Building a 100 album vinyl collection 3 must have albums are?


No opera or rap in the three must haves. Sorry.

128x128hbarrel

Live at the Fillmore - Allman Brothers Band

Cheap Thrills - Janis Joplin / Big Brother & The Holding Company

Wheels of Fire - Cream

 

perhaps the question should be, what 3 albums have you listened to the most in your life.

@jasonbourne71 I find myself agreeing with you today. This is new. 😀

Off the top of my head:

Kind of Blue

Allman Bros - Fillmore East

Dead - Europe 72 - Bickershaw Festival

 

+1 Miles Davis - Kind of Blue

Mussorgsky - Pictures at an Exhibition

John Coltrane - Blue Train

Good luck let us know how you make out!

Grand Hotel - Procol Harem

Waiting for Columbus - Little Feat

Third choice is really hard, so have to list a few

Will the Circle be Unbroken - Nitty Gritty Dirt Band

Heavy Weather - Weather Report

Don Juan’s Reckless Daughter - Joni Mitchell

School Days - Stanley Clarke

So many others I would want in my library of 100; they may not be the best recordings, but I find them significant in the story of music, and can listen to them over and over which I what I want in a library of 100.

group 1

Abbey Road - The Beatles

Axis: Bold As Love - Hendrix

Inner Mounting Flame - Mahavishnu Orchestra

group 2

Beggars Banquet - Stones

Dark Side of the Moon - Floyd

Moondance - Van the Man

Group 3

Blue - Joni

American Beauty - The Dead

Blonde On Blonde - Dylan

group 4 (Blues only)

Hoodoo Man Blues - Junior Wells

Paul Butterfield Blues Band - 1st album

Mississippi John Hurt, Today!

Willie Dixon-I Am The Blues

Allman Brothers-Live At The Fillmore East 

Joni Mitchell-Hejira

Sheffield Labs  "I've Got The Music In Me with Thelma Houston and Pressure Cooker",  "Jethro Tull Aqualung,"  "The New York Rock And Soul Review" with Donald Fagen.

Too many to count, so off the top of my head: Donald Fagen “The Nightfly”; The The, “Who’s Next”; Chicago, “Chicago Transit Authority.” Best wishes!

Big Head Todd -- Sister Sweetly 

Art Pepper -- Art Pepper Meets the Rhythm Section

Beethoven's Violin Concerto -- Anne Sophie Mutter

 

As usual, lots of great suggestions by some serious music lovers and audiophiles. 
Here are my 3. (Only 3!?!??!!)

1. Everly Brothers. A Date With The Everly Brothers. (Well recorded. Touching and emotional. Country and Blues crossover to equal Rock n Roll. One can hear where The Beatles, The Beachboys were influenced and “got” there sound. IMHO. 
 

2. A Clockwork Orange soundtrack. Well recorded. Excellent intro to Classical music for those of us who were not exposed much. 

3. Thelonious Monk, Talking Heads, Santana, Mozart…

 

Dylan, Blood on the Tracks (his best material & sonics)

Fleetwood Mac, Eponymous, 1975  (ditto)

Pink Floyd, Dark Side (material -- Floyd sonics are consistently fine)

Counting Crows, August and Everything After (abundance)

Neil Young, After The Gold Rush (abundance, emotional range)

Ramsey Lewis Trio, Pot Luck (a heaping platter of magic)
(Criteria: Appeal of material, arrangement/mix, sonics)

Oh. 
I’d like to thank those people who listed 

Axis Bold As Love 

Gaucho

Wheels of Fire, Disraeli Gears

Talking Heads  ‘77

Aretha Franklin

Janis, Big Brother Holding Co  

Carol King Tapestry 

N Young, Everybody Knows…

 

U2- The Joshua Tree (available as a 40th anniversary 2lp set)

Richard and Linda Thompson- Shoot Out The Lights

The Smiths- The Queen Is Dead

Derek and the Dominoes- Layla and Other assorted Lovesongs

Supertramp- Crime of the Century

Rush- 2112 

 

Miles Davis- Sketches of Spain

Steely Dan - Gaucho

Cat Stevens - Tea for the Tillerman 

Good question! Great answers from folks!

Santana - Abraxas (Original on Columbia)

Dave Brubeck - Take Five (Several good pressings out there)

Vivaldi - Four Seasons, Boston Symphony w/ Seiji Ozawa conducting (Telarc)

 

Happy listening. 

