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Non Jazz Albums (Or Songs, etc.) That Rocked Your World


paul secor

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The Topic Title speaks for itself.

Here are mine:

Fat Domino: "Blueberry Hill"

Chuck Berry: "Johnny B. Goode"

The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan

Ray Charles Story Vols. 1&2

Robert Johnson: King of the Delta Blues Singers

The Best of Muddy Waters

Hank Williams - a Best Of compilation

Mississippi John Hurt: Today!

Son House singing "Death Letter Blues" on the Newport Folk Festival 1965 compilation

Jimmy Yancey: Chicago Piano Volume 1

Swan Silvertones: Love Lifted Me

Bach: Cello Suites

Mozart: Clarinet Concerto

Jascha Hornstein conducting Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde

Artur Schnabel playing Beethoven's Piano Sonatas

and a few more to make it an even twenty:

The Best of Little Walter

Reverend Robert Wilkins (Piedmont)

Elmore James on an old Kent album

Bobby "Blue" Bland" "Stormy Monday"

Otis Rush: "All Your Love (I Miss Loving)"

I hope others will add their choices.

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It was somebody, yeah! Don't remember names at this point...but if he was on between 8 PM & 1-2 AM between 1968 and 1971 or so, I probably did.

Top 40 back in the day...after dark, you could pick up stuiff from all over, and the playlists were still somewhat regional, so...it was a good time just going up and down the dial all night long.

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Great thread! Here's 20 from me - songs and albums, in no particular order:

The Klezmatics - Rhythm & Jews
Defunkt - Thermonuclear Sweat
The Allman Brothers Band - Eat a Peach
R.L. Burnside - Too Bad Jim
Robert Johnson - King of the Delta Blues Singers
Fela - Zombie
Rascher Saxophone Quartet - Music for Saxophones
Joni Mitchell - "Furry Sings the Blues" and "Tea Leaf Prophecy"
Randy Newman - Land of Dreams and "Shame"
The Radiators - Wild and Free
James Booker - Resurrection of the Bayou Maharajah
O.V. Wright - The Soul of O.V. Wright
Professor Longhair - New Orleans Piano
Jimi Hendrix - Band of Gypsys
Sounds of the South (Alan Lomax field recordings - Fred McDowell, Hobart Smith, Vera Hall, Wade Ward, Mississippi fife and drum music & more)
Alan Lomax's 1947-48 Parchman Prison songs; I've had various issues over the years.
James Brown - "Cold Sweat"
Blind Willie Johnson - Complete Recordings
Al Green - "Love and Happiness"
Howlin' Wolf - "Killing Floor," "Smokestack Lightning," "Moanin' at Midnight," "Commit a Crime," etc.

Edited by jeffcrom
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Dire Straits, "Sultans of Swing"

Peter Gabriel, "Red Rain"

Peter Gabriel, "In Your Eyes"

The Police, "Bring on the Night"

The Police, "Message in a Bottle"

The Police, "Synchronicity II"

U2, "A Sort of Homecoming"

Yep, I grew up in the '80's.

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Yeah I think hearing the Bad Brains in 1987 started me on explorering lesser known music. Before that I was listening to Zeppelin, Hendrix, etc. Living on west coast I got to see Nirvana, Mudhoney, etc numerous times around 1989-1991 which was a special time for me.

Anyway here are some of the non-jazz albums that really rocked my world growing up:

Led Zeppelin 1

Jimi Hendrix "axis bold as love"

Metallica "ride the lightning"

Bad Brains "roir cassette"

Dinosaur Jr "you're living all over me"

Sonic Youth "sister"

Big Black "atomizer"

Fugazi "s/t"

Beat Happening "jamboree"

Mudhoney "s/t"

Nirvana "bleach"

Galaxie 500 "on fire"

Stooges "funhouse"

Wire "pink flag"

Squirrelbait "skag heaven"

Slint "spiderland"

My Bloody Valentine "loveless"

And that's not including all the prog, Canterbury, krautrock, electronic, experimental, folk, avant garde stuff I was discovering along the way!

