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Pet Sounds is my most favorite ever, so after the Elvis tune...that would be mine pick. |
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Humpty Dance is a song anyone remembers because it has a bass line that has been sampled and used by dozens of major acts since then. It's also where Tupac got his start in music and the bridge between Clinton funk from the 70s and rap from the 90s. The Digital Underground toured for more than 20 years. Anything 'funky' you hear today, they had a hand in... :2 cents: |
Being from Detroit originally:
Iggy & The Stooges - First Two Albums Mc5 - Kick Out The Jams Huge influence on many later bands..... |
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Pretty much all punk followed after them and their sound is what lead to bands like U2 later on (according to Bono). :2 cents: |
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There are 100s or euro death metal bands that were directly influenced by his album there are countless heavy metal and punk bands that draw major inspirations from this album. Until that time, no one was really combining those elements together. There were some crossover bands that tried and some of them (like DRI and Cryptic Slaughter) that have their own place in the growing history of that genre. In their genre, this album was THE blueprint. All of the drumbeat blasts, double bass drumming, etc. taking place in all this nu metal, death metal, etc. came from that album. The engineering of the album was responsible for the way this type of music is engineered and produced. It was almost by accident due to the low recording budget. The album has a flow to it and a rhythm that transpires through it all as a common thread. Yet through this, it was one big cacophony of noise. There were no "chorus/verse/chorus/verse" by the numbers song structures. They managed to write songs that didn't even have rhyming choruses, yet made it all thread together and not sound awkward. This was a time when some of their heavier peers were playing 6-7-8 minute long complex songs. They managed to crunch their songs down to 2 minutes blasts of brutality (like some of their own punk influences). There just wasn't anything like it out there when this album was released. There were all the cheesy satan bands trying to one up each other being "more evil than the others" but Slayer just went out there and destroyed them all, especially on this album. Go to any hard rock/heavy metal festival and more than half of the bands on any of those bills was inspired by this bands and more specifically this album. This album sent 1000s of kids into their garages to start similar bands. They bought up BC Rich guitars and distortion pedals in droves. I believe those kinds of things make this album truly groundbreaking. This album is almost 24 years old and is still as brutal today as it was when it was released. Or maybe you have a different view of what makes something groundbreaking? |
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Radiohead's OK Computer
Nirvana's Nevermind |
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Everyone's idea of groundbreaking is going to be influenced by their own taste in music though. If anyone mentions rock to me it goes in one ear and out the other because I personally think it's shit. It doesn't mean it IS shit just that I don't like it and they could very well think any music I like is complete bollocks instead. |
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you people who keep saying "nirvana - nevermind" are a bunch of idiots.
that album broke nothing. they basically ripped of their style from the pixies. |
I think you guys overlooked one...
Appetite for Destruction - Gn'R |
The Ramones
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Frank Zappa - Shut Up 'n Play Yer Guitar opened my ears
But there are so many great artists with ground breaking albums, hard to choose one |
there are some. mainly personal favourites.
wagon christ - sorry i make you lush pink floyd - the wall burial - untrue dream theater - metropolis pt 2 (SFAM) peeping tom (by mike patton / ex-faith no more) chemical brothers - dig your own hole and so on.. each musical style has its few golden gems i think |
Sgt. Pepper
Boston's first album Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon |
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It doesn't matter who they ripped off. Fact is Nevermind IS the album that broke big and changed the music industry in the early 1990's. NOT The Pixies. It's just like Harvey Mandel is the real guy who perfected tapping technique on guitar several years before Eddie Van Halen copied him. But it was Van Halen who broke it big and was the influence that changed the way guitarists played, not Mandel. |
This thread is one big megalulz, aside from Brian Eno's Another Green World none of the albums listed in this thread are nearly as groundbreaking as the ones below:
Slint - Spiderland Modern Lovers - s/t Ornette Coleman - The Shape of Jazz to Come Television - Marquee Moon Ildjarn - Forest Poetry Nick Drake - Pink Moon Steve Reich - Music for 18 Musicians |
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The original question in this post isn't subjective. It's historical fact in the record industry. Sgt. Peppers was the first concept album that sold in numbers enough to change everything. Suddenly all the bands were making ALBUMS instead of a single with a bunch of filler. That's what Paul was saying. Has nothing to do with how incredible Ornette Coleman is as a musician or anything else. |
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Danced my way down to the front. LOl |
'groundbreaking' IS subjective - Paul's interpretation of groundbreaking is based on Sgt Pepper's being a concept album. Which is fair but groundbreaking to somebody else would be was it groundbreaking societally, did it change the culture and how broadly, a musicphile might define groundbreaking for recording techniques, or song structure, or instrumentation.
Sgt Pepper's is absolutely the most ground breaking album ever more for its' part in changing the culture than just being a concept album. Sgt Pepper's brought the drug and hippy culture to the masses, it exploded, and affected everything from fashion, art, music, free love, Vietnam . Would the 60's have gone down the same way without the Beatles and Sgt Pepper's - probably so. The Beatles were a product of things underway more than them leading the way, they became a conduit. |
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So if an artist changes the direction of the music industry and gets every band in the world excited about that direction (which the Beatles did), it is a big deal. You're kinda jumping the shark and talking about an entirely different subject matter than what Paul made this thread about. |
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Their single off the album "The Underdog" 2003 - The Shins - Oh, Inverted World Their single off the album "New Slang" 2006 - The Arctic Monkeys - Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not Their single off the album "I bet you look good on the dance floor" (This album became the fastest selling record of all time in the UK when it was released in 06) There was a ton of good music that came out in the 2000's. 2006 was just an incredible year for album releases. I wouldn't doubt nearly a quarter to a fifth of the music on my ipod is stuff that was off a 2006 album release. Lots of good stuff coming out of the UK as well during the last decade. There was literally a new UK invasion. From what I know, none of this shit is played on the radio though. You have to have satellite to hear any of it. The music industry still mostly wants to peddle the shit that sells to teenagers and kids (the ones spending the most on music). So they sell as much of the rap and pop as they can, because kids eat it up like it's crack cocaine. Lot's of good chick fronts coming out recently as well: Ida Maria - "I like you so much better when you're naked" Metric - "Dead Disco" Regina Spektor - "Fidelity" But yeah, most of the ground breaking albums are going to be through the 50s to the 70s. When there was ground to break. Each decade from there had it's own genre forks created that had their individual albums and bands which made it happen. You had punk, new wave, metal, electronica, grunge, alternative, indie. Each breakout had their own push from whoever happened to get the sound right and captured the youth of the time. Definitely gotta say though 58-73 were the best years for music, hands down. To have been alive to been able to see the American Blues, Motown, and British Invasion - would have been witness to the truest and best music that will of ever graced our ears. |
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Sabbath Paranoid
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How about some love for Chrissy Hynde and The Pretenders?
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Metallica: Master of Puppets
Slayer: Reign in Blood Basically, these two albums created a sound that no one has been able to replicate. I would argue that Kill em All by Metallica is also an album with an unobtainable sound. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siamese_Dream definitely a groundbreaking album and in my top 5 of all times. |
Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker Suite, released in April 1909 (first "album" ever recorded)
Gershwins original recording of Rhapsody In Blue - 1924. I haven't seen anything posted here yet which compares in terms of groundbreaking and influential. Iggy Pop - Funhouse |
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