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) :-)
talking heads,"speaking in tongues" just finished listening to the lp ,,twice,,have to agree with lugnut greg allman "laid back" is also a great album!!
Absolutely no question...MFSLabs UHQR pressing "Crime of the Century" by Supertramp...AWESOME..hope you get a chance to listen to one of these someday...pretty rare though!...
Professor Longhair - Rock-n Roll Gumbo Crusaders - Free As the Wind Oscar Peterson - West Side Story Santana - III Sarah Vaughn - Live in Japan Beatles - Revolver Steely Dan - Pretzel Logic Genesis - Lamb Lies Down on Broadway John Coltrane - Giant Steps Little Feat - Dixie Chicken
Sneakin' Suspicion by Jack Semple Time Loves A Hero by Little Feat Close To The Edge by Yes...listening to any recordings by these artists may change your life...they certainly did mine!!
an introduction into early music-naxos, music of medieval france by sonus chanterai-dorian, migration by peter kater and r.carlos nakai-silverwave records--oh and magnificat by chanticleer ;-) enjoy and be prepared to weep tears of joy
Hendrix: Electric Ladyland Derek and the Dominoes: Layla CSNY: 4 Way Street Grateful Dead: American Beauty Jethro Tull: Aqualung Eric B. and Rakim: Paid in Full
Spirit: 12 Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus Neil Young: Harvest The Who: Who's Next Stones: Exile on Main Street Byrds: Sweetheart of the Rodeo Led Zeppelin: Physical Graffiti
What is your opinion on the track 1 on album "Making Music"?
Your post above in this thread mentioned that you bought Peter Gabrial's "UP" and you simply said "YUCK". As for Making Music and Primal Magic you went ahead and bought them! Why? How did you make up your mind that this audiophool (Quadophile) could be trusted with music recommendation ? I am gald you liked them, otherwise I would surely be in touble! :-)
I have no idea how much of good music is out there that we are missing, I bet what we have is like a drop in the ocean. By sharing good music, we all get to listen more of the variety and I believe that is what we are precisely doing on this thread.
I bought 'making music' and also 'primal magic'.... So, you see, these posts do get some action because of what we type.... I would never have know about these otherwise.
I agree with what you say. I happen to like some artists who are mentioned in this thread hence I may check them out, its worth the risk. OTOH some artists mentioned I cannot stand them so I will certainly disregard them. (By mentioning the artists/albums which I do not like, I may well create confusion which could lead to flame wars, the last thing I would like to do on this board)
I also happen to like many albums but I do not expect others to appreciate as much as I do. We have to respect each others opinion. After all music is about emotions, and if you read my original post I did mention "Not necessarily the best sounding but the one which you are emotionally attached to"
All in all, I find that this thread has a lot to offer. So thank for your valuable input, which is greatly appreciated!
Yes, Privateparty....you just said what I was thinking.
This thread shows the many variety of tastes out there.
On a similar thread a while ago, 'everyone' mentioned Peter Gabriel's "UP" album. Welllll, I just hadda have it! Bought it....put it in the ole CD player and....YUCK!
Other occasions, did same, and LOVE the music (Steely Dan's latest "2 against Nature")
Well, I guess it just shows to go you different strokes....etc.
Now then, MY personal favorites (for what it's worth)....
1) Finger Paintings by Earl Klugh 2 Parkening Plays Bach by Christopher Parkening 3) Into Dark by Andrew York
These would be 3 to get into if your collection has no classical guitar. Earl Klugh plays with a quartet...Parkening is strictly solo classical guitar that on the Bach album sounds like God himself is guiding his hands....and Andy is the best contemporary writer/performer for classical guitar of our time, performing his own songs and also an interpretation of the Bach Cello Suite. His creation "Sunburst" is worth the price of the CD and has been recorded by the most famous world class guitarists of today.
Are you finding out how NOT objective the public's taste is, and how EVERY subjective it is :-)
For instance, Time Out, and Kind of Blue are not that great (I do have them in my collection). Just popularly thought of in that way. There has always been a cultural phenomenon about what is selected by the public to be revered. It never makes any sense. The phenomenon is just accepted, especially by marketers.
Like the Mona Lisa. If that painting is so great, why is it that forgers create copies so close to the original that it take lasers, xray, and chemical analysis to determine the forgery from the original. It is almost superstitious. One guy made one painting and it is somehow superior to ALL others?
Kind of Blue is one of the first attempts at model structure. By a guy who was already accepted by the public as the jazz authority. I am sure many other virtuoso artists did not agree that he should singularly hold that title.
A classical DJ did a special feature on his show. He played examples of some of the very best performances ever recorded. He played artists who were, for one reason or another (appearance?), never accepted by the public for their superior talent.
Have you ever heard of Nina Simone? Who sang better? How about 'Eddie who?'...Eddie Harris. He said, 'if I don't have the chops, come and blow me off the stage. But no one ever does. Yet I am thought of as not so good a player.'
