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【Billboard】Guardian:五十张改变音乐的专辑

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The 50 albums that changed music


IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端1楼2020-04-06 16:11回复
    1 The Velvet Underground and Nico
    The Velvet Underground and Nico (1967)
    Though it sold poorly on its initial release, this has since become arguably the most influential rock album of all time. The first art-rock album, it merges dreamy, druggy balladry ('Sunday Morning') with raw and uncompromising sonic experimentation ('Venus in Furs'), and is famously clothed in that Andy Warhol-designed 'banana' sleeve. Lou Reed's lyrics depicted a Warholian New York demi-monde where hard drugs and sexual experimentation held sway. Shocking then, and still utterly transfixing.
    Without this, there'd be no ... Bowie, Roxy Music, Siouxsie and the Banshees and the Jesus and Mary Chain, among many others.
    SOH


    IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端2楼2020-04-06 16:12
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      2 The Beatles
      Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967)
      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.
      我更爱revolver啦


      IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端3楼2020-04-06 16:13
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        3.Kraftwerk
        Trans-Europe Express (1977)
        Released at the height of punk, this sleek, urbane, synthesised, intellectual work shared little ground with its contemporaries. Not that it wanted to. Kraftwerk operated from within a bubble of equipment and ideas which owed more to science and philosophy than mere entertainment. Still, this paean to the beauty of mechanised movement and European civilisation was a moving and exquisite album in itself. And, through a sample on Afrika Bambaataa's seminal 'Planet Rock', the German eggheads joined the dots with black American electro, giving rise to entire new genres.
        Without this... no techno, no house, no Pet Shop Boys. The list is endless.


        IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端4楼2020-04-06 16:17
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          4 NWA
          Straight Outta Compton (1989)
          Like a darker, more vengeful Public Enemy, NWA (Niggaz With Attitude) exposed the vicious realities of the West Coast gang culture on their lurid, fluent debut. Part aural reportage (sirens, gunshots, police radio), part thuggish swagger, Compton laid the blueprint for the most successful musical genre of the last 20 years, gangsta rap. It gave the world a new production mogul in Dr Dre, and gave voice to the frustrations that flared up into the LA riots in 1992. As befits an album boasting a song called 'Fuck tha Police', attention from the FBI, the Parents' Music Resource Centre and our own Metropolitan Police's Obscene Publications Squad sealed its notoriety.
          Without this ... no Eminem, no 50 Cent, no Dizzee Rascal.


          IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端5楼2020-04-06 16:17
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            5 Robert Johnson
            King of the Delta Blues Singers (1961)
            Described by Eric Clapton as 'the most important blues singer that ever lived', Johnson was an intensely private man, whose short life and mysterious death created an enduring mythology. He was said to have sold his soul to the devil at a crossroads in Mississippi in exchange for his finger-picking prowess. Johnson recorded a mere 29 songs, chief among them 'Hellhound on My Trail', but when it was finally issued, King of the Delta Blues Singers became one of the touchstones of the British blues scene.
            Without this ... no Rolling Stones, Cream, Led Zeppelin.


            IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端6楼2020-04-06 16:17
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              支持


              IP属地:浙江来自Android客户端7楼2020-04-06 16:20
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                支持惹


                IP属地:北京来自iPhone客户端9楼2020-04-06 16:21
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                  6 Marvin Gaye
                  What's Going On (1971)
                  Gaye's career as tuxedo-clad heart-throb gave no hint he would cut a concept album dealing with civil rights, the Vietnam war and ghetto life. Equally startling was the music, softening and double-tracking Gaye's falsetto against a wash of bubbling percussion, swaying strings and chattering guitars. Motown boss Berry Gordy hated it but its disillusioned nobility caught the public mood. Led by the oft-covered 'Inner City Blues', it ushered in an era of socially aware soul.
                  Without this ... no Innervisions (Stevie Wonder) or Superfly (Curtis Mayfield).


