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  • SUNDAY JULY 16 2006 5:00 PM

Another List: The 50 Most Influential Albums of the Last 50 Years

Enough bar stool debates about "important" records. Ask 100 people about the "most influential" album of all time and you'll get 100 different answers. Or maybe, like 75 different answers.

However many answers there are, you expect to see a few of the same names appearing again and again. UK's The Observer has attempted to answer the age old question with what they feel is a "definitive list" of the "50 albums that changed music".

Not interested in wading through another one of these lists? Well, #1 is The Velvet Underground And Nico.


Though it sold poorly on its initial release, this has since become arguably the most influential rock album of all time. The first art-rock album, it merges dreamy, druggy balladry ('Sunday Morning') with raw and uncompromising sonic experimentation ('Venus in Furs'), and is famously clothed in that Andy Warhol-designed 'banana' sleeve. Lou Reed's lyrics depicted a Warholian New York demi-monde where hard drugs and sexual experimentation held sway. Shocking then, and still utterly transfixing.

Without this, there'd be no ... Bowie, Roxy Music, Siouxsie and the Banshees and the Jesus and Mary Chain, among many others


#2? Sgt. Pepper. Pet Sounds? #10. The Ramones? #35. And so on. Print the list out, bring it down to Happy Hour and annoy your friends. Or, bring it to the record shop and annoy the clerks. Either way, here's your blueprint for hours of summer fun. Enjoy!



Pet Sounds: #10

 

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Comments
rowsofhouses

rowsofhouses

I'm lost
July 2005

JUL 16, 2006 05:17 PM


While it's nice to see Joni Mitchell score as high as she did on that list, it's discouraging to see Nirvana score so low. Was grunge just not that affecting in the UK?

Cigarette

Cigarette

Cleveland, OH
April 2004

JUL 16, 2006 05:29 PM

Without this, there'd be no ... Bowie, Roxy Music, Siouxsie and the Banshees and the Jesus and Mary Chain, among many others



So? It's not like that's exactly the most diverse list of rock acts.

Now if they'd said of an album, "Without this there'd be no Weezer, Outkast, Smiths, or System of a Down", I'd be impressed.

MrStitches

MrStitches

Brooklyn, NY
November 2003

JUL 16, 2006 05:38 PM



38 Radiohead
The Bends (1995)

In parallel with Jeff Buckley, Radiohead's Thom Yorke popularised the angst-laden falsetto, a thoughtful opposite to the chest-beating lad-rock personified by Oasis's Liam Gallagher. Sounding girly to a backdrop of churning guitars became a much-copied idea, however, one which eventually coalesced into an entire decade of sound.

Without this ... Coldplay would not exist, nor Keane, nor James Blunt.



So that's it. I'm sorry to say, but we must go back in time to destroy Radiohead.

B_Werner

B_Werner

Philadelphia, PA
February 2006

JUL 16, 2006 05:46 PM

So? It's not like that's exactly the most diverse list of rock acts



It's not meant that those are the only acts that were somehow influenced by VU. I'm sure any number of members of any of the artists you mentioned will cite VU as an important influence. Basically most if not all serious musicians who started a band sometime between 1975 and now will cite the VU in some way. That may be a slight exaggeration, but not so much really.

dholokov

dholokov

Toronto, ON
April 2003

JUL 16, 2006 06:54 PM

What's the 411 > Unknown pleasures?

mamet

mamet

Charleston, SC
March 2005

JUL 16, 2006 06:57 PM

Spice Girls at #21? Get the fuck out of here.

Geisterfaust

Geisterfaust

Tempe, AZ
June 2006

JUL 16, 2006 07:12 PM

Lists like these are made to show how hip and aware a publication is, which is why they pushed the Beatles to number 2. Everyone expects them to be number 1 on a list like this, and they probably deserved to be.

Skribbo

Skribbo

United Kingdom
April 2006

JUL 16, 2006 07:35 PM

What exactly is the point of The Observer? It's owned by The Guardian, no? And it's like a crappy version of The Guardian as far as I can tell. Why not just have The Guardian On Sunday instead of another, lesser publication?

As far as the list is concerned, I'm not sure how anyone can gauge how "influential" one artist is to any other. NWA certainly was influential, but I would argue that the commercial success of The Chronic and Doggystyle would make those records far more influential than Straight Outta Compton ever was. But then again I think 4 track demos is PJ Harveys best album, I stopped liking Outkast post-Aquemini and I think Skinnyman is better than The Streets, Lady Sov, Dizzee, MIA, Ms. Dynamite and Plan B combined.

