Maiden Voyage
Gold™ Member
The title of the thread is from a book title by a Robert Dimery which collects information about various albums released over the years that are considered mandatory by the editor. The book covers music from across genres and from all over the world.
As an experiment, and because I love music discovery, I opted to start down the path of listening to one of these albums each day. If this sounds interesting to you, join me. There are only two things you need:
A few highlights for me so far (on day 19 today):
Bob Dylan - Bringing It All Back Home: While I've been well aware of most of Dylan's hits, I've never delved into his albums. Day 1 started off with a bang as I enjoyed this album so much that I picked up a copy on vinyl about a week after hearing it.
Hugh Masekela - Home Is Where The Music Is: I love jazz but I'm not going to pretend my knowledge is deep. Masekela's album was a joy to listen to and I'm happy to add him to my pool of artists. I quite enjoyed the book's writeup of the origin of the album as well. It really helped drive home the meat of the album. My standout track on first listen was Minawa.
The Blue Nile - A Walk Across The Rooftops: I had never heard of this band before. The album was a knockout for me. I see it described as pretentious, and I do agree, but this hits all the right notes for me. Reminds me a lot of Peter Gabriel and Talking Heads. The audio quality is top tier.
Harry Nilsson - Nilsson Schmilsson: I've of course heard Coconut, as I'm sure just about everyone has. I was surprised by the rest if the album, as it was my first time hearing Nilsson's other work. I had no clue he was so regarded by The Beatles. Early in the Morning was the early standout track for me.
Sister Sledge - We Are Family: I am familiar with the titular track but the rest of the album was a solid listen as well. The standout track for me is Think of You, which I had not heard prior
Of course there have been a number of albums that I am already familiar with. Work by Incubus, Arcade Fire, LCD Soundsystem, My Bloody Valentine, and Portishead for example.
Here's what my ratings look like so far.
As an experiment, and because I love music discovery, I opted to start down the path of listening to one of these albums each day. If this sounds interesting to you, join me. There are only two things you need:
1) I'm using this website to randomly generate an album each day. After you listen and rate the days album, at a specific time, a new one will be listed. Repeat the process. There are a few settings you can adjust, like receiving albums on weekends. You can extract your data at any time.
1001 Albums Generator
Explore the history of music. One album a day. From the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.
1001albumsgenerator.com
2) A copy of the book or access to Wikipedia if you want to learn more about the album. The book is out of print these days, however a PDF copy is up at the Internet Archive.
1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die
archive.org
A few highlights for me so far (on day 19 today):
Bob Dylan - Bringing It All Back Home: While I've been well aware of most of Dylan's hits, I've never delved into his albums. Day 1 started off with a bang as I enjoyed this album so much that I picked up a copy on vinyl about a week after hearing it.
Hugh Masekela - Home Is Where The Music Is: I love jazz but I'm not going to pretend my knowledge is deep. Masekela's album was a joy to listen to and I'm happy to add him to my pool of artists. I quite enjoyed the book's writeup of the origin of the album as well. It really helped drive home the meat of the album. My standout track on first listen was Minawa.
The Blue Nile - A Walk Across The Rooftops: I had never heard of this band before. The album was a knockout for me. I see it described as pretentious, and I do agree, but this hits all the right notes for me. Reminds me a lot of Peter Gabriel and Talking Heads. The audio quality is top tier.
Harry Nilsson - Nilsson Schmilsson: I've of course heard Coconut, as I'm sure just about everyone has. I was surprised by the rest if the album, as it was my first time hearing Nilsson's other work. I had no clue he was so regarded by The Beatles. Early in the Morning was the early standout track for me.
Sister Sledge - We Are Family: I am familiar with the titular track but the rest of the album was a solid listen as well. The standout track for me is Think of You, which I had not heard prior
Of course there have been a number of albums that I am already familiar with. Work by Incubus, Arcade Fire, LCD Soundsystem, My Bloody Valentine, and Portishead for example.
Here's what my ratings look like so far.