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Best album ever?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Kaat72
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Kaat72

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I am pondering... honestly... I cannot decide which is the best album ever. Album that is, not a song. It's it any of the four Led Zeps? Janis Joplin's Cheap Thrills? Pink Floyd's Wish you were here?
What album is best, dearest to you, which one changed or consolidated your music preferences?
 
I don't think I could ever pick just one. Even a top ten would be difficult, and would probably change a lot depending on what mood I was in at the time.
 
One reason I picked those two, and yes, it is a hard decision to make, they were/are on the Top 20 list for years and years. I'm not sure if they are still listed.

And I do like both of them.
 
I'll cast my vote for Pink Floyd's - Dark Side of the Moon. Though not tops on my list, there are many that are all caught up in Carol King's Tapestry lp. The Beatles White album and Pink Floyd's Wall should rank high. How about Jethro Tull's Aqualung? An album that I listen to often is Monster by Steppenwolf. Kansas had a great lp, Leftoverture. I'll throw one more out. This LP has a very small following. It's a great work. If you enjoy music, this one is a must listen to. You will be moved by the music... it's fantastic. Better than the book.. better than either movie... it's War Of the Worlds.. a work by Jeff Wayne.
 
Another vote for Pink Floyd's - Dark Side of the Moon. I was heavy into funk, James Brown, Mandrill, Parliament/Funkadelic, Ohio Players etc... until I was turned on to this album in College. That War of the Worlds album was pretty good when I heard it in college as well. I went to PC in Rhode Island
 
It'll probably change in the next 10 min :rolleyes: but my vote is for Joanna Newsom's Ys.
She's pretty fringe, but amazingly talented and awesome live (first time I saw her she played the whole album). The album is only 5 songs but each one is well over 10min long.
 
I would have to say Miles Davis - Kind of Blue. There's just something really special about it. It's six extremely talented musicians laying down some spectacularly improved music.

As for an album that changed my musical preferences: Coheed and Cambria - In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3 was the beginning to discovering good music for me.
 
Its a tough one.. there are lots of good albums... quite a few brilliant albums, but the best..

Dark side of the Moon, wish you were here, Sgt Pepper, Chagall Guevara,The Muppet Show Album (1977) all nearly got my pick, but if the rule says only one then I'm going for


The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars
 
If anyone is interested, here's Rolling Stone's take (published in 2012):
500 Greatest Albums of All Time | Rolling Stone
Spoiler, their top 10:

10. The Beatles - White Album
9. Bob Dylan - Blonde on Blonde
8. The Clash - London Calling
7. Rolling Stones - Exile on Main St
6. Marvin Gaye - What's Going On
5. The Beatles - Rubber Soul
4. Bob Dylan - Highway 61, Revisited
3. The Beatles - Revolver
2. The Beach Boys - Pet Sounds
1. The Beatles - Lonely Hearts Club Band

As someone who really doesn't like the Beatles (though I can acknowledge their relevance in rock music history), can't say I'm a fan of this top ten.
 
It looks like they're pretty bias towards the Beatles.

Italo, Kind of Blue is a great album and can be among the greatest of all time.
 
If I had to choose straight away, there would be two choices.

Boards of Canada - Geogaddi
Tool - Lateralus

Both had made a huge impact on my music preferences at the time, and basically shaped mine and my friends music taste for years to come
 
It's actually impossible for me to pick one album. I just can't do it. There are so many, including multiple albums from The Beatles--and the individual Beatles--Moody Blues, Pink Floyd, Cat Stevens, Creedence Clearwater Revival, and others. Plus specific albums from people like Carole King, Janis Joplin, Joni Mitchell, and others.

Great question, though, Kaat! :)
 
If I had to choose straight away, there would be two choices.

Boards of Canada - Geogaddi
Tool - Lateralus

Both had made a huge impact on my music preferences at the time, and basically shaped mine and my friends music taste for years to come


Lateralus is one I would personally put up there. Fantastic album and band.
 
not to jump on a bandwagon, but sonically, Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon. It creates this cosmic 3-dimensional headspace, along with those unbelievably lush vocals. Alan Parsons cannot be praised enough.
I'm also still gaga over Crash Test Dummies' God Shuffled His Feet. Great alternative pop/rock. intelligent music coupled with very poignant, almost dour tongue-in-cheek lyrics.
 
