Nice thread Husker
Music has always been huge in my life. My mom never practiced anything, but my dad has been an active blues-guitarist for over thirty years, so I have had a relationship with music since I was in diapers. Me and my neighbour started writing songs on our own when we were very young, about 5-6, we were both part of a church, so it was mainly christian lyrics really that we wanted to put some music on. We did this for several years and enjoyed it alot.
After a slump for a couple of years, I picked up the guitar when I was about ten or eleven. I got one and a cheap shit amp from my dad, and I started playing on my own. Before that I was very fascinated by rhythms as I was very focused on break-dancing at the end of 6th or 7th grade. I got more and more into guitar-playing and my dad taught me a couple of chords, and I started practicing on my own and have been since. Well, anyway, I was into Michael Jackson back then and after hearing Beat It and Dirty Diana, I started getting my eyes open for guitar-solos and a heavier sound. So, that's when a buddy of mine started to introduce me to Metallica. I was 11 or 12 I think. I refused to like it at first, but then I borrowed a Master of Puppets CDR and I LOVED it. Had kinda the same problems like Husker as my parents didn't really approve of it. However, they quickly let go of trying to suck me out of it.
Then I started my band-experience when I was 13-14 I guess. At first we just played covers of Nirvana and Metallica, but expanded to Maiden and Foo Fighters after a while as well. I got properly into Iron Maiden when I caught their Rock In Rio show broadcasted on Norwegian TV. The day after I downloaded every single song off of Bearshare, and well, the rest is history. But I think I only listened to Maiden for two straight years before getting into some other bands as well.
Meanwhile, the band was going strong, and we developed a kind punk/rock-sound. None of the other band-members were into metal except for a few bands so I didn't really have a chance to pull us in the right direction. However, I managed to keep solos a part of the band, and the first solo I ever learned properly was Iron Maiden's The Trooper.
While the bandwagon was rolling, I got into some new stuff, and I bought an In Flames album spontaneously to try and get into "harsh" music. At the same time, Mr. Laiho of Children of Bodom opened a whole new world to me when it came to soloing so I got into them as well even though I kinda felt bad because I thought it was satanic as fuck. Which it obviously wasn't of course. I started to like bands such as Pagan's Mind and other slightly more technical stuff when I was 15-16 and it was then I started to read reviews over at the metalcrypt and soon wanted to be one as well. I discovered tons of new bands, got tons of new inspiration for my own music and expanded my horizons. I gained, as Husker, a very elitist attitude towards other music, nu-metal and stuff like that in particular, but I learned over the years that there's enjoyable stuff everywhere, though I never really were able to stomach metalcore even though I listened to Killswitch Engage once or twice.
Since then, my horizons have gotten wider, but I gave up my solo-playing and started focusing on riffs, and that's why I think riff-heavy and rhythm-drenched genres like trash metal and post-hardcore and screamo/punk/hardcoreis my favourite genre right now. But hat changes from time to time, as when I focused on soloing, progressive metal was my favourite.
I eventually quit my band when I was 18, and fiddled around on my own for a while. I got more and more into hardcore, and fell in love with the rhythmic perfection, the dirty attitude and the image as a whole. I also started apreciating old-school music much more as well, as my favourite metal genres is thrash metal, old school heavy metal and 70s prog rock/rock. I never got into black metal properly though, but that's starting to change. Death Metal as well, the more brutal stuff is opening up and taking me in, after years of trying to get it.
I'm now in a new band, a post-hardore/hardcore punk band were I do most of the song-writing. I work with excellent musicians and I hope, and havee heard, that we have potential to go places.
By far the longest post on I've written here.