Led Zeppelin IV
Led ZeppelinBlack Dog, Stairway, AND Levee?! You gotta be kidding me
Black Dog, Stairway, AND Levee?! You gotta be kidding me
As soon as I pressed play on this album, a man materialized in my room. I immediately understood him to be my husband whom I loved very much. He promptly left me and broke my heart. Just the way Joni intended. 10/10
I'm 26 years old, and this is my first time listening to Grateful Dead. This will not be my last. I absolutely love the harmonies.
Standout tracks for me were "oh baby", "how do you sleep?", and "tonite".
An iconic album. "Tuesday's Gon" was my favorite track this listen
Absolutely monumental album for jazz. Dark and experimental
Irish folk music is always amazing. Add a dash of punk elements and this album absolutely rips
The single acoustic guitar and lone voice make this a tender and intimate album. It was beautiful and calming, but nothing really stood out to me in it.
I don't have much to say about this one. I can immediately recognize the importance of this album to the punk and psychobilly genres, but I was left enjoying what I had heard, not loving it.
I legitimately love whenever the singer for a band is low key kind of shite cause it's like they're saying "fuck you, even if I can't hit all the notes this is the music that's in my heart and I'm going to sing it anyway"
As soon as I pressed play on this album, a man materialized in my room. I immediately understood him to be my husband whom I loved very much. He promptly left me and broke my heart. Just the way Joni intended. 10/10
A fun mix of blues, rock 'n roll, and punk. I really enjoyed the explosive wails of the singer.
Black Dog, Stairway, AND Levee?! You gotta be kidding me
This album holds up even if you haven't seen Shaft. Speaking of which, I really ought to see Shaft.
I'm 26 years old, and this is my first time listening to Grateful Dead. This will not be my last. I absolutely love the harmonies.
Look, Nu Metal gets a bad rap (ha, pun unintended). And it deserves most of it, being deeply emblematic of the aggressive edginess of the late 90s and the aughts. But damn if it doesn't still go hard at times. 4 stars for the iconic Freak on a Leash
I loved the song Make the Bus (feat. Of Montreal) because I love Of Montreal. Kevin Barnes' musical thumbprint is so pronounced it was like an Of Montreal song was somehow mixed up in the recording booth and placed there by accident. All the featured songs on this album were recognizably distinct from the beautiful R&B Janelle solo tracks, yet wove in to the album expertly to take the listener on a journey through the afrofuturist story of The ArchAndroid.
Good rock and roll. I don't know if there was really a standout track on here, and largely lacks the idiosyncrasies that made its contemporaries so iconic
Gorgeous jazz piece
The tracks with Sandy Denny singing — such as Genesis Hall, A Sailor's Life, and Dear Landlord — are phenomenal
https://preview.redd.it/bevu28k4g2l91.jpg?auto=webp&s=1a50dffe7311262ad4d3fb1399ab1f5c60bf843d "Oh, solo city over here"
An eclectic masterpiece. I'll die salty that the 50 States project was just a publicity gimmick
Music exclusively for dads
Very efficient to go ahead and describe the themes of the album in the intro track
Chronic? More like Iconic