Week 50: 50 Albums That Changed Music [Archive] - Audio & Video Forums

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Swish
06-24-2007, 10:54 AM
I'm posting a little early this week as I'm heading out 'o town for the week and won't have time to get this done tomorrow, so here goes. Has it really been 50 weeks since I started posting this list? Gee, time flies when you're having fun. :confused5: Anyway, some of the selections resulted in heavy arguments/debates, although most of them barely caused a whimper. While I'm glad I decided to do this little project, I'm also glad it's over, although I won't hesitate to do something similar down the road if the right situation presents itself. It sure won't be another list from the Guardian though. With further adieu, the final selection is LFO - Frequencies (1991).

Acid house was sniffed at as a fad until it started producing 'proper' albums. Frequencies was its first masterpiece. Updating the pristine blueprint of Kraftwerk with house, acid, ambient and hip hop, it made dance music legitimate to album-buyers. Without this...no success for Orbital, Underworld, Leftfield, Chemical Brothers or Aphex Twin.

Once again I have no comment as I don't have any knowledge of this genre, although I have heard a little from Chemical Brothers and Aphex Twin. It's just not my bag, but I'm sure a few of our RR whack jobs will have something to add.

G Swish

Troy
06-24-2007, 11:09 AM
Never heard of LFO. Why didn't they just say Kraftwerk? Oh wait, they did say it- Without Kraftwerk, no LFO.

Is Kraftwerk even on this list? If it is, this pick smells of someone desperate for their 50th pick.

This list has been far too Brit-centric, but it has been provocative.

50 weeks, your perseverance is amazing. Thanks for doing it.

kexodusc
06-24-2007, 11:16 AM
Yeah, didn't like the vast majority of pics, but I really appreciated the discussions and the effort you made, Swish...lots of great opinions to read every week.

Kinda hopin' ya got another list in mind....

Swish
06-24-2007, 11:28 AM
Never heard of LFO. Why didn't they just say Kraftwerk? Oh wait, they did say it- Without Kraftwerk, no LFO.

Is Kraftwerk even on this list? If it is, this pick smells of someone desperate for their 50th pick.

This list has been far too Brit-centric, but it has been provocative.

50 weeks, your perseverance is amazing. Thanks for doing it.

...and while there were plenty of British bands on the list, I counted at least 29 that were from the US, and a few others were from other European countries. The worst I could say is that some of the British choices were a stretch at best, and others should not have appeared, although I could say the same for some of the Americans as well.

And you're welcome for doing this series. I'm not sure if it was perseverance or stupidity for promising to do it in the first place. Must have been tipsy.

Swish

MindGoneHaywire
06-24-2007, 11:37 AM
Tipsy!

BFD.

LOF?

who?

3-LockBox
06-24-2007, 01:22 PM
Thanks for all the effort you've put into this. 50 weeks of posting on a consistant basis when you knew that interest would wane shows a lot of fortitude. Thanks, and if you have any other similar ideas, I'm in.

edit: It's too bad they ended this list on such a lame note. Just pure laziness. Buncha hacks they are...

We should add our own entries...not an entire list of 50 albums, but just one album that was left off that we feel has merit for such a list. I'm gonna mull this one over and post one tomorrow. I just hate to see what has been an entertaining thread series go out with a whimper.

SlumpBuster
06-24-2007, 07:39 PM
I enjoyed the list and the fact that it was somewhat unusual and wrongheaded in its choices.

How fitting that they would get the last entry so wrong though after such dispute about the list. I know alot of people here aren't fans of this genre, but I was for a long time. Whithout this no Underword?!?! Underword is still one of my favorite bands (if you can call them that) and guess what?!? Founding member Karl Hyde gave his list of "Top 20" albums to The Guardian in 1997, and LFO does not appear on it!

Hyde's "Top 20 Albums", as per the Guardian of Friday, 19 Sep 1997:
The Isley Brothers - 3 Plus 3
Miles Davis - *****es Brew
The Prodigy - Music for the Jilted Generation
Kraftwerk - Computer World
Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band - Trout Mask Replica
Ella Fitzgerald - The Cole Porter Songbook
Black Uhuru - Red
The Groundhogs - Split
Toots and the Maytals - Reggae Greats
Arvo Part - Tabula Rasa
Miles Davis - Kind of Blue
Miles Davis - Sketches of Spain
The Beastie Boys - Check Your Head
Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band - Strictly Personal
Goldie - Timeless
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young - Deja Vu
The Beatles - Revolver
Aphex Twin - Selected Ambient Works
Stevie Wonder - Songs in the Key of Life
Sly and the Family Stone - Fresh

unleasHell
06-24-2007, 09:10 PM
I never heard of them either, so what did they change again? music? can we blame them for RAP?.
.
.
lol

nobody
06-25-2007, 09:39 AM
I like a lot of what it says this influenced but have never listened to it. Maybe I outtta.