Album which you have listened to most?


We all have favourites and we all keep going back to them every now and then. Some maybe permanently lying next to our systems and have been for years.

Is there an album or two or three at the most which gets most of your attention and is played on your system most often? Not necessarily the best sounding but the one which you are emotionally attached to.

I thought I would ask for a single album but to make it easier for all you may name three of them.

If you have have had the album for more than five years, it qualifies for inclusion here.

The reason I decided to post this message is because I am interested in buying something interesting and if there are only ten people responding it means 30 albums for me to be on the lookout for.

Thanks a lot for your input (if you have read this far I know you will post your three albums also) :-)
128x128quadophile
Nick Drake Five Leaves Left that would be the one I imagine I have heard more than any other.
Jethro Tull Aqualung
Johhny Winter Progressive Blues Experiment
Bela Fleck & The Flecktones Little Worlds
Moody Blues- To Our Children's Children's Children
Kansas- Leftoverture
Boston- Boston
Heart- Dreamboat Annie
ELO- Time
Yes- Going for the One
Elton- Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
Doobies- The Captain and Me

All from my 'era' and all still receive regular play. I consider each of them veritable "Time Machines" as any great albums should do.
On the turntable tonight (and most nights of late) are

Plans: Death Cab
Sea Changes: Beck
Only by the night: kings of leon

Three I always go back to and never tire of hearing:

1) Pink Floyd - The Final Cut
2) The KLF - Chill Out
3) John Mellencamp - The Lonesome Jubilee
1-If you don't know Charlie Hunter, try "Earth Tones" ... and start with cut 2, "What I Am" ... musicianship beyond compare
2-Dave Douglas ... I still vote for "Keystone," but find that I'm playing "Spark of Being" with regularity
3-Donny McCaslin ... "Soar" and "In Pursuit" ... essentials and "to die for"
4-Manu Katché ... "Third Round" ... buy it and find out why it was the only decision to make
5-Chris Potter ... if I get only one, I'm going with "Follow the Red Line" and it will remain my favorite CD of all time
6-Dominic Frasca's "Deviations" ... buy it! End of story.
7-Natalie Merchant's "Leave Your Sleep" ... a vocalist without equal; she needs to marry me
8-Elton John/Leon Russell's "The Union" ... better than EJ's TV appearances suggested

I've got so many others, but I'm very enthused by these at the moment, and in some cases I've been enthused for several years. Potter is the sax man, though McCaslin is "almost" without equal.
Easily the top album played on my system, in my car, and on my iPod -

Metallica - Ride The Lightning

Other Metallica albums may have a better song or two, especially Master Of Puppets, but there's not a single track I skip on Ride The Lightning. People say the song Escape was a poor attempt at commercial success. The band must not like it because it has never been played live. I like it enough to never skip it.

Next 2 are pretty tough. I like so much stuff that nothing stands out like Ride The Lightning. I guess it has to be my favorite album if I've been listening to it this often and have owned it for about 20 years.
A few different ones

Greg Brown - If I Had Known
Gillian Welch - Revival
Rusty Truck - Broken Promises
Neil Finn - One All
Gov't Mule - Dose
I think I need to update my own list since it has been seven years since I posted this thread. I still listen to the ones I mentioned but have to add one to the list.

Cassandra Wilson - New Moon Daughter
Quadrophile, I only just stumbled on this thread, started at the beginning and noticed Zakir Hussain's "making music" made your list. So , sure enough I endorse all of the other usual suspects that have been mentioned ("kind of blue", "something else" and the likes), but "making music" happens to be one of my all time favorite discs so I suspect you will appreciate some of these more esoteric recommendations.

Richard Galliano - Laurita, Blow up
Anuar Brahem - Brazakh, Conte de l'incroyable amour, Khomsa
Arvo Part - Tabula Rasa
Keith Jarreth - Koln Concert, Personal Mountains
Hariprasad Chaurasia - Indian Night Live, Stuttgart '88 (and a lot of other stuff)
Rabih Abou-Khalil - Nafas, Al-Jadida

More in the mainsteam, honorable mentions are:

The Who: Quadrophila
Talk Talk: Color of spring
Crosby, Stills, Nash: 4 way street

Two other - entirely different - but equally brilliant albums are:

Eminem: The Marshall Mathers LP
Lauryl Hill: The miseducation of Lauryl Hill

And the list goes on ....

Since you asked about more recent material. I find myself listening to Chick Corea, "Rendez Vouz in New York" on MCH SACD quite a bit these day, if only to appreciate what the SACD medium AND what Chick Corea are capable of.

Oops - I forgot to mention John McLaughlin "my goals beyond" and "extrapolation"
I wonder what has changed for those who posted 5-7 years back on this thread. Are you still listening to the same or have shifted to something else?
from way back....The Allman Brothers, "Live at Fillmore East", Savoy Brown, "Street Corner Talking", Neil Young, "After the Gold Rush"...
Some Springsteen record..usually pre-1990

Bill Evans Waltz for Debby or Sunday at the Village Vanguard

Bach's Brandenburg Concertos or Cello Suites (or Beethoven Piano Sonatas

Tough to limit this to three + !
drive-by truckers.....dirty south
bruce.....born to run
the who......... who's next
Great topic--not necessarily the "best" but the most played.

1) Rain Dogs by Tom Waits. This is probably most people's intro to Waits. It was 1991, and I was 17 and a senior in high school. In a time before internet when some of us were vainly trying to seek out something truly special, this was a godsend.

