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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 111
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 01:55 am:   

I find it easier to name my favourite LPs than tracks. Who else loves what? Don't feel you have to do 20. I just could not stop at 5, or 10.

1 The Chills – Soft Bomb
2 The Lemonheads – It’s A Shame About Ray
3 Kate Bush – Hounds Of Love
4 R.E.M. – Murmur
5 The Pursuit Of Happiness – Love Junk
6 The Waterboys – Fisherman’s Blues
7 The Beach Boys – Pet Sounds
8 The Go-Betweens – 16 Lover’s Lane
9 Teenage Fanclub – Bandwagonesque
10 Whipping Boy – Heartworm
11 Mary Margaret O’Hara – Miss America
12 The Posies – Frosting On The Beater
13 The Stone Roses – The Stone Roses
14 Marvin Gaye – What’s Going On
15 The Replacements – All Shook Down
16 Pixies – Doolittle
17 Mercury Rev – Deserter’s Songs
18 Public Enemy - It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back
19 Husker Du – Zen Arcade
20 My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
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Kurt Stephan
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Username: Slothbert

Post Number: 107
Registered: 04-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 04:08 am:   

Oh, my goodness...this thread was inevitable. And irresistible. Nice list, Pádraig--a number of your choices are serious contenders for my list. Here's 20, not necessarily in order:

Roxy Music - Stranded
Television - Marquee Moon
Richard and Linda Thompson - Shoot Out the Lights
The Go-Betweens - Before Hollywood
Magnetic Fields - 69 Love Songs
James Brown - Star Time (box set; maybe it's not fair to include)
Steely Dan - Pretzel Logic
Spinanes - Strand
Neil Young and Crazy Horse - Zuma
John Cale - Fear
Velvet Underground - VU & Nico
The Chills - Submarine Bells
Elvis Costello & the Attractions - This Year's Model
The Only Ones - Special View (U.S. compilation)
Brian Eno - Another Green World
My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
Kristin Hersh - Sunny Border Blue
The Auteurs - New Wave
Buzzcocks - Singles Going Steady
David Bowie - Station to Station
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Geoff Holmes
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Username: Geoff

Post Number: 31
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 06:06 am:   

In no particular order...except the first 5 which I have played on shuffle WAY too many times!
Younger than Yesterday - The Byrds
Carnival of Light - Ride
Rubber Soul - The Beatles
Best of Traffic
Pet Sounds - The Beach Boys
Gone to Earth - David Sylvian
Blue Bell Knoll - Cocteau Twins
Fisherman's Blues - The Waterboys
Meat is Murder -The Smiths
Lifes Rich Pageant - R.E.M.
Sunshine Superman - Donovan
Regatta de Blanc - The Police
The Blurred Crusade - The Church
Ram - Paul McCartney
Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots - The Flaming Lips
Seachange - Beck
America - America
Tabaran - Not Drowning,Waving
Blue - Joni Mitchell
The Beatles (White Album) - The Beatles

and on the edge are....

Liberty Belle and the Black Diamond Express - The Go-Betweens
John Barleycorn Must Die - Traffic
Out of Time - R.E.M.
Hatful of Hollow - The Smiths
Fear of Music - Talking Heads
Born Sandy Devotional - The Triffids
Temple of Low Men - Crowded House
New Gold Dream - Simple Minds
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Duncan Hurwood
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Username: Duncan_h

Post Number: 28
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 07:59 am:   

To really love an album, I think there can't be any tracks on it you want to skip. Even though I own every Bob Dylan album, there's tracks I dislike on every one - so there's none from him here:

The Mutton Birds - Envy of Angels
The Go-Betweens - 16 Lovers Lane
Stephen Duffy - I love my friends
Mike Scott - Still Burning
Marc Almond - Open all night
Lloyd Cole - Love Story
David McComb - Love of Will
The Beatles - Sgt Pepper
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kevin
Member
Username: Kevin

Post Number: 53
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 12:30 pm:   

Excellent choices, but if you dont mind can I suggest albums from some of these bands that I think are as good if not better,I've put them in brackets.

1 The Chills – Soft Bomb
2 The Lemonheads – It’s A Shame About Ray
3 Kate Bush – Hounds Of Love
4 R.E.M. – Murmur
5 The Pursuit Of Happiness – Love Junk
6 The Waterboys – Fisherman’s Blues
7 The Beach Boys – Pet Sounds
8 The Go-Betweens – 16 Lover’s Lane (before hollywood)
9 Teenage Fanclub – Bandwagonesque (grand prix)
10 Whipping Boy – Heartworm
11 Mary Margaret O’Hara – Miss America
12 The Posies – Frosting On The Beater
13 The Stone Roses – The Stone Roses
14 Marvin Gaye – What’s Going On
15 The Replacements – All Shook Down (pleased to meet me)
16 Pixies – Doolittle (surfer rosa)
17 Mercury Rev – Deserter’s Songs
18 Public Enemy - It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back (fear of a black planet)
19 Husker Du – Zen Arcade (warehouse songs and stories)
20 My Bloody Valentine - Loveless

My own top 5, in no order

David Bowie - Low
Joy Division - Closer
Super Ape - Lee Perry
American Music Club - California
Husker Du - Warehouse Songs and Stories
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Jerry Clark
Member
Username: Jerry

Post Number: 120
Registered: 08-2004
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 02:46 pm:   

Bob Dylan - Highway 61 Revisited
Kraftwerk - Man Machine
Go-B's - Linerty Belle
Public Enemy - There's A Poison Going On
Stephen Jones - Almost Cured Of Sadness
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Peter Collins
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Username: Tyroneshoelaces

Post Number: 42
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 04:25 pm:   

Love - Forever Changes
Go-Betweens – Liberty Belle and the Black Diamond Express
Kraftwerk -Trans-Europe Express
Suicide - Suicide
The Scars - Author Author
Wire - Chairs Missing
Joy Division - Closer
Marc Almond - Jacques
Scott Walker - Scott 2
Tindersticks - Curtains
Husker Du - Candy Apple Grey
The Nightingales - Pigs On Purpose
The Wedding Present - George Best
The Kinks - Something Else
Devo - Are We Not Men? We Are Devo!
Traffic - Mr Fantasy
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Jeff Whiteaker
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Username: Jeff_whiteaker

Post Number: 149
Registered: 10-2004
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 04:48 pm:   

the go-betweens - liberty belle
the smiths - louder than bombs
microdisney - everybody's fantastic
felt - strange idols pattern
japan - tin drum
cocteau twins - treasure
nick drake - bryter layter
rem - murmur
xtc - skylarking
left banke - walk away renee
love - forever changes
beach boys - pet sounds
siouxsie - kaliedoscope
wire - 154
aztec camera - high land hard rain
echo & the bunnymen - ocean rain
prefab sprout - swoon
new order - substance
everything but the girl - eden
the church - seance
john cale - paris 1919
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Michael Bachman
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Username: Michael_bachman

Post Number: 23
Registered: 01-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 05:28 pm:   

Gram Parsons - Grievous Angel
Velvet Underground - Velevet Underground
Love - Forever Changes
My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
Beatles - Rubber Soul
Richard and Linda Thompson - Shoot Out The Lights
R.E.M. – Murmur
Slowdive - Souvlaki
Robyn Hitchcock - I Often Dream Of Trains
Soft Boys - Underwater Moonlight
The Go-Betweens – 16 Lover’s Lane
Gang of Four - Entertainment!
Kate Bush - The Dreaming
Talking Heads - Remain In Light
Peter Gabriel - III (Melting Face)
Eveything But The Girl - Idlewild
Julia Fordham - Porcelain
Aimee Mann - Whatever
Bob Dylan - Blood On The Tracks
Fairport Convention - Unhalfbricking

and on the edge are....
Big Star - Sister/Lovers
Allman Bother Band - Live at The Filmore East
Derek and The Dominoes - Layla
John Cale - Paris 1919
Bangles - All Over The Place
Dream Syndicate - The Days Of Wine and Roses
Til Tuesday - Everything's Different Now
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Matthias Treml
Member
Username: Matthias

Post Number: 48
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 05:51 pm:   

