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top 10 comeback" albums according to rolling stone 2007 1. Green Day, American Idiot
2. Elvis, From Elvis In Memphis 3. Meatloaf, Bat Out of Hell II - Back Into Hell 4. Neil Young, Freedom 5. Paul Simon, Graceland 6. Johnny Cash, American Recordings 7. Bob Dylan, Time Out of Mind 8. George Harrison, Cloud 9 9. Tina Turner, Private Dancer 10. Aerosmith, Permanent Vacation http://www.rollingstone.c...bums-ever/ waht do you think of this list? i think there are some albums missing or some should be replaced , think musicology i think that would be concidered a great come-back album. | |
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What the hell is Green Day doing on that list??? And they were number ONE!!!!
JERKIN' EVERYTHING IN SIGHT!!!!! | |
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what an oddball list | |
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How is a little less then 4 years between albums considered a comeback (Green Day)? In that case, Thriller should be here. PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever ----- Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It | |
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Paris9748430 said: What the hell is Green Day doing on that list??? And they were number ONE!!!!
they had a huge commercial success after a decade of humble to poor perfoming projects. | |
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The only one I'd completely disagree with is Meat Loaf...replace that with Off The Wall by Michael Jackson. That album shot him back into the stratosphere of pop when he had been spending the last several years coasting towards has-been territory. | |
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PricelessHo said: Paris9748430 said: What the hell is Green Day doing on that list??? And they were number ONE!!!!
they had a huge commercial success after a decade of humble to poor perfoming projects. I would agree it was an amazing comeback and sort of reinvention. Before that they were just trying to follow 1994's Dookie which has a certain novelty to it you don't associate with actual artists. | |
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PricelessHo said: Paris9748430 said: What the hell is Green Day doing on that list??? And they were number ONE!!!!
they had a huge commercial success after a decade of humble to poor perfoming projects. I thought Warning & Nimrod were huge successes!!! Songs like Minority, and especially Good Riddance (Time of Your Life) were huge hits!!! It's not like they fell-off and noone was buying their records. They may not have been as successful as Dookie was, but they did alright. JERKIN' EVERYTHING IN SIGHT!!!!! | |
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im missing santana's supernatural
that guy didnt had propper hits for a long time and supernatural turned out to be his most succesfull album 2 date 8 grammies 2 smash hits 27 mil albums sold world wide? | |
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Byron said: The only one I'd completely disagree with is Meat Loaf...replace that with Off The Wall by Michael Jackson. That album shot him back into the stratosphere of pop when he had been spending the last several years coasting towards has-been territory.
Not sure if I agree with that.In the years leading up to 'Off The Wall',Michael had numerous hits with his brothers ("Shake Your Body (Down To The Ground)" in 78,for example) and he appeared in 'The Wiz'.True,'Off The Wall' took his career to another level but I think it's a stretch to say that he was coasting towards has-been territory,lol. | |
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SoulAlive said: Byron said: The only one I'd completely disagree with is Meat Loaf...replace that with Off The Wall by Michael Jackson. That album shot him back into the stratosphere of pop when he had been spending the last several years coasting towards has-been territory.
Not sure if I agree with that.In the years leading up to 'Off The Wall',Michael had numerous hits with his brothers ("Shake Your Body (Down To The Ground)" in 78,for example) and he appeared in 'The Wiz'.True,'Off The Wall' took his career to another level but I think it's a stretch to say that he was coasting towards has-been territory,lol. I have to agree here. If one was talking about his last years at Motown and the first couple of years at Epic, then yes, I would argue that he was heading towards has-been territory. But like you pointed out, Destiny did very well. | |
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Paris9748430 said: PricelessHo said: they had a huge commercial success after a decade of humble to poor perfoming projects. I thought Warning & Nimrod were huge successes!!! Songs like Minority, and especially Good Riddance (Time of Your Life) were huge hits!!! It's not like they fell-off and noone was buying their records. They may not have been as successful as Dookie was, but they did alright. I think it was also critical acclaim, not just commercial that seemed to favor Green Day for their "comeback". | |
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Paris9748430 said: What the hell is Green Day doing on that list??? And they were number ONE!!!!
i think the rule is, if you put green day on any list you have to put them at number one. some kind of mafia thing or something | |
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SoulAlive said: Byron said: The only one I'd completely disagree with is Meat Loaf...replace that with Off The Wall by Michael Jackson. That album shot him back into the stratosphere of pop when he had been spending the last several years coasting towards has-been territory.
