Dave618   06-12-2012, 10:11 PM
#1
Sorry if this question's been asked before--I looked through the last four or five pages of entertainment threads and didn't see one. Anyway, what 5 albums would you absolutely have to have if you were forced to choose? Please write a brief comment about what you love about each disc if the muse strikes you.

1. LOW by David Bowie

I love Bowie's music in all it's chameleon-like phases. Low is where he really stopped caring about what his audience would expect and let his creativity and desire to experiment reign. The music still seems alien and futuristic even though it was released in 1977. My favorite cuts are probably the somber mostly-instrumentals like Warszawa, Art Decade, Subterraneans, etc.

2. A[B][I]NOTHER GREEN WORLD [/B]by Brian Eno

[/I]Low couldn't have been Low without Eno's creative contributions, and this record, the third solo disc from the ex-Synth player and all-around creative genius from Roxy Music shows another side to the ex-Glam Rocker. Ethereal, meditative and ambient instrumentals peppered with quirky and wonderfully bizarre vocal cuts. Released in 1975. My two favorite cuts are The Big Ship and Becalmed.

3. STRANDED
by Roxy Music

This was the third Roxy Music album, and the first without Brian Eno. Bryan Ferry is one of my all-time favorite vocalists and songwriters. The songs on this album are among the group's best. I'd say this is Ferry's masterpiece. Released in 1973. My favorite cuts are Mother of Pearl, Just Like You, and A Song for Europe.

4. THE MICK KARN COLLECTOR'S EDITION by Mick Karn

This CD offers a sample of my all-time favorite bassist and an incredible composer. Mick Karn started out as bassist for the band Japan, which also introduced David Sylvian to the world, but Mick's compositions really shine when he started his solo career. His compositions are so funky and mysterious. This CD culls work from the early-mid 90's and is probably the best primer for anyone interested in hearing the most imaginative bassist in the world. Mick sadly passed away in 2011. This record was released in 1997. My favorite cuts are Bestial Cluster, Drawings We Have Lived, and There Was Not Anything But Nothing.

5. BLACK MARKET by Weather Report

I couldn't end the list without including one Jazz Fusion CD. I really love old school Fusion. Weather Report was one of the premeire Fusion outfits and probably best known for their composition Birdland, which was later covered by The Manhattan Transfer, but their best album, IMHO, is Black Market. Gibraltar alone is worth the price of the CD. This album is also the first Weather Report disc to feature Jaco Pastorius, a total bass monster. Released in 1976. My favorite cuts are Gibraltar, Black Market and Cannon Ball.
This post was last modified: 06-19-2012, 02:30 AM by Dave618.
Kenji   06-13-2012, 09:26 AM
#2
1. Live In New York by Bruce Springsteen

If I go to deserted island, I really need crowd's shout and applause, so I won't feel loneliness. Also, The Boss's voice will give his power to me.


2.Working On A Dream by Bruce Springsteen

I'm Springsteen fan. My favirote album is Live In New York and this "Working on a dream". If WOAD's songs are included to LINY, I don't need to bring it.


3. Maneater by Hall & Oates

I am Hall & Oates fan since 1982. Oh, that was a good year! American rock/pop music got into Japan. I listened to many songs. One of them were Hall & Oates's Maneater.


4. Glass Houses
by Billy Joel

You may be right, Sometimes A Fantasy, All For Leyna, It's Still Rock And Roll To Me.....need more say?


5. Live At Budokan by Sheryl Crow

Because I was there! My shout and applause are inclued to this album. Also I got guitar's plectrum from Sheryl.
Dave618   06-13-2012, 12:29 PM
#3
Awesome choices, Kenji! Favorite Springsteen is a lesser known track called "I'm Goin' Down" from Born in the USA. "You May Be Right" is my favorite Joel song. I like Hall and Oates' 70's stuff best--did you ever hear the album Hall did with King Crimson's Robert Fripp called Sacred Songs? Very cool and underrated. Hall could have gone another direction but the label didn't like his more experimental stuff.

Kenji, as you are from Japan, do you like Stomu Yamashta and/or Yellow Magic Orchestra/Ryuichi Sakamoto? Ryuichi Sakamoto is simply a genius. Tremendous musician. I have several Yamashta and Sakamoto CDs. Wonderful music.
Kenji   06-15-2012, 11:11 AM
#4
Dave618 Wrote:Awesome choices, Kenji! Favorite Springsteen is a lesser known track called "I'm Goin' Down" from Born in the USA. "You May Be Right" is my favorite Joel song. I like Hall and Oates' 70's stuff best--did you ever hear the album Hall did with King Crimson's Robert Fripp called Sacred Songs? Very cool and underrated. Hall could have gone another direction but the label didn't like his more experimental stuff.

Yeah, I have all of Hall & Oates albums and solo albums. I have "Sacred Songs". Pretty good, but I prefer "Soul Alone".

Quote:Kenji, as you are from Japan, do you like Stomu Yamashta and/or Yellow Magic Orchestra/Ryuichi Sakamoto? Ryuichi Sakamoto is simply a genius. Tremendous musician. I have several Yamashta and Sakamoto CDs. Wonderful music.

I know YMO with Ryuichi Sakamoto. They're good!
  
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