DeadBilly

DeadBilly

Burnt Cabins, PA
February 2004

JUL 16, 2006 07:47 PM

mamet said:
Spice Girls at #21? Get the fuck out of here.



I hear ya, but to be fair, they never said it had to be a good influence.

treasurerats

treasurerats

Cambridge, MA
December 2004

JUL 16, 2006 08:03 PM

MrStitches said:


38 Radiohead
The Bends (1995)

In parallel with Jeff Buckley, Radiohead's Thom Yorke popularised the angst-laden falsetto, a thoughtful opposite to the chest-beating lad-rock personified by Oasis's Liam Gallagher. Sounding girly to a backdrop of churning guitars became a much-copied idea, however, one which eventually coalesced into an entire decade of sound.

Without this ... Coldplay would not exist, nor Keane, nor James Blunt.



So that's it. I'm sorry to say, but we must go back in time to destroy Radiohead.




They talk about "angst-laden falsetto" and say that it was Jeff Buckley and Radiohead that populatized it? I know he's very forgettable, but I think Morrissey had that title, right?

SocietysPliers

SocietysPliers

Ocala, FL
October 2004

JUL 16, 2006 08:27 PM

mr_gosh said:

mamet said:
Spice Girls at #21? Get the fuck out of here.

I hear ya, but to be fair, they never said it had to be a good influence.

But they could at least base it on influencing musicians, not influencing young girls to cop attitudes.

At least the kids I know who used to like Spice Girls before they faded away have attitudes. I suppose I shouldn't blame the Spice Girls as I never saw the movie and I don't know if I can remember anything I heard by them (Did they do that annoying-as-Hell I'lll tell you what I really really want drivel?) I just think that since I usually hear a song and remember most of the words and can figure out how to fake playing it after one or two listenings, I might remember SOMETHING about them if they had a redeemingquality. I listen to enough stuff and interact with a very eclectic lot of musicians and listeners, but I can't think of ANY EVER that have ever once mentioned Spice Girls as anything remotely resembling influential.

But then again, I've been wrong before. Maybe they did influence someone musically. Do they even play instruments or write songs? I assume they sing the songs at least.

MessyJessy

MessyJessy

Fort Myers, FL
August 2005

JUL 16, 2006 08:59 PM

This is an interesting list, and an admirable attempt at the impossible. I am however kind of pissed to see that Husker Du's Zen Arcade is not on the list, same with Minor Threat. In fact I really see no one that influenced the current hardcore/emo scene...

philloak

philloak

USA
July 2005

JUL 16, 2006 09:30 PM

brian eno rates above aretha franklin for influence? i'm not much of a soul fan but as any single mariah carey or whitney houston release has outsold everything ambient techno has vomited out of its collective hard drive. i hate to equate commercial success with artistic whatever but seriously, whose sound is infinitely more recognizable to the average person, franklin or eno?

ephexis

ephexis

I'm lost
September 2004

JUL 16, 2006 09:55 PM

I'm happy to see Hip-Hop has a strong presence on the list with NWA, RUN-DMC, De La Soul. It's undeniable that Hip-Hop has become very influential in moderm music. I don't necessarily think all the influence is positive, but I'm glad to see those groups on the list. biggrin

BarryJive

BarryJive

Washington, DC
December 2004

JUL 16, 2006 10:23 PM

philloak said:
brian eno rates above aretha franklin for influence? i'm not much of a soul fan but as any single mariah carey or whitney houston release has outsold everything ambient techno has vomited out of its collective hard drive. i hate to equate commercial success with artistic whatever but seriously, whose sound is infinitely more recognizable to the average person, franklin or eno?



And how does recognizability of a sound to the average person = influence? Average people don't make music. The subject of influence is always a tricky one, as the bands that most influenced their successors in music weren't always the bands at the top of the charts. Two words - Big Star. Influential to the point that the Replacements wrote the following line about Big Star's lead singer, "Children by the million scream for Alex Chilton".

Eno's influence on the Second Wave of the British Invasion also can't be underestimated. Joy Division/New Order, Depeche Mode, and Yaz, among many others, owe much of their success to Eno's groundbreaking work.

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