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1969
The Beatles - Abbey Road (Apple) 32%  32%  [ 14 ]
The Velvet Underground - The Velvet Underground (Verve) 23%  23%  [ 10 ]
Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin II (Atlantic) 5%  5%  [ 2 ]
The Rolling Stones - Let It Bleed (London) 14%  14%  [ 6 ]
MC5 - Kick Out the Jams (Elektra) 2%  2%  [ 1 ]
Sly and the Family Stone - Stand! (Epic) 0%  0%  [ 0 ]
The Kinks - Arthur (or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire) (Reprise) 2%  2%  [ 1 ]
The Who - Tommy (MCA) 0%  0%  [ 0 ]
The Band - The Band (Capitol) 5%  5%  [ 2 ]
Other - Please Specify 18%  18%  [ 8 ]
Total votes : 44
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 7:26 pm 
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it's really bewildering to me how these early years get no votes. I would've figured it would have been the opposite

I think another omission nobody mentioned was Electric Ladyland...


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 7:28 pm 
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I think it's because there is a non-vocal majority on this board who only like the new stuff, or perhaps they feel (as I myself sometimes do) that they don't know enough music from 1969 or whichever year to feel justified in voting.

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 7:37 pm 
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shmoo Wrote:
I think it's because there is a non-vocal majority on this board who only like the new stuff, or perhaps they feel (as I myself sometimes do) that they don't know enough music from 1969 or whichever year to feel justified in voting.


y. just not familiar enough with 1969 (as opposed to 69) to vote -- but i vote anyway this time for bowie. :P

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 7:38 pm 
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Spade Kitty Wrote:
I think another omission nobody mentioned was Electric Ladyland...


Damn. You really fucked up on that one, Spade. That shit would rival some of my favorite's from '69.

Plus, Woodstock was in '69 and even though it was "Under My Thumg" that provoked Meredith, I think its fair to say that the Stones were at their inspirational peak at this point especially when it comes to going bucky.

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 7:44 pm 
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Yail Bloor Wrote:
Spade Kitty Wrote:
I think another omission nobody mentioned was Electric Ladyland...


Damn. You really fucked up on that one, Spade. That shit would rival some of my favorite's from '69.

Plus, Woodstock was in '69 and even though it was "Under My Thumg" that provoked Meredith, I think its fair to say that the Stones were at their inspirational peak at this point especially when it comes to going bucky.


The omission is heart-breaking, but when looking at the list, who would you leave off? Ok, maybe MC5...but that record was so influential...any of the others being left off is a glaring omission


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 7:44 pm 
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Quote:
Spade Kitty wrote:
I think another omission nobody mentioned was Electric Ladyland...

Electric Ladyland was released in September, 1968

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 7:46 pm 
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Dusty in Memphis is also one hell of a record. Would be in my top 5 for the year.

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 7:48 pm 
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DumpJack Wrote:
Spade Kitty Wrote:
Gimme Shelter is the best opening track in the history of recorded music


I thought the same thing while walking to the car. I've heard the song a billion fucking times but I still get shivers when Mary Clayton is singing 'Rape, murder...it's just a shot away...' It's just frightening stuff.


OPenly the sound of crashing your car while VERY FUCKING HIGH ON COCAINE>

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 7:56 pm 
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mcaputo Wrote:
Quote:
Spade Kitty wrote:
I think another omission nobody mentioned was Electric Ladyland...

Electric Ladyland was released in September, 1968



whew


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 8:37 pm 
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Didn't Black Sabbath come out in '69? Nope...that was '70...

This one is too hard from too many choices (as opposed to '65, '66, in which case I'm not familiar enough with the releases to really like anything much).

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 8:44 pm 
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I'm voting The Band, with The Kinks not all that far behind.

"Gimme Shelter" is awesome, but "Love In Vain" and "Country Honk"…well, we've been down that road.

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 10:16 pm 
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Where is Creedence? They started one of the most ridiculous two year rolls in rock history that year. Three albums in '69 alone!
I'll go with The Band due to most lifetime plays even though I'm burned out on it.

And how about The Grateful Dead? They had 2 good ones that year. Give 'em a shot!


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 10:37 pm 
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<<I don't know of any good source though for country music by year so I'm sure I've been ignoring important releases with each thread.>>

I don't either but noticed The Fabulous Charlie Rich on the Acclaimed list. Ever heard it? On the CD it says something about being a stew of roots rock influences (has some Jimmy Reed). It's produced by Billy Sherrill but not as over the top as he did on the later hits. I just heard the reissue of Elvis Costello Almost Blue and he covers 'Sittin' And Thinkin' from this album.


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 10:40 pm 
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Spade Kitty Wrote:
it's really bewildering to me how these early years get no votes. I would've figured it would have been the opposite


That's an interesting assessment. In your estimation, just what would the average be for the other years, as far as average voters? I haven't really paid attention to how many people vote.


