11.07.2008, 05:40 PM | #101 | |
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So true...I didn't even get to Deep Purple, Funkadelic, Foghat, Free, Steve Miller Band, Iron Maiden, Black Sabbath, Alice Cooper, Styx, Judas Priest or Rush. |
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11.08.2008, 10:36 AM | #102 |
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The Top 25 Soul/Funk/R&B Records From The 70's:
*there are mainstream ''non-get-arounds'' as well as some deep underground, gut-bucket funk* 1. Funkadelic - Maggot Brain...yes it is that good. 2. Demon Fuzz - Afreaka....find this album 3. Curtis Mayfield - Superfly...possibly the best soundtrack ever 4. Sly & The Family Stone - There's A Riot Going On...need I say more? 5. James Brown - Payback...The godfathers swan song 6. Gil Scot Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised...often overlooked 7. Stevie Wonder - Innervisions...extremely popular but extremely good 8. Skull Snaps - S/T...an underground funk/soul treat 9. Sir Joe Quarterman & Free Soul - S/T... true gritty soulful funk 10. Isaac Hayes - To Be Continued...the most solid 70's album Ike put out 11. Parliament - Mothership Connection...laid back, rythmic delight 12. Cymande - S/T...jamica style funk, not for the L7 13. Donny Hathaway - Everything Is Everything....this is the ghetto 14. The Meters - Look-Ka-Py-Py...southern-style new orleans mash up 15. Fatback - Keep On Steppin'....well, keep on steppin 16. Fred Wesley & The J.B.'s - Breakin Bread...go on and get a piece 17. Al Green - I'm Still In Love With You...as you will be with this record 18. Jimmy Castor Bunch - It's Just Begun...a true roots of funk player 19. Port Authority - S/T...truly underground, hard hitting tunes 20. Bobby Byrd - I Need Help...a killer live album from James' friend 21. Marvin Gaye - What's Going On...it is hard to get around this album 22. Mandrill - Composite Truth...progressive, wild funk 23. Bill Withers - Still Bill...true r&b with nice grooves 24. New Birth - Birth Day...a flowing, dynamic funky record 25. Earth,Wind & Fire - S/T...far as raw funk goes, this one is it for E,W,F |
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11.08.2008, 12:24 PM | #103 |
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i really hate making lists in order. cause i usually dont like any of my top albums more than the other, each is good for its own time.
and im not in the mood for thinking much, so im probably just going to post lots of punk.... 1. the stooges-funhouse 2.can- ege bamyasi 3.television-marquee moon 4. serge gainsbourg-history de melody nelson 5. ramones-ramones 6.neu!-75 7.suicide-suicide 8. wire- pink flag 9.patti smith-horses 10. john fahey-america 11.any morricone album, lets say two mules for sister sarah, or my name is nobody 12.pere ubu-the modern dance 13.serge gainsbourg and jean claude vannier-cannabis ost 14. jean claude vannier-L' Enfant Assasin des Mouches 15. the damned-damned damned damned 16. derek bailey-topography of the lungs 17.talking heads-more songs about buildings and food 18. alexander von schlippenbach-pakistani promade 19.captain beefheart-mirror man (released in 1970) 20. bob dylan-desire 21.the sparks-kimono my house/ propoganda 22.john fahey-old fashoined love 23.the clash-london calling 24. joy division-unknown pleasures 25.tom waits-nighthawks at the diner or something like that....
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11.08.2008, 12:25 PM | #104 |
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Good list, but, blonde on blonde and mirror man are both from the 60's.
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11.08.2008, 12:27 PM | #105 |
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fuck youre right about dylan-but mirror man was released in 70-71
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11.08.2008, 12:33 PM | #106 |
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Ah, indeed, it was released in 70. I got confused because my copy says it was recorded in 65, even though it was really recorded in 67.
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11.08.2008, 12:47 PM | #107 | |
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What do you mean, "I don't get what the point of looking for new music is for many posters?" You don't see what the point of lookin for new tunes is, period? Or you don't understand some peoples intentions of doing so? If it is the former that's kind of silly. If we're young, obviously we're going to be interested in music that is happening at the very moment, just as you did 18/19 years ago, yknow? |
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11.08.2008, 12:49 PM | #108 | |
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AW, another amazing lists that made me realize another record I love and ommited. SPARKS-Kimono My House. Possibly the coolest band ever! |
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11.08.2008, 01:12 PM | #109 |
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Only a top 10 from me, but whatever.
