Why the Hell Were These Albums So Big?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 651

  • @DT11757
    @DT11757 Год назад +26

    Abby Road is both an artistic achievement and the Beatles' most modern sounding album. It's production values outweigh any other Beatles' album. You have an already amazing album raised up even further by its overall sound. McCartney fully intended AR to be a huge seller- and knew by setting a high bar for it's arrangements and production, this could most definitely happen. AR has become the example of an album riding the seam of both the 1960's and 1970's.

    • @hildegardseibenstein3263
      @hildegardseibenstein3263 Год назад

      Abbey

    • @josephblue4135
      @josephblue4135 8 месяцев назад

      On most days it is still my favorite Beatles' album.
      My brother had Beatles albums which I got to hear; but 'Abbey Road' was the 1st rock album I bought with my own money.

  • @dabhidhm4093
    @dabhidhm4093 Год назад +16

    All of these albums are really good albums, that's why they are popular. Who's Next has some of their greatest songs and it's not weighed down by an opera narrative, even though it was leftovers of an attempted rock opera. LZ IV is the ultimate distillation of blues, hard rock and folk the defined LZ. It's a much more original album than the first one, which wasn't far afield from Cream or Jeff Beck Group. Dark Side Of The Moon is the goal that the Floyd were aiming at since their second album. And so on and so on. All of these albums represent their artists at the top of their talents. The only one I could contest is Abbey Road, but frankly it shows the Beatles in a very mature light with George's greatest songs and great sound and a good mixture of heavy and serious, and the medley which is like a well-programmed FM radio station of Beatles songs. It's easy and fun to listen to. Sometimes what is popular is garbage, and sometimes it's not. These are ten examples of when real quality rose to the top.

    • @abueloraton
      @abueloraton Год назад +2

      Yeah, this guy doesn't understand the existential drama of Pink Floyd, LZ, and The Who

    • @tdunph4250
      @tdunph4250 Год назад

      Care to elaborate??

    • @abueloraton
      @abueloraton Год назад +1

      @@tdunph4250 it's all elaborated in extended previous comment.

  • @krisp3128
    @krisp3128 Год назад +5

    I had exactly the same feeling about some of these records, especially Abbey Road and Dark Side... Until I stopped listening to them for definitely more than 10 years. Revisiting them after all these years made me realise again how fantastic they are!
    Thanks for this very entertaining piece!

    • @photoslum
      @photoslum 8 месяцев назад

      i have been blessed to have that happen to a lot of the music i was burned out on. To hear Freebird, Stairway, and Born to Run to name a few, with fresh ears gives an entirely new appreciation, or deepens my first appreciations.

  • @Atlanticmulberry
    @Atlanticmulberry Год назад +7

    I recently discovered Kind of Blue. Its very enjoyable. Speaking of Jazz, I enjoy Dave Brubeck's Time out even more. Growing up in the 80's, I bought Abbe Road, Who's Next, and Dark side of the moon as slightly old records. I bought Rumors and Hotel California as new releases. I don't know what makes these great but all I can say is I still listen to them because the music holds up. They still have meaning to me. I can relate to dark side more now than ever. A few other great timeless albums that I can think of off the top of my head are Rush Moving pictures, Steely Dan Aja and Sargent Pepper.

  • @basementfortyfive
    @basementfortyfive Год назад +2

    Hey Mazzy. What a great Video. Thanks for that. I think is even parts: Fantastic Songs + great sound + legendary coverart + full of urban legends = Masterpiece Album.

  • @twofromthetrunk9932
    @twofromthetrunk9932 Год назад +16

    It was all great music. How could you not like them. The 70’s were such a great time in music. Enjoyed them all.

    • @spudwas
      @spudwas Год назад +2

      1960's was much better! Especially 1965>1970. The Best!

    • @analogmoz
      @analogmoz Год назад

      These were better by a consensus that did not involve **you.**

    • @spudwas
      @spudwas Год назад +1

      @@analogmoz Sorry Bud, it involved everybody!

    • @Claytone-Records
      @Claytone-Records Год назад

      But back then we were more concerned with youth in Asia. 😬

    • @spudwas
      @spudwas Год назад

      @@Claytone-Records I don't fully understand what you mean. Please explained a little more.

  • @lawrence5368
    @lawrence5368 Год назад +7

    Great video Mazzy. There are a few other that could've been added to the list. Like Carole King's Tapestry, Deep Purple's Machine Head, Allman Brothers Live at the Fillmore East, Frampton Come Alive and Dire Strait's Brother in Arms

    • @johnryan3913
      @johnryan3913 Год назад +1

      Thanks for mentioning Tapestry, which has gone from overrated to underrated

    • @hildegardseibenstein3263
      @hildegardseibenstein3263 Год назад +2

      Dire Straits' Brothers In Arms

    • @photoslum
      @photoslum 8 месяцев назад

      @@johnryan3913and my favorite of hers - Writer - is basically unknown.

  • @charleskra
    @charleskra Год назад +11

    Excellent topic and one that I think about sometimes as well. While I am not in advertising or marketing, I think each of these albums represents the point when these artists became a "brand", and that cemented these albums into the public's collective mind as THE ALBUM that represents each artist. I agree that many times, there are better albums by most of the artists you mentioned, but it's not a quality thing. It's more a point in time where they trancended into something bigger and are forever associated with that particular record.

    • @timhewtson6212
      @timhewtson6212 9 месяцев назад

      Absolutely agree. They are like sonic trademarks.

    • @geraldbrennan7425
      @geraldbrennan7425 3 месяца назад

      The observation about them becoming a brand with the album is spot on.

    • @geraldbrennan7425
      @geraldbrennan7425 3 месяца назад

      With the exception of Abbey Road and Kind of Blue, or course!