Beethoven and Mozart both had trouble with public acceptance. Check out the movie 'Amadeus'. It tells this story.
You may as well just give in to your own subjectivity and select music that touches you in some special way when listening to the radio.
You will never get a straight response, or a rational view, from the public. At one memorable moment in history the Dutch were paying a small fortune for a tulip bulb.
Though they do make very good employees, voters, and customers, and are made good use of by those who want to rise above it all. (Bill Gates? He did not create anything. He purchased DOS from a couple of guys you created in their garage, went to IBM, and the rest is history :-)
Ahmad Jamal - "I remember Duke, Hoagy & Strayhorn" on Telarc. Great, natural sounding piano recording and an outstanding performance.
Andre Previn & Thomas Stevens "play a classic american songbook" on DRG. An unusual combo of trumpet and piano by two excellent performers - great late nite listening.
Shirley Horn - "I thought about you" on Verve. A live performance - classic Horn.
1.) Kind of Blue- Miles Davis 2.) Strollin'- Chet Baker 3.) These Are The Vistas- The Bad Plus
All of these are Fantastic!. Also liking some I see from other respondents... like Brubeck, Monk and Metheny. Good to know others out there are listening to jazz. Italian vinyl dealer came into our store here in Atlanta last week looking for southern rock told me there was not that great a demand in Europe for jazz anymore. Gotta' think he's wrong.
Of the five you mention I have the Dire Straits on CD, U2 on both vinyl and CD and Supertramp on vinyl. I agree with you that these are incredible sounding albums.
Another album which I have on both vinyl as well as CD is Dire Straits - Brothers in Arms which actually beats all the above in almost every department.
1. Dire Straights- On Every Street (great sounding disc, and has some great tracks that encompass many of their other albums styles) 2. U2- Joshua Tree (a classic rock album, not much else to say) 3. Maroon 5- Songs About Jane (their first release, and recorded well enough you get a good idea of how great their live shows are, awesome blue-eyed soul/funk) 4. Paco De Lucia- Siroco (awesome flamenco guitar, and a great recording) 5. Supertramp- Crime of the Century ( probably their best album, and the half-speed mastered vinyl I have sounds incredible)
I'll add some of my favorites that haven't already been listed: 1. ELECTRIC FLAG (1st album) 2. EAST-WEST (Paul Butterfield Blues Band) 3. FOREVER CHANGES (Love) 4. BYRDS GREATEST HITS (Byrds) 5. YARDBIRDS GREATEST HITS (Yardbirds)
Peter Gabriel - 3rd, Security XTC - Nonsuch, Skylarking Pink Floyd - The Wall, Animals Patrick O'Hearn - Ancient Dreams, Indigo Dire Straits - Making Movies, Love Over Gold Brian Eno - Apollo, The Pearl The Clash - London Calling, The Clash Miles Davis - Kind of Blue, In A Silent Way
1. dave brubeck quartet with jimmy rushing: excellent, but short recording that I can still listen to almost every week,in fact it is playing as we speak.
2. ben harper - fight for your mind: this is listened to alot although some tracks do get past over, I even have a copy for listening in my car. This has alot of different tracks on it. Sometimes I just put on the guitar intro of track 12 and listen to it quite a few times in a row.
3. midnight oil - acoustic nights: this was made on the oxygen label and recorded during the unplugged craze a few years back. even though the are doubles of some tracks, it was recorded in two different venues, I often listen to it all the way through
Only three? No promises! :-) You ask for LPs that engender an emotional; response and I could list a hundred. How about three from each of several separate categories? Even at that it is damn hard and I will leave out many depends on the mood as to what I find best. All of these, though, induce strong emotions in me upon listening and Id never say no if they were offered in the queue. I have tried to restrict my suggestions to those that are not blatantly obvious best-sellers (e.g. Sgt. Peppers/Dark Side of the Moon/Led Zep IV, etc.) BTW, kudos to Lugnut for mentioning G. Allman's "Laid Back" and I feel I must mention it also - it is sorely underrated and an all-time favorite for melancholy moods - I recently had to buy a mint first pressing since my son absconded with my original copy!
50s-60s Jazz Art Pepper Intensity Art Pepper Smack Up Miles Davis - Steamin
70s Jazz/Fusion Chick Corea Again and Again (The Joburg Sessions) Weather Report 8:30 Brand X Livestock
60s Rock Beatles Revolver King Crimson In the Court of the Crimson King Velvet Underground White Light, White Heat
70s Rock Steely Dan - Pretzel Logic Yes Fragile Spirit Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus There are dozens in this list, alone.
