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1970s music draft- Link to google spreadsheet in first post (1 Viewer)

Groovy man!! Thanks guys. I had Yellow Brick Road and SN Fever as my first two picks predraft, but you snooze, you lose.

I'll take Physical Graffiti at #21 as my 1975 selection. I thought about my Singer Song Writer pick here, but hoping it falls and I get a sweet steal a little later.

I can take Plant's screeching in relatively small doses, but this album really shows Page's mastery and the groups diversity and think it deserves a first round pick.

My second rounder is Deep Purple's1972 monster classic Machine Head. Any album that has sandwiches Smoke on the water and Pictures of home in between Space Truckin and Highway Star can't go past the second round here.

Thanks agian!
Welcome, back but :rant:  for taking the two albums I was eyeing up next. 

 
Out of town so I'll comment later but to keep things going here are my picks. 

Fleetwood Mac Rumours 1977 album

David Bowie The Rise & Fall of Ziggy Stardust & the Spiders from Mars 1972 album

PS You guys took a ton of albums I had queued up! 

PPS Age is the Big 50 next week

 
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Picking 6th this round (4 picks from now) and would like to drop off a pick via PM if anyone after me would take it.

 
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3.xx   A Night at the Opera - Queen (Best Rock Album)

Such a diverse album. One of a kind band IMO. 
Probably my favorite album but thought it would get around so I went with Ziggy instead.  :rant:

Diverse in right. The campy Lazing on a Sunday Afternoon,  the acoustic 39' (did you know the song is about space travel & time warp) & flat out rockers like Sweet Lady. Bo Rhapsody is the big one but it's been played so much it's not even in my top 5.

I wore the grooves out of this LP. 

 
Probably my favorite album but thought it would get around so I went with Ziggy instead.  :rant:

Diverse in right. The campy Lazing on a Sunday Afternoon,  the acoustic 39' (did you know the song is about space travel & time warp) & flat out rockers like Sweet Lady. Bo Rhapsody is the big one but it's been played so much it's not even in my top 5.

I wore the grooves out of this LP. 
ditto on the wearing out ...

my favorites were "I'm In Love With My Car" (I dig all of Taylor's lead vocal tracks) and "Love of My Life" - two amazing pieces of work, from such opposite directions  :thumbup:

 
ditto on the wearing out ...

my favorites were "I'm In Love With My Car" (I dig all of Taylor's lead vocal tracks) and "Love of My Life" - two amazing pieces of work, from such opposite directions  :thumbup:
"Told my girl I had to forget her. Rather buy me a new carburetor."  :D

 
:wub:

and howzabout "Death on Two Legs" as the opener? man, forgot about that one earlier ... scathingly brilliant, Freddie was PISSED at that "old barrow boy"  :rant:
Dedicated to Norman Sheffield. They really came up with some interesting name calling in that song! 

 
3.xx  Singles Going Steady - Buzzcocks  (Punk Album)  NOTE:  The link is to the reissue with bonus tracks.  To simulate 1979, skip from 23:40 to 35:04 and smash your device at the end of "Something's Gone Wrong Again".

Punk was initially a live phenomenon but quickly moved to singles when people realized that there was demand for them.  Record, press, release, no rinse, repeat.  Punk albums followed shortly but generally managed to avoid the pretensions of the medium until the 80s.

Singles Going Steady documents a year and a half of singles and B-sides released by Manchester's Buzzcocks.  Sixteen songs, all except the last two b-sides clock in at less than 3:10.  They also managed to release three LPs in the same time period without a lot of redundancy.  

The tracks themselves are glorious explosions of hooks and cynicism delivered with less self-importance than their London counterparts. The tempos are almost all fast, as if they're racing through the song in order to get on to the next.  Buzzcocks' influence has arguably been greater than their contemporaries from 1977.  Pop-punk and emo didn't exist yet but a lot of their future vocabulary was already in place on this record.

Pete Shelley and Steve Diggle are still touring the band and going strong after 40 years.  Unlike most bands of the era, they're still recording new material and mixing it into their sets but the material from Singles Going Steady forms the backbone of their set.