Wow this is extremely tough as I know I'll miss some by here goes from memory:

Go-Betweens - 16 LL
U2 - Unforgettable Fire
Trashcan Sinatras - Cake
Everything but the Girl - Amplified Heart
Patty Griffin - Living with Ghosts
Lloyd Cole - Love Story
The Smiths - Louder than Bombs
Natalie Merchant - Tigetlily
Hothouse Flowers - Songs From the Rain
the Cure - Disintegration
Norah Jones - Come Away With Me
Luka Bloom - Salty Heaven
the Alarm - Change
Duncan Sheik - Daylight
the Church - Starfish
the Replacements - Pleased to Meet Me
Cactus World News - Urban Beaches
Devlins - Waiting
Daniel Lanois - Acadie
Peter Gabriel - Us
Suzanne Vega - Songs in Red and Grey
New Order - Substance
Bruce Springsteen - Ghost of Tom Joad
Sting - Soul Cages
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abigail law
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Username: Abigail

Post Number: 21
Registered: 06-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 05:52 pm:   

hmmm in no particular order

big star sister lover/tird
neil young after the goldrush
smiths hatful of hollow
mark eitzel songs of love live
nina simone Emergency Ward/It Is Finished/Black Gold [Live] triple album
stone roses stone roses
nico chelsea girls
nick cave boatmans call
pixies doolittle
stones exile on main street
joy division unkown pleasures

hardly anything under 20 years' old
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Jeff Whiteaker
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Username: Jeff_whiteaker

Post Number: 150
Registered: 10-2004
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 07:57 pm:   

oops! forgot to indulge in a few 'on the edge' honorable mentions:

eno - another green world
bowie - scary monsters
big star -third/sister lovers
joy division - closer
teardrop explodes - wilder
style council - our favorite shop
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Kurt Stephan
Member
Username: Slothbert

Post Number: 108
Registered: 04-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 09:14 pm:   

A few "bubbling under" choices from me too (following my arbitrary "no repeat artists" rule; "16LL" and "Liberty Belle" would both be ahead of any of these):

Dylan - Blood on the Tracks
Talking Heads - Fear of Music
Husker Du - Flip Your Wig
Wire - Chairs Missing
XTC - Black Sea
Beatles - Abbey Road (or Revolver? Rubber Soul?)
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spence
Member
Username: Spence

Post Number: 43
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 05, 2006 - 09:25 pm:   

some great stuff listed.. here's mine, in no order of merit:
1 Magazine - The Correct use of soap
2 Kings of convenience - Riot on an empty street
3 XTC - English Settlement
4 Spike Priggen - The very thing that you treausure
5 Josef K - The only fun in town
6 Pixies - Doolittle
7 Blue Aeroplanes - Swagger
8 Felt - The Pictorial Jackson Review
9 Television - Marquee Moon
10 Matthew Sweet - Girlfriend
11 Orange Juice - You can't hide your love forever
12 Jazateers - Jazzateers
13 The Stranglers - Rattus Norvegicus
14 Associates - Sulk
15 The Jam - All mod cons
16 Paul Haig - The warp of pure fun
17 Wilco - A ghost is born
18 The Go betweens - Oceans
19 The Beatles - Rubber Soul
20 The Beach Boys - Sunflower/Surfs up
'on the edge' runner's up:
21 Associates - Perhaps (cassette version)
22 Tuxedo Moon - Desire
23 Momus - Circus Maximus
24 Del Amitri - Del Amitri
25 The Clash - London Calling
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Dusty
Member
Username: Dusty

Post Number: 18
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, January 06, 2006 - 10:12 am:   

OK, here we go. In no particular order:

16 Lovers Lane
Lambchop - Is a woman
Beach Boys - Friends
David Crosby - If only I could remember my name
Gene Clark - No Other
Pavement - Crooked rain
Fall - Groteque
Sun Kil Moon - Ghosts of the great highway
Robert Forster - Danger in the Past
Smiths - Meat is Murder
Little Feat - Dixie Chicken
Steely Dan - Aja
David Sylvian - Brilliant Trees
Talking Heads - Remain in Light
Grandaddy - Sophtware Slump
Smog - Red Apple Falls
Triffids - Calenture
Byrds - Sweetheart of Rodeo
Colorblind James - Strange Sounds from the Basement
Townes Van Zandt - Flying Shoes
Nick Cave - The Good Son
Orange Juice - Can't Hide Love Forever or The Orange Juice
The Very Best of Chris De Burgh*

*Only joking
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jerry hann
Member
Username: Jerry_h

Post Number: 36
Registered: 07-2005
Posted on Friday, January 06, 2006 - 03:01 pm:   

The Go-betweens-16LL
Bruce springsteen-Darkness
Elvis Costello- Get Happy
Neil Young-After the Goldrush
Lloyd Cole-Rattlesnakes
Billy Bragg-Brewing Up w
The Pogues -Rum Sodomy and the Lash
Nick Cave-Boatmans Call
Tom Waits-Raindogs and Asylum Years
Flatlanders-1st album
The Smiths-Hatful of Hollow
Johnny Cash- American Recordings 111
The Band-The Band
The Rockingbirds-Rockingbirds
Teenage Fanclub-Grandprix
and Desert Island book is Collected Works of Conan Doyle.
Could be other albums by all these artists
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jerry hann
Member
Username: Jerry_h

Post Number: 37
Registered: 07-2005
Posted on Friday, January 06, 2006 - 03:12 pm:   

The Go-betweens-16LL
Bruce springsteen-Darkness
Elvis Costello- Get Happy
Neil Young-After the Goldrush
Lloyd Cole-Rattlesnakes
Billy Bragg-Brewing Up w
The Pogues -Rum Sodomy and the Lash
Nick Cave-Boatmans Call
Tom Waits-Raindogs and Asylum Years
Flatlanders-1st album
The Smiths-Hatful of Hollow
Johnny Cash- American Recordings 111
The Band-The Band
The Rockingbirds-Rockingbirds
Teenage Fanclub-Grandprix
and Desert Island book is Collected Works of Conan Doyle.
Could be other albums by all these artists
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Michael Leach
Member
Username: Mike_l

Post Number: 9
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, January 06, 2006 - 03:43 pm:   

I'll just go five, I think:

1. Van Morrison - Astral Weeks
2. Beatles - Revolver
3. Go-Betweens - 16LL
4. The Jam - Modern World
5. Triffids - Treeless Plain
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kevin
Member
Username: Kevin

Post Number: 54
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, January 06, 2006 - 03:44 pm:   

Can I take this off on a slight tangent? Does anybody agree with me that the best time to experience an album is at the moment in time it is released, and then grow with it in the following years? I was born in the early 60s and was a teenager when Punk hit in the late 70s. I believe that this made me the perfect age to fully experience and appreciate all those great punk and new wave albums because I was evolving with them. I could be wrong but I dont think that a 17 year old (in say the late 80s or 90s) hearing these albums (Clash, Pistols, Ramones, PIL, Wire, Talking Heads etc) for the first time could possibly get the same enjoyment I (we?) got because the moment had passed, they werent "living" it? Conversely I feel like that about blues/jazz from the 40s/50s, or Dylan/Stones/Byrds/Doors/Velvets from the mid 60s. Sure I love this music, but I wasnt there at the time when it must have been amazing!
Almost as frustratingly for me, this can apply to the young guitar bands of the here and now. I have heard a download of The Arctic Monkeys album and after 3 listens I think its sounds great. But heres where the frustration kicks in, it ticks all the boxes - melodies, exciting guitars, bouncy melodic (sometimes funky bass) and a good contrast in the vocals - sometimes shouty, sometimes tender. However,I know if I was 17 it would sound like the best record I had ever heard in my life. Sorry that this is a bit of a ramble, but its the bestI can do - it would be easier to put this over verbally o:-)
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jerry hann
Member
Username: Jerry_h

Post Number: 38
Registered: 07-2005
Posted on Friday, January 06, 2006 - 03:59 pm:   

Hi Kevin. I agree to a certain extent, and am of a similar age, I metioned someting similar on another thread,about music not being as good now ( I was talking about hype/promotion of decidedly average bands). But I think the real reason is that, as you say, you grow up with a band and also at that impressionable age ( teens mid-late) you are starting to really appreciate and relate to music, books, art etc. You are really up for everything, and this has a great impact and I think as you get older it's harder to feel the same excitement as you did then. I rarely feel so enthusiastic now about new music or even new discoveries as I did when I was 15 ( and upwards) at hearing The Great Punk acts or when I was at University in London seeing the Smith /Go-Betweens/ Costello/REM etc. On the Otherhand some older music can still change your life I remebmber first hearing Thunder Road when I was 16 and thinking this is proper serious music and that had a real impact on my tastes/life etc.
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XY765
Member
Username: Judge

Post Number: 1
Registered: 01-2006
Posted on Friday, January 06, 2006 - 04:26 pm:   

in no particular order...and i'm sure i've missed a few..

