The most "ahead of it's time" albums you know of.
Comments
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1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
It's all up for discussion and to be a music buff no matter what you say, you are right. Somewhere someone else will agree and that is what makes debating and talking music fun.0 -
brianlux said:JH6056 said:tempo_n_groove said:JH6056 said:Pap said:Bob Marley & The Wailers - Burnin' (1973) / In 2007 the album was added to the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry for its historical and cultural significance.
This is as perplexing as it is jubilant - sometimes gripping, sometimes slippery. It's reggae, obviously, but it's not mainstream reggae, certainly not rock or soul, maybe some kind of futuristic slow funk, 'War' without the pseudo-jazz. What's inescapable is Bob Marley's ferocious gift for melodic propaganda. It's one thing to come up with four consecutive title hooks, another to make the titles 'Get Up Stand Up,' 'Hallelujah Time,' 'I Shot the Sheriff,' 'Burnin' and Lootin'. ~ Robert Christgau (Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies)
I think "Ahead of it's time" is somewhat different than simply being "first" (although Toots was also a major innovator and being "first" is of course being a visionary).
How cool, JH!
I don't travel much these days but if I did, besides London and maybe parts of Ireland, Jamaica is one place I would really like to go see. The music that came out of there is amazing. I wish I had gotten the chance to see Bob Marley. But I did get to see Black Uhuru with Sly and Robbie in the mid 80's. Oh man! What a show! It's like, no way could you sit still!
I also never got to see Bob Marley. My hubs' dad was just telling me last time I saw him about 2 of the times he saw Bob Marley live (because he was living in the US by the time Marley got really big), and they were life-changing. Just listening to the description of the shows gave me shivers. And he's seen a LOT of great concerts.
Hope you get to Jamaica! I'm a big fan of Ireland, been there a few times and always love it, so get there too!0 -
1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
But yes, so many albums ahead of their time are only recognized after the fact as groundbreaking or even worthwhile at all.0 -
1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
That sounds like a good definition to me. As far as groundbreaking, I think that does happen with some albums that are ahead of their time (by your definition). The Ramones first album could be considered groundbreaking simply because of Johnny Ramones relentless down-stroke only guitar playing, something copied endlessly since. And that album has won over vast numbers of fans over the years but did not do so well when it came out.
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
brianlux said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
That sounds like a good definition to me. As far as groundbreaking, I think that does happen with some albums that are ahead of their time (by your definition). The Ramones first album could be considered groundbreaking simply because of Johnny Ramones relentless down-stroke only guitar playing, something copied endlessly since. And that album has won over vast numbers of fans over the years but did not do so well when it came out.Was it a great album? Absolutely and I still listen to it. The cultural relevance simply cannot be ignored. I’m not so sure it was ahead of its time. I think it came out at EXACTLY the right time. The world was ready for it… most of us had grown tired of hair bands. I’m not sure Nevermind is held in such high regard if it’s released in 1994 for example.0 -
tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
It's all up for discussion and to be a music buff no matter what you say, you are right. Somewhere someone else will agree and that is what makes debating and talking music fun.0 -
JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
But yes, so many albums ahead of their time are only recognized after the fact as groundbreaking or even worthwhile at all.
It’s odd, but bands with male singers and high singing voices (including early Rush) take me a long time to get into. Long story short, I am not a person to comment on how ahead of their time Radiohead was because I hardly knew they existed. Lol.
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1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
But yes, so many albums ahead of their time are only recognized after the fact as groundbreaking or even worthwhile at all.
It’s odd, but bands with male singers and high singing voices (including early Rush) take me a long time to get into. Long story short, I am not a person to comment on how ahead of their time Radiohead was because I hardly knew they existed. Lol.0 -
JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
But yes, so many albums ahead of their time are only recognized after the fact as groundbreaking or even worthwhile at all.
