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Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Thu January 29, 2026 1:21 pm
by bada
liebzz wrote:
Heart
The fall of Rome. The 2004 ALCS. Sears & Roebuck. These are but a few of the epic collapses of great empires. And then there’s Heart: once the heir apparent to Led Zeppelin. This album, outside of a couple good tracks, represents that epic fall from grace. From the hard rock masters of Dreamboat Annie and Little Queen to soft rock adult contemporary power ballads that made me beg my parents to change the station circa the mid-80s.
The Essential Track: The Wolf
Up Next: Phil Collins - No Jacket Required
Mom Pop 80's Heart ruled bro.
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Thu January 29, 2026 2:00 pm
by liebzz
Red Hot Chili Peppers - Freaky Styley
There’s no doubt the Chili Peppers’ first album could have been better, and frankly, while this is a huge step up, probably they didn’t fully find their groove here either. There’s a ton of great tracks and okay tracks here - one of the great bands finding their way but not quite home yet (the improvement might be the inclusion of Hillel Slovak here, and we have to wait for The Uploft Mofo Party Plan to get Jack Irons for the full original lineup). If You Want Me To Stay is a true prelude to the Chili Peppers becoming a truly exceptional band where songwriting meets their unique blend of sounds. There’s fun tracks that are sort of disposable in a good way like Jungle Man, Hollywood, Yertle the Turtle, and Brother’s Cup. Nevermind was a fun ride on this listen as well. There’s rest were sort of underdeveloped but fine. Growth as a band doesn’t all happen at once, but we know this band will slowly transform into one of the all time greats.
The Essential Track: If You Want Me To Stay
Up Next: Prince - Around the World in a Day
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Thu January 29, 2026 2:26 pm
by VinylGuy
i love Freaky Styley. I was totally a fan of it as a kid. If You Want Me To Stay is a favorite of course, what an amazing cover!!! Freaky Styley and Loving And Touching are also favs here.
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Thu January 29, 2026 2:52 pm
by liebzz
VinylGuy wrote:i love Freaky Styley. I was totally a fan of it as a kid. If You Want Me To Stay is a favorite of course, what an amazing cover!!! Freaky Styley and Loving And Touching are also favs here.
The closest thing to Pearl Jam sampling = Dirty Frank and Freaky Styley.
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Thu January 29, 2026 3:02 pm
by LoathedVermin72
I've only heard bits of FS via the Scott Aukerman/Adam Scott podcast and it was some of the most embarrassing music I've ever heard
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Thu January 29, 2026 3:14 pm
by liebzz
LoathedVermin72 wrote:I've only heard bits of FS via the Scott Aukerman/Adam Scott podcast and it was some of the most embarrassing music I've ever heard
You clearly haven’t heard Bon Jovi.
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Thu January 29, 2026 3:15 pm
by wease
liebzz wrote:LoathedVermin72 wrote:I've only heard bits of FS via the Scott Aukerman/Adam Scott podcast and it was some of the most embarrassing music I've ever heard
You clearly haven’t heard Bon Jovi.
AL
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Fri January 30, 2026 12:17 pm
by liebzz
Prince - Around the World in a Day
After 1999 and Purple Rain, Prince was at such a high level that nearly anything would by definition be a let down. This is not so much that as merely a very good album. The known quantity is Raspberry Beret, you know, the kind you’d find at a second hand store. Beyond that, there’s quite a few highlights here: Paisley Park, the title track, and the album closing Temptation come to mind, and especially the latter two here seem to explore a more psychedelic sound.
The Essential Track: Temptation
Up Next: Chris Isaak - Silvertone
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Fri January 30, 2026 12:42 pm
by liebzz
Chris Isaak - Silvertone
This is a marked shift in sound from Prince, and Isaak’s debut album. This is a sort of rockabilly that’s slightly unconventional in that the textures created by a more reverb soaked guitar and vocals gives the album a mysterious quality. It doesn’t reach the level of say a Johnny Cash, but it can remind you of him in the right moments. Dancin’, Talk to Me, Funeral in the Rain, Gone Ridin’, and Western Stars are all very different but by the end of that list of highlights, you’ll get the idea.