Great choices listed, mine:

Supertramp - Breakfast in America

Flertwood Mac - Rumors

Dire Straits - S/T

honorable mention:

Eagles - The Long Run

Keep us posted and good luck

Now that you have a lot of peoples favorites or suggestions ( I gave suggestions because my favorites would not necessarily be your favorites )    you have to now consider pressings .  So here are a few thoughts from my experiences .  For rock I like Japanese and German pressing in general , the English/Great British ones can be good if you find one without a lot ot background noise  , Reprise is a good label So is London and Abbey Road .  For classical I am limited in experience to Chicago Symphony Pressings  , RCA Living Stereo , Decca/London ffrr and Mercury Presence , for Jazz Blue Note , for Folk Vanguard .

I like fidelity of the new re-releases at 45rpm as well as the double vinyl 33rpm releases ( like Dire Straits " Brothers in Arms " ) .

All of these are available within reason whereas the MOFI original and the new Ultra Disc are Ultra expensive , as are the Classic pressing ( great fidelity but so so quietness ) the same with Chesky  .

While all this is just my opinion it is some to start thinking about . 

 

#1 Bowie...Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars....#2Warren Zevon..Excitible Boy....#3. Jeff Beck...Truth or Beckola......Honorable Mention  CSN....Daylight Again and Karla Bonoff S/T

"I find myself agreeing with you today" is a good example of why the music related threads tend to be more enjoyable (and civil) then the equipment related threads.

+1 for Jeff Buckley - "Grace;" I can't believe I forgot that one. While not a universally loved & respected album (or critics choice), I can't imagine not having "Argus" by Wishbone Ash in my collection.

Excellent picks!

L. Ronstadt - Heart Like a Wheel

Getz/Gilberto 

The Band - s/t

The Beatles,   Rubber Soul.

Miles Davis,   Kinda Blue.

Bill Evans,   Waltz For Debby.

Nevermind,   Nirvana.

Red Hot Chili Peppers,   Blood Sugar Sex Magik.

Neil Young,   Harvest.

 

woretpot

  1. LP (Laura Pergolizzi) "Lost on You"
  2. Tool " Aenima"
  3. Linda Ronstadt "Heart Like a Wheel"
  4. Moby "Reprise"
  5. Roy Buchanan "Livestock"

Little Feat “Waiting For Columbus”

Talking Heads “Stop Making Sense”

Natalie Merchant “MTV Unplugged”

Alice In Chains “MTV Unplugged”

Nirvana “MTV Unplugged”

Supertramp “Crime Of The Century”

Amy Winehouse “Back To Black”

The Civil Wars “Barton’s Hollow”

Gorillaz “Demon Days”

Roxy Music “Avalon”

 

 

Queen “Night at the Opera”

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young “Deja Vous”

Who “Next”

Cat Stevens “Tea for the Tillerman”

Pink Floyd “ Dark Side of the Moon”

I’m ashamed I didn’t remember the 1st Moody Blues album, when they were a Piano Based Blues Band with Denny Laine singing. Many are aware of the Justin Hayward Era, but this is how they came to fame.

Moody Blues, Go Now,

Go Now, song, showing USA version of LP Sleeve

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SN2fOgfFnDo

Whole Album on youtube, different sleeve image

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IcgY1kWDzqk&list=PLZ-KH7o-aD2hFPcuUog_mStKaFD9ud_3-&index=1

I’m lucky to have found 2 copies on R2R tape at great prices years ago

https://www.ebay.com/itm/265963964309?hash=item3decb00795:g:4YAAAOSwgQdjRb49&amdata=enc%3AAQAIAAAA0JwyPB0JheFvv7e%2BzfCsFUwVZ5IEHCxKPy%2Bve8NQy0bjZAViKirL9NTh5mo3NpITtVaSCsLE11n0s91BRoKVRX54o3qp5MYSpaI4gsOtMLQf2l8nzLOlPp%2BzjNbmsGoDWM4OHH9l4B8%2Fl%2Bz4yHiJ%2FDGgxW4WsOhxqeIDVzEuCLYF60SyFnyMai1%2FfUTQbuEjuMsVARAKuk6GV1p2T%2FXF1oSe4x0GW7oDIc6bj4SriOpYePiJ0M%2BkhPYKE7h0M1wC7VAakQw3RrQlQYjBNNqWUCw%3D%7Ctkp%3ABk9SR66Axf25Yg

The Piano benefits most from the Tape Format.

btw, I'll Go Crazy was written by James Brown, here, 1960, with the Famous Flames

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Twa3WQk2fgk

 

 

@tony1954

You should also mention to the OP that an original, genuine pressing of Tool's "Aenima" will run at least $1000.  There are many, many bootleged versions, but very few genuine articles.  

