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Favorite Beatles Album


Gugny

Your Favorite Beatles Album  

94 members have voted

  1. 1. Which Beatles album is your favorite (not necessarily which you think is best) and why?

    • Please Please Me
      0
    • Meet the Beatles
      2
    • Hard Day's Night
      1
    • Beatles For Sale
      1
    • Help!
      3
    • Rubber Soul
      9
    • Revolver
      12
    • Magical Mystery Tour
      3
    • White Album
      15
    • Yellow Submarine
      2
    • Abbey Road
      37
    • Let it Be
      0
    • Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (out of order, but I somehow left it out)
      9


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2 minutes ago, section122 said:

 

When I was younger I had this idea that much like sports you couldn't like 2 bands that were similar.

 

I chose Stones over Beatles and Metallica over GnR as the 2 examples that stick out in my head.  My teenage years though I realized that was dumb and fell head over heels for the Beatles.  Yellow Submarine will always hold a special place due to experiments my friends and I held.  0:)

 

On topic though Abbey Road is my favorite and a go to whenever I need background music at work that will keep me motivated.  That and Neil Young's greatest hits (different thread though)

 

I think Pink Floyd fans would have trouble picking a favorite as well.  Floyd is my favorite band of all time (them and Rage against the Machine - doesn't have to make sense lol) and there are heated debates.  I don't care for Syd Barrett Floyd it is way to "out there".  There are many that don't consider Division Bell a true Floyd album even though for me it is in the discussion of favorite albums by them.  Then there is the incredible run of dark side of the moon, wish you were here, animals, and the wall.  There are GIlmour fans, Waters fans, Syd fans.  I can't even pick my favorite after sitting here and trying to lol.

 

Didnt say I don’t like the Beatles, just that I prefer The Who .

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it has to say something about us to rave on about Animals all these years later....  ?

 

 

 

The Wall came out my first year of high school, didn't dig it like everyone else around me seemed to.

 

 

Edited by row_33
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2 minutes ago, row_33 said:

 

so why can't i get more fans interested in Exile???

 

I was hooked the first time i heard it

Too many levels for the casual listener to take in. A lyric sheet would help for some too. :lol:

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3 minutes ago, row_33 said:

Have you seen them live?

 

 

I'm just too young to have seen the division bell tour but I have caught Gilmour live.  I missed Waters last year and I'm still not over it lol.

 

Just now, Gugny said:

 

Floyd, for me is easy:  Wish You Were Here, with Dark Side as a semi-distant second.

 

I think Water-less Floyd is still Floyd.  But I, personally, don't like one Floyd album that doesn't have Waters on it.

 

Division Bell is such a good album to me.  What do you want from me and Keep Talking are 2 of my favorite songs.  I actually think Animals would be my pick.  If you've never heard it check out Les Claypool and Frog Brigade doing the Animals album.  It is fantastic.

 

 

Just now, joesixpack said:

 

Didnt say I don’t like the Beatles, just that I prefer The Who .

 

Oh I wasn't trying to say that just that when I was younger I didn't realize you could like 2 bands that made similar music.  Stones were my classic rock band.  I had hot rocks 64-71 on vinyl lol.  Might be the only album I ever had on vinyl given to me by my aunt so I could listen to "real music".  God Bless her!  

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24 minutes ago, The Real Buffalo Joe said:

As much as I love The Beatles, this award goes to Buddy Holly. Buddy Holly did it from the start of his career, where the Beatles weren't given that freedom until after stardom. And even then was only because they got to a point where they could fart into a microphone, and sell 100 million records.

 

This may well be true, but I feel we need to differentiate 'band' from a solo artist in this instance.  It's for this same reason I have to eliminate any of the Hendrix lineups from our 'best band' discussions.  But your point is still well taken and has me reading and learning more about Buddy this morning.  

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37 minutes ago, The Real Buffalo Joe said:

As much as I love The Beatles, this award goes to Buddy Holly. Buddy Holly did it from the start of his career, where the Beatles weren't given that freedom until after stardom. And even then was only because they got to a point where they could fart into a microphone, and sell 100 million records.

