ILX 70s album poll - results

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...and I'm struggling to find anything to quote about either of the last two albums, so on with the next one, and then the rest tomorrow.

hobart paving (hobart paving), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:10 (nineteen years ago) link


(in answer to best Fall album for starters):


Dragnet. No contest.

-- Dr. C (Daveatcrossdee...), October 14th, 2002.

The true heart of the mighty Fall beats in the gnarled, beer n' woodbines sound of Dragnet and the early singles.

-- Dr. C (Daveatcrossdee...), February 12th, 2002.


The lowest of lo-fi and absolutely fantastic! Intense, spooky garage fun, AND has some rarely mentioned Fall classic tracks. The best Fall album IMHO.

-- Dr. C (Daveatcrossdee...), July 10th, 2001 1:00 AM.


It's the absolute essence of The Fall, never bettered.

-- Dr. C (Daveatcrossdee...), July 11th, 2001


Dragnet is real Fallmusik - accept no other (except Room To Live, Hex, Witch Trials)

-- Dr C (Daveatcrossdee...), September 10th, 2001

Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:11 (nineteen years ago) link

I forgot:

(In answer to: Which FALL album do you get first?)

Not a single vote for Dragnet then?

-- Nag! Nag! Nag! (MarquisChaCha...), August 28th, 2003 5:47 AM.

Dragnet

-- Dr. C (Daveatcrossdee...), August 28th, 2003 10:56 AM.

Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:13 (nineteen years ago) link

50

points: 338
1st place votes: 0
total votes: 11

STEELY DAN - PRETZEL LOGIC

http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/B00000IPAC.02.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

hobart paving (hobart paving), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:18 (nineteen years ago) link

Tonight's The Night:


On the Beach is alright, but Tonight's the Night's peerless.

-- otto (ottomanjense...), March 28th, 2004

The only Neil Young album I can love. There's something so dark and tragic yet playful in it. And you can shout along with it brilliantly.

-- Omar (o.muno...), May 2nd, 2001


"Tonight's the Night" is one of the most gloriously, strangely f***ed up records I've ever heard. He just sounds like his hanging on the edge of complete mental collapse. But oddly indifferent to it. Most of his early solo albums have a similar kind of catastrophic feel to them. I think he's great for bad hangovers.

-- Johnathan (blis...), May 2nd, 2001

in answer to 'Name a so-called classic album which you think is a real stinker':

every record by Neil Young except Tonight's the Night.
-- o.munoz (o.muno...), January 12th, 2001

Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:20 (nineteen years ago) link

I'll be very surprised if London Calling is number one. Are there really that mean people around here who love it that much (given how many people hate the Clash)?

RS, Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:22 (nineteen years ago) link

Miles Davis continues to be the only jazz musician in the universe.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:22 (nineteen years ago) link

um #55

whenuweremine (whenuweremine), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:23 (nineteen years ago) link


PL is probably SD's crowning glory. Struck the right balance between conventional pop structures, MOR and whatever it is that they do. I love the wintery feeling of the thing ("We could stay inside and play games, I don't know), perfectly reflected on the cover shot.

-- Baaderonixxx le Jeune (fabfon...), November 19th, 2004.

whenuweremine (whenuweremine), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:25 (nineteen years ago) link

It's already begun to an extent, but can there be a seperate thread for people predicting what the top 30/25/20/10 will be PLEEEEASSSEEE????? It totally kills the surprise.

billstevejim, Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:26 (nineteen years ago) link

RS' last post has a funny typo, I think.

Paul in Santa Cruz (Paul in Santa Cruz), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:26 (nineteen years ago) link

Start one, bill!

Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:29 (nineteen years ago) link

um #55

Hmm, I'm unfamilar with that Coleman record; I've only listened to his 50s and 60s stuff. I guess I should check it out and tuck my tail between my legs.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:30 (nineteen years ago) link

I was just writing an e-mail message with the subject line "More mean comments about co-worker" about the same time I posted that.

RS, Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:33 (nineteen years ago) link

I can find lots of comments about how Pretzel Logic sounds RUBBISH at first but gets you when you aren't expecting it. This sort of thing... I have a nice blurb for the song, but that's the wrong poll.

