If there was only ONE album/cd/release you can listen to, over and over.............


Your " best ever " recording, which has likely been discussed ad nauseam, would you select, say, if given a choice of only one ( whatever the scenario would be; stranded on an island, locked up in isolation, all music gone, but this one ). As hard as this is, as there are so many to choose from, I have selected " A Tribute To Jack Johnson ", by the esteemed Miles Davis ( 1992 Columbia version ). I have selected this, specifically for the performances, as I do with all of my listening. The playing.....the musicianship.....the arrangement.....the story, set to music, by the esteemed M.D.. And, my system delivers the message, so I feel proud of my set up. What can I say ? I hope everyone well, and, ENJOY ! Always, MrD.

mrdecibel

Pat Methany:    Secret Story (1992)       no lyrics  (superb human voice, yes)

Stunning beautiful musical compositions (entirely by Pat on this album).

I've not listened to, or enjoyed, any album so many times, and so much.

What's Going On - Marvin Gaye... An album GenX missed out on due to their age. Ask you parents

I could never, no matter how much I tried or how much time I had, narrow my choice for one "best album". The thought of doing so can't even enter my mind.

First of all, I listen to 3 main genres, each has several subgenres. There are quite a few (to say the least) masterpieces in each genre and subgenre that I feel are equal in artistic, emotional, and intellectual content, to many pieces in the sane genre, and  other genres and subgenres.

The 3 genres I listen to are:

Jazz, which includes: post bop, fusion, chamber jazz, M-Base, avant-garde.

Prog, which includes: Canterbury, classic prog, Zeuhl, avan-prog, prog-metal.

Classical, which includes: avant-garde, serial, atonal, dissonant, spectralism, mostly from the post 1950's. The 'thorny' sounding stuff.😎  

The best I could ever hope to do, would be to pick, say 10 from each genre, and even that wouldn't cover it. So, prepare for a major cheat!

Here goes:

Prog:
Yes - Close to the Edge
Genesis - The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
PFM - Per un Amico
Thinking Plague - The History of Madness
Magma - K.A.
King Crimson - Larks' Tongues in Aspic
Anglagard - Hybris
Gentle Giant - Octopus
Banco - Io Sono Nato Libero
National Health - Of Queues and Cures


Classical:
Elliott Carter - Concerto for orchestra
Charles Wuorinen - 4th Piano concerto
Joan Tower - Concerto for orchestra
Magnus Lindberg - Sculpture
Bartok - Music for strings, percussion, and celesta
Krzysztof Penderecki - Violin Concerto No. 2: Metamorphosen 
Ernst Krenek - Static and Ecstatic
Stravinsky - The Rite of Spring
Alban Berg - Violin Concerto
Bruno Maderna - 3rd Oboe concerto

Jazz:
Miles - In a Silent Way
Coltrane - A Love Supreme
Mahavishnu Orchestra - Inner Mounting Flame
Return to Forever - Romantic Warrior
The Art Ensemble of Chicago - Full Force
Pharoah Sanders - Africa
Steve Coleman's Natal Eclipse - Morphogenesis
Oregon - Out of the Woods
Keith Jarratt - Koln
Anthony Braxton - Seven Compositions

Tool - Fear

Miles Davis - Sketches of Spain

Steely Dan - Gaucho 

Any of those three, only on Saturday nights, after I master distilling my own coconut liquor. 

"Back to Oakland by Tower of Power (ideally the 2008 Japanese remaster)

One of the greatest Soul/Funk albums ever produced."

This is the reason I love this forum. I have never heard this album until now. I can’t sit still during "Squib Cakes". Thanks @whipsaw!

Excellent choices by many. Just thought it would be a fun exercise. Enjoy ! MrD.

At the moment it would be Miles Davis/Gil Evans "Miles Ahead". Complex, layered, jazzy and orchestral. It has taken many listenings for it to open up and reveal its charms. I particularly enjoy the 1997 Columbia/Legacy CD reissue as it was remixed in good quality, honest stereo. All four of the Davis/Evans collaborations are remarkable. 

Dear Deadhead1000, I have the original release of Waiting for Columbus. EXCELLENT!!!

Supertramp, Crime if the Century or Even in the Quietest Moments, or both.....

 

 

.

Jean Michel Jarre - Oxygene

It really never gets old to me. Loved it since the guy behind the counter at local head shop / record store / CD shop in a converted garage said "Hey kid, take this home. If you like it, come back and pay me or just bring it back".

Been a huge fan ever since.

Blues for Allah - Grateful Dead

honorable mention:

Waiting for Columbus - Little Feat

Spiritualized, "Laser Guided Melodies" 

Described as "cinematic, textured and deeply narcotic soundscapes:"

"Spiritualized's music quivers with Apollonian attributes – airiness, fleetness, radiance, serenity...At times, Spiritualized are making 21st century gospel."

 

Can we have a different island each week?

Last week my island was Hans Theesink's "Songs from The Southland."

This island week would be Deuter's "Mirage."

Next week's island would be Greg Brown's "One More Goodnight Kiss."

Clearly what we need here is an island "chain."

I am afraid I could not pick a single album but I can easily pick a performer - Leonard Cohen

lectronjh50

MrD - love your choice for the ONE album, and I believe I understand why you chose it. 

Easy: I have burned my entire CD collection onto my streamer and assembled into a continuous stream. That is my pick.

 

Does this violate the rules?


