The 10 Most Influential Albums In Rock Music

The 10 Most Influential Albums In Rock Music

Do you agree?

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Why are Nevermind and London Calling in that list?

this tbqh

>none pet sounds
What gives?

I like Blonde on Blonde better but Highway 61 Revisited arguably has more influence.

good list, but missing a few important ones, eg:

Is this now mu-core?

What did Spirit of Eden influence? I would put Laughing Stock instead if I thought a Talk Talk album belonged on that list, which I don't.

>only focuses on the artier side of rock
Sure is a Sup Forums chart

>Spirit of Eden
>AYE
>Nevermind
>Black Sabbath
"no"

While having some rock aspects I guess it doesn't count as a rock album itself, even though it did influence rock music. Otherwise it'd definitely make the list.

Master of Reality is more influential

I know Rolling Stone would disagree with me but I'd say Revolver is more influential than Sgt Peppers. Sgt Peppers came out when pyschedelia was in full swing, when Revolver came out it was truly unique.

Nope unless you're those mainstream music magazine that don't know shit.

However I'm going to rank them imo of best to worst

Loveless > ITCOTCK > Banana > Sabbath > SOE > Sgt, Peppers > Blonde > London Calling > Jimi >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Pedophilia

highway 61 had more influence than blonde on blonde

also, it could be argued that Rubber Soul had more influence than Sgt. Pepper, since it was one of the first actual rock ALBUMS as opposed to just a collection of songs, if you look at any "top albums of the 60s" you'll notice that 99% of them came out after 1965, that's the year Rubber Soul was released. But Sgt. Pepper, was one of the first big concept albums, so also influential.

How is banana not #1?

Where is DSoTM?

Should be noted that Highway 61 came out before Rubber Soul and was arguably the first rock album in the sense that you're talking about.

Paranoid is more influential than Black Sabbath

yeah, 1965 had Bringing It All Back Home, Highway 61 Revisited, and Rubber Soul. But the releases varied by months, so it's safe to say they all had significant influence.

>tfw roots rock, blues rock, heartland rock, country rock, jam rock are almost always ignored in these discussions

>no Hybrid Theory
nigger?

my bad, updated list

>search up Hybrid Theory
>Paper Cut
>Crawling
>In The End
Really the most influential in the last 16 years

lmao

Much better

No Never Mind the Bollocks.

I don't care if you like it or not, omitting that album from a list of most influential albums is like leaving hydrogen out of a recipe for water.

obviously not

it's a mix of overrated classics, genuinely influential albums, and great albums that aren't influential

also you're missing a ton of the important ones

Slint needs to be here, it simultaneously invented/pioneered post-rock and math rock, influencing everything those genres touch and had influence on various genres from indie rock to metal.

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Sabbath is absurdly influential. Just because you don't like something doesn't mean it isn't influential.

You guys don't realize that it's limited to just 10. You can't fit every seminal album in the rock canon.

Even with just ten Spirit of Eden doesn't deserve to be on that list. I'm sorry but the internet isn't the real world.

Ramones influenced a lot of bands

>London Calling instead of The Stooges s/t
wut

Replace London Calling for Ramones' s/t

Where's the punk love? I would argue Never Mind is more influential than London Calling, and I'd maybe replace Blonde on Blonde with Highway 61. Maybe replace Kid A with MBV too,

>Ramones' s/t
>not The Stooges s/t

Replace Talk Talk with this.

>Maybe replace Kid A with MBV too
Wut
I'll admit to being fairly ignorant to punk history, but weren't The Ramones fairly more popular comapres to The Stooges?

The only albums on that list that are truly influential are ITCOCK and Nevermind the Bollocks. And no Velvet Underground? And no Loveless. And I hate MBV and VU. Are you fucking trolling or what? I'm starting to get angry with all this plebcentricity.

>Loveless
>Loveless
>Fucking loveless

Sorry I meant to say MBV with Kid A or perhaps OK Computer

The Stooges are more influential, and that's what this list is really about.

