Share albums where EVERY SINGLE song is good


It rarely happens to me, but in a pile of records I bought over the summer I

found one with no cover. Shocking Blue’s 2nd album. 'At Home' (I’m your Venus is on it).

Even most Beatles albums have at least one song I could pass on, but not this one. Horrible fidelity, scratched to hell, but damn...

So I’d love to hear of other records that you all could suggest.

 

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How about some more recent albums, and from the underrepresented Americana bin:

 

Sarah Jarosz - Undercurrent

Chris Stapleton - all 4 albums but especially Starting Over

Jason Isbell - Southeastern,

 

and vocal jazz;

Patricia Barber - Cafe Blue

My Aim is True- Elvis Costello

Pretenders-The Pretenders

Born to Run -Springsteen

Bob Seger -Night Moves

TomPetty - Wildflowers

The Blue Nile -walk across the rooftops

Boston-Boston

Van Morrison-Moondance

 

Good evening and, Happy new year!!

1. Bob Seger ..Live bullet 

2. Creedence ..Cosmos Factory 

3. Violent Femmes  ..S/T

4. Denise King  ..Soul RnB Smooth Jazz

5 Boston .. Boston 

 

Thanks for all the suggestions!! 

@leemaze 

I’m 41 and feel compelled to drop a short, non-exhaustive list (of music made in my lifetime😅) to add to all of the excellent suggestions made previous.

1) OK Computer - Radiohead

2) B52s yellow record

3) My Finest Work Yet - Andrew Bird

4) Rain Dogs - Tom Waits

5) Summerteeth - Wilco

6) Pinkerton - Weezer

7) High Violet - The National

8) Elephant - The White Stripes

9) Howl - Black Rebel Motorcycle Club

10) Texas Sun - Khruangbin and Leon Bridges

Bonus - I learned the hard way - Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings

-and a cheat, because I don’t think this is in the spirit of the OP)

Lovely Creatures - Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds

May your new year be filled with records you want to listen all the way through.

Dir Gordon Cole

My two cents:

I would have included Cafe Blue as well except there is one cut on it that I always skip over.

Many people suggested Joni Mitchell's Blue and that is a good choice although I personally prefer Hejira.

Kind Of Blue deservedly made many lists including my own although I get the feeling the OP was thinking about rock and pop.

You can certainly tell a lot about a poster by the music he/she listens to.

New adds:

Elvis Costello "My Aim Is True", "Get Happy", "This Years Model", "Armed Forces"

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band "Will The Circle Be Unbroken"

Jefferson Airplane "30 Seconds Over Winterland"

Big Brother & The Holding Co. "Cheap Thrills"

Bonnie Raitt "Nick of Time"

Paul McCartney "Ram"

David Bowie "ChangesOne"

Creedence Clearwater Revival "Greatest Hits"

Santana self-titled first album and "Abraxas"

The Who "Quadrophenia", "Live at Leeds"

Little Feat "Sailn Shoes", "Dixie Chicken"

Nirvana "Nevermind"

Simon & Garfunkel "Bridge Over Troubled Water"

Black Sabbath "Paranoid"

U2 "Achtung Baby"

The Eagles "Hotel California"

 

 

 

For openers....

Pink Floyd- Dark Side of the Moon

S&G. Bookends

EBTG- Eden

Vivaldi-4 Seasons

Everything by Mozart, Beethoven, Getz, Brahms-Violin Concerto

Joni Mitchell-Blue, Court & Spark, For the Roses

Kate Bush-Hounds of Love

Dylan- ’62, ’63,’64,’65,’66

J. Airplane-Surrealistic Pillow, Volunteers

J. Starship-Blows Against the Empire

Neil Young-Neil Young’69, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, After the Gold Rush

Leonard Cohen-Songs of Leonard Cohen’67

Tim Buckley-Happy Sad

Dream Academy-The Dream Academy ’85

Blue Nile-Hats

Most of Miles, Coltrane

Van Morrison-Moondance, Astral Weeks

Marvin Gaye-What’s Goin On

Who- Tommy, Who's Next

 

 

Motörhead.  Most albums!

Boston. S/T

dark angel.  Darkness descends. 
 

venom.  First 3 albums

onslaught.  The force. 
 

bathory. First 4 albums. 
 

slayer.  Hell awaits

death Angel. Ultra violence. 
 

Y&T.  several albums!

