Missing from Top 100 of each year in the 70s..
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Missing from Top 100 of each year in the 70s..
1970 (Self-Titled) Jessie Winchester
1971 Trafalgar- Bee Gees *
1972 Obscured By Clouds- Pink Floyd *
1973 Moondog Matinee- The Band
1974 Preservation Act 2- The Kinks
1975 Venus & Mars- Paul McCartney & Wings *
1976 Technical Ecstasy- Black Sabbath *
1977 American Stars & Bars- Neil Young
1978 Powerage- AC/DC *
1979 (Self-Titled)- George Harrison *
Re: Missing from Top 100 of each year in the 70s..
Re: Missing from Top 100 of each year in the 70s..
And yes about McCartney albums, if they can include “Wings At The Speed Of Sound” on 76 list, “London Town” on 78 and “Back To The Egg” on 79.. as good as those albums are, “Venus & Mars” beats ALL of them.
Watch any McCartney solo album ranking on Youtube and you’ll find V&M is among the top 3.
Re: Missing from Top 100 of each year in the 70s..
I put it at No. 38.
Let me know if it should be moved up or down.
Re: Missing from Top 100 of each year in the 70s..
Re: Missing from Top 100 of each year in the 70s..
Damn, I though Sampson's lists were untouchableLew wrote: Tue Jul 22, 2025 5:37 pm I added "Venus & Mars" to the 1975 albums list today.
I put it at No. 38.
Let me know if it should be moved up or down.
Re: Missing from Top 100 of each year in the 70s..
Re: Missing from Top 100 of each year in the 70s..
Re: Missing from Top 100 of each year in the 70s..
I'd much rather see Sabotage in the 1975 list than Technical Ecstasy in the 1976 one.Derek wrote: Tue Jul 22, 2025 4:20 pm Maybe it’s because Ozzy just passed away but i really think “Technical Esctesy” deserves some love, it may not be as great as first 6 albums but it shines!
And yes about McCartney albums, if they can include “Wings At The Speed Of Sound” on 76 list, “London Town” on 78 and “Back To The Egg” on 79.. as good as those albums are, “Venus & Mars” beats ALL of them.
Watch any McCartney solo album ranking on Youtube and you’ll find V&M is among the top 3.
Re: Missing from Top 100 of each year in the 70s..
87. The Bottom Line - O.V. Wright
90. Truth n' Time - Al Green
97. Just Another Band From East L.A. - Los Lobos
None of these albums made the charts, and in Green's case, his previous 10 albums had all charted. Wright also was an artist declining in importance. Los Lobos is at the other end of the spectrum: an artist whose time had not yet come. According to wiki, it's an album of Mexican folk music, so it's questionable as a rock album, unlike their bigger albums that came later. I don't know what part of the criteria these albums are scoring in. Maybe a little bit in musical impact, but I think not enough that they really need to be on the list.
So Alone by Johnny Thunders is another one that could be dropped, though I lean toward thinking that it's slightly more worthy than the others that I named. But how is it ahead of Another Music In A Different Kitchen by The Buzzcocks? The latter went to #15 in the UK; I don't think that the former charted anywhere. Acclaimedmusic has The Buzzcocks' album at #22 on the 1978 list, with Thunders' album unlisted. With The Buzzcocks' album an early example of pop-punk, I would think that if anything, it would also be the more influential of the two albums.
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