pitchfork best albums of 70 s thing

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http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/

Surprisingly, this is not a crap list when you take the thing as a whole. Individual choices raise eyebrows: "Low" #1, and is "Marquee Moon" really the THIRD BEST album of the decade?, but, you know, what are you gonna do, it's just a list.

"There's A Riot Goin On" in the top 5 is pretty awesome.

No "Tonight's the night" is totally lame. Why "On the Beach" is all of a sudden considered Neil Young's crowning achievement is sort of beyond me. Neil never does well on lists like these though.

No Sabbath? And we could go on and on I'm sure.

But man, what a fucking decade for music, you know? This list made me want to go back and re-listen to all these Miles Davis albums. Oh yeah, and "Off the Wall" too. I'm buying that today.

pitchfork best albums of 70 s thing

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also their list of what got left out:
Among the casualties this time out were: Bruce Springsteen, Bob Marley, Patti Smith, Sticky Fingers, Ornette Coleman, Pere Ubu, Van Morrison, Black Sabbath, "Heroes", Chic, Queen, Nina Simone, New York Dolls, The Jam, Frank Zappa, Transformer, Curtis Mayfield, The Police, The Damned, Aretha Franklin, Tonight's the Night, The Kinks, Tom Waits, Elton John, Yes, Janis Joplin, Station to Station, Willie Nelson, Cheap Trick, AC/DC, Grateful Dead, Alice Coltrane, Paris 1919, The Upsetters, Yellow Magic Orchestra, Cecil Taylor, Amon Düül II, The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway, Augustus Pablo, Human League, Chi-Lites, Captain Beefheart, No New York, Magazine, The Slits, The B-52's, Durutti Column, Burning Spear, Tangerine Dream, Gene Clark, Françoise Hardy, Magma, Kimono My House, The Adverts, Manuel Göttsching and/or Ash Ra Tempel, Lee Hazlewood, and all of Brazil, including Caetano Veloso


looks to be a hell of lot more interesting than what made it in, which I guess is my whole point. I would rather see a weird/idiosyncratic list of someone's personal faves, of stuff that I didn't agree w/ or had even heard of a la the Nurse with Wound list, then hearing the offical indie rock canon praised again.

end rant

pitchfork best albums of 70 s thing

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There's been a lot of lists lately to be sure. That Rolling Stone Top 500 albums was truly horrible, Alanis Morrisette in the top 30 or something. This list at least has some surprises and the commentaries are mostly thoughtful. I learned a few things and I'll probably go buy a couple of these now.

It's just interesting how certain records begin to gain in popularity and recognition as we move forward, while others just slide away. These lists always reflect what's going on in music today, what's fashionable... "Low" is really the ultimate example of an record gaining lots more momentum 25 years after the fact. "On the Beach" is now on everyone's list because it just got released on CD last year. Just the way it goes.

"London Calling" is always at the top of these lists. I guess that's pretty much ok by me. I haven't listened to "London Calling" in probably 6 years though, I never feel any urge to put it on.

pitchfork best albums of 70 s thing

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I would rather see a weird/idiosyncratic list of someone's personal faves, of stuff that I didn't agree w/ or had even heard of a la the Nurse with Wound list, then hearing the offical indie rock canon praised again.


I think they have all the voters individual top 100 lists in there too. I looked at a few of them but my eyes got blurry. I guess they derived the full list from the voter lists.

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