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The Velvet Underground

Blog

12…173Próximo
  • How diverse is your musical taste?

    Dez 16 2009, 17h42 por noheadbody

    First, make a list of your top-20 artists overall. Then, for each of these artists, add the 8 most similar artists to your list. Delete any duplicates, count up the number of entries on your list and this will give you some idea of how eclectic your listening habits are. A score of 8 represents an extremely unvaried musical taste while a 160 represents an extremely varied one.

    J.U.F.
    Kultur Shock
    Balkan Beat Box
    DeVotchKa x2
    Emir Kusturica & The No Smoking Orchestra/artist]
    Fanfare Ciocărlia
    Jason Wbley x2
    The World/Inferno Friendship Society
    Los Tres
    [artist]De Saloon/artist]
    Teleradio Donoso
    Primavera de Paraga
    Los Prisioneros x2
    Lucybell x2
    Difuntos Correa
    Fother Muckers
    Soda Stereo
    Cerati / Melero
    Babasónicos
    Charly García
    Fito Páez
    Illya Kuryaki and the Valderramas
    Luis Alberto Spinetta
    Pescado Rabioso
    Los Marty
    Le Baron
    Pastilla x2
    Los Concorde x3
    Eufemia
    La Gusana Ciega x6
    Los Dynamite x2
    Thermo
    A Hawk and a Hacksaw x2
    Beirut
    Gogol Bordello
    Firewater
    Andrew Bird x2
    Andrew Bird's Bowl of Fire
    The Decemberists
    Pink Floyd
    Kaleidoscope
    Jefferson Airplane
    Rick Wright
    13th Floor Elevators
    David Gilmour
    Roger Waters
    The Velvet Underground
    Porter x2
    Fobia x3
    Kinky
    Bengala x2
    Jumbo x4
    Chetes
    John Lennon x2
    Julian Lennon
    thenewno2
    Paul McCartney x2
    George Harrison x2
    Albert Hammond Jr.
    Rufus Wainwright
    Ben Kweller
    Sufjan Stevens
    Grizzly Bear
    Bon Iver
    Fleet Foxes
    The Dodos
    Devendra Banhart
    Kaiser Chiefs
    Dirty Pretty Things
    The Pigeon Detectives
    Franz Ferdinand
    Arctic Monkeys
    The Wombats
    The Kooks
    The Zutons
    Caifanes x2
    Maldita Vecindad
    Liquits x2
    Zoé x4
    Plastilina Mosh x2
    Ringo Starr
    Paul McCartney & Wings
    Wings
    The Who
    Paul & Linda McCartney
    William Shatner
    William Shatner & Leonard Nimoy
    DarkMateria
    Warp 11
    Brent Spiner
    Alexander Courage
    Dennis McCarthy
    Jonathan Coulton
    Gustavo Cerati
    Emmanuel Horvilleur
    Café Tacuba
    Los Auténticos Decadentes
    Los Fabulosos Cadillacs
    Dave Gahan
    Martin L. Gore
    Recoil
    Camouflage
    De/Vision
    And One
    Erasure
    Mesh
    Tin Machine
    Roxy Music
    Lou Reed
    T. Rex
    Iggy Pop
    Mott the Hoople
    Bryan Ferry
    The Rolling Stones
    La Lupita
    Los Bunkers
    Pettinellis
    Chancho en Piedra
    Los Jaivas
    Angel Parra Trio
    Sinergia
    Camera Obscura
    God Help The Girl
    The Magnetic Fields
    Jens Lekman
    of Montreal
    Architecture in Helsinki
    The Boy Least Likely To
    The Gentle Waves
    Zurdok
    Vaquero
    Niña

    132/160
    Mmm... supongo que no está tan mal :/
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  • Top 50 Albums Of The Year

    Dez 13 2009, 3h20 por TrixRabbi

    My most listened to albums of 2009.

    TrixRabbi's top albums (12 months) 1. Andrew Jackson Jihad - People That Can Eat People Are the Luckiest People in the World (231)
    2. Mindless Self Indulgence - You'll Rebel to Anything (225)
    3. Minutemen - Double Nickels on the Dime (222)
    4. Andrew Jackson Jihad - Can't Maintain (191)
    5. Mindless Self Indulgence - If (162)
    6. Girl Talk - Feed the Animals (159)
    7. Mindless Self Indulgence - Frankenstein Girls Will Seem Strangely Sexy (150)
    8. The Bran Flakes - I Have Hands (135)
    9. Andrew Jackson Jihad - Candy, Cigarettes and Cap Guns (119)
    10. Richard O'Brien - The Rocky Horror Picture Show (109)
    11. The Beatles - The Beatles (White Album) (96)
    12. Pink Floyd - The Wall (93)
    13. Public Enemy - Fear of a Black Planet (91)
    14. The Velvet Underground - The Velvet Underground & Nico (87)
    15. De La Soul - 3 Feet High and Rising (86)
    16. Slim Cessna's Auto Club - Cipher (85)
    17. The Lonely Island - Incredibad (85)
    18. Pixies - Surfer Rosa (84)
    19. The Breeders - Pod (83)
    20. Andrew Lloyd Webber - Jesus Christ Superstar (83)
    21. Operation: Cliff Clavin - Out Of Control (80)
    22. Gorillaz - Demon Days (79)
    23. Daniel Johnston - More Songs Of Pain (78)
    24. Andrew Jackson Jihad - Andrew Jackson Jihad & Ghost Mice (77)
    25. Meat Puppets - Meat Puppets II (77)
    26. Public Enemy - Apocalypse 91... The Enemy Strikes Black (76)
    27. Howlin' Wolf - The Genuine Article (74)
    28. Sublime - Sublime (73)
    29. Man or Astro-man? - Destroy all Astromen! (73)
    30. Leonard Cohen - The Essential Leonard Cohen (71)
    31. Del tha Funkee Homosapien - Both Sides of the Brain (69)
    32. Daniel Johnston - Songs Of Pain (69)
    33. Neutral Milk Hotel - In the Aeroplane Over the Sea (69)
    34. Sublime - 40 Oz. to Freedom (68)
    35. The Monks - Black Monk Time (67)
    36. Dead Kennedys - Give Me Convenience or Give Me Death (66)
    37. Galt MacDermot - Hair (66)
    38. This Bike Is a Pipe Bomb - Dance Party With... (66)
    39. Dead Kennedys - Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables (64)
    40. Bomb the Music Industry! - Get Warmer (63)
    41. The World/Inferno Friendship Society - Red-Eyed Soul (63)
    42. This Bike Is a Pipe Bomb - Front Seat Solidarity (62)
    43. The Moldy Peaches - The Moldy Peaches (62)
    44. A Tribe Called Quest - The Low End Theory (61)
    45. Langhorne Slim - When the Sun's Gone Down (61)
    46. Daniel Johnston - 1990 (61)
    47. Frank Zappa - We're Only in It for the Money (60)
    48. Creedence Clearwater Revival - Chronicle, Vol. 1 (59)
    49. Tom Waits - Rain Dogs (59)
    50. Mr. Bungle - California (59)
    Top albums generator
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  • My 2009 Listening Statistics

    Dez 10 2009, 8h31 por latte77

    I'm a true Listener. I scrobbel with Itunes and my Ipod Nano.