  • @LanceB1960
    @LanceB1960 Год назад +8

    I think my biggest "why" is "Cracked Rear View" by Hootie and the Blowfish. I have and like the record, but never in my imagination did I think it would sell over 20 million copies. My belief is that it drew in the aging boomers who had gotten lost in the 80s pop metal and 90s grunge and they just wanted to hear songs they could sing and were good jangly pop rock.

  • @samgiroux
    @samgiroux Год назад +4

    You hit the nail on the head early in the video; these albums are so accessible and easy to listen to. Thus, they are also commercialized and then millions hear those songs in commercials, movies, and tv shows.

  • @pauljohnson5925
    @pauljohnson5925 Год назад +16

    Every album you show stands up for me....except one.
    Hotel California. How that album (how any Eagles album) became such a monster hit will always be beyond me. They're the Bud light of music. (Fizzy piss)

    • @Cap683
      @Cap683 Год назад +6

      It baffles me. The Eagles suck. They were like the General Motors of music.

    • @marktrickett5081
      @marktrickett5081 Год назад +4

      The phrase "Lowest Common Denominator" should answer that question.

    • @keithparker1346
      @keithparker1346 Год назад +2

      3 or 4 hit singles will make an album sell big

  • @christymarks9586
    @christymarks9586 Год назад +6

    I can't pick a favorite Beatles album - love em all!

    • @goplad1
      @goplad1 9 месяцев назад

      I can definitely pick a Beatles album I don't like. And I do have my favorite.

  • @ExileOnMyStreet
    @ExileOnMyStreet Год назад +5

    It seems to me that most of these records tend to capture an artist at both a commercial and artistic peak, so it isn't surprising to me that these are popular records. JUST how popular some of them are, is one of those things where the music connects with a much larger audience than their typical fanbase, that extra dash of magic where the music continues to touch people of all generations.

  • @DavideMana
    @DavideMana Год назад +2

    Great video. I have only five of those records.
    But on the important stuff: John Landis is the director of Thriller (and Animal House, The Blues Brothers, American Werewolf etc etc)
    Cheers!

  • @johnchristophertonks2528
    @johnchristophertonks2528 Год назад +4

    I remember in the 1970,s people walking around with the Dark side of the moon lp, under their arm. I was very young and didn't even know what type of music it was.

    • @photoslum
      @photoslum 8 месяцев назад

      in high school in 83-85 i rarely went anywhere with that cassette.

  • @martinsvinyl1985
    @martinsvinyl1985 Год назад +3

    A big reason with most of your picks is the fact they are some of the biggest albums ever! And are soooo familiar that they have become victims of their own success.
    For example I refuse to own ‘rumours’ and ‘hotel California’ as most of the tracks are constantly played on the radio so why do I need to own it?
    But I’m going to contradict myself now, It’s also very common as well for people to 💩 on the popular stuff so they sound like the smartest people in the room.

  • @colourlessbluethings
    @colourlessbluethings Год назад +14

    Some albums are overhyped, others completely deserve their reputation and there is a reason KoB, Dark Side and Abbey Road are talked about as being among the greatest albums; they ARE among them. Yes, Miles has better albums but KoB was the entry record for SO many and it is absolutely fantastic.

    • @johnryan3913
      @johnryan3913 Год назад

      The 10 Id put above the overrated 20
      1 Stones, Exile (and about 8 other RS albums)
      2 Bo Diddley, debut
      3 Sly, Riot
      4 Beach Boys, Friends, 20/20, Holland, and PS of course
      5 Curtis Mayfield, Curtis
      6 Hendrix, Axis, Cry of Love
      7 Jefferson Airplane, Crown Of Creation
      8 David Crosby, If I Could Only Remember My Name
      9 Sam Cooke, Night Beat
      10 Patti Smith, Horses,
      Roxy Music, Stranded
      Neil Young, Time Fades
      Away

    • @charlesbowman105
      @charlesbowman105 Год назад +2

      Crown of Creation is a masterpiece, especially Lather. That song almost breaks me.

    • @Claytone-Records
      @Claytone-Records Год назад

      @@charlesbowman105Lather turned 30 years old today…

  • @petejp1
    @petejp1 Год назад +3

    Well to answer your question mazzy, and to quote a very wise man. It's the music stupid! All of these albums are loaded with great songs. Also timing, they were released at the right time for each album. I would throw in tapestry and boston's 1st album too.

  • @tyesmith9661
    @tyesmith9661 Год назад +2

    Fun video! I might include Boston's excellent first album which sold a metric ass ton and was and is still overplayed. I'd like to hear about your 10 albums that no matter how often you hear them you still love each and every note.

  • @jamesgriffithsmusic
    @jamesgriffithsmusic Год назад +1

    Hi Mazzy. A lot of these albums have really fantastic cover art. Not sure where I'm going with that, but it's making me wonder if there are any really huge and eternally loved records which have bad jacket design.

    • @mazzysmusic
      @mazzysmusic  Год назад +2

      Interesting theory but these records got pushed and played so much in the US. I should create a list of great albums with bad cover art ✌🏼

  • @billkeon880
    @billkeon880 Год назад +1

    You should do an underrated, under appreciated lp video. There are so many, but the two recently I thought about are Joe Walsh’s Barnstorm and James Gang Rides Again. Blodwyn Pig Ahead Rings Out, Ogden’s Nut, Paradise and Lunch, Diamond Head, Tim Buckley’s debut….so many more

  • @francescotenti193
    @francescotenti193 Год назад +4

    They're great albums and played non stop in the radio and therefore very familiar to a lot of people who do not have the deep knowledge of music and artists like you do and other audiophiles with huge records collections. Kind of Blue was also used in Runaway Bride and a lot of folks bought it after watching that movie. It is a great album and it is, for a lot of people, me included, the opening door to jazz, easy to listen to from beginning to end.

    • @tomroot7961
      @tomroot7961 Год назад +1

      It's easy to listen to while being very sophisticated and rather perfect. I'm happy that it is so popular. Hurray!