Wilco-Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
Luna-Bewiched
My Bloody Valentine-Loveless
Spacemen 3-Recurring
Bob Dylan-Blood on the Tracks
The Beatles-Revolver/Abbey Road
Iggy & the Stooges-No Fun
Spectrum-Soul Kiss Glide Divine
The Wedding Present-George Best
The Smiths-Strangeways Here We Come
Van Morrisson-Moondance
Neil Young & CrazyHorse-Zuma
Jesus & Mary Chain-Psychocandy
Go-Betweens-16 Lovers Lane
Spiritualized-Pure Phase
Velvet Underground-VU-Previously Unreleased
Pavement-Slanted & Enchanted
The Flaming Lips-Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots/Hit to Death in the Future Head
Tom Waits-The Black Rider
The Modern Lovers-Modern Lovers
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abigail law
Member
Username: Abigail

Post Number: 22
Registered: 06-2005
Posted on Friday, January 06, 2006 - 05:29 pm:   

my god! how could I have left out funhouse by iggy & the stooges......
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kevin
Member
Username: Kevin

Post Number: 55
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, January 06, 2006 - 08:42 pm:   

As a follow on from my post about experiencing albums at their genesis, I'll never forget the thrill of buying my first ever album. My 9th birthday, November 21st 1970 and rushing to the local record shop to buy Let it Be by the Beatles. From memory the album had been out for about a fortnight and I was counting down the days till I had birthday money and could afford to buy it. Possibly the greatest day of my life - I felt so grown up!
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Randy Adams
Member
Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 124
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Saturday, January 07, 2006 - 02:21 am:   

I agree that the age of the person is important rather than the age of the music. When I was 16, it was late 1972. Pop music was sinking deep into a phase of bloated degeneration that I still view as a nadir, although I am now aware of a decent undercurrent of good records from the time. I remember the excitement my best friend and I had when we first got hold of the first Velvet Underground album which was about five years old then. I also remember the intense thrill of discovering the first Thirteenth Floor Elevators album, about six years old at that time. And, speaking of another two-guitar wonder band, I also remember how excited we were over the discovery of the Easybeats' five or six year old "Friday on my Mind" album. We felt like the last survivors of a dying race. By the time interesting new music started to reach us we were about 20. "Never Mind the Bollocks" seemed like the perfect update of Phil Spector's Wall of Sound. Everything was a great discovery then, but that's because the music scene was finally dynamic again. It was objectively different than it had been before. The major labels were bypassed by the little indies and zillions of bands were putting out their often quite imaginative singles.

There are particular eras that are exceptional, for example 1964 to 1967 and 1976 to 1979. Those two time periods brought incredible upheaval and progression in the world of pop music. I have no doubt that there is at least one more newer similar period but I am not personally qualified to identify it. If you arrived in one of these great eras during your teens, you hit a sweet spot that cannot be improved upon.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 112
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, January 07, 2006 - 02:48 am:   

I mostly agree with you Kevin. Of my selections only The Beach Boys and Marvin Gaye predate either my birth or my starting to appreciate music. Most of my selections back up what I've always thought; which is that your favourite albums tie you to a time and place you like to be reminded of.

With The Chills, it is seeing them in Sydney in 1992 when the album came out and playing the album on the bus to work. The Lemonheads ties me to earlier the same year. Kate Bush's Hounds Of Love came out the year I finished high school and was working an awful job as a hotel restaurant waiter. The Pursuit Of Happiness and Pixies tie me to living in Boston in 1989. (Last June I was walking around my home village in Ireland listening to Love Junk on the iPod and it struck me that a similar stroll around the village more than 16 years earlier would have found me listening to the exact same album on a cassette walkman!). The Waterboys' Fisherman’s Blues reminds me of a particular girl and missing her and Ireland when I returned to Boston in 1990. (I know that Fisherman's Blues came out in 1988 though, of course. I bought it on vinyl in the Sound Cellar on Nassau St the week it came out. It was probably the one non metal/ blues album bought there that day!).

Pet Sounds always makes me think of listening to it immediately after I bought it in Cork in December 1991. It was cold, dark and drizzling rain but I was wearing a Hawaiian shirt under my leather jacket (I really was) and was grinning like an idiot at how amazing the album was. It had such a reputation to live up to and it did.

By the way, it's good to see that I am not the only one who adores Murmur above all other R.E.M. albums.
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M. Mark Burgess
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Username: Fortysomething

Post Number: 58
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, January 07, 2006 - 06:08 am:   

I think that the best albums are the ones that always stay with you. I always give a new album at least ten years and if I still enjoy it as much as when I first heard it then it's a classic for me.
1. Fairport Convention---Unhalfbricking
2. Velvet Underground--Same
3. Bob Dylan--Highway 61
4. Shirley Collins--No Roses
5. Go-Betweens--16LL
6. Television--Marquee Moon
7. Richard and Linda Thompson--I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight
8. Nick Drake--Pink Moon
9. X--Wild Gift
10. Beatles--Revolver
11. Capt. Beefheart--Trout Mask
12. Steeleye Span--Below the Salt
13. XTC--Nonsuch
14. Nico--The Marble Index
15. Byrds--Fifth Dimension
16. Midnight Oil--Diesel and Dust
17. Ashley Hutchings,et al--Son of Morris On
18. Shirley Collins--Love, Death and the Lady
19. Elvis Costello--This Year's Model
20. Talking Heads--Buildings and Food
Honourable mentions
1. Lou Reed--The Blue Mask(Robert Quine R.I.P)
2. The Kinks--Something Else
3. Fotheringay--Same
4. Sonic Youth--Daydream Nation
5. Savoy Brown--Raw Sienna
Best album in the last ten years
John Cale--Hobo Sapiens
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Erhard Grundl
Member
Username: Erhardgrundl

Post Number: 7
Registered: 09-2005
Posted on Saturday, January 07, 2006 - 02:16 pm:   

as i said before, i love lists like that. here are my favourites:

old no 1 - Guy Clark
velvet underground and nico
the clash(first album)
white blood cells - white stripes
at san quentin - johnny cash
green river - creedence clearwater revival
low - bowie
ziggy stardust - bowie
tonight`s the night - neil young
everybody knows this is nowhere -neil&crazy horse
buffalo springfield - first album
la maison de mon reve - coco rosie
liberty belle - go-betweens
tunnel of love - bruce springsteen
your funeral my trial - nick cave and the bad seeds
i`m your man - leonard cohen
and far too many Bob Dylan albums
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kevin
Member
Username: Kevin

Post Number: 56
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, January 07, 2006 - 07:24 pm:   

Christ, how could I leave out Grotesque by The Fall. Knew I should have done more than a top 5 so here is a top 20

The Fall - Grotesque
David Bowie - Low
Joy Division - Closer
Super Ape - Lee Perry
American Music Club - California
Husker Du - Warehouse Songs and Stories
Stooges - Funhouse
Smiths - Strangeways...
Talking Heads - Remain in Light
Wire - 154
PIL - Metal Box
Stones - Let It Bleed
Pixies - Surfer Rosa
VU - VU and Nico
REM - Murmer
Radiohead - Kid A
Television - Marquee Moon
Gof4 - Entertainment
Only Ones - Even Serpents Shine
Wilco - YHF
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John Flood
Member
Username: Floodjo

Post Number: 46
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, January 07, 2006 - 11:47 pm:   

Nice music discussion - I agree with lots of it though finding something new can still me a tremendous kick - e.g. hearing that Damian Rice album O - love it. Something different from first listen. (When's he going to bother bringing out something new, I wonder). Or Joshs Ritter & Rouse - great music in any age! They've given me a great buzz recently. Still, the pure excitement of Bowie at his peak (Ziggy days) will never be matched. I was about 14 and in awe of him. I remember feeling physically sick when he announced his "retirement" 33 bloody years ago - the cheeky bastard!