Country Rock Pure Prairie League Bustin Out Ozark Mountain Daredevils Men From Earth Poco Indian Summer
70s R&B/Soul War The World is a Ghetto Al Green Lets Stay Together OJays Backstabbers
80s Rock Donald Fagen The Nightfly R.E.M. Document The Clash London Calling
Bluegrass Nitty Gritty Dirt Band Will the Circle Be Unbroken Flatt and Scruggs Country Music Dillards Decade Waltz
Classic Female Vocals Carol King Tapestry Jennifer Warnes Shot Through the Heart Aretha Franklin Lady Soul
Relatively Current- Steely Dan Everything Must Go (superb) Marlena Shaw Live in Tokyo Coldplay Rush of Blood to the Head
I hesitated to post so many, but maybe it is a good thing for the sake of variety. As some will equally find for my choices, I would not let the choices of some others come near my platter. Moral: "To each his/her own!" :-)
Tools for setup and evaluation: MFLS Steely Dan Aja, Steely Dan Katy Lied, Nautilus Joan Baez Diamonds and Rust. Pink Floyd DSOM I played this far too many times in the 70's and just don't ever listen to it anymore. Hey Philjolet: King Crimson Islands - Good Call!! my favorite King Crimson, what a poetic transporting album.. I always think I'm on some Greek Island.
You Audiogoners never cease to amaze me! I was expecting maybe 10 responses and in all, 30 albums to hunt down, but, here I am confronted with 47 posts in only two days and probably more to come. Do you guys have any idea how many albums have been mentioned in this thread? WOW so much of good music is packed into this thread I had no idea it would turn out this way. Thank you so much to each and every one who responded.
Going through the whole thread I realised there are many good albums which I already own but still many which I must check out. Some of the albums mentioned are also on top of my list and I listen to over and over and have been doing it for years.
I did not mention my three choices (three is really difficult and I wish I had asked for ten!)when I started this thread but allow me to mention them in this post.
Carole King - Tapestry have been listening to it since last 32 years and still laying next to my system, it was the LP in 1971 followed by the CD in 1989 and another version of the CD few months back. (The LP is still with me though, but, a few mm thinner with hundreds of hours of playing!)
Zakir Hussain, John McLaughlin, Jan Garberak and Hari Prasad Chaurasia - Making Music Listening to it since 1989 on a regular basis and use it when there is any component change or when evaluating other fellow audio nuts system. Sounds fabulous with Maggies and LS3/5a's. Track 1 has the uncanny ability to hypnotise anyone, provided it is heard on a good system. This is an album which I think gives one an impression that the instruments are talking to each other, this also conveys to the listener how skillfull the musicians are. Plenty of improvisation. The only album which is better in all respect is "Kind of Blue"
Strunz and Farah - Primal Magic pure magic in every sense of the word!
During the last one year I have come across some very good albums which are not only having excellent music to start with, but, excellent sonics as well. Patricia Barber's Cafe Blue is one of them. This album can also be used to evaluate any system and the better the system the better it sounds, I have no idea what the limits are for this album. Another lovely album which grabbed my attention few years back was Cassanda Wilson's New Moon Daughter. Both these albums do not qualify to be included in the post even though both were released more than five years back. The reason? I have had them for less than five years.
I made the rules and I should be the last to break them.
Blind Faith: This album simply astounds me. It captures the spiritual essence of the prime of my life. I can't begin to imagine the processes involved in its creation which is how I define art (and magic). These vibes are like a psychic grinding wheel -searing off the rust -leaving shiny new metal.
Jefferson Starship "Blows Against the Empire": This one rang in the new millennium (the Starship ascending exactly at 12 p.m.). Have you seen the stars tonight?
Steppenwolf "The Second": Was there anyone cooler than John Kay? Magic Carpet Ride? Give me a break. Was blessed to have this music in my teens.
There are albums that I like a lot but do not listen to very often. I also have many compilations on tapes. So, I'll stay exactly within the thread. 1. Miles Davis-Bitches Brew- 2. John McLaughlin Trio-Que Alegria-(digital recording) 3. Paco De Lucia-Siroco-(analog recording but digital mast.)
Hendrix - "Are you experienced?". This single recording changed the electric guitar(and me, for that matter) forever. It's also my first musical memory at 5 years old. I can still remember cranking it up on my friend's parent's new hifi and rocking out all day long!! I still can't believe that was nearly 37 years ago.
Also don't usually shop by sonic's as would be evidenced by my current music collection were you to go through it.
I used to buy and trade for British imports in the 70's, but it seemed to me that the added quality faded going into the 80's. MFSL was also a big disappointment much of the time.
Anyway, now I only pick up phile versions if they are a buck (like everything else).
Some of my favorite CD redo's have been by Rhino, plus they reissue music that appeals to me.
Hmmmm - good thread! I'll list a few currently enjoying a heavy rotation on my turntable:
"Rough Mix" - Pete Townshend and Ronnie Lane "Soular Energy" - Ray Brown "Clap Hands, Here Comes Charlie" - Ella Fitzgerald "Soundtrack From Local Hero" - Mark Knofler "Saxophone Colossus" - Sonny Rollins "Miles of Aisles" - Joni Mitchell "Gaucho" - Steely Dan "Firebird" - Stravinsky/Leinsdorf/LA Philharmonic "Ancient Airs And Dances" - Respighi/Dorati
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