The most "ahead of it's time" albums you know of.
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just want to say this is a great thread that makes me think, reminisce, and learn new things!0
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GlowGirl said:We might have to add the New York Dolls to the list of influential theatrical bands. They formed in 1971.0
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This album, particularly Side BWhereas Black Flag had previously played fast hardcore music this album alienated some of the fans as it had a slower, heavier sound. Particularly on Side B it draws from heavy metal influences.This album really struck a chord with Buzz Osborne in particular. The Melvins slowed down their music and became a sludge metal proto-grunge band. The Melvins influenced the entire Seattle music scene.0
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Another album was ahead of its time. It’s still might be. Just timeless:
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Oh YEAH, double "How did we miss those??" re: Talking Heads & NY Dolls!
Also I read a fascinating article a few weeks ago about Talking Heads' "Remain In Light", how not only is the music itself groundbreaking and impactful, but HOW they recorded it was so innovative and not what most people were doing then. I can't remember details and can't stop to look for article, but if I can find it later I'll post.Post edited by JH6056 on0 -
I don't think I own ONE album mentioned in this thread so far. hahaBy The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0
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tempo_n_groove said:tempo_n_groove said:Gern Blansten said:Loujoe said:Frank Zappa (any record) thinking Joe's Garage. I think he is so ahead of his time it hasn't come yet. Apostrophe is crazy too. If you can stomach it, listen many times if you want to surprise your brain repeatedly.
Here is part of his greatness. Yes, that's a young clean shaven Frank Zappa.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y9P2V0_p6vE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fBGNuvEZOfc
side note: at that show I had a standing-room ticket (it was a theatre, so that meant behind the back row on the orchestra level) - and I'm still 95% sure that Bjork herself came and stood beside me and watched that opening band.Post edited by biz999 on0 -
1ThoughtKnown said:This album, particularly Side BWhereas Black Flag had previously played fast hardcore music this album alienated some of the fans as it had a slower, heavier sound. Particularly on Side B it draws from heavy metal influences.This album really struck a chord with Buzz Osborne in particular. The Melvins slowed down their music and became a sludge metal proto-grunge band. The Melvins influenced the entire Seattle music scene.0
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Here's one from 1969 that broke through some of the confines of rock music of the day:And it really has staying power. It's two cuts, two sides. Here's my favorite side:
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
1ThoughtKnown said:
Another album was ahead of its time. It’s still might be. Just timeless:0 -
tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:
Another album was ahead of its time. It’s still might be. Just timeless:0 -
1ThoughtKnown said:tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:
Another album was ahead of its time. It’s still might be. Just timeless:
Great album but I don't see it.0 -
tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:
Another album was ahead of its time. It’s still might be. Just timeless:
Great album but I don't see it.0 -
1ThoughtKnown said:tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:
Another album was ahead of its time. It’s still might be. Just timeless:
Great album but I don't see it.
I can go on about it but I'd like to hear others thoughts to why and then I might retort.0 -
tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:tempo_n_groove said:1ThoughtKnown said:
Another album was ahead of its time. It’s still might be. Just timeless:
Great album but I don't see it.
I can go on about it but I'd like to hear others thoughts to why and then I might retort.
Talking Heads were a great band, no doubt! I saw them in '82 and what a show! This was with that great expanded band that included Adrian Belew, Steve Scales, and Bernie Worrell. And Byrne's energy was off the charts. (This was also a time when pretty much everyone was doing coke. I'm guessing that was an influence. (My friends and I were definitely a bit cranked up pre-show, lol.) That show was a few years after Remain in Light Came out, but what they were doing was still pretty much along that album's path.
But I would say their more ground breaking work was from the first couple of albums. From the get-go, they were combing elements of r&b, soul, and new wave, and Byrnes herky-jerky robotic moves and singing were certainly unusual. So to me it would be '77 that would rank as their album that was a bit more ahead of it's time. I wouldn't say hugely so, but it definitely had a distinct flavor within new wave and art-pop/ art-funk.
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
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I fucking LOVED Pantera before the alternative wave. Both CFH and Vulgar. Two top notch metal records.By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0
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FiveBelow said:0
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perhaps, without new grass revival, billy strings and greensky bluesgrass would not exist or be flourishing0
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pick any moment is david's career.his version of this song on his last solo tour was beyond anything i have ever witnessed.0
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