Fave Albums :

Bowie - Ziggy
Dylan - Desire
Beatles - Revolver
REM - Green
Go-Betweens - Tallulah
Planxty - The Woman I loved so Well
Kristin Hersh - Hips & Makers
Al Stewart - Past, Present & Future
Van Morrison - Astral Weeks
James - Laid
Pierce Turner - The Sky & the Ground
Renaissance - A Song for all Seasons
Genesis - Selling England by the Pound
Prefab Sprout - Steve Mc Queen
Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon
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Mark Leydon
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Username: Mark_leydon

Post Number: 27
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Sunday, January 08, 2006 - 11:35 pm:   

Love the eclecticism of most peoples choices. So I'm not the only person who likes The GBs AND the Allman Bros! Here's some of my favs:

The Go-Betweens - Spring Hill Fair/Oceans Apart
Steely Dan - Countdown to Ecstasy
Buzzcocks - Singles Going Steady
XTC - Drums and Wire
The Lemonheads Best of - the Atlantic Years
Lou Reed - Rock'n'Roll Animal
The Smiths - The Queen is Dead (I did pause for thought when I read this is the favorite album of the new Tory party leader David Davies)
The Strokes - Is this It?
J Giels Band - Live Full House
Tim Buckley - Greetings From LA
Crowded House - Temple of Low Men
The Beat - The Beat (the 'English' Beat to anyone in the US)
Elvis Costello - Get Happy/Trust/Imperial Bedroom
Bob Dylan - Highway 61 Revisted/Blood on the Tracks
Allman Brother Band - Live at the Fillmore East
Finn Brothers - Finn
Led Zeppelin - How the West Was Won
Pixies - Waves of Mutilation (best of)
The Blue Nile - A Walk Across the Rooftops
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Guy Morton
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Username: Guym

Post Number: 5
Registered: 09-2005
Posted on Sunday, January 08, 2006 - 11:51 pm:   

Here's the 20 I can think of offhand:

The Teardrop Explodes - Wilder
The Church - Seance
Iggy Pop - New Values
Television - Marquee Moon
Elvis C & the Attractions - This Year's Model
REM - Murmur
Pretenders - Learning to Crawl
Wilco - AM
Bob Dylan - Blood on the Tracks
Go-Betweens - 16 Lovers Lane
Something for Kate - Echolalia
Aimee Mann - I'm With Stupid
Alice Cooper - Welcome to my Nightmare
Crowded House - Woodface
Hoodoo Gurus - Stoneage Romeos
Icecream Hands - Sweeter than the Radio
Jellyfish - Spilt Milk
Dave Grany & the Coral Snakes - Night of the Wolverine
Ben Folds Five - Ben Folds Five
Hunters and Collectors - Juggernaut

Guy
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XY765
Member
Username: Judge

Post Number: 2
Registered: 01-2006
Posted on Monday, January 09, 2006 - 02:01 pm:   

oops, forgot to mention Beck's 'Seachange' in there.....also i see a few people have mentioned Mary Margaret O'Hara's incredible "Miss America", has anyone heard her Chrismas EP or the 5 or 6 songs she contributed to the 'Apartment Life' soundtrack? i heard they were very good...
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Graham Twyford
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Username: Graham_twyford

Post Number: 28
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Monday, January 09, 2006 - 02:04 pm:   

Agree with Kevin about time influencing what makes an album great. Undoubtedly that has some influence on my selection:

Altered Beast - Matthew Sweet
Heartworm - Whipping Boy
Murmur - REM
Liberty Belle and The Black Diamond Express - The Go-Betweens
Fables of the Reconstruction - REM
Miss America - Mary Margaret O'Hara
The Good Will Out - Embrace
Suzanne Vega - Suzanne Vega
Abstinence - Popsicle
Automatic for the People - REM
Marion - This World and Body
Marquee Moon - Television
100 Broken Windows - Idlewild
Harvest - Neil Young
Steve McQueen - Prefab Sprout
Antics - Interpol
Vivadixiesubmarinetransmissionplot - Sparklehorse
Before Hollywood - The Go-Betweens
Dog Man Star - Suede
Spoon and Rafter - Mojave 3
XO - Elliott Smith
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Donat
Member
Username: Donat

Post Number: 109
Registered: 11-2004
Posted on Monday, January 09, 2006 - 02:47 pm:   

There are some killer lists here! Here's mine.

Television - Adventure
The Saints - Prehistoric Sounds
Lou Reed - Berlin
Verlaines - Hallelujah All The Way Home
Laughing Clowns - Mr Uddich Schmuddich Goes To Town
Red Crayola - Soldier-Talk
John Cale - Paris 1919
Go Betweens - Send Me A Lullaby
Apartments - The Evening Visits ...and Stays For Years
Dusty Springfield - Dusty In Memphis
Felt - Strange Idols Pattern & Other Short Stories
Neil Young - Tonight's The Night
Bob Dylan - Blood On The Tracks
The Clean - Great Sounds Great, Good Sounds Good, So-so Sounds So-so, Bad Sounds Bad, Rotten Sounds Rotten
The Triffids - In The Pines
Velvet Underground - s/t
John Lennon - Plastic Ono Band
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Jerry Clark
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Username: Jerry

Post Number: 121
Registered: 08-2004
Posted on Monday, January 09, 2006 - 06:53 pm:   

The Byrds - Sweetheart Of The Rodeo
Bob Dylan - Desire
Talking Heads - Speaking In Tongues
Bjork - Homogenic
Doves - The Last Broadcast
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Randy Adams
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Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 125
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Tuesday, January 10, 2006 - 03:53 am:   

Choosing best albums is really tough. There's always something that could be improved upon, but here are ones that have stood out for me over the years that I don't already see on someone else's list here:

In the Dark -- Toots & the Maytals
Confessions of a Mind -- The Hollies
Easter Everywhere -- 13th Floor Elevators
The Great Speckled Bird --same (Ian & Sylvia)
Odyssey & Oracle -- The Zombies
Out of Our Heads (U.S. version) -- Rolling Stones
From a Whisper to a Scream -- Esther Phillips
Never Mind the Bollocks -- Sex Pistols
Nevada Fighter -- Michael Nesmith & 1st Natl Band
New Routes -- Lulu
Real Life -- Magazine
Chrominance Decoder -- April March
Character Assassination -- Ed Kuepper
A Century Ends -- David Gray
Good Earth -- The Feelies
Bend Sinister -- The Fall
Here Come the Warm Jets -- Eno
Good Friday -- Easybeats
After Everything Now This -- The Church
West of Rome -- Vic Chesnutt
Spotlight Kid -- Captain Beefheart
Digital Ash -- Bright Eyes
Gorilla -- Bonzo Dog Band
Radio City -- Big Star
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Simon Withers
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Username: Sfwithers

Post Number: 5
Registered: 08-2005
Posted on Tuesday, January 10, 2006 - 11:12 am:   

In alphabetical order...