 

Sodom. Many albums. 
 

thin lizzy. Not much filler throughout. !

rory Gallagher. Couple filler songs, most albums are great throughout. 
 

Riot.  Everything!

 

can list so many more, I’m double visioned and ….gnight

Duran Duran - Rio

The whole album is outstanding and and the singles are all very good. 

 

dvddesigner,

So right you are. Rio is to me the perfect album. Every song is part of the whole, and each is perfectly realized. When it came out in '83 (?), i Iistened to it every day for 3 years. I still listen to it frequently.

I will add Candy O by The Cars to the list. All great songs that hold together as a single work of art, perfectly produced by Roy Thomes Baker, and inspired guitar playing by the great Elliott Easton.

Pink Floyd: Dark Side of the Moon; The Wall;  Is Anybody Out There;  A Momentary Laps of Reason;  Division Bell

Jennifer Warnes: The Hunter

Van Morrison: Avalon Sunset;  Moon Dance

Neil Diamond: Hot August Night; Stones

Beth Neilson Chapman: You Hold The Key;  Sand and Water

Billy Squire: Don't Say No

Eva Cassidy: Song Bird

Leonard Cohan: Ten New Songs

Amy Winehouse: Back to Black

Fleetwood Mac: Rumours

Eagles: Hotel California

Jennifer Rush: The Power of Love

Herb Alpert: Whipped Cream and Other Delights

Jack Johnson: Brushfire Ferry Tales

Jackson Brown: The Pretender

Ray La Montagne: Gossip In The Grain

Amos Lee: Mission Bell

WOW, so many more and haven't even started on Classical, Jazz or Country

Jim

The Cure - Disintegration

Bob Mould - Workbook

Cocteau Twins - Bluebell Knoll

Jeff Buckley - Grace

Peter Gabriel - Passion

Neil Young - Harvest Moon

 

 

A great question.

Soooo many to choose from but my go to albums are:

Pink Floyd - Dark side of the moon

Pink Floyd - Meddle

Dire Straits - Dire Straits

Gary Wright - Dream Weaver

Elton John - Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

Santana - Supernatural

Jennifer Warnes - Famous Blue Raincoat

Uriah Heap - Solisbury

David Bowie - Lets Dance

Deep Purple - In Rock

Led Zeppelin - II

Jethro Tull - Thick as a Brick

Grace Jones - Slave to the Rhythm

Deodato - Prelude

Eagles - Hell Freezes Over

Patricia Barber - Cafe Blue

REM - Automatic for the People

Wings - Band on the Run

Robert Plant - Fate of Nations

Supertramp - Crime of the Century

Big Pig - Bonk

 

Not necessarily in that order as it depends on the MOOD.

Steve Winwood "Back in the High Life"

David Benoit "Every Step of the Way"

Dire Straits "Brothes in Arms"

@artemus_5 

FWIW. I own and listen to many of these albums that have been posted. I know that some of these albums have filler songs. Yes, they are excellent albums. But they don't fit the criterion of the OP original question.

While music is subjective, I agree, that happened pretty quickly. I don't know of any artist that has a discography that doesn't have filler. And albums devoid of songs I merely tolerate, zone out of, use as snack break material, or skip altogether is rare. I'd say somewhere on the order of 1-2% of my collection. Heck, I even left Black Sabbath's Master of Reality off my list because it has the 28-second filler Embryo. 

Here are several that I've thought of that I'm not sure have been mentioned!

Randy Newman- Sail Away

Joe Jackson- Look Sharp!

Steve Forbert- Alive On Arrival

Robert Cray- Strong Persuader

The Smiths- The Queen Is Dead

Amy Winehouse- Back In Black

I also agree that many of the lists contain very good or excellent albums, but not necessarily with every track being great.  I guess it depends if you interpret the original poster literally, that every track is at least "good", versus every track is excellent.  And of course, you have to account for individual taste!

