Great Albums of 1974
 
            Pick your five favourite LPs of 1974
Veedon Fleece - Van Morrison's best IMHO
Before the Flood - Introduced me to the Band via Dylan
Natty Dread - The Wailers
Pretzel Logic - Steely Dan
Rock and Roll Animal - Lou Reed
Comments
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            Diamond Dogs - David Bowie
 Apostrophe - Frank Zappa
 Rock N Roll Animal - Lou Reed
 David Live - David Bowie 
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            Court and Spark - the ever lovely Joni Mitchell
 Red - King Crimson
 The Heart of Saturday Night - Tom Waits
 Diamond Dogs - Bowie
 Second Helping - Lynyrd Skynyrd0
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            Neil Young - On the Beach.0
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            Diamond Dogs - Bowie
 Kimono My House - Sparks
 Court and Spark - Joni Mitchell
 Sheet Music - 10cc
 Planet Waves - Bob Dylan.
 Sheer Heart Attack - Queen
 Country Life - Roxy Music
 It's only Rock and Roll - The Stones1
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            The Hoople - Mott the Hoople0
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            Grievous angel by Gram Parsons for me is the album of the year.1
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            Lynyrd Skynyrd...... Second Helping1
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 Thissralan said:Lynyrd Skynyrd...... Second Helping 1
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            Pretzel Logic - Steely Dan
 David Live - David Bowie
 461 Ocean Boulevard - Eric Clapton
 Elton John Greatest Hits - Elton John (yes, really, 43 years ago was his first compilation)
 Photographs And Memories - Jim Croce
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            Focus - Hamburger Concerto
 Supertramp - Crime Of The Century
 Gong - You
 Tangerine Dream - Phaedra
 Camel - Mirage
 Genesis - The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
 Richard & Linda Thompson - I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight
 Kraftwerk - Autobahn
 ...and Abba's second LP, Waterloo
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            the first Kiss album
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 Camel.....a very very underrated band.Anna_Kissed said:Focus - Hamburger Concerto 
 Supertramp - Crime Of The Century
 Gong - You
 Tangerine Dream - Phaedra
 Camel - Mirage
 Genesis - The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
 Richard & Linda Thompson - I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight
 Kraftwerk - Autobahn
 ...and Abba's second LP, Waterloo0
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            Humble Pie -Thunder box1
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            Robert Wyatt - Rock Bottom
 Gentle Giant - The Power and the Glory
 Genesis - The Lamb lies Down...
 Gong - You
 For me 1974 was when a lot of creative bands started to run out of a ideas. After that things went shallow and paved the way for simpler music... IMHO2
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 Not their greatest album but has a great version of I Can't Stand the Rain and superb backing vocals by The Blackbirds.Baldybonce said:Humble Pie -Thunder box 0
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            Rory Gallagher: Irish tour 1974:
 Frank Zappa: Live at the Roxy and Elsewhere:
 Steely Dan: Pretzel Logic
 Court and Spark: Joni0
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 Agree, not their greatest but they are the only band of that era I can happily listen to today.DaveMehmet said:
 Not their greatest album but has a great version of I Can't Stand the Rain and superb backing vocals by The Blackbirds.Baldybonce said:Humble Pie -Thunder box 0
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 Sheet music is an incredible album. A very underated bsnd.Six-a-bag-of-nuts said:Diamond Dogs - Bowie 
 Kimono My House - Sparks
 Court and Spark - Joni Mitchell
 Sheet Music - 10cc
 Planet Waves - Bob Dylan.
 Sheer Heart Attack - Queen
 Country Life - Roxy Music
 It's only Rock and Roll - The Stones0
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            Rhinos Winos and Lunatics - Man
 Slow Motion - Man
 Kamikaze - Deke Leonard. RIP 30/1/2017. Wonderful man.0
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            Flat as a pancake. - headeast0
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            Hawkwind - Hall of the Mountain Grill
 Judas Priest - Rocka Rolla
 Sweet - Sweet Fanny Adams
 Bowie - Diamond Dogs
 Not a great year for music. Glam rock was dying and Punk hadn't started. I never got the Frank Zappa or Gong thing and i still don't understand why Tangerine Dream are seen as a heavy band, to me they are in the same league as Yes, just a lot of overlong instrumental drivel.
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 I've got a lot to thank my uncle for when it comes to music. He was about in that era and was a massive rock fan. He saw loads of concerts, including both Charlton gigs and got me into the bands of the time.Baldybonce said:
 Agree, not their greatest but they are the only band of that era I can happily listen to today.DaveMehmet said:
 Not their greatest album but has a great version of I Can't Stand the Rain and superb backing vocals by The Blackbirds.Baldybonce said:Humble Pie -Thunder box 
 I've mentioned this before but one of the best things he did was take me to see Steve Marriott at the Tramshed in 84. I took my copy of performance and got it signed on the night.
