Whether you like punk or don't this is a great album. Better than Combat Rock, in my opinion, even though Combat Rock was more commercial and garnered the band more recognition and success. Maybe that is why this album is better, because it was more raw than Combat Rock. The Album had two big hits for the band including my favorite song of their's "Train in Vain"
"London Calling"
"Train in Vain"
Tomorrow's Album #39 The Beatles - With the Beatles
I haven't listened to The War on Drugs until now, but I have heard of them, and know that they are immensely popular. Their first album was released in 2008 and only four albums in to their career the band won a Grammy for Best Rock Album for their latest release.
I liked this album quite a bit. It has an 80's sound to it, which I really like. Reading up on the inspiration for the songs, the album was written by the lead singer after they finished touring for their 2nd album. After touring, the lead singer says that he had a hard time adjusting back into normal life and sunk into a depression. In an effort to get out of his depression and deal with his emotions he wrote these songs.
I'm definitely going to check out their Grammy winning album "A Deeper Understanding"
Right from the start U2 has been a band involved with politics and events going on around the world. An activist band. Many of their songs, a lot of their songs deal with these themes. With their fame and popularity they have been able to use it to bring focus to causes that they believe in. Bono has been instrumental in raising a lot of money to help those causes. Over the years the band has continued to release albums but they have also become a greatest hits band. By that I mean when a band has been around as long as U2 has and have as many hit songs as they do, people want to hear the hits. At some point releasing new music, while fulfilling to the band, becomes irrelevant to the fans.
War is the bands 3rd album and is probably the bands most politically focused. All of the songs focus on the effects on war, both physically and emotionally. For myself, if I was to rank my favorite U2 albums, it would go: Achtung Baby, Zooropa, Joshua Tree, Rattle and Hum, War and then all the others somewhere after that. Top five is not bad for a band that has released 14 albums total.
"New Years Day"
Sunday Bloody Sunday"
Tomorrow's Album #1062 War on Drugs - Lost in the Dream
43 songs in one hour and 14 minutes and every single song has explicit lyrics, with no clean version of the album. Too bad, I was kind of wondering what songs that can only average 2 minutes in length would be like.
I have been interested in Sufjan Stevens for awhile now. I read about him awhile back and the albums that he has recorded. What intrigued me was that he records some of his albums as themes and they vary in styles. His first album is a folk album and the songs explore folk music styles from around the world. His second album is electronic and each of the songs are inspired by the animals of the Chinese zodiac. For his third album, Michigan, Sufjan announced his "Fifty States Project" in which he planed to record an album of songs for each of the states. For album number four he went back to folk-rock and recorded songs that tell stories from the bible. Album six is electronic/hip-hop beats and focuses on personal themes. Album seven was recorded as a way for Sufjan to grieve and come to terms with the death of his mother, who had schizophrenia and drug abuse problems and abandoned Sufjan when he was one. Sufjan has also recorded 10 EP's of Christmas songs, an album of songs based on the Brooklyn-Queens expressway and an album called "Planetarium" with each song inspired by something in the Solar System.
Album number five, this one, was the second in his fifty states project. 22 songs long, although some are just short segues, the album consists of different musical styles through out. I thought it was really quite good, and I enjoyed the themes that the songs explored. I thought the idea behind it was so original. This is what being an artist is about, being original and creative, not to be famous but to create, and when it works it is recognized and the fame and accolades follow.
"Come on Feel the Illinoise"
Tomorrow's Album #919 Mike Ladd - Welcome to the Afterfuture
I had never heard of Sam Cooke before but was surprised to find that he wrote the songs on the album which include two very famous songs, Chain Gang and Twisting the Night Away. The album was good but once again would have been better if it wasn't a live album. The sound quality is really poor.
One interesting thing that I learned about Sam Cooke was that he died at the age of 33. He was found shot in a hotel wearing nothing but his shirt. The story goes that the manager of the hotel he was staying in shot him when he broke into her office and attacked her. After an investigation it was found that it was justifiable homicide.
An alt-rock band from England, musically this album was fantastic. These guys are really very talented and know how to write some great music. The guitar work in a lot of the songs us really great. Vocal and lyrically it was much weaker, that's not to say it was terrible but it was just average in that area.
"Catch the Sun"
Tomorrow's Album #38 Sam Cooke - Live at the Harlem Square
Nothing that I could say about this album could make it sound any different that the other Joni Mitchell albums I have heard so far. It wasn't bad it was just more of the exact same folk music.
It took me awhile to get into Arcade Fire, but now that I am I think that they are a really good indie rock band. It started for me only recently with their album "Reflektor" in 2013. Since then I have gone back and listened to their older albums, including this one, and have really grow to love them. The have a very unique sound and the way they use a male and female singer to do both lead and backing vocals really add another level to their songs.
I wasn't really felling this album. I don't love country, that's no secret, and while I have enjoyed a couple of the country albums so far, what were more traditional, this one is not that. Pass on this one.
Frankie Goes to Hollywood was a 80's pop band who really only had this one hit album. But boy was it big. Not only did it do well on the charts and sell a ton of albums, but it also spawned a fashion trend of wearing over-sized plain white t-shirts with bold large black lettering:
As for the album, I never owned or listened to it when it came out but I did like the two hits, and as far as I'm concerned they are the really only bright spots of the album.
