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Seeing as everyone's talking favourite Rats albums again over yonder, I started making a mental list of general favourites. And now I'm nosy as to what everyone else's are.
10 is probably too many for a nice neat thread, but it's hard to draw a line once you start, so my current rough top 10 are:
1. A Tonic For The Troops
2. The Who - Quadrophenia
3. Amanda Palmer & The Grand Theft Orchestra - Theatre Is Evil
4. The Pogues - If I Should Fall From Grace With God
5. Billy Bragg - Worker's Playtime
6. The Clash - Give 'Em Enough Rope
7. Morrissey - Years of Refusal
8. The Mountain Goats - The Life of the World to Come
Top ten without sticking five Pulp albums in it. Tricky, so I'll just pick one per band.
Ignoring compilations (like Chas n Dave's Greatest Hits), here's a quick 30, not necessarily ranked in order, and probably missing another 20 I could easily tack on...
Pulp - This Is Hardcore
Happy Mondays - Pills 'n' Thrills and Bellyaches
Suede - Dog Man Star
Radiohead - The Bends
Boomtown Rats - A Tonic for the Troops
Teardrop Explodes - Kilimanjaro
JJ72 - JJ72
Flys - Own
David Bowie - Aladdin Sane
Sex Pistols - Never Mind The Bollocks
T. Rex - Bolan Boogie
Blur - Parklife
Stone Roses - Stone Roses
Elvis Costello - Get Happy!!!
Royal Blood - Royal Blood
Damned - Machine Gun Etiquette
Stranglers - Black & White
The House Of Love - The House of Love
Franz Ferdinand - Franz Ferdinand
Slade - Slayed?
The White Stripes - Elephant
The Strokes - Is This It
Blondie - Parallel Lines
Arcade Fire - Reflector
XTC - English Settlement
Velvet Underground & Nico - Andy Warhol
Bluetones - Expecting to Fly
Arctic Monkeys - AM
Razorlight - Up All Night
Dodgy - Free Peace Sweet
A fairly predictable glam/punk/new wave/baggy/britpop list I suppose...
I had forgotten The Kinks - Low Budget, James - Seven, Nirvana - Nevermind, Kula Shaker- K, Black Grape - It's Great When You're Straight and Oasis - What's The Story...
1. The Boomtown Rats
2. A Tonic for the Troops
3. U2 - All that you can't leave behind (probably all their albums apart the the latest)
3. The Zutons - Tired of Hanging Around
4. Razor light - Up All Night
5. white Lies - To Lose My Life
7. Thin Lizzy - Black Rose
8. U2 - How to dismantle an atomic bom
9. The Arctic Monkeys - AM
10. In the long grass (because it has Dave on it)
11. REM - Automatic for the people
12. Gabrielle - Rise
13. The Sex Pistols - Nevermind The bollocks
14. Pink - Funhouse
15. Pink Floyd - Atom Heart Mother
16. The Zutons - You can do anything
17. Cold Play - A rush of blood to the head
I probably overran by putting all of U2's albums up there. more Rats, Aerosmoth, Leonard Cohen, Rainbow will all feature but not sure which album. So many to choose from.
Some crackin' choices, although we'd all be terrible Desert Island Discs guests. Would belatedly add Sex Pistols -Flogging a Dead Horse (compilation, I know, cheating) and Faces - A Nod is as Good as a Wink. And to cheat, would replace Pogues IISFFGWG with Pogues in Paris, 'cause they are the best live band I've ever seen.
Anyway, now rectifying the realisation from these lists that I've never listened to a whole Pulp or Echo & the Bunnymen album. To Spotify!
Anyway, now rectifying the realisation from these lists that I've never listened to a whole Pulp or Echo & the Bunnymen album. To Spotify!
Regarding Pulp,it's best to start and Intro or His 'n' Hers and go chronlogically from there. The albums before that can be a little challenging (like Freaks), and the latter ones only make sense when you know what has gone before. Hardcore is a great album but wouldn't be the best place to start...
Anyway, now rectifying the realisation from these lists that I've never listened to a whole Pulp or Echo & the Bunnymen album. To Spotify!
Regarding Pulp,it's best to start and Intro or His 'n' Hers and go chronlogically from there. The albums before that can be a little challenging (like Freaks), and the latter ones only make sense when you know what has gone before. Hardcore is a great album but wouldn't be the best place to start...