  • @TheRollingStoness
    @TheRollingStoness Год назад +2

    All the LPs that you showed have been collecting dust for the past 25 years in my collection, ❤the hat

    • @mazzysmusic
      @mazzysmusic  Год назад +3

      Maybe you need to pull one or two out and listen again 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @johnryan3913
      @johnryan3913 Год назад

      Yeah, like the ones on MY top 10

  • @ediblehorse
    @ediblehorse Год назад +1

    thanks for the vid Mazzy. I recently changed my favorite Beatles album from Rubber Soul to Abbey Road. I think the sound quality may have something to do with it.
    Ed from Chicago

  • @alancumming6407
    @alancumming6407 Год назад +7

    As a kid my soundtrack to 1969 was Hot Rats and Abbey Road, thanks to my older brother. I still think Abbey Road is one of the best records ever made. The "medley" for me is astonishing.

    • @Claytone-Records
      @Claytone-Records Год назад +1

      Took my son to Dweezil’s Hot Rats 50th Anniversary show in Austin a couple days before the pandemic shut everyone down. Fucking awesome.

    • @abueloraton
      @abueloraton Год назад

      Abbey Road is like the ultimate sealed signature of the Beatles chronology. This guy doesn't get it! 😂

    • @Claytone-Records
      @Claytone-Records Год назад +1

      @@abueloraton Yeah, I spin that lp a lot. It has aged well, Grandpa Rat!

    • @abueloraton
      @abueloraton Год назад

      @@Claytone-Records "granpa mouse"

  • @ricardo_miguel13
    @ricardo_miguel13 Год назад +1

    The music has to connect with the masses, but an important point in the digital streaming era is also if its sounds well produced for the time, also timeless in a way but especially for headphones.

  • @jameswilson7084
    @jameswilson7084 Год назад +5

    These are all 10 out of 10's for me. It's understandable why they're so popular. But, the ones here are not always my favorite album by the artists in question.

  • @Saffy-yr8vo
    @Saffy-yr8vo Год назад +1

    Led Zep II and III are the best. The cut out moveable cover was a bonus to us child teens, like The Beatles adding photos and a poster to the White Album, we we still reading some teen mags and the boys, comics. Although we considered ourselves extremely mature in our music taste!

  • @warrenny
    @warrenny Год назад +2

    Love the video and your style. You have such a calm and measured demeanor without pretense. I am going to take you to task with Purple Rain, though.
    I was a young teen when it came out, so for me it was the first time to hear Prince songs fresh out of the oven. Even at that age my musical taste was pretty eclectic.
    Purple Rain hit all the different genres in just one album. I think that's what's so great about it. Besides only one musician sounds like Prince.

    • @keithparker1346
      @keithparker1346 Год назад +1

      Purple Rain is great , diverse , hugely enjoyable. It's basically Princes greatest hits

  • @lauriebrett5292
    @lauriebrett5292 Год назад +3

    I think because most of these records show the bands or performers at their peak & maybe they are the most accessible albums. I think the radio stations play a big part in pushing album sales & most of these albums were pushed. We also believe the hype as well so to be in with everyone else we should own these albums. Whether we like other albums by them more is a state of mind, I personally like Led Zeppelin lll & Desperado as my favourite Led Zep & Eagles albums. Abbey Road has an iconic album cover & being the last album by The Beatles has a special place for many. Any album can be overplayed & most of these certainly were but they're still great albums so just bring them out now & then. I don't feel sick of them so much as l don't listen to the radio & just play my music from my collection so i get to choose what i listen to. Maybe thats the secret take control of your listening choices.

    • @perrysobotta-tn7ol
      @perrysobotta-tn7ol Год назад

      Yes, it seem to be that certain record companies would push radio stations to play certain songs from newly released albums to death. Many listeners would naturally jump on the bandwagon because that's all they knew.....what the radio stations were cramming down their ears. Too bad they couldn't look outside the box.

