Album(s) That Took The Longest To Come Around To


For me, it took about 8 listens to fully appreciate and get Bon Iver’s “For Emma, Forever Ago”. Same goes for the first two Springsteen albums. Gratifying to come around to art that good (and I know that’s up for debate).

 

nicholsr

Showing 10 responses by immatthewj

For me I guess mostly it's CDs, but for the purposes of this thread that might be okay?

There are several I am pretty sure, but at the moment I cannot think of most of them.

Back when I was in the Air Force in around '79 I made friends with this guy from NJ who was always playing something by Springsteen.  I mostly tolerated it but didn't get most of it.  That would meet the LP criteria (AND 8-track) if there is that criteria.  But when I got a CD player in '89 Darkness On The Edge Of Town was one of the very first CDs I bought anyway. But I didn't come around to it until the early 2000s.

I've been auditioning/breaking in a new pair of speakers and I am coming up on 90 hours, and to get there I've been playing a lot of CDs from my truly vast collection that I thought might be interesting when I bought them but for whatever reason they didn't grab me at the time so they may have been played once or twice and that was it.

Rosanne Cash's Ten Song Demo from I think around '95 was one of those, and the other night it really blew me away how good it is.  The same for Kiki Dee's (of Don't Go Breaking My Heart fame with Elton John)  live Naked Songs CD from about, I think, the same time period.  Sounds wonderful!  She actually does an acoustic version of Don't Go Breaking My Heart (but I wouldn't put that as the best work on the CD) and a real nice cover of Joni Mitchell's Carey.  

 

. . . Holly Cole Trio It Happened One Night released in ’96(?) and I know that I bought it in the ’90s, but I didn’t listen to it closely enough to realize how good it is until ’18 or ’19.

Same with Patricia Barber/Cafe Blue . . . I bought the red book HDCD version not long after it’s release (’94?) for her cover of Ode To Billy Joe but I never really listened to it and started digging it until ’18 or ’19 . . . and I’d say the same also goes for Patricia Barber/Companion.

The Man Comes Around (Johnny Cash) I bought after its release (’02?) and I am sure I played it a couple of times, but it was basically gathering cobwebs until two or three days ago (the same session I listed to Rosanne Cash/Ten Song Demo) and it was, "Wow! Good stuff!"

It’s not been that way with everything I am pulling out of mothballs . . . I played Cowboy Junkies/Open tonight, and it left me pretty cold and clueless.

 

 

@simao  +1 on that!  If I had a TT, I know that I would have a few Patricia Barber LPs.  

Ten Song Demo is incredible, so amazingly great.

@rpeluso  , I find it hard to understand why that didn't hit me when I bought it almost 30 years ago!  I guess I was in another life-mode back then, and if a CD or song did not have a real catchy obvious grab-line, I put it (the CD) out of sight and then it was out of mind.  I am way happy I rediscovered it a few days ago.  There is a palpable quality to her voice on that one that is not there on all red books OR SACDs.  Maybe it's because of these new speakers that I am auditioning/breaking in . . . but if it is, it isn't happening on all my old red books I am trying to rediscover.

. . . here's another one I bought back in the late 90s that I just played today and really enjoyed, although I probably hadn't played it but a half dozen times (if that many):

Dave's True Story, the Sex Without Bodies CD (a Chesky aluminum disc, 1998).  Kelly Flint's vocals almost have that same palpable quality that I was raving about above on Rosanne Cash's Ten Song Demo CD, and I like much of the quality of the instrumental work around her.  I particularly enjoy their cover of Lou reed's Walk On The Wild Side. 

I am going to add Van Morrison/Blowin Your Mind.  I remember hearing Brown Eyed Girl frequently on AM radio stations when I was growing up in Montana and I thought it was a catchy tune but I never thought much else about it.  Then in '91 when I had a rack system I ordered that CD from the record club I had joined, but back then everything was background music and I never sat and seriously listened to anything.  I had also gained a passing familiarity and interest in Van Morrison via The Last waltz (video) and the Rodger Watters remake of The Wall/Berlin (video).  Then a few years ago (so I'll say '18 or '19) on an impulse I ordered a used (Sony red book) SBM remaster of it and I discovered that not only were there some good tunes the SQ of that particular remaster is fantastic!  And I am generally not thrilled with all of the other SBM remasters I own.

So with that typed, I am adding Van Morrison/Blowin' Your Mind to my list.

Back in the early or mid '90s I heard a Richard Thompson song on the public radio station I used to listen to, so i went to the CD store and bought Richard And Linda Thompson/Shoot Out The Lights (1982, I think).  I remember listening to it a few times back then, but it was never really grabbing me.  I made it to hour 96 plus on my speaker audition/break in journey, and Shoot Out The Lights was the second CD I listened to.  It sounded very good (actually better than the two Linda Ronstadt CDs that I finished with) and it is a CD that I now appreciate and should be listening to some more.

I had always seen “Shoot Out The Lights” on many greatest albums lists. Got it a couple of years ago at Goodwill for a buck, but I don’t think I’ve given it a proper listen. I’ll do that very soon.

AND Shoot Out The Lights is a great sounding recording, a bonus. I regularly use it as one of my demo LP’s.

@bdp24 ans @nicholsr I hadn’t played mine (red book CD version) since sometime in the early to mid ’90s, and it wasn’t that I disliked it, but it didn’t really grab me by any body parts either. So it went out of sight/out of mind until today.

Maybe I just wasn’t ready for it back then, or what I think is more likely is that my system went through several stages of evolution since the last time I played it, and today I really started to hear how well it truly was done and how good the vocal and instrumental work really was. With that all typed, it is not nearly the best of my best red book stuff, but it is getting up there with the best of the good (if that makes sense). Not everything I am blowing the cobwebs off of and putting in my CDP during this speaker audition/break in sounded as good as Shoot Out The Lights did today. I’ve got a couple of solo Richard Thompson CDs post breakup with Linda that I haven’t listened to much at all since I bought them sometimes in the ’90s (I bought those other two after I bought Shoot Out The Lights for songs I heard on the public radio station I used to listen to) so maybe I’ll put them on the list for tomorrow or the next day or the day after that.

 

It was a game time decision, but I started the session off this afternoon with Patricia Barber/Nightclub (red book).   I bought that one back in the '90s shortly after I bought Cafe Blue (even though, at the time, I wasn't grabbed by Cafe Blue).  I won't say that I just came around to liking Nightclub this afternoon, I listened to it a few years ago and decided that there was more to it than I originally thought, but today I decided that I liked Nightclub even more than that.  The vocal is very palpable in between the speakers and the instrumental work in the sound stage is very good.

A different post in this forum ('music') made me think of a couple:

right after I read the review in Stereophile of Steve Earle's '97 releases, Train A Coming and I Feel Alright, I went out and bought them.  It actually took me a while to start liking them, but after I did, I couldn't get enough of them.

Anything Leonard Cohen. A true musical poet.

@bubinga , in that case, why would Leonard Cohen be on the list of "albums that took [you] the longest to come around to"?