The Beatles: Revolver
The Beatles: Rubber Soul
Belle & Sebastian: Tigermilk
Kate Bush: Hounds of Love
Chills: Submarine Bells
The Cure: Seventeen Seconds
Nick Drake: 5 Leaves Left
Go-Betweens: 16 Lovers Lane
Go-Betweens: Spring Hill Fair
Jefferson Airplane: After Bathing at Baxter’s/Crown of Creation (first side of ABaB, second side of CoC...)
Ed Kuepper: Everybody’s Got To
Jimmy Little: Messenger
Love: Forever Changes
Nirvana: Nevermind
Portishead: Dummy
REM: Reckoning
Saints: Prehistoric Sounds
The Smiths: Strangeways Here We Come
The Smiths: Hatful of Hollow
Velvet Underground & Nico: Velvet Underground & Nico

This gives an idea of my favourites at the moment, though it misses out David Byrne, Talking Heads, Teardrop Explodes, Jacques Brel, Doors, Dandy Warhols, Crowded House and loads more. And I could list loads of GBs, Chills, Belle & Sebastian, Kate Bush, Cure, Nick Drake, REM, etc, plus compilations of Beatles, Ed Kuepper, Nick Drake, Lovin’ Spoonful... but that would be well over 20...
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Geoff Holmes
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Username: Geoff

Post Number: 35
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Tuesday, January 10, 2006 - 10:40 pm:   

It's been heartening to see so many references to the Teardrop Explodes. I didn't think they were very well known or regarded. You could always "freak out the straights" in normal record (ah...remember them???) shops here in Australia just by mentioning the name! I was going to list "Fried" by Julian Cope. Does anybody here rate any of his stuff? And how DO you approach basically anything by him after he swam with dolphins??? I find lots of his later stuff nearly unlistenable, although his "Address Druidian" on his website is a cack but sort of scary.
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Donat
Member
Username: Donat

Post Number: 111
Registered: 11-2004
Posted on Wednesday, January 11, 2006 - 02:19 am:   

Julian Cope had some good singles in the 80s, like 'Charlotte Anne' for example :-)
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Kurt Stephan
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Username: Slothbert

Post Number: 111
Registered: 04-2005
Posted on Wednesday, January 11, 2006 - 05:19 am:   

I saw Teardrop in a rare U.S. performance in '81 (before "Wilder" came out, I believe) and it didn't leave a big impression. I've had sort of a love/hate relationship with Teardrop/Cope over the years. I loved the single "World Shut Your Mouth" for a long time, now it sounds like bombastic generic rock to me. I really got into "Peggy Suicide" when it came out but failed to follow Cope into the weirder territory that followed. I've probably missed a lot of good stuff, but to me he's like Robyn Hitchcock--wildly prolific, but a person can only take so much of it.
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Michael Bachman
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Username: Michael_bachman

Post Number: 25
Registered: 01-2005
Posted on Wednesday, January 11, 2006 - 05:03 pm:   

Last Cope I bought was Peggy Suicide back in 1990.
On the other hand I am a Robyn Hitchcock fanatic,
and have just about all his releases except for a compilation or two and some vinyl only stuff.
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Jeff Whiteaker
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Username: Jeff_whiteaker

Post Number: 152
Registered: 10-2004
Posted on Wednesday, January 11, 2006 - 05:40 pm:   

geoff - i LOVE the teardrop explodes immensely. words can't describe how happy both 'kilamanjaro' and 'wilder' make me.

i like cope's first 2 solo records too, 'world shut your mouth' and 'fried.' not as good as teardrops but they still definitely have their moments. i don't like anything i've heard after that, and to be honest, i don't think i've even heard *anything* after 'peggy suicide' era. there just didn't seem to be any reason to keep up with it.
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spence
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Username: Spence

Post Number: 47
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 12, 2006 - 12:06 am:   

Julian Cope I saw in '91 or '92 in Birmingham around the Peggy Suicide thing and he playyed one of the greateset 10 minute guitar solo's I have EVER seen/heard, the song was Safe Surfer. It is a great album. Probably way ahead of its time on reflection.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 113
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 12, 2006 - 04:42 am:   

I agree Spence. Peggy Suicide is a terrific album; one that has stood the test of time. I bought it on cassette when it came out in 1991 after Melody Maker gave it a rave review. I loved it from the start. I only finally got it on CD about six months ago.

I haven't bought anything he released since then but I have heard several of them through a Cope-mad friend of mine. None made me want to go out and buy my own copy, though Jehovakill had some good moments.

I saw him live once but have to admit I spent most of the gig at the bar.
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Geoff Holmes
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Username: Geoff

Post Number: 36
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 12, 2006 - 10:11 pm:   

Peggy Suicide always got the good rap but it wasn't pop enough for my tastes. I listened to Jehovakill a couple of months ago and, to my suprise, I could actually listen to it though I haven't been back. "Autogeddon" was like a big fat zero with me, as was "Interpretor" where I pretty much left off ('96?). What made me persist for an album past his use by date was the brilliant "20 Mothers". "Try,Try,Try" was glorious Cope pop which I presumed was written to top the charts and fill his coffers to fund his archeological "trips" and voluminous writings.
He's one of the big ones that I haven't seen yet! I missed the Teardrops in Sydney by a few days in 1982 on a school vice-royal sorjourn and again in England by a month in 2000. I am extremely envious of anyone who has seen him as he's indicated he will never be back to the Antipodes.....unless someone can find a stone circle down here!!
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Donat
Member
Username: Donat

Post Number: 113
Registered: 11-2004
Posted on Friday, January 13, 2006 - 02:50 am:   

Mark E Smith refuses to return to Australia, too. Perhaps its for the best - he sacked Martin Bramah and Marcia Schofield from the band last time they were here and had a huge falling out with Marc Riley the time before that...

You gotta love him, though - he's a lad.
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david pestorius
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Username: David_pestorius

Post Number: 31
Registered: 08-2005
Posted on Friday, January 13, 2006 - 10:42 am:   

I remember well the Teardrops tour to Australia in 1982. I did a radio interview with Cope in Brisbane at this time and clearly recall him raving about having recently been to a show by Glenn Branca's ten guitar ensemble in New York. Regrettably, the Teardrops shows in Brisbane and at Surfers Paradise hardly shook me out of my shoes. On the other hand, the Echo and the Bunnymen show at Cloudland in Brisbane, not long beforehand, was really intense, with The Doors 'When the Music's Over' fittingly played through the P.A. before the band took to the stage. I also saw an early Cope solo show in London around May 1984, I think it was at the Hammersmith Palais, which also was nothing to write home about, unfortunately. Didn't stop me from reading Cope's autobiography, which I can thoroughly recommend to anyone even vaguely interested.
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Jerry Clark
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Username: Jerry

Post Number: 123
Registered: 08-2004
Posted on Friday, January 13, 2006 - 12:30 pm:   

I've been meaning to buy Cope's autobiography, Courtney Love, Pete DeFreitas, McCulloch, Pete Wylie and Cope himself would make a better sitcom/dramatisation than the Gallagher bros. one that's on tv at the moment.
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Jerry Clark
Member
Username: Jerry

Post Number: 125
Registered: 08-2004
Posted on Saturday, January 14, 2006 - 01:26 am:   

Anyway, I digress.

The Kinks - Are The Village Green Preservation Society
Roxy Music - Stranded
Marvin Gaye - Here, My Dear
The Associates - The Affectionate Punch
Pulp - This Is Hardcore
Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Fever To Tell

... and as a sorbet for the palate, Tubular Bells, you have to hear shit to truly appreciate the magnificent.
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Rob
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Username: Rob

Post Number: 44
Registered: 12-2004
Posted on Saturday, January 14, 2006 - 10:24 am:   

jerry, great to see you dropping your selections in bunches rather than by the bucketload

rather than add my own, i'll say that your ray & dave/bryan & brian/marvin/billy/jarvis selection is so good, the fact that i've not heard anything by the yyys won't stop me seconding it
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Roland Michaener
Member
Username: Mr_roland

Post Number: 1
Registered: 01-2006
Posted on Monday, January 16, 2006 - 08:52 pm:   

Curtis Mayfield - There's No Place Like America Today
Neil Young - On The Beach
Tommy Keene - Based On Happy Times
Bruce Springsteen - Darkness On the Edge of Town
Billie Holiday - The Lady in Autumn
Okkervil River - Black Sheep Boy
Centro-matic - All the Falsest Hearts Can Try
Elvis Costello and the Attractions - Armed Forces
The Jam - This is the Modern World
The Who - Quadrophenia
The Beatles - Revolver
Will Johnson - Murder of Tides
Patty Griffin - Flaming Red
John Prine - s/t
Rick Springfield - Working Class Dog
The Smiths - The Queen Is Dead
The Cure - Disintegration
Pixies - Doolittle
The Replacements - Let It Be
Minutemen - Double Nickels on the Dime
Wire - Pink Flag
The Clash - s/t
KISS - Double Platinum
Robyn Hitchcock - I Often Dream of Trains
Ryan Adams - Cold Roses
Uncle Tupelo - No Depression

okay, that's it. no more typing for me. Yeah, yeah there's thousands I've missed. I'm tired.
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kuba a
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Username: Kuba