  • @Douchemaster_McChest
    @Douchemaster_McChest Год назад +3

    At least with Thriller and Purple Rain (actually any popular album from the '80s,) MTV had a lot to do with their popularity by constantly playing the videos, which in turn made the radio stations to constantly play the songs too. MTV was the lightning in the bottle for many of the artists in the '80s. Other examples of '80s artists who had massive albums because of MTV.....Madonna, The Police, Tina Turner, Lionel Richie, Huey Lewis, Billy Idol, Def Leppard, Phil Collins, U2, and many others.
    Anyway, 3 of the 10 you mention happen to be in my list of all-time top 10 albums of any genre:
    The Who - Who's Next ------ As you stated, this album is just so anthemic and the ultimate party album. Can't wait until September when I spend $300 to get the Super Deluxe Edition.
    Michael Jackson - Thriller ----------- As I said above, MTV had a lot to do with its popularity. But also the label's strategy of releasing singles from the album in intervals spread over a couple years kept it in the minds of people. I was a junior in high school when the album was released in late Fall of '82 and I can remember in the Spring of '84 (my senior year) people were still talking about the album. Hell, I remember my Spanish 4 teacher (who was in his late 40s) saying he finally went out and bought the album to see what all the hype was about for the past 1 1/2 years. Because of the success of Thriller, many albums that followed tried to mimic that strategy of trickling out the singles off an album over an extended time. By the way, John Landis directed the music video for Thriller
    Led Zeppelin IV --------- My favorite of theirs that I go back to every so often (not as often as I used to when I was younger.) What is the appeal? I really can't answer that. Black Dog, Rock And Roll, Stairway To Heaven and Misty Mountain Hop really keep that album moving. The other 4 songs in The Battle Of Evermore, Four Sticks, Going To California and When The Levee Breaks don't really rock hard, but there is something mesmerizing and unique about each one of them that draws me to them. I can't explain it. As a whole album, those collections of songs just seem to gel.
    Some of the other albums you mention I also own but aren't some of my overall favorites or even ones I consider to be the best album from the artist.
    The Beatles - Abbey Road -------- No doubt a great album, but I don't think it is my favorite Beatles album. Revolver, Sgt. Pepper's, The White Album, and even Magical Mystery Tour (even though a soundtrack and a collection of singles album) I like better than Abbey Road.
    Fleetwood Mac - Rumours ---------- Excellent album that was just played to death by the radio stations that kept it going. This album is probably my favorite album by Fleetwood Mac. Actually it is the only Fleetwood Mac album still in my collection. Haven't listened to it in a very long time. I might just go do that later today. LOL
    Eagles - Hotel California -------------- Similarly, played to death by the radio stations. Not one I go back to anymore, though.
    Prince - Purple Rain -------------- Hard to say if this is my favorite Prince album, but it's right up there with 1999 and Sign O' The Times.
    Pink Floyd - Dark Side of The Moon ------------- Yep my favorite album by them. It's just such a mesmerizing album you can just chill out to by closing your eyes and taking it all in at once. Though, I'm not a stoner nor ever did any drugs. But I can understand how this album is the "perfect" stoner album. Even though this album is not in my all-time top 10 favorite albums of any genre, it is probably in my top 20, if I had a top 20 list.
    The only 2 albums you mentioned that I don't own are the Miles Davis album (not a fan of Jazz) and Alanis Morissette's Jagged Little Pill. I remember when Jagged Little Pill was huge. It was in the mid '90s when I was finishing up my final master's degree and getting ready to start my professional career. She was constantly on the radio and winning awards.
    Personally, I would've included U2's Joshua Tree. You did mention that you didn't think of it when you first made this list. That album is my favorite by U2 and is in my all-time top 10 list of favorite albums of any genre.
    Other huge albums to mention that caught fire and attracted lots of people for one reason or another:
    AC/DC - Back In Black
    Guns N' Roses - Appetite For Destruction
    Rush - Moving Pictures (not my favorite by them.....that would be Hemispheres.)
    Def Leppard - Hysteria (not my favorite of theirs, but you can't deny the popularity of that album.)
    Nirvana - Nevermind (The only Grunge album I own. Can't stand Grunge. LOL. No denying the massive impact this album had. Nearly destroyed Heavy Metal. Even though I don't like Grunge, this album I had to have just because of the impact it had on popular culture at the time. It's a good album too.)
    Metallica - S/T (The Black Album) -------- Not my favorite album of theirs; I like Ride The Lightning and Master Of Puppets better. But no denying this album helped fend off the Grunge takeover of heavy rock music in America at the time. This album helped revive the Heavy Metal scene in America while also becoming massive in other countries.

    • @cerneuffington2656
      @cerneuffington2656 Год назад

      I've never liked any of the singles from The Joshua Tree. I prefer side two 🙂

  • @richardfitzpatrick5748
    @richardfitzpatrick5748 Год назад +2

    Brothers in arms. Dire straits. Another one for you 😂

  • @tomhatton3303
    @tomhatton3303 Год назад +3

    Led Zep IV was the album that appealed to me the most when I was a teenager. It's amazing to think they released albums I - IV in just a couple of years. But IV is still a great album.

    • @johnryan3913
      @johnryan3913 Год назад

      At the time bands were expected to produce an LP every 9 months or so. Credence put out 6 studio albums in two and one half years.

  • @EdKazO-Vision
    @EdKazO-Vision Год назад +14

    These records were so overplayed by those infernal Classic Rock FM stations that quit playing new music by the mid eighties. I listened at first just out of habit but after hearing Black Dog for the 23,459th time I bailed. They rendered these albums unlistenable. Then I discovered Jazz. Went in that trip for a decade. Now I find that I can go back and listen to Who’s Next without gagging, because I ignored it for so long. Still love “Sell Out” way better. Cheers Mazzy

    • @Onteo1
      @Onteo1 Год назад +2

      Exactly. Corporate rock radio in the U.S. plays them incessantly. Add Boston, Allman Brothers and AC/DC. We need a Freeform rock radio revival

    • @MrKelleyzinho
      @MrKelleyzinho Год назад

      The free form independent stations seem stuck in terms of their reach or appeal. They are primarily web-based now.

    • @Onteo1
      @Onteo1 Год назад +1

      @@MrKelleyzinho this is very true, SiriusXM has some but even they are a bit repetitious. I live close to Lake Ontario and am fortunate to have neighbors to the north that still have something that resembles free form. Toronto, Peterborough and Coburg with the Added bonus that once an hour you get a Canadian band per requirement.

    • @johnryan3913
      @johnryan3913 Год назад

      Classic Rock radio killed many great artists and songs for me.

    • @paulkazakoff9231
      @paulkazakoff9231 8 месяцев назад

      I've heard black Dog 30,000 times probably and still it gives me a buzz when I hear it !

  • @djgerman5705
    @djgerman5705 8 месяцев назад +1

    Why was Cracked Rear View by Hootie & The Blowfish so big?

  • @phillipharrison7283
    @phillipharrison7283 Год назад

    Yes! More! Please! Numbers 11 to 20.Thanks for this. ✌I have 7 out of the 10. Cheers Mazzy.

  • @AntonXul
    @AntonXul Год назад

    Like you, there are certain songs I cut out of my wheelhouse due me hearing them so much thanks to radio, TV shows & movies overusing them. I have this massive playlist on Spotify of over 900 (and growing) handpicked songs by me of rock & metal and only recently decided to add some overplayed classics since I’ve ignored them long enough I can enjoy listening to them again. I have a tendency of loving the non hits more than the big hit song, but if isn’t for the big hit song, I probably would’ve never heard those hidden gems I love so much.

  • @artistbaby138
    @artistbaby138 Год назад +1

    They all have one thing in common: iconic album cover

  • @anahatatutu
    @anahatatutu Год назад +1

    There is something unique about the prism on the Floyd album. The light could be moving (not a still graphic) and it would look the same.