    My Top 30 Artists 2009:

    1. Placebo - 2,840 Plays
    2. dredg - 2,369 Plays
    3. Manic Street Preachers - 1,294 Plays
    4. Die Toten Hosen - 1,140 Plays
    5. Red Lights Flash - 912 Plays
    6. Eddie Vedder - 780 Plays
    7. The Boxer Rebellion - 761 Plays
    8. The Cooper Temple Clause - 689 Plays
    9. Blackmail - 639 Plays
    10. The Gaslight Anthem - 598 Plays
    11. And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead - 589 Plays
    12. Led Zeppelin - 573 Plays
    13. Kings of Leon - 557 Plays
    14. Deftones - 496 Plays
    15. QOTSA - 477 Plays
    16. Billy Talent - 458 Plays
    17. Arctic Monkeys - 453 Plays
    18. Interpol - 436 Plays
    19. Pearl Jam - 426 Plays
    20. Them Crooked Vultures - 415 Plays
    21. Coldplay - 399 Plays
    22. Glasvegas - 389 Plays
    23. State of Riot - 384 Plays
    24. Metallica - 368 Plays
    25. Radiohead - 327 Plays
    26. Iron & Wine - 315 Plays
    27. Portishead - 308 Plays
    28. Bloc Party - 304 Plays
    29. Rammstein - 284 Plays
    30. Depeche Mode - 283 Plays

    Total Top 30 Scrobbles: 20263
    Average per Day listening to Tracks from my top 30 Artists: 55


    My Top 10 Albums of 2009:

    1. Placebo - Battle For The Sun - 1,438 Plays
    2. dredg - The Pariah, The Parrot, The Delusion - 1,345
    3. Eddie Vedder - Into the Wild - 780 Plays
    4. Red Lights Flash - For Your Safety - 735 Plays
    5. Manic Street Preachers - Journal For Plague Lovers - 670 Plays
    6. The Cooper Temple Clause - Kick Up The Fire And Let The Flames Break Loose - 532 Plays
    7. The Gaslight Anthem - The 59' Sound - 463 Plays
    8. The Boxer Rebellion - Union - 422 Plays
    9. Them Crooked Vultures - Them Crooked Vultures - 378 Plays
    10. Arctic Monkeys - Humbug - 386 Plays

    My Top 10 Tracks 2009:

    1. Red Lights Flash - Cities Burn - 162 Plays
    2. Placebo - TocarDevil In The Details - 159 Plays
    3. Placebo - TocarBattle For The Sun - 158 Plays
    4. Placebo - TocarThe Never-Ending Why - 153 Plays
    5. The Cooper Temple Clause - TocarThe Same Mistakes - 134 Plays
    6. Placebo - TocarJulien - 126 Plays
    7. Placebo - TocarSpeaking In Tongues - 124 Plays
    7. dredg - Saviour - 124 Plays
    9. The Velvet Underground - TocarSome Kinda Love - 118 Plays
    10. Depeche Mode - TocarWrong - 118 Plays

    My new found Artists 2009:

    1. Them Crooked Vultures
    2. Expatriate
    3. Iron & Wine
    4. Editors
    5. Scumbucket

    Young Artist Attack 2009:

    State of Riot - First Case Scenario
    Pack of Wolves - Intimacy Is A Serious Danger
    100%cotton - Break the Silence

    Links:
    State of Riot
    Adrenaline Forever

    Video:
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  • Playlist 7. Dezember 2009

    Dez 7 2009, 19h32 por zipcode

    Playlist 07. Dezember 2k9

    01. Hippieshit (0:24)
    02. New Days Delay - Stereokatastrophe (3:58)
    03. Lords of Acid - Stripper (3:35)
    04. Randolph's Grin - Ask Me (Cybersex Mix) (4:23)
    05. CEOXiME - Subsume (6:00)
    06. SpaceScape - Musik Elektronik (3:38)
    07. The Psychic Force - Underpass (3:39)
    08. Ickytrip - The Passage (4:04)
    09. Björk - It's Oh So Quiet (3:23)
    10. Robbie Williams - Mack The Knife (3:06)
    11. Senor Coconut - Pinball chacha (3:04)
    12. Yello - Vicious Games (4:11)
    13. Grace Jones - Walking in the rain (4:08)
    14. Nana Mouskouri - I Get A Kick Out Of You (2:26)
    15. Ofra Haza - Im Nin Alu (3:53)
    16. The Velvet Underground - Winter song (3:14)
    17. Tin Machine - Amlapaura(Indonesian Version) (3:35)
    18. The Doors - Love Street (2:47)
    19. Marc Almond - If You Go Away (Live Leicester Cathedral 30-08-2004) (4:42)
    20. Current 93 - Idumea (Vocals - Marc Almond) (3:24)
    21. Tom Waits - I Hope That I Don't Fall In Love With You (3:48)
    22. Marillion - Lavender (2:23)
    23. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - The Mercy Seat (Acoustic Version) (3:35)
    24. Deine Lakaien - Wunderbar (4:06)
    25. apocalytica feat. Nina Hagen - Seemann (Album Version) (4:39)
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  • The 50 albums that changed music

    Dez 7 2009, 15h59 por ManInAUniform

    1 The Velvet Underground and Nico -The Velvet Underground and Nico (1967)
    Though it sold poorly on its initial release, this has since become arguably the most influential rock album of all time. The first art-rock album, it merges dreamy, druggy balladry ('Sunday Morning') with raw and uncompromising sonic experimentation ('Venus in Furs'), and is famously clothed in that Andy Warhol-designed 'banana' sleeve. Lou Reed's lyrics depicted a Warholian New York demi-monde where hard drugs and sexual experimentation held sway. Shocking then, and still utterly transfixing.

    Without this, there'd be no ... Bowie, Roxy Music, Siouxsie and the Banshees and the Jesus and Mary Chain, among many others.


    2 The Beatles -Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967)

    There are those who rate Revolver (1966) or 'the White Album' (1968) higher. But Sgt Pepper's made the watertight case for pop music as an art form in itself; until then, it was thought the silly, transient stuff of teenagers. At a time when all pop music was stringently manufactured, these Paul McCartney-driven melodies and George Martin-produced whorls of sound proved that untried ground was not only the most fertile stuff, but also the most viable commercially. It defined the Sixties and - for good and ill - gave white rock all its airs and graces.

    Without this ... pop would be a very different beast.


    3 Kraftwerk -Trans-Europe Express (1977)

    Released at the height of punk, this sleek, urbane, synthesised, intellectual work shared little ground with its contemporaries. Not that it wanted to. Kraftwerk operated from within a bubble of equipment and ideas which owed more to science and philosophy than mere entertainment. Still, this paean to the beauty of mechanised movement and European civilisation was a moving and exquisite album in itself. And, through a sample on Afrika Bambaataa's seminal 'Planet Rock', the German eggheads joined the dots with black American electro, giving rise to entire new genres.

    Without this... no techno, no house, no Pet Shop Boys. The list is endless.


