10 all time
favourite albums over 10 days. Albums that really made an impact and
are still on your playlists, even if only now and then.
Post the cover, no
need to explain and nominate a person each day with each album to do
the same.
Well, that's not
hard at all, ten is loads isn't it?
Yeah right.
If we are friends on
Facebook then you will have seen this cropping up a lot over the last
couple of weeks (I know it should have been ten days but there were
alcohol-related gaps).
A lot of people have
been doing it, and most cannot resist the urge to explain. I am no
different, but I'm utilising a loophole and putting it all here in a
very self-indulgent blog. Sorry if you were hoping for something more
Russia-related and relevant.
It turned out to be
an impossible ask to get my favourite albums down to ten, and I spent
a good two days writing and rewriting and changing my mind about the
list. I got it down to 30, but none of those ended up in the final
ten. I added extra rules for myself, changed the goalposts. It didn't
help, so I ended up picking stuff I like pretty much at random. If I
did it again now they'd all be completely different.
At no point do any
of the records that I routinely quote as my favourite appear, and
only one of my rolling roster of answers to the question 'What's your
favourite band?' made it. There's no Led Zeppelin, no Jimi Hendrix,
no Beatles, no Queen, no Rolling Stones, no Sex Pistols, no Clash, no
Frank Zappa, no Captain Beefheart, no Lou Reed, no Doors, no Skynyrd,
no Creedence, no Mahavishnu Orchestra, not a single acoustic
singer-songwriter (Cat Stevens, Bob Dylan, Suzanne Vega, Carole King,
all missing). No Folk, no Jazz, you get the picture.
And I forgot Stoned
Age Man by Joseph completely – fuck...
So without further
ado, here's those ten albums.
Come An' Get It –
Whitesnake
When I was ten, I
got a ghetto blaster for Christmas. Mum and Dad asked me what music I
liked so they could buy me a tape to play on it. I said Whitesnake,
expecting to get a copy of 1987 (because as far as I knew they had
only done the one album, and I loved 'Still of the Night' despite
being too young to understand the delicate nuance of David
Coverdale's metaphors).
Being canny with
their money, they found this album in a bargain bin and got it for me
instead. My brief disappointment at not having 1987 (it's okay, Dad
bought it for me in the January sales) was dissipated as soon as the
massive intro riff of the title track started. I had not heard proper
70s pomp rock before. Mum and Dad listened to classical music,
Gilbert and Sullivan operettas and very occasionally The Beatles and
Simon and Garfunkel, and you never got Alice Cooper on Saturday
Superstore (pretty sure I once saw Motorhead on the 8:15 from
Manchester though, or it might have been Number 73), so I had been
denied the joy of overdriven Hammond organs.
The sheer
naughtiness of David Coverdale singing 'Baby you can kiss my arse,
yes indeed,' was enough to turn my ten year old brain on to screamy,
open-shirted, velvet-flared-high-kicking rock. Without this album I
might never have bothered with Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Mountain,
Edgar Winter or any of the other bands I didn't put on this list but
should have.
Easter – Patti
Smith Group
International
Women's Day popped up while I was doing this and I noticed that my
original list was a massive sausage-fest. I had yet another reshuffle
and threw this in.
As a teenager I
spent a lot of time buying old vinyl records from market stalls and
second hand shops – because I couldn't afford new tapes. I mostly
had to judge everything by its cover (hence all my Grateful Dead and
Incredible String Band albums) since I had rarely heard of any of it.
Obviously this striking woman's nipply vest cried out to my
testosterone soaked mind and I had to buy it. Also it had 'Rock and
Roll Nigger' on it, and I loved the Byrdland
(who?) version of it already.
From the crashing
opening of 'Till Victory' right to the haunting menace of the title
track it is a tour de force of energy, beauty and awesome. More
immediately accessible than the waking dream of Horses, and thus a
better gateway to the high priestess of punk poetry. Horses took me
longer to get, and if I had bought it first I might never have
bothered with any more Patti Smith records. Which would have been a
mistake.
Snuffsaidbutgorblimeyguvstonemeifhedidn'tthrowawobblerchachachachachachachachachachachayou'regoinghomeinacosmicambience
– Snuff
If you did your
teenage years in the early 90s and were into music that didn't get
played on the radio then you needed friends with record collections.
I had a few of them, and Jim 'Don't Call Me Lofty' Brameld was one of
the best. I would spend school lunchbreaks in his study where he
played me the Sub-Humans, Dead Kennedys, Lard, DOA, Chumbawamba
(before THAT song ruined them) and Snuff (who I had said I was a fan
of because I once read their name in a skateboard mag). The massive
guitars and frenetic drumming were perfect for a 14 year old buried
deep in 70s punk music and paved the way for a later obsession with
the Descendants, Rancid and NOFX. I thought I had worn my tape of it
out with excessive play, but then I replaced it with a vinyl copy and
it turns out the production is incredibly underwhelming – exercise
your rights to excessive equalising. (The same applies to Metallica's
And Justice For All...)