  • @MrUndersolo
    @MrUndersolo Год назад

    Great video breakdown of their popularity. I am not the biggest fan of all of the groups here (the Eagles give me a real Lebowski feeling), but I like your critiques.
    And if I had to pick my favorites:
    The Who - Live at Leeds
    The Beatles - The Beatles (White Album)
    Miles Davis - Bitches Brew
    Fleetwood Mac - FM (1975)
    The Eagles - N/A
    Michael Jackson - The Wall
    Pink Floyd - Almost anything but The Wall
    Prince - Dirty Mind (sue me)
    Alanis Morrissette - ?

  • @dont_follow5777
    @dont_follow5777 Год назад +2

    Abbey Road just has a flow and great mix of song styles. My favorite track is I Want You (She's so Heavy). Dark Side of the Moon appeals to the good and bad in everything. Stuff we don't want to talk about, but we do think about.

  • @analoguecity3454
    @analoguecity3454 Год назад +1

    Almost everyone who are getting back into LPs ( and first timers also) get "kind of blue" in their collections! Even people that are into heavy metal and rock ( like me ) get it! That's what got me " dipping my toe " into jazz, now I love jazz!😊

  • @matthewrichey7128
    @matthewrichey7128 Год назад

    Mazzy...A very fun and informational video....The Kind of Blue track you refer to as having a composition clash between Miles and Bill Evans is Blue in Green, not So What.

  • @BlindArthurBlake
    @BlindArthurBlake Год назад +2

    I would agree that my favorite Led Zeppelin album is the first one for me also

    • @oleggorky906
      @oleggorky906 Год назад +1

      All the Led Zeppelin albums were pretty good until they got to Presence in about 1975 or 1976, something like that anyway (well, perhaps vol 3 wasn’t quite as good as 1,2 and 4, but still not a rank disaster anyway).
      When they got to Presence I think that maybe all the drugs, booze and general excess were starting to take their toll. Plant was still trying to recover from the car crash, sometime towards the end of 1975 and the record was done hastily.
      And there’s also the fact that Plant felt that his health wasn’t up to touring, what with that crash and all.
      From this point on, Zep were never quite the same again as the band members started being hit with a series of personal misfortunes and tragedies, such as In 1977, the following year after the release of Presence, when Plant’s five year old son died and then John Bonham died in that pool accident a couple of years after.
      But up till about Physical Graffitti, it was a fabulous run of success and they sold an incredible amount of albums; it was fantastic whilst it lasted, and to be fair they kept it going for a good while, especially so considering that they were constantly burning the candle at both ends.

  • @johnthrasher8146
    @johnthrasher8146 Год назад +2

    The producers of these records all had clout and truly great ears. That is why they continue to sell. With the exception of the Alanis Morissette record (which I think sold simply on the strength of the incredible hit You Ought To Know) all these albums on your list have amazing spatial head room when you listen. It is no coincidence Abbey Road & Dark Side are here. They were two of the go-to records all through the 1970s and into the 1980s home stereo or high fidelity sales people used to demonstrate sound systems. It is also of note that the majority of these records are British artists with British sound engineers and producers. Keith Olsen & Bill Szymczyk were epic 1970s producers that hit it big with your two inclusions here. I always believed Purple Rain was a loving tribute to the Beatles and Jimi Hendrix and his sound men (George Martin & Eddie Kramer) with the guitar emphasis, panning and the dense multi-instrumentation which pervades the record. Thriller, which used Toto & LA's finest hired-hand musicians in the studio under Quincy Jones (and also later Glenn Ballard with Bad & Dangerous for Michael Jackson) still has amazing sound qualities to this day that most of the pop music world freely borrows from ad nauseam. You could have included Roy Thomas Baker for a couple of Queen records or the Cars to add to your list and they would have fit. Great segment!! Always love your circuitous and informative takes down Memoryville Road. Thanks.

  • @onsenkuma1979
    @onsenkuma1979 Год назад +1

    I really get your point about not being able to listen to certain records for long periods of time. I had this personal moratorium on playing DSOTM for the better part of thirty years, and there are a lot of records I feel that way about. Part of it is over-exposure - familarity breeds...well, at least indifference if not actual contempt. Then there are others that I can listen to several times a year or more. Go figure...

  • @pieterbalk-ht7kq
    @pieterbalk-ht7kq 6 месяцев назад

    Great selection @Norman Maslov somehow I have them all. So I guess you have great taste!😜😉
    But where is Sticky Fingers, Some Girls or Tattoo You?! (even though Let it Bleed and Exile are way better albums….as is Zep II or III over Zep IV btw!)

  • @ShamrocknRecords
    @ShamrocknRecords Год назад

    Thank you for that Michael Jackson imitation. Hahaha!!!
    You sounded like Mickey Mouse. Lol
    Cheers☘️

  • @jillyidle6462
    @jillyidle6462 Год назад +1

    More Mazzy, more! Do a part 2 🙏🏻. Nirvana Nevermind, is another, King Crimson Court of the Crimson. King, even Sergeant Pepper, obviously for the iconic covers, as well as the fact they’re all great albums. Band on the Run? YES Fragile? (I know, you don’t like Prog), or Frampton Comes Alive? Boston?

  • @Gardosunron
    @Gardosunron Год назад +1

    You answered your own question by listing all the great songs on those albums. The one I wonder about now is Rumours. It's okay and I WAS a huge fan at the time. I can't listen to it now. Except - Dreams is a terrific song.

  • @PensivePoet97
    @PensivePoet97 Год назад

    Thriller definitely defined the 80’s along with many others and the music video was nothing like we had seen at the time. The demos are interesting also especially PYT. I personally preferred Bad over Thriller but love both.
    Great list👍🏾

  • @joncarpenter984
    @joncarpenter984 Год назад +1

    Stan Kenton gets my vote for awesome jazz music, just saying one of the greatest.

