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Thread: Ten albums that "changed your life"

  1. #1
    BLOOD SWEAT STEEL Guest

    Ten albums that "changed your life"

    You know what I mean. Desert island discs. The ones you couldn't go on living without. The ones that sculpted your formative years. The album playing in the other room the first time you got laid, the first time you got hauled off to jail, the album that sparked your personal "renaissance."...

    Only ten. In order:

    10. Genesis - And Then There Were Three
    9. Alan Jackson - Here In The Real World
    8. Chris Ledoux - Western Skies
    7. Jimmy Buffett - Barometer Soup
    6. Urge Overkill - The Supersonic Storybook
    5. Sebadoh - Harmacy
    4. Enigma - MCMXCaD
    3. Jim Croce - Time In A Bottle
    2. Mana - Suenos Liquidos
    1. James Taylor - Greatest Hits

    Wow. It's hard to pick just ten. Even harder to rank them.

  2. #2
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    In no order:

    Fugazi: 13 songs
    Violent Femmes: Violent Femmes
    Pink Floyd: Animals
    Pearl Jam: Ten
    Led Zeppelin: IV
    Smashing Pumpkins: Siamese Dream
    Pete Rock & CL Smooth: Mecca and the Soul Brother
    Public Enemy: Fear of a Black Planet
    Bob Marley & The Wailers: Legend
    Green Day: Dookie

  3. #3
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    All fairly old but I was impressionable enough way back then to have my life changed.

    1. Layla -- Derek and the Dominos
    2. Ziggy Stardust -- David Bowie
    3. Nantucket Sleighride -- Mountain
    4. Caravaranseri -- Santana
    5. Trans Europe Express -- Craftwerk
    6. Space is the Place -- Sun Ra
    7. Apostrophe -- Zappa
    8. Never Mind the Bolloks -- Sex Pistols
    9. Headhunter -- Herbie Hancock
    10. Some cheap ass Motzart compilation -- Motzart
    Damn, we're in a tight spot!

  4. #4
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    My ten, in no particular order because the impact these had at the time is not the same as they make upon me now, but that doesn't diminish the impact's importance. Mostly these are and were important to me because they made me rethink music.

    -Sonic Youth, Sister
    -DEVO, Q: Are We Not Men? A: We are DEVO.
    -Talking Heads, Remain in Light
    -Television, Marquee Moon
    -The Ramones, Rocket to Russia
    -Led Zeppelin, IV/Zoso/Runes/4 Sticks
    -Elvis Costello, Get Happy!
    -King Crimson, Discipline
    -Miles Davis, Kind of Blue
    -...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead, Source Tags & Codes

  5. #5
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    Each of the albums below have all done something to shape the person I've become and my way of life.

    1 showcases one of the greatest guitarists ever.
    2-4 is for reflecting.
    5-6 introduced me to electronic music and nearly 95% of my music library.
    7 is the soundtrack for any alcoholic.
    8 is lyrical mastery.
    9 will make anyone want to own a Hammond organ.
    10 is for the summer-time.

    1. Stevie Ray Vaughan, The Essential Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble
    2. Pink Floyd, Wish You Were Here
    3. Bob Marley, Legend
    4. Pulp, Different Class
    5. soundtrack, Trainspotting
    6. soundtrack, The Saint
    7. The Doors, The Best of
    8. Beastie Boys, Paul's Botique
    9. Jimmy Smith, Walk on the Wild Side: The Best of the Verve Years
    10. Beck, Guerro
    Last edited by Nick Pappagiorgio; 03-24-2007 at 05:48 PM.

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    Led Zep - The Song Remains the Same
    Pink Floyd - The Wall
    Moby - Play
    The Grateful Dead - Blues for Allah
    People Under the Stairs - Stepfather
    Blackalicious - Blazing Arrow
    Daft Punk - Discovery
    Jean-Michel Jarre - Oxygene
    Santana - Supernatural
    The Roots - The Beginner's Guide to Understanding The Roots vol. 1

  7. #7
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    grateful dead - live dead
    pink floyd - pipers at the gates of dawn
    slayer - show no mercy
    bad brains - roir tape
    king crimson - larks tongue in aspic
    devo - freedom of choice
    black sabbath - volume 4
    sonic youth - daydream nation
    public enemy - it takes a nation of millions to hold us back
    aphex twin - Richard D James

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by BLOOD SWEAT STEEL View Post
    You know what I mean. Desert island discs. The ones you couldn't go on living without. The ones that sculpted your formative years.
    The ten that "sculpted my formative years", or that "changed my life" are certainly not the same as my desert island discs.
    .

