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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@jssmith   I think the key here is that you're a guitar player and a couple of the songs bore you from both playing and listening viewpoints.  Fair enough--maybe we should split these lists into categories for musicians and non-musicians and further by under the influence or not under the influence ?

@jssmith BTW who is your favorite guitar player ?  I'm torn between Gary Clark Jr. and Joe Bonamassa--when younger it was Chet Atkins

@jssmith and now to prove i haven't had coffee yet i saw that you said Buckethead--sorry

@wyoboy 

No need to filter lists. You like what you like and that's valid for everyone for whatever reason. Musicians will still have wildly divergent viewpoints.

As far as guitarists go, I respect technicians, like Buckethead, Yngwie Malmsteen, Michael Batio, Jason Richardson, Ewan Dobson and Guthrie Govan, the most because they are the most skilled at the instrument, but I tend to listen to "feel" players like Nick Johnston and Estas Tonne more, while I tend to play "fun to play" licks within my skill level, like Van Halen, Randy Rhoads, Jimmy Page, James Hetfield, Dimebag Darrell and James Sykes. While all the technicians can play with feel, they tend to focus on speed because it's more satisfying. Buckethead is possibly the only one who focuses equally on both. But Buckethead is an autistic savant, which puts him on a whole different level of creativity and skill, hence the 300 albums of varying styles and techniques, not all of which I like, and world-class speed. But of all the guitar-focused albums I have, only Johnston, Malmsteen and Batio have put out one straight-through listen each.

I didn't look at my list with playing in mind. Just which albums do I put on from start to finish and enjoy every minute of it and not have a thought of skipping anything. And I'd add one more I didn't think of ...

Rush - Permanent Waves

 

@jssmith 

I do find that being under the influence strongly changes my opinions in a "Everything is Beautiful..." sort of way.  Knowing zip about Johnston, Malmsteen and Batio i look forward to listening--i'm always looking for good guitar music i haven't heard and while i tend to be analog-oriented i'm not living in a cave and will stream them--thanks and Happy New Year

@wyoboy 

As I said, they each only have one album that's great all the way through. They are:

Johnston - Remarkably Human

Malmsteen's Rising Force (1984? - his solo debut)

Batio - No Boundaries

They have some other albums that are real stinkers. Malamsteen's other albums are somewhat boring. And Batio's other albums are speed for the sake of speed. And I guess why not. He's probably the fastest of the bunch. But it gets monotonous.

Many great albums listed here so I won’t bother being repetitive; a few albums I find are over way too fast:

Black Market - Weather Report

Dread Inna Babylon - U Roy

Heart Like a Wheel - Linda Ronstadt

Girl From Ipanema - Getz/Gilberto album

Big Calm - Morcheeba

Naturally - J J Cale

Bringing it all Back Home - Bob Dylan

Kiko - Los Lobos

Astral Weeks - Van the Man

@rettrussell 

almost put Kiko on my list too but there are a couple duds IMO--still, with so many good songs i can see why

@rettrussell - 'Dread inna Babylon'? IRIE!! I was gonna be going on a trip to Jamaica in mid-January, but I canceled that a few months ago....

Linda Ronstadt: Heart Like A Wheel

The Beatles: Rubber Soul

Miles Davis: In A Silent Way

Hot Tuna: debut album

Bob Dylan: debut album





 

Since it took 150 - 200 posts before "Court and Spark" (Joni Mitchell) or "For Everyman" (Jackson Browne) were mentioned, I wonder what else we've forgotten?.

So, here's a few more that have not been mentioned yet:

Jim Carroll - Catholic Boy

Lloyd Cole - S/T solo album

Dada - Puzzle

Dixie Dregs - What If

The Housemartins - Now That's What I Call Good

Humble Pie - Town and Country

Hunters & Collectors - Human Frailty

Aimee Mann - Bachelor # 2

Mott The Hoople - All The Young Dudes

Ocean Blue - Cerulean

Ten Years After - A Space in Time

All submitted in my humble opinion:

Peter Frampton - Fingerprints

Snarky Puppy - Culcha Vulcha

Mick Jagger - She's The Boss

Jeff Beck - Orange Album 

Elton John - Tumbleweed Connection

The Band - Stage Fright

Tom Scott - Tom Cat

Santana - Caravanserai

Rolling Stones - Sticky Fingers and Let it Bleed

Doobie Brothers - Stampede

Steely Dan - Pretzel Logic

Jethro Tull - Stand Up

The Who - Who's Next

Honorable Mention - The Allman Brothers Live at the Fillmore East

 

 

 

David Crosby  If I Could Only Remember My Name

Jefferson Starship  Blows Against The Empire

The Allman Brothers’ first album

I wonder what else we've forgotten?