Post Number: 29
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Monday, January 16, 2006 - 09:07 pm:   

Stone Roses - s/t
Go-Betweens - 16LL
Beatles - Sgt Pepper's
Television - Marquee Moon
XTC - Skylarking
Triffids - Born Sandy Devotional
Mansun - Six
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Randy Adams
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Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 133
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Tuesday, January 17, 2006 - 04:37 pm:   

It's fascinating how many people put "Revolver" on their lists. When it was new it was always overshadowed by "Rubber Soul" and "Sgt. Pepper." For me, it is a mixed bag. "Tomorrow Never Knows" is almost frighteningly ahead of its time whereas most of the McCartney songs seem slight.
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Matt Ellis
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Username: Matt_ellis

Post Number: 41
Registered: 11-2004
Posted on Wednesday, January 18, 2006 - 12:19 am:   

1 The Go-Betweens - Liberty Belle
2 R.E.M. - Murmur
3 Mover - Mover
4 Radiohead - Pablo Honey
5 Smashing Pumpkins - Machina: The Machines of God
6 Sluts of Trust - We Are All Sluts Of Trust
7 Smaller - Badly Badly
8 Pixies - Doolittle
9 Whipping Boy - Heartworm
10 The Apartments - The Evening Visits...
11 Kerbdog - On The Turn
12 Matt Deighton - The Common Good
13 Iron Maiden - Iron Maiden
14 Beastie Boys - Check Your Head
15 Split Enz - Mental Notes
16 Marion - This World And Body
17 Queen - Sheer Heart Attack
18 Jane's Addiction - Ritual De Lo Habitual
19 Mansun - The Attack of The Grey Lantern
20 Nine Black Alps - Everything Is

Looking at other folks choices - I'm suprised at how many excellent albums have been chosen, from a fairly narrow band of artists.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 132
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Wednesday, January 18, 2006 - 12:50 am:   

Matt, good on you for including Maiden! I bought their best of three years ago to remind me of my teen metal years. Wasted Years is an awesome song, though far closer to hardcore than metal. The solo in it is one of my favourites. I mentioned Def Leppard's double CD comp elsewhere on this board the other day. I got albums by TNT and Helloween this week to continue my teen metal regression! Haven't played them properly yet so I don't know if I still like those two or not.
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Peter Collins
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Username: Tyroneshoelaces

Post Number: 51
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Wednesday, January 18, 2006 - 12:36 pm:   

Hey, Pádraig - I think most blokes go through some sort of metal phase. Most of it I find embarrassing now, but I must admit recently purchasing the first Uriah Heep lp (Very 'Eavy, Very 'Umble) on CD. I think some things just stay with you, however dated.
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Michael Bachman
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Username: Michael_bachman

Post Number: 28
Registered: 01-2005
Posted on Wednesday, January 18, 2006 - 04:51 pm:   

Like Matt and Peter, I also admit to some Uriah Heep in my collection, vinyl though and not CD. Other vinyl only and no CD's that I have include Rolling Stones, Bob Seger, Foghat, Groundhogs, Kansas, Boston and many other 60/70's acts that I lost interest in 20 some years ago.
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Randy Adams
Member
Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 135
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 19, 2006 - 01:55 am:   

No arguments in favor of any of the other folks listed in Michael Bachman's Hall of Shame but I'll vouch for the lasting value of many of the things the Rolling Stones did from 1965 through about 1968. That was really their great era after which they should have disbanded as far as I am concerned and, yes, I discount the critics' beloved "Exile on Main Street" too.

The closest I ever got to metal was Bowie's great send-up of the genre, the entire "Man Who Sold the World" album. But I probably only escaped the clutches of metal by virtue of being about ten years older than you folks in Padraig's age cohort.

For my embarrassment, I admit to listening to the likes of Lene Lovich, totally unlistenable today, and . . . get ready for it . . . the first Adam & the Ants album.

Maybe we should have a thread for confessions of really bad music we used to like in our youth. Mine gets much worse: how about Ten Years After? If you are too young to know who they were, consider yourself very lucky indeed.
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 136
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 19, 2006 - 03:28 am:   

Start the thread Randy; it will be a popular one.
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Peter Collins
Member
Username: Tyroneshoelaces

Post Number: 52
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 19, 2006 - 10:56 am:   

There was a group of punks at my sixth form who considered the first Adam and the Ants album - Dirk Wears White Sox, wasn't it? - the apotheosis of cool, so I don't think that's so embarrassing. I have a rather large collection of Hawkwind vinyl, which stops some time in the 80s, but they go in and out of fashion and John Lydon likes them, so I'm not bothered.
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Randy Adams
Member
Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 136
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 19, 2006 - 04:26 pm:   

I've always loved "Mirror of Illusion."
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Michael Bachman
Member
Username: Michael_bachman

Post Number: 29
Registered: 01-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 19, 2006 - 05:12 pm:   

I used to listen to Lene Lovich a lot in the 79-83 period, along with many of her fellow Stiff Records contemporaries. Those were the days!
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Kurt Stephan
Member
Username: Slothbert

Post Number: 114
Registered: 04-2005
Posted on Thursday, January 19, 2006 - 05:59 pm:   

As far as embarrassing music from my past goes, I never had a heavy metal phase; Mott the Hoople was about as close as I got, but they were more a forerunner of late '70s punk, which was my noisy guitar music of choice as a teen. I hated Led Zeppelin back in those days; strangely, I kind of appreciate them now. So that's a current guilty pleasure.

I guess my worst infraction was being an Elton John fanatic in the mid-'70s, when he was at his peak of popularity and releasing two or three albums a year. Oh, and like every other teenager in the U.S., I bought "Frampton Comes Alive" in 1976. In my defense, I did it more to fit in and to try to impress girls. If you were in an American high school in '76 and wanted to get dates, you had to have that album in your collection.

Another fave from that era that some may give me a hard time for is the Stevie Nicks/Lindsay Buckingham-era Fleetwood Mac(at least through "Tusk"). After disavowing them for 20 years, I rediscovered their three good albums a few years ago and appreciate them a lot. I wouldn't argue with anyone who made comparisons between "Rumours" and "16LL."
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M. Mark Burgess
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Username: Fortysomething

Post Number: 62
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, January 20, 2006 - 01:57 am:   

Yeah, I too was a big Hawkwind freak back in the seventies, mainly because I was reading alot of sci-fi and they were associated with Mike Moorcock at times. I used to drive people out of my car with all my Hawkwind 8 tracks, especially the first one. Can't stand them now. though
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Randy Adams
Member
Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 138
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Friday, January 20, 2006 - 02:20 am:   

Ok, folks. Embarrassing confessions now have their own thread.
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Matt Ellis
Member
Username: Matt_ellis

Post Number: 42
Registered: 11-2004
Posted on Sunday, January 22, 2006 - 12:45 am:   

Cheers Pádraig, I always thought folk who were into Whipping Boy had a discernable ear (if they don't play London shortly I'm going to cry) As much as I love Maiden's debut, I'm afraid that I would say that I don't generally like metal. On a side note: It's a shame that Paul Di'Anno didn't stay with Maiden as I think the two albums featuring him are the best.

Michael - sadly I haven't heard any Uriah Heap yet. However, I once met the band after we discovered that they were in the next door rehearsal room to my band. Our band's manager noticed them, became delighted and collared them for half an hour! - nice guys.

I suppose I'm from the Def Leppard/Iron Maiden era metal (I'm 28). I do feel sorry for the younger generation though - the metal they are presented with comes in the form of tripe like The Darkness.
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kevin
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Username: Kevin

Post Number: 70
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Sunday, January 22, 2006 - 01:02 am:   

Matt said

"I do feel sorry for the younger generation though - the metal they are presented with comes in the form of tripe like The Darkness."