Russ Barenberg - Moving Pictures
Paul Simon - Graceland
Al Stewart - Time Passages
Kim Richey - Edgeland
Dreadful Snakes - Snakes Alive!
Jesse Winchester - Humour Me
Sheffield Labs - The Moscow Sessions
Donald Johanos / Athena - Rachmaninoff Symphonic Dances Vocalise

@palasr 

Not sure how relevant that is, as the same could be said for an "original, genuine pressing" of Kind of Blue, Pet Sounds, Allman Bros. at the Fillmore East, Blue Train, etc. As there was no reference to cost in the question and there are always avenues for finding good bargains on anything if one is diligent.

When an OP clearly asks for 3 selections, why do so many insist on posting a much larger number?  

Impossible...I would personally have trouble with all 100. Still, too much great music would be left out. Good luck with your pursuit.  AB

Most albums of great music are available in very decent digital versions, so it is not that essential to hunt down a vinyl version.  But, in some cases, the original vinyl release is quite a bit better than anything else.  This particularly true with jazz and specialty recordings that were done direct-to-disc.  These are some of my picks:

Dave Brubeck-Take Five (original, 6-eye Columbia recordings sound better than anything that followed).

Bill Berry Allstars-For Duke (fantastic direct-to-disc recording)

David Peabody-Americana (obscure recording that was not reissued digitally that sounds amazing).

Duke Ellington-Blues in Orbit (6-eye Columbia original.  Another recording not surpassed in reissue. Sony though well enough of the recording to make it among the first SACDs issued, but even that was not as good as the originsl0

 

Peter Gabriel So

Talking Heads Remain in Light.

Grateful Dead 77 Cornell concert

Too numerous, 100 albums is a teaser.

@deroy Who's Next ,Dark Side ,Allman  Bros. At Fillmore East

 

I can’t argue with that list - all excellent albums!

The Youngbloods - Elephant Mountain 

Pat Martino - First Light 

Miles Davis - In a Silent Way

 

I hope none of these are repeats - I did look...pick your own 3, too tough for me

Friday Night in San Francisco

The Well (IMPEX)

Breaking Silence

We Get Requests (Oscar Peterson)

Stardust

Lightnin Hopkins, Lightnin

Wildflowers and Damn the Torpedoes

Johnny Cash American II: Unchained

I own many of the LPs suggested and agree they are great records.  However, my criteria for 3 must have LPs would need to take into account how they actually sound of a good system.  Many of the LPs I grew up loving, get very little play today as they just weren't recorded very well to start with.  So classic LP's that also sound great:

Junior Wells - Come On In This House

Joshua Redman - Elastic (/Brain Blade's drumming is fantastic throughout)

Jimmy Smith - Dot Com Blues

Idris  Muhammad  "Power of Soul"

Climax Blues Band " Shine On"

Steppenwolf "7"

 

@norton Don't hear a lot about Climax Blues Band.  Always liked them.  Recently picked up a nice box set (Amazon) containing their first 5 recordings.  Put out by the Esoteric Recordings label.  Going back to 1969 for the first two records, it's very impressive the use of soundstage.  Some great engineering.  

1) Alan Parsons,  "vulture Culture" 

2) Moody Blues, " in Search of the Lost Cord"

3) Beatles, " Abby Road"

IMHO;

ROCK / POP; 1) BOWIE; HEROES

                      2) JAPAN ;GENTLEMEN TAKE POLAROIDS

                      3) 801; LISTEN NOW

JAZZ;              1) JEAN LUC PONTY; A TASTE FOR PASSION

                       2) JOHN SCOFIELD; BLUE MATTER

                       3) KENNY BARRON; SCRATCHAL

CLASSICAL;     1) SIBELIUS; SYMPHONY NO. 1 IN E MINOR

                        2) SATIE; GNOSSIENNE 1

                        3) MUSSORGSKY; NIGHT ON BALD MOUNTAIN