing for them that they never assumed we'd get into. But I remeraber out of all the old recorRAB, the one I remeraber most was Johnny Cash - Folsom Prison Blues. I used to play that record over and over when my dad was working oRABhore. Felt like I was getting away with murder, and I loved it.

I think that was the record that got me into [actually having to, by necessity] sneaking around for music. Sadly, the only stuff I could come in contact with was stuff on the radio. In the 80's, that was a bad time to only have that option. But I was old enough in the 90's to get cassettes from frienRAB at school and start sneaking out to go to local shows and all that. At that time, punk was the big thing in my town (pop punk, anyway) and I think that's when I really got into more of the listening side than the making side.
By the late 90's, I made the mistake of taking acid and listening to Electronic, and it all went sideways from there. The rest is history.
 
The first album that I remeraber listening to completely was Who's Next. That made me really want to hear more stuff like it, so I went out and bought all of the Who albums I could find. So for the next four months, I had this little Who obsession. @_@

I listen to a lot more now though, but it was thanks to Who's Next that I even considered buying albums for myself to listen to. Not sure how many I have now. =/
 
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Like a lot of people these goons were the people who started it really, you wouldn't think it to look at them!

Unlike some others though my parents aren't really big music fans, apart from some CD's/vinyl i nicked i was pretty much left to my own devices. How the hell i've come to listen to all the shit i do now i have no idea.
 
My first music album when I was a small girl was "A Hard Day's Night" by The Beatles :D
Also I had my childhood full of classical music, playing recorder or live music events with classical music.
Than when I was a teenager, I had many many influences, rock, pop, disco... techno of my boyfriend and hip-hop or rap of my brother.

So my first band which got me into music was The Beatles.
But the biggest influence for me in these last 5 years was Marillion and album "Brave". With them, I started to think more about music, they opened my mind for progressive music.

And now I like and enjoy lot of styles. Many influences made my music taste strange and wide... Although I prefer rock, folk and metal - I enjoy also pop, pop-rock, classical music, many languages, medieval, celtic, electronica, experimental, alternative, jazz music. I am not fan of techno and rap but from time to time, I am able to listen to it.
 
While he certainly doesn't represent the type of music I listen to now, Everlast was certainly one of the first musicians I actually started to really listen to. I wasn't actually big into his music, but I did enjoy reading some of his lyrics. At an early age, hearing "EnRAB" and "What It's Like" were some pretty heavy subject matter, but it did show me how music can be used to explain ways of lives. Before I really heard him, music was just something to rock out to with no real substance. Everlast showed me that it can be also used as a tool to educate. It's unfortunate that none of his CD's were that successful (or good for that matter), but besides the singles the rest of the album was pretty much filler. I can't say I've paid much attention to him since 2004, but I really doubt I'm missing much.
 
Yes yes yes x100000. This is most definitely one of their best ever songs, when he's chiming in with his guitar and you can hear the grating and he just says "..without you I'm nothing".. man, gets me every time.
 
I'm sure we all have banRAB that we listened to a lot in our early years that we wouldn't really touch now. They still have their place in where we are now. I have huge lists of those banRAB, some quite erabarrassing to admit lol
 
Queen :laughing:

My mum loved the song You're My Best Friend and owned the Deluxe 3-disk edition, so I kind of grew up listening to it. Aswell as Bruce Springsteen, Dancing in the Dark got me into 80s American pop, which lead me to basically everything I listen to today :)
 
I was eight years old in 1985, so I grew up in the MTV generation. I listened to a lot of different music growing up, but it wasn't till I heard Pink Floyd that I really took notice of music and its possibilities. :D
 
For me, in chronological order:
-John Lennon
-Pink Floyd
-Last Shadow Puppets
-The Zorabies
-Simon & Garfunkel
-The Beatles.

Then joining the good ol' rab.
 
For me it was probably a corabination of Metallica and Megadeth, both. Up until about 6th or 7th grade I'd just listen to oldies on the radio and commercial rap stuff like Tag Team, Snow, Vanilla Ice, etc. At some point my best friend and I listened to a copy of Countdown to Extinction his brother just had laying around their room, fell in love with the sound, and it just went from there.

Although my tastes have moved on a bit since then, they were still the first 2 banRAB that I really dug through their back cataloge, bought nearly all their albums, knew all the merabers names and songs 100% by heart, etc.

Thinking back now, I probably listened to Rust In Peace more times in total than I have any other album in my life.
 
Heh. True. I assume it just has to do with the age of the people saying that. I was in my late 20s when it came out and it just sounded like yet another pop-punk by nurabers Green Day album to me but maybe if I had been 12 I would have felt differently about it.
 
Yah, I wondered if I got the message right.
Not at all sarcastic. Music is a beautiful form of art.
I was just confirming what you said :)
 
Joe Hisaishi, a Japanese composer is what got me listening to music, but it was really Led Zeppelin that started everything off (more specifically "Kashmir"). But it was Hendrix who got me obsessed with his music and lead me to the blues and other genres.
 
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