  • @staggerlee6794
    @staggerlee6794 Год назад +1

    I had no idea about Abbey Road Studios not being called that until after the Beatles album. Having said that, I am not a massive Beatles fan, so nuggets of info like that passed me by.

  • @ColinWilson-ds8ou
    @ColinWilson-ds8ou Год назад +1

    I have ALL those albums - clearly too mainstream in my tastes! But they’re all fantastic albums. Most of them featured on a retrospective I did for my daughters a while ago.

  • @Russell.S
    @Russell.S Год назад +1

    not gonna lie, I dozed off during this video. I vaguely recall questions that may or may not have answers. will watch again after some cocaine fuel.

  • @BillyDenton-nx3oy
    @BillyDenton-nx3oy 5 месяцев назад

    This is among my favorite of your videos...
    But why ?
    Why is this video so popular ?
    Why is this video better than the other videos below ?
    Why ?
    Baaahaaahaaa !!

  • @georgepblair
    @georgepblair Год назад +1

    Because... people follow, few think independently. Also, some of those are actually great!

  • @brettnelson5091
    @brettnelson5091 Год назад

    Great Show, funny have all in my collection, Rumours along with Sgt Pepper's were huge big sellers in New Zealand, been thinking about all the great artist's we have lost even today Sinead O'Connor.

  • @IllyaLeonovMorganFreepony
    @IllyaLeonovMorganFreepony 10 месяцев назад

    About "Who's Next." IV was probably the hottest album, and "Houses of the Holy" was my fave but... "Who's Next" had "Won't Get Fooled Again." What an anthem. Saw them perform it live in 1971. It just... doesn't get any better than that.

  • @themaven4054
    @themaven4054 Год назад

    Your picks are for the most part albums that you played in their entirety. No weak tracks. Perhaps that has(had)something to do with their popularity as to why! Good video Mazzy .

  • @ReasonablySane
    @ReasonablySane 8 месяцев назад

    I'm 70. For me, Abby Road is my favorite Beatles album, with Rubber Soul coming in as a close second. But I'm not all that much of a Beatles fan. My band plays Yesterday as a vocal duet and it gets a huge response...
    Who's next is also an amazing album. I remember sitting in my car shortly after it came out sitting in the back seat of my '63 rambler classic, with my 6x9 car speakers in the back deck, and blasting the cassette that I'd recorded from the vinyl record. It's giving me goosebumps as I type this. Loved that album.
    I was a big pink Floyd fan too. Dark Side of the Moon, now, is kind of overdone. But back in the 70's, playing that through my Dynaco 400 and "top of the line" Radio Shack speakers was almost a spiritual experience.
    I didn't get into the Eagles because I considered them "country". That all changed when I got the DVD of the Australian concert. It's never too late to learn.
    Rumors was popular In my early days as a hi-fi salesman, And it had some good musicianship. But I tend to see it as more ephemeral than the more timeless releases on you list. Still, Stevie Nicks is cute.
    Being from that generation, and male, I of course like Led Zep 4. Since becoming, in 1998, a bass player and being in a dozen "classic rock" bands, I've learned to appreciate their music a lot more, but more as a musician than as a "Wayne's World" teenager attitude back in the day.
    I never really got into Michael Jackson. Not bad, just not my cup of tea. I never liked Prince. Just couldn't get into it. He seemed to be a very talented musician, but I wasn't impressed by the songs he wrote. But then, it wasn't made for my generation. Same with Morissette, though "You Aughta Know" was interesting. It's also the one that I don't understand why it's on your list. I didn't realize it ever got that popular.
    Oddly, a few years ago I really got into Taylor Swift. Not really impressed with her voice, but her songs and arrangements are amazing, as is her (or her handlers') business and marketing sense. And that was BEFORE he popularity really got into high gear. She'll easily go into the history books with artists like the Beatles.

  • @billvanhorn5094
    @billvanhorn5094 Год назад

    Who's Next is big because on Friday you can turn it on the turntable and sing these great songs and relax!

  • @marrrtin
    @marrrtin Год назад +2

    Some records just hit the zeitgeist. It amuses me to remember that my sister was responsible for buying both dark side and rumors when they came out, in both cases they were like a record event marketing, there was a ton of hype. However in both cases the product lived up to the hype. However this must be contrasted with the crushing disappointment of tusk, also hyped to the gills. Michael Jackson even more so - I would say off the wall kind of announced him as a new artist not the kid member of the Jackson 5 that we can remember (I love those old Jackson 5 records. they still blow, absolutely fantastic songs). So therefore the stage was set with these huge expectations for thriller, and for many people it did not disappoint and with Madonna he was then the very epitome of 80s dance music. I can't really talk about the other ones they're in either the wrong time or place for me to be somewhat in the zeitgeist at the time of their release. I was never a huge Michael Jackson fan he was just too poppy for me at that time I was into industrial metal type stuff. And yeah it was a real cringe part of Macca's career. Dark side of the moon on the other hand and rumors I do still listen to on occasion. They're both concept albums in the sense that they were operating under some kind of large overarching idea. Pink Floyd were just asking what it's all about? What is time? what the hell is money? this sort of thing, and it still works start to finish. The last time I busted out rumors was when Christine mcvie passed away, She was one of those celeb deaths which hit you unexpectedly hard. On this re-listen found the greatest pleasure in listening to rumors start to finish as it was intended, then had this vision of it being still around 500 years in the future when it was called the rumors suite and was this example of musical perfection meaning there wasn't a single bum note or wrong beat or duff song. I think it's worth a whole other video how you go off things just because you overhear them,

  • @vayres7512
    @vayres7512 Год назад +1

    Waters is the genius behind Pink Floyd. I like you selection.

  • @Majesticon
    @Majesticon Год назад +1

    the crazy thing about THRILLER is that little kids LOVE that record. if you throw on any of the upbeat songs off that album, children ages 1-7 will start dancing haha.. very few records can move kids like that without them having been indoctrinated into it at first. there's something electric in the grooves of that record that just cant be explained.