"Relax"
"Two Tribes"
Tomorrow's Album #911 Emmylou Harris - Red Dirt Girl
So Donald Fagen is the lead singer of the band Steely Dan, of which I have already listened to a couple of albums. The style of the album is much different that what I have heard of Steely Dan so far. Way more mellow and easy listening than the Jazz of Steely Dan, the songs, for me, were way easier, and more enjoyable to listen to.
"I.G.Y"
Tomorrow's Album #537 Frankie Goes To Hollywood - Welcome to the Pleasuredome
For a 60's album I actually thought it was pretty good, mostly because it wasn't super weird. It was just some simple 60's rock that didn't try and be more than that.
Joan Baez is another folk singer along the same vein as Joni Mitchell. Very similar music, lyrics and vocals. I'm not sure if I can say which I prefer, or if I do prefer one over the other. Mostly because I don't really like the style of music and don't have an opinion.
"East Virginia"
Tomorrow's Album #105 The Young Rascals - Groovin'
I'll admit I was surprised that Duran Duran had an album on the list. It's not that don't think they make good music, they do, it's more because I never though of them as a band that people took seriously.
Rio is the only album on the list from the band, and while they have had success with many albums, with my personal favorites being "Big Thing" and "The Wedding Album", this album is a pretty good album to represent the band. It's catchy, all of the songs are pretty good, it has some of their biggest hits, and it is a pretty good example of early 80's synth-pop.
This was an odd album, but was also oddly good. Released in 1978 in what the band calls "avant-garage" it was a combination of sounds and music, and while none of the songs were particularly memorable it was good enough to keep my interest while it played.
Ever since The White Stripes released their album "Elephant" I have been a fan of Jack White. Lets be honest, even though his ex-wife was the drummer for The White Stripes, the reality was it was really all about Jack White. Since the band broke up he has done some other projects, like The Raconteurs and The Dead Weather, he has also released a couple solo albums. What ever the project, He exudes talent. Musically, in my opinion, he is one of the best song writers and guitar players out there. With his music you just know that he is going to give you something new and innovation with each album, and on top of all that it's going to rock.
"I'm Shakin"
I'm excited for his third solo album, Boarding House Reach, to drop March 23rd. Here is a preview:
I have no idea who Ray Price is, but boy this album was good. I know it is country and I don't like country but it was hard not to like this album. Super simple songs, great music and man his voice is golden. There have been a lot of albums on here that I had heard previously and feel like other people should definitely listen to them, and there have been other albums that have been new to me that I have really liked, but this is one that if you are gonna listen to any of them, make it this album. It's just so good.
I have listen to a couple Elvis Costello albums now, and while the others had a couple songs I had heard previously, and this one had none, I liked this one more than the others. I'm not really sure why. It really was just more of the same as the others, but it was just better. It wasn't that it was good, I wouldn't listen to it again, but it was just less terrible I guess.
The National are a relatively new-ish alt-rock band. The have been releasing music since 2001, but haven't been mainstream until recently. Not knowing much about the band, or not having been exposed to them I haven't listened to any of their music until now. I do now that the band has a pretty strong following and have released some albums that critics have really loved. I thought the album was really pretty good. The songs were well crafted and fit the alt-rock genre well. It was definitely worth the listen, and I would listen to it again.
"Terrible Love"
Tomorrow's Album #432 Elvis Costello & The Attractions - Armed Forces
This is one of the best albums I've listened to from the 60's era. Everyone knows the song "Respect", and it is a great song, but the others on the album are equally as good if not better. What makes them so good it they are simple musically and lyrically but the reality is they are so good because of her voice. There is a reason Aretha is called the "Queen of Soul"
She is also another one of the extremely prolific artists to come out of the late 50's. The year that she released this album, 1967, she released 4 albums, with 2 of them reaching #1 on the charts, and in the following two years she released 3 more albums with all three reaching #1. Overall she has released 41 studio albums and 6 live albums. Nobody does that or has that kind of success any more.
I don't really have much of an opinion of this album. The was a clean version of it so I was able to listen to it, and it was decent, I guess, but nothing really stood out.
Tomorrow's Album #78 Aretha Franklin - I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You
The Go-Go's formed in 1978 and for a few years they were a power-house new wave band in the U.S. Their debut album, this one, did really well for the band reaching number one on the charts and has their two biggest singles. The album is definitely catchy and fun to listen to, even if it is a bit cheesy at times.
"Our Lips are Sealed"
"We Got the Beat"
Tomorrow's Album #955 Ms. Dynamite - A Little Deeper
For the most part I really enjoyed this album. It is totally the mid-80's new wave sound that I like. The band also included a lot of string arrangements and other instrumental sounds that made the songs different and interesting to listen to. Lyrically some of the songs were a bit weak, but still worth a listen.
"A Walk Across the Rooftops"
"Tinseltown In The Rain"
Tomorrow's Album #490 The Go-Gos - Beauty and the Beat
Once again, for a country album, it was the style of country that I can kind of stand to listen to. It is more of the classic style, with the twang and fiddle etc. It was good in comparison to other albums that I have listened to of similar style.
Listening to it reminded me that once upon a time I actually liked a Dwight Yoakam song, but I hadn't heard any of these ones before so I can't remember what it is. Maybe there will be another of his albums on the list and I'll hear it.
"Streets of Bakersfield"
Tomorrow's Album #532 Blue Nile - A Walk Across the Rooftops
A psychedelic rock band from the 60's is definitely not my style of music and I didn't like listening to this one any more than any of the others from the same genre, but then I didn't really like it any less either :)
"Grace"
Tomorrow's Album #617 Dwight Yoakam - Beuenas Noches From a Lonely Room