Best Album on My Favourite Albums of......1979!!

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gah that list almost makes me regret voting for This Heat but not quite

Emperor Tonetta Ketchup (sleeve), Friday, 5 April 2019 01:58 (seven years ago)

Yeah, I think I'll vote for This Heat. Really fantastic band.

jmm, Friday, 5 April 2019 02:25 (seven years ago)

I should listen to Einstein on the Beach one of these days.

jmm, Friday, 5 April 2019 02:29 (seven years ago)

it's so good!

Emperor Tonetta Ketchup (sleeve), Friday, 5 April 2019 02:39 (seven years ago)

my favorite Glass by far mostly because of the voices & narration

Emperor Tonetta Ketchup (sleeve), Friday, 5 April 2019 02:39 (seven years ago)

Listened to a couple of songs from that Graham parker album. Not bad, but not some forgotten gem imo. Vocal style reminds me of elvis costello for sure

findom haddie (jim in vancouver), Friday, 5 April 2019 02:42 (seven years ago)

I love the This Heat album, it was proto-post rock, foreshadowing Tortoise, The Sea and Cake, Bark Psychosis, Ben Frost, and others

Dan S, Friday, 5 April 2019 02:43 (seven years ago)

listening to Squeezing Out Sparks now, it's nice, surprised it's been so forgotten

it's in the Springsteen, Garland Jeffries, Nick Lowe, Replacements bar-band continuum that The Village Voice seemed to really love

Yes, I think Graham Parker was like gold dust to rock critics in their late 20s upwards - esp. in the US.

Angry Question Time Man's Flute Club Band (Tom D.), Friday, 5 April 2019 07:10 (seven years ago)

I've never seen even Mark Grout mention him or Stewart O formerly of this parish ever mention him and they would be the likeliest two

― Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Thursday, 4 April 2019 23:24 (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I saw him plus Rumour at the first Reading Festival, he was very good. Next up was Thin Lizzy.

Oh, he did a sort-of encore (never seen that happen since for a non-headliner at RFest), where the power had been cut except for the microphones, and he got the audience to chant "Turn The Power On!" while he improvised some lyrics, then when the power was restored, they broke into "Hold back the night" seamlessly. Some years later, I found that the first bit was a 'pastiche' of "Out Demons Out".

Anyway, he put it quite well recently when he said that the main difference between himself and Elvis C was that Elvis could actually sing.

Some years later, I found one of his first two albums at a car boot, and was pleased. Then I played it, and was "hmmm... nah, sorry. It's OK, but".

There you go.

Mark G, Friday, 5 April 2019 10:28 (seven years ago)

(at the first Reading Festival I went to, not the first ever, obv)

Mark G, Friday, 5 April 2019 10:28 (seven years ago)

NME 1979 Albums of the Year

1. Fear Of Music - Talking Heads
2. Metal Box - Public Image Ltd.
3. Unknown Pleasures - Joy Division
4. Setting Sons - The Jam
5. Entertainment - Gang Of Four
6. Armed Forces - Elvis Costello
7. Do It Yourself - Ian Dury
8. London Calling - The Clash
9. Squeezing Out The Sparks - Graham Parker
10. The Specials - The Specials
11. Forces Of Victory - Lintin Kwesi Johnson
12. The B52's - The B52's
13. Bop Till You Drop - Ry Cooder
14. The Raincoats - The Raincoats
15. Tom Verlaine - Tom Verlaine
16. I Am - Earth, Wind & Fire
17. The Undertones - The Undertones
18. 154 - Wire
19. Repeat When Necessary - Dave Edmunds
20. Drums & Wires - Xtc
21. New Panic Time - Pere Ubu
22. Cut - The Slits
23. Risque - Chic
24. Regatta De Blank - Police
25. Humanity - The Royle Rasses
26. Same Song - Israel Vibration
27. Katzenmusic - Michael Rother
28. Rust Never Sleeps - Neil Young
29. Brudder Des Schattens, Sohne Des.. - Popol Vuh
30. Dragnet - The Fall
31. Even Serpents Shine - The Only Ones
32. Eskimo - The Residents
33. Slow Train Coming - Bob Dylan
34. Blue Valentine - Tom Waits
35. This Heat - This Heat
36. A Train To Marineville - Swell Maps
37. I’m The Man - Joe Jackson
38. Soldier Talk - The Red Crayola
39. Reproduction - The Human League
40. Lodger - David Bowie