If so, then, at the risk of sounding like I am trying to impress with upper brow tastes truly above my social standing, I would have to pick the Philips Recording of the John Gardiner conducted Handel’s Der Messias (see? I am trying to impress by using the original German form of The Messiah). It is the greatest recording of the Messiah in English, conducted by one of the greatest interpreters of Handel (John Eliot Gardiner) and performed by one of the greatest chorals groups suited for Handel (Monteverdi Choir) and orchestrated by one of the greatest chamber groups for Handel’s period (English Baroque Soloists).

 

And it was recorded by some of the best orchestral and choir sound engineers. And it was recorded DIGITALLY, back in the day when digital was the enstranged child of music recording. Sorry, vinyl people, your best bet is to get this in a digital format. (Qobuz’s rendering of this equals the CD pressing.)

 

I believe that John Eliot Gardiner is to Handel what Neville Mariner and The Academy of Saint -Martin-In-The-Fields was to Mozart.

Handel’s "Der Messias", conducted by John Eliot Gardiner

Gardiner’s Messiah was recorded in a European Cathedral, where it was written to be performed.

 

Gardiner, the small size of the choir and chamber orchestra, is precisely how Handel wrote The Messiah--more as a ballet, a ballad--not a huge in your face choral shout-fest, and NOT for giant choirs and giant orchestras.

 

Handel’s Messiah was written nimble and precise, with fast attacks and transients, as man audiophiles love to say. For instance, the first two-thirds of The Hallelujuah Choir is to sound like a light-hearted ballet, with delicate instruments playing in the vein of Mozart’s Eine Kleine Nachtmusik (A Little Night Music). Only a small, tight choir and orchestra can accomplish this.

 

Most recordings of The Hallelujuah Chorus blow it out and come on full bore with 300 voices. It is like how to properly cook an egg: most folks murder the eggs--overcook them by overbeating them, adding way too much ingrediants, and add too much heat, turning them into rubber. A properly cooked egg is simple, fluffy, delicately spiced and presented in a tasteful manner that allows the natural elements to shine. If you want LOTS OF EGGS (i.e., huge soundstage), then increase the amount of properly cooked and layered eggs--not heat, additives or physical beatings of the whisk.

 

Of course, The Messiah has sections where the choir is supposed to sound HUGE--the most well known of these sections being the last third of The Hallelujuah Chorus. And here is the trick: a small, tight choir--classifically trained--projects their voices against each other, layering upon each other, building an amplification of tones that--when set against a Cathedral backdrop that resonates--swells the sound of the choir to a presentation every bit as huge as the Mormon Tabernacle Choir (now renamed as the "The Tabernacle Choir").

 

However, unlike how the Morman Tabernacle Choir’s "hugeness" is sloppy and dissonant (like a poorly ported sub-woofer that lacks precision), the Monteverdi Choir achieves a huge choral soundstage while retaining the tightness and articulation (like a Magico speaker) that only a small choral group can achieve.

 

It is a landmark recording.

 

Of course, I have to turn up the volume to hear the delicate complexities. This will not play at the same volume level of an Ed Sheeran recording, whose tracks are modern and clear and immensely voice forward--which I truly love for HIS recordings. Rather, you--well, I do, at least--have to really crank up Gardiner’s version of Messiah to realize the full soundstage.

 

But this is a GOOD thing, because it shows how superbly and properly the sound engineers packed all of the complexities of a chamber choir and orchestra, recorded in a huge cathedral, in proper relationship with each other, without losing precision and layered nuance. It is ALL there. Just crank it up. And to boot, when you crank it up, you will NOT hear noise. The backgrounds are BLACK and QUIET.

 

Again, truly a landmark recording. I can go to my grave with this one.

 

PS: My very close runner-up is the John Rutter conducted Christmas Night: Carols of the Nativity, by the Cambridge Singers and City of London Sinfonia. This is THE GREATEST Christmas recording. Period. Crank this one up for soundstage, as well. Make sure to get the recently digital remastered release.

Cambridge Singers : Carols Of The Nativity

My UHQR copy of "Kind of Blue" for jazz. 

"Dire Straits" (their debut album)

Abbey Road, Giant Steps, Kind of Blue, Bach: Sonatas & Partitas for solo violin by Nathan Milstein, Keith Jarrett Bremen-Lausanne, Pat Metheny Group White album, Tales From Topographic Oceans, Brain Salad Surgery in any order. This is as far down as I can narrow 55 years of listening. 

Back to Oakland by Tower of Power (ideally the 2008 Japanese remaster)

One of the greatest Soul/Funk albums ever produced.

Blonde on Blonde + 1

I would be fine with one of these 3 also

Abbey Road

Out of the Blue

Spencer Davis group - the best of the - not to cheat but their LP releases are all over the map

+1 on "Quadrophenia" by The Who.   My all time favorite band and all time favorite album.  "Who's Next" would be a close second.

@fred60 +1 As a Prog guy an inclination would be to pick The Yes Album or DSOTM but the 'Lamb is just more of a total journey IMHO.  Decided this question in college.  Same answer today but loads more coming close.  

Some nice choices made...

As stated, very difficult to decide, and many  choices came to mind. These were chosen not only because they are loved, but they also are associated to experiences in my life that were extraordinary. Rather than outright cheat the OP's rule, my end run is to let chance decide. I'd take a single six-sided die, roll and accept the result.

1. Jethro Tull : Bursting Out

2. Beatles: White Album

3. Cocteau Twins: Blue Bell Knoll

4. Genesis: Seconds Out

5. Fishbone: Reality of my Surroundings

6. Altan: Harvest Storm