Grand, thanks, as the resident Pulp authority I'll trust your guidance and start at His 'n' Hers. Although looking up Hardcore tracklisting has reminded me of this actually quite good compilation album that came free with a copy of Q sometime in the early 00s - http://www.discogs.com/Various-Rule-Britannia/release/717011
Anyway, now rectifying the realisation from these lists that I've never listened to a whole Pulp or Echo & the Bunnymen album. To Spotify!
Regarding Pulp,it's best to start and Intro or His 'n' Hers and go chronlogically from there. The albums before that can be a little challenging (like Freaks), and the latter ones only make sense when you know what has gone before. Hardcore is a great album but wouldn't be the best place to start...
I just know the Pulp singles and bits and pieces rather than the full albums. I'll download a few of the album tracks from Hardcore and see if I like them. Not sure if you ever saw Pulp doing Stacks and a few other tracks on Irish tv around 92/93. I was them live in Dublin around that time- I think the venue was somewhere near Vicar St, though the name escapes me.
No just found info on Pulp in Dublin. It was a programme called Rock The Garden April 1993.
Anyway, now rectifying the realisation from these lists that I've never listened to a whole Pulp or Echo & the Bunnymen album. To Spotify!
Regarding Pulp,it's best to start and Intro or His 'n' Hers and go chronlogically from there. The albums before that can be a little challenging (like Freaks), and the latter ones only make sense when you know what has gone before. Hardcore is a great album but wouldn't be the best place to start...
Grand, thanks, as the resident Pulp authority I'll trust your guidance and start at His 'n' Hers. Although looking up Hardcore tracklisting has reminded me of this actually quite good compilation album that came free with a copy of Q sometime in the early 00s - http://www.discogs.com/Various-Rule-Britannia/release/717011
I've just downloaded The Fear/Dishes/I'm a Man from This is Hardcore. Will give a review when I get a chance to listen to the songs later.
Some crackin' choices, although we'd all be terrible Desert Island Discs guests. Would belatedly add Sex Pistols -Flogging a Dead Horse (compilation, I know, cheating) and Faces - A Nod is as Good as a Wink. And to cheat, would replace Pogues IISFFGWG with Pogues in Paris, 'cause they are the best live band I've ever seen.
Anyway, now rectifying the realisation from these lists that I've never listened to a whole Pulp or Echo & the Bunnymen album. To Spotify!
The first two Supergrass albums are brilliant- I Should Coco and In It For The Money. Also Beatles White Album/Revolver, Sgt Peppers.
Sex Pistols-Never Mind the Bollocks
Housemartins-London 0 Hull 4
The Fine Art of Surfacing
Bowie-Scary Monsters
Bowie-Diamond Dogs
Morrissey-You Are The Quarry
Iggy and the Stooges-Raw Power
Iggy Pop-Lust For Life
A Tonic For The Troops
Smiths-Strangeways Here We Come
I've just downloaded The Fear/Dishes/I'm a Man from This is Hardcore. Will give a review when I get a chance to listen to the songs later.
Straight in with the more challenging material! I must admit that individually the Hardcore tracks don't always sound right in isloation but they all work together. Julian Cope albums are like that. Jehovahkill and Peggy Suicide are quite brilliant, but when I listen to the tracks on shuffle, they don't seem as great.
OK, just for a laugh, these are the albums I remember loving to listen to in late 1970s/1980s - I would have to think too hard to come up with all time faves, but this is a start!
Obviously, first 3 Rats albums
Reality Effect - Tourists
Absolutely - Madness
Blondie - debut one, Plastic Letters, Parallel Lines, Eat to the Beat
Dire Straits - debut, Communique, Making Movies (ok and all the rest!)
Abba - Super Trouper (and the rest!)
Shakin' Stevens - Shaky (gulp! - a short-lived phase!)
ELO - Out of the Blue
Rainbow - Down To Earth
Men At Work - Business As Usual
Bowie - Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust, Aladdin Sane (and most of the others too)
Rod Stewart - Every Picture Tells A Story
Feline - Stranglers
Kinks - ... Village Green Preservation Society, State of Confusion
For the unititiated...was 3 times the width of album. About the only poster which was allowed space between the Rats ones. Mind you, there was more space on the ceiling
I've just downloaded The Fear/Dishes/I'm a Man from This is Hardcore. Will give a review when I get a chance to listen to the songs later.