1979 NME Singles

1. Eton Rifles - The Jam
2. Gangsters - The Specials
3. London Calling -The Clash
4. I Will Survive - Gloria Gaynor
5. Strange Town - The Jam
6. Message In A Bottle - The Police
7. Oliver's Army - Elvis Costello
8. Spacer - Sheila B Devotion
9. Shake Your Body - The Jacksons
10. Memories - Public Image Ltd.
11. Death Disco - Public Image Ltd.
12. My Feet Keep Dancing - Chic
13. Rock Lobster - The B52's
14. Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough - Michael Jackson
15. Making Plans For Nigel - Xtc
16. Queen Of Hearts - Dave Edmunds
17. The Pictures On The Wall - Echo & The Bunnymen
18. Life During Wartime - Talking Heads
19. She's Beyond Good & Evil - The Pop Group
20. Boogie Wonderland - Earth Wing And Fire
21. Rowche Rumble - The Fall
22. Living On The Front Line - Eddie Grant
23. The Prince - Madness
24. Boys Don't Cry - The Cure
25. Touch - Lori & The Chameleons
26. Transmission - Joy Division
27. Get Over You - The Undertones
28. Memphis Tennessee - Silicone Teens
29. On My Radio - Selector
30. Pop Music - M
31. Girls Talk - Dave Edmunds
32. Heart Of Glass - Blondie
33. We Are Family - Sister Sledge
34. Stop Your Sobbing - Pretenders
35. Where’s Bill Grundy Now - Tv Personalities
36. Saturday Night Beneath The Plastic Palms - Leighton Buzzards
37. Time Goes By So Slow - Distractions
38. Protection - Graham Parker
39. A Message To You Rudi - The Specials
40. Electricity - Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark

Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Friday, 5 April 2019 11:18 (seven years ago)

Anyway, he put it quite well recently when he said that the main difference between himself and Elvis C was that Elvis could actually sing.

Other way surely?

Angry Question Time Man's Flute Club Band (Tom D.), Friday, 5 April 2019 11:20 (seven years ago)

... other way round, that is.

Angry Question Time Man's Flute Club Band (Tom D.), Friday, 5 April 2019 11:21 (seven years ago)

29. Brudder Des Schattens, Sohne Des.. - Popol Vuh

This was '78, NME guys.

Angry Question Time Man's Flute Club Band (Tom D.), Friday, 5 April 2019 11:22 (seven years ago)

btw tom to answer an earlier question by you i simply haven't heard any of the later 70s popol vuh

Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Friday, 5 April 2019 11:33 (seven years ago)

Any albums missing from my lists should be assumed ive not heard them or the odd case where i forgot about them.
In the case of Rush, Kiss , Later Pink Floyd or Yes, I simply dont like them

Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Friday, 5 April 2019 11:55 (seven years ago)

nme's list is actually very good! way more interesting, and much better albums, imo than the fairly boring us critical consensus of the era. honestly, reading a list like that just makes me pity the american critics more for being stuck with such a tepid and blinkered view of music

Jaki Liebowitz (rushomancy), Friday, 5 April 2019 13:32 (seven years ago)

Was that because so much of 'punk' was UK centric and not available in the US or were they just too old and 60s hangovers looking for music like they had as a youth?

Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Friday, 5 April 2019 15:32 (seven years ago)

Here's the acclaimed music list for 79

http://www.acclaimedmusic.net/year/1979a.htm

Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Friday, 5 April 2019 15:33 (seven years ago)

Rolling Stone 1979 Critics

Album

• Rust Never Sleeps - Neil Young

Single Of The Year

• Tusk - Fleetwood Mac

Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Friday, 5 April 2019 16:12 (seven years ago)