    4 NWA -Straight Outta Compton (1989)

    Like a darker, more vengeful Public Enemy, NWA (Niggaz With Attitude) exposed the vicious realities of the West Coast gang culture on their lurid, fluent debut. Part aural reportage (sirens, gunshots, police radio), part thuggish swagger, Compton laid the blueprint for the most successful musical genre of the last 20 years, gangsta rap. It gave the world a new production mogul in Dr Dre, and gave voice to the frustrations that flared up into the LA riots in 1992. As befits an album boasting a song called 'Fuck tha Police', attention from the FBI, the Parents' Music Resource Centre and our own Metropolitan Police's Obscene Publications Squad sealed its notoriety.

    Without this ... no Eminem, no 50 Cent, no Dizzee Rascal.


    5 Robert Johnson -King of the Delta Blues Singers (1961)

    Described by Eric Clapton as 'the most important blues singer that ever lived', Johnson was an intensely private man, whose short life and mysterious death created an enduring mythology. He was said to have sold his soul to the devil at a crossroads in Mississippi in exchange for his finger-picking prowess. Johnson recorded a mere 29 songs, chief among them 'Hellhound on My Trail', but when it was finally issued, King of the Delta Blues Singers became one of the touchstones of the British blues scene.

    Without this ... no Rolling Stones, Cream, Led Zeppelin.


    6 Marvin Gaye -What's Going On (1971)

    Gaye's career as tuxedo-clad heart-throb gave no hint he would cut a concept album dealing with civil rights, the Vietnam war and ghetto life. Equally startling was the music, softening and double-tracking Gaye's falsetto against a wash of bubbling percussion, swaying strings and chattering guitars. Motown boss Berry Gordy hated it but its disillusioned nobility caught the public mood. Led by the oft-covered 'Inner City Blues', it ushered in an era of socially aware soul.

    Without this ... no Innervisions (Stevie Wonder) or Superfly (Curtis Mayfield).


    7 Patti Smith -Horses (1975)

    Who would have thought punk rock was, in part, kickstarted by a girl? Poet, misfit and New York ligger, Patti channelled the spirits of Keith Richards, Bob Dylan and Rimbaud into female form, and onto an album whose febrile energy and Dionysian spirit helped light the touchpaper for New York punk. The Robert Mapplethorpe-shot cover, in which a hungry, mannish Patti stares down the viewer, defiantly broke with the music industry's treatment of women artists (sexy or girl-next-door) and still startles today.

    Without this ... no REM, PJ Harvey, Razorlight. And no powerful female pop icons like Madonna.


    8 Bob Dylan -Bringing it All Back Home (1965)

    The first folk-rock album? Maybe. Certainly the first augury of what was to come with the momentous 'Like a Rolling Stone'. Released in one of pop's pivotal years, Bringing it All Back Home fused hallucinatory lyricism and, on half of its tracks, a raw, ragged rock'n'roll thrust. On the opening song, 'Subterranean Homesick Blues', Dylan manages to pay homage to the Beats and Chuck Berry, while anticipating the surreal wordplay of rap.

    Without this ... put simply, on this album and the follow-up, Highway 61 Revisited, Dylan invented modern rock music.


    9 Elvis Presley -Elvis Presley (1956)

    The King's first album was also the first example of how to cash in on a teenage craze. With Presleymania at full tilt, RCA simultaneously released a single, a four-track EP and an album, all with the same cover of Elvis in full, demented cry. They got their first million dollar album, the fans got a mix of rock-outs like 'Blue Suede Shoes', lascivious R&B and syrupy ballads.

    Without this ... no King, no rock and roll madness, no Beatles first album, no pop sex symbols.


    10 The Beach Boys -Pet Sounds (1966)

    Of late, Pet Sounds has replaced Sgt Pepper's as the critics' choice of Greatest Album of All Time. Composed by the increasingly reclusive Brian Wilson while the rest of the group were touring, it might well have been a solo album. The beauty resides not just in its compositional genius and instrumental invention, but in the elaborate vocal harmonies that imbue these sad songs with an almost heartbreaking grandeur.

    Without this ... where to start? The Beatles acknowledged its influence; Dylan said of Brian Wilson, 'That ear! I mean, Jesus, he's got to will that to the Smithsonian.'


    11 David Bowie -The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars (1972)

    Bowie's revolutionary mix of hard rock and glam pop was given an otherwordly look and feel by his coquettish alter ego Ziggy. It's not so much that every act that followed dyed their hair orange in homage to the spidery spaceman; more that they learned the value of creating a 'bubble' of image and presentation that fans could fall in love with.

    Without this ... we'd be lost. No Sex Pistols, no Prince, no Madonna, no Duran Duran, no Boy George, no Kiss, no Bon Jovi, no 'Bohemian Rhapsody' ... I could go on.


    12 Miles Davis -Kind of Blue (1959)

    A rare example of revolutionary music that almost everyone liked from the moment they heard it. Its cool, spacey, open-textured approach marked a complete break with the prevalent 'hard bop' style. The effect, based on simple scales, called modes, was fresh, delicate, approachable but surprisingly expressive. Others picked up on it and 'modal jazz' has been part of the language ever since. The album also became the media's favourite source of mood music.

    Without this ... no ominous, brooding, atmospheric trumpet behind a million radio plays and TV documentaries.


    13 Frank Sinatra -Songs for Swingin' Lovers (1956)

    The previous year Sinatra had cut In the Wee Small Hours, a brooding cycle of torch songs that was arguably pop's first concept album. Once again working with arranger Nelson Riddle, he presented its complement; a set of upbeat paeans to romance. Exhilarating performances of standards like 'I've Got You Under My Skin' defined Sinatra's urbane, finger-snapping persona for the rest of his career and pushed the record to number one in the first ever British album chart.

    Without this ... the 'singer as song interpreter' wouldn't have been born, karaoke menus would be much diminished.


    14 Joni Mitchell -Blue (1971)

    Though Carole King's Tapestry was the biggest-selling album of the era, it is Joni Mitchell's Blue that remains the most influential of all the early Seventies outings by confessional singer-songwriters. Joni laid bare her heart in a series of intimate songs about love, betrayal and emotional insecurity. It could have been hell (think James Taylor) but for the penetrating brilliance of the songwriting. Raw, spare and sophisticated, it remains the template for a certain kind of baroque female angst.

    Without this ... no Tori Amos or Fiona Apple - and Elvis Costello and Prince have cited her as a prime influence.


    15 Brian Eno -Discreet Music (1975)


    Brian Eno, it is said, invented ambient music when he was stuck in a hospital bed unable to reach a radio that was playing too quietly, giving him the eureka moment that set the course not only for his post-Roxy Music career as an 'atmosphere'-enhancing producer, but for the future of electronic music.

    Without this ... we wouldn't have David Bowie's Low or Heroes, the echoey guitars of U2'S The Edge, and no William Orbit, Orb, Juana Molina. To name but a few.


    16 Aretha Franklin -I Never Loved a Man the Way I love You (1967)

    'R-E-S-P-E-C-T. Find out what it means to me!' Is there a more potent female lyric in pop? Franklin's Atlantic Records debut unleashed her soulful ferociousness upon an unsuspecting public, and both the singer and her album quickly became iconic symbols of black American pride.

    Without this ... Tina Turner, Mariah Carey, girl power would not exist, and rudeboys would not spit 'res'pec' through kissed teeth.


    17 The Stooges -Raw Power (1973)

    Produced by David Bowie, who also helped re-form the band, Raw Power was the Stooges's late swansong, and their most influential album. The Detroit group were already legendary for incendiary live shows and first two albums, but Raw Power, though selling as poorly as its predecessors, was subsequently cited as a prime influence by virtually every group in the British punk scene.

