First LP to keep you in genre for life


I started in jazz-rock when all my buddies were in rock. All my rocker friends thought I was nuts and called it con-fusion music. I dragged them to shows and converted quite a few. One time, I had buddy who thought Ginger Baker was the greatest (no disrespect) and I took him to see Billy Cobham. Cobham started with a short solo and halfway through it he turned to me and shook my hand. Once Jazz-Rock digressed I then quickly took on jazz as my main music of choice. It took awhile to open the ears.

Inner Mounting Flame (Jazz-Rock) - The Mahavishnu Orchestra. The interplay, spirituality, ragalike repetition and volume was otherworldly and never to be matched. In this style McLaughlin and Cobham were the masters of their genre.

A Love Supreme - Coltrane (Jazz). Why go to church when you can just play this classic? My favorite jazz is still modal with a spiritual bent.

Rock and Roll Animal - Lou Reed (Rock). Dark and angry. The guitar interplay is fantastic. I always picture myself in a subterranean, urban bar; it's 2:00 am and raining outside and everyone is as pasty as Casper; when seeing this band. I'm glad I survived.
richardmr
Sorry. The above is a question. Not just a statement. What LP really pulled you in and gave you the fever?
Good Question! Mine was probably Blood, Sweat & Tears' "Child Is Father To The Man" Couldn't get enough of Al Kooper's masterpiece. Also, listening to The Mothers Of Invention's "We're Only In It For The Money" through headphones made me buy a pair of Koss ESP-9 electrostatics. And I haven't stopped upgrading since. :-)
P.S. - Even "Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" could transport me like few others.

Thanks for the memories,
Ed
Miles Davis - Kind of Blue
Cheap Trick - Cheap Trick
Tchaikovsky - Ballet Suites as performed by Mstislav Rostropovich and the Berlin Philharmonic. Unmistakably the best performances of these suites ever commited to disc.

I also love the records that you listed above with the exception of the Lou Reed.