Greg Smith gsmith@westnet.com
V1.0 11/9/96. This listing started out as a Progress database, which was easily
enough turned into HTML
V1.1 1/21/05. Finally started updating this moldy old list with even
older and moldier prog albums from ELP and King Crimson.
Nearly Perfect Albums: 1967-1980
I must be starting to get old. Here's the latest symptom, which has been
happening with disturbing frequency lately: I'm talking to someone about
music. I ask them if they recognize a song, they don't. Now, I'm
surprised to hear this, because I remember that song as being very popular
when it came out, getting tons of radio play. Oops, sorry about that,
they weren't born yet when it was released. No wonder they don't
have the same memories of it that I do. I can trace my own taste in music
back to 1967, so that's where I start here (even though that does happen
to be before I was born). 1980 seems a good place to stop at; at that
point, Steely Dan and the Eagles were breaking up, Pink Floyd had started
tearing apart (even if it would be another few years before it was
official), and the radio stations I listened to were poised to start
playing material from bands like Journey and the Police, who don't quite
fit in my mind with the era I'm covering here.
I've already got some stuff on my home page about obscure
music I listen to (like Sifting
through the Wasteland, which winds through the 80's),
but that's not really the core of my collection. The albums
listed here are. If I had to go replace all my CDs
tomorrow, these are the first 60 I'd buy. Not all of them
are quite perfect; you'll find the occasional bummer track
on even the best albums. The worst track ever on an
otherwise perfect album is, of course, Mother from
the Police's Syncronicity, with I'm in touch with
your world from The Cars being a close second;
I also hate Benny the Bouncer on ELP's Brain Salad Surgery,
but unlike the other two opinions are mixed on that one.
These albums are as close to ideal as I've found , and this
listing by year lets the youngsters see just how much
they've missed out on. Even fellow old folks should find a
surprise or two, so off we go.
1967
- Beatles: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
1968
- Blood Sweat & Tears: Child is Father to the Man
1969
- Crosby Stills & Nash: Crosby, Stills & Nash
- Led Zeppelin: Led Zeppelin
- Who: Tommy
- King Crimson: In The Court of the Crimson King
1970
- Crosby Stills Nash & Young: Deja Vu
1971
- Pink Floyd: Meddle
- Todd Rundgren: Runt, The Ballad of Todd Rundgren
- Traffic: Low Spark of High Heeled Boys
- Who: Who's Next
- Yes: The Yes Album
1972
- Steely Dan: Can't Buy a Thrill
- Yes: Fragile
1973
- Eagles: Desperado
- Jethro Tull: Aqualung
- Elton John: Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
- Pink Floyd: Dark Side of the Moon
- Emerson, Lake, and Palmer: Brain Salad Surgery
1974
- Bad Company: Bad Company
- Camel: Mirage
- Supertramp: Crime of the Century
1975
- Chicago: Chicago's Greatest Hits
- Crack the Sky: Crack the Sky
- Electric Light Orchestra: Face the Music
- Fleetwood Mac: Fleetwood Mac
- Pink Floyd: Wish You Were Here
- Steely Dan: Katy Lied
1976
- 10cc: How Dare You!
- Boston: Boston
- Eagles: Hotel California
- Heart: Dreamboat Annie
- Billy Joel: Turnstiles
- Alan Parsons Project: Tales of Mystery and
Imagination
- Rush: 2112
- Steely Dan: The Royal Scam
1977
- Jackson Browne: Running on Empty
- Fleetwood Mac: Rumors
- Heart: Little Queen
- Billy Joel: The Stranger
- Little Feat: Times Loves a Hero
- Meatloaf: Bat out of Hell
- Alan Parsons Project: I Robot
- Steely Dan: Aja
1978
- Cars: The Cars
- Steve Miller: Greatest Hits 1974-1978
- Pablo Cruise: Worlds Away
- Van Halen: Van Halen
- Warren Zevon: Excitable Boy
1979
- Camel: I Can See Your House From Here
- Eagles: The Long Run
- Tom Petty: Damn the Torpedos
- Pink Floyd: The Wall
- Supertramp: Breakfast in America
1980
- AC/DC: Back in Black
- Rush: Permanent Waves
- Styx: Paradise Theater
Hits Collections
Some of the stuff I really like from this area is from bands
that are, in my opinion, better sampled in hits collection
sized bites. All the things listed here are great
collections from artists I wouldn't bother getting the
individual albums by. Many of these also feature stuff the
bands released in the 80's, so they seemed particularly
appropriate to segregate here. These represent my favorite
grouping of material by the band, which may or may not still
be available:
- Aerosmith: Aerosmith's Greatest Hits
- Foreigner: Records
- Golden Earring: Continuing story of Radar Love
- Kansas: The Best of Kansas
- Moody Blues: Story of...Legend of a Band
- Queen: Greatest Hits
- Bob Seger: Greatest Hits
A closing comment
If you saw something you like here, you may want to
reference my Rock Remaster
Reviews listing before you go buy it--many of the albums
here have multiple CD versions, and some are better than
others.
Back to Greg's page.