1. (pronounced 'lĕh-'nérd 'skin-'nérd), Lynrd Skynrd 2. Cosmo's Factory, Creedence Clearwater Revival 3. Soul On Top, James Brown 4. Nighthawks At The Diner, Tom Waits 5. Kimono My House, Sparks 6. The Wild, The Innocent, And The E Street Shuffle, Bruce Springsteen 7. Blank Generation, Richard Hell and the Voidoids 8. Raw Power, The Stooges 9. Specials, The Specials 10. Exodus, Bob Marley And The Wailers |
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11.08.2008, 01:13 PM | #110 |
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The Rock List:
1. David Bowie - Ziggy Stardust 2. Can - Ege Bamyasi 3. Iggy Pop & The Stooges - Raw Power 4. Velvet Underground - Loaded 5. T. Rex - Electric Warrior 6. Television - Marquee Moon 7. The Ramones - S/T 8. Talking Heads - Fear Of Music 9. Brian Eno - Another Green Planet 10. Lou Reed - Transformer 11. Gang Of Four - Entertainment 12. Nick Drake - Pink Moon 13. Amon Duul II - Dance Of The Lemmings 14. New York Dolls - S/T 15. The Kinks - Lola Vs. Powerman & The Money-Go-Round 16. Captain Beefheart - Lick My Decals Off, Baby 17. Bob Dylan - Blood On The Tracks 18. Neu! - S/T 19. Van Morrison - Tupelo Honey 20. Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffiti 21. The Fall - Live At The Witch Trials 22. The Buzzcocks - Singles Going Steady 23. Joy Division - Unknown Pleasures 24. The Dead Boys - Young Loud and Snotty 25. Roxy Music - For Your Pleasure |
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11.08.2008, 01:29 PM | #111 | ||
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There was an inferred clause - "I don't see what the point is of looking for new tunes [from now, if you're only going to pick 'conservative' choices from the 1970s]." The other point being that if you're into 'exciting' 'underground' music now, there was plenty of that in the 70s (beyond Bowie and the like). Seriously though, you're studying journalism?
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11.08.2008, 02:55 PM | #112 | |
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Yep, probably better than Moondance or Astral Weeks. |
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11.08.2008, 06:41 PM | #113 | |
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Thanks for reminding me of this album!!! Your list is definitely the most interesting so far...
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11.08.2008, 06:53 PM | #114 | |
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Because inevitably you keep finding more and more stuff you like, occasionally you find a new favorite, and also your tastes change as you get older. Plus I'm young, I know relatively little about the 70's. |
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11.09.2008, 05:26 AM | #115 |
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1. Public Image Limited - Metal Box
2. Lou Reed - Metal Machine Music 3. Tony Conrad & Faust - Outside The Dream Syndicate 4. Nurse With Wound - A Chance Meeting On A Dissecting Table Of A Sewing Machine And An Umbrella 5. This Heat - This Heat 6. AMM III - It Had Been An Ordinary Enough Day In Pueblo, Colorado 7. Modern Lovers - Modern Lovers 8. Amon Duul II - Yeti 9. Fela Kuti - Zombie 10 Suicide - Suicide 11. The Stooges - Fun House 12. Simon Finn - Pass The Distance 13. The Fall - Live At The Witch Trials 14. Agitation Free - Malesch 15. Can - Tago Mago 16. Neu! - Neu! 17. The Ramoes - The Ramones 18. Sand - Golem 19. Sly & The Family Stone - There's A Riot Goin' On 20. Walter Wegmuller - Tarot
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11.09.2008, 05:53 AM | #116 | |
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This is a blatant excuse, I'm afraid. The point I was trying trying to make with my earlier post, and perhaps I should have pointed it out more clearly, is that when I was your age (I think), there was no internet or powerful resource of musical information like the one you've now had for a long period of time. You were even more disadvantaged if you lived in a small town and had to rely on mail order catalogues, saving pocket money, taping stuff off the radio etc. I'm certainly not romanticising this like you often see some people my age or older doing, in fact I totally embrace any possibility that has the potential of making one person's taste expand ad infinitum, what with an array of blogs and websites at your disposal, which should encourage you to find out about a different perspective of what went on in the 60's, 70's, 80's etc. What strikes me as a bit odd, and this is in no way a criticism of the records people put on their own lists at all, is that for all the continuous debate on this forum as to what constitutes noise, where it originates from, who are the forefathers etc, a record like 'metal machine music' is more prominent view than, say, your pierre henry's, stockhausen's, or any other true experimentator that made music in those decades. Just a simple observation, nothing polemical. |
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11.09.2008, 06:21 AM | #117 |
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Albums that I remember being in my record collection in the 70's, so I must have thought they were good at the time though they may not be remembered as classics nowadays included:
