Greatest 4 Album Run in Rock History?
Comments
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AC/DC: 'Let There Be Rock' (1977), 'Powerage' (1978), 'Highway to Hell' (1979), 'Back in Black' (1980)
If Like a Rolling Stone is considered rock...
I don't know, that's kind of my point. I feel like it needs to be more hard driving. Like a Rolling Stone was pop/oldies imo, just like most of the 60s besides late 60s Stones, Zep, MAYBE Beatles, The Birds, The Who, CCR, Jimi, etc. I don't actually feel strongly about any of this, that's just my stance on rock. I don't feel like rock truly took hold until the '70s.
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AC/DC: 'Let There Be Rock' (1977), 'Powerage' (1978), 'Highway to Hell' (1979), 'Back in Black' (1980)
Clearly this is all just me being a bitch about the definition of rock. Don't mind me, I'm just out here trying to have a good time.
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AC/DC: 'Let There Be Rock' (1977), 'Powerage' (1978), 'Highway to Hell' (1979), 'Back in Black' (1980)
What is the definition of blues? (Utilization of the blues scale, imo. Minor or major. This one seems clear.)
What is the definition of oldies? (3 or 4 chord progressions? Typically using I IV V VI chords? The II chord is hot too. I don't know.)
What is the definition of pop? (The same?)
What is the definition of rock? (Plugged in bass and guitar? Driving rhythms?)
Major scales? Minor scales? Pentatonic scales? Mixolydian modes?
I don't know the answers. I only have guesses and my geetar.
And that's all I need too. I don't need one other thing.
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The Rolling Stones: 'Beggars Banquet' (1968), 'Let It Bleed' (1969), 'Sticky Fingers' (1971), 'Exile on Main St.' (1972)
I did a pretty deep dive into The Cream last night, and IMO they have 3 (out of four), but "Goodbye" just doesn't cut it, even though it has Badge, which IFL…(shout out to "L'Angelo Misterioso")
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The Rolling Stones: 'Beggars Banquet' (1968), 'Let It Bleed' (1969), 'Sticky Fingers' (1971), 'Exile on Main St.' (1972)
We're overthinking it here, bud. Just go with the flow.
I too have guitars that I play (poorly).
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Neil Young: 'Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere' (1969), 'After the Gold Rush' (1970), 'Harvest' (1972), 'On the Beach' (1974)
Kurt Cobain thought Neil was rock
Godfather of Grunge
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AC/DC: 'Let There Be Rock' (1977), 'Powerage' (1978), 'Highway to Hell' (1979), 'Back in Black' (1980)
Yeah but Kurt was an Aberdeen lad. Hard to trust em. Granny was an innocent Hoquiam gal, then Gramps, son of a loggerman, rolls through Aberdeen HS in his one of ten homes before he was 18, meets this Hoquiam bitch, then he leaves for Olympia, graduates Olympia HS playing LG at like 160 (this is my mom's side, I'm like 380 cuz dad ;-)), then he goes off to war as a pharmacist in the Navy, stationed at Pearl Harbor. His rotation ends 2 weeks before the attack, he comes back home, reunites with that Hoquiam slut, Granny, somehow, one thing led to another, and here I am.
And then I spent my first 10 years of life in split custody, halftime in Leschi (good name for a Nirvana cover band?) right down the street from his pad. I went by Kurt and Courtney's garbage can on foot or as a passenger daily. And then he went and shot hisself. I was only like seven at the time and I've never really been a big nirvana guy. I like them more now than I did in high school. I was an outcast for my nirvana meh attitude.
What were we talking about?
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AC/DC: 'Let There Be Rock' (1977), 'Powerage' (1978), 'Highway to Hell' (1979), 'Back in Black' (1980)
Gramps also played bagpipes for the Keith Highlanders Pipe Band for 40+ years until his death. It's only a matter of time before I take up his pipes.
RIP Gramps.
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AC/DC: 'Let There Be Rock' (1977), 'Powerage' (1978), 'Highway to Hell' (1979), 'Back in Black' (1980)
Bagpipes are not rock-'n'-roll music.
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The Rolling Stones: 'Beggars Banquet' (1968), 'Let It Bleed' (1969), 'Sticky Fingers' (1971), 'Exile on Main St.' (1972)
Apparently you don’t listen to AC DC much.