King of Rock – Run
DMC
Hip-hop is divisive.
Always has been, and amazingly there are still cocks out there who do
the 'Rap is spelled with a silent C' joke. Twats. We were a lot more
tribal when I was a kid, so being into Rock music I claimed not to
like rap – even convinced myself it was true. It wasn't, I loved
the Beastie Boys first album (like everybody did) but it took Run DMC
to cement it. Big guitar riffs, check, memorable hooks, check, vocal
acrobatics, check. Everything good about music is on this album. It
took the changing attitude of the late 90s for me to come out as
someone who enjoyed more than one kind of music. It felt good, and it
is hard to believe how solid the battle lines were before that.
Against The
Grain – Rory Gallagher
I had seen pictures
of Rory Gallagher in magazines, I had read about how important he
was, I had fallen deeply in love with his 1961 Stratocaster, but
never heard him. We had no internet, I had little money for records
and didn't know anybody that listened to him already. Then, when I
was about 16, I was flicking through the new in section at Discovery
Records in Bideford (now moved to Barnstaple, and still hosted by the
greatest Record Shop owner I have ever known, Matthew 'Top Hat Matt'
Poulton) when a familiar guitar appeared in the drifts of Rumours and
Brothers In Arms. My heart skipped a beat and it went in the haul. I
got it home, stuck it on, and with the opening riff of 'Let Me In,' I
realised that I had been right to be in love with that Stratocaster
for so long. It turned out that Mr Furness, my A Level Economics
teacher, was also a big fan, which led to a lot of record swapping,
the discovery of good Jazz via John Etheridge and Wes Montgomery, and
a disappointing C in Economics.
An Electric
Storm – The White Noise
During the 90s I
began to realise that electronic music was okay after an out of body
experience involving some stairs and an Orb album while staying with
my Canterbury cousins. My friend Julian (who I had previously thought
only listened to Kate Bush and The Sisters Of Mercy) managed to track
down a copy of this record he had been looking for forever. He sat me
down and made me listen to it, and everything changed. Wild
electronica from Delia Derbyshire out of the BBC Radiophonic
workshop, stories of the sounds of wild orgies being recorded by
having an actual orgy. Tales of people committing suicide to the last
track, rumours of it being banned. I have no idea how many of these
things are true, but I became fixated with the tape of it Julian did
for me. I've since replaced it with an original pressing on Island, a
CD and a backup reissue somewhere. It's that important to me.
Straight??!! –
The Dogs D'Amour
I love the Dogs
D'Amour. They are probably the reason for my mildly eccentric dress
sense. I should really have put Errol Flynn in here as it was the
first Dogs album I got (taped off my mate Paddy who found them first)
or the eponymous 1988 EP that I played more than any other. But
Straight??!! has a special place in my heart.
A long time ago I
went to a birthday party, a friend's girlfriend. Said friend borrowed
the band's guitar to play a song in the break. It was supposed to be
for the girlfriend. He spotted me, and remembered my claim that 'Back
on The Juice' had the best opening of any song ever. So he played me
'Back on the Juice', the girlfriend had never even heard of the Dogs
D'Amour. He did not play any other songs.
I like to think it
went some way to that girlfriend eventually marrying me instead (she
still hates the Dogs D'Amour though).
Meet The
Residents – The Residents
Scanning the shelves
at Discovery one Saturday morning I saw an album by the Residents. I
recalled that I really liked their song, 'Left of the Dial' so I
bought it and took it home. That album was Whatever happened to
Vileness Fats? and it did not have 'Left of the Dial' on it. That's
because 'Left of the Dial' was by The Replacements. A second rate,
instantly forgettable, American college rock band.
The Residents
particular brand of batshit insane avant-gardism left me bemused,
confused and intrigued. I went back the next week and more had turned
up, including Meet The Residents with its defaced Beatles cover. I
bought the lot and forced myself to keep listening. It took a while
to get but once I got it there was no turning back. This wouldn't
happen now, in a world of quick fix online listening I wouldn't have
accidentally bought the wrong record, or bothered to keep on
listening until they became the one answer to the question 'What's
your favourite band?' to make this list. I'd have found the wanky
song about radios and gone on listening to bland crap forever. God
bless my shitty memory and second hand record shops.
Hearts – I
Break Horses
Honestly, I think I
put this record in because my list lacked women, and needed something
a bit more modern. Still desperately trying to look cool in my 40s.
