Wednesday, July 8, 2009

1001 Albums (251-265): Elvis Presley - Exile On Main Street

Note: I didn't have a whole lot of interest in doing this the last week or so and I am pretty that is reflected in the outcome. Maybe Snake can pick up my flack. Maybe not, it's not the most thrilling group.

In Red’s Collection

Oh, well.

The Good

Elvis Presley (1956) by Elvis Presley

It’s Elvis with “Blue Suede Shoes” and such. That’s the extent of it.

Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (1969) by Neil Young with Crazy Horse

I don’t really know this album other than “Cinnamon Girl,” but I would wager it’s pretty solid.

Every Picture Tells A Story (1971) by Rod Stewart

Only The Rutles were bigger than Rod. This album knocked out hits like “Maggie May,” “Reason to Believe” and the title track.

Exile On Main St. (1972) by The Rolling Stones

This is Keith Richards baby and it’s an album entrenched in Rock ‘n Roll. Supposedly the band hated the music, which seems like a weird thing to me.

The Middle

Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) (1993) by Wu-Tang Clan

The eight-man clan spawned the careers of rappers like Method Man and Ol’ Dirty Bastard.

Exile in Guyville (1993) by Liz Phair

Phair became a cult hero among women with this album. It was straight in your face kind of stuff, quite a bit different from the pop she reappeared with a decade later.

The Rest


Emergency On Planet Earth (1993) by Jamiroquai

I only know one song from this guy and it isn’t on this album. Eh, I think the Brits were wild about this guy.

Emperor Tomato Ketchup (1996) by Stereolab

Female led band reminiscent of Nico and the Velvet Underground.

Endtroducing (1996) by DJ Shadow

More rap that’s what you need to know here.

En-Tact (1990) by The Shamen

This was a pshychedelic band in the 1980s. I think they missed their opportunity by 10 years.

Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge (1991) by Mudhoney

Seems like I should know Mudhoney, but I don’t know. I guess there good, just never hit it big. I’ve heard that story before.

Below the rest (I just don’t have anything clever to say)

Entertainment (1979) by Gang of Four

Eternally Yous (1978) by The Saints

Everything Must Go (1996) by Manic Street Preachers

Evol (1986) by Sonic Youth

5 comments:

Unknown said...

Well I'll try to pick up some of this slack. I got a good amount to say about a couple of these albums and will have to put in a little more effort on some of these other ones.

I am just shocked you dont have something clever to say for once :)

Mike said...

Who are the Manic Street Preachers?

Unknown said...

The Manic Street Preachers are an English band from Wales. I would assume they are much bigger over there than in the States. Their original guitar player and lyricist disappeared mysteriously in 1995. "Everything Must Go" was their first album after his disappearance and obviously took the band in a new direction. It won Brit Album of the Year in 1997 and is described as Britpop, whatever that means.

Not comparing greatest or anything else, but their career path kind of sounds like a Pink Floyd story. They had this enigmatic lyricist who created dark, introspective songs. He is out of the picture, and the band breaks out into more of a commercial success with a new direction.

I haven't heard any of the songs yet, but I plan too. Need to see what all the hype is about and if a Yank can get the music.

Dan Woessner said...

Just my luck somebody actually reads this the time I am being lazy.
Snake basically cover this band.
I do find it ironic that a group labeled as Britpop tried to make a statement against consumerism by titling this album "Everything Must Go."

Unknown said...

Irony is so ironical sometimes