 

Buddy Holly was popular for like 45 minutes.  You're trolling and it's ruining an otherwise very cool thread.  Please cut the ****.  Thanks.

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20 minutes ago, coloradobillsfan said:

 

This may well be true, but I feel we need to differentiate 'band' from a solo artist in this instance.  It's for this same reason I have to eliminate any of the Hendrix lineups from our 'best band' discussions.  But your point is still well taken and has me reading and learning more about Buddy this morning.  

 

Buddy and Jimi helped secure the Strat as the early death guitar

 

 

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20 minutes ago, coloradobillsfan said:

 

This may well be true, but I feel we need to differentiate 'band' from a solo artist in this instance.  It's for this same reason I have to eliminate any of the Hendrix lineups from our 'best band' discussions.  But your point is still well taken and has me reading and learning more about Buddy this morning.  

 

Oh, I have to respectfully disagree, on this one.  The Jimi Hendrix Experience was stacked with talent.  Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell were two of the best at their respective instruments.

 

I think even Who, Stones and Beatles fans would agree that those bands lacked all-around talent.

 

None of those bands had a top-tier guitarist.  Ringo was a "good," drummer, as was Watts.  Bill Wyman was a very good bassist, but not "one of the best."

 

They made their sounds together, which is what made them such awesome bands.  But the Experience (and the Band of Gypsies, for that matter), were not just Hendrix's backup musicians; they were masters at their crafts.

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10 minutes ago, Gugny said:

 

Oh, I have to respectfully disagree, on this one.  The Jimi Hendrix Experience was stacked with talent.  Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell were two of the best at their respective instruments.

 

I think even Who, Stones and Beatles fans would agree that those bands lacked all-around talent.

 

None of those bands had a top-tier guitarist.  Ringo was a "good," drummer, as was Watts.  Bill Wyman was a very good bassist, but not "one of the best."

 

They made their sounds together, which is what made them such awesome bands.  But the Experience (and the Band of Gypsies, for that matter), were not just Hendrix's backup musicians; they were masters at their crafts.

 

 

as we have stated, 1965 to mid 1970s cannot be replaced, no matter how many autotuners and dance routines are inflicted on us...

 

 

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26 minutes ago, Gugny said:

 

Buddy Holly was popular for like 45 minutes.  You're trolling and it's ruining an otherwise very cool thread.  Please cut the ****.  Thanks.

Not trolling. Look it up. Buddy Holly got into arguments with studio execs on a regular basis. Refused to record songs he didn't want. Produced is own. Refused to play with a studio band. Not tearing down the Beatles for what they did, I'm just saying they weren't the first artists to do things their own way. And they didn't gain that right until after they were already stars. They'd admit to that. No **** to be cut.

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10 minutes ago, row_33 said:

 

 

as we have stated, 1965 to mid 1970s cannot be replaced, no matter how many autotuners and dance routines are inflicted on us...

 

 

Amen, will never be another decade of music like that... ever.

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In Keith Richards' autobiography, he talked about a conversation he had with Paul about the whole Beatles/Stones debate. They essentially agreed that it boiled down to a preference over vocal work vs instrumental work. They agreed that the Stones had better musical chops as far as playing their instrument goes, and the Beatles had much better vocals, as all four of them, even Ringo, the weakest link of the band vocally, could probably still have been a decent lead singer somewhere. 

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On 6/16/2018 at 10:42 AM, Johnny Hammersticks said:

Norwegian Wood and In My Life are two of my favorite Beatles tunes.  I could play Rubber Soul on repeat.  Maybe not the best, but my favorite.

 

^ This.  My favorite Beatles album and probably Top 5 on any given day.  Nearly perfect.

 

While not a radical departure from previous albums, the move in a new direction is noticeable. Up to that point they were all very confident songwriters but perhaps an added dose of maturity (and drugs?) pushed them to break out into new territory.  

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1 hour ago, Gugny said:

 

Oh, I have to respectfully disagree, on this one.  The Jimi Hendrix Experience was stacked with talent.  Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell were two of the best at their respective instruments.

 

I think even Who, Stones and Beatles fans would agree that those bands lacked all-around talent.