Oh well, this will do for now. More tomorrow.


As I put on Pretzel Logic for the 1st time, I was like wtf, but since I'd put the album on repeat while computerizing all afternoon I soon caught myself singing along.

-- Baaderist (fabfon...), February 13th, 2004.

hobart paving (hobart paving), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:35 (nineteen years ago) link

Till then, here are some comments for Nos 100-96, which missed out the first time around. I'll do 95-91 if I have some time:


100. V/A - 'Pebbles'


More than worth it, for me, for the original of 'I Want Candy', which for some reason I assumed was a Bow Wow Wow original! D'oh!

Oh, and the Standell's 'Dirty Water' (has there been a better song about Boston, ever??)etc etc

-- Bill E, January 24th, 2002


Got both Vol 1 and Vol 2, and they're both worth every! Single! Penny! Lots of great material throughout, and not knowing most of it beforehand just makes it all that much better.

-- Sean Carruthers, January 24th, 2002


I love *all* this stuff more than just about anything.
i sometimes find it difficult to *adjust my ears* if I listen to say 20 minutes of Nuggets stuff followed by something with clean, modern production. Somehow you listen to them in different ways, and get used to a particular range of frequencies, or timbres maybe or just the amount of *detail*

-- Dr. C, January 25th, 2002


99. New York Dolls - s/t

As a man whose first records were (45) Ride A White Swan and (33) Slade Alive, and who had only gone to a couple of gigs before going to dozens of punk ones, how can I not love the bridge between them.

-- Martin Skidmore (martin.skidmore...), May 4th, 2002


There's something genuinely expressive about Johnny Thunder's guitar playing. He solos all through the songs – often just distorted extended notes. It bears little relation to the 'acceptable' guitar playing of commercial radio; it's even 'decorative,' fragile, or delicate. It makes all the lyrics of the songs much more melancholy, because they're accompanied by this sporadic, almost contrapuntal, harmony. It doesn't sound like other music. I think the producers tried to make up for it by making these random notes really quiet except in the 'proper' places (at the end of the song usually) but you can still hear them, all the time – it's quite disturbing. I guess he's actually listening to what they sound like.

-- Maryann (tedium200...), June 10th, 2001

*Were* they clever or radical? Johansen was clever, Johnny Thunders was radical even if he wouldn't've known why himself. What did their ultra femininity/ultra masculinity mean? it meant that it was 1973 & time to take rock back off the hippies once & forever. & it still is. (1973 I mean).

-- duane zarakov (pfaiga...), June 10th, 2001


98. David Bowie - "Heroes"

Low is elegant, weird, strange and wonderful, but "Heroes" is all that and more, and is probably the album I've listened to from Bowie the most over the years. "Sons of the Silent Age" may actually be my favorite song by him ever, that weird queasy start, sax and synths and more, the sudden imagistic power of the lyrics -- "they never die, they just go to sleep one day" -- and that sudden break into a twisted tearjerker chorus, a pure spotlight/drama queen moment that feels like the most emotional confession of love ever.

-- Ned Raggett (ne...), June 15th, 2004

Heroes is just as interesting and unusual as Low and yet more accessible.

-- wetmink (minksof...), June 15th, 2004 7:09 PM.

Heroes is the only Bowie album I've ever gotten deeply and emotionally attached to.

- Girolamo Savonarola (gsav@smb.net), June 26th, 2003 11:12 PM.

97. Kate Bush - 'The Kick Inside'

I do still have a bit of a thing for KB, and, last year, listened to the first three LPs for the first time in ages. The Kick Inside won that particular battle easily though, strangely, I've no desire to listen to 2/3rds of it ever again.

-- Michael Jones (tourajsig...), February 8th, 2002

My favorite is "The Kick Inside"... but then again I love Laura Nyro.

-- Sean (saturns...), January 22nd, 2003 7:06 PM.

Go with her debut, "The Kick Inside". My favorite, and the least freakish (my favorite AND the least freakish??).