That's not to say that it's not worthy of the list. I was entranced
and obsessed with this record from the first moment I heard 'Winter
Beats' on 6 Music. I'm a sucker for a massive throbbing analogue
synth drone, and this is the best example out there, it's utterly
sublime. I played it endlessly during the first few months of 2012
driving back and forth to rehearse with Maz
Totterdell's band and it is now irrevocably linked with that very
happy period of my life. It's a special record and I still grin from
ear to ear every time it comes on (I mostly listen to music from an
mp3 player on shuffle these days). Does it deserve to be on this list
at the expense of Weezer's Blue album though?
Open Up And Say
...Ahh! – Poison
This is another
moment of throwing off years of repression. (I've
written about the trouble with music snobbery before here). So
much of being a teenager is trying to make sure you like the right
things, and that nobody thinks you like the wrong things. Being
consistent in your image was all. (I can admit now what a pretentious
little prick I was when I was 14 – can you?) My brief dalliance with
Poodle Rock in the late 80s/early 90s was thrown away once I
discovered Punk. I got rid of all my Metal albums (except Metallica,
Slayer, Megadeth, Anthrax et al – they were practically punk) and
cut all ties with spandex, perms and widdly nonsense. Since then I
have stopped giving a fuck what people think, embraced Motley Crue,
welcomed back Whitesnake, Def Leppard, Faster Pussycat, Van Halen,
and the most shameful of them all – Poison.
Two-tone permed
hair, eyeliner, cowboy boots, leather trousers, and Bret Michaels
looking like the most beautiful creature I had ever seen – while
being a man. Stupid throw away songs about girls and having (nothin'
but) a good time with excessive show off stunt guitar solos. All
utterly unforgiveable in an early 90s of earnest plaid-clad grunge,
even though 'Every Rose Has Its Thorn' was the first song most of us
learned how to play on guitar.
But all so fucking
awesomely cool – oh the shame of it.
It's not shameful
now, kids today don't define themselves by one kind of music. The 16
year old drummer in Carnivala told me he liked 'Your Mama Don't
Dance' when I was driving him to a gig a couple of years ago. I
expected scorn of the kind I received at school, and some snobby shit
about Loggins and Messina. Times have changed, times are better, I
can wear my cowboy boots with pride.
So, come on CC, pick
up that guitar and talk to me....
*For your
delectation, here's a massive list of stuff that got cut before I hit
the final ten. There's a lot of it and it could easily be four times
this.
Catch Bull At Four –
Cat Stevens
Lifebringer –
Zervas and Pepper
Last Scream of the
Missing Neighbours – DOA with Jello Biafra
Exile On Main Street
– The Rolling Stones
Thick as a Brick –
Jethro Tull
Skid Row – Skid Row
Skid Row – Skid Row
Queen 2 or Queen, or
News of the World, or Sheer Heart Attack – Queen
Radio 1 – The Jimi Hendrix Experience
Sleepwalking – Kingmaker
Radio 1 – The Jimi Hendrix Experience
Sleepwalking – Kingmaker
Pendulum - Creedence
Clearwater Revival
Flogging a Dead Horse – Sex pistols
Desire – Bob Dylan
Flogging a Dead Horse – Sex pistols
Desire – Bob Dylan
Fountains of Wayne –
Fountains of Wayne
Blue Album – Weezer
Blue Album – Weezer
Meaty, Beaty, Big
and Bouncy – The Who
Flat, Baroque and
Berserk – Roy Harper
Love It To Death –
Alice Cooper
Alive! - Slade
God Shuffled His Feet – Crash Test Dummies
Flood – They Might Be Giants
How to Make Friends and Influence People – Terrorvision
Led Zeppelin 1-4 inclusive
Black Sabbath vol. 4 – Black Sabbath
Piper At The Gates Of Dawn – Pink Floyd
God Shuffled His Feet – Crash Test Dummies
Flood – They Might Be Giants
How to Make Friends and Influence People – Terrorvision
Led Zeppelin 1-4 inclusive
Black Sabbath vol. 4 – Black Sabbath
Piper At The Gates Of Dawn – Pink Floyd
Little Earthquakes –
Tori Amos
Suzanne Vega –
Suzanne Vega
Let It Be – The
Beatles
Powerage – AC/DC
Bongo Fury – Frank
Zappa and Captain Beefheart
Give 'Em Enough Rope
– The Clash
Van Halen – Van
Halen
Second Helping –
Lynyrd Skynyrd
Crises – Mike
Oldfield
Harvest – Neil
Young
Peace Sells But
Who's Buying? - Megadeth
Inflammable Material
– Stiff Little Fingers
Landscape –
Landscape
Penguin Eggs – Nic
Jones
Lovesexy – Prince
Skeletons From the
Closet – The Grateful Dead
Volunteers –
Jefferson Airplane
Gorilla – The
Bonzo Dog Doo Da Band
Back in the DHSS –
Half Man Half Biscuit
and on and on and on
and on