No offence Matt but I think we got the gist after the all important word tripe - in my dictionary if you look up the word tripe it says "heavy metal"
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Jerry Clark
Member
Username: Jerry

Post Number: 128
Registered: 08-2004
Posted on Thursday, January 26, 2006 - 09:06 pm:   

Thanks Rob, YYY's were actually quite succesful 2 years back, a new single is due in March, followed by a new album. Good times ahead, with Babybird also back together. :-)
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Hardin Smith
Member
Username: Manosludge

Post Number: 12
Registered: 03-2006
Posted on Monday, March 13, 2006 - 09:17 pm:   

Remarkable consensus - it seems a lot of the same names keep coming up...here's my 10, all in fact discs I'd want with me on a desert island:

16 Lovers Lane - The GoBs
Moondance - Van Morrison
King of America - Elvis Costello
Kinks Kronikles - The Kinks
Blood on the Tracks - Bob Dylan
Two Wheels Good (Steve McQueen) - Prefab Sprout
Raindogs - Tom Waits
All the Best Cowboys Have Chinese Eyes - Pete Townshend
After the Goldrush - Neil Young
Speaking in Tongues - Talking Heads
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steven drennan
Member
Username: Dj_steviedee

Post Number: 7
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Thursday, April 20, 2006 - 10:49 pm:   

one entry one album
unknown pleasures changed my life
opened my eyes to what i could do
when i dust it down to play it brings a tear to my eye as i write the tears are coming down my face
does that make it special
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 322
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, April 21, 2006 - 01:12 am:   

Yes it does Steven. There are many albums that bring tears to my eyes to.
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Jerry Clark
Member
Username: Jerry

Post Number: 282
Registered: 08-2004
Posted on Friday, April 21, 2006 - 11:00 am:   

Ian Curtis probably felt the same way, when he played Iggy's The Idiot. Is that true by the way? I've never read any books on the JD legend, nor have I seen 24hr PP.
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kevin
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Username: Kevin

Post Number: 393
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Friday, April 21, 2006 - 12:17 pm:   

Jerry, apparently Curtis had played The Idiot while drinking some whiskey, he then watched some "art" film whose title escapes me, before hanging himself. I am not advocating it by any means but thats a pretty rock n roll way to go.
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Jerry Clark
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Username: Jerry

Post Number: 284
Registered: 08-2004
Posted on Friday, April 21, 2006 - 12:37 pm:   

That is quite a R & R way to go. Instant myth making of the highest order. The film was probably a Warhol factory effort, they're not very good, if you're deep in depression already
But for all his shortcomings Michael Hutchence takes the trophy. I mean what was he thinking, didn't he feel that maybe if it all goes wrong it's not a very good way to be found. It's not as if he was short of female attention either.
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andreas
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Username: Andreas

Post Number: 14
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Monday, May 01, 2006 - 02:27 pm:   

to name ten, twenty, thirty it's almost impossible. so i decided to part it into decades:

sixties:

jerry jester & judy henske - farewell aldebaran
beach boys - pet sounds (1966)
captain beefheart and the magic band - safe as milk (1968)
neil young - 1st (1969)
the flying burrito brothers - the gilded palace of sin (1968)
love – forever changes (1968)
van dyke parks – song cycle (1968)
the band – same (1969)
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andreas
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Username: Andreas

Post Number: 15
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Monday, May 01, 2006 - 02:35 pm:   

here are the seventies and this list is much longer which surely has the reason in that waht was discussed above: the age and to what music someone have been socialised/grown up:

Grateful Dead – Workingman’s Dead (1970)
Bo Hansson – Lord of the Rings (1972)
Gene Clark – No other (1975)
Van Dyke Parks - Discover America (1972)
Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band - Shiny Beast (Bat Chain Puller) (1979)
Brian Eno – Taking Tiger Mountain (1974)
Allman Brothers Band – Live at Fillmore East (1971)
Crosby + Nash – Live (1977)
Caravan – In the Land of Grey and Pink (1971)
Curtis Mayfield – 1 st (1970)
Blue Oyster Cult – Some enchanted evening (1978)
Yes - Yessongs (1973)
Cluster – Zuckerzeit (1974)
Fall – Dragnet (1979)
X-Ray Spex – Germfree Adolescents (1978)
Gang of Four – Entertainment (1979)
Modern Lovers - The Modern Lovers (1977)
Joy Division – Unknown Pleasures (1979)
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andreas
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Username: Andreas

Post Number: 16
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Monday, May 01, 2006 - 02:41 pm:   

the eighties. grown-up. and a lotof fantatsic music:

Gang of Four – Solid Gold (1981)
Fun Boy Three – Waiting (1983)
Microdisney – Everybody is fantastic (1984)
The Go-Beetwens – Spring-Hill Fair (1984)
Scott Walker – Climate of Hunter (1984)
Minutemen – Double Nickles on the Dime (1984)
The Gun Club – The Las Vegas Story (1984)
Mark Stewart – As the Veneer of Democracy starts to fade (1985)
Robert Wyatt – Old Rottenhat (1985)
David Thomas – Monster walks the Winter Lake (1985)
Felt – Let the snakes crinkles their head to death (1986)
Talk Talk – Spirit of Eden (1988)

and everything from The Fall from Perverted by language till Bend Sinister!!!
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andreas
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Username: Andreas

Post Number: 17
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Monday, May 01, 2006 - 02:45 pm:   

now the nineties. maybe it could be the following ones:

talk talk - laughing stock (1991)
bim sherman - miracles (1996)
prefab sprout - andromeda heights (1997)
black box recorder -england made me (1998)
xtc - apple venus vol. 1 (1998)
mark hollis - same (1998)
rufus wainwright - same (1998)
jim o'rourke - eureka (1999)
the flaming lips - the soft bulletin (1999)
arab strap - elephant shoe (1999)
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andreas
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Username: Andreas

Post Number: 18
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Monday, May 01, 2006 - 02:51 pm:   

about the favourite albums of the current maybe i have to think later. what i like to say is, that reading all the above lists there showing that it seems that some of us have a similar 'education sentimentale' (Gustave Flaubert). that's fine!
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Randy Adams
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Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 400
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Monday, May 01, 2006 - 04:48 pm:   

Andreas, I love your lists. I'll be studying them and asking questions over time. Anybody who puts Neil Young's first album (a masterpiece in my opinion and it's all downhill afterwards) and the Fall's "Dragnet" on his favorite lists is somebody who does his own thinking.
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Pádraig Collins
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Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 351
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Tuesday, May 02, 2006 - 12:58 am:   

Bim Sherman, there's a man I have not listened to in quite a while. Must dig out the one album I have by him (don't think it's the one Andreas mentioned though).
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Michael Bachman
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Username: Michael_bachman

Post Number: 95
Registered: 01-2005
Posted on Tuesday, May 02, 2006 - 05:28 pm:   

Andreas, although I like Workingman's Dead a lot, my favorite Greatful Dead song is from American Beauty, "Box of Rain".
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andreas
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Username: Andreas

Post Number: 21
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Tuesday, May 02, 2006 - 07:38 pm:   

padraig, you should give especially the miracles album a listen. it is reggae played in acoustic style with an indian orchestra and talvin singh on it. marvellous.
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andreas
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Username: Andreas

Post Number: 22
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Tuesday, May 02, 2006 - 07:43 pm:   

miahael bachman, american beauty is the same quality level, no question. but if you discover new music on your way you often prefer your 'first love'- and i bought workingmans dead before i the american beauty album.
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andreas
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Username: Andreas

Post Number: 23
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Tuesday, May 02, 2006 - 08:04 pm:   

randy adams, no other album of neil young has a bigger impact on me than his first. many years after i bought the lp i read an discussion in a german music mag between michael ruff (german writer, musician (geisterfahrer) and rough trade record shop owner in hamburg in former times) and nikki sudden (r.i.p.) about their favourite neil young lp's. michael ruff disliked his first album because it sounded to him like that 'van dyke parks'-music (which he doen't like very much). at this time i didn't know nothing about van dyke parks. many years after that article i felt in love with the music of mr. parks and i remebered about that a.m. article - and it was absolutely clear to me that i ever loved this masterpiece.