 

None of those bands had a top-tier guitarist.  Ringo was a "good," drummer, as was Watts.  Bill Wyman was a very good bassist, but not "one of the best."

 

They made their sounds together, which is what made them such awesome bands.  But the Experience (and the Band of Gypsies, for that matter), were not just Hendrix's backup musicians; they were masters at their crafts.

I don't think there is a weak link in the Who... 3 crack musicians and a singer who played a little harmonica or tambourine. 

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20 minutes ago, coloradobillsfan said:

 

Curious who in The Who would you consider to be the weak link in talent?

 

I wouldn't consider anyone weak.  But I don't think Pete Townsend is an elite guitarist by any stretch.

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1 hour ago, Gugny said:

 

Oh, I have to respectfully disagree, on this one.  The Jimi Hendrix Experience was stacked with talent.  Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell were two of the best at their respective instruments.

 

I think even Who, Stones and Beatles fans would agree that those bands lacked all-around talent.

 

None of those bands had a top-tier guitarist.  Ringo was a "good," drummer, as was Watts.  Bill Wyman was a very good bassist, but not "one of the best."

 

They made their sounds together, which is what made them such awesome bands.  But the Experience (and the Band of Gypsies, for that matter), were not just Hendrix's backup musicians; they were masters at their crafts.

 I will have to give Jimi the nod over Mick Taylor.

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The White Album (especially disc 2) creeps me out because I associate it with Charles Manson.  I was 7 when all that happened.

 

Some years later, I had just bought Physical Graffiti and listened to it non-stop while reading Helter Skelter (the Vincent Bugliosi book about Manson).  Same reaction now.

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6 minutes ago, JÂy RÛßeÒ said:

The White Album (especially disc 2) creeps me out because I associate it with Charles Manson.  I was 7 when all that happened.

 

Some years later, I had just bought Physical Graffiti and listened to it non-stop while reading Helter Skelter (the Vincent Bugliosi book about Manson).  Same reaction now.

The messed up thing is Helter Skelter is just a British term for a playground slide. 

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1 hour ago, Gugny said:

 

Oh, I have to respectfully disagree, on this one.  The Jimi Hendrix Experience was stacked with talent.  Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell were two of the best at their respective instruments.

 

I think even Who, Stones and Beatles fans would agree that those bands lacked all-around talent.

 

None of those bands had a top-tier guitarist.  Ringo was a "good," drummer, as was Watts.  Bill Wyman was a very good bassist, but not "one of the best."

 

They made their sounds together, which is what made them such awesome bands.  But the Experience (and the Band of Gypsies, for that matter), were not just Hendrix's backup musicians; they were masters at their crafts.

 

Agree on the Jimi Hendrix Experience, I could listen to Redding and Mitchell all day.  

 

Not so sure about other comments, though.  The Who were super tight group, no weak links, so I'm not sure who you mean.  Entwistle was a superior bassist ("lead" guitarist of the band), Daltrey one of the greatest lead signers, Keith Moon was a magician and Townsend created some of the most iconic rifts.  

 

Same for the Beatles. I'll agree that none were a Top 5 on their instruments, but all were superior in their own right.  Personally, I get a little worked up when Ringo doesn't get his due. The guy revolutionize the rock drummer, so many innovation and methods that are now taken for granted. A great influence on many greats after him. It's hard to ever envision anyone taking his place. 

 

Rolling Stones - I do agree about the entire band to a point but that may have more to do with their longevity and turnover.  Wyman was good but could have been substituted for any number of bassists.  

 

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2 minutes ago, Max Fischer said:

 

Agree on the Jimi Hendrix Experience, I could listen to Redding and Mitchell all day.  

 

Not so sure about other comments, though.  The Who were super tight group, no weak links, so I'm not sure who you mean.  Entwistle was a superior bassist ("lead" guitarist of the band), Daltrey one of the greatest lead signers, Keith Moon was a magician and Townsend created some of the most iconic rifts.  

 

Same for the Beatles. I'll agree that none were a Top 5 on their instruments, but all were superior in their own right.  Personally, I get a little worked up when Ringo doesn't get his due. The guy revolutionize the rock drummer, so many innovation and methods that are now taken for granted. A great influence on many greats after him. It's hard to ever envision anyone taking his place. 

