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1978
The Cars - The Cars (Elektra) 9%  9%  [ 4 ]
Devo - Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! (Warner Bros) 6%  6%  [ 3 ]
Wire - Chairs Missing (Restless) 4%  4%  [ 2 ]
The Rolling Stones - Some Girls (Virgin) 11%  11%  [ 5 ]
Elvis Costello and the Attractions - This Year's Model (Columbia) 11%  11%  [ 5 ]
Van Halen - Van Halen (Warner Bros) 15%  15%  [ 7 ]
The Jam - All Mod Cons (Polydor) 6%  6%  [ 3 ]
Talking Heads - More Songs About Buildings and Food (Sire) 19%  19%  [ 9 ]
Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band - Shiny Beast [Bat Chain Puller] (Bizarre/Straight) 0%  0%  [ 0 ]
Other - Please Specify 19%  19%  [ 9 ]
Total votes : 47
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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 3:24 pm 
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Can I use my vote to take one away from Van Halen?

I went with Talking Heads, Cars 2nd.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 3:36 pm 
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Radcliffe Wrote:
Radio Birdman Radios Appear


'77 in Australia, otherwise it would've been my "other". This was Top 10 in my Listmania, IIRC.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 3:38 pm 
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Radcliffe Wrote:
Generation X s/t


Would never have pegged you for a fan. Likes me some singles, but they get tedious fast.

"Prehistoric Sounds", OTOH...


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 3:46 pm 
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DumpJack Wrote:
Gotta go with Elvis on this one, even though I do some 'Some Girls'. In the other category, I would have also considered Bruce, Cheap Trick and Big Star.


Fuck, I might have to change my answer to 'Other' for Road to Ruin. I totally forgot about that one and it's one of my faves. These picks are really hard.

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 3:57 pm 
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Gobblezebub Wrote:
Radcliffe Wrote:
Generation X s/t


Would never have pegged you for a fan. Likes me some singles, but they get tedious fast.

Yeh, I really liked that Generation X debut. Punchy power pop dressed in punk clothing. I had HUGE expectations when they lined up Mott the Hoople's Ian Hunter to produce their second album - but it's still one of the most disappointing releases I've ever bought. Anyway, I recently upgraded both albums to CD and, um, let's just say neither has aged all that well. Billy Idol = the Rod Stewart of punk.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 4:28 pm 
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PopTurkey Wrote:
Wow.
Eclectic list of choices... many of them worthy.

But I think that I'm going to have to go with the unhippest of them all.
VH!!!
One of the most-fun records ever recorded.

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I'd probably just drink myself to death. More so, I mean.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 4:38 pm 
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Radcliffe Wrote:
let's just say neither has aged all that well. Billy Idol = the Rod Stewart of punk.


That brought a smile to my face. Pretty accurate too.

Kudos to SK for these threads....I'm enjoying them.

np: Donny Hathaway S/T


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 4:45 pm 
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Tough choice between Devo and The Cars, so I went with one of my perennial favourites, Safety In Numbers by Crack the Sky.

Yes, really.

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 5:14 pm 
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What a fucking year, rediculous to have to choose, but I did, and it was The Jam, but it really is a dead heat between Elvis C and All Mod Cons, with Wire not far behind.

And others from '78 not on the list:

Siouxsie & the Bashees - The Scream
Pere Ubu - The Modern Dance
The Police - Outlandos D'Amour
Lou Reed - Street Hassle
Tom Robinson Band - Power in the Darkness
The Undertones - Teenage Kicks
Tonio K - Life in the Foodchain
Wreckless Eric
Ultravox - Systems of Romance
Public Image

Allow me to repeat himself...WHAT A FUCKING YEAR!

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 5:16 pm 
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Ex Lion Tamer Wrote:

The Police - Outlandos D'Amour


SHIT FUCK GODDAMN MOTHERFUCKER I MEANT TO PUT THIS ON THERE

I EVEN HAD IT PICKED OUT YESTERDAY

:evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil:


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 5:16 pm 
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Ex Lion Tamer Wrote:
Pere Ubu - The Modern Dance


could just as easily have gotten my vote


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 6:00 pm 
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I remember listening to that Thunders album at my third birthday party...I mean....

Yeah, predictably, I went with the Stones. To be honest, Some Girls is a capital G GREAT record full of amazing songs. Also a really fun record.

Darkness would probably come in second; Lotsa good choices in this year though.

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 7:30 pm 
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Spade Kitty Wrote:
Ex Lion Tamer Wrote:

The Police - Outlandos D'Amour


SHIT FUCK GODDAMN MOTHERFUCKER I MEANT TO PUT THIS ON THERE

I EVEN HAD IT PICKED OUT YESTERDAY

:evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil:


Ohh fucking hell. No way to change a vote I suppose eh? I would have totally picked that one. I love this album.

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PostPosted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 1:27 pm 
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I don't think anyone in this thread mentioned Tubeway Army although it was only given limited release in '78.

I'm just bringing it up because I picked it up last night, and I'm loving it.


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 1:33 pm 
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Drinky Wrote:
I don't think anyone in this thread mentioned Tubeway Army although it was only given limited release in '78.

I'm just bringing it up because I picked it up last night, and I'm loving it.


The two Tubeway Army albums are phenomenal. I'm partial to Replicas, but you can't go wrong either way. Another dynamite debut from '78 is Japan's "Adolescent Sex".


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 1:44 pm 
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Gobblezebub Wrote:
Another dynamite debut from '78 is Japan's "Adolescent Sex".


That is great....totally forgot about it which is strange since I actually was listening to it yesterday.