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 10:49 pm 
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Some comments since votings about done:

Beatles have about double the votes of the Stones. I'm surprised by this. I thought in the Beatles vs. the Stones, "Obners" were a pretty evenly divided camp. I guess the Stones crew is just more vocal and/or I'm projecting my own preferences in part. I think Let It Bleed is at least as highly respected within the Stones catalog as Abbey Road is within the Beatles, so its probably a good barometer I'd think of each bands' relative popularity

I don't blame SK too much for including Led Zeppelin. Its clearly one of 15 or so albums from this year that one could say is deserving based on general Obner popularity. That said, I hate Zeppelin and I'm getting tired of seeing them on the list so often when bands/artists I love and also think are deserving (eg Flying Burrito Brothers, Nick Drake, Isaac Hayes) are not included.

I guess Sly and the Family Stone are "indie-approved" funk. I like 'em but not nearly as much as you all seem too and that's even counting myself as a huge funk fan.

After mulling it over, I voted other which I will say is for Flying Burrito Brothers. I could just as easily say its for Eddie Gale or Isaac Hayes if I were in a different mood though.

And here's a few summary blurbs for some of my lesser known 1969 favorites in case anyone's interested in checking more stuff from this year out.

Eddie Gale "Black Rhythmn Happening"

AMG Wrote:
Love it or hate it, trumpeter Eddie Gale's second Blue Note outing as a leader is one of the most adventurous recordings to come out of the 1960s. Black Rhythm Happening picks up where Ghetto Music left off, in that it takes the soul and free jazz elements of his debut and adds to them the sound of the church in all its guises — from joyous call and response celebration on the title track (and album opener), to the mournful funeral sounds of "Song of Will," to the determined Afro-Latin-style chanting on "Mexico Thing" that brings the pre-Tommy Dorsey gospel to the revolutionary song style prevalent in Zapata's Mexico — all thanks to the Eddie Gale Singers. Elsewhere, wild smatterings of hard and post-bop ("Ghetto Love Night") and angular modal music ("Ghetto Summertime," featuring Elvin Jones on drums and Joann Stevens-Gale on guitar), turn the jazz paradigm of the era inside out, simultaneously admitting everything in a coherent, wonderfully ambitious whole. There is no doubt that Archie Shepp listened to both Ghetto Music and Black Rhythm Happening before setting out to assemble his Attica Blues project. The album closes with "Look at Teyonda," a sprawling exercise in the deep melding of African and Latin folk musics with the folk-blues, flamenco, and jazz rhythms. Funky horns (courtesy of Gale, Russell Lyle, and Roland Alexander) moan toward Fulumi Prince's startlingly beautiful vocal. Stevens-Gale's guitar whispers the tune into the field before the saxophones and brass come to get it, and when they do, long open lines are offered slowly and deliberately, as Jones' shimmering ride cymbals triple-time the beat into something wholly Other. Black Rhythm Happening is a timeless, breathtaking recording, one that sounds as forward-thinking and militant in the 21st century as it did in 1969.


Bobby Hutcherson "Now!"

AMG Wrote:
Now! is one of Bobby Hutcherson's most adventurous recordings. Cut with the Harold Land Quintet in 1969, Hutcherson augments the lineup with vocalist the Right Reverend Eugene McDaniels (then Gene McDaniels) and a chorus at the height of Black Power consciousness. While this band may not appeal to straight hard and post-bop listeners who prefer their music instrumentally, it is a compelling and even stunning record if accepted on its own terms. The compositions reflect the tightrope Hutcherson and Land walked on their earlier outings together between post-bop and vanguard jazz The interplay between Hutcherson and Stanley Cowell's 's piano in the instrumental passages in "Slow Change" is so intuitive and symbiotic it may slip by the listener who is not paying attention. Land's solo too, comes out for the post-Coltrane ethos and fills the vocal lines powerfully and convincingly. Elsewhere, on "Hello to the Wind," written by drummer Joe Chambers and McDaniels, the influence of Terry Callier is evident in the tune's dynamic and melody line that is led by Wally Richardson's guitar. With fine piano work by Kenny Barron and a fluid, modal bassline by Herbie Lewis. McDaniels' voice is in fine form here, his husky baritone effortlessly coloring the mix. The title cut is a short lullaby written by Hutcherson and McDaniels, tender, simple and haunting as Land's saxophone winds through the shouts of female voices with restraint and elegance. The utter creative vision of Herbie Lewis' "The Creators" showcases the band at the height of its powers with Cowell holding the piano chair with killer Latin rhythms, psychedelic electric guitar and a provocative engagement between Land, Hutcherson and the chorus. The original set ends with "Black Heroes" by Land. A scatted, syncopated piece of counterculture beat jazz, it offers a better portrait of the band than it does of McDaniels or the choral group. A hard bop piece with a striated and knotty vocal intro and finish, it is a fitting and exciting final track