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            Planet Waves - Dylan
 Here Come The Warm Jets - Brian Eno
 Diamond Dogs - Bowie
 Kimono my House - Sparks
 Before the Flood - Dylan/The Band
 On The Beach - Neil Young
 New Skin for Old Ceremony - Leonard Cohen
 Fear - John Cale
 David Live - Bowie
 The Heart of Saturday Night - Tom Waits
 Veedon Fleece - Van Morrison
 Autobahn - Kraftwerk
 Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) - Brian Eno
 Walls and Bridges - John Lennon
 Apostrophe - Zappa
 Roxy and Elsewhere - Zappa/Mothers
 Doesn't look a bad year to me. Imagine what we'd think of 2017 if half of these albums came out this year!
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            Court And Spark - Joni Mitchell
 On The Beach - Neil Young
 Prezil Logic - Steely Dan
 Its Only Rock And Roll - Rolling Stones
 Its Too Late To Stop Now - Van Morrison
 Veedon Fleece - Van Morrison
 Before The Flood - Bob Dylan
 461 Ocean Boulevard - Eric Clapton0
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            Obviously, Remember You're A Womble by The Wombles.
 Such a classic among Wombles albums, I'm really surprised no-one else has mentioned it.1
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            Be Bop Deluxe - Axe Victim
 Kraftwerk - Autobahn
 David Shire - Taking of Pelham Soundtrack
 Tomita - Snowflakes are Dancing1
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            Bad Co. - Bad Company
 Feats don't fail me now - Little Feat
 The irish tour 1972 - Rory Gallagher
 On the Border - The Eagles
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 Some classic albums there.Alex Wright said:Bad Co. - Bad Company 
 Feats don't fail me now - Little Feat
 The irish tour 1972 - Rory Gallagher
 On the Border - The Eagles0
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            Ah, those were the days...I haven't done this as a retrospective exercise, simply as a nod to the albums I liked best at the time and loads of evocative memories are associated with that period
 Genesis - The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
 Remember buying it the day it was came out in Boots, Woolwich. Curiously the 'record counter' used to be in the basement next to the home brew kits, strange! Anyway proper mysterious gatesfold sleeve, proper mysterious lyric booklet and proper mysterious music and lyrics - one of my all time favourites. For those unfamiliar or too young the Peter Gabriel led Genesis was a top band.
 David Bowie - David Live
 Got this one after work (as a young apprentice Electrican at the Dorchester Hotel) in the large HMV store in Oxford Street. It used to claim to be the biggest record shop in the world and I was a frequent visitor. Having already seen Bowie I was a devotee and loved this double album. What a cool guy, those cover photos, such style.
 David Bowie - Diamond Dogs
 Again the mysterious enthralling gatefold sleeve and weird cover artwork which made the news at the time. A strange collection of Bowie tracks but some real classic, tracks such as Sweet Thing, We are the Dead, The Candidate and Chant of the ever circling skeletal family which were probably pointers to the future Berlin period. Love the crazy first track which finishes with 'This ain't Rock & Roll, this is genocide'. Playing it now and it still sounds good, well it does to me, at least.
 Lou Reed - Rock 'n Roll Animal
 In truth probably didn't buy until a year or two later but a live rendition of one of the best concerts I have ever seen. Intro/Sweet Jane remains one of my all time favourites and certainly one of the best songs I have ever seen performed live.
 Cockney Rebel - The Physcomodo
 Even back then I didn't think it was a great album and nowhere near as good as their debut album, The Human Menagerie. This was the first time that I'd managed to latch onto a band before they 'broke'. I was with them before 'Judy Teen' was released and there might be a few who can associate with that 'I bought their first single years before...' type of mentality which is definitely sad but undoubtedly rewarding, at least for old blokes.
 Happy days!!
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 It's always been one of my favourite Bowie albums.Sensei said:
 David Bowie - Diamond Dogs
 Again the mysterious enthralling gatefold sleeve and weird cover artwork which made the news at the time. A strange collection of Bowie tracks but some real classic, tracks such as Sweet Thing, We are the Dead, The Candidate and Chant of the ever circling skeletal family which were probably pointers to the future Berlin period. Love the crazy first track which finishes with 'This ain't Rock & Roll, this is genocide'. Playing it now and it still sounds good, well it does to me, at least.
 Even though it represented a transition phase between the rock/pop of Ziggy/Aladdin and the "Plastic Soul" of Young Americans.
 And of course it was a "rescue" job after Orwells widow nixed his request to make an album/show of 1984 with half the songs already done!
 Still he comes up with his own dystopian fantasy world and with songs as strong as SweetThing/Candidate and then he out-riffs Keef on his Stones parody Rebel Rebel.
 The "1984" songs on side 2 (of the original album) are brilliant and I really think if he'd been allowed to finish that project it would have been sensational.
 To top it all, when the 40th (?) anniversary CD was released we got "Alternative Candidate", possibly my favourite "outtake" by anyone ever.
 Cover art brilliant (airbrushed genitalia now restored on CD reissues!)
 Artist Guy Paellart (sp?) was flavour of the month after doing the Stones IORNR cover and collaborating with Nik Cohn on "Rock Dreams".
 Bowie was on a roll throughout the 70's
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