It’s odd, but bands with male singers and high singing voices (including early Rush) take me a long time to get into. Long story short, I am not a person to comment on how ahead of their time Radiohead was because I hardly knew they existed. Lol.The legacy these bands or artists create is what puts them ahead of their time. The first Killing Joke album inspired so many bands (Soundgarden for one) but is still grossly under appreciated. Often times they are the “musician’s band”. King’s X is a classic example of this. Layne Staley once asked Dug Pinnick (only half jokingly) “hey when are you going to come out with a new album so we can rip you off again?” Ty Tabor is really helped popularize Drop D in alternative music.Anyways, you are right in that no one is wrong. I was only saying I didn’t comment on Radiohead because I am not educated enough to say whether they would be considered ahead of their time or not. Happy for you they are a great live act. I would probably see them if they rolled through Cowtown again (I don’t know if they still tour).0 -
1ThoughtKnown said:brianlux said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
That sounds like a good definition to me. As far as groundbreaking, I think that does happen with some albums that are ahead of their time (by your definition). The Ramones first album could be considered groundbreaking simply because of Johnny Ramones relentless down-stroke only guitar playing, something copied endlessly since. And that album has won over vast numbers of fans over the years but did not do so well when it came out.Was it a great album? Absolutely and I still listen to it. The cultural relevance simply cannot be ignored. I’m not so sure it was ahead of its time. I think it came out at EXACTLY the right time. The world was ready for it… most of us had grown tired of hair bands. I’m not sure Nevermind is held in such high regard if it’s released in 1994 for example.
It's interesting to me to have read more recently about Cobain's thoughts on Nevermind. Apparently he found it "over-produced" and said it sounded "like a Motley Crue album". The songs were great, but there was nothing really new there and in retrospect, I think Cobain was right about the production. To make matters worse, I have a DVD somewhere that is a documentary about the making of Nevermind. The film was intended to highlight all these great and positive attributes of the album. If you love that album, I would suggest avoiding the film. It absolutely ruined that record for me. I haven't listened to it in years.JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
But yes, so many albums ahead of their time are only recognized after the fact as groundbreaking or even worthwhile at all.
It’s odd, but bands with male singers and high singing voices (including early Rush) take me a long time to get into. Long story short, I am not a person to comment on how ahead of their time Radiohead was because I hardly knew they existed. Lol.
I totally agree, JH.
I try to preface my opinions about music with the caveat that my opinions are just that- opinions. If I ever come across as a smart-ass or overly opinionated, please call me on that shit!
In another thread, I waxed fanboy like over the band Dead Moon. Our good fellow poster Wobbie gave his opinion which was, "...gotta tell you, I thought they were unlistenable."
I was totally cool with that and we had a good laugh over it. We all have our own individual and separate ears and brains and not a one of us can crawl inside someone else and hear the way another person hears. This is one of the reasons why I insist there is no such thing as "bad music". I find that to be impossible!
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
But yes, so many albums ahead of their time are only recognized after the fact as groundbreaking or even worthwhile at all.
It’s odd, but bands with male singers and high singing voices (including early Rush) take me a long time to get into. Long story short, I am not a person to comment on how ahead of their time Radiohead was because I hardly knew they existed. Lol.The legacy these bands or artists create is what puts them ahead of their time. The first Killing Joke album inspired so many bands (Soundgarden for one) but is still grossly under appreciated. Often times they are the “musician’s band”. King’s X is a classic example of this. Layne Staley once asked Dug Pinnick (only half jokingly) “hey when are you going to come out with a new album so we can rip you off again?” Ty Tabor is really helped popularize Drop D in alternative music.Anyways, you are right in that no one is wrong. I was only saying I didn’t comment on Radiohead because I am not educated enough to say whether they would be considered ahead of their time or not. Happy for you they are a great live act. I would probably see them if they rolled through Cowtown again (I don’t know if they still tour).
So after reading what you've written, I'm of the mind that you have a bit of an elitist mindset when it comes to music. While it is absolutely true that rarely is music that becomes commercially successful right away is seen as cutting edge or ahead of it's time, you're basically saying your standard for if it's ahead of it's time is whether it's too obscure or unusual for a huge mass of people to like it and buy it and cover it in the media. That standard has zero to do with the content of the music, anything innovative about it, or what did and didn't exist like it before. You're only judging (on that point) on whether it's commercially successful, and that seems a bit elitist and to not be about the music and the context, just the commercial success. It also assumes that only a small % of people appreciate music "ahead of its time" even if maybe that band or that album actually wakes everyone up to something they had no clue of. You can call that "right on time" or you can just look at whether there was anything like it that everyone knew and appreciated before it, and if not, when they were writing and recording it they were ahead of all the rest of us.
You said the legacy they create is what puts them ahead of their time, and I'd say so many bands were inspired (and say so publicly) by Radiohead, I feel they meet the "Legacy Criteria" easily.
In many ways it's all semantics on this point, but I do always bristle at that "if it's successful it isn't cool anymore", which isn't what you said but I hear the roots of that idea in what you did say.0 -
1ThoughtKnown said:tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
It's all up for discussion and to be a music buff no matter what you say, you are right. Somewhere someone else will agree and that is what makes debating and talking music fun.