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I know i'm forgetting stuff... these shook my world roughly in chronological order from pre-puberty to early twenties.

Blues Brothers OST

Grease OST

John Williams - Star Wars OST

Jimi Hendrix - Smash Hits

Big Brother and the Holding Company - Cheap Thrills

Led Zeppelin - Remasters (2 CD compilation)

The Beatles - 1967-1970 (that 2 CD blue compilation)

Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon

Metallica - Ride the Lightning

Pearl Jam - Ten

Rage Against The Machine - S/T

Body Count - S/T

Nine Inch Nails - The Downward Spiral

A Tribe Called Quest - Midnight Marauders

Pavement - Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain

Chavez - Gone Glimmering

The GZA - Liquid Swords

Vangelis - Bladerunner OST

Aphex Twin - Richard D. James album

Fantomas - S/T

Dillinger Escape Plan - Calculating Infinity

Converge - Jane Doe

Cannibal Ox - The Cold Vein

El-P - Fantastic Damage

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So many to choose from. Here's the first six that come to mind:

Black Flag - Jealous Again

black_flag_jealous_again.jpg

Black Flag - Nervous Breakdown

018861000121.jpeg

SNFU - ...And No One Else Wanted To Play

And+No+One+Else+Wanted+To+Play+34870.jpg

D.O.A. - War On 45

DOA-War+on+45.jpg

Clash - London Calling

TheClashLondonCallingalbumcover.jpg

Gary Numan (Tubeway Army) - Replicas

Gary%20Numan%20-%20Replicas.jpg

So tough to narrow this down... but each of these albums has influenced my life in profound ways. I'll probably list a dozen more tomorrow!

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Excellent idea!

Buffalo Springfield Again

Cream - Disraeli Gears

Gentle Giant - I A Glass House

Pentangle - Solomon's Seal

Pentangle - Reflection

Otis Rush - Mourning In The Morning

Kooper/Bloomfield/Stills - Super Session

Howlin' Wolf - some Chess Greatest Hits compilation

Loggins & Messina - same

Johnny Guitar Watson - A Real Mother

James Brown - Live at the Apollo (the one with There Was A Time)

Helcio Milito - Kilombo

Moacir Santos - all of them!

African & Afro-American Drums (2 LP Smithsonion Box)

Jali Nyama Suso - Kora Music

anything from the Musical Anthology of the world series on Musicaphon

Kartick Kumar - Sitar Music from India

Edited by mikeweil
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vaguely in the order that my world was rocked...

Thin Lizzy - Jailbreak

Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band - Live Bullet

Bruce Springsteen - Born to run

Mighty Ballistics Hi-Power - Here comes the Blues

Tom Waits - Blue Valentine

Van Morrison - Astral weeks & Common one

whichever recording of Vaughan Williams' A Lark Ascending my father owned

Marvin Gaye - What's going on

Clash - London's calling

The Congos - Heart of the Congos

Joni Michell - Don Juan's Reckless daughter

Bach - Cello suites (Tortellier)

REM - Reckoning

Microdisney - Clock comes down the stairs

Sonic Youth - Daydream nation

Massive Attack - Blue lines

Terry Callier - What colour is love

Gil Scott Heron - Winter in America

The Necks - Sex

Arve Henriksen - Sakuteiki

Edited by mjazzg
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Chicago Transit Authority - my first rock album. As popular as the group was I still think Terry Kath remains an overlooked rock vocalist/guitarist.