2) Pod by The Breeders. I've listened to every Pixies album over and over, including b-sides. I still haven't listened to them nearly as much as their bass player's (Kim Deal) first foray as a front person. For those who follow studios/producers/technicians, this was done in Steve Albini's studio. He considers it one of his best studio efforts, for what it's worth. It's sort of a dreamy post-punk cross between Pixies and Throwing Muses. I had to listen to it many times before I realized I liked it let alone LOVED it.

3) The Facts of Life by Black Box Recorder. If you like the dream-pop sub-genre of brit-pop, it doesn't get any better. I accidentally left this in my mother's travel agency one day, and she and her boss listened to it for days. They also never tired of it. I don't know what it is, but it never feels over-played.
Led Zeppelin II- at least 15000 times. all formats
AC/DC - back in black - at least 20000 times. all formats
Ted Nugent - double live gonzo (lp only) - at least 1000.

does this get me in the GB of WR?
The last album by Apocalyptica its pretty good to listen...i have listened like 4 times today.
Keith Jarrett-At The Blue Note,disc IV
Mark Knopfler-Sailing into Philedelphia
Al Stewart-Past Present and Future
Cannonball-Something Else
Miles-Someday My Prince will Come
Zappa-Hot Rats
Sinku-Sinku
I've haven't tired of any of these after countless listening sessions.
Jeff Beck's TRUTH, Almond Brothers LIVE AT THE FILLMORE EAST, and Yes THE YES ALBUM.

Over the years I have worn out more than a couple of these lps each.
Many, many great responses here! So much music I love, yet my all time favorite is Allman Bros. "At Fillmore East".
Followed by "Mountain Jam" from "Eat a Peach". Quite possibly the best concert recording of popular music. Certainly the best of this phenomenal groundbreaking band. Alas short lived though it was.
not even close for me - The White Album. I friend brought it over the day after it first hit the record store and from then over the next 15 years I bought probably 5 copies of the record (tending to leave it along with everything else as I moved from place to place). I listened to the complete album more than 100 times in the first few years of its release. Was so glad to get the box sets of the Beatles last year as the cd's prior to that sounded nothing like the original vinyl.
I can't imagine Hair of the Dog without Love Hurts!!!! That is one of the original power ballads, and one of the best!
Nazareth - Hair of the dog (original UK version without Love Hurts that was added to the US version)...been playing it since it came out 1975...
Cheap Trick- the first one
Lyle Lovette- Pontiac
Norah Joens- Come Away With Me
I last posted to this thread almost 5 years ago! Is that possible?

Since that time one cd has definitely gotten the most time - "Out of The Cradle" by Lindsey Buckingham ca. 1992. Has seen almost daily use in my car. Recently Don Dixon and The Jump Rabbits CD as well as Rosann Cash's "The List" are getting quite a bit of vehicular time, too.

At home, Duke Ellington's "Far East Suite" has probably been the "Go To" choice, although Allen Toussaint's "Bright Mississippi" and Alejandro Escovedo's "With These Hands" have both been in heavy rotation, too.

Marty
Ry Cooder Jazz, Ozark Mountain Daredevils Men from Earth, Cat Stevens Mona Bone Jakon. These may sound crazy but just try them.
Three I don't believe have been mentioned already.

The Velvet Underground - 1969 Live

Brian Eno - Another Green World

Television - Marquee Moon
Orpheus10,

Abraxas is surely a great album as haunting as any can be. Very good choice!
Seventh Sojourn - Moody Blues
Foxtrot - Genesis
Mix Up - Patrick O'Hearn
Jack the Toad - Savoy Brown
Guitar Noir - Steve Hackett
Stationary Traveler - Camel
I am still looking for good music and it would be great to see some more folks posting here, thanks!
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I'll limit to 3
Clash - London Calling
Steely Dan - Aja
Pink Floyd - DSOTM

maybe 5
Beach Boys - Pet Sounds
Pat Metheny Group - S/T

Ok 10
Yes - Close To The Edge
Saint Etienne - Entire catalog
Everything But The Girl - Entire catalog
Emerson Lake & Palmer - Brain Salad Surgery

This is way to hard...
Counting adolescence and childhood, college and adult years, I would say one of the following (impossible to really know, of course).

1. Pharoah Sanders "Live at the east"
2. Jimi Hendrix "Band of gypsies"
3. Arvo Part "Tabula rasa"
4. John Coltrane "A love supreme"
5. Rev Robert Wilkins (complete works 1927-1930)
Chet Baker- Chet. Closely followed by

Tom Waits- Closing Time

With CD's it's a different story
Pat Benatar, True Love.
Not anything like the pop of the 80's except for that extraordinary voice. Backed by Roomful of Blues.

Roomful's Live at Lupo's also has great versions of Duke Ellington's Caravan and Jeep's Blues that I never get tired of.
All vinyl:

Dylan Self-Protriat
Christine McVie Self-titled
INXS Listen Like Thieves
John Klemmer Touch MoFi
Cat Stevens Tea for the Tillerman MoFi
Eric Clapton Me And Mr.Johnson
Who Quadronphenia
Sanborn & James Double Vision
Sade Greatest Hits
Robert Cray Stong Persuader
Mark Knopfler Brother in Arms & Making Movies
Suzanne Vega Solitude Standing
Shawn Colvin Steady On
Sarah McLachlan Surfacing
Cowboy Junkies Black-Eyed Man

There are many more but this is a good start