 

Rolling Stones - I do agree about the entire band to a point but that may have more to do with their longevity and turnover.  Wyman was good but could have been substituted for any number of bassists.  

 

 

I think Ringo was a good drummer, but he wasn't anything close to a Keith Moon.  I do agree that Ringo was influential and I could never seem him being replaced, either.  I actually think McCartney is a PHENOMENAL bassist, as was Entwistle.

 

And if we're keeping this to Stones, Beatles and Who (for this discussion), I think lead vocals for all three bands were incredible.

 

I think the reason the discussion has gone into this direction was the comment about Hendrix being a "solo" artist.  It's clear we're in agreement with regard to the validity and significance of the Experience.

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1 hour ago, Gugny said:

I wouldn't consider anyone weak.  But I don't think Pete Townsend is an elite guitarist by any stretch.

 

Wow you have a serious standard to live up to!  Even putting the guitar to the side, he penned the lyrics to pretty much all their songs which puts him into elite songwriter category in my book.  He wrote a massive amount of hits for The Who.  

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1 minute ago, coloradobillsfan said:

 

Wow you have a serious standard to live up to!  Even putting the guitar to the side, he penned the lyrics to pretty much all their songs which puts him into elite songwriter category in my book.  He wrote a massive amount of hits for The Who.  

 

Oh, I'm not talking about songwriting.  Not at all.

 

I'm strictly talking about guitar.  If given 10 minutes, I think I could list 100 better guitarists.  That doesn't mean they're bigger rock stars or had more influence.

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Hypothetical. If back in 69, when John left the band, or Paul first (I've heard conflicting stories about who quit first.) If when that person left, and the rest of the band kept trucking with a replacement, would we still have a band called The Beatles today? What direction would it have gone in? Would the group have eventually gotten back together? I know it's a whole bunch of "What ifs" but I think about it often. 

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1 minute ago, The Real Buffalo Joe said:

Hypothetical. If back in 69, when John left the band, or Paul first (I've heard conflicting stories about who quit first.) If when that person left, and the rest of the band kept trucking with a replacement, would we still have a band called The Beatles today? What direction would it have gone in? Would the group have eventually gotten back together? I know it's a whole bunch of "What ifs" but I think about it often. 

 

This was Jeff Lynne's vision when he formed ELO.  ELO was his "what if."

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Just now, Gugny said:

 

Oh, I'm not talking about songwriting.  Not at all.

 

4 minutes ago, Gugny said:

I think the reason the discussion has gone into this direction was the comment about Hendrix being a "solo" artist.  It's clear we're in agreement with regard to the validity and significance of the Experience.

 

You mentioned a 'lack of overall talent' in the band, I believe talent includes songwriting - that's the only reason I got on the defensive.  

 

Whether or not the Experience counts in the ever-subjective 'best rock band' category is probably a discussion in itself

 

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13 minutes ago, coloradobillsfan said:

 

You mentioned a 'lack of overall talent' in the band, I believe talent includes songwriting - that's the only reason I got on the defensive.  

 

Whether or not the Experience counts in the ever-subjective 'best rock band' category is probably a discussion in itself

 

 

I thought the context of the discussion was mastery of their respective instruments, so it could have easily been my misunderstanding.  Either way, no big deal.

 

And I wouldn't put The Jimi Hendrix Experience in the "best rock band" discussion.  Honestly, it's my opinion that The Stones, The Who and the Beatles are the only three that would qualify.

 

But if we do want to talk "overall talent," which would include songwriting, I'd have to give the edge to the Beatles over the Who and the Stones.  The Beatles had three solid songwriters, who were also each solid vocalists.

 

An earlier post quoted Keith Richards saying that McCartney conceded that the Stones had more talent than the Beatles.  I'd like to know if McCartney corroborated that.

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19 minutes ago, Gugny said:

 

Oh, I'm not talking about songwriting.  Not at all.

 

I'm strictly talking about guitar.  If given 10 minutes, I think I could list 100 better guitarists.  That doesn't mean they're bigger rock stars or had more influence.

