W.C.
New member
- Oct 31, 2011
- 4,927
I saw Gazza in concert Tuesday night!
OK, wife's out this evening so I just opened a beer and put on some tunes and it got me thinking. Possibly the reason that more recent stuff has been left out is that it is not yet considered classic. Possibly it's because there are a lot of us old farts on NSC. Or it could be this.
Many of the classic albums mentioned to date have accompanied sea changes in youth culture. The Beatles and Stones being the start of pop and rock as we in the UK know it, Mods starting with Northern Soul and reappearing with The Who and The Jam. Punk sees the Pistols and Clash. New Order, The Smiths and The Cure define post punk miserablism before the nation cheers up and goes raving with The Stone Roses, Orbital and Screamadelica era Scream before going for a spliff with Massive Attack and Portishead. @xenaphon makes the very same point about Bowie and he's right. Every classic album starts or follows a youth movement.
And then the century changes.
Youth culture to me now appears to consist of wearing tight trousers and a hat and deck shoes. Of buying every gadget you're told to. Simon f***ing Cowell on the telly every weekend. Has there been anything to rival punk or ska or rave or even f***ing Britpop in the last 12 years. Not for me. Maybe I'm old but I think the next classic album will be made when the nations youth invent new culture instead of spending their days consuming other peoples.
The Fall - Hex Education Hour
British Sea Power - The Decline of British Sea Power
My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
Sonic Youth - Daydream Nation
Radiohead - In Rainbows
Tom Waits - Swordfishtrombones
HEALTH - Get Colour
Swans - White Light From The Mouth of Infinity
Women - Public Strain
Sleater Kinney - The Woods
Emeralds - Does It Look Like I'm Here?
Spacemen 3 - The Perfect Prescription
Pere Ubu - Dub Housing
Burning Spear - Marcus Garvey
Arcade Fire - Funeral
NWA - Straight Outta Compton
Portishead - Dummy
Interpol - Turn On The Bright Lights
Jesus and Mary Chain - Psychocandy
Suicide - Suicide
The Stooges - Raw Power
Talking Heads - Remain In Light
The Pop Group - Y
Lift To Experience - The Texas Jerusalem Crossroads
If PJ Harvey's Let England Shake isn't deemed a classic in 10 years time then I'll eat my hat.
If PJ Harvey's Let England Shake isn't deemed a classic in 10 years time then I'll eat my hat.
The The - Dusk.
EDIT - I stand by my dislike of Cowell and deck shoes though...
That was my very thought when I read GB's post.
Music is truly the international language of the world & it speaks to people in different ways.
Some awesome choices on here and maybe some stuff that many of us havent heard & will go & check out.
I'll add
therapy? - trouble gum
The Wildhearts - earth vs the wildhearts although I may replace that with the more recent chuzpah
The Waterboys this is the sea
Tori Amos - little earthquakes
Adam & the ants - kings of the wild frontier
System of a down - toxicity
Bryan Adams - reckless
Skid row - slave to the grind
Moby - play
Plus millions more
Music is truly the international language of the world & it speaks to people in different ways.
Some awesome choices on here and maybe some stuff that many of us havent heard & will go & check out.
I'll add
therapy? - trouble gum
The Wildhearts - earth vs the wildhearts although I may replace that with the more recent chuzpah
The Waterboys this is the sea
Tori Amos - little earthquakes
Adam & the ants - kings of the wild frontier
System of a down - toxicity
Bryan Adams - reckless
Skid row - slave to the grind
Moby - play
Plus millions more
Troublegum was a great listen, still play it every now and again, only album with the line "I'm gonna get drunk, come round and f**k you up" I've ever heard!
A thing of infinite beauty, utterly blew me away when I first played it and still does today.
A thing of infinite beauty, utterly blew me away when I first played it and still does today.
Violator - Depeche Mode