... will be the last one ever listened to? As in all 99 other albums have already been listened to for the last time and most certainly never will grace a persons ears ever again. As in forever and ever.
My guess will be 'Back In Black' because "Hey it's AC/DC!" and it seems like it could last the marathon ahead ๐ They have mass appeal and it's the sort of amazing (yet entirely pointless when the time arrives) achievement AC/DC are capable of.
Also there is inevitably going to be a first album from the top 100 to never be listened to ever again. So bonus points if you want to guess that one. ๐คฃ
Have fun... ๐
JasonconfusedIf We Make It We Can All Sit Back and LaughProfile Washington
Only a few artists of the last 60 years will still be listened to in, say 300 years (how many 18th Century composers can you name?). The Beatles, Pink Floyd. Radiohead. Maybe Arcade Fire. The Beatles have proven that their music appeals to multiple generations. My money would be on Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band for the Last Album Ever Listened To. It's importance to music history means that music professors will keep going back to it in music history classes.
By the way, the first time I heard I Want You (She's So Heavy), from Abbey Road, was in a Music History class. They had a chapter section on the Beatles, and that was the song the textbook analyzed to prove the Beatles were geniuses. That was 1986 or so, before Radiohead.
By the way, the first time I heard I Want You (She's So Heavy), from Abbey Road, was in a Music History class. They had a chapter section on the Beatles, and that was the song the textbook analyzed to prove the Beatles were geniuses. .
How did they go about proving that? ๐
NickVolosSegnahc Reve4Profile Land of the Argonauts, Centaurs and other such creatures
"According to the New Musical Express, The Stone Roses' relationship with their future producer John Leckie was settled when they all agreed that Forever Changes was the "best record ever".
Forever Changes failed to achieve commercial success when it was first released in 1967, but it has since become recognized as one of the finest albums to come out of the Summer of Love, ranking 40th on Rolling Stone magazine's 2003 list of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time,[4] being inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2008 as well as being added to the National Recording Registry in May 2012.
The 1979 edition of The Rolling Stone Record Guide gave the album a rating of five stars (out of five). It also received five stars in the 1983 edition of the guide and in the fourth edition that was published in 2004.
In a special issue of Mojo magazine, Forever Changes was ranked the second greatest psychedelic album of all time. In the January 1996 issue, Mojo readers selected Forever Changes as #11 of the "100 Greatest Albums Ever Made."[12]
Forever Changes was praised by a group of Members of the British Parliament in 2002 as being one of the greatest albums of all time.[13]
Rolling Stone magazine ranked the album 40th in its list of the 500 greatest albums of all time in the December 11, 2003 issue.
In 2003, NME ranked the album #6 on their list of greatest albums of all time. In 1998, Q magazine readers voted Forever Changes the 82nd greatest album of all time.
In a 2005 survey held by British television's Channel 4, the album was ranked 83rd in the 100 greatest albums of all time.[14]
The album was included in the 2005 book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die." (wikipedia) _________________ "And canโt you see youโre in on it?
You were born though you need not
And is that not some cause
For worship, being born among these trees?"
Using a bunch of complicated musical terms that I never really understood to begin with. Things like "syncopation" and "allocution" or something. C'mon it was 25 years ago.
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