-- Sean (saturns...), April 8th, 2003

96. Bruce Springsteen - 'Darkness On The Edge Of Town'

What an opening couplet:

I got a sixty-nine Chevy with a 396
Fuelie heads and a Hurst on the floor

-- Mark (mar...), July 15th, 2002

The stuff that's good on Darkness is good in some really interesting ways. I think he came into his own there, figured out more what worked for him and what didn't. He kept the big anthems, but he also finally figured out the quiet end -- it's the first album that anticipates Nebraska, especially the title track. And even the anthems got more pointed and pared down. Like, "poor man wanna be rich/ rich man wanna be king/ and a king ain't satisfied until he rules everything/ I wanna go out tonight, I wanna find out what I got" -- I mean, that's a great fucking lyric, especially joined to the jumping-out-of-his-skin throb of the song. It combines dawning political consciousness with adolescent will to power, and suggests without even meaning to the roots of fascism. And it locates all that in small-town Midwestern we-gotta-get-out-of-this-place cockiness, just barely covering up for a growing certainty that he ain't going nowhwere. (Which is kind of the theme of the whole album, I think, even more than "Born to Run" -- on Born to Run there still seemed to be some kind of idea that all that mythic shit would add up to something, but "Darkness" kind of put an end to that.)

Also, for all its cheesiness, I love "Candy's Room" just for the pure horny build and release of it. ("Prove It All Night," on the other hand, never really gets going -- he makes it sound way too much like work.)

-- spittle (ptu...), July 21st, 2004


If anyone asks "what historical moment would you like to have seen", sometimes I think that being present at the first studio playback of the completed "Racing" would be my real answer. I can't imagine what it must've been like to have finished that song, I picture everyone collapsing afterward. It's a song to put on when the only option in life seems to be staring into space and flicking a lit cigarette into the dustbin for every bad decision you've ever made, half in hope that maybe your house will burn down with you still in it. The delivery of the "Callin' out around the world" line is the finest recorded vocal in the history of music. Or one of them, anyway. ("Badlands" - that's more all-purpose put-on-any-time for me, mainly because I can tune out the words if I want to and train the beady rational-crit half of my brain onto the sonics. IMHO "Badlands" is the most intensely political song ever recorded because it would say the same thing even if I couldn't understand the words or even if there WERE no words. (In distorted symbolic form, what it seems to be saying sonically is "Whatever happened to the Vagrants? Does Leslie West ever step out of his limo to buy a hot dog from them? And why are THEY reduced to selling hotdogs when Lou Reed isn't?" ) The social analysis of the song is built into the structure and playing and arrangement and sound etc., whereas most artists attempt to prove they see beyond their own noses by taking stock forms and then singing lists of famous names and appalling historical tragedies over the result.

-- dave q (scrape10...), July 15th, 2002


Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 21:42 (nineteen years ago) link

Where is the outrage over "Rumours" not even cracking the op 50??

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 22:58 (nineteen years ago) link

http://miklas.bad-hosting.com/albums/1mai2003/Bild_1.jpg

rs, Tuesday, 19 April 2005 23:08 (nineteen years ago) link

I am OUTRAGED.

whenuweremine (whenuweremine), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 23:15 (nineteen years ago) link

Well, that's what I did when I found some fucking Fall album beat out MOTHERSHIP CONNECTION

Stupornaut (natepatrin), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 23:17 (nineteen years ago) link

xpost - go Alba! some ILM context on these selections is good.

i only had one album vote and that was for the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack. I was more about the singles.

gspm (gspm), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 23:22 (nineteen years ago) link

xpost - I'm outraged that it made the list!

peepee (peepee), Tuesday, 19 April 2005 23:27 (nineteen years ago) link

> I love the wintery feeling of the thing ("We could stay inside and play games, I don't know), perfectly reflected on the cover shot.

!

!!

Now I finally understand the importance of the sleigh bells on "Charlie Freak." Thank you!

Joseph McCombs (Joseph McCombs), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 00:36 (nineteen years ago) link

Folks - this thread is fantastic! Well done Hobart and Alba. But....when was voting? I didn't know about this at all! I hope to see C'Est Chic, The Raincoats, Real Life, Unknown Pleasures, Lodger, The Man Machine, Neu 75 and Ege Bamyasi up there at the top.