REM - Fables of the Reconstruction

Jethro Tull - Stand Up

First two Roxy Music albums

Great thread with lots of good choices. Guess I'll have to go obscure, or at least semi - obscure, to try and not repeat anything:

JJ Cale - Naturally

Rosanne Cash - Interiors

Lloyd Cole & Commotions - Rattlesnakes

Crack The Sky - Animal Notes

Mark Eitzel - Sixty Watt Silver Lining

Everything But The Girl - Amplified Heart

Grapes of Wrath - Treehouse

It's Immaterial - Life Is Hard and then You Die

Ivy - Apartment Life

Grant McLennan - Horsebreaker Star

Pousette - Dart Band - S/T debut

Wishbone Ash - Argus

Warren Zevon - Sentimental Hygiene

Lot's a great ones... a few more

 

Buena Vista Social Club 

In a Silent Way- Davis

A tribute to Jack Johnston - Davis

At Fillmore East _Allman Bros. Band

Fear of Music- Taking Heads

Half in the City- St Paul and the Broken Bones

Breath - Dr. Lonnie Smith

Rodrigo y Gabriela-Mettavolution

A Go Go - Scofield

The in Sounds from Way Out - Beastie Boys (They could play!)

Witcues Stew -Lettuce

Out of the blues - Boz Scaggs

 

 

 

Iron Maiden

Powerslave

 

Iron Maiden

Piece of Mind

 

Billy Idol

Rebel Yell

 

Dave Brubeck 

Time Further Out

Great, this thread is going to cost me more money! I'm with Fred60 on

Lynryd Skynyrd and Marshall Tucker Band. Have always thought Marshall

Tucker was very underrated and appreciated. Oh yeah, put me down for

Aja. Cheers, Steve

Van Halen I

Fleetwood Mac - Rumors

SD - Aja

Pretenders I & II

The Both (Aimee Mann & Ted Leo)

Cheap Trick Live at Budokan

Creedence - Bayou Country

Foo Fighters - Nothing Left to Lose

CSNY - Deja Vu

Rush - Moving Pictures

Green Day - American Idiot

King Crimson - Lark's' Tongue in Aspic

Zeppelin III & IV

The Pentangle

The Beths - Jump Rope Gazers

Sketches of Spain

Itzy Perlman’s Encores 1988 version

Muddy Waters. Folk Singer (as someone else mentioned)

John Prine. John Prine (1st album)

Kronos Quartet Pieces of Africa

Joe Venuti and Ray Romano Never Before Never Again

 Buddy Guy and Junior Wells Drinkin' TNT, Smokin' Dynamite 

S&G Sounds of Silence or Greatest Hits; maybe Bookends

I find it amazing that so many folks here find so many albums/LPs to be without a weak cut. C'mon dudes and dudettes! Prove your Audiogon cred. Sharpen those bludgeons. 😀

I'm always amazed how much good music is out there that I've never heard of. I have saved many of these to Qobuz or Spotify to listen to later.

I'm going to stick with the OP's original intent (I eagerly anticipate every song on these albums) but I'll add one more filter. The following albums have above average recording quality. I don't think any of these have been mentioned thus far.

Anita Baker: Rapture

Simply Red: Picture Book

Animal Logic: II (polar bears in desert on cover)

Janis Siegel: At Home

Ivy: Long Distance

Morcheeba: Charango

Josh Rouse: 1972

Shawn Colvin: A Few Small Repairs

'Til Tuesday: Welcome Home

Rick Derringer: All American Boy

Lee Ritenour: On the Line (LP Version)

Valerie Carter: Wild Child

China Crisis: Flaunt the Imperfection

Stewart Copeland: The Rhythmatist

kd Lang: All You Can Eat

Col. Hampton and the Aquarium Rescue Unit (live)

Nada Surf: Let Go

Todd Rundgren: Nearly Human

David Crosby: If I Could Only Remember My Name

Joe Walsh: The Smoker You Drink...

Dee Dee Bridgewater: Live in Paris

Weather Report: Mysterious Traveler

Stanley Turrentine: Pieces of a Dream

@edcyn Yes, I've seen this thread running for a couple days, I have a hard time thinking of an LP/cd release without a lesser tune or two. Maybe I'm being too critical?

Lloyd Cole And The Commotions - Rattlesnakes 

Nick Lowe - Labour Of Lust

Nick Lowe - Pure Pop For Now People (or King Of Cool)

Ocean Color Scene - Moseley Shoals

The Rumour - Purity Of Essence

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thanks for all the suggestions---those of us into analog love any album where every song is good since we can't FF or skip.