Santana (1st album) and Santana's Abraxas

Allman Brothers, In Memory of Elizabeth Reed from Live at the Fillmore

Creedence Clearwater Revival, Willie and the Poor Boys

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20 Songs from my early listening days in the 70s:
1 Brownie McGhee & Sonny Terry, Down by the Riverside
2 Elmore James, Dust My Broom
3 Lighnin' Hopkins, Hurricane Betsy
4 Muddy Waters, 40 Days and 40 Nights
5 John Lee Hooker, Tupelo
6 Howlin' Wolf, Wang Dang Doodle
7 Earl Scruggs, Nashville Blues
8 Doc Watson, Tennessee Stud
9 Jimmy Martin, Losing You (Might be the Best Thing Yet)
10 Bashful Brother Oswald, The End of the World (7-10 from Will the Circle Be Unbroken, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band)
11 Jimmie Rodgers, Blue Yodel #1 (T for Texas)
12 Carter Family, Lula Walls
13 Rambling Jack Elliott, 1913 Massacre (from Tribute to Woody Guthrie concert)
14 Nathan Abshire, Pine Grove Blues
15 Octa Clark & Hector Duhon, Waltz of the Marshes
16 Adam & Cyprien Landreneau, Les Pinieres
17 Mamou Hour Cajun Band, Hathaway Two Step
18-19 Lawrence Walker, Unlucky Waltz, Opelousas (Osson) Two Step
20 Professor Longhair, In the Night
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as far as classical goes, off the top of my head:

Bartók/Szgeti playing the "Kreutzer Sonata"

Gulda playing the well-tempered piano

Arrau playing Chopin's Nocturnes

Rubinstein playing Mozart's K 491 and Schubert's D 960

Schnabel playing Beethoven's sonatas ... and D 960

Rubinstein playing Mozart's piano quartets

Michel Portal playing Mozart's clarinet concerto

Ginette Neveu playing the Brahms violin concert

Ferras and Barbizet playing various sonatas (Beethoven, Schumann, Brahms, Franck)

Samson François playing nearly any Chopin

Marcelle Meyer playing Debussy

Blandine Rannou playing Rameau

Gardiner conducting Mozart's da Ponte operas and the Magic Flute

Fricsay conducting Mozart's c minor mass

Kathleen Ferrier singing english songs (mostly that one unacompanied one that Terence Davies made such wonderful use of in one of his cinematic poems)

Gardiner's recording of Monteverdi's "Orfeo"

Janet Baker singing Bach and Schubert

Hans Hotter singing Bach's cantata BWV 82 "Ich habe genug"

Hilary Hahn's recording of the Mendelssohn violin concerto

Maria Callas' "Tosca" and some of the arias she did in her studio recitals (the coloratura arias album!)

Natalie Dessay singing the second aria of the queen of the night in William Christie's recording of the Magic Flute

Glenn Gould's recording Bach's two- and three-part interventions

Stern's recording of Mozart's K 364 (with Pinchas Zukerman and Daniel Barenboim conducting)

Ida Haendel and Vladimir Ashkenazy's recording of the third Enescu sonata

Szigeti's recording of the Bach violin solo partitas and sonatas

Rubinstein/Szeryng/Fournier doing Brahms' piano trios

Tragicomedia's CD of "Canterine Romane" by Rossi

I feel like this list is still way too short - but then it shows how intense the past around 15 months of listening to classical for the very fist time in any degree of seriosity were ...

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Albums that rocked my world include Nichols & May Examine Doctors, the first Moms Mabley releases that got played on WLAC,

and Beyond The Fringe with Peter Cook & Dudley Moore.Songs that woke up my ears, at various young ages, include

Spike Jones / William Tell Overture

Joe Turner / Shake Rattle & Roll

Coasters / Searching

Jimmy Reed / The Sun Is Shining

Ray Charles / Rock & Roll (album)

Johnny Cash / Big River

Bartok: Concerto for Orchestra (on an LP with Cantata Profana)

Santo & Johnny / Sleep Walk

(don't remember the singer) / Here I Am I'm Drunk Again

Bayreuth 1936 (album of Wagner arias; Hitler was allegedly there that year)

and the first rock-&-roll record I can remember hearing on the radio. It was by a male quartet and the first five lines were

Booly otten boo, baby, booly otten boo

Booly otten boo, baby, booly otten boo

Booly otten boo, baby, booly otten boo


Booly otten boo, baby

Huh?

The next strain was the same. Anybody know the singers or the name of the song? It was ca. 1953 or 54

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