Essential Studio Albums

Other than Pearl Jam, who else is there?
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liebzz
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Re: Essential Studio Albums

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Cream - Disareli Gears

I am kind of fond of the idea of the three albums back-to-back-to-back of A Hard Road, Disareli Gears and Are You Experienced? (Next). This album veers away from the British blues to focus more on that fat groove and a little psychedelia mixed in. Sunshine of Your Love, Tales of Brave Ulysses, SWLABR, and Outside Woman Blues all have that killer exact groove that is Cream at its most essential. Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker make one hell of a team, and Clapton plays well around their muscularity here.

The Essential Track: Sunshine of Your Love

Up Next: Jimi Hendrix Experience - Are You Experienced?
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Re: Essential Studio Albums

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I love SWLABR so damn much.
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Re: Essential Studio Albums

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Yeah, I would probably have used that track if not for giving Sunshine of Your Love a little boost for being as classic as it is.
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Re: Essential Studio Albums

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Just like a lot of teenagers, now more than 30 years ago, I had the rock n roll awakening at around 15, and started discovering music other than what was on MTV and the radio (though it helped that at that age, the bands on MTV and radio were bands like Pearl Jam, Nirvana, Soundgarden and Alice In Chains who worshipped these guys). The first wave of bands I was obsessed with were indeed Nirvana, Pearl Jam and Led Zeppelin, a perfect 15 year old starter set. The second wave, I had borrowed (I am still borrowing the CD to this day) Are You Experienced?, and discovered Jimi Hendrix. I played that thing non-stop and if you want to find the primary source behind why I developed an appreciation for blues, jazz, and much of rock music, it all comes back to this album. That’s easily the most baggage any album I listen to on this journey will have.

However, it’s been a while since I revisited this particular album. Frankly, none of the wonder and amazement has worn off at all. This spritual combination of distortion meets rock, blues and jazz is as potent as my teenage years. The riffs and day and so viscerally satisfying. The solos are mind boggling. The rhythms are addictive. And in the context of this journey, it seems like this music came from another dimension, sent down from outer space to redefine and unrefine everything that came before it. Purple Haze really wraps up all this in a nice 3 minute package, but you can also point to the deconstructed almost nature of the title track in terms of focusing in just on that distortion, or the riff and vocal delivery on Foxy Lady, or the spaced out jams on Third Stone From the Sun. Jimi really does it all on this thing, and in that singular way no one has ever been able to replicate. This is still, 30+ years after I first heard it, one of the best and mind blowing albums I have ever heard.

The Essential Track: Purple Haze

Up Next: Grateful Dead - Anthem of the Sun
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Re: Essential Studio Albums

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liebzz wrote:Yeah, I would probably have used that track if not for giving Sunshine of Your Love a little boost for being as classic as it is.
Agreed
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Re: Essential Studio Albums

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AYE? is the best Hendrix record. Hell yeah.
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Re: Essential Studio Albums

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I loved Hendrix in high school, went off him for a long time, but came back to him in a big way in the last few years or so. Much like the Dead, I was able to appreciate Hendrix’s playing in a whole new way after immersing myself in jazz. AYE is an incredible record. I think “May This Be Love” is my favorite song. Really enjoyed your review — I am probably due for a listen to this one myself.
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Re: Essential Studio Albums

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tragabigzanda wrote:I agree AYE? is his best, but I feel like it’s a matter of time before Band of Gypsies takes the title
The rub being that Band of Gypsies is a live album, but it’s no less really great.
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Grateful Dead - Anthem of the Sun

As radical as some of the albums have gotten so far, few if any have reached the aural insanity that is Anthem of the Sun. That’s It For the Other One, a suite of ideas that merge together wildly, sets the tone for an album that never lets you get your guard down. Rather than every song fitting in place and there being some larger story to tell, this album just sort of jumps from place to place in much of the psychedelic improvisation that the Grateful Dead were pulling out in concert. If the debut was contrived a bit until its end with Viola Lee Blues, this one removes the guardrails immediately and purposely never finds focus. Even Alligator, a Pigpen workout, doesn’t have a definitive flow to it. Caution (Do Not Stop On Tracks) actually runs naturally, a bit, from Alligator, like a 16 minute total jam between the two tracks where nobody’s in charge but everybody gets heard. It’s a brilliant album, even if at times that brilliance gets over my head.