    Without this ... no punk, so no Sex Pistols (who covered 'No Fun'); no White Stripes.


    18 The Clash -London Calling (1979)

    The best record to come out of punk, or punk's death knell? On this double album, The Clash fused their rockabilly roots with their love of reggae, moving away from the choppy snarls of the scene that birthed them. This was the album that legitimised punk - hitherto a stroppy fad - into the rock canon. Its iconic cover, and songs about the Spanish Civil War brought left-wing politics firmly into musical fashion.

    Without this ... would the west have come to love reggae, dub and ragga quite so much? We certainly would have no Manic Street Preachers ... or Green Day, or Rancid ... or possibly even Lily Allen.


    19 Mary J Blige -What's the 411? (1992)

    When the Bronx-born 'Queen of Hip Hop Soul' catapulted her debut on to a legion of approving listeners, she unwittingly defined a new wave of R&B. Before Mary, R&B's roots were still firmly planted in soul and jazz (ie Aretha Franklin and Chaka Khan). The emergence of hip hop and this album from Blige and her mentor and producer Sean 'Puffy' Combs (aka P Diddy) gave birth to a new gritty sound, informed by the singer's harrowing past.

    Without this ... no R&B/soul divide, which means no TLC, Beyonce, or Ashanti, to name just three.


    20 The Byrds -Sweetheart of the Rodeo (1968)

    At one inspired stroke, Sweetheart vanquished the cultural divide between acid-munching, peace-preaching long hairs and beer-swilling, flag-waving good old boys by creating the enduring hybrid of country-rock. Allying rippling guitars and silky vocal harmonies with a mix of country tradition ('I Am a Pilgrim') and Gram Parsons originals, the record irrevocably altered the perspective of two previously averse streams of Americana. The group even cut their hair to play the Grand Ole Opry.

    Without this ... no Hotel California, no Willie Nelson, no Shania Twain.


    21 The Spice Girls -Spice (1996)

    The music business has been cynically creating and marketing acts since the days of the wax cylinder, but on nothing like the scale of the Spice phenomenon, which was applied to crisps, soft drinks, you name it. Musically, the Spice's Motown-lite was unoriginal, but 'Girl Power', despite being a male invention, touched a nerve and defined a generation of tweenies who took it to heart.

    Without this ... five-year-olds would not have become a prime target for pop marketeers. Most of all, there'd be no Posh'n'Becks.


    22 Kate Bush -The Hounds of Love (1985)

    On Side One our Kate strikes a deal with God, throws her shoes in a lake and poses as a little boy riding a rain machine. Turn over, and she's drowning, exorcising demons and dancing an Irish jig. All this to a soundscape that employs the shiniest synthesised studio toys the Eighties had to offer in the service of one women's unique yet utterly English musical genius. Listen again to the delirious cacophany of 'Running Up That Hill', and it sounds like God struck that deal.

    Without this ... Tori Amos would have spawned no earthquakes, Alison Goldfrapp would lack her juiciest cherries and romance would have withered on the vine.


    23 Augustus Pablo -King Tubby Meets Rockers Uptown (1976)

    Jamaica's invention of dub - a stripped-down, echo-laden instrumental remix of a vocal track - was spawned principally on the B-sides of local reggae hits and in the island's competing sound-systems, with technician-engineer King Tubby as its master creator, a man who could 'play' the mixing console. This collection of ethereal melodies by melodica maestro Augustus Pablo distilled the art into album form. It would be years before the West caught up.

    Without this ... no DJ remixes, no house, no rave.


    24 Youssou N'Dour -Immigres (1984)

    The charismatic N'Dour, Senegal's top star, changed the West's perception of African musicians, just as he had revolutionised Senegalese music. Nothing sounded like the fusion on Immigres, with its lopsided rhythms, whooping talking drums and discordant horns, topped by N'Dour's supple, powerful vocals. Immigres also redefined the role of West African griot, addressing migration and African identity.

    Without this ... N'Dour wouldn't have met Peter Gabriel, there'd have been no African presence at Live 8. In fact, 'world music' would not exist as a section in Western collections.


    25 James Brown -Live at the Apollo (1963)

    This remains the live album by which all others are measured, and is still the best delineation of the raw power of primal soul music. It propelled James Brown into the mainstream, and paved the way for a string of propulsive hits like 'Papa's Got a Brand New Bag' (1965) and 'Cold Sweat' (1967). The catalyst for many great soul stylists, from Sly Stone to Otis Redding, it also provided an early lesson in dynamics for the young Michael Jackson.

    Without this ... great chunks of hip hop - which has sampled Brown more than almost any other - would be missing.


    26 Stevie Wonder -Songs in the Key of Life (1976)

    This influenced virtually every modern soul and R&B singer, brimming with timeless classics like 'Isn't She Lovely', 'As' and 'Sir Duke'. The 21-tracker encompassed a vast range of life's issues - emotional, social, spiritual and environmental - all performed with bravado and a lightness of touch. No other R&B artist has sung about the quandaries of human existence with quite the same grace.

    Without this ... no Alicia Keys, no John Legend - contemporary R&B would be empty and lifeless.


    27 Jimi Hendrix -Are You Experienced (1967)

    Looking and playing like a brother from another planet, Hendrix delivered the most dramatic debut in pop history. Marrying blues and psychedelia, dexterity and feedback trickery, it redefined the guitar's sonic possibilities, while beyond the fretboard pyrotechnics burnt a fierce artistic vision - 'Third Stone From the Sun' made Jimi rock's first (and still best travelled) cosmonaut.

    Without this ... countless guitarists and cock-rockers might not have been (Stevie Ray Vaughan, Lenny Kravitz, even Miles Davis owes him), but most of all, without Experienced, there'd be no Jimi experience.


    28 Prince and the Revolution -Purple Rain (1984)

    Prince had been plugging away with limited success for several years when the man in tiny pants reinvented himself as a purple-clad movie star. Like Michael Jackson, he felt that the way to gain crossover appeal was to run the musical gamut: in this case, from the minimalist funk of his earlier albums to the volume-at-11 rock of Jimi Hendrix. The title track is a monumental, fist-clenching rock ballad that, perversely, whetted our appetites for far worse examples by Christina Aguilera among others.

    Without this ... no Janet Jackson, no Peaches, and certainly no Beck.


    29 Pink Floyd -The Dark Side of the Moon (1973)

    Sounds like it was pretty tough to be in Pink Floyd in the early 1970s. You had all the money you could spend (ker-ching!) but you thought that was vulgar. You didn't get on with your bandmates because they all had superiority complexes. You couldn't enter the recording booth without having an existential crisis. Piper At The Gates of Dawn, their debut with the late Syd Barrett, turned out to be influential in a more positive sense (David Bowie, Blur).

    Without this ... there'd be no Thom Yorke solo mumblings, and much less prog rock (if only ...).


    30 The Wailers -Catch a Fire (1973)

    Alongside The Harder They Come (movie and soundtrack), Catch a Fire changed the perception of reggae from eccentric, lightweight pop to a music of mystery and power. Dressed in a snappy Zippo lighter sleeve, and launched with rock razzmatazz, it delivered a polished, guitar-sweetened version of what Bob Marley, Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer had made when white audiences weren't listening. By turns militant, mystic and sexy, it helped make Bob Marley the first Third World superstar.