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Fleetwood Mac's debut album (Dog & Dustbin)
Carole King - Tapestry
Rolling Stones - Sticky Fingers
 
Stale thread, I'm late to the party, but here goes;

Good question, impossible to answer for reasons already stated, and many others; Asked as both an absolute, and with option for personal reasons, thanks for the wiggle room :)

Absolute best: Kind of asks "What is the one thing the vast majority of us can all agree should go in the time capsule to represent us 1,000 years from now?" Never gonna' happen, but if forced to go there, I think strong contenders would have to be Dark Side of the Moon, or Sgt. Pepper's. Both for creativity, well deserved mass appeal and recognition, longevity, technical innovation, pushing the art form forward, and also great cover art.....an integral component of the album. While the cover of DSOTM is about as iconic as one will ever see, I still have to give the overall win to Sgt. Pepper's, for a few simple reasons. I love Dark Side, but it lives up to its name; It is a brilliant downer, kind of a slog to get through, even for the devoted. A masterpiece from one end to the other, but not a terribly broad color palette. Pepper's, on the other hand, is also a "start to finish" experience, but the individual components stand up well even out of context, and showcase a wider range of emotions and styles while doing so.

Personal best: Also impossible, and as others have said, "ask me again in a week." Two that make me happy every time I hear them, decade after decade, from first track to last, and among the first I ever spent my own money on:

Dire Straits - debut album
The Grateful Dead - debut album

Both contain a nice mix of songs, under the umbrella of a signature sound; Happy and sad, long and short, simple and complicated, explosive and smoldering, frivolous and introspective.
 
741 weeks on chart. Dark Side of the Moon. Everything else is a distant second. The album is timeless. It still sounds as if it come out today, and it's 43 years old.
 
I cited DSOTM out of genuine reverence and affection, not to use it as a target to rip down. Love it, genuinely considered it for the top slot, but the more I think about it, the more distant a second place it becomes, the more I consider promoting other possible candidates to #2 spot.

Age is meaningless; Pepper's is 43 years old too.....and then some.

So the studio production techniques so integral to both albums, (and used in far wider variety, to fuller effect on S P's, imho) were still in their infancy when Pepper's recorded; Perhaps in some cases being developed right there, for other artists to use years later, when they showed up at Abbey Road.

Success in the charts is always a tricky yardstick. It may be very true, or very false to say either: "Success in the charts comes as the natural result of quality" or "true quality always brings inevitable success in the charts".
Chart success generally = unit sales, so ongoing chart success generally means (well justified) continuing interest. If it were merely in the short term, I would tease and say "only 'cuz nothing else worth a damn came out that month":p But clearly 741 weeks is a major achievement, a meaningful statistic. My initial reaction was "Really.....only 741? I thought it was even more than that!" But by the way, I am lead to believe that DS spent a whopping one week on the top of those charts......that's one week more than 99.9% of all other music produced, but still. One can get truly lost (in a good way) looking at the history of the Billboard charts, but come away thinking "you gotta' be putting me on" quite a lot.

Without question, ongoing appeal through the generations is of critical importance, but another tricky yardstick. IMO, neither album truly sounds as fresh or relevant as they must have when first released, but that's an impossible standard, so who cares? Everything else moves forward, art has a production date. (1982's) Tron seems quite dated, by today's standards. As does "The Wizard of Oz", a comedy routine by Groucho Marx, or the tiny little Eiffel tower. Landmark treasures with enduring appeal, all. Love them none the less for their age, perhaps even cherish the lines around her eyes as you grow old together. But ongoing relevance isn't necessarily a badge of honor, in fact it's just "entry level dues" when applying for a position as "best".

To my ear, Shakespeare sounds quite dated, yet somehow it endures.:D

Like any great art, the individual tracks on DS are explorations of simple, fundamental human ideas, and that's why they retain their relevance over time. But where Dark Side fails for me, is in the relatively shallow exploration of those ideas. I find the lyrics heavy handed and obvious, more literal than metaphoric. Great song writing can be, and often is quite simple. Writing which aspires to "best" seldom is. It must be open to countless playful interpretations, over countless generations, regardless of cultural shifts. Time......I think I get it, please stop hitting me over the head with it. We all lose our youth. We all eventually die. We all are born, live, then stop existing, while the rest carry on. It moves relentlessly in one direction only, has no real existence or substance, is the fourth dimension, is the only thing that will never cease to be,(Whoah, far out, man!). On and on, I get it. Truly great writing requires a Shakespeare......Or perhaps a Dylan?

At this point I'm practically begging others to join in and show me why both my candidates are nearly rubbish, and force me to consider something I hadn't previously........It's fun!;)
 
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