  • @manolisgeorgakakis6342
    @manolisgeorgakakis6342 Год назад +1

    I do agree with you about Pink Floyd and Meddle is my favourite too, as well as Atom Heart Mother. But when it comes to IV and Abbey Road, I can't agree. Those are two of my top ten favourite albums ever, I don't understand the why question, I think they're irresistible, they are absolute, they are authorities.

    • @simonemurray1345
      @simonemurray1345 Год назад

      Exactly. I was suprised when he listed abbey road since he answered every reason while asking why. It's the best produced, best recorded, best put together album of the best band of all time. It was their peak, and magnum opus. And I say this as someone who personally prefers a bunch of earlier beatles stuff. Most of their early stuff pales in comparison when you remove all the societal infuleneces at the time. Like some 16 year old today isn't having their mind blown by I wanna hold your hand, like a 16 year old would in the 60s. But with abbey road it's as accessible as ever, the music speaks for itself due to its insanely good production for a beatles album, and is unique with its medley. It's funny, most listed are listed as overly commercial, but in my opinion, abbey road as a whole isn't as commercial as some other beatles albums because of its impressive medley. Like you can't play a medley like that on the radio.
      Get a clean 1st UK abbey road and it speaks for itself. The sound is why it's so popular, the amazing artistic accomplishment of side b medley is why it's so popular, the band at their peak along with some of their best singles is why it's so popular.

  • @carlcrenshaw7845
    @carlcrenshaw7845 Год назад

    Good topic Mazzy, sure to spark debate. I think, like you said, they are all well recorded and one of the more accessible versions of each artist. I'd add that they are also very solid; few weak tracks, if any.

  • @mike-qk1vf
    @mike-qk1vf Год назад

    Hey norman
    I too ask why this album sold big time. I like Sign o the times by prince. But i hope one day to find an 84 pressing of prince purple rain on purple variant lp. Alanis great canadian eh. Yeah her 1st two album on mca were dance. then she moved to maverick and bang jagged little pill came out. great video bro.
    mike
    friend from
    canada eh!!

  • @markschroeder5559
    @markschroeder5559 Год назад

    The industry selected these examples for us.
    Sometimes it's also timing of the release, that time can't necessarily erase.

  • @tomrobinson5776
    @tomrobinson5776 Год назад +2

    I’d take Revolver over Abbey Road. In A Silent Way Over Kind Of Blue. Who Sell Out Over Who’s Next. Houses Of The Holy over IV. I can live peacefully without hearing Rumours and Hotel California and Thriller ever again.

  • @ricardo_miguel13
    @ricardo_miguel13 Год назад +1

    I would choose Nevermind for the 1990s

  • @MaterLacrymarum
    @MaterLacrymarum Год назад +1

    I own 3 from this list of 10: MIles Davis, Led Zep IV and Dark Side. The others...... meh. I'm happy their popularity never swayed me.

  • @Blinkerson55
    @Blinkerson55 Год назад

    The suite is epic. So many hits...and their last album together

  • @Blinkerson55
    @Blinkerson55 Год назад +1

    PF learned to record an album with Meddle. DSOTM is the opus. I love Animals and saw them at Soldier Field 77

  • @llongdong
    @llongdong Год назад +3

    Anybody who questions why Abbey Road is "so big" either A. knows nothing about music; or B. is just trying to get clicks.

  • @nervo6321
    @nervo6321 Год назад

    Love your videos, I think because they all have been played to death it tarnishes their fabness.

  • @histubeness
    @histubeness Год назад +5

    I think you should have made Kind of Blue a two-fer tie, along with Dave Brubeck's Time Out. Both came out in 1959. Either one is considered the most popular jazz album of all time, depending on what source you read. Both are jazz albums that appeal to non-jazz fans.

  • @matm4331
    @matm4331 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks Mazzy...My nominee for part 2 of this video is Meatloaf Bat Outta Hell! If you like it, fine, but 43 Million copies and counting just defies explanation...IMHO of course.

  • @michaeldelorenzo6827
    @michaeldelorenzo6827 Год назад

    Golden slumber blows me a way
    Pual sings in a soft voice then the vibrato of his voice kicks in and I'm blown away

  • @tomgrych
    @tomgrych Год назад

    Good fun as always! :Goodbye Yellow brick rd could make the list...and hundreds of others. More of a "Tumbleweed..." fan myself. Also lean more towards "Jack Johnson", when it comes to Miles. Keep up the great channel!

    • @SuperNevile
      @SuperNevile Год назад

      Yes, also "Saturday Night Fever", over-hyped, over-played and absolutely MASSIVE. Always preferred the Bee Gees "First" over "Sgt Pepper" which came out a couple of months before.

  • @danny1959
    @danny1959 Год назад +71

    The true “Why?” record for Pink Floyd is The Wall.

    • @jameswilson7084
      @jameswilson7084 Год назад +8

      The first half is really good, but then it gets "spotty" for me on the second disc.

    • @houstoncreed
      @houstoncreed Год назад +4

      If they had just cut out all the filler bs. If it had been just one disc, sans filler, it would have been okay.

    • @stuartraybould6433
      @stuartraybould6433 Год назад +22

      Some of us think The Wall is their best album 🤷‍♂️

    • @Stonecutter334
      @Stonecutter334 Год назад +8

      Only if you don’t get it

    • @larrysmith5249
      @larrysmith5249 Год назад +3

      Agreed. I think it could have been a good EP. One of the most depressing albums I own, and the music is very mediocre.

  • @classicrock7890
    @classicrock7890 Год назад

    I think what is significant is the most recent is from 1995 and I never got that one at all. It has been reissued on vinyl.