 
3.xx  Singles Going Steady - Buzzcocks  (Punk Album)  NOTE:  The link is to the reissue with bonus tracks.  To simulate 1979, skip from 23:40 to 35:04 and smash your device at the end of "Something's Gone Wrong Again".

Punk was initially a live phenomenon but quickly moved to singles when people realized that there was demand for them.  Record, press, release, no rinse, repeat.  Punk albums followed shortly but generally managed to avoid the pretensions of the medium until the 80s.

Singles Going Steady documents a year and a half of singles and B-sides released by Manchester's Buzzcocks.  Sixteen songs, all except the last two b-sides clock in at less than 3:10.  They also managed to release three LPs in the same time period without a lot of redundancy.  

The tracks themselves are glorious explosions of hooks and cynicism delivered with less self-importance than their London counterparts. The tempos are almost all fast, as if they're racing through the song in order to get on to the next.  Buzzcocks' influence has arguably been greater than their contemporaries from 1977.  Pop-punk and emo didn't exist yet but a lot of their future vocabulary was already in place on this record.

Pete Shelley and Steve Diggle are still touring the band and going strong after 40 years.  Unlike most bands of the era, they're still recording new material and mixing it into their sets but the material from Singles Going Steady forms the backbone of their set.
This is an incredible album, one of my all-time favorites. But- is it a greatest hits? 

 
It's more like the "Hey Jude" album except Buzzcocks could fit two complete songs in while the Beatles were "Na-Na-Na-ing" the coda
:lmao:

let's split it down the middle and call it "Magical Jude", seeing as how neither was a 'session' album ...

going back to your op on the selection, I'd say "Ever Fallen In Love" and "What Do I Get" are proto - Emo starter kits 

 
Harvest - Neil Young
Neil had as good a run in the 70s as anybody.  Off the top of my head, only Bowie challenges him for consistency and variety over the full 1970-79 duration.

The 80s were a different story

ETA:  Zeppelin

 
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I think I am up.  If so let's do The Clash debut album for punk/post punk LP.

I prefer the US release to the UK issue, but either one is incredible.

 
I prefer the US release to the UK issue, but either one is incredible.
agreed big time  :thumbup:

the U.S. version added "Complete Control" and "White Man In Hammersmith Palais", my two favorite tracks from the album

also added were "Clash City Rockers"(the dynamite opener) "Jail Guitar Doors" ( a raucous Mick vehicle) and the awesome cover of "I Fought The Law"

just a phenomenal album all around - raw, sonic, blistering as all hell - the boys at their best ... was gonna be my next selection. 

and, as I stated a few pages ago, this was the extent of the "punk" version of the band, imo

 
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I'm picking for dal_boys_phan (from a PM)...

3.06 -  Earth Wind and Fire - That's the Way of the World (soul/funk album)

Their only album that hit #1 and one that is both critically and listener highest rated amongst their output in the decade.  One of the best bands of the era for the genre.
 
Tim timed out, so...

3.08 - The Cars, 1978 Album

At the height of Disco, this comes out - one of the most memorable debut albums ever. You know all the songs, and it helped pave the way for the "new wave". 

 
Sorry.  I was typing from a golf tournament and didn't have time to comment. You should've seen the look on my playing partner's face when I told him I had to get my 1970s funk album pick in on a fantasy football message board. I probably should've just told him I was just answering an email from the office.  Anyway........

This category was relatively thin for me but I love, love this album.  The title track alone, with Eddie Hazel's guitar solo, makes it worth the pick for me.  Possibly could've gotten it a little later but it was by far my #1 in this category so I felt I had to take it in R2.

Maggot Brain


Yes

 
3.07 David Bowie- Hunky Dory- 1971 Album

It's always been a question in my mind of which album is better, this one or Ziggy. We even had a thread about it here. Can't quite decide. Ziggy is more complete and themed, while this album, in my opinion is slightly stronger in terms of individual tunes (but even that's really close!)

"Changes", "Oh You Pretty Things", and "Life on Mars" are masterpieces, as good as songwriting gets in rock music, with "Andy Warhol" and "Song For Bob Dylan" not too far behind. Meanwhile, "Queen #####" is as great a hard rocker as anything out of the early 70s. And beyond that there are no weak songs on the album. A game changer in a year filled with incredible music. 

 

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