The albums that have shaped your life

This topic makes for a very good thread whether here on the music thread :cool:

in my teens my dad exposed me to jazz and I fell in love:

Time Out -Dave Brubeck
Live At the Pershing - Ahmad Jamal
Les McCann & Eddie Harris- Swiss Movement ( Live at Montreux Jazz Festival )
 
As a teen, as I discovered my own music, nothing mattered as much to me as David Bowie.

I listened to Ziggy Stardust and Hunky Dory uncountable times.

Purple Rain became an all time great listen for me.

Others from college forward (I discovered a lot of older stuff in college) — albums that I listened to end to end so many times I lose track:

The Wall
Led Zeppelin IV
Houses of the Holy
Scary Monsters
Pros and Cons of Hitchhiking
Amused to Death
Sticky Fingers
Born in the USA
Crowded House
Fables of the Reconstruction
Reckoning
Life’s Rich Pageant
Green
Out of Time
Full Moon Fever
Indigo Girls
Dolittle
Disintegration
Dirty
The Bends
One Foot in the Grave (Beck)
OK Computer
Play (Moby)
Californication
American Recordings I-IV
Blackstar (Bowie)
Long Lost (Lord Huron)
 
It’s also interesting to think back to how I would listen to the albums I loved. The first two albums on my collage in the OP I had on vinyl. Up until the age of 8, my parents’ record collection was all vinyl and we listened to music on the one record player in the house.

In the summer of 1984, the Jacksons’ Victory album came out, which, being a huge Michael Jackson fan at the time, I couldn’t wait to get. I was with my dad when I got it, and he convinced me that I should get the cassette rather than the vinyl record, as you can carry around cassette players and listen to them anywhere you go.

From then until the mid-90s, I primarily purchased albums on cassette, even for several years after CDs became the best way to listen to music. Cassettes were a few dollars cheaper than CDs, and I bought a lot of music, so it was better for my budget. I didn’t even own my own CD player until 1994.

Then in 1994, I got a CD player for my birthday. Due to CDs being a much better way to listen to music and also due to the fact that cassettes were starting to be phased out of the music industry (it was getting harder to find albums I wanted on cassette), I went all in on CDs.

Even after pretty much any music you were looking for was available digitally, I stuck with CDs for a while. I liked going to record store to peruse through the CDs. I liked having a physical “cover” with the cover art and liner notes. I would buy the CD, pop it into my computer, upload it into my iTunes library, and transfer it to my iPod. I would then put the case on a huge CD rack in my living room that contained my entire CD collection.

Then, probably around 2011, I realized those CDs were just going to keep taking up space. Downloading albums digitally was also cheaper, not to mention easier. I finally caved and went all digital.

It’s crazy that now I can carry around my entire music collection in my phone and play it anywhere.
 
As a teen, as I discovered my own music, nothing mattered as much to me as David Bowie.

I listened to Ziggy Stardust and Hunky Dory uncountable times.

Purple Rain became an all time great listen for me.

Others from college forward (I discovered a lot of older stuff in college) — albums that I listened to end to end so many times I lose track:

The Wall
Led Zeppelin IV
Houses of the Holy
Scary Monsters
Pros and Cons of Hitchhiking
Amused to Death
Sticky Fingers
Born in the USA
Crowded House
Fables of the Reconstruction
Reckoning
Life’s Rich Pageant
Green
Out of Time
Full Moon Fever
Indigo Girls
Dolittle
Disintegration
Dirty
The Bends
One Foot in the Grave (Beck)
OK Computer
Play (Moby)
Californication
American Recordings I-IV
Blackstar (Bowie)
Long Lost (Lord Huron)

As a teen, as I discovered my own music, nothing mattered as much to me as David Bowie.

I listened to Ziggy Stardust and Hunky Dory uncountable times.

Purple Rain became an all time great listen for me.

Others from college forward (I discovered a lot of older stuff in college) — albums that I listened to end to end so many times I lose track:

The Wall
Led Zeppelin IV
Houses of the Holy
Scary Monsters
Pros and Cons of Hitchhiking
Amused to Death
Sticky Fingers
Born in the USA
Crowded House
Fables of the Reconstruction
Reckoning
Life’s Rich Pageant
Green
Out of Time
Full Moon Fever
Indigo Girls
Dolittle
Disintegration
Dirty
The Bends
One Foot in the Grave (Beck)
OK Computer
Play (Moby)
Californication
American Recordings I-IV
Blackstar (Bowie)
Long Lost (Lord Huron)
Ok pulling up Purple Rain... That shaped my life because we would put our now 15 yo granddaughter to sleep for a nap playing Purple Rain

Saw Prince at the PNC with Shaka Khan many years ago ... great performance
 
I saw them twice in the early 90s, all I remember/know of them is their drummer was really good. And iirc the drummer was the singer as well, at least on some songs?
The drummer didn’t sing, other than maybe some background screams. The original lineup had two main vocalists: Harrison Cannon (the bassist) and Chris Clodfelter, who also played trumpet. Cannon mostly screamed, whereas Clodfelter sang. Eventually, Jim Clodfelter joined and played a couple different instruments (trumpet and guitar) along with providing backup vocals. Chris then left and Jim took over his vocal and trumpet duties.
 
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