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Ground breaking ...

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Comments

  • Yeti! Yes, ADII were a great fave of mine back in the day, but I'd not call them quite so ground breaking. They were more in the box with Hawkwind. My consciousness-altering came from early Pink Floyd, especially the Crystal Palace concert. And Moody Blues Days of Future Passed.

  • @dwarman All the AD11 stuff is re-released on CD etc. Live In London is still a great listen. Archangels Thunderbird comes out of the speakers like....well like an Archangels Thunderbird.

  • Some good picks so far. A few of mine: Faust, King Crimson, Black Sabbath, AMM, Scott Walker (post-pop stuff), Merzbow, John Coltrane.

  • This started as game changing songs but now it's all bands. I cheated and did albums. Sorry.

  • edited January 2014

    @richardyot said:

    The Velvet Underground & Nico

    Marvin Gaye: What's Goin' On

    The Sex Pistols

    The Smiths

    @Dramatispersona13 said:

    Pink Floyd, The Cure, Smashing Pumpkins, Boards Of Canada, Radiohead, My Bloody Valentine.

    +1: smiths, SP, cure, radiohead, and Pet Sounds LAMF

    Anyone ever listen to "La Natura De Sonorum" by Bernard Parmegiani

    That and Pinkerton are two of my Desert Island Discs.

  • Hit me with your rhythm stick - Ian Dury and the Blockheads

  • I was 14 when i saw Master and Servant by Depeche Mode on the telly!
    And i thought it was the coolest thing i've ever heard, been a fan ever since.

  • David Bowie - The album : The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars

  • @PaulB said:

    Sledgehammer.

    well I laughed

  • @CalCutta said:

    @PaulB said:

    Sledgehammer.

    well I laughed

    Me too

  • @Ian said:

    @CalCutta said:

    @PaulB said:

    Sledgehammer.

    well I laughed

    Me too

    I guess he meant the Peter Gabriel song. Nice song, but I dont think its groundbraking. The complete works of Mozart, well thats groundbraking.

  • Tomorrow Never Knows - The Beatles:

  • @Marcel said:

    @Ian said:

    @CalCutta said:

    @PaulB said:

    Sledgehammer.

    well I laughed

    Me too

    I guess he meant the Peter Gabriel song. Nice song, but I dont think its groundbraking. The complete works of Mozart, well thats groundbraking.

    http://gearpatrol.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/wilton-bash-sledgehammer-gear-patrol.jpg

  • @Marcel said:

    I guess he meant the Peter Gabriel song. Nice song, but I dont think its groundbraking. The complete works of Mozart, well thats groundbraking.

    Generations of labourers have been doing it all wrong. They should have been using recordings of Mozart's Requiem...

  • Prodigy - Smack My Bitch Up...

    Making domestic abuse fashionable... ;-)

  • Or giving heroin to their dog...

  • I'd assume Lou Reed probably put that idea in someone's head, prior to Keith Flint's birth.

  • im not going to waste perfectly good heroin on my dog

  • edited January 2014

    Groups that influenced my gag reflex:

    Miley Cyrus, Justin Bieber, Brittney Spears, Spice Girls, Rebecca Black, etc., etc., etc.,.......

  • @Audiojunkie Bay City Rollers, Showwaddywaddy, Joan Baez

  • That deserves a dedicated thread. Way more candidates than for the ground breakers!

  • It would be an endless thread I fear @funjunkie27, but what does occur to me is that the focus so far is on US/UK bands. What if members from other countries provided some examples of home-grown nasties? Spain and France spring to mind. Stuff the rest of us may not be aware of.

  • That's a good point @thinds. I was stationed in Australia for a couple of years, and it was interesting to observe what was popular there as opposed to what was popular in the US. Not that I'm very keen on what's popular, but I did learn about a few bands that I never would have known about otherwise. I'm sure it's the same in any given country.

    Speaking of that, although I wouldn't categorize them as ground breaking, the Finn brothers are amazing as song writers.

  • Indeed, they are in fact Kiwis but we have adopted them. Remember Split Enz? same brothers. New thread has been started.

  • edited January 2014

    I remember them from the late 70s...and then Crowded House, the Finn Brothers, Liam Finn, Pajama Club. Saw them in Atlanta a few years ago. I know they're Kiwi's, but they're pretty popular in Aussie too. I have their farewell tour DVD from Sydney. Great show and an amazing turnout there!

  • It also raises the point that what is considered ground breaking in one country may not even be a blip on the radar elsewhere.

  • Very true. I'm thinking of that movie I saw - Searching for Sugarman. A musician from the US who never hit it big only to later find he had a huge following in S. Africa. Highly recommended!

  • And to add one from another country..France...I'd say Django Reinhardt needs to be in this list.

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