Straight in with the more challenging material! I must admit that individually the Hardcore tracks don't always sound right in isloation but they all work together. Julian Cope albums are like that. Jehovahkill and Peggy Suicide are quite brilliant, but when I listen to the tracks on shuffle, they don't seem as great.
Sometimes listening to a full album can be a bit daunting,and it's easier to take in a few tracks at a time. That way you 'absorb' them better rather then them all melting into one. I thought they were really good.I'm a Man was the best of the 3, more upbeat musically which tends to help.
The man with the same initials as Jesus Christ is just a fantastic lyricist. All the songs themes are very clear, you know just what is he talking about-none of that cryptic crossword nonsense you get form some songwriters. Anyway they are on my current playlist, pumping on my stereo and I'll download a few of the others later. I understand about listening to an album in full, and sums of parts etc, equally if you hear a song on the radio it is out of 'context' too. In the end good songs are good songs and they should work as individual units.
Nice to know anytime I get The Fear Jarvis will be there to sooth me.
For the unititiated...was 3 times the width of album. About the only poster which was allowed space between the Rats ones. Mind you, there was more space on the ceiling
I think this may be the first time I've been able to muster any real interest in a Queen album....
For the unititiated...was 3 times the width of album. About the only poster which was allowed space between the Rats ones. Mind you, there was more space on the ceiling
I think this may be the first time I've been able to muster any real interest in a Queen album....
Not sure if you have seen the Stephenie Roche 'wonder goal', for Peamount United in Dublin. Worth a look for anyone who missed it.
For the unititiated...was 3 times the width of album. About the only poster which was allowed space between the Rats ones. Mind you, there was more space on the ceiling
I think this may be the first time I've been able to muster any real interest in a Queen album....
Not sure if you have seen the Stephenie Roche 'wonder goal', for Peamount United in Dublin. Worth a look for anyone who missed it.
For the unititiated...was 3 times the width of album. About the only poster which was allowed space between the Rats ones. Mind you, there was more space on the ceiling
I think this may be the first time I've been able to muster any real interest in a Queen album....
Not sure if you have seen the Stephenie Roche 'wonder goal', for Peamount United in Dublin. Worth a look for anyone who missed it.
Only relevant in that Tango likes football,and might be interested in seeing a girl score a brilliant goal.Was continuing sporting thread of girls on bikes to girls playing football.
For the unititiated...was 3 times the width of album. About the only poster which was allowed space between the Rats ones. Mind you, there was more space on the ceiling
I think this may be the first time I've been able to muster any real interest in a Queen album....
Not sure if you have seen the Stephenie Roche 'wonder goal', for Peamount United in Dublin. Worth a look for anyone who missed it.
Only relevant in that Tango likes football,and might be interested in seeing a girl score a brilliant goal.Was continuing sporting thread of girls on bikes to girls playing football.
And it is a damn fine goal, now we wait for the first women's winner of the Puskas!
For the unititiated...was 3 times the width of album. About the only poster which was allowed space between the Rats ones. Mind you, there was more space on the ceiling
I think this may be the first time I've been able to muster any real interest in a Queen album....
Not sure if you have seen the Stephenie Roche 'wonder goal', for Peamount United in Dublin. Worth a look for anyone who missed it.
Only relevant in that Tango likes football,and might be interested in seeing a girl score a brilliant goal.Was continuing sporting thread of girls on bikes to girls playing football.
And it is a damn fine goal, now we wait for the first women's winner of the Puskas!
Well it got lots of publicity in Ireland anyway. I think the fact that it was more intention than luck helped. Now back to the music or we'll be in trouble.
Only relevant in that Tango likes football,and might be interested in seeing a girl score a brilliant goal.Was continuing sporting thread of girls on bikes to girls playing football.
WTF has that picture got to do with sport? You ain't looking at it properly.
To veer on topic, two modern gems I'd forgotten about - Imogen Heap's Ellipse and Perfume Genius' Put Your Back N 2 It.
Also, never really got Peter Gabriel (besides Biko) but recently New Blood proving an excellent post-breakup album (big orchestral sounds, good for anger). Must go into the back catalogue for non-orchestral versions.
And A Nod Is As Good As A Wink...To A Blind Horse - Faces, another party I'm late to, but excellent.