  • @MAGXX
    @MAGXX Год назад

    I specially agree on 2 albums you mention.
    I bought Hotel California after hearing the single and New in in town. Good singles vack then, but the rest of the album bored me to death.
    And then Rumours, it got so hyped back on the day that I bought it, but only the first and very last track on the album were interesting for me. It sound like 2 schoolgirls with their boyfriends doing their best.
    But, nice video anyway!

  • @Authori_tah
    @Authori_tah Год назад +2

    I agree with Dark Side of the Moon. It’s a great album, but I don’t think it’s their best. I prefer Piper At the Gates of Dawn over Dark Side.

  • @robmills537
    @robmills537 Год назад

    Hi Mazzy my 12 year old grandson has just started listening to Pink Floyd so on that basis it could go on forever.

  • @melprophet1936
    @melprophet1936 Год назад +3

    IMO, many of these are just the easiest albums to like by their respective bands. I think they could be described as accessible albums. Key being accessible doesn't mean best, it just means they take zero or less effort to listen to and like and there's very little to dislike...One could easily argue for example that Pink Floyd Animals is less accessible than DSOTM or that Sign of the Times less accessible than Purple Rain or Revolver less accessible than Abbey Road. That's my theory anyway.

    • @johnryan3913
      @johnryan3913 Год назад

      Far more gravitas, no question.

    • @keithparker1346
      @keithparker1346 Год назад

      I would argue that it's far harder to make an interesting accessible album than some self indulgent nonsense

  • @00stangdriver
    @00stangdriver Год назад

    From your references to SF landmarks (Winterland, Kezar) I’m going to guess you are from The City. I’m from The City and every time you mention those areas it makes me homesick. By the way, Meddle is my favorite Pink Floyd record too. Great videos. Take care! Nick

    • @mazzysmusic
      @mazzysmusic  Год назад

      Born on Stanyan street. Lives in the city over 50 years. Now in Seattle.

    • @00stangdriver
      @00stangdriver Год назад

      @@mazzysmusic very cool. I grew up in the Richmond District and the Sunset. I live in Texas now. Love Seattle. I have relatives there as well. With all the residential housing around Kezar a concert there will piss off a lot of people. I’m going to guess you visited Recycled Records once or twice on Haight.

  • @analoguecity3454
    @analoguecity3454 Год назад

    "thriller" was the first recording I ever bought , It was 1984 I was 14 ! I bought the LP of course! Still love it!

  • @jeffkaufman9875
    @jeffkaufman9875 Год назад

    I LOVED Mazzy’s Hierarchy of Vinyl Needs back when I was a frosh in college!..

  • @timshearn8203
    @timshearn8203 Год назад

    Very much enjoyed that video Mazzy. I'm a huge Beatles fan and I admit Abbey Road is my favourite album from the fab four. Why? Not sure but has been since I was a teenager. Just love it above all their other albums I love!

  • @healthybrand
    @healthybrand Год назад +2

    I still refuse to listen to Rumors and Frampton Comes Alive, which was a result of my gig running a foosball hall in the mid 70's and having to spin those suckers over and over and over again.

  • @clonesteak
    @clonesteak Год назад +1

    LED Zeppelin II is their best album since it was the first Zeppelin album I bought and fell in love with

  • @matthewashman1406
    @matthewashman1406 Год назад +3

    Abby road was the Beatles at their peak as musicians and vocals and is very good production for modern ears. Its a perfect balance of heavy and sweet. What the white album attempted was perfected on abby . As for Led zeppelin 4 its stairway all the way. Its a Perfect melody at the end of the day. The drums are monstrous and plants perfect early voice.

  • @magicmayhem69
    @magicmayhem69 11 месяцев назад

    A lot of these albums were my introduction to the artists, in my young teenage years, when I didn't have a lot of access to music like you do now. They were treasured and listened to a thousand times. They might not be the artists' best albums, but they were MINE, and they will always take me back to a simpler, more freer, easier time, whenever I play them. The music in these albums stopped being songs and have become spells for me, let's call it medicine. We all have our own albums that were just the right album at the right time, which connected with us on a deep level, and I think these albums managed to be those albums for a lot of people, and so more copies kicked about, and so they then became those albums for the next generation. I have been thinking about those albums that have become really special to me over the years, the ones that were my introduction to music or to a genre, the ones that were there when I was grieving, the ones that played when things were great, what would I say were the albums that have soundtracked my life. What would be yours?

  • @steakmediumrare
    @steakmediumrare Год назад

    I totally agree. Especially with "Dark Side of the Moon". Pink Floyd's "The Wall" is a good 11 on that list.

  • @bubble-and-scrape
    @bubble-and-scrape Год назад +1

    Miles Davis Kind of blue, the Velvet underground banana record, Pink Floyd Dark side of the moon and Beach boys Pet sounds, i bought all four several times, trying to give them another chance to have some sympathy, some understanding why these are considered such influential and great classic albums. But still i don’t understand the fuss. I have tried, really, but i continue to sell them simply because i can’t appreciate them…

    • @mazzysmusic
      @mazzysmusic  Год назад

      The VU bombed. Only became a cult record years later

  • @kickndaddy6398
    @kickndaddy6398 Год назад

    I graduated H.S. in 77' and the three albums in Ca. anyway that were played to death were Dark Side of Moon, Boston and Frampton Comes Alive. It was against the law to have a party without these playing over and over.

  • @tonystephens6858
    @tonystephens6858 Год назад +1

    My biggest "why" album is Pet Sounds by the Beach Boys. Of course I live thousands of miles from any beach or ocean so, maybe that has something to do with it.

  • @dansavik7137
    @dansavik7137 Год назад

    Actually I have Dark Side of the Moon, Hotel California and Kind of Blue and Thriller. So your list is to the point indeed :)

  • @brianartillery
    @brianartillery Год назад

    I have a couple of copies of 'Kind Of Blue', simply because the original was mastered at the wrong speed. This was corrected in more modern releases. It took many years, though!