                  IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端10楼2020-04-06 16:22
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                    7 Patti Smith
                    Horses (1975)
                    Who would have thought punk rock was, in part, kickstarted by a girl? Poet, misfit and New York ligger, Patti channelled the spirits of Keith Richards, Bob Dylan and Rimbaud into female form, and onto an album whose febrile energy and Dionysian spirit helped light the touchpaper for New York punk. The Robert Mapplethorpe-shot cover, in which a hungry, mannish Patti stares down the viewer, defiantly broke with the music industry's treatment of women artists (sexy or girl-next-door) and still startles today.
                    Without this ... no REM, PJ Harvey, Razorlight. And no powerful female pop icons like Madonna.
                    喜欢她人大过音乐


                    IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端11楼2020-04-06 16:22
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                      9 Elvis Presley
                      Elvis Presley (1956)
                      The King's first album was also the first example of how to cash in on a teenage craze. With Presleymania at full tilt, RCA simultaneously released a single, a four-track EP and an album, all with the same cover of Elvis in full, demented cry. They got their first million dollar album, the fans got a mix of rock-outs like 'Blue Suede Shoes', lascivious R&B and syrupy ballads.
                      Without this ... no King, no rock and roll madness, no Beatles first album, no pop sex symbols.


                      IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端13楼2020-04-06 16:23
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                        10 The Beach Boys
                        Pet Sounds (1966)
                        Of late, Pet Sounds has replaced Sgt Pepper's as the critics' choice of Greatest Album of All Time. Composed by the increasingly reclusive Brian Wilson while the rest of the group were touring, it might well have been a solo album. The beauty resides not just in its compositional genius and instrumental invention, but in the elaborate vocal harmonies that imbue these sad songs with an almost heartbreaking grandeur.
                        Without this ... where to start? The Beatles acknowledged its influence; Dylan said of Brian Wilson, 'That ear! I mean, Jesus, he's got to will that to the Smithsonian.'
                        所以说他们是和披头士同样重要的乐队


                        IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端14楼2020-04-06 16:25
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                          11 David Bowie
                          The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars (1972)
                          Bowie's revolutionary mix of hard rock and glam pop was given an otherwordly look and feel by his coquettish alter ego Ziggy. It's not so much that every act that followed dyed their hair orange in homage to the spidery spaceman; more that they learned the value of creating a 'bubble' of image and presentation that fans could fall in love with.
                          Without this ... we'd be lost. No Sex Pistols, no Prince, no Madonna, no Duran Duran, no Boy George, no Kiss, no Bon Jovi, no 'Bohemian Rhapsody' ... I could go on.


                          IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端15楼2020-04-06 16:26
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                            12 Miles Davis
                            Kind of Blue (1959)
                            A rare example of revolutionary music that almost everyone liked from the moment they heard it. Its cool, spacey, open-textured approach marked a complete break with the prevalent 'hard bop' style. The effect, based on simple scales, called modes, was fresh, delicate, approachable but surprisingly expressive. Others picked up on it and 'modal jazz' has been part of the language ever since. The album also became the media's favourite source of mood music.
                            Without this ... no ominous, brooding, atmospheric trumpet behind a million radio plays and TV documentaries.


                            IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端16楼2020-04-06 16:26
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                              13 Frank Sinatra
                              Songs for Swingin' Lovers (1956)
                              The previous year Sinatra had cut In the Wee Small Hours, a brooding cycle of torch songs that was arguably pop's first concept album. Once again working with arranger Nelson Riddle, he presented its complement; a set of upbeat paeans to romance. Exhilarating performances of standards like 'I've Got You Under My Skin' defined Sinatra's urbane, finger-snapping persona for the rest of his career and pushed the record to number one in the first ever British album chart.
                              Without this ... the 'singer as song interpreter' wouldn't have been born, karaoke menus would be much diminished.


                              IP属地:广东来自iPhone客户端17楼2020-04-06 16:26
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