    Without this ... no Aswad or Steel Pulse, no native American or Maori or African reggae bands.


    31 The Stone Roses -The Stone Roses (1989)

    Until the late Eighties, Manchester was thought to be a forbidding, dour place where the ghost of Ian Curtis still clanked about. The Stone Roses' concatenation of sweet West Coast psychedelia and the lairy, loved-up rave culture was as unforeseeable as it was seismic. Ecstasy pulled the sniffy rock kids away from their Smiths records and into clubland; the result was an album whose woozy words and funky drumming sounded as guileless as it did hedonistic.

    Without this ... well, a bit of the Roses remains in the DNA of every British guitar band since.


    32 Otis Redding -Otis Blue (1965)

    Until Stax Records and Otis Redding arrived, the Southern states were a place you had to leave to make it (unless you were a country singer). Recorded weeks after the death of Redding's idol, Sam Cooke, the album cast Otis as Cooke's successor, an embodiment of young black America with white appeal - alongside Cooke's 'A Change is Gonna Come' was the Stones's 'Satisfaction'. With terrific backings from the MGs and the Markeys horns behind Otis's rasping vocals, it defined 'soul'.

    Without this ... no Aretha Franklin singing 'Respect', no Al Green, and no Terence Trent D'Arby.


    33 Herbie Hancock -Head Hunters (1973)

    It definitively wedded jazz to funk and R&B, and did it with such joyful confidence that it launched a whole new, open-minded approach to the music. Equally important was the use of electronic keyboards, then in their infancy, which vastly expanded the range of available textures. Head Hunters kickstarted the stylistic and ethnic fusions that have enlivened jazz for 30 years.

    Without this ... suffice to say, almost everything in the jazz-funk idiom can be traced back to this.


    34 Black Sabbath -Black Sabbath (1970)

    A mere 30 minutes long, this was none the less the album where heavy metal was first forged. Its ponderous tempos, cod-satanic imagery (bassist Geezer Butler was a Roman Catholic and Dennis Wheatley fan), Tony Iommi's sledgehammer guitar riffs and Ozzy Osbourne's shrieking vocals all went on to define the genre and shaped most arena rock of the Seventies and Eighties.

    Without this ... no Spinal Tap, no grunge or Kurt Cobain and, of course, no Osbournes.


    35 The Ramones -The Ramones (1976)

    'Fun disappeared from music in 1974,' claimed singer Joey Ramone. To restore it took he and his three 'brothers' just one album and 16 tracks, all under three minutes. Brevity was the New York punk rockers' first lesson to the world, along with speed, a distorted guitar thrash and a knowing line in faux-dumb lyrics. In an era of 'progressive' rock pomposity and 12-minute tracks, the Ramones' back-to-basics approach was rousing and confrontational.

    Without this ... no fun.


    36 The Who -My Generation (1965)

    Alongside the equally influential Small Faces, The Who were the quintessential British mod group. Long before they recorded the first rock opera, Tommy, they unleashed a stream of singles that articulated all the youthful pent-up frustration of Sixties London before it started to swing. Their 1965 debut album, My Generation, included the defiant and celebratory 'The Kids Are Alright' and the ultimate mod anthem, 'My Generation', with its infamous line, 'I hope I die before I get old.' Angry aggressive art-school pop with attitude to burn.

    Without this ... no Paul Weller, no Blur and, God help us, no Ordinary Boys either.


    37 Massive Attack -Blue Lines (1991)

    Obliterators of rap's boundaries, Massive Attack pioneered the cinematic trip hop movement. After graduating from one of Britain's premier sound systems, the Bristol-based Wild Bunch, Andrew 'Mushroom' Vowles and Grant 'Daddy G' Marshall joined forces with graffiti artist 3D. Massive Attack's debut LP spawned the unforgettable 'Unfinished Sympathy' and remains a modern classic.

    Without this ... no Roots Manuva, no Dizzee. In fact, there would be no British urban music scene to speak of.


    38 Radiohead -The Bends (1995)

    In parallel with Jeff Buckley, Radiohead's Thom Yorke popularised the angst-laden falsetto, a thoughtful opposite to the chest-beating lad-rock personified by Oasis's Liam Gallagher. Sounding girly to a backdrop of churning guitars became a much-copied idea, however, one which eventually coalesced into an entire decade of sound.

    Without this ... Coldplay would not exist, nor Keane, nor James Blunt.


    39 Michael Jackson -Thriller (1982)

    Pure, startling genius from beginning to end, Michael Jackson and producer Quincy Jones seemed hellbent on creating the biggest, most universally appealing pop album ever made. Jones introduced elements of rock into soul and vice versa in such a way that it's now no surprise to hear a pop record that mashes up more marginal genres into a form that will have universal relevance.

    Without this ... no megastars such as Justin Timberlake or Madonna, no wide-appeal uber-producers such as Timbaland or Pharrell Williams.


    40 Run DMC -Run DMC (1984)

    Before them came block-rocking DJ Grandmaster Flash and the Godfather, Afrika Bambaataa, but it was Run DMC who carved the prototype for today's hip hop MCs. Their self-titled debut - the first rap album to go gold - was rough around the edges and catchy as hell. As Rev Run spat, 'Unemployment at a record high/ People coming, people going, people born to die', the way was paved for conscious and political rap.

    Without this ... no Public Enemy, Roots and Nas.


    41 Chic -Chic (1977)

    The Chic Organisation revolutionised disco music in the late Seventies, reclaiming it from the naff Bee Gees and ensuring the pre-eminence of slickly produced party music in the charts for the next three decades. Its main men Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards patented a sound on their 1977 debut that was influential on bands from Duran Duran to Orange Juice. They also created a hit-making formula that mixed dance beats with monster hooks.
    Without this ... no Destiny's Child.


    42 The Smiths -The Smiths (1984)

    Yearning, melodic, jangly, and very northern, The Smiths' first album was quite unlike anything that had gone before. It helped that Morrissey was a one-off and that Johnny Marr had taken all the best riffs from Sixties pop, punk and disco and melded them into his own unique style. But there was something magical about their sound that endless successors have tried to replicate.

    Without this ... there'd be no Belle and Sebastian, no Suede, no Oasis, and no Libertines - at the very least.


    43 Primal Scream -Screamadelica (1991)

    Thanks to producer Andrew Weatherall and some debauched raving, this former fey indie outfit enthusiastically took on dance music's heady rushes. It was a conversion bordering on the Damascene, but one being mirrored in halls of residence, cars, clubs and bedsits all around the nation. Screamadelica brought hedonism crashing into the mainstream.

    Without this ... no lad culture - it was no accident that a mag founded in 1994 shared its name with Screamadelica's defining single, 'Loaded'.


    44 Talking Heads -Fear of Music (1979)

    There's something refreshingly jolly about the modern-life paranoia expressed by chief Talking Head David Byrne on this album that moany old Radiohead could learn from. Opening track 'I Zimbra' splices funk with afrobeat, paving the way for Byrne and Eno's mould-breaking My Life in the Bush of Ghosts album a few years later.

    Without this ... Paul Simon's Graceland might never have been made.


