STING: The Complete Chicago Sessions (Tracks 8-16) (1991) Soul Cages (1991) The Complete Chicago Sessions (Tracks 1-7) (1993) Ten Summoner's Tales (1993)
That's an incredible four album sequence. I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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NoVideo said: I know we've had this topic before in the past, but I've been immersed in the Stones this weekend and it really struck me again how massively amazing the Beggars Banquet/Let It Bleed/Sticky Fingers/Exile on Mainstreet sequence really is.
There are only a couple sequences that I think might compare:
Beatles: Revolver/Sgt. Peppers/MMT/White Album
or if you count MMT out as an EP, then add Rubber Soul to the beginning, or - maybe better - Abbey Road to the end.
Then there's Bowie's magical run: Station to Station/Low/Heroes/Lodger
Prince, of course: 1999/PR/ATWIAD/Parade - - or do you start with PR and go to SOTT? Debatable. ATWIAD is the weak link either way.
I gotta think that the Stones classic foursome is the best of them all.
Thoughts? | |
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That explains it! Dude, Fleetwood Mac were around for eight or nine years churning out classics (and a few standards, like "Black Magic Woman," later covered by Santana). How can you say I'm stretching it, when you haven't listened to the albums I listed? "There is two kinds of music, the good, and the bad. I play the good kind."
Louis Armstrong | |
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I agree with U on the Stones, but here's another one for ya: Another side of Bob Dylan 1964 Bringing it all back home 1965 Highway 61 revisited 1965 Blonde on Blonde 1966 And if that is not enough, Bob camera back strongly in his later years. Time out of mind 1997 Love and theft 2001 Modern times 2006 Together through life 2009 That is 2 rows of great LPs! Try beat that anyone if you can! I Love Bob Dylan as much as I Love Prince! | |
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Definitely agree with both of those. I'm a big fan of Dylan as well, and his last 4 have all been great (although Together Through Life is my least favorite of the 4) * * *
Prince's Classic Finally Expanded The Deluxe 'Purple Rain' Reissue http://www.popmatters.com...n-reissue/ | |
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Probably because the album has never entered my field of reference through reading, word of mouth, listening to radio, album lists, etc. I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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There's no supporting evidence for your pronouncement amigo.
Let me just say I'd take Lemon over over anything on Joshua Tree. | |
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easily the greatest in the history of music, and the first thing that popped in my mind before i even opened this thread. | |
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Madonna: Like A Prayer, I'm Breathless, The Immaculate Collection, Erotica
If You don't count The Immaculate Collection:
Like A Prayer, I'm Breathless, Erotica, Bedtime Stories
Someone said something about R. Kely earlier:
12 Play, R. Kelly, R., TP-2.com
(If ony TP-2.com wasn't album) | |
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These were the 4 I had in mind - but TP2 stopped me from posting. Although I liked the cd - it's not in the same class as the first 3 cd's mentioned or the next cd - "Chocolate Factory" - released. | |
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I get the complaint, but I personally like the songs on the album. "She's Leaving Home" in particular is one of my favorites. I don't see why songs like "Lovely Rita" and "For the Benefit of Mr. Kite" are so oft-maligned. They may be lightweight, but they're still enjoyable listens to my ears.
They are a little repetitive, but I enjoy the vamps with Stevie ad-libbing. He was in excellent voice back then, so I just can't complain about more singing. "Joy Inside My Tears" is the one I enjoy the most of the crop you listed.
I listened to it again with this in mind and it still sounds great to me. The three starting songs may be similar in tempo, but they're very diverse in just about every other way. While "Love's in Need of Love Today" sounds like he is practically pleading for a better world, "Have a Talk with God" features a self-assured Stevie who is speaking from experience. Both of those songs are very harmony driven in stark contrast to the bleak "Village Ghetto Land." After that beginning, I think "Contusion" is a marvelous transition to the more upbeat and commercial songs. I fully realize I could just be used to it after years of listening, but I still think it sounds fabulous every time. "Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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FWIW, TP2.com is definitely my favorite of all his albums. 12 Play and R. (great songs, but too much filler) are the weak links in that sequence IMO. "Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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WHAT!!!!!!!! "R" is CLASSIC! It's a double cd so of course not everything was hot, but overall that damn thing was FIRE!!!! | |
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I don't think "Mr. Kite" is lightweight at all. It has a bit of a sinister vibe under all the surface pageantry. When I think lightweight I think "When I'm 64". But it has a charm all it's own.
* * *
Prince's Classic Finally Expanded The Deluxe 'Purple Rain' Reissue http://www.popmatters.com...n-reissue/ | |
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REM
Document Green Out of Time Automatic For the People (their magnum opus)!
[Edited 6/26/11 16:28pm] | |
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Actually Harvest for the World came out in between "Heat" and "Guns". But I get you point all solid work! | |
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1973: 3+3 1974: Live It Up 1975: The Heat Is On 1976: Harvest for the World [Edited 6/26/11 16:27pm] | |
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Of course Miles would have another great run!
1969: In a Silent Way
1970: Bitches Brew
1971: Tribute to Jack Johnson
1972: On the Corner | |
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In case no one mentioned CCR, here goes:
1969: Bayou Country
1969: Green River
1969: Willie & the Poor Boys
1970: Cosmo's Factory
John Fogerty & the boys were very busy back then!! | |
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I'm a U2 fan as well. I disagree with u both.
Try 1981: October 1983: War 1984: The Unforgettable Fire 1987: The Joshua Tree (their magnum opus from the '80's) | |
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I totally agree with you on the CCR!
But not on the U2... "October" is their weakest album by far, IMHO. * * *
Prince's Classic Finally Expanded The Deluxe 'Purple Rain' Reissue http://www.popmatters.com...n-reissue/ | |
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Same here. Chocolate Factory is awesome! | |
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Thanks for the response. Even though we disagree I hope at the very least that I did a decent job of explaining my position. I do agree that Songs in the Key of Life is a classic album but I just think it's not quite as classic as the three albums that immediately preceded it.
As far as the Beatles go I think I will always hold their psychedelic albums in lower esteem than the rest of their catalog. I do enjoy some of those songs but I think they were kind of coasting, John in particular. Also, no one will ever convince me that letting George's "Within You Without You" and "Blue Jay Way" onto an album was a good idea. | |
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i agree 100 per cent...just amazing run of stunning albums... . for me...only the beatles - revolver/st.pepper/mmt/white album and prince - purple rain/atwiad/parade/sign o the times .. . comes close to stevie's run... | |
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To go back to the OP, I think the Stones series of Beggars Banquet, Let It Bleed, Sticky Fingers and Exile on Main Street is every bit as strong, if not better than The Beatles. | |
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There are good arguments to be made on all sides. I own just about all of them. To me they're all valuable. [Edited 6/26/11 20:10pm] | |
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It's better.
Nobody in the 60s would have thought it possible for them to come out of the shadow cast by The Beatles. | |
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Oh, I follow you. It made perfect sense to me.
"Blue Jay Way" has a certain charm. I actually never really warmed to "Within You Without You" until I heard the mashup with "Tomorrow Never Knows" on Love. That made me appreciate both songs much more. "Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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I haven't heard anything from Love. | |
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