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    ^ Seconded. When I was in 6th grade I listened to Matthew Sweet's Girlfriend about ten million times, and it was influential to me I guess, but it's not one of my ten favorite albums (although I still like it).

    I guess as a musical biography/soundtrack to my life kinda thing (like if this was an episode of The Wonder Years), I'd have to have...

    Various Artists, Dukes of Hazzard Original Soundtrack (which has "Up on Cripple Creek," my first favorite song).
    Run DMC, Kings of Rock.
    Violent Femmes, Violent Femmes.
    Public Enemy, Fear of a Black Planet.
    Guns and Roses, Lies and Appetite for Destruction.
    Jane's Addiction, Ritual De Lo Habitual.
    Elmore James, Let's Cut It.
    Built to Spill, Keep It Like A Secret.
    This awesome two disc Stax/Volt compilation album. I can't remember what it is called, but it is fucking great.
    Stevie Wonder generally.
    The Hold Steady, Separation Sunday.

    Wow, I could really go on and on... but I have to go to dinner.
    Last edited by Steven S. Dallas; 03-24-2007 at 05:58 PM.

  10. #10
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    Pink Floyd: Dark Side of the Moon
    Led Zeppellin: The symbols album
    Rolling Stones: Let it Bleed
    Allman Bros.: Live at the Fillmore East
    Grateful Dead: Europe '72
    Grateful Dead: Blues for Allah
    Steely Dan: Katie Leid
    Yes: Fragile
    Frank Zappa: Apostrophe
    Patti Smith: Horses

    I also have to mention Lou Reed: Heroin
    Last edited by schindlerpiste; 03-24-2007 at 06:08 PM.
    “How does it feel to be the greatest guitarist in the world? I don’t know, go ask Rory Gallagher”. — Jimi Hendrix

  11. #11
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    In no particular order


    Jethro Tull - Aqualung
    Mahavishnu Orchestra - Birds of Fire
    Al DiMeola - Casino
    James Taylor - Never Die Young
    Frank Zappa - Apostrophe
    Ween - White Pepper
    Miles Davis - Agharta
    The Slip - Angels Come on Time
    Pat Metheny - Secret Story
    Donald Fagen - The Nightfly



    yeah, im fucking weird

  12. #12
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    The albums that formed me, in order of formation:

    Partridge Family
    Beatles' Sgt Peppers
    Neil Diamond's Hot August Night
    David Essex's All the Fun of the Fair
    Elton John's Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
    Led Zeppelin's Physical Graffiti
    Rolling Stone's Some Girls
    Elvis Costello's first 3 or 4 and anything Nick Lowe was involved in
    Roxy Music's Avalon
    and a whole bunch of synthesizer, electronic, early day English stuff like Human League, Depeche Mode and Visage

    I'm still being formed, thankfully, by artists like Sufjan and Thom Yorke and others...
    Last edited by yogachik; 03-26-2007 at 01:29 PM.
    .

  13. #13
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    Formative years (most of these were before my high school years, but for some reason they pulled me in):

    Depeche Mode - Violater
    The Cure - Disentigration
    U2 - Achtung Baby
    Pink Floyd - The Wall
    The Cure - standing on the beach, staring at the sea
    The Cranberries - No need to Argue
    Morissey - Suedehead
    XTC - Nonsuch
    The Cure - kiss me, kiss me, kiss me
    Depeche Mode - Music for the masses

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by yogachik View Post
    David Essex...
    Hey kid, rock and roll
    Rock on, ooh, my soul
    Hey kid, boogey too, did ya

    Hey shout, summertime blues
    Jump up and down in my blue suede shoes
    Hey kid, rock and roll, rock on

    And where do we go from here
    Which is the way that's clear

    Still looking for that blue jean, baby queen
    Prettiest girl I ever seen
    See her shake on the movie screen, Jimmy Dean
    (James Dean)

    And where do we go from here
    Which is the way that's clear

    Still looking for that blue jean, baby queen
    Prettiest girl I ever seen
    See her shake on the movie screen, Jimmy Dean
    Jimmy Dean
    Rock on
    Rock on
    Rock on

    Hey, hey
    Rock and roll
    Rock on

    Rock on
    Hey, hey
    Rock and roll
    Rock on

    Rock on
    Hey, hey
    Rock and roll
    Rock on

    Rock on
    Hey, hey
    Rock and roll
    Rock on........



    Great fucking vocal.

    Ten albums? Can't do that. Have fun.

