Really good album but personally not even my favourite of hers from 1967. If it had been the year prior or the year after an Aretha Franklin album would most likely make my list. Lady Soul or Aretha Now from 1968 or Soul '69 from 1969 for example. This Girl's in Love with You and Spirit in the Dark are definitely a lock for a 1970 list.
A contradiction in terms.... lightweight Hendrix album...
1. The Jimi Hendrix Experience- Axis: Bold as Love
2. The Jimi Hendrix Experience- Are you Experienced?
3. Aretha Franklin- I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love you
4. James Carr- You Got My Mind Messed Up
5. The Doors- The Doors
6. The Doors- Strange Days
7. Cream- Desereli Girls
8. Bob Dylan- John Wesley Harding
9. The Beatles- Sgt. Peppers Lonely Heart Club Band
10. The Beatles- Magical Mystery Tour
Probably need more time to really determine my order with most of these, but my music-listening time is limited at the moment.
The 13th Floor Elevators were to me always one of the best bands the 1960's had to offer.
roky erickson is a legend.
Anyways, if you don't mind weird ass blues rock, try Captain Beefheart. This guy is definitely twisted in his head! His vocals and facial expression gives me the lulz.
Just Youtube 'captain beefheart' and you'll get a bunch of videos.
Some people find him annoying, but he definitely amuses me!
Most people don't understand Captain Beefheart. It takes ear training, like DsO, Portal, or Stravinsky.
Captain Beefheart - blues/psych/I-don't-know-how-the-fuck-to-describe-it artist, again the lyrics are completely surreal, so check him out, see what you think.
rip you miserable old fuck. not a death that bothers me - i was always periodically surprised when reminded he didn't die like 40 years ago, his best songs seem so old and ready made for the abyss. i do count myself among his fans though, if not really his devotees. when he was on, he was ON.
The first four Cohen albums are folk masterpieces, in my opinion.
the mighty...mighty Leonard Cohen. His early albums are untouchable for atmosphere...and his writing is legendary.
my version of Psychadelic- Jefferson Airplane, early works of Moody Blues and E.L.P. or anything containing Psilocybin
or Lysergic Acid Diethylamide!![]()
I don't care about their influential value, i think they are incredibly overrated because there were a LOT better bands than them in the 60s, and The Beatles are supposed to be "best band evah" .. or something. They never released a "Forever Changes" or "Surrealistic Pillow".
Cream > The Doors
Cream and Blue Cheer were instrumental in influencing Sabbath.
I dig cream :/
Nothing wrong with that. They kick ass.
Second. Disraeli Gears is always fun to hear.
Am i weird in that i prefer the more psychedelic 60's stuff than the the rest of their stuff? I know the Gilmour era stuff is more popular and such but i really can't get into it. Honestly, it puts me to sleep, but the Syd Barrett era, i actually kinda like.
I honestly believe Syd Barrett was the best floyd member
There is a decent chunk of people out there that regard Syd as the peak of psychedelic music, I've never really understood the appeal. I mean, he's okay, but in many ways he's just a more obscure (and thus by extension more appealing to music nerds/hipstery types) version of Donovan.
At least Syd Barrett's Pink Floyd material aged better than Syd Barrett himself.
The Doors are surely the best 60's band but my favourite album is still the Pink Floyd's psychedelic masterpiece "The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn"
Syd Barrett was a genious
also--a psych rock album with whimsical in the title yeah i'll definitely be checking that out </sarcasm because whimsical psych rock is the worst thing possible and btw just for the record syd barrett-era pink floyd is fucking retarded>
I'm currently addicted to Heroin (the Velvet Underground.)
and another thing, "run run run" is a completely fabulous song. the solo alone is one of the best things ever. who does shit like that?
well lou reed is part god so yes i like velvet underground
The Velvet Underground are definitely the major influence in both Punk and Industrial and serve as a legit link between both worlds.
Their debut, The Velvet Underground & Nico, is the godhead of all punk/alternative rock. It came out in 1967, and was produced by Andy Warhol.
Absolutely essential for the armchair rock historian....
parts of Lou Reeds Rock n Roll Animal is the only thing I ever heard I liked. My memory of Velvet Underground stuff was the equivilent of listening to a garbage disposal
Thought it would be interesting to see what peoples favorite Doors album was. Mine would have to be the S/T or Strange Days, they have this kind of energy to them that none of the other albums have.
By far one of my favorite bands of all-time. I like virtually everything they did. They're just such a perfect band. Fun to listen to, musically interesting, and lyrically meaningful.
Sorry... they were on the radio when I was growing up and they were OK till I heard some Hendrix or Zeppelin. Their music was primitive as hell. Cheap chincy sounding keyboard with playing the level of a kindergardener. Drunkin babblings into a microphone, totally amature, beginning amature at that. Nope, cant say as though Ive heard anything remotely similiar, thank goodness
jimi is the most influential guitarist of the 20th century..he is the best
jimi hendrix has all of my favorite guitar solos
most overrated guitarist ever
Jimi Hendrix is the best. His guitar is a siren, a beast, sexual energy purified to its essence.
I'll throw out a counter to the anti-Hendrix opinions: of all the rock stars that died young Hendrix is the most tragic. He still had the most to offer, and was only scratching the surface. Rock music would be totally different if he would have lived longer.
Hendrix was a force of nature. He took the stage every night like a god damn tidal wave, and had no limitations on his expression. He's one of those rare musicians that amazed authorities far outside of his genre. Jazz would not be the same without Jimi. Classical music was changed forever by Jimi.
Let's break this down, shall we? Jim Morrison set the stage for a bands "front man." No one did it before him the way he did it, and no one today comes close. Ray Manzarek was a classically tranined pianist. John Densmore was a professional jazz drummer before he joined the Doors. Robbie Krieger was a dam fine guitar player who knew what he was doing. Listen to his work on "Spanish Caravan" on Waiting for the Sun. The Doors were major contributors to music, especially back in the 60's. No one had the stones to do and say what they did. The Doors represented what everyone else was thinking. Period.
The Doors- The first band to delve deeply into the darker side of consciouness (though often pulling back in fear at the edge of the abyss), and also, along with King Crimson, among the first to explore narrative and thematic structures rather purely cyclic riff centered contructs. "The End" is still heavier in the only real sense than 95% of metal songs.