When Albums Ruled The World

dinners

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I found this a really interesting watch. Certainly killed a few hours of baby pacing.

Very thought provoking in terms of how the LP itself influenced music and the industry as a whole.

Link to info and the programme itself here...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01qhn70

The long-playing record and the albums that graced its grooves changed popular music for ever. For the first time, musicians could escape the confines of the three-minute pop single and express themselves as never before across the expanded artistic canvas of the album. The LP allowed popular music become an art form - from the glorious artwork adorning gatefold sleeves, to the ideas and concepts that bound the songs together, to the unforgettable music itself.

Built on stratospheric sales of albums, these were the years when the music industry exploded to become bigger than Hollywood. From pop to rock, from country to soul, from jazz to punk, all of music embraced what 'the album' could offer. But with the collapse of vinyl sales at the end of the 70s and the arrival of new technologies and formats, the golden era of the album couldn't last forever.

With contributions from Pink Floyd, Roger Taylor, Ray Manzarek, Noel Gallagher, Guy Garvey, Nile Rodgers, Grace Slick, Mike Oldfield, Slash and a host of others, this is the story of When Albums Ruled the World.

 
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I really enjoyed it. I spent most of the programme saying "Oh I had that one!". I even went out and bought Tubular Bells the following day.
 
Great program I was brought up listening to Bowie, Led Zep,Yes and Queen:)
 
Really good programme. I also watched the first two of the Danny Baker discussion things around rock and pop albums.
 
b****r missed it may have to watch it on iplayer, i also saw one of the Danny Baker programmes, the one that had Clarkson on it, which i really enjoyed, they have some great stuff on BBC 4
 
I didn't watch it the second time round.

A couple of years ago, I nearly got into a row with a friend's sixteen year old son about albums ... he genuinely believes every song should be a hit single for it to be a good album! EVERY song A HIT single?
I know Jackson pushed the boundaries with Thriller/Killer/KiddyFiddler or whatever it was called, but there is so much more to an album than hit singles, something that so many kids cannot appreciate!


Yeah, I'm getting old :D
 
I loved the tactile-type experience of buying a Tangerine Dream LP on vinyl, don't get that kind of feeling when downloading MP3 files. I still have all their LPs to this day.
 
I've still got all my vinyl too.

It's funny how I treat my records as something precious yet CDs are just something I'll chuck in the glove box etc.
 
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