which 1971 album holds up better?
pickwick33
8,946 Posts
OR...The Bar-Kays' Black Rock? (sorry, couldn't find a printable image online!)[/b](obviously, I can't compare these two even though they are both fine examples of heavy metal as played by black folk. but i saw the '91 and '81 threads and thought i'd keep the trend going. any prime '71 elpees you wanna floss here, go get 'em! and NO, it doesnt necessarily have to be what you were listening to that year...)
Comments
but i keeps this warm......
Aw, dude, that is such a copout ('specially from someone like you who knows his stuff)! I don't think '71 would be any more ridiculous than any other year! Although any 12-month period that gave us both You're So Beautiful and Teenage Head was definitely !
Maggot Brain isnt 100% rock either.
Black Rock had "how sweet it would be"
Maggot Brain had "can you get to that"
both albums are tied one for one as far as having a conventional soul song bustin' up an otherwise fuzzed-out funk-rock set
any other '71 picks?
Curtis Live
I went a grabbed a copy outta the bins(as I hadnt listened to it in awhile and I wanted to make sure I wasnt mistakin), and I still dont hear much heavy rock that can compare to Maggot Brain on Black Rock..."Baby I Love You" has a pretty cool heavy riff..but besides that...just soul tracks..."Street Walker" from "Gotta Groove" is a lot heavier than anything on Black Rock.
YES, it is really that good. Popcorn is not even the strongest track on there imo...I recommend you hear it.
This record is Bananas!!!!! The riffs are killer, the drums tight and Perry intro's are crutial!
Compare 1971 with 2001. All years are definitely NOT equal.
71 has:
Blue
What's Going On
Sticky Fingers
Tapestry
There's a Riot Going On
Let's Stay Together
Maggot Brain
Just As I Am
Revolution of the Mind
Electric Warrior
Imagine
Hell, even a cornball ass album like "American Pie" would sooner get a spin from me then most of what came out in 2001.
asked and answered in the same year!
how much shit am i about to get for STILL not owning "what's going on" (even though i must admit its getting harder and harder to find...)
??????????????????
Hmmm, the sight of Marvin Gaye close-up in the rain with his coat collar turned up is still a familiar sight to me...
Paranoid
Master of Reality
Tago Mago
first Cluster, Ash Ra Tempel, and Faust albums...
This album is crap. I read somewhere that it was a dollarbincommon record until sampled.
I definitely prefer this album to Eugene McDaniels' previous LP, Outlaw.
What about these?
-"Freedom Flight"-Shuggie Otis.
-"What is It?"-S.O.U.L.
-"S/T"-Rasputin's Stash.
-"The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys"-Traffic.
-"S/T"-Donny Hathaway.
-"Blue"-Joni Mitchell.
-"All Day Music"-War.
-"Pain"-The Ohio Players.
-"Young, Gifted, and Black"-Aretha Franklin.
Peace,
Big Stacks from Kakalak
and Outlaw is pretty good. so i'm assuming Headless Heroes is ACTUALLY pretty great.
iowa is horrible for Soul albums. the last "what's going on" i saw was last year and i ended up not getting it so i could take a chance on some other albums i was less likely to see again.
i havent seen it since.
then again im sure the dollarbincommon Soul LP's pretty much anywhere in the country are at LEAST $5-6 around here, if you can find them. not that thats a big deal, its just harder to locate the stuff here.
Ill defend 2001, even if it doesnt measure up. Fell free to clon.
LadyTron - 604
JadaKiss - Kiss The Game Good Bye
Zero 7 - Simple Things
DelTron 3030 - The Instrumentals
Aaliyah - Aaliyah
The Isley Bros. Featuring Ronald Isley aka Mr.Biggs - Eternal
Mariah Carey - Glitter.....i know im in trouble for that
Angie Stone - Mahoghany Soul
Michael Jackson - Invincible
Nate Dog - Music & Me
Not to me. I thought that album was interesting, as far as hearing a former pop star mutate into a socially-conscious singer-songwriter, but it ain't no desert island disc. Headless Heroes is far superior. Hell, any Gene McDaniels best-of with "Tower Of Strength" and "A Hundred Pounds Of Clay" would be a better bet.
'Outlaw' is really about 'Unspoken dreams of light' primarily - then 'Cherrystones'. 'Headless heroes....' is genius from start to finish - but you gotta hear it. ie it's not instant at all.
But Outlaw is the most compelling visually:
The stark B&W cover of this album has always intrigued me, from the moment I first saw it advertised on an Atlantic innersleeve. (I believe that's McDaniels' wife on the far right, BTW.)
The two tracks that stood out for me were "Outlaw" and the singsongy "Welfare City."
I beg to differ. It grabbed me instantly! Definitely one of '71's best.