If you're like me, you hunt music most of the time. Additional albums from bands you love is good. Finding some old "classics" you missed out on can be good too. But the most exciting thing for me is hearing a band that reminds me of why I bother looking. NEW music. It's often something that sounds exactly like a lot of things, but also like nothing else.
The last example that jumps to mind is hearing the song Here's Your Future. The patronizing and dismissive tone of even the positive reviews for that record piss me the fuck off. TBTBTM is a shield of pure fire. The Onion gave their record a perfect score, but then said dumb shit like "massively catchy melodies sugarcoating the biting sarcasm." Such a simplistic and bad representation of the music. It's more bracing and vigorous than it is "catchy." Why do they do that, because the band goofs around in music videos? The vitality and momentum of this album is singular. Few records
ever knocked me out so immediately. And after I listened for a while, I found that there are several tracks that are even better than the opener. "Returning to the Fold" is the kind of genuinely powerful non-believer's Christian song Win Butler wishes (YOU HEARD ME) he could write.
Alright, digression. So I'm not talking about the moment you first discovered indie rock as something potentially amazing(hearing Silence Kit after checking out CR from the library). But maybe one of them could be the moment you became sure that you loved it. I'm talking about the kind of thing that might happen every 6 months or every year, when you discover something that really leaps out at you. It doesn't necessarily mean you find a new favorite (although it often does).
Other moments that really floored me, from various points in my life - hearing Suicide Invoice for the first time (Hot Snakes).
Hearing "No Action" from This Year's Model for the first time.
Hearing "Ever Overpsyched" on a Chavez record. Part of my learning that more dangerous-sounding bands were not my enemy.
Grandaddy's "The Sophtware Slump."
BIGGER ONES:
Hearing "The Glow pt. 2" (song specifically) and thinking how trivial and empty most claims about "getting goosebumps" from a song are.
Okkervil River's "So Come Back I am Waiting" - Jesus Christ.
"Drop" by Red House Painters.
(this is mostly "indie" style music moments if you will, and not necessarily formative ones)