Some great selections so far. My only genuine WTF moment was with 'My Aim Is True' - that album is pish! Oh Alright, the singles are good.

Anyway.......GET DRAGNET!!

Dr. C (Dr. C), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 06:22 (nineteen years ago) link

This thread loomed in the New Answers for about a month, Dr C!

Alba (Alba), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 07:10 (nineteen years ago) link

the 70s poll (albs and singles) predictions and things are posted here, i guess has been started, so people who don't like predictions to be on this thread, btw.

Alba (Alba), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 07:15 (nineteen years ago) link

49

points: 339
1st place votes: 0
total votes: 11

ROXY MUSIC - ROXY MUSIC

http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/B0000256KG.02.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 08:15 (nineteen years ago) link

There are bands I've been getting into almost instantly at first listen like Velvet Underground or The Smiths and there are others which took me a long time to appreciate. Like Joy Division Roxy Music belong into this group.
My first audio encounter with their singer and main songwriter Bryan Ferry dates back to the summer of 1976. It was the first time I was in a foreign country without my parents and I was in Bournemouth in a guest family. Two songs were everywhere in that very dry & hot English summer: Let's Stick Together by Ferry and Here Comes the Sun by Cockney Rebel. I liked both of them and didn't realize for a long time that Here Comes the Sun was a Beatles cover. Ferry's sleazy crooner's voice was hard to resist and he was good looking too which could impress a thirteen year old.

But somehow for a long time I had a problem to connect the pop singer Ferry to the more experimental and challenging band Roxy Music which was lauded in music critics circles. And I didn't understand what was so special about them. I don't remember the name of the first song by them I ever listened to and it didn't mark me at all but I know that it was in my philosophy class at school around 1979 (our teacher was young). The class was about existentialism and the teacher said that this song was new wave.

ihttp://musik.antville.org/images/roxymusic/
Let's come back to my album of 1972. The cover is the first in a series of sexily dressed women covers. Mauvais goût but in an interesting way. All the women on the first five albums of Roxy Music have in common that they have a stupid artificial expression on their face and that from my point of view their faces are ugly in their false and unapproachable coolness. I suppose that is intended. This is part of the game. It is not the cover that is supposed to turn anyone on. It is just an eye-catcher. A false package if you want. Inside there is one of the most ear-catching records of the seventies. At least it turned me on but it took a long time.

There is a party going on. People talking, tinkling glasses. A seemingly average rock song starts with a kind of bar piano line. Ferry sings forgettable lyrics about the sweetest queen he has ever seen. With his staccato intonation he sounds like the blueprint for David Byrne in the Talking Heads. Phil Manzanera tries to be Jimi Hendrix and he almost succeeds. And suddenly the song takes a turn. The saxophone becomes freestyle, there is some guitar distortion, the piano becomes atonal, the song morphs into a free jazz session. It slows down at the end like as if the record player is plugged off and the speed is slowing down. A nice drum solo and a fireworks noise finish the song.

A lyrical classical oboe theme starts Ladytron. A song for romantic candle-light dinners. But beware this one speeds up. Never trust the beginning of a Roxy Music song. Eno adds some electronic spices to this.

My favourite song is no.3 If There Is Something. The first 90 seconds constitute about the most boring country rock ballad I have ever heard. But when Andy Mackay's sax and later oboe join in and play a new theme everything changes. Suddenly we are in melodramatic land. Ferry sings vibrato as if he had swallowed one gallon of his own tears:

I would do anything for you.
I would climb mountai-ai-ai-ns.
I would swim all the oceans blue.

The theme is repeated by the piano and varied upon. It is really fascinating how the guitar also merges in. All instruments seem to fuse into one. The oboe is reaching heights where no man has ever been. Ferry almost drowns in his tears now. How can a voice sound so desperate from deep inside? The last minute is a tad boring again with the over and over repeated line When you were young but the four minutes in between 1'30'' and 5'30'' are about the most exciting four minutes in any piece of rock I know.

Marginal note: I just read here in the AMG that there is a probably even superior 12 minute (!) live version of this song performed at the John Peel radio show in January 1972. I really need this now.

