I got my first Alice In Chains tape for Xmas from my uncle as a kid. I wore a hole in it.
The Beatles. I remember back to when I was ten years old (1964), dancing along with some friends in their living room to "I Want to Hold Your Hand". I've loved their music ever since, due to their creativity, imagination, diversity of styles, and their humor. I never had the chance to attend any of their concerts, but I've enjoyed hearing performances of their music by several good Beatles tribute bands.
Queen.
The first album I ever bought was Night at the Opera.
@phil21 Great album
@Treasurehunter Oh hell yeah!
The Osmond Brothers, and now I want to go barf.
Led Zeppelin and then Black Sabbath. They got me into liking rock music more than any other band. Even tho I did like The Monkees as a wee tot. Fun group to watch on tv.
Black Sabbath - because they were very raw sounding and not afraid to examine the occult and its alleged antithesis.
Another Beatles guy, remember dancing to their stuff when I was 4. Older brothers had good taste in music
And then conor obers/bright eyes. In my opinion he's the greatest lyricist in the last 30 years. He's super intelligent and his lyrics have a vocabulary to put other singer/songwriters to shame.
"Why are you scared to dream of god/
When it's salvation that you want?/
You see stars that clear/
Have been dead for years/
But the idea just lives on"
There are a few that could fit the bill, but the band that really changed my life when I first heard them is the grateful dead
The latest was about 9 yrs ago I was really into Within Temptation. I still listen to a lot of similar bands such as Epica, Lacuna Coil, Delain, and Nightwish.
The first band I was really obsessed with was Marillion. I found an abandoned 12 inch single of Heart of Lothian in the basement of my college fraternity and it compelled me to go pick up a copy of the album, Misplaced Childhood. The next day I went and picked up a copy of Clutching At Straws. I must have worn the grooves out of those two records.
The fact that a band could be so complex and yet so accessable was amazing to me. I always found the prog rock which I heard prior to Marillion to be far more complex and technical than it was actually listenable or emotionally fulfilling. Marillion proved that it was possible to bridge the gap between prog rock and the mainstream without sacrificing impeccable musicianship or giving way to predictable conventionality.