    45 Fairport Convention -Liege and Lief (1969)

    The birth of English folk-rock. Considered an act of heresy by folk purists, this electrified album fragmented the band. No matter, the opening cry of 'Come all you roving minstrels' proved galvanic.

    Without this ... no Celtic revivalists like the Pogues and Waterboys or descendants like the Levellers.


    46 The Human League -Dare (1981)

    Until Dare, synthesisers meant solemnity. Phil Oakey's reinvention of the group as chirpy popsters, complete with two flailing, girl-next-door vocalists, feminised electronica.

    Without this ... and Oakey's lop-sided haircut, squads of new romantics and synth-pop acts would have been lost.


    47 Nirvana -Nevermind (1991)

    You might argue Nirvana's landmark album changed nothing whatsoever. All their best seditious instincts came to nothing, after all. And yet Nevermind still rocks mightily, capturing a moment when the vituperative US underground imposed its agenda on the staid mainstream. Without this ... no Seattle scene, no Britpop, no Pete Doherty.


    48 The Strokes -Is This It? (2001)

    Five good-looking young men hauled the jangling sound of Television and the Velvet Underground into the new millennium, reinvigorating rock's obsession with having a good time.

    Without this ... a fine brood of heirs would not have been spawned: among them, Franz Ferdinand and the Libertines.


    49 De La Soul -3 Feet High and Rising (1989)

    Ten years after hip hop's arrival, its original joie de vivre had been subsumed by macho braggadocio. Three Feet High made hip hop playful again, with light rhythms, unusual sound samples and its talk of the D.A.I.S.Y. age ('Da Inner Sound Y'all') earning the trio a 'hippy' label.

    Without this ... thoughtful hip hop acts like the Jungle Brothers and PM Dawn wouldn't have arrived.


    50 LFO -Frequencies (1991)

    Acid house was sniffed at as a fad until it started producing 'proper' albums. Frequencies was its first masterpiece. Updating the pristine blueprint of Kraftwerk with house, acid, ambient and hip hop, it made dance music legitimate to album-buyers.

    Without this ... no success for Orbital, Underworld, Leftfield, Chemical Brothers or Aphex Twin.

    The Velvet Underground
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  • Favorite / Best Albums of Each Year: 2008 - 1959

    Dez 7 2009, 0h17 por Ozzloaf

    The 70's killed me! Sorry about that... I really just couldn't choose for a lot of these, sorry...

    2009 - Still undecided... ( Mono - Hymn to the Immortal Wind, maudlin of the Well - Part the Second, Mastodon - Crack the Skye... ?)

    2008 - Esoteric - The Maniacal Vale / Deathspell Omega - Veritas Diaboli in Manet Aeternum: Chaining the Katechon EP

    2007 - Deathspell Omega - Fas - Ite, Maledicti, in Ignem Aeternum <- This year was about as good as the 70's but DSO came out on top. Special mention for Ulver...

    2006 - Negură Bunget - Om / Agalloch - Ashes Against The Grain / The Ruins of Beverast - Rain Upon the Impure

    2005 - Opeth - Ghost Reveries / Deathspell Omega - Kenose EP

    2004 - Deathspell Omega - Si Monvmentvm Reqvires, Circvmspice

    2003 - Kayo Dot - Choirs of the Eye / Opeth - Damnation

    2002 - Sigur Rós - ( ) / Arcturus - The Sham Mirrors / Agalloch - The Mantle / Porcupine Tree - In Absentia <- Another great year!

    2001 - Opeth - Blackwater Park / maudlin of the Well - Leaving your Bodymap / Bath

    2000 - Godspeed You! Black Emperor - Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas To Heaven! / Weakling - Dead As Dreams / Porcupine Tree - Lightbulb Sun / Ulver - Perdition City

    1999 - Opeth - Still Life

    1998 - Opeth - My Arms, Your Hearse

    1997 - Emperor - Anthems To The Welkin At Dusk / Radiohead - OK Computer / Godspeed You! Black Emperor - F♯A♯∞

    1996 - Neurosis - Through Silver in Blood / Burzum - Filosofem / Katatonia - Brave Murder Day

    1995 - Porcupine Tree - The Sky Moves Sideways / Meshuggah - Destroy Erase Improve / Ulver - Kelvdssanger

    1994 - Ulver - Bergatt: Et eeventyr i 5 capitler / Emperor - In the Nightside Eclipse / Jeff Buckley - Grace / Mayhem - De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas

    1993 - Burzum - Hvis Lyset Tar Oss / Cynic - Focus / Slowdive - Souvlaki

    1992 - Alice in Chains - Dirt / Änglagård - Hybris

    1991 - My Bloody Valentine - Loveless / Atheist - Unquestionable Presence / Death - Human

    1990 - Naked City - Naked City / Psychotic Waltz - A Social Grace / Atheist - A Piece of Time / Lustmord - Heresy

    1989 - The Cure - Disintegration / Morbid Angel - Altars of Madness / Voivod - Nothingface

    1988 - Metallica - ...And Justice for All

    1987 - Dead Can Dance - Within The Realm Of A Dying Sun

    1986 - Metallica - Master of Puppets

    1985 - Tom Waits - Rain Dogs

    1984 - Arvo Pärt - Tabula Rasa / Metallica - Ride the Lightning

    1983 - Bacamarte - Depois Do Fim

    1982 - King Crimson - Beat / Iron Maiden - The Number of the Beast / Rush - Signals <- Pretty freaking bad year.

    1981 - King Crimson - Discipline

    1980 - Black Sabbath - Heaven and Hell

    1979 - Pink Floyd - The Wall

    1978 - Rush - Hemispheres (I can't believe I had to give Rush that year... Shows how mediocre the year was)

    1977 - Pink Floyd - Animals

    1976 - Rainbow - Rising / Camel - Moonmadness / Van der Graaf Generator - Still Life

    1975 - Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here

    1974 - King Crimson - Red

    1973 - Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon

    1972 - Yes - Close to the Edge

    1971 - To hard to choose just 1... see below.

    1970 - Black Sabbath - Paranoid / Black Sabbath - Black Sabbath

    1969 - King Crimson - In the Court of the Crimson King: An Observation by King Crimson / The Beatles - Abbey Road

    1968 - The Zombies - Odyssey and Oracle

    1967 - The Beatles - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (but also Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd, Leonard Cohen, The Doors, The Velvet Underground, etc.)

    1966 - The Beatles - Revolver (special mention to Bob Dylan and Frank Zappa)

    1965 - The Beatles - Rubber Soul / John Coltrane - A Love Supreme / Bob Dylan - Highway 61 Revisited

    1964 - The Beatles - Hard Day's Night (only because it's the only album I've ever heard from this year. It's a pretty mediocre album...)

    1963 - Charles Mingus - The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady

    1962 - John Coltrane - Olé Coltrane

    1961 - Yusef Lateef - Eastern Sounds

    1960 - Miles Davis - Sketches of Spain

    1959 - Miles Davis - Kind of Blue


    So hard to choose for some of those!!! Look at the amazingness the 70's produced!

    1975 - Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here / Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffiti / Bob Dylan - Blood on the Tracks / Van der Graaf Generator - Godbluff / Queen - A Night at the Opera / Frank Zappa - One Size Fits All / Camel - The Snow Goose / Black Sabbath - Sabotage / Steve Hackett - Voyage of the Acolyte ... And more.