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    Red Hot Chili Peppers- "Mother's Milk"
    Public Enemy- "It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back"
    Nirvana- "Nevermind"
    Pearl Jam- "Ten"
    Rollins Band- "The End Of Silence"
    Jane's Addiction"- Ritual Del Lo Habitual
    The Beatles- "The Beatles" (White Album)
    New Radicals- "Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too"
    The Replacements- "Pleased to Meet Me"
    Bruce Springsteen- "Born to Run"
    "There is a hell of a huge difference between skiing as a sport- or even as a lifestyle- and skiing as an industry"
    Hunter S. Thompson, 1970 (RIP)

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    Black Flag - My War
    Tool - Undertow
    Dead Kennedys - Plastic Surgery Disasters
    The Meatmen -We're the Meatmen and You Suck
    Circle Jerks - Wonderful
    Ministry - Psalm 69
    Misfits - Earth A.D.
    Rage Against The Machine - Rage Against The Machine
    Butthole Surfers - Psychic...Powerless...Another Man's Sac
    Kyuss - Sky Valley
    Rollins Band: Life Time

    I got my political leanings (DK, RATM), sense of humor (Meatmen, CJ, BS, Misfits) teen-angst (rollins), paranoia (BF, Tool), and more from these tapes/CDs.

  17. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by slippy View Post
    The Meatmen -We're the Meatmen and You Suck.
    Unbelievable! Not sure if I'd put them on my ten most influential list, but you gotta like a band with songs like "Blow Me, Jah" and "Crippled Children Suck."

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    I was a little innocent listening to that album at 12 years old and it definitely fucked with my mind. Only people I've met that have heard of them were from the east coast, telling me how they ssaw them at some college house party.....you too?

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    Exclamation

    No one has mentioned Air Supply yet?
    Fighting leads to killing, and killing gets to warring. And that was damn near the death of us all.

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    Quote Originally Posted by slippy View Post
    I was a little innocent listening to that album at 12 years old and it definitely fucked with my mind. Only people I've met that have heard of them were from the east coast, telling me how they ssaw them at some college house party.....you too?
    Never saw them live. I was browsing at Newbury Comix, saw the title, and thought "I have got to own that."

    I got it on vinyl, so I haven't listened to them for years, but some of the fucked-up lyrics still swirl around in my head.

    "Then she kicked me in the dick. God she was pissed."

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    No particular order.........

    Death From Above 1979 - "You're a Woman, I'm a Machine"
    Change of Heart - "Tummysuckle"
    The Sex Pistols - "Never mind the bullocks......."
    Refused - "The Shape of Punk to Come"
    Rage Against the Machine - "Rage Against the Machine"
    The Reverend Horton Heat - "The Full-Custom Sounds of........"
    The Tragically Hip - "Day for Night"
    Kyuss - "Welcome to Sky Valley"
    Queens of the Stone Age - "Songs for the Deaf"
    Tool - "Aenima"

  22. #22
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    I guess in order of influence, it'd have to be something like:
    Getz/Gilberto - Getz/Gilberto
    Meet the Beatles - Beatles
    Abbey Road - Beatles
    Thriller - MJ
    Raising Hell - Run DMC
    Graceland - Paul Simon
    Decade of Aggression - Slayer
    Ten - Pearl Jam
    Rastaman Vibration - Bob Marley
    Live Dead - Grateful Dead


    There, that takes me from a wee young lad to early high school. Everything after that was just a variation of the above.
    Putting the "core" in corporate, one turn at a time.

    Metalmücil 2010 - 2013 "Go Home" album is now a free download

    The Bonin Petrels

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    Quote Originally Posted by The Suit View Post
    I was browsing at Newbury Comix...
    Pretty much the best store evar.

    Back in the day they'd have the bin of 45's by Bosstown bands up by the register, I still have a shitload of those.

  24. #24
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    If I define it as albums that defined certain periods in my life, and I just played the hell out of in these periods, it would go something like this in roughly chronological order:

    1. U2 - War
    2. Echo & The Bunnymen - Porcupine
    3. The Church - Heyday
    4. New Order - Substance
    5. Catherine Wheel - Ferment
    6. Julian Cope - Jehovahkill
    7. Straitjacket Fits - Hail
    8. Radiohead - OK Computer
    9. The Shins - Oh, Inverted World
    10. Built to Spill - You In Reverse

  25. #25
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    Alphabetical order, life-changers rather than DIDs:

    Chet Baker, Once Upon a Summertime
    De La Soul, Three Feet High ... and Rising
    Jane's Addiction, Nothing's Shocking
    Love Tractor, This Ain't No Outerspace Ship
    Thelonious Monk, ... Plays Duke Ellington
    Nirvana, Nevermind
    Red Hot Chili Peppers, Mother's Milk (close call for Blood Sugar Sex Magic)
    R.E.M., Fables of the Reconstruction (close call for Murmur)
    Straitjacket Fits, Melt
    The Who, Live at Leeds
    not counting days 2016-17

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