The William Shatner, Don Johnson, Bruce Willis and Russell Crowe Quartet.

There have been many discussions on here about why audiophilia is dying. This thread is an interesting glimpse into the reason (or symptom). The average album age looks to be about 45 - 50 years. Which either means there are only us old people on here, or a bunch of old people in young people's bodies. Believe it or not, there are some great newer albums. Even spotless ones. Music availability has never been more prolific than it is now, which does make it harder to sift through all the crap, but gems are out there. Music doesn't end at age 20.

For instance, I didn't include EPs on my list, but if I had I might have included an album that is not too "modern" for "old" progressive rock-oriented audiophiles, and is audiophile-friendly, David Maxim Micic - Eco. Release date - 2015.

If you're into epic movie soundtracks, Brand X Music - Battle for Dawn might make this list. Heck, I'm not a huge soundtrack fan, but when I'm in the mood for loud epic music I always listen to this album all the way through, so I'm adding it to this thread's list. Release date - 2016.

I won't go into all the great modern metal. I know metal is outside the scope of most people here, but even if you got stuck on 70's or early 80's metal there's plenty of new stuff that would possibly make this list for some, like Dee Snider (from Twisted Sister) - For The Love Of Metal, release date - 2018. I dare say Dee is older than most people here, but he's rockin' harder than ever. He puts cheesy Twisted Sister to shame. My most-played album is the doom metal release Trees of Eternity - Hour of the Nightingale. Easily in my top three metal albums of all time. And I bought my first metal album in 1971, so it had to beat out thousands of albums for that honor. Release date - 2016.

Lyra Lynn, Plays Well With Others

https://leralynn.com/plays-well-with-others-pre-order

Gene Clark, No Other

www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8a8cutYP7focgLNtBH8B3EaCMLikq7Ur

And the album that turned me on to Clark, Robert Plant & Alison Krauss, Raising Sand

 

@dmlaudio Thanks, I think Alvin Lee might have been sending a message with his opening guitar chords on the first song of the album. (One of These Days)

@jssmith  +2

I was just relaying those exact thoughts to my wife last night.  She could care less but it's 2022... 

Album: Touch Wood
Artist: Antonio Forcione 2003

 

New Age robot I am

First, let me state that I am basically a Rock and Jazz guy for music listening; and I agree with many of the albums listed here; but I also have a decent classical music collection on both vinyl and CD.

I just finished listening to the RCA Victor Gold Seal recording of Rossini Overtures by the NBC Orchestra conducted by Arturo Toscanini. I can unequivocally state that there is not one bad cut on this album.

There are too many perfect albums to name but here are a few that I play often:


Van Morrison - Astral Weeks, Moondance

Joni Mitchell - Court and Spark, Hejira

Dusty Springfield - Dusty in Memphis 

David Bowie - Low, Station to Station

Roxy Music - Avalon

REM - Murmur 

Herbie Hancock - Empyrean Isles

Miles Davis - In A Silent Way, Nefertiti 

John Coltrane - Coltrane’s Sound, A Love Supreme 

 

 

 

 

String Cheese Incident - Rhythm of the Road, Vol. 2

It's a live NYE concert in Vegas from some years ago.  Recording is excellent, the range of styles of music and the shear musicallity is, at time, nearly breathtaking.  Some of the hottest sax I've heard in a long time on a couple of tracks.  Awesome keyboards, violin, guitar and vocals to show off a system.  2 CD set so it's a lot of great music.

Kevin Gray's White Ladder, have it on CD, but recently bought the lp. No idea how the lp will sound, hopefully at least as good as the CD. Not a bad song on that album imo...always one of my favorites. 

@jssmith nostalgia is one heck of a substance.

still, I think there’s a lot to some of these seminal records being superior—I’m thinking it’s like something Eliot was getting at here.

If we want the hobby to grow, however…nvm, I’ve got nothing that hasn’t been said before😅

 

@dirgordoncole agreed that nostalgia is powerful; but, I would argue there is a stronger bias to how you relate to the music of your present when it takes on the role of the "soundtrack to your life" instead of just being music.

Trust me, in 10 - 20 - 30 years from now, you will look back on some of the artists and/or albums that you are listening to today and you will ask yourself: "What the hell was I thinking?"