Ramones lasted longer and were more popular but less influential than Stooges,[spoiler]Dead Kennedys were better than the 2[/spoiler]

Springsteen had a shitload of imitators after Born to Run was released. He's practically the only reason Heartland Rock exists. See , they may not be popular genres on Sup Forums or "hip" but they exist and have/had steady followings.

>Dead Kennedys is better than Stooges

viper yourself dude

I definitely agree with the Dead Kennedys being the apex of punk rock, but they weren't as influential.

Let me guess? Psychocandy?

Didn't say more influential just better

Everyone knows Green Day's Dookie and Uno,Dos,Tre are the best punk albums

Dookie was ok. Nice try to bait with the Uno whatever though.

Yes and yes

Yes. Even thought i wouldn't put as the most influential. It's beyond better and influential than Loveless.

Fair enough. Not my ball of wax but I'm sure you're right.

No, I disagree.

How the hell is In the Aeroplane Over the Sea influential? Acclaimed, yes, but what important albums of the past eighteen years (can't even say twenty yet) has it influenced? Also, I just realized, what the fuck are the Gorillaz doing on there? Fuck it, I guess I'm just gradually realizing that this is bate.

That's fucking pretty damn good.

>see no TMR or Spiderland
Opinion fucking discarded

It has influenced shitty acoustic guitar music of futures to come

>No Doolittle
>No Freak Out!

Can't tell if this is a bait thread, but this would be my list off the top of my head:
Saxophone Colossus - Sonny Rollins
Live at the Apollo - James Brown
Bringing It All Back Home - Bob Dylan
Black Monk Time - Monks
In a Silent Way - Miles Davis
White Light/White Heat - The Velvet Underground
ITCOCK - King Crimson
Irrlicht - Klaus Schulze
Here Come the Warm Jets - Eno
Endtroducing - DJ Shadow

Seriously how has no one added Slint

The Monks were barely known in their day, DJ Shadow, Sonny Rollins, Eno and Brown weren't rock, the Davis album you listed was more influential in jazz than it was in rock.

Literally why Laughing Stock? IT's the watered down Spirit of Eden. Also Post-Rock, crumbus

Pixies instead of Nirvana

yeah didn't realize thread was limited to just rock, my bad

>Fuck it, I guess I'm just gradually realizing that this is bate.
>bate
You are bate

Correct

Because they're objectively influential culturally regardless of whether or not you like them you sod

>watered down spirit of Eden
Wat

Besides like, five shoegaze bands, what the fuck did Loveless influence?

Weezer

Laughing Stock did nothing new, you just say that because it's posted more on Sup Forums like the hypebeast you are.

>no Can
smhtbhfam

Spirit of Eden is one of my favourite albums, but it shouldn't be on there

...

get nirvana off of there you silly twat put the pop group's Y on there or fucking Elvis' self titled you fucking stupid moron

This is closer

>black sabbath
>invented an entire genre that is still thriving to this day
>not influential
ok

Highway 61 revisited had a bigger influence.

>I'm so immature to the point of not recognizing how influental an album is just because I don't like it.

Who has been influenced by london calling?

>he thinks good albums were influential too

loveless should just always be substituted by treasure by cocteau twins since thats what influenced loveless

...

who?

I don't think Sgt Pepper is the most influential Beatles album, I think Revolver probably is. Doolittle/Surfer Rosa is more influential than Nevermind, and Highway 61 Revisited probably more than Blonde on Blonde (though I prefer the latter). Pet Sounds has to be up there, ahead of Talk Talk (though I adore that album).

Also, I'd probably have The Modern Lovers' debut ahead of London Calling, and maybe Psychocandy ahead of Loveless.

The Velvet Underground, influential? They were super underground during their existence lol

VU were the single most influential band of all time desu.

literally created what would become post-punk before punk even existed.

Bathory really needs to be in here if Sabbath is.

in terms of influence I think
>White Album
>Revolver
>Sgt. Peppers
the rest I think are important but I wouldn't consider many of them more influential than the other 3