    1974 - King Crimson - Red / Yes - Relayer / Camel - Mirage / Magma - Köhntarkösz / Focus - Hamburger Concerto ... and way more!

    1973 - Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon / King Crimson - Larks' Tongue in Aspic / Genesis - Selling England by the Pound / The Who - Quadrophenia / Black Sabbath - Sabbath Bloody Sabbath / Mahavishnu Orchestra - Birds of Fire / Magma - Mekanïk Destruktïw Kommandöh ... and so many more!!!

    1972 - Yes - Close to the Edge / Jethro Tull - Thick as a Brick / David Bowie - The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars / Nick Drake - Pink Moon / Deep Purple - Machine Head / Genesis - Foxtrot / Wishbone Ash - Argus / Premiata Forneria Marconi - Per un Amico / etc ... Ugh, another insanely amazing year!!!

    1971 - Led Zeppelin - IV / Pink Floyd - Meddle / Yes - Fragile / Jethro Tull - Aqualung / John Lennon - Imagine / Comus - First Utterance / Van der Graaf Generator - Pawn Hearts / The Who - Who's Next / Caravan - In the Land of Grey and Pink / Yes - The Yes Album / Genesis - Nursery Crime ... AMAZING YEAR!!!

    1969 - King Crimson - In the Court of the Crimson King: An Observation by King Crimson / The Beatles - Abbey Road / Nick Drake - Five Leaves Left / Led Zeppelin - I & II / Frank Zappa - Hot Rats ... etc.

    Jake
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  • My Top Records (sorted by decade)

    Dez 4 2009, 14h10 por mboles

    organized by format and decade only.
    in the works......this will be a long process....

    12" LPs

    00's

    Bonnie "Prince" Billy - Beware, Drag City DC 666- 2009



    Bonnie "Prince" Billy - Lie Down In The Light, Drag City DC 367- 2008



    Castanets - In The Vines, Asthmatic Kitty - 2007



    Phosphorescent - Pride, Dead Oceans - 2007



    Woods - At Rear House, Woodsist 004 - 2007



    Bonnie "Prince" Billy - Master and Everyone, Drag City DC 233- 2003



    The Microphones - "The Glow" Pt. 2, K KLP 133 - 2001



    Lift to Experience - The Texas Jerusalem Crossroads, Bella Union - 2001



    Bonnie "Prince" Billy - Ease on Down the Road, Palace Records PR 26- 2001



    Red House Painters - Old Ramon, Sub Pop Records - 2001



    90's

    Bonnie "Prince" Billy - I See A Darkness, Palace Records - 1999



    Dirty Three - Ocean Songs, Touch And Go TG193LP - 1998



    Neutral Milk Hotel - In An Airplane Over The Sea, Merge Records MRG136 - 1998



    Silver Jewsl - American Water, Drag City DC 149 - 1998



    Pavement - Brighten the Corners, Matador OLE 097-1 - 1997



    Neutral Milk Hotel - On Avery Island, Merge Records MRG103 - 1996



    Palace Music - Arise Therefore, Drag City DC 088- 1996



    Dirty Three - Horse Stories, Touch And Go TG165 - 1996



    Palace Music - Viva Last Blues, Drag City DC 065- 1995



    Palace Brothers - Palace Brothers, Drag City DC 050- 1994



    Jeff Buckley - Grace, Columbia CK 57528 - 1994



    Sebadoh - Bakesale, Sub Pop Records SP 260- 1994



    Pavement - Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain, Matador OLE 079-1 - 1993



    Red House Painters - Red House Painters, 4AD - 1993



    Palace Brothers - There Is No-One What Will Take Care of You, Drag City DC 034- 1993



    Pavement - Slanted and Enchanted, Matador OLE 038-1 - 1992



    Neil Young - Harvest Moon, reprise records - 1992



    Red House Painters - Down Colorful Hill, 4AD - 1992



    Sebadoh - III, Homestead Records HMS 168-1- 1991



    Slint - Spiderland, Touch And Go TG064LP - 1991




    80's

    Townes Van Zandt - Live At the Old Quarter, Tomato - 1989



    The Cure - Disintegration, Electra - 1989



    Sebadoh - The Freed Man, Homestead Records HMS 145-1- 1989



    Dinosaur Jr - you're living all over me, Sst Records SST 130 - 1987



    The Smiths - The Queen Is Dead, Rough Trade Records - 1986



    Tom Waits - Rain Dogs, Island Records - 1985



    Tom Waits - Swordfishtrombones, Island Records - 1983



    Joy Division - Closer, Factory FACT 25 - 1980




    70's

    Joy Division - Unknown Pleasures, Factory FACT 10 - 1979



    Bruce Springsteen - Born to Run, Columbia - 1975



    Tom Waits - Nighthawks at the Dinner, Asylum Records - 1975



    Tom Waits - Closing Time, Asylum Records SD5061 - 1973



    Lou Reed - Berlin, rca victor - 1973



    The Rolling Stones - Goats Head Soup, Rolling Stones Records - 1973



    Neil Young - Harvest, reprise records - 1970



    Lou Reed - Transformer, rca victor LSP-4807 - 1972



    The Rolling Stones - Exile on Main Street, Rolling Stones Records - 1972



    Leonard Cohen - Songs of Love and Hate, Columbia C 30103 - 1971



    The Rolling Stones - Sticky Fingers, Rolling Stones Records - 1971



    Neil Young - After the Gold Rush, reprise records - 1970




    60's

    The Stooges - The Stooges, Electra - 1969



    The Rolling Stones - LET IT BLEED, Decca - 1969



    Townes Van Zandt - Out Mother the Mountain, poppy - 1969



    The Velvet Underground - The Velvet Underground, Verve Records - 1969



    Leonard Cohen - Songs From a Room, Columbia - 1969



    The Velvet Underground - White Light/White Heat, Verve Records - 1968



    Johnny Cash - At Folsom Prison, Columbia - 1968



    The Velvet Underground & Nico - The Velvet Underground & Nico, Verve Records - 1966
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  • drobiazgi i cudeńka

    Dez 3 2009, 20h12 por wolowina-saute

    Last.FM Milestones1st track: (05 Nov 2007)
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    77000th track: (20 Nov 2009)
    Sonny Clark - TocarCool Struttin'
    78000th track: (02 Dec 2009)
    Tricky - TocarFeed Me
    Generated on 03 Dec 2009
    Get yours here
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  • yes, this was the best way to spend my last night at home.

    Nov 29 2009, 4h28 por Alia612

    01. What's your favorite song by Neutral Milk Hotel?
    "Two-Headed Boy, Part Two".

    02. How did you get into Felt?
    Kathrin put "TocarAll the People I Like Are Those That Are Dead" on a mixtape for me, and I fell hard for Lawrence.

    03. Who is your favorite member in Orange Juice?
    I'm probably contractually obliged to say Edwyn Collins, but I do have a soft spot for the songs by James Kirk.

    04. What's your favorite lyric by The Magnetic Fields?
    this is an unreasonably difficult question. actually, no:
    "I could dress in black and read Camus / Smoke clove cigarettes and drink vermouth / Like I was seventeen, that would be a scream / But TocarI Don't Want to Get Over You."