and randy, my lists are surely eclectic. i think i just like good music and i have a big heart. what neil young meant to me in seventies, maybe mark e. smith meant to me in the eighties. somewhere in the nineties i lost the contact to both. neil young's albums were boring, and the fall seemed to try to don't loose the connection to new sounds - but that new sounds (electronic music liek drum and bass for example sounds fresher and much more innovative when i listened to the originals).
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andreas
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Username: Andreas

Post Number: 24
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Tuesday, May 02, 2006 - 08:22 pm:   

is there a limited space to write a message? i couldn't write much more in my above posting. and by the way: what i miss is a modify button. my typing errors and my english made this necessary!!!

the fall (continuing): over the last few years i once again felt in love with their music. last year i went to a concert of them. it was a strange experience. the last time i saw mark e.smith live was somewhere at the end of the eighties and he saved my life (because i stood at the front of the stage and the crowd pushed forward and nearly crushed me and my girlfriend. mark e. smith helped us as he hoisted us onto the stage where we enjoyed the show savely). now he looks crumpled, small, teethless and really old as he passed me by with his plastic bag. but on the stage he does his job as good as ever. the last album 'fall heads roll' was a good one. now they exist thirty years. and it seems that he will do his shows until he his unable to stay on the stage.
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Hardin Smith
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Username: Manosludge

Post Number: 431
Registered: 03-2006
Posted on Tuesday, May 02, 2006 - 08:35 pm:   

Andreas, your posts are "the sh_t"! That's a compliment - it's an American slang expression for: the greatest, the best, the coolest, and so on. Keep up the good work!
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andreas
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Username: Andreas

Post Number: 27
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Tuesday, May 02, 2006 - 09:03 pm:   

thank you very much for your compliment, hardin. i will try my best, but first i have to work to avoid that lot of typing errors. so, sorry.
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Randy Adams
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Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 405
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Tuesday, May 02, 2006 - 09:59 pm:   

Andreas, as far too many of my own posts demonstrate there does not seem to be any limitation to the length of a post. If you want to proofread and correct your post, click the "preview/post message" button at the bottom of the first page then make your modifications in the next page that you see. Make the changes in the window on the lower half of the screen. Then hit the bottom "preview/post message" button. After you hit that button, the version of the message that you see in the upper window will be the current version of your message. Once you like the message, click the "post this message" button directly below that upper window. You can keep changing the message as many time as you want until you hit "post this message."

I hope that explanation was clear enough.
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Pádraig Collins
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Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 354
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Wednesday, May 03, 2006 - 01:11 am:   

Randy, that was a very lawyer-esqe explanation of how to use the preview feature!
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kevin
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Username: Kevin

Post Number: 440
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Wednesday, May 03, 2006 - 01:16 am:   

Padraig, I was interested to see in your list you have Zen Arcade at No19. I was a massive Husker Du fan in the 80s but try as I might couldnt get into Zen Arcade, apart from Never Talking To You Again and Chartered Trips. I dont think they topped Warehouse Songs and Stories, particularly what used to be the old side 1. My problem may have been that I worked my way from Candy Apple Grey, to Warehouse...., then worked my way back to Zen. Did you buy Zen when it first came out, and "grow" with the band so to speak?
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Pádraig Collins
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Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 355
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Wednesday, May 03, 2006 - 01:25 am:   

No Kevin, Warehouse was my introduction to them too. But I just love Zen Arcade as a richer, deeper album. Warehouse has not stood the test of time for me as much as Zen and Candy; though it still has a lot of great songs.
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Keith Weston
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Username: Lumper5

Post Number: 2
Registered: 06-2006
Posted on Friday, June 16, 2006 - 03:45 pm:   

My "current" Top 10 would be:

10. Alexi Murdoch- Time w/o Consequence
9. Beatles - Revolver
8. Mojave 3 - Any Day Will Be Fine
7. Tim Buckley - Starsailor
6. Jam - Setting Sons
5. Nursery Crime - Genesis
4. August and Everything After - Counting Crows
3. Jean Paul Sartre Experience - Love Songs
2. any ablum that has "Waterloo Sunset" by Kinks
1. Yo La Tengo - I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One

This will change in one hour or less... I'm sure!
-online @ http://www.deeperintomusic.net
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andreas
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Username: Andreas

Post Number: 278
Registered: 04-2006
Posted on Friday, October 27, 2006 - 09:00 pm:   

kevin, my 'fall-story' is somewhere above ( 2nd of may). nothing spectacular.
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Little Keith
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Username: Manosludge

Post Number: 1030
Registered: 03-2006
Posted on Friday, October 27, 2006 - 09:18 pm:   

Your story is great, Andreas. Usually when fans say an artist saved their life, they don't mean it literally.

Your description of MES as "toothless" reminds me of a great, but disturbing story I read about him somewhere. The journalist apparently had full access and was witness to a horrible fight between Mark and his girlfriend at the time, probably Brix, who hit him in the grill with a phone receiver and apparently knocked out some teeth. Undaunted, Smith took the stage later, bleeding stumps clearly visible, but the girlfriend absent. Isn't he a pretty heavy drinker, too? That doesn't do wonders for your health, either.
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Jeff Whiteaker
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Username: Jeff_whiteaker

Post Number: 416
Registered: 10-2004
Posted on Friday, October 27, 2006 - 10:45 pm:   

Spence, I noticed the Jazzateers in your list. I've been curious about them for a while. I've read brief snippets about them here and there, and have been intrigued. Now even more so seeing them in your list. What were they like?
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kevin
Member
Username: Kevin

Post Number: 1058
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, October 28, 2006 - 01:14 am:   

Andreas, thanks for the story. MES saved your life literally, I wish I could say that!
My first Fall gig was in 1981 I think, MES spent the whole gig with his back to the audience and the setlist was almost exclusively new material at the time - eg the audience hadnt heard most of the songs on record( I think it may have been just before Grotesque came out, I could be wrong), and it was of course fantastic. One other memory of that Glasgow gig, was that members of the Scottish punk band The Exploited were in the front row and tried their best to verbally abuse MES in between songs. I'm sure I dont have to tell you who triumphed in these verbal jousts.

LK, MES is an extremely heavy drinker and has been for a number of years. Its a pity you guys dont have access to BBC4 via cable(or do you?), they are regularly showing a Fall documentary called The Frightening World Of Mark E Smith, it is highly entertaining, but also graphically shows what a heavy drinker he is.
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kevin
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Username: Kevin

Post Number: 1059
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, October 28, 2006 - 01:32 am:   

Christ, this is a great thread when you read it again. I actually had the brass necked audacity back in January to suggest that some of Padraigs list omitted better albums by some artists - not that I retract this Padraig :-)
Its interesting that our lists include albums and artists that we have all waxed lyrical at in many different threads over the subsequent months this year, we're a consistent bunch.
Must admit, I got a lump in my throat when I read M Marks list, we lost 2 friends this year.
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John B.
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Username: John_b

Post Number: 37
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Saturday, October 28, 2006 - 10:37 am:   

I remember reading this thread before I became a member and being deeply impressed by the lists and the stories such as Andreas'. I still am impressed and would like to add my favourites in no particular order. And yes, I am a big fan of live albums.

The Hummingbirds - Love Buzz
Joy Division - Closer
Television - Marquee Moon
Patti Smith - Radio Ethiopia
Bob Dylan - Desire
Wilco - Kicking Television
Sophia - De Nachten
The Walkabouts - Devil's Road
Sigur Ros - ()
Fehlfarben - Monarchie und Alltag
Bruce Springsteen - Darkness on the edge of Town
Steve Winwood - Steve Winwood
Crowded House - Debut
REM - Lifes Rich Pageant
Go-Betweens - Tallulah
The Cure - 17 Seconds
Talking Heads - Remain in Light
Neil Young - Live Rust
Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds - The Good Son
Indigo Girls - Nomads Indians Saints
The Smiths - The Queen is Dead
Interpol - Antics
Franz Ferdinand - Debut
Songs: Ohia - The Lioness
The Clash - London Calling

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