50 most influential album's of all time
There are those who rate Revolver (1966) or 'the White Album' (1968) higher. But Sgt Pepper's made the watertight case for pop music as an art form in itself; until then, it was thought the silly, transient stuff of teenagers. At a time when all pop music was stringently manufactured, these Paul McCartney-driven melodies and George Martin-produced whorls of sound proved that untried ground was not only the most fertile stuff, but also the most viable commercially. It defined the Sixties and - for good and ill - gave white rock all its airs and graces.
Without this ... pop would be a very different beast.
my god they got this right. of course revolver may be the better album technically speaking, but if we are talking influence - pepper's is the way to go. i love when a publication forces me to re-evaluate things.
i absolutly must pop this in and listen to it again.
6 comments:
I used to love Hounds Of Love back in the day when I was kicking it old school with the cassette tape.
I was glad to see Velvet Underground and Nico at number one, but disappointed not to see any mention of early Sonic Youth, especially the brilliant Daydream Nation. Come on, they put the Spice Girls on there but no Sonic Youth?? Fucking Brits!
No question for me. Its either "Sgt Peppers" or "Abbey Road". Revolver... eh. White album... too out there.
Oh, and I can honestly say that I only have 3 of the albums on the list... which is good given that I don't like more than half of their choices.
that's cause you have not heard of most of those bands. :-)
and dave, trust me - pull out Hounds again - that record is still brilliant.
so strange
i am listening to "Revolver" right now.
St Pepper is the first album my father ever bought me. I was 9.
At some point in the continuum things get removed from their historical context.
He just brought the context back.
kate kate
mmmmmmmmmm
Post a Comment