The Essential Track: That’s It For the Other One

Up Next: The Doors
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The Doors

Of their albums, I have always gravitated most to the bookends of this one and LA Woman. There’s the signature Doors sound here on all timers Break On Through, Light My Fire, with both Soul Kitchen and Back Door Man also having that sort of vibe. The Crystal Ship and The End show their more psychedelic side. Alabama Song (Whisky Bar) is more of a fun highlight. This listen I really enjoyed I Looked at You and Take It As It Comes…maybe I just never noticed them before amongst the classics? Either way, this debut is an absolute home run.

The Essential Song: Break On Through

Up Next: The Beach Boys - Smiley Smile
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The Beach Boys - Smiley Smile

In the midst of the height of the psychedelic rock movement, I am listening to this - a quirky, most out of bounds for The Beach Boys album. It’s full of strange sounds, songs about vegetables, and a herky jerky feel that lends much more experimentation than even Pet Sounds, but doesn’t quite catch its cohesiveness. The true moments of genius here are Heroes and Villains, and Good Vibrations, both with sonic game playing but bringing the sort of addictiveness The Beach Boys do best.

The Essential Track: Good Vibrations

Up Next: The Rolling Stones - Their Satanic Majesty’s Request
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The Rolling Stones - Their Satanic Majesty’s Request

This albums seems to go from maligned to rediscovered and back to maligned pretty frequently. I am sure it’s divisive, and for good reason - the album just doesn’t feel like them. Even with albums nearly fully covers, or albums where they capitulate to current trends in one way or another, it always feels like a Stones record, as if they have this base filter and signature by which all other sounds must in some way bend to. And they have a great career of doing that. Here, it’s as if the Stones are barely there, Mick seems very out of place, and it’s reaching for Sgt. Pepper, which for them is a fool’s errand.

That said, it is a much better album than all those comments. Citadel and 2000 Light Years From Home do feel very Stones. She’s A Rainbow is a quality psych pop single. Sing This All Together (See What Happens) is a wonderful sonic journey. So is The Lantern and Gomper. Unfortunately, these achievements are buried in its tourist existence in the Stones catalogue, and for all their talents, they were never meant to be the Beatles or the Grateful Dead, and the next run of albums will show their true power as a rock n roll band.

The Essential Track: 2000 Light Years From Home

Up Next: Dr. John - Gris Gris
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Re: Essential Studio Albums

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tragabigzanda wrote:
tragabigzanda wrote:Top 10 maybe?
Hello Morning
Close Captioned
The Kill
Place/Position
Do You Like Me?
Latest Disgrace
Recap Modotti
Nightshop
Break
Life & Limb
I'd maybe bump Life & Limb for Epic Problem
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We’ll get there. It’s in the list later.
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Dr. John - Gris Gris

On Dr. John’s debut album, he immediately delivers a striking psychedelic vision, shrouded in New Orleans slang and a kaleidoscopic landscape that’s as foreboding as it is steeped in the city’s jazz and funk. Gris-Gris Gumbo Ya-Ya immediately lets you in but reminds you of your visitor status, foreign concepts of the night tripper luring you into his big tent. Mama Roux brings a bit more funk to the equation but it’s still keeping the psychedelic vibes at the forefront as is Danse Fambeaux. Croker Courtbullion is more of a straighter jazz approach, giving way to the most accessible Jump Sturdy. But then to close it out, Dr. John unleashes the best track here, I Walk On Guilded Splinters, a sparse but highly effective track that declares victory over his real or imagined spiritual foes. Here it is a joy to be cast under Dr. John’s spell, a 40 minute dive into an eccentric mind weaving all types of music into a cohesive yet challenging piece worthy of your immersion.

The Essential Track: I Walk On Guilded Splinters

Up Next: Miles Davis - Sorcerer
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damn so many classics!!

I need to listen to that Dr John album. I listened to a few of his last year, and loved them. Also AYE is fucking incredible.
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Guilded Splinters’s drum track is what Beck sampled for Loser.
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VinylGuy wrote:damn so many classics!!

I need to listen to that Dr John album. I listened to a few of his last year, and loved them. Also AYE is fucking incredible.
Yeah, going back and visiting and in many cases revisiting classics is the idea. It’s a gluttony of greatness where there are moments I feel hypercritical because I am hearing so many great albums in a row, but they’re all awesome for the most part.
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