The Essential Track: Gone Ridin’
Up Next: Bob Dylan - Empire Burlesque
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Fri January 30, 2026 10:12 pm
by liebzz
Bob Dylan - Empire Burlesque
Working with a whole bunch of studio musicians, including members of the Heartbreakers, this Dylan album has a feel not unlike Street-Legal. For much of the album, this seems like he’s trying to make good on that album, which might have been too much of more is more. Seeing the Real You at Last, Clean Cut Kid, and Trust Yourself are highlights - but this sort of falls apart in the second half of the album, as the synths and big guitar just seem to not quite fit.
The Essential Track: Clean Cut Kid
Up Next: Robert Plant - Shaken ‘N’ Stirred
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Fri January 30, 2026 10:46 pm
by liebzz
Robert Plant - Shaken ‘N’ Stirred
Well this album is an unmitigated disaster scene. Way overindulgent with synthesizers. It feels completely dated before it even starts. In some senses, it seems like Plant was indeed planted onto some kid’s odd 80s Casio keyboard compositions. Just a mess. The closest thing that works is the album closing Sixes and Sevens (how excited would today’s kids be for that song title!?). This is the dark side of trying to “modernize” your sound.
The Essential Track: Sixes and Sevens
Up Next: The Firm
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Fri January 30, 2026 10:48 pm
by oasisfan35
Ah the 80s

Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Fri January 30, 2026 11:09 pm
by LoathedVermin72
liebzz wrote:
Bob Dylan - Empire Burlesque
Working with a whole bunch of studio musicians, including members of the Heartbreakers, this Dylan album has a feel not unlike Street-Legal. For much of the album, this seems like he’s trying to make good on that album, which might have been too much of more is more. Seeing the Real You at Last, Clean Cut Kid, and Trust Yourself are highlights - but this sort of falls apart in the second half of the album, as the synths and big guitar just seem to not quite fit.
The Essential Track: Clean Cut Kid
Up Next: Robert Plant - Shaken ‘N’ Stirred
I’m not a Dylan fan but I love “Tight Connection to My Heart”
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Fri January 30, 2026 11:49 pm
by liebzz
The Firm
From trying to update a sound to here trying to recapture old glory, our 1985 tour of uneven albums continues with The Firm - a supergroup most prominently featuring Jimmy Page and Bad Company’s Paul Rodgers. Some of it actually pretty good, like Closer, Make or Break, Money Can’t Buy, and the reworked Led Zeppelin intended Midnight Moonlight. The rest is more of a challenge - just not great songs. It’s at least better than Shaken ‘N’ Stirred.
The Essential Track: Midnight Moonlight
Up Next: John Fogerty - Centerfield
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Sat January 31, 2026 12:51 am
by wease
Midnight Moonlight based on the unreleased Zep tune, Swan Song.
Always liked Radioactive.
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Sat January 31, 2026 1:32 am
by Ello Sailor
Holy smokes, The Firm. Tony Franklin is a beast on the fretless and is, by all accounts, a really cool mfer. I learned how to slide a harmonic (like Jeff does at the start of "Evenflow") by watching one of his tutorial videos. Love that dude! Full Diddy!
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Sat January 31, 2026 1:37 pm
by liebzz
Ello Sailor wrote:Holy smokes, The Firm. Tony Franklin is a beast on the fretless and is, by all accounts, a really cool mfer. I learned how to slide a harmonic (like Jeff does at the start of "Evenflow") by watching one of his tutorial videos. Love that dude! Full Diddy!
I have to say that some of the bass lines on this are pretty killer, so agreed on that. There’s a sense on here, and I suspect it will feel like this all the way to the Page and Plant reunion in ‘94, that Jimmy Page is searching for the next Plant when what he actually needs is Robert Plant.
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Sat January 31, 2026 1:40 pm
by VinylGuy
Oh cool, i never really listened to those solo albums and projects from those two. I did love their reunion.
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Sat January 31, 2026 3:10 pm
by wease
Coverdale/Page was pretty good.
Re: Essential Studio Albums
Posted: Sat January 31, 2026 3:13 pm
by liebzz
wease wrote:Coverdale/Page was pretty good.
We’ll get there eventually.