Showing posts with label 50th Anniversary Albums. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 50th Anniversary Albums. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Ten notable albums each from the first quarters of 1974, 1984, and 1994

MCA Records

Looking back fifty years, to 1974. In no particular order, ten good-to-great albums that were released between January and March of that year: JONI MITCHELL - ‘Court and Spark’; STEELY DAN - ‘Pretzel Logic’; CARLY SIMON - ‘Hotcakes’; CAMEL - ‘Mirage’; FRANK ZAPPA - ‘Apostrophe’; KING CRIMSON - ‘Starless and Bible Black’; WEATHER REPORT - ‘Mysterious Traveller’; HARMONIA - ‘Musik von Harmonia’; ROY HARPER - ‘Valentine’; and TANGERINE DREAM - ‘Phaedra.’ Remember, this list covers only the first three months of 1974, and I believe only ‘Court and Spark’ and ‘Pretzel Logic’ would be likely to make my top ten albums of the entire year. A task I may or may not tackle some other time.

Berlin singer Terri Nunn. Photo: Geffen Records

Looking back forty years, to 1984. In no particular order, ten good-to-great albums that were released between January and March of that year: PRETENDERS - ‘Learning to Crawl’; THE SMITHS - s/t; QUEEN - ‘The Works’; ALAN PARSONS PROJECT - ‘Ammonia Avenue’; SPINAL TAP - ‘This is Spinal Tap’ soundtrack; DAVID GILMOUR - ‘About Face’; BERLIN - ‘Love Life’; KING CRIMSON - ‘Three of a Perfect Pair’; JOE JACKSON - ‘Body and Soul’; and MARILLION - ‘Fugazi.’ Despite being a child all throughout the 1980s, I am not keen on the music and culture of the decade; yet, I had to fill a spot and it was not going to be with all the hair metal bands that were becoming prevalent (Tap aside, naturally). Remember, this list covers only the first three months of 1984, and whether any of these records would be likely to make my top ten albums of the entire year is an open question.

Geffen Records

Looking back thirty years, to 1994. In no particular order, ten good-to-great albums that were released between January and March of that year: ALICE IN CHAINS - ‘Jar of Flies’; TORI AMOS - ‘Under the Pink’; NINE INCH NAILS - ‘The Downward Spiral’; SOUNDGARDEN - ‘Superunknown’; PINK FLOYD - ‘The Division Bell’; MEAT PUPPETS - ‘Too High to Die’; MARK LANEGAN - ‘Whiskey for the Holy Ghost’; ALISON MOYET - ‘Essex’; FAILURE - ‘Magnified’; and MARILLION - ‘Brave.’ At the age of sixteen, I found myself amidst a momentous epoch for rock music. Verily, it was the last period where rock-based music was dominant in the marketplace. Remember, this list covers only the first three months of 1994, and of these releases only ‘The Division Bell’ and ‘Superunknown’ - and quite possibly ‘Jar of Flies’ - would be absolutely guaranteed to make my top ten albums of the entire year. 

Copyright 2024, Arthur Newhook. @Sunking278 and @FloydEtcetera on X, and at the same handles on FACEBOOK. MASTODON - @ArthurNewhook@mastodon.world, BLUESKY - @arthurnewhook.bsky.social, and @arthurnewhook on POST.

Saturday, June 17, 2023

From the official Pink Floyd site on YouTube and in conjunction with the Perth Observatory, the Ningaloo eclipse in Exmouth, Western Australia, set to ‘Dark Side of the Moon’ in its entirety

AI generated image

Having just watched this incredible footage as I post, and being a bit groggy at six in the morning as I lay here in my bed, I can tell you that it is a very moving experience. Almost as amazing as the wonders of nature is how the collective piece of music such as ‘Dark Side of the Moon’ - or Led Zeppelin’s ‘Kashmir,’ or any number of great symphonic pieces across a range of rock, jazz, and classical subgenres - can retain its majesty and its power across - quite literally - thousands of listens over the course of decades. Also, how certain artists from the Progressive Rock era of the 70s - David Gilmour, Peter Gabriel, Robert Plant, to name a few - continue to find ways to remain innovative in their old age, and are still among the most ‘progressive’ musical artists alive today. 

Copyright 2023, Arthur Newhook. @Sunking278 and @FloydEtcetera on TWITTER, and at the same handles on FACEBOOK. MASTODON - @ArthurNewhook@mastodon.world, and POST - @arthurnewhook.

Wednesday, July 6, 2022

On This Date, 1972: Emerson, Lake and Palmer release Trilogy

Hipgnosis

Emerson, Lake & Palmer: Trilogy - Released 50 years ago today, July 6, 1972. This album and its follow-up, Brain Salad Surgery, are the ultimate peak of the legendary (or infamously) aristocratic and bombastic ELP. Easily a tighter, more-focused affair than the album that preceded it, 1971’s Tarkus. How many times have I heard ‘From the Beginning’ over the years? Maybe 10,000 times or so, yet that spacey outro never fails to send a chill down my spine. The perfect song for around Midnight. Another classic rock radio staple to this day is the wonderful take on Copland, ‘Hoedown.’ How I love that technicolor moment about three minutes into the title track when the tempo picks up pace dramatically, like Dorothy entering the Land of Oz. The closing march, ‘Abaddon’s Bolero,’ is pure bliss. Frankly, after not having played Trilogy from beginning-to-end and in one sitting in many years, I was a bit surprised by how much I enjoyed revisiting this record. ELP is not my absolute favorite band from the era, but this is an absolutely essential masterwork of 1970s Progressive and Classic Rock, no questions asked. (That cover, on the other hand, is hideous. There was a strange trend of bands consisting of pale, skinny, ugly white guys posing shirtless for publicity photos and album covers at that time.)

GRADE: A

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Tuesday, July 5, 2022

On This Date, 1972: Frank Zappa's Waka/Jawaka is released

Cal Schenkel

Frank Zappa: Waka/Jawaka - Released 50 years ago today - July 5, 1972. The 17:23 instrumental opener ‘Big Swifty’ is top-notch, ultra-quirky jazz fusion that explicitly pays tribute to Miles, and is guaranteed to greatly irritate anyone with more conventional tastes. Two shorter vocal tracks in the middle are at least as quirky, but do not really stand out relative to the overall multitude of satirical songs Zappa put forth in his time. Then, however, we come to the 11:17 instrumental closing title track, and another great ear worm for those of us who are demented enough to enjoy this sort of thing. For the two pieces bookending it, Waka/Jawaka is a must-have for all fans of Progressive Rock, Jazz Fusion, Free Jazz, and novelty songs.

GRADE: A-

Copyright 2022, FloydEtcetera. Twitter - @FloydEtcetera. DONATIONS - click here.

Remembering Jack Buck, born 24 August 1924.

photo: Jack Buck speaking at Busch Stadium, 17 September 2001 “You can't get a job without experience and you can't get experience u...