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Albums you've listened to the most


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What albums have you listened to all the way through, beginning to end without skipping any songs the most? Greatest Hits and Live Albums do count. 

 

In no particular order:

 

  •  Back in Black: AC/DC
  • Abbey Road: The Beatles
  • Live Bullet: Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band
  • Led Zeppelin II
  • Dark Side of the Moon: Pink Floyd
  • Tres Hombres: ZZ Top
  •  Beatles 1: The Beatles (My introduction to the Beatles)
  • Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band: The Beatles
  • Hot Rocks: The Rolling Stones
  • Highway to Hell: AC/DC
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• J.S. Bach - Goldberg Variations: Glenn Gould

•   J.S. Bach - Cello Suites: Yo Yo Ma

•. W.A. Mozart - Piano Sonatas (Complete):  Malcolm Bilson

•. F. Chopin - Piano Etudes (Complete): Vladimir Ashkenazy

•. F. Chopin - Ballades: Vladimir Ashkenazy

•  Sticky Fingers: The Rolling Stones

•. Some Girls: The Rolling Stones

•. Beggar’s Banquet : The Rolling Stones

•. Live at The Sands: Frank Sinatra

•. Ellington at Newport: Duke Ellington

•  Abbott Road: The Beatles

.

 

Edited by The Senator
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I buy and listen to vinyl, there is not skipping of songs really.  So my list is pretty long.  Some of my favorite beginning to end ones are:

 

Beatles - Abbey Road

Led Zeppelin - II, III, IV

The Allman Bros Band - Self-Titled

Pearl Jam - 10, Vs.

Van Morrison - Moondance

Otis Redding - Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul

Blind Melon - Self-Titled

Mad Season - Live at the Moore

Smashing Pumpkins - Siamese Dream

Oasis - What's the Story (Morning Glory)

Hum - Self-Titled

Weezer - Blue Album

Bob Dylan - The Freewheelin Bob Dylan

Coltrane - A Love Supreme

Miles Davis - Kind of Blue

Charles Mingus - Mingus Ah Hum

Jimmy Smith - Root Down

John Mayall Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton

Edited by Mark80
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23 minutes ago, The Senator said:

 

• J.S. Bach - Goldberg Variations: Glenn Gould

•   J.S. Bach - Cello Suites: Yo Yo Ma

•. W.A. Mozart - Piano Sonatas (Complete):  Malcolm Bilson

•. F. Chopin - Piano Etudes (Complete): Vladimir Ashkenazy

•. F. Chopin - Ballades: Vladimir Ashkenazy

•  Sticky Fingers: The Rolling Stones

•. Some Girls: The Rolling Stones

•. Beggar’s Banquet : The Rolling Stones

•. Live at The Sands: Frank Sinatra

•. Ellington at Newport: Duke Ellington

•  Abbott Road: The Beatles

.

 

Abbot Road, nice touch.

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Since Live albums count.. Random order

Chicago IV

ELP   Welcome Back My Friends to the Show that Never Ends

Yes.. Yessongs

Woodstock

The Guess Who ,  Live at the Paramount

Roy Orbison , The Last Concert

Peter Gabriel    Secret World

CSNY      4 Way Street 

Genesis .  Selling England By the Pound

Led Zeppelin II

Renaissance ..  Live At Carnegie Hall.

David Bowie... Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars

 

 

 

Edited by LewPort71
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In no order whatsoever:

 

Beatles - White Album, Abbey Road, Let it Be, Revolver and Rubber Soul

Neil Young - After the Gold Rush

Zep - I, II, III, IV, Houses, Physical

Jane's Addiction - Nothing's Shocking, Ritual

White Stripes - White Blood Stells, De Stijl, The White Stripes

ACDC - For Those About to Rock, Back in Black

Journey - Infinity, Evolution, Escape

Hendrix - Are You Experienced, Electric Ladyland, Axis

Pink Floyd - Dark Side, The Wall, Wish You Were Here

ELO - New World Record

Amy Winehouse - Back to Black

Police - Outlandos, Regatta, Zenyatta, Ghost

RCHP - BSSM

Rush - 2112, Fly By Night

Van Halen - I, II, Fair Warning, Women and Children, Diver Down, 1984, 5150, OU812

 

 

 

 

Edited by Gugny
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29 minutes ago, Rico said:

Never Mind The Bollocks.

 

Back in my vinyl days (pre-cd, pre-streaming), we would usually only play 1 side of an LP at a time.

 

Excellent.  Bass was my son's first instrument.  Never Mind the Bollocks was one of the first albums he jammed to.  Brought me down memory lane.