Supertramp - Crime of the Century Tonto's Expanding Head Band - Zero Time and I'ts About Time (still have both of these) Greenslade - Bedside Manners Are Extra T. Rex - Ride a White Swan Every Bowie album Sparks - Kimono My House Devo - Are We Not Men? We Are DEVO! Sex Pistols - Never Mind The Bollocks Damned - Damned Damned Damned The Clash - London Calling TG - Second & Third Annual Reports Bad Company - Bad Company Pink Floyd - A Nice Pair Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here Yes - Close To The Edge Yes - Fragile Klaus Schultz - Timewind The Sensatonal Alex Harvey Band - Next Wishbone Ash - Argus Emerson Lake & Palmer - Tarkus Peter Frampton - Frampton Comes Alive Alice Cooper - Schools Out, Killer & Billion Dollar Babies Iggy Pop - The Idiot Suicide - Suicide
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11.09.2008, 06:47 AM | #118 | ||
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I think this is a brilliant point - there's the possibility today, which wasn't as viable an option so recently as 10 years ago, for someone with a minimum of resources to find out an entirely different narrative on the 'dawn of rock' (60s/70s). Personally, I never really adhered to the idea that the best music produced in the 60s and 70s was the music that was being written about in Q (or wherever); that's not to say that music isn't 'good', it's just that someone like the Monks or the Shaggs (who aren't particularly obscure in the context of this forum) meant more to me than the Doors [etc] did. This narrative of seeking out 'more interesting' stuff than the 'mainstream' is ubiquitous when it comes to 00s music, but doesn't seem to abide (for many here) to earlier decades.
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11.09.2008, 07:51 AM | #119 | |
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I put Metal Machine Music as #1 on my list for a couple reasons. One, it personally was pretty much the first experimental noise album I ever personally listened to, for whatever cultural or historical reasons. And two, it was directly influential on my favorite band, Sonic Youth, and my favorite album, Bad Moon Rising. Listening to them, I reverse engineered to their influences and found that record that demonstrated that a rock musician could be every bit as experimental as a Stockhausen, though of course it pointed me towards looking into the non-rock world avant garde as well. So in my part the '70s list is every bit as much a Sonic Youth fan's list as the '80s or '90s lists were. I considered trying to put a list together like Nefeli's, which I agree is probably the list of very most interesting music from the decade overall. But I would have been lying to pretend those were really my favorite albums from the decade, because while I may go listen to them now and love them, I mostly haven't yet. When I was searching for reminders of what to put on my list through Google and Rate Your Music, I came across Steve Reich's Music for 18 Musicians and put it on my list at one point. But the fact is, as much as I might agree it is incredibly important in terms of taking music as a whole to a new place, I can't pretend to have listened to it as much as Big Star's third album or Live at the Witch Trials. I don't think those albums are necessarily "better" than Reich or Stockhausen's output in the '70s, I just have spent way more time with the rock records. That said, in the '70s themselves, I was mostly, as a child, listening to AM radio, and owned a couple ELO, Bee Gees, and Little River Band albums. It would be very entertaining to put together a list of what I really was listening to in those days, and just trying to imagine brings Casey Kasem's voice into my head! At the start of the '80s in my early teens the list would be dominated by Led Zeppelin, who I still appreciate as decent musicians with three good first albums, but hardly the best of the decade. And, yes, Yes... |
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11.09.2008, 08:21 AM | #120 |
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Both you and Glice make excellent points.
I was just thinking specifically at how I'd compile a list of 80's records 'cause that would be the hardest, since much of what I used to listen to then is a mixture of older brother record collection made up mostly of mid-to-late 70's punk and 'classic rock', my own pop music 7'' singles, the obsession of my sister for Duran Duran, and then more weird - at that time at least - bands that I suddenly got to know. It makes it even more difficult 'cause a band like Husker Du, which I'm a big fan of, I didn't even get to own a record by until they had already split up, and it ended up in my hands in the early 90's, therefore effectively making themselves 'felt' in another decade other than the one they were making music in. A different criteria applies to Sonic Youth, which I already knew in 1989. If I'd follow my heart, Terence Trent D'Arby's 'Introducing...' would be number one because that's the first lp I went to the shop to buy for myself, but even though it has some good songs on it, I'd hardly define it as the best that came out in that decade. And so forth. |
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