Melody Maker End Of Year Critic Lists - 1979

Albums

1. Fear Of Music - Talking Heads
2. Bop Till You Drop - Ry Cooder
3. Entertainment - Gang Of Four
4. Forces Of Victory - Linton Kwesi Johnson
5. Rust Never Sleeps - Neil Young
6. The Undertones - The Undertones
7. Off The Wall - Michael Jackson
8. I Am - Earth, Wind & Fire
9. Metal Box - PIL
10. London Calling - The Clash
11. The Original Sin - Cowboys International
12. Squeezing Out Sparks - Graham Parker
13. We Are Family - Sister Sledge
14. Armed Forces - Elvis Costello
15. Tom Verlaine - Tom Verlaine
16. 154 - Wire
17. Drums And Wires - XTC
18. Exposure - Robert Fripp
19. Rock On - Raydio
20. Bad Girls - Donna Summer

Single Of The Year

• Public Image Limited - Death Disco

Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Friday, 5 April 2019 16:14 (seven years ago)

Most critics were on board with punk, though boundaries have shifted since. Elvis Costello's vitrol got him called punk. There was a year or more lag for a lot of those NME records getting issued in the States, Metal Box becoming Second Edition. Mid-eighties, when I started buying these records, Slits, Wire, The Fall were all still hard to find. Urgh A Music War is a pretty good example of the New Wave acts that were promoted and distributed more thoroughly in the US.

https://www.discogs.com/Various-URGH-A-Music-War/release/1104550

bendy, Friday, 5 April 2019 17:28 (seven years ago)

btw found a person on ilx who is a graham parker fan. He's a former ilxor from way back in the early days.

Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Friday, 5 April 2019 20:07 (seven years ago)

tough one. went with Throbbing Gristle.

buttigieg play the blues (crüt), Friday, 5 April 2019 21:07 (seven years ago)

do you know what Throbbing Gristle is Yorkshire slang for?

Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Friday, 5 April 2019 23:13 (seven years ago)

I wouldn't call myself a Graham Parker *fan* exactly but Squeezing Out Sparks is a decent pub rock LP

Colonel Poo, Friday, 5 April 2019 23:17 (seven years ago)

Was that because so much of 'punk' was UK centric and not available in the US or were they just too old and 60s hangovers looking for music like they had as a youth?

― Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy)

i don't know what the hell was wrong with american critics in the '70s, i was three, and i'm a little grumpy about it because complaining about their utterly tepid and anodyne tastes makes me sound like fucking lj or something, i try to be a live and let live person, but jesus fucking christ their list looks like the shit the grammy voters come up with.

Jaki Liebowitz (rushomancy), Friday, 5 April 2019 23:39 (seven years ago)

"60's hangover" gets closest to the vibe imo, it is very distinct and I mostly blame Dave Marsh

Emperor Tonetta Ketchup (sleeve), Saturday, 6 April 2019 00:29 (seven years ago)

yes. also agree about the lag in US availability of a lot of the UK albums

Dan S, Saturday, 6 April 2019 00:40 (seven years ago)

this IS The B-52's, but in absence of that Joy Division.

this was the very first year i did the acclaimed series, which i ended up doing over five summers and then singles in the fall. what happened when i did the 1979 one is that the B-52's won. i did not know the B-52's at that time and knew that if it won a poll on ILM that it must be a special album. flash forward to 2018 and here i am doing the B-52's artist poll for ILM which Karl Malone ended up having to finish for me. i will never forget my reaction on the winning of the poll and being introduced to a band that i now love with all my heart. all thanks to ILM and why i love this place.

Bee OK, Saturday, 6 April 2019 01:21 (seven years ago)

Acclaimed Music Top 25 from 1979 poll

15 The B-52's - The B-52's 12
1 The Clash - London Calling 11
2 Joy Division - Unknown Pleasures 10
3 Michael Jackson - Off the Wall 10
14 Chic - Risqué 8
9 Talking Heads - Fear of Music 8
4 Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Rust Never Sleeps 7
22 Wire 154 6

Bee OK, Saturday, 6 April 2019 01:23 (seven years ago)

There was a CD compilation of Graham Parker and the Rumour from about 20 years ago called You Can't Be Too Strong that collected everything you'd ever need to hear by them. It's well written and executed pub rock but I always found his voice was like nails on chalkboard. At the time, I couldn't understand what critics saw in him, especially because they were ignoring that Van Morrison was still in peak form.

No love on this board for Doll by Doll, who released two superb albums in 79, Remember and Gypsy Blood. They were a vicious live act too.