    05. Have you ever seen Sufjan Stevens live?
    yes, in fact!

    06. What's your favorite album from The Shins?
    Wincing the Night Away.

    07. Do you own any merchandise from The National?
    nothing, sadly. (not even a tote bag from Wicker Park.)

    08. What is a good memory you have of The New Pornographers?
    dancing around my room to "Graceland" while packing for college.

    09. Is there a member of the same age as you in Belle and Sebastian?
    hahaha, no. they are all much older.

    10. When did you first get into The Shins?
    2003, right after Chutes Too Narrow was released. I heard "TocarNew Slang" on the college radio station and it was downhill from there.

    11. Who likes The Smiths along with you?
    many, many people. on my last.fm friends list, primarily Kathrin.

    12. Which song did you first hear from of Montreal?
    "TocarSo Begins Our Alabee", on a Polyvinyl sampler.

    13. What song made you fall in love with Clap Your Hands Say Yeah?
    I believe it was "TocarUpon This Tidal Wave of Young Blood", after some blog described it as "David Byrne fronting The Cure".

    14. Which song do you not like by The Only Ones?
    there are actually quite a few, shamefully, but my least favorite is probably "Deadly Nightshade".

    15. Why do you like Morrissey?
    what a question! his stunning voice (even at such an age), his splendid pop sensibilities, his terrific way around a witty, erudite lyric...

    16. Where did you first hear Voxtrot?
    oh, wow, I don't actually know. I think I heard "Mothers, Sisters, Daughters, and Wives" on a blog somewhere right after it came out, but I didn't really start to love them until I heard "TocarThe Start of Something".

    17. How long were The Jesus and Mary Chain a band before you liked them?
    haha. they were a band for sixteen years and weren't a band for three before I liked them.

    18. Does Matthew Sweet have a song that gives you a bad memory?
    well, yes. most of his songs are irrevocably linked to certain memories for me, but "TocarSomeone to Pull the Trigger" and "TocarLife Without You" are the worst.

    19. When did you get into The Cure?
    the winter of sixth grade, when my brother burned a copy of Staring at the Sea: The Singles for me.

    20. How long have you been into The Jesus and Mary Chain?
    seven years.

    21. If Jens Lekman had a concert 300 miles away, would you drive there to see them?
    well, I can't drive. but if someone else were going, I would certainly consider it.

    22. How many The Replacements albums do you own?
    christ. nine, not counting bootlegs and unreleased compilations.

    23. Do Vampire Weekend have a song that makes you cry?
    hahaha, definitely not.

    24. Do The Wedding Present have a song that makes you happy?
    of course! especially "TocarThis Boy Can Wait".

    25. Do Wilco have a song that makes you smile?
    yes indeed. "Nothing'severgonnastandinmyway (Again)" is a guaranteed smile-maker.

    26. What's the last song you've listened to of Guided by Voices?
    "TocarTwilight Campfighter".

    27. Is there a song by Elvis Costello and the Attractions that you've listened to more than 30 times?
    "(The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes", though my statistics don't show it... that was mostly in seventh grade.

    28. What is a song from Joanna Newsom that you've only listened to once?
    "TocarThree Little Babes". NEVER AGAIN.

    29. Is there a song you are sick of hearing by Robyn Hitchcock and The Egyptians?
    I am not really a fan of "TocarThe Fly".

    30. What song got you into Echo and the Bunnymen?
    "Bring on the Dancing Horses", once again via the local college station.

    31. What is your favorite single by Bright Eyes?
    single? probably "If The Brakeman Turns My Way".

    32. If The Weakerthans hated you, what would you do?
    I would be really upset, probably. and regret not seeing them when I could have in September, before I learned of this sad development.

    33. What would you say if one of the members from R.E.M. asked you out?
    um, accept, obviously!! I don't care that all of them are either over fifty or almost there (yes, Michael, this means you). we would be the May/December romance for the ages.

    34. Would you care if Editors had a boyfriend/girlfriend?
    of course. I demand that Tom Smith remain perpetually single.

    35. Who has the best voice in The Posies?
    I prefer Jon Auer's songs.

    36. Do you think Elvis Costello and the Attractions are good looking?
    haha, I was actually just talking about this today. yes.

    37. How many times have you listened to your favorite song by Arcade Fire?
    I have apparently only listened to "Intervention" 11 times. this might be wrong.

    38. How many CDs do you own of Sparks?
    I actually only own Kimono My House, but my mother has most everything else on vinyl.

    39. Is there a song from Radiohead that makes you mad?
    I don't think so.

    40. Which member from Yo La Tengo do you want to see go solo?
    I actually really like Dump, a.k.a. James McNew's side project. but I wouldn't want Ira and Georgia to split up.

    41. What does your favorite song from The Velvet Underground remind you of?
    "TocarSweet Jane" ... actually, reminds me of standing on the corner with a suitcase in my hand. hahaha. presumably because whenever I find myself in that situation, I start singing that song.

    42. Did you hate Hüsker Dü at first?
    no, I just thought they were really noisy. and Grant Hart was super cute. whatever, I was a twelve-year-old with priorities.

    43. Does your best friend also listen to The Hold Steady?
    haha, yes. although not without reservations. (no lyrics about Pringles cans, please.)

    44. Do you think your parents would like The Broken West?
    both my parents love them, actually.

    45. Do Pixies have a song that makes you want to dance?
    who doesn't dance to Debaser?

    46. Have you ever seen Joy Division live?
    yes. that time when I time-travelled.

    47. Do you like The Broken West's name?
    I guess so. I like it better than their previous name, "The Brokedown".

    48. Is there someone in Paul Westerberg that you want to go out with?
    this question is adorable. yes, I want to go out with the teenager in Paul Westerberg who wore his heart on his sleeve, rode his bike everywhere, and kissed girls under bridges on autumn nights, as described in "First Glimmer".

    49. Do you know anyone that hates Shearwater?
    I don't believe so.

    50. Have you ever danced to a song from Sigur Rós?
    it's probably happened.
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  • Last.fm milestones

    Nov 28 2009, 21h25 por NoraPora

    Last.FM Milestones1st track: (04 Feb 2009)
    Billy Talent - TocarRed Flag
    1000th track: (25 Feb 2009)
    Owl City - TocarFuzzy Blue Lights
    2000th track: (22 Mar 2009)
    Adam Green - Drowning Head First
    3000th track: (09 May 2009)
    Queen - TocarI Want to Break Free
    4000th track: (30 May 2009)
    Maria Mena - TocarFragile (Free)
    5000th track: (22 Jun 2009)
    Bright Eyes - Amy in the White Coat
    6000th track: (04 Aug 2009)
    Kimya Dawson - TocarSinging Machine
    7000th track: (24 Aug 2009)
    Farin Urlaub - Phänomenal Egal (live)
    8000th track: (09 Sep 2009)
    The Velvet Underground - TocarAll Tomorrow's Parties
    9000th track: (26 Sep 2009)
    Pendulum - Fasten Your Seatbelt (featuring The Freestylers)
    10000th track: (12 Oct 2009)
    David Choi - I Gotta Feeling (Cover)
    11000th track: (18 Nov 2009)
    Imogen Heap - Speeding Cars
    Generated on 28 Nov 2009
    Get yours here
    Ler mais Adicionar comentário
12…173Próximo
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