Not sure if I agree with that.In the years leading up to 'Off The Wall',Michael had numerous hits with his brothers ("Shake Your Body (Down To The Ground)" in 78,for example) and he appeared in 'The Wiz'.True,'Off The Wall' took his career to another level but I think it's a stretch to say that he was coasting towards has-been territory,lol. While with the Jackson 5, MJ was having several hits each year...by the time Off The Wall came out, the only relevance MJ had on the charts and on the radio over the past several year was "Shake Your Body". "Off The Wall", however, established MJ as an adult performer. "Destiny" was more of a nice moment of decent success, but it didn't signal a comeback. | |
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Byron said: The only one I'd completely disagree with is Meat Loaf...replace that with Off The Wall by Michael Jackson. That album shot him back into the stratosphere of pop when he had been spending the last several years coasting towards has-been territory.
That's absurd. The Jackson Five (or Jacksons or whatever) weren't excatly bombing before. "Off the Wall" was hardly a comeback album. Meatloaf came out of nowhere (well, out of Europe) to have another blockbuster album at a time when that kind of music was not big. Green Day is absurd in it's placement if not being listed at all.. It's Rolling Stone kissing the ass of the one the decent rock bands still left. | |
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Byron said: SoulAlive said: Not sure if I agree with that.In the years leading up to 'Off The Wall',Michael had numerous hits with his brothers ("Shake Your Body (Down To The Ground)" in 78,for example) and he appeared in 'The Wiz'.True,'Off The Wall' took his career to another level but I think it's a stretch to say that he was coasting towards has-been territory,lol. While with the Jackson 5, MJ was having several hits each year...by the time Off The Wall came out, the only relevance MJ had on the charts and on the radio over the past several year was "Shake Your Body". "Off The Wall", however, established MJ as an adult performer. "Destiny" was more of a nice moment of decent success, but it didn't signal a comeback. I never thought of any of those Motown releases, even the number one singles, as a proper solo career. They're not unlike Janet's first two albums with the difference being that they sold well. | |
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VinnyM27 said: Byron said: The only one I'd completely disagree with is Meat Loaf...replace that with Off The Wall by Michael Jackson. That album shot him back into the stratosphere of pop when he had been spending the last several years coasting towards has-been territory.
That's absurd. The Jackson Five (or Jacksons or whatever) weren't excatly bombing before. "Off the Wall" was hardly a comeback album. Meatloaf came out of nowhere (well, out of Europe) to have another blockbuster album at a time when that kind of music was not big. Green Day is absurd in it's placement if not being listed at all.. It's Rolling Stone kissing the ass of the one the decent rock bands still left. I'd replace Meat Loaf because Back Into Hell didn't propel Meat Loaf's singing career and chart success for the next decade. Off The Wall did for MJ. | |
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VinnyM27 said: Byron said: While with the Jackson 5, MJ was having several hits each year...by the time Off The Wall came out, the only relevance MJ had on the charts and on the radio over the past several year was "Shake Your Body". "Off The Wall", however, established MJ as an adult performer. "Destiny" was more of a nice moment of decent success, but it didn't signal a comeback. I never thought of any of those Motown releases, even the number one singles, as a proper solo career. They're not unlike Janet's first two albums with the difference being that they sold well. Well, if you consider the Jackson 5 and MJ as two separate entities, and if you consider that Off The Wall wasn't a comeback for the Jackson 5, then I guess you'd be right to leave that album off the list ... But then again, you'd have to take Paul Simon's Graceland off the list, too, since Garfunkle wasn't part of it's creation lol ... [Edited 1/14/08 8:15am] | |
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Another Michael Jackson thread! | |
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Byron said: you'd have to take Paul Simon's Graceland off the list, too, since Garfunkle wasn't part of it's creation lol ...