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Elton John - Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

Morrissey - Viva Hate

Marshall Crenshaw - Field day

Easy Rider Soundtrack

Vivaldi - 4 Seasons

Pat Metheny - As falls Wichita, So Falls Wichita Falls

Yes - Close To The Edge

 

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There was a Who album a guy down the hall would listen to when he would lock up with a girl named Henriette for days at a time. She had an amazing body, and a face that would frighten small children. She drove a taxi when not in school or boinking my hall mate. The album just played over and over and....

 

I thought I turned the station every time The Who came on because we attended the concert where those young people died, but maybe it’s because it wore me out trying to drown out the sounds of hot body/ugly faced Henriette? 

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1 hour ago, Augie said:

There was a Who album a guy down the hall would listen to when he would lock up with a girl named Henriette for days at a time. She had an amazing body, and a face that would frighten small children. She drove a taxi when not in school or boinking my hall mate. The album just played over and over and....

 

I thought I turned the station every time The Who came on because we attended the concert where those young people died, but maybe it’s because it wore me out trying to drown out the sounds of hot body/ugly faced Henriette? 

 

My uncle told me he went camping with some friends in the mid 70s. Middle of the woods. No radio. No records. Just one guy who happened to have a copy of “Who’s Next” on 8 Track. So they just played it all weekend long. Hasn’t listened to a song from that album voluntarily since. 

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6 hours ago, The Real Buffalo Joe said:

 

My uncle told me he went camping with some friends in the mid 70s. Middle of the woods. No radio. No records. Just one guy who happened to have a copy of “Who’s Next” on 8 Track. So they just played it all weekend long. Hasn’t listened to a song from that album voluntarily since. 

 

Is your uncle's name Bobby Trippe?

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1 hour ago, bdutton said:

The Cure - Disintegration 

The Cure - Wish

Led Zeppelin - OK

Led Zeppelin - Presence

Led Zeppelin - Houses of the Holy

Pink Floyd - Dark side of the moon

 

 

What is Zep OK?

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As a record collector, this topic is of interest to me. 

I have a clarification question; is this an "album" that was on tape, CD, or digital, or an actual piece of vinyl?

28 minutes ago, T&C said:

The entire catalog of The Mothers of Invention/The Mothers on the Verve and Bizarre labels.

 

My record store guy LOVES Zappa.......that stuff is SO weird. Technically brilliant, but way out in space.

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Pink Floyd - Dark side of the moon

Pink Floyd - Wish you were here

CSN&Y - Deja Vu

Grateful Dead - Dead Set

Grateful Dead - Europe 72

Lynyrd Skynyrd - One more from the road

Rolling Stones - Hot Rocks

The Doors - The Doors

Bob Marley and the Wailers - Legend

Yes - Yessongs

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2 hours ago, Seasons1992 said:

As a record collector, this topic is of interest to me. 

I have a clarification question; is this an "album" that was on tape, CD, or digital, or an actual piece of vinyl?

 

My record store guy LOVES Zappa.......that stuff is SO weird. Technically brilliant, but way out in space.

I'm going with vinyl... there was/is a thread on vinyl from a year or two ago. I've been a collector/dealer for 40 years so making a list is kind of pointless for me anyways, probably you too.

 

Zappa isn't that weird, a lot of people don't understand WHY he wrote what he did... he did write differently than anyone else though. This is for sure my one most played album ever... a sarcastic funny lampoon on hippies, parenthood, drugs, the Beatles, etc. along with some childhood memories. From 1968:

 

 

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1 hour ago, T&C said:

I'm going with vinyl... there was/is a thread on vinyl from a year or two ago. I've been a collector/dealer for 40 years so making a list is kind of pointless for me anyways, probably you too.

 

Zappa isn't that weird, a lot of people don't understand WHY he wrote what he did... he did write differently than anyone else though. This is for sure my one most played album ever... a sarcastic funny lampoon on hippies, parenthood, drugs, the Beatles, etc. along with some childhood memories. From 1968:

 

 

 

 

Thanks for clarifying. First off, I have seen that album.........and asked my guy all about it. Fascinating stuff. 

 

As for my vinyl that I've listened to the most? I've only had them for nearly two years now, so many of your albums already listed would count, but not for vinyl.

 

I'd say:

 

Pink Floyd, DSOTM

Elton John, Madman Across the Water

Rolling Stones, Exile on Main Street

Black Crowes, Southern Harmony

Buckingham-Nicks (self titled, the album they recorded in Sound City when Mic Fleetwood discovered them)

David Bowie, Ziggy Stardust

Neil Young, Hitchhiker

Santana, Abraxas

Grateful Dead, Europe '72

Supertramp, Breakfast in America (honestly, the best-sounding album out of them all that I own.)

 

There are SO many more that I've heard WAY more, but not on vinyl. 

 

Audio Technica AT-LP120 turntable, with an AT VM540ML cartridge.

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