@dirgordoncole 

One sentence from that article really struck me because it reminds me of something I was thinking the last time I listened to Trapeze- Medusa.

"The dead writers are remote from us because we know so much more than they did."

Even though I think it's an album that belongs on this list, I was thinking, "What a monster album this would be if it used today's technology." As it is, the guitars are extremely thin and lifeless. The vocals have no depth. The drums are dead. Today, with my free recording and drum software, $169 guitar modeling software, and a $100 direct interface, I can make a far better recording in my living room.

 

@mitchagain 

I would argue there is a stronger bias to how you relate to the music of your present when it takes on the role of the "soundtrack to your life" instead of just being music.

Which is exactly why The Beach Boys - Endless Summer makes my list. It's a great album, but possibly I like every song on it because it's what my group of friends and I played on our trips to the ocean every summer. Good times. But now nostalgia.

I can honestly say there isn't anything I can think of that I liked past the age of 12 that I don't like today. But then again, I was always into album (FM) rock (Zeppelin, Sabbath, Rush, etc.), not pop. I think a lot of pop from every generation is embarrassing.

Some are asking for newer music.

The best I can come up with is the Avicii Tribute Concert available on YouTube.

Not a bad track and exceptional show/production. Lots of real feelings.

If you thought the guy was just a dj you may rethink.

Hopefully on Blu-ray sometime.

RIP

 

 

@audioguy85  - That would be David Gray - "White Ladder. I too have had it on CD since its release and recently bought the 2XLP 20th anniversary vinyl. Unfortunately, mine must be defective. The vocals on the second LP have terrible distortion. I'm sending it back.

Fortunately (I hope) my wife had bought me the 4XLP special edition, direct from the David Gray site, and it's expected within the next couple of days. Hopefully, it will not suffer the same issue.

BTW, you are correct. It deserves to be on this list.

Also, I just received David Gray - "Mutineers" on vinyl, for Christmas, and it is fantastic! Great album and excellent sound quality...

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@gkim1986 @mjmcubfn 

I'm not much of a fan of modern/new country as I don't find it very country. However, I like old school country and I love Americana. That said, for me, one country album that I could put on this list is 

David Ball - "Thinkin' Problem"

I've always loved it and typically listen all the way through when I play it.

Colter wall - songs of the plain

Bon Iver - for Emma forever ago

Joni mitchel - blue

Paul Simon - graceland (although 25th anniversary version has rehearsal gems incl Ray phiri killing it on diamonds....)

Television - marquee moon

Bill Callahan - once we were horses

Bonnie prince Billy - I see a darkness

Talking heads 77

Bob dylan desire

Gram parsons GP

Byrds - sweetheart of the rodeo

Beach Boys - pet sounds

Roberta flack first take

Lcd soundsystem sounds of silver and American dream

Kraftwer - tour de france

Ray lamontaigne trouble

Fleet foxes shore

First aid kit lions roar 

Animal collective Merriweather 

Moby - play (although played. To death)

Phosphorescent - here’s to taking it easy

Radiohead OK computer And In Rainbows

Sufjan Stevens illinois

Smog - dogs of sevotion

Miles Davis - kind of blue

All I can play and sing tap and hum too..... So many more with just one song that irritates

Crossing The Liquid Mirror - Mystic Diversions

French Kiwi Juice - FKJ

Days of Twang - De-Phazz

Cantoma - Cantoma

Simple Things - Zero 7

Illumined Blues - Steve Gold

I swear I saw Shocking Blue at the Palm Beach Pop Festival 1969, but can’t find it documented anywhere.

 

@dmlaudio

The Band - All the first four Albums

Santana - Caravanserai Yeah

@gratefuleric

Son and wife saw Rufus Du Sol a couple weeks ago. Didn’t get me a ticket. Gave them hell. I am older than you.

Village Green Preservation Society - The Kinks

Speak of the Devil - Chris Isaak

The Cult - Electric

Primus - Sailing The Seas Of Cheese

Henry Rollins - Weight 

Any three albums will do if you're having a Stereo duel with neighbor ;-)

@richdirector 

Hey, we got several favorites in common. Sweetheart of the Rodeo. I saw the Byrds at the Troubadour during that moment on the Byrds' existence. Television's Marquee Moon. Saw them at the Whiskey during that band's brief moment in time. And oh yeah, I spent many years paying dues to IATSE and MPEG.