The next song is Virginia Plain and I think I'll finish now as everyone will know this anyway. As sparkling as rock music can get. I have to add that there is no weak song on this album. That there are two small rock mini-operas The Bob (Medley) and Sea Breeze which piss on Supper's Ready or anything released by The Who in this field. 2 H.B. and the beginning of The Bob foreshadow ambient. And there is Would You Believe? which anticipates the dreadful Rocky Horror Picture Show without its one-dimensionality. The end is Bitters End, the party is over, the girl is gone and has found another and Bryan asks

will someone find me?

This was a party as it should be. It was fun but it was a disappointment as well. A good pretext for another party, don't you think?

P.S. This has been published before on my blog but I didn't get the feedback I wanted to get. That's why I have recycled it here.

-- alex in mainhattan (alex6...), February 25th, 2005.


or read the thread: In praise of... the 1st Roxy Music album

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 08:19 (nineteen years ago) link

48

points: 345
1st place votes: 0
total votes: 11

ROXY MUSIC - FOR YOUR PLEASURE

http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/B0000256KE.02.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 08:30 (nineteen years ago) link

amanda lear is really cool on that cover.

alex in mainhattan (alex63), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 08:35 (nineteen years ago) link

Alright, who's been block voting Roxy Music?

(I got "Stranded" for a pound in Fopp. Havent played it yet)

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 08:35 (nineteen years ago) link

I got "Stranded" for a pound in Fopp

You jammy get.

Billy Dods (Billy Dods), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 08:39 (nineteen years ago) link

For Your Pleasure is pretty much my favourite album by anyone,
-- James Ball (james.bal...), November 11th, 2002.

Morrissey
1. For Your Pleasure Roxy Music*
(*Morrissey claims he can only think of one truly great British album and that this is it)

-- ha ha (a...), June 20th, 2004.


----------------------------------------------------------------------

shite
-- autovac (mrichards2...), June 20th, 2004.

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 09:41 (nineteen years ago) link

All I have is For Your Pleasure, but damn is it great. I've actually been listening to the hell out of it lately, and it grows on me a lot with each succeeding listen.
-- Clarke B. (clarkeb...), June 5th, 2001.

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 09:52 (nineteen years ago) link

Yeah, no front cover/booklet though.

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 09:56 (nineteen years ago) link

Only two things I voted for have made it so far (Einstein and Rumours). I know that at least one more gets in cos I did a blurb, but still. There'd better be some Buzzcocks LPs soon (and please NOT the singles comp).

Jeff W (zebedee), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 09:57 (nineteen years ago) link

47

points: 348
1st place votes: 0
total votes: 12

STEVIE WONDER - TALKING BOOK

http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/B00004S36A.02.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 09:58 (nineteen years ago) link

i never realized there was one "automatic" top stevie album in that sense. if anything, i'd think SITKOL fits that role, though i've seen any number of his albums called his best by old stodgy canon makers. talking book is my fave.
-- fact checking cuz (factcheckingcu...), February 22nd, 2005.

I agree with those who say that Talking Book is the pinnacle. But he was pretty much untouchable for a good several album run there.
-- o. nate (syne_wav...), February 23rd, 2005.

(from the OPO thread)

talking book by a mile.

-- fact checking cuz (factcheckingcu...), November 11th, 2003.

Talking Book > Innervisions

-- billstevejim (billsteveji...), February 22nd, 2005

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 10:16 (nineteen years ago) link

46

points: 348
1st place votes: 1
total votes: 14

SUICIDE - FIRST ALBUM

http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/B000040OBS.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 10:38 (nineteen years ago) link

that's the first of the albums of this thread that at the same time i do not have and that i would like to listen to (and own) right now.

alex in mainhattan (alex63), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 10:42 (nineteen years ago) link

good winter-time album; walking through the city, surrounded by dirty piles of melting snow - nice soundtrack
-- 6335 (633...), June 20th, 2004.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

It's great to listen to at night while trying to fall asleep. Very unsettling.
-- latebloomer (posercore24...), June 21st, 2004.

i love the space in this album. it's simultaneously huge and claustrophobic, droning and jittering. it'll make you laugh. it'll make you cry. it'll make you come out of the theatre wanting to conquer the world. it's definitely my pick for top romantic comedy of the year.
-- Felonious Drunk (wangchungvsah...), June 21st, 2004.