For the Wailers album there was so much other great Reggae out there. That album just happened to catch on. Is it timeless? Yes I would say that it is.0 -
Can we say GG Alin and the Murder Junkies for Scat Rock or WTF music? I think they were so groundbreaking that no one has tried to reproduce it or follow in the bands footsteps since!0
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JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
But yes, so many albums ahead of their time are only recognized after the fact as groundbreaking or even worthwhile at all.
It’s odd, but bands with male singers and high singing voices (including early Rush) take me a long time to get into. Long story short, I am not a person to comment on how ahead of their time Radiohead was because I hardly knew they existed. Lol.The legacy these bands or artists create is what puts them ahead of their time. The first Killing Joke album inspired so many bands (Soundgarden for one) but is still grossly under appreciated. Often times they are the “musician’s band”. King’s X is a classic example of this. Layne Staley once asked Dug Pinnick (only half jokingly) “hey when are you going to come out with a new album so we can rip you off again?” Ty Tabor is really helped popularize Drop D in alternative music.Anyways, you are right in that no one is wrong. I was only saying I didn’t comment on Radiohead because I am not educated enough to say whether they would be considered ahead of their time or not. Happy for you they are a great live act. I would probably see them if they rolled through Cowtown again (I don’t know if they still tour).
So after reading what you've written, I'm of the mind that you have a bit of an elitist mindset when it comes to music. While it is absolutely true that rarely is music that becomes commercially successful right away is seen as cutting edge or ahead of it's time, you're basically saying your standard for if it's ahead of it's time is whether it's too obscure or unusual for a huge mass of people to like it and buy it and cover it in the media. That standard has zero to do with the content of the music, anything innovative about it, or what did and didn't exist like it before. You're only judging (on that point) on whether it's commercially successful, and that seems a bit elitist and to not be about the music and the context, just the commercial success. It also assumes that only a small % of people appreciate music "ahead of its time" even if maybe that band or that album actually wakes everyone up to something they had no clue of. You can call that "right on time" or you can just look at whether there was anything like it that everyone knew and appreciated before it, and if not, when they were writing and recording it they were ahead of all the rest of us.
You said the legacy they create is what puts them ahead of their time, and I'd say so many bands were inspired (and say so publicly) by Radiohead, I feel they meet the "Legacy Criteria" easily.
In many ways it's all semantics on this point, but I do always bristle at that "if it's successful it isn't cool anymore", which isn't what you said but I hear the roots of that idea in what you did say.I do like and appreciate music that is more of a challenge to listen to, that stirs emotion. That’s why PJ Ten was such an important album to me as a young man. It was dark and beautiful.0 -
To that end, Ten was also released at exactly the right time. No Code or Binaural would be PJ albums I consider ahead of their time. Most people didn’t appreciate them at the time of release (sales show that). Only later were these albums being recognized for the (imo) masterpieces they are. At this point, they are my two go to studio albums for PJ0
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1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
But yes, so many albums ahead of their time are only recognized after the fact as groundbreaking or even worthwhile at all.
It’s odd, but bands with male singers and high singing voices (including early Rush) take me a long time to get into. Long story short, I am not a person to comment on how ahead of their time Radiohead was because I hardly knew they existed. Lol.The legacy these bands or artists create is what puts them ahead of their time. The first Killing Joke album inspired so many bands (Soundgarden for one) but is still grossly under appreciated. Often times they are the “musician’s band”. King’s X is a classic example of this. Layne Staley once asked Dug Pinnick (only half jokingly) “hey when are you going to come out with a new album so we can rip you off again?” Ty Tabor is really helped popularize Drop D in alternative music.Anyways, you are right in that no one is wrong. I was only saying I didn’t comment on Radiohead because I am not educated enough to say whether they would be considered ahead of their time or not. Happy for you they are a great live act. I would probably see them if they rolled through Cowtown again (I don’t know if they still tour).
So after reading what you've written, I'm of the mind that you have a bit of an elitist mindset when it comes to music. While it is absolutely true that rarely is music that becomes commercially successful right away is seen as cutting edge or ahead of it's time, you're basically saying your standard for if it's ahead of it's time is whether it's too obscure or unusual for a huge mass of people to like it and buy it and cover it in the media. That standard has zero to do with the content of the music, anything innovative about it, or what did and didn't exist like it before. You're only judging (on that point) on whether it's commercially successful, and that seems a bit elitist and to not be about the music and the context, just the commercial success. It also assumes that only a small % of people appreciate music "ahead of its time" even if maybe that band or that album actually wakes everyone up to something they had no clue of. You can call that "right on time" or you can just look at whether there was anything like it that everyone knew and appreciated before it, and if not, when they were writing and recording it they were ahead of all the rest of us.
