What album are you most thankful for?

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dp39




Location: Hell

  • #1
  • Posted: 11/02/2009 04:56
  • Post subject: What album are you most thankful for?
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With Halloween over and Thanksgiving right around the corner, I was thinking what album am I most thankful for?
So what album are you THANKFUL for? It could be life changing, just sentimental, etc.
Talk to me.
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40footwolf



Gender: Male
Age: 33
United States

  • #2
  • Posted: 11/02/2009 06:03
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I'm most thankful for The Moon and Antarctica by Modest Mouse. I first heard it the night my father died and it's helped me sort out a lot of shit over the years.
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dp39




Location: Hell

  • #3
  • Posted: 11/02/2009 06:40
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40footwolf wrote:
I'm most thankful for The Moon and Antarctica by Modest Mouse. I first heard it the night my father died and it's helped me sort out a lot of shit over the years.


Sorry for your loss my man.
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1234567890




Location: Hollow tree.

  • #4
  • Posted: 11/02/2009 07:06
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Jewels first two albums remind me of My deceased wife.
But gosh i might have to say mellon collie and the infinite sadness, and garbages self titled debut album. when i first heard "stupid girl" and "bullet with butterfly wings" on the radio, i knew something big was going on. I later inherited Nirvana's "from the muddy banks of the wishkah" when my brother passed. Right now im wearing the shirt of that album.
I might have to think a bit more.
But for now ill say Jewel's "Pieces of you".
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Virvo




Location: Belgium

  • #5
  • Posted: 11/02/2009 13:07
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Live in Hyde Park by the Chili Peppers. For the first time in my life I understood what music was really about, the honest, raw feeling, the energy, and those improvisations..
It's the reason I'm on this forum for sure Smile

John Frusciante is way underrated imo, just don't listen to the albums, download some bootlegs and do a freaky dance move Cool .
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badfaith



Gender: Male
Age: 48
Location: Kent
United Kingdom

  • #6
  • Posted: 11/02/2009 14:22
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The Bluetones- Expecting to Fly

It describes almost song for song, a situtation in my life in a way that I can only describe as eerie... almost supernaturaly acurate, and hearing someone else describe it in the way I felt and thought about it made me feel less of an oddball, that I wasn't unique or strange in the way I dealt with it.

In the words of another great band's song, " close your eyes and bow your head...I need a little sympathy"
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40footwolf



Gender: Male
Age: 33
United States

  • #7
  • Posted: 11/03/2009 04:22
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dp39 wrote:
40footwolf wrote:
I'm most thankful for The Moon and Antarctica by Modest Mouse. I first heard it the night my father died and it's helped me sort out a lot of shit over the years.


Sorry for your loss my man.


Aw, fuggedaboutit, it was a long time ago.
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chrisdread



Gender: Male
Location: Orkney
United Kingdom

  • #8
  • Posted: 06/16/2010 12:00
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Never Mind The Bollocks - because it shocked the shit out of all those guitar-noodling, prog-rock nerds and gave the 1970's the kick in the pants it so desperately needed!
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ffudnebbuh
level 8


Gender: Male
Location: Boston
United States

  • #9
  • Posted: 06/16/2010 12:11
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chrisdread wrote:
Never Mind The Bollocks - because it shocked the shit out of all those guitar-noodling, prog-rock nerds and gave the 1970's the kick in the pants it so desperately needed!


I have to agree with chrisdread..that album was the blast of fresh air that rock needed in the 70s...the thing I like best about it is that he sang it like meant every word...that spitting anger really got to me.
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acb27





  • #10
  • Posted: 02/03/2011 01:31
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I think I'm going to say Radiohead's "OK Computer". It's helped me through a lot of stuff.
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