Many above i agree and own (Waiting for Colombus, Clapton Unplugged, Brothers in Arms and Aja in particular) but i see a total lack of "Country" or "Country Rock" so i have a couple in that category as well as some others i have not seen:

Asleep at the Wheel—Wheelin’ & Dealin

Jimmy Buffett—A1A

Joe Bonamassa—Live From Royal Albert Hall

SRV—Texas Flood (kinda surprised i didn't see this above)

Willis Alan Ramsey—his only album, although you have to forgive "Muskrat Love" which is the worst song on the album but many like it

Zac Brown Band—The Foundation

Byrds--Mister Tamborine Man

Beatles-- Help soundtrack

Jethro Tull--Stand Up

Kinks--Muswell Hillbillies

Warren Zevon--Excitable Boy

Dylan-- Blood on the Tracks

Janis Ian-- Breaking Silence

Sharon Shannon--The Diamond Mountain Sessions (Irish)

Sarah Jarosz--World on the Ground

Mountain Goats--Beat the Champ

This doesn't happen often

ELP 1, tarcus and trilogy. Jethro Tull thick as a brick

Most of Miles Davis albums 

ELP 1, tarcus and trilogy. Jethro Tull thick as a brick

Most of the Miles Davis albums 

Some of mine already listed, but not The Houston Kid by Rodney Crowell (which really needs to be issued on LP). Did I miss any of Randy Newman’s early albums, Good Old Boys in particular?

IMO very, very few bands have produced perfect albums, as that demands and requires superior songwriting, which almost all bands lack. Imo, of course. One exception is The Kinks, whose Ray Davies’ songwriting is sublime. Their Face To Face, Something Else By, and Are The Village Green Preservation Society are perfect albums, imo better than ANY of their contemporaries. He on his own wrote better songs than the combined talents of Lennon & McCartney. Jagger and Richards? Surely you jest! ;-)

I’d add Manfred Mann,s Earth Band - Solar Fire to the list of superior albums.

Steely Dan-Gaucho or Aja

Beatles Sgt Peppers and others

Pink Floyd DS and WYWH

Kraftwerk Man Machine

Does a 20 minute Grateful Dead live song count?

Fleetwood Mac Rumours

Bryan Ferry Boys and Girls

Peter Gabriel 3(melt)

Talking Heads Remain in Light

Brian Eno Another Green World and Before and After Science

 

Tracker -- Mark Knopfler

Court and Spark - Joni Mitchell

The Concert in Central Park - Simon and Garfunkel

American Beauty - Grateful Dead

Bach Brandenburg Concertos - 2 CDs Academy of St Martin’s in the Fields / Neville Mariner

Mozart Piano Concertos - Geza Anda

Beethoven Piano Sonatas - Emil Gilels

Wallflower - Diana Krall

Good Vibrations - the Kings Singers

Faure’s Requiem - Kings College Choir (David Wilcox, conductor. Robert Chilcott, soloist)

Appalachan Journey - YoYo Ma, Mark O'Conner et. al featuring James Taylor

FYI based on all the responses so far: either almost no one on this board is under 45, or all modern recordings are a disappointment :)

Boston: Boston

CCR: Cosmos Factory 

Head East: Flat as a Pancake

Bryan Adams: Reckless

Coleman Hawkins discovers Ben Webster

Led Zepplin I

The Carpenters Christmas Album

Boz Skaggs I

Stevie Wonder: Talking Book

Christopher Cross

Jackson Browne: For Everyman

Carol King : Tapestry

Beatles: Rubber Soul, Sgt Peppers, Abbey Road

Beach Boys: Pet Sounds

Tim Buckley: Greetings from L.A. 

The Who: Live at Leeds

Santana: Abraxas

Alman Brothers: Eat a Peach

Moody Blues:( any)

@wyoboy

SRV—Texas Flood (kinda surprised i didn’t see this above)

As a guitar player myself, SRV is my second favorite guitarist and I own all his albums, but Tell Me is the same monotonous type of song I’ve heard in every corner blues bar and has no special flavor that he usually adds to a song, even his covers. I always skip it. Dirty Pool is another song that’s monotonous. Maybe it sounds interesting to non-players, but it’s just a bunch of tremolo picking with an easy standard blues solo and isn’t that catchy. And I think he has at least one or two of those type of songs on every album, which is why I didn’t include any of his albums. Neither did I include my favorite guitarist - Buckethead - even though he has over 300 albums and I have 280 of them. But I did include some other guitarists who have a solid album all the way through. For instance, I think Nick Johnston’s Remarkably Human is the best guitar album I’ve heard in 30 years and doesn’t have any weak songs.

I am so glad to see Tull getting some love here. Not only were they great song writers they were great musicians. Their albums were also some of the best produced you will find anywhere. I use Thick as a Brick to tune in my system anytime I make a change.