[Edited 1/14/08 8:15am] No this is about Simon's solo career. He had major bombs in between STILL CRAZY... ('75) and GRACELAND ('86). Personally, I liked the jazzy flavor of and , but Simon's succes is measured in GRAMMY awards test | |
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PFunkjazz said: Byron said: you'd have to take Paul Simon's Graceland off the list, too, since Garfunkle wasn't part of it's creation lol ...
[Edited 1/14/08 8:15am] No this is about Simon's solo career. He had major bombs in between STILL CRAZY... ('75) and GRACELAND ('86). Personally, I liked the jazzy flavor of and , but Simon's succes is measured in GRAMMY awards Well, that was the point of me putting the laughing emoticon after that comment lol...to show that I was kidding. | |
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Byron said: Well, that was the point of me putting the laughing emoticon after that comment lol...to show that I was kidding.
The internet is no place for humor...unless it involves midgets or porn. test | |
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PFunkjazz said: Byron said: Well, that was the point of me putting the laughing emoticon after that comment lol...to show that I was kidding.
The internet is no place for humor...unless it involves midgets or porn. I'm off to google.com...be right back. | |
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Cloudbuster said: i this album man, he has such an amazing body of music that it's sad to see him constrict it down to the basics. he's too talented for the lineup he's doing. estelle 81 | |
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motownlover said: im missing santana's supernatural
that guy didnt had propper hits for a long time and supernatural turned out to be his most succesfull album 2 date 8 grammies 2 smash hits 27 mil albums sold world wide? Yes, indeed! Maybe Clapton's Unplugged John Fogerty Centerfield Tina Turner Private Dancer--oh nemmind edit [Edited 1/14/08 13:11pm] My Legacy
http://prince.org/msg/8/192731 | |
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NDRU said: motownlover said: im missing santana's supernatural
that guy didnt had propper hits for a long time and supernatural turned out to be his most succesfull album 2 date 8 grammies 2 smash hits 27 mil albums sold world wide? Yes, indeed! Maybe Clapton's Unplugged John Fogerty Centerfield Tina Turner Private Dancer--oh nemmind edit Excellent choice ... | |
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motownlover said:[quote]1. Green Day, American Idiot
2. Elvis, From Elvis In Memphis 3. Meatloaf, Bat Out of Hell II - Back Into Hell 4. Neil Young, Freedom 5. Paul Simon, Graceland 6. Johnny Cash, American Recordings 7. Bob Dylan, Time Out of Mind 8. George Harrison, Cloud 9 9. Tina Turner, Private Dancer 10. Aerosmith, Permanent Vacation http://www.rollingstone.c...bums-ever/ waht do you think of this list? i think there are some albums missing or some should be replaced , think musicology i think that would be concidered a great come-back album.[/quote] I really disagree with that. These were albums that were put out that the public really took notice to. Musicology on the otherhand, was an album Prince wanted you to notice. Besides Prince has never really left the public eye. I am not even sure if you can ever call a Prince album a comeback album...maybe if it was hearlded and was on everyone's "to get" list as opposed to a "look another free album by Prince" Christian Zombie Vampires | |
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motownlover said: im missing santana's supernatural
that guy didnt had propper hits for a long time and supernatural turned out to be his most succesfull album 2 date 8 grammies 2 smash hits 27 mil albums sold world wide? I'd definitely say that should be on the list. Christian Zombie Vampires | |
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SoulAlive said: Byron said: The only one I'd completely disagree with is Meat Loaf...replace that with Off The Wall by Michael Jackson. That album shot him back into the stratosphere of pop when he had been spending the last several years coasting towards has-been territory.
Not sure if I agree with that.In the years leading up to 'Off The Wall',Michael had numerous hits with his brothers ("Shake Your Body (Down To The Ground)" in 78,for example) and he appeared in 'The Wiz'.True,'Off The Wall' took his career to another level but I think it's a stretch to say that he was coasting towards has-been territory,lol. I agree with this. Now if he was to have an album that was spectacular it would be hearlded as his comeback album. Christian Zombie Vampires | |
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