Food "Forever is a Dream"
Dusty Groove Wrote:
beautifully baroque bit of psychedelia from the late 60s -- the only album recorded by the group Food, a sad and somber batch of tunes that really stands out from the pack! The core quintet is augmented on the set by some larger arrangements that mix in strings and horns -- really opening up the sound into territory that's somewhere in the neighborhood of groups like Gandalf and The Left Banke. The set was recorded in Chicago at the mostly-soul Ter Mar Studios, done with a wonderful juxtaposition of styles that we never would have expected -- and which gives the record a depth that's kept it pretty darn fresh over the years! Titles include "Naive Prayers", "No", "Lady Miss Ann", "Leaves", "Marbled Wings", "Inside The Mirror", and "Forever Is A Dream".


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 11:02 pm 
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dr winston o'boogie Wrote:
Bobby Hutcherson "Now!"

AMG Wrote:
Now! is one of Bobby Hutcherson's most adventurous recordings. Cut with the Harold Land Quintet in 1969, Hutcherson augments the lineup with vocalist the Right Reverend Eugene McDaniels (then Gene McDaniels) and a chorus at the height of Black Power consciousness. While this band may not appeal to straight hard and post-bop listeners who prefer their music instrumentally, it is a compelling and even stunning record if accepted on its own terms. The compositions reflect the tightrope Hutcherson and Land walked on their earlier outings together between post-bop and vanguard jazz The interplay between Hutcherson and Stanley Cowell's 's piano in the instrumental passages in "Slow Change" is so intuitive and symbiotic it may slip by the listener who is not paying attention. Land's solo too, comes out for the post-Coltrane ethos and fills the vocal lines powerfully and convincingly. Elsewhere, on "Hello to the Wind," written by drummer Joe Chambers and McDaniels, the influence of Terry Callier is evident in the tune's dynamic and melody line that is led by Wally Richardson's guitar. With fine piano work by Kenny Barron and a fluid, modal bassline by Herbie Lewis. McDaniels' voice is in fine form here, his husky baritone effortlessly coloring the mix. The title cut is a short lullaby written by Hutcherson and McDaniels, tender, simple and haunting as Land's saxophone winds through the shouts of female voices with restraint and elegance. The utter creative vision of Herbie Lewis' "The Creators" showcases the band at the height of its powers with Cowell holding the piano chair with killer Latin rhythms, psychedelic electric guitar and a provocative engagement between Land, Hutcherson and the chorus. The original set ends with "Black Heroes" by Land. A scatted, syncopated piece of counterculture beat jazz, it offers a better portrait of the band than it does of McDaniels or the choral group. A hard bop piece with a striated and knotty vocal intro and finish, it is a fitting and exciting final track



Noted, i really think i'll dig this and I will definitely look for this on my next trip to the record store. Thanks.


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PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 12:04 am 
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Velvet Underground - s/t

The Beatles - Abbey Road
King Crimson - In The Court Of The Crimson King
Tim Buckley - Blue Afternoon
Nick Drake - Five Leaves Left
Flying Burrito Bros - Gilded Palace Of Sin
Kinks - Arthur
Leonard Cohen - Songs From a Room
Fairport Convention - Unhalfbricking
Tim Buckley - Happy/Sad


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PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 2:06 am 
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Spade Kitty Wrote:
whew


trust me I would have been the first to let you know


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PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 3:02 am 
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Yail Bloor Wrote:
pumachik Wrote:
i only recently heard let it bleed from the atl boys, but that was my pick. it's my 2nd favorite stones album (1st is some girls).

vu comes a close second. very close.

but fuck, you can't always get what you want absolutely SLAYS me.


we love you too, baby.Image


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PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 11:24 am 
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Spade Kitty Wrote:
andyfestivus Wrote:
I had to go with Led Zeppelin II. Abbey Road is great as are Tommy, Everybody Knows This is Nowhere, and VU but I've probably listened to the Brown Bomber the most of any of them.


what of you think of II vs. I? I think II is way better personally....I can't get enough of songs like "What Is..." and "Thank You"


I agree. Personally, I see Zep I as a typical debut album. The band was finding their sound and while there are some good songs on there, I don't think they had the trademark sound they'd end up with. To me, II was possibly their best album. There's really not a weak song and it has so many classics on their. IV is very good but I really think II was the best overall.


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PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 12:24 pm 
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Tough call between "Mendocino" and "Pretties For You". Alice made my Listmania, so I've voting "Pretties". "Reflected" might be one of the best psyche-pop songs to come out of the 60's, and the rest of that album is one fantastic dream after another, with an occasional nightmarish interlude chucked in for good measure.


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