There was something in the air then. Every week there was a new album that left your jaw on the floor. Even acts like the Slits and Joy Division, who could come across so unfocussed and sloppy live, would startle you with releases as good as Cut and Unknown Pleasures. I voted for Entertainment, GO4 were pretty special that year.

Ρεμπετολογια, Saturday, 6 April 2019 02:51 (seven years ago)

"There was something in the air then. Every week there was a new album that left your jaw on the floor. Even acts like the Slits and Joy Division, who could come across so unfocussed and sloppy live, would startle you with releases as good as Cut and Unknown Pleasures. I voted for Entertainment, GO4 were pretty special that year."

love this post

Dan S, Saturday, 6 April 2019 03:09 (seven years ago)

aw shucks

Ρεμπετολογια, Saturday, 6 April 2019 03:21 (seven years ago)

I think my first exposure to Gang of Four was "I Love a Man In a Uniform" in 1982, I looked but couldn't find Entertainment! for the longest time after that

Dan S, Saturday, 6 April 2019 03:41 (seven years ago)

GO4 feels predictable after reading thread but was immed at top for me. london calling is jan 80 in my mind tho i wouldnt hear it til later when i begged a classmate to tape it for me

Hunt3r, Saturday, 6 April 2019 04:01 (seven years ago)

I still reckon Tusk will win, its ILM

Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Saturday, 6 April 2019 13:34 (seven years ago)

even with the typo

Thus Spoke Darraghustra (Oor Neechy), Saturday, 6 April 2019 13:35 (seven years ago)

20 Jazz Funk Greats. It's one of the most urgent and beautiful records I've ever heard.

kraudive, Saturday, 6 April 2019 14:57 (seven years ago)

Is there a tribute act based in the NW England, called Fleetwood Manc?

Mark G, Saturday, 6 April 2019 17:39 (seven years ago)

Tubeway Army is on the list but 1979 was also the year that Gary Numan went solo. The Pleasure Principle isn't the best album of the year but it's better than a couple on that list.

Ashley Pomeroy, Saturday, 6 April 2019 18:10 (seven years ago)

Went solo in name only. Tubeway Army was as much of a solo project as anything he did under his own name.

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Saturday, 6 April 2019 18:43 (seven years ago)

Except Tubeway army carried on without him, under a slightly modified name

Mark G, Saturday, 6 April 2019 19:19 (seven years ago)

Er, no they didn't.

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Saturday, 6 April 2019 19:26 (seven years ago)

"slightly modified"?

https://www.discogs.com/artist/45761-Dramatis

Emperor Tonetta Ketchup (sleeve), Saturday, 6 April 2019 19:28 (seven years ago)

Numan's backing band circa '81 formed Dramatis after Numan announced his "retirement", but none of its members were on Tubeway Army or Replicas. Paul Gardiner (who was) continued to work with Numan on 'Stormtrooper in Drag' etc. and Jess Lidyard (the drummer on those records) featured on Dance. None of the members of Dramatis had any legal claim to the name Tubeway Army.

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Saturday, 6 April 2019 19:32 (seven years ago)

In fact, Denis Haines was only ever on Telekon. Payne, Bell and Sharpley would be back with Numan on Warriors etc.

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Saturday, 6 April 2019 19:34 (seven years ago)

If I had voted anywhere in '79, think it would have gone something like this, based on the ones I heard then---didn't yet know XTC, Slits, Tom Verlaine's s/t, or Metal Box ever (though did get Second Edition eventually) and remember best---10 points each:
1. Entertainment!- Gang of Four
2. Rust Never Sleeps- Neil Young & Crazy Horse
3. Unknown Pleasures - Joy Division
4. Into the Music- Van Morrison
5. Entertainment - Gang Of Four
6. The B-52- The B-52s
7. Do It Yourself - Ian Dury
8. London Calling - The Clash
9. Squeezing Out Sparks - Graham Parker
10. The Raincoats- The Raincoats

dow, Saturday, 6 April 2019 19:51 (seven years ago)

Also didn't hear Bad Girls and Risque 'til later, though would have been a source of my Singles list.

dow, Saturday, 6 April 2019 19:53 (seven years ago)

don't think I heard The Raincoats' first album until a reissue in the early '90s, or The Slits' first album until even later

Dan S, Saturday, 6 April 2019 23:34 (seven years ago)


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