
I don’t tend to do many of those 'things about your life' lists that flood Facebook and Myspace.
You know the ones where you’re asked ridiculous questions that are supposed to offer your friends a profound insight into your psyche.
But which invariably just make you seem needy, insecure, unfunny and in need of validation. Well, this is what this is. Although this one is actually not so sad, quite interesting and kind of apt for a blog about music. However I’m using a bit of poetic licence with the description and taking out all the shit about changing your life. They might have done but that sounds a tad wanky.
So the idea is to think of 15 albums that had a profound effect on you. That shaped the music you listen to now. That stopped you in your tracks, sucked you in and took you over for days, weeks, months, years. 15 albums that you can use to identify time, places, people, emotions. These are the albums that, no matter what they were thought of musically, meant something to you. They may not be your favourite albums ever, you may not have listened to them in years, but they’re the albums that were turning points in your musical life.
So here are mine. I pondered over this for a while. Stood in front on my CD racks going through them all. Some were easy to think of. I knew them all ready. I could relate them exactly to moments that still shape the music I listen to know. That turned corners on where my interests lay. Others I had to think harder over. And a few more could easily have been replaced and swapped for others. But this is ultimately the list of albums that fuel this blog. I’ve tried to list them chronologically in order of when I heard them but as my memory is awful and as some were around the same time, it may not be entirely accurate. What I know for sure is that ‘Appetite For Destruction’ was the first proper album I remember listening to. Up til that point, it had been pop compilations and a couple of Madonna albums. But while that may be the record that started it all, I can honestly say that The Smiths ‘Best 1’ is the album that changed everything. I heard it through my brother who had just started university and it affected me in ways I probably can’t even begin to express. As for the rest, well I guess they’re the soundtrack to what got me to the place I am now. The signposts along the way. The ones that made me take detours in what I listened to. There are inevitably some that I've had to miss off but all in all, I think it’s a pretty robust list. The question is, what makes up your list?
Guns N Roses - 'Appetite For Destruction'
The Smiths - 'Best 1'
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - 'Henry's Dream'
Radiohead - 'Pablo Honey'
Rage Against The Machine - 'Rage Against The Machine'
Suede - 'Suede'
Smashing Pumpkins - 'Siamese Dream'
Oasis - 'Definitely Maybe'
The Verve - 'A Northern Soul'
dEUS - 'Worst Case Scenario'
David Bowie - 'Ziggy Stardust'
Bob Dylan - 'Greatest Hits'
Mercury Rev - 'Deserter's Songs'
Belle & Sebastian - 'The Boy With The Arab Strap'
The White Stripes - 'White Blood Cells'
Radiohead - you (live acoustic version) original version available on 'Pablo Honey'
The Verve - a new decade (live session version) original version available on 'A Northern Soul'
Oasis - married with children (live acoustic session version) original version available on 'Definitely Maybe'
The Smiths - what difference does it make (live session version) original version available on 'Best 1'
Smashing Pumpkins - cherub rock (live acoustic version) original version available on 'Siamese Dream'
mp3 / music / 15 important records
Monday, March 02, 2009
Heavy words are so lightly thrown
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3 comments:
Nice topic.
If I had to pick one album as THE turning point in my musical life which also ended up affecting other aspects of my life in general - not directly, but like a super-domino effect - that would inevitably be The Bends. I still remember the day I bought it and the feeling afterwards of knowing that this was the album that had come from somewhere to get me.
But there are others too. Nirvana's 'Unplugged in NY' which was the first CD I ever bought (in 1994, and I was already 18 - until then it was just tapes and some vinyl). The Velvet Underground & Nico, Love's Forever Changes and Nick Drake's Five Leaves Left, which an older cousin gave to me as a present. Blur's The Great Escape (I never, ever liked Oasis apart from a couple songs). The Screaming Trees' Dust, the Chemical Bros' Dig Your Own Hole, dEUS' The Ideal Crash, Sigur Ros' Agaetis Byrjun. OK Computer and Kid A obviously. Also, a HUGE list of individual songs, such as Orbital's "The Box" and Ride's "Unfamiliar", or early Belle & Sebastian singles. And Urusei Yatsura's "Kewpies Like Watermelon", of which a transparent green vinyl 45" is my most valued music-related possession. :-)
I'd also include Suede's Dog Man Star, despite the fact that I first really paid attention to it in 2000. Yeah, pretty late, but I couldn't really get into Suede when they first emerged. I was a late comer into many things, movements, sounds, but getting into Radiohead actually got me really, really deep into music, and I've been trying to make up for it all since then.
This is an amazing post... And a fabulous idea for a blog post. I imagine this being not an easy feat.
Alive! - Slade
Fragile - Yes
Atom Heart Mother - Pink Floyd
Blue Moves - Elton John
Belladonna - Nucleus/Ian Carr
Blood on the Tracks - Bob Dylan
"Heroes" - David Bowie
Real to Reel Cacophony - Simple Minds
Seventeen Seconds - The Cure
The Smiths - The Smiths
Plastic Surgery Disasters - Dead Kennedys
Generals and Majors - XTC
Pablo Honey - Radiohead
Grace - Jeff Buckley
A Better Version Of Me - Rainer Maria
I got a Phillips "Portable" cassette player for my birthday in April 1973 (the mono type with the big clunky play button you physically pushed the play head up into the cassette) - my faves at the time were Gary Glitter (be nice) and Slade - I got "Touch me" and Slades Alive - wow real rock!!! Later my Mum bought me Fragile (not the Yes album I wanted) but it was an eye opener to all things prog.
ATM just because I thought it was fab and no one I knew liked it.
Elton John - very emotional album (for me).
Ian Carr - and JAZZ - took me a lot of places.
Dylan and Bowie - seminal influences. Home bedroom bliss.
Cure, Smiths, Simple Minds - university bedroom bliss, swaggering arrogance, fuck you attitude.
Kennedys (or Sex Pistols) - I came late to punk!
XTC, Radiohead - post punk, experimental leaders.
Buckley just gorgeous. A new hope sadly short lived.
Rainer Maria - best thing I've heard (and seen) in many years, along with Deerhoof, Grizzly Bear, restoring faith in music worth.
And too many to mention but I'm really digging the whole Post-rock/math rock/new prog rock synthesis.
Did I mention The Wedding Present?
Nice one Coxon!
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