You said the legacy they create is what puts them ahead of their time, and I'd say so many bands were inspired (and say so publicly) by Radiohead, I feel they meet the "Legacy Criteria" easily.
In many ways it's all semantics on this point, but I do always bristle at that "if it's successful it isn't cool anymore", which isn't what you said but I hear the roots of that idea in what you did say.I do like and appreciate music that is more of a challenge to listen to, that stirs emotion. That’s why PJ Ten was such an important album to me as a young man. It was dark and beautiful.
Reason I ask is that a reviewer said if Yield was made after Ten it would have made them a bigger band than U2.
I always thought that take to be very interesting.0 -
tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:JH6056 said:1ThoughtKnown said:I don’t understand how someone or some band has to be first in a genre for their album to be ahead of its time. Everyone is influenced by their environment and what they see and listen to. Ahead of its time, to me,
indicates the album may have not been appreciated for its significance at the time. A seminal album.Not necessarily groundbreaking, but definitely culturally relevant in hindsight.
But yes, so many albums ahead of their time are only recognized after the fact as groundbreaking or even worthwhile at all.
It’s odd, but bands with male singers and high singing voices (including early Rush) take me a long time to get into. Long story short, I am not a person to comment on how ahead of their time Radiohead was because I hardly knew they existed. Lol.The legacy these bands or artists create is what puts them ahead of their time. The first Killing Joke album inspired so many bands (Soundgarden for one) but is still grossly under appreciated. Often times they are the “musician’s band”. King’s X is a classic example of this. Layne Staley once asked Dug Pinnick (only half jokingly) “hey when are you going to come out with a new album so we can rip you off again?” Ty Tabor is really helped popularize Drop D in alternative music.Anyways, you are right in that no one is wrong. I was only saying I didn’t comment on Radiohead because I am not educated enough to say whether they would be considered ahead of their time or not. Happy for you they are a great live act. I would probably see them if they rolled through Cowtown again (I don’t know if they still tour).
So after reading what you've written, I'm of the mind that you have a bit of an elitist mindset when it comes to music. While it is absolutely true that rarely is music that becomes commercially successful right away is seen as cutting edge or ahead of it's time, you're basically saying your standard for if it's ahead of it's time is whether it's too obscure or unusual for a huge mass of people to like it and buy it and cover it in the media. That standard has zero to do with the content of the music, anything innovative about it, or what did and didn't exist like it before. You're only judging (on that point) on whether it's commercially successful, and that seems a bit elitist and to not be about the music and the context, just the commercial success. It also assumes that only a small % of people appreciate music "ahead of its time" even if maybe that band or that album actually wakes everyone up to something they had no clue of. You can call that "right on time" or you can just look at whether there was anything like it that everyone knew and appreciated before it, and if not, when they were writing and recording it they were ahead of all the rest of us.
You said the legacy they create is what puts them ahead of their time, and I'd say so many bands were inspired (and say so publicly) by Radiohead, I feel they meet the "Legacy Criteria" easily.
In many ways it's all semantics on this point, but I do always bristle at that "if it's successful it isn't cool anymore", which isn't what you said but I hear the roots of that idea in what you did say.I do like and appreciate music that is more of a challenge to listen to, that stirs emotion. That’s why PJ Ten was such an important album to me as a young man. It was dark and beautiful.
Reason I ask is that a reviewer said if Yield was made after Ten it would have made them a bigger band than U2.
I always thought that take to be very interesting.0 -
Love where this convo has continued to go!0
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Also @1ThoughtKnown I have fantastic news for you... The Radiohead thread on this forum is up to 42 pages long now. I feel confident that by the time you read through all 42 pages of discussion... well you will probably hate Radiohead after reading through it but you will also certainly know why so many of us love them
Kidding, of course I don't expect you to read it all but I did smile since it's the thread at the moment right under this one0 -
JH6056 said:Also @1ThoughtKnown I have fantastic news for you... The Radiohead thread on this forum is up to 42 pages long now. I feel confident that by the time you read through all 42 pages of discussion... well you will probably hate Radiohead after reading through it but you will also certainly know why so many of us love them
Kidding, of course I don't expect you to read it all but I did smile since it's the thread at the moment right under this oneGreat band and will trust others when they say they were ahead of their time.0
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