I also forgot about Annette Peacock's "X Dreams" which I was also listening to yesterday.

here's amg's take on X Dreams:

Quote:
The large roster of studio musicians listed in the credits is the only hint that this record wasn't made in a standard session. And speaking of musicians, check this list: guitarists include both Chris Spedding and the late Mick Ronson; drummer Bill Bruford presides here, along with Rick Marotta; Dave Chambers and two others make up the saxophone choir; and everyone from Kuma Harada, Stu Woods, and Steve Cook plays bass. Peacock does nothing but sing and recite her wild poetry. Never have jazz dynamics come together and embraced rock's worship of the almighty riff so seamlessly, beginning with the opener, "Mama Never Taught Me How to Cook," with its brazen approach to revealing childhood incest and liberation not only in spite of it, but because of it! Guitars and keyboards dust the floor with one another as Peacock tells a tale of defiance, and an optimism that is taken not given. And yes, despite the subject matter, it is an erotic, tense mess of a song, glorious in its freewheeling temperament and unapologetic confession. In the 11-minute "Real & Defined Androgenes," Peacock's sexual politics ask more questions than they reveal about her thought process. Inside those questions, she lets saxophones and keyboards bleat and skronk their way through her sultry delivery on all the topics addressed by such sexual philosophers before her as the Marquis de Sade, Georges Bataille, Laure, and Pauline Reage. As if to balance out her growing testament on relationships, she adds two wonderful tracks from love's sadder side coming straight out of the blues. The first is "Dear Bela," truly a letter written with the intention of a one-sided conversation. A choir of saxes carries the vocal right into the listener's body so she too can feel the hurt. The other is perhaps the most amazing cover ever of the old Otis Blackwell/Elvis Presley classic, "Don't Be Cruel." Funky, chunky, and lean, this bed of electric pianos and guitars gives Peacock a soft place to fall for taking so many chances with not only her vocal but the blues form itself. She turns the melody back on itself and in turn this bluesy rockabilly number becomes a gorgeously bluesed-out jazz number. Spedding's guitar playing here is nothing less than stunning in both its understatement and the inventive manner in which he keeps the track rooted to its traditional setting while playing Peacock's new arrangement. One is truly contained within the other. There are no weak moments on X-Dreams, and despite its age, the album still sounds a bit ahead of its time. Peacock may have been wringing her own personal exorcism from these tracks, but for the rest of us, she offered a guidebook of complex emotional terrain, a treatise on the messy state of love, and a musical dissertation on how to integrate the nuances of form in rock and jazz.


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 1:51 pm 
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dr winston o'boogie Wrote:
Gobblezebub Wrote:
Another dynamite debut from '78 is Japan's "Adolescent Sex".


That is great....totally forgot about it which is strange since I actually was listening to it yesterday.

I also forgot about Annette Peacock's "X Dreams" which I was also listening to yesterday.

here's amg's take on X Dreams:

Quote:
The large roster of studio musicians listed in the credits is the only hint that this record wasn't made in a standard session. And speaking of musicians, check this list: guitarists include both Chris Spedding and the late Mick Ronson; drummer Bill Bruford presides here, along with Rick Marotta; Dave Chambers and two others make up the saxophone choir; and everyone from Kuma Harada, Stu Woods, and Steve Cook plays bass. Peacock does nothing but sing and recite her wild poetry. Never have jazz dynamics come together and embraced rock's worship of the almighty riff so seamlessly, beginning with the opener, "Mama Never Taught Me How to Cook," with its brazen approach to revealing childhood incest and liberation not only in spite of it, but because of it! Guitars and keyboards dust the floor with one another as Peacock tells a tale of defiance, and an optimism that is taken not given. And yes, despite the subject matter, it is an erotic, tense mess of a song, glorious in its freewheeling temperament and unapologetic confession. In the 11-minute "Real & Defined Androgenes," Peacock's sexual politics ask more questions than they reveal about her thought process. Inside those questions, she lets saxophones and keyboards bleat and skronk their way through her sultry delivery on all the topics addressed by such sexual philosophers before her as the Marquis de Sade, Georges Bataille, Laure, and Pauline Reage. As if to balance out her growing testament on relationships, she adds two wonderful tracks from love's sadder side coming straight out of the blues. The first is "Dear Bela," truly a letter written with the intention of a one-sided conversation. A choir of saxes carries the vocal right into the listener's body so she too can feel the hurt. The other is perhaps the most amazing cover ever of the old Otis Blackwell/Elvis Presley classic, "Don't Be Cruel." Funky, chunky, and lean, this bed of electric pianos and guitars gives Peacock a soft place to fall for taking so many chances with not only her vocal but the blues form itself. She turns the melody back on itself and in turn this bluesy rockabilly number becomes a gorgeously bluesed-out jazz number. Spedding's guitar playing here is nothing less than stunning in both its understatement and the inventive manner in which he keeps the track rooted to its traditional setting while playing Peacock's new arrangement. One is truly contained within the other. There are no weak moments on X-Dreams, and despite its age, the album still sounds a bit ahead of its time. Peacock may have been wringing her own personal exorcism from these tracks, but for the rest of us, she offered a guidebook of complex emotional terrain, a treatise on the messy state of love, and a musical dissertation on how to integrate the nuances of form in rock and jazz.


I gotta hear this if only to listen to Ronson and Bruford playing together. Whoa.


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 1:55 pm 
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Gobblezebub Wrote:
[ The two Tubeway Army albums are phenomenal. I'm partial to Replicas, but you can't go wrong either way.

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PostPosted: Thu Dec 08, 2005 5:56 pm 
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going thru old polls to see what i'm missing in my collection and found a poll i didn't complete! maybe i didn't because i don't have much from 1978. my fav in my collection is peter gabriel 2. however, i voted with a guilty pleasure (that actually annoys me sometimes depending on my mood), and that's vh. i bet a couple other selections i'd like better if i heard 'em, but i haven't...

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