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 10:43 (nineteen years ago) link

45

points: 352
1st place votes: 0
total votes: 12

MILES DAVIS - ON THE CORNER

http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/B00004WN2L.02.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 10:45 (nineteen years ago) link

to me, it pointed at the future of how not jazz, but popular music itself would be made. all loops and punched in bits of 'sound' over melody, emphasising rhythm and groove. peep timbaland et al. and the way production dictates everything else. on headphones, the sound of everything being punched in here is overwhelming. i don't think pro-tools has birthed anything as complex.
-- Beta (andybet...), June 9th, 2004.

I didn't get this album until after I had gotten into Can and a lot of electronic dance music - it really seems to be along those lines rather than 'jazz', or even the other Miles fusion records. In a way, it's coming out of Silent Way a lot more than Bitches Brew or Jack Johnson, in the way it was constructed, and the way it gradually unfolds. Right now, I think it's one of the best albums he ever made.
-- dleone (d_leon...), June 9th, 2004.

It's fantastic, by far my favourite of his. It set the benchmark for music for the next 30 years (and beyond), most of the possiblities contained in these grooves haven't even been explored yet.
-- Billy Dods (butterbubble...), June 9th, 2004.
I was expecting something that would need repeat listening before it sounded like music, and instead got a dense but immediately enjoyable slab of energetic funk that doesn't seem any more difficult than, say, James Brown's more abstract live stuff. I'm still baffled by its reputation as Miles's least accessible album.


-- frankiemachine (franki...), June 10th, 2004.

the thing noone has mentioned is how environmental the record is. it's very 'electronic forest,' particularly the last track. i get lost in it.
-- milesrules (mile...), June 16th, 2004.

On the Corner was my first Miles Davis album. My initial reaction was to take it back to the shop, but I like it now. Sort of.
-- PJ Miller (pjmiller6...), June 10th, 2004.


Miles' "On the Corner"

Just one question - what does it mean to be "very electronic forest"?

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 10:53 (nineteen years ago) link

44

points: 358
1st place votes: 0
total votes: 12

CURTIS MAYFIELD - SUPERFLY

http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/B000059ZE1.02.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 11:02 (nineteen years ago) link

that's the only soul/funk album i love wholeheartedly.

alex in mainhattan (alex63), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 11:18 (nineteen years ago) link

Curtis Mayfield, Superfly: "Little Child Runnin' Wild", "Pusherman", "Freddie's Dead". Opening a soundtrack with three of the ten best R&B songs ever (in any definition of the genre) in a row is one hell of a feat.
-- Nate Patrin (natepatrin550...), April 12th, 2003.

better than Maggot Brain if not Riot--nothing on earth is better than Riot--and does just about the same things as both)
-- M Matos (michaelangelomato...), February 27th, 2003.

Go for the Superfly soundtrack, an awesome piece of blaxploitation-funk

-- Patrick (calimer...), May 11th, 2001.

I once walked into a local bar exactly on the opening note of Curtis Mayfield's "Superfly"!!! I felt like they were finally making the movie of my life. I know - I'm a DORK but it was very cool.

-- wallace carothers (wallacecarothersrepentenc...), February 17th, 2004

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 11:23 (nineteen years ago) link

**that's the first of the albums of this thread that at the same time i do not have and that i would like to listen to (and own) right now.**

It's pretty rubbish, but at the same time interesting. Don't rush out and get it.

Dr. C (Dr. C), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 11:25 (nineteen years ago) link

If/When a Buzzcocks album comes up I fervently hope that it's 'A Different Kind Of Tension'. But it won't be.

Dr. C (Dr. C), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 11:26 (nineteen years ago) link

43

points: 363
1st place votes: 0
total votes: 12

STEVE REICH - MUSIC FOR 18 MUSICIANS

http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/B000006E4C.03.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

hobart paving (hobart paving), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 11:27 (nineteen years ago) link

I think that's the cover of a later edition.

RS_LaRue (RSLaRue), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 11:34 (nineteen years ago) link


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