Better doesn't exactly mean better imo. Its the style of the band... I mean, Robert Fripp is a great guitar player but he wouldn't have worked well in the Who vision  just like Townsend wouldn't have worked well in the King Crimson vision.

 

I personally think Frank Zappa is the greatest rock guitarist ever but everyone has theirs I suppose.

 

Back in the 60's I would put Mick Avery Way ahead of Ringo as far as drumming is concerned with the British invasion bands. Baker too. But, its all about what was needed for a particular style and sound.

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15 minutes ago, T&C said:

Better doesn't exactly mean better imo. Its the style of the band... I mean, Robert Fripp is a great guitar player but he wouldn't have worked well in the Who vision  just like Townsend wouldn't have worked well in the King Crimson vision.

 

I personally think Frank Zappa is the greatest rock guitarist ever but everyone has theirs I suppose.

 

Back in the 60's I would put Mick Avery Way ahead of Ringo as far as drumming is concerned with the British invasion bands. Baker too. But, its all about what was needed for a particular style and sound.

 

Excellent points and totally agreed.

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16 minutes ago, Gugny said:

An earlier post quoted Keith Richards saying that McCartney conceded that the Stones had more talent than the Beatles.  I'd like to know if McCartney corroborated that.

He conceded that The Stones were better musicians, and Keith conceded that The Beatles were better vocalists. Beatles blow the Stones out of the water when it comes to songwriting. I'm more of a Stones fan myself, but anybody who thinks otherwise is fooling themselves. 

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1 minute ago, The Real Buffalo Joe said:

He conceded that The Stones were better musicians, and Keith conceded that The Beatles were better vocalists. Beatles blow the Stones out of the water when it comes to songwriting. I'm more of a Stones fan myself, but anybody who thinks otherwise is fooling themselves. 

 

That's just it.  It's laughable, to me, to say the Stones were better musicians than the Beatles; and more laughable that McCartney would say it.  I believe that it was in the book.  I just can't believe it's true.

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The combination of musical talent and songwriting is why Rush is the greatest rock band ever.  Geddy Lee #1 bassist.  Neil Peart #1 drummer.  Alex Lifeson probably top 10 but underrated.

Edited by JÂy RÛßeÒ
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Watts is much more talented than Ringo, especially his time with The Beatles. He got much better after the breakup. You can't really hear it in Stones songs, because their all so simple, but if you look up some of his solo stuff he does a lot of jazz and you can hear it. 

I'll give you that McCartney is a better bassist than Wymann. 

 

Brian Jones is better than George, but I don't think either of his replacements are. 


Keith is in a league of his own.

 

All four Beatles are better vocalists than Mick.

Lennon/McCartney is lightyears ahead of Jagger/Richards in songwriting.

 

Stones had a better stage show, but they also had the advantage of a singer that wasn't tied to an instrument at a time where cordless mics were a thing. Although Paul solo shows seem to give them a run for their money, at least from what I've seen on TV/DVDs. 

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23 minutes ago, JÂy RÛßeÒ said:

The combination of musical talent and songwriting is why Rush is the greatest rock band ever.  Geddy Lee #1 bassist.  Neil Peart #1 drummer.  Alex Lifeson probably top 10 but underrated.


Good band for sure, my first concert ever... at the Aud, but no to everything you said about them.

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25 minutes ago, JÂy RÛßeÒ said:

The combination of musical talent and songwriting is why Rush is the greatest rock band ever.  Geddy Lee #1 bassist.  Neil Peart #1 drummer.  Alex Lifeson probably top 10 but underrated.

 

On a serious note, pound-for-pound, they are definitely one of the most talented rock bands, ever.

 

And I totally agree that Lifeson is underrated. 

 

Rush is easily one of my favorite bands of all time.  Taking my son to the R40 show turned out to be one of the best concert decisions I've ever made.

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Big difference between studio and live. Live, Jimi didn’t lose a thing with the Band of Gypsys over the  Experience. All his bands needed was Jimi and other competent players. Live, Bill Wyman made the Stones swing. His absence was and is most glaring from the bland Vegas Stones lineup. Live, Entwistle and Moon were just monsters. It’s not about being technically proficient,  not at all.

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