Desert Island Music Album Draft 2013 - draft complete

Should we extend the draft to 25 picks?


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With the final selection of the 5th round my next pick is:

Madonna Like a Virgin-1984

600full-like-a-virgin-cover.jpg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Like_a_Virgin

I was 10 years old when this album came out. I thought Madonna was so cool! I loved every song on the album. I would dance around lip synching pretending I was making a music video. This album brings back so many fond childhood memories. My island would not be complete without it.
 
With the first selection of the 6th round my pick is:


Elton John- Goodbye Yellow Brick Road-1973


Elton-John-Goodbye-Yellow-Brick-Road.jpg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodbye_Yellow_Brick_Road

Elton John was and still is a musical genius! My island would not be complete without at least one Elton John Album. This album includes some of his greatest songs like Bennie and the Jets, Saturday Night's alright for fighting and Candle in the Wind. Definitely a must have on My island!
 
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VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
With the first selection of the 6th round my pick is:


Elton John- Goodbye Yellow Brick Road-1973


View attachment 4458

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodbye_Yellow_Brick_Road

Elton John was and still is a musical genius! My island would not be complete without at least one Elton John Album. This album includes some of his greatest songs like Bennie and the Jets, Saturday Night's alright for fighting and Candle in the Wind. Definitely a must have on My island!
You're grounded.
 
Well, I didn't intend it to work out this way, but since a couple of my upcoming picks were cruelly stolen from me, I am for the second time in as many picks selecting an album that involves a collaboration with Danger Mouse. My sixth pick is:


Little Broken Hearts -- Norah Jones (2012) http://www.allmusic.com/album/little-broken-hearts-mw0002305938
This is an album I have listened to a ton since I bought it last year. It's not perfect on a song-by-song basis; unlike the other albums I've picked so far, I didn't have to spend too much time trying to figure out which tracks I was going to link in this write up, for instance. The stand outs stand out by a lot. But it's the kind of album that I just like spending time with. I've enjoyed Jones' vocals since her debut album, and have enjoyed, and especially like the almost playful quality she adopts with the new sound.


Other videos:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HA0pVibwOIM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9s0DCQJq4I

"After the Fall"
 
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Capt. Factorial

ceterum censeo delendum esse Argentum
Staff member
Neutral Milk Hotel - In The Aeroplane Over The Sea (1998) (wiki link)



Neutral Milk Hotel (which is basically Jeff Mangum) does not have a particularly impressive catalog, but In The Aeroplane Over The Sea is widely considered one of the best albums of the '90s in the alternative music scene. It's a tough one to explain - it's loud, it's brash, it's got bizarre arrangements complete with horns and accordions and musical saws (but apparently not a theremin), and Mangum's voice is harsh and pained, but at the same time it's brutally melodic, it's evocative, it's lyrically devastating, and it's charged with more raw emotion than you'd imagine could be packed into 40 minutes. Joy, sorrow, loss, pain, acceptance, regret, it's all in there. The lyrics are poetic but obscure, often chosen more for euphony than anything else, so it's tough to make a coherent whole out of the sketches contained in each verse but it's clear that some, if not the entirety of the album is inspired by the diary of Anne Frank:

I know they buried her body with others,
Her sister and mother and five-hundred families.
And will she remember me fifty years later?
I wished I could save her in some sort of time machine.
Know all your enemies. We know who our enemies are.
At any rate, this album is one of my favorite discoveries ever - I've listened to it at least 50 times now and it never fails to amaze me. And I know the "hipsters" are onto this one, so I had to grab it now lest it get away.

Here's the closer on the album - Two-Headed Boy, Part II. The whole album is available on YouTube if it piques your interest.
 
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All right, so this is the last time I'll whine about or even mention losing OK Computer. Fortunately for me Radiohead isn't exactly a one-hit wonder and this is a rather shiny silver medal.



The Bends - Radiohead (1995)

The Bends is when Radiohead evolved into the monumental band of depth and substance they're celebrated as today. They'd been pushed to the brink of collapse by pressure to follow the moderate success of a grunge-ish, "Nirvana-lite" angst-ballad single for the MTV circuit. But instead of repeating the formula or bowing out, they became defiant and began to forge a new identity.

The Bends certainly isn't the most uplifting, but it's fairly gorgeous in its somberness, the theme is more far-reaching and mature, and stays consistent working as a cohesive whole. It also produced respectable singles in My Iron Lung, Just, High and Dry and my personal favorite Street Spirit (Fade Out).


Admittedly, this is a bit like going to prom with my high school crush's sister. But this album is a jewel in its own right and it's fun to fall in love again.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bends
 
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The Beatles - Magical Mystery Tour (1967) (wiki link)
Good pick, I am the walrus is my favourite Beatles song and for a brief moment I entertained the thought of picking this first overall.
In The Aeroplane over the Sea is another good one, altought I never really loved it like I was supposed to.

With my sixth pick I choose:

Syd Barrett - The Madcap Laughs (1970)

wiki



A psychedelic voyage into Barret's by then severly damaged mind. I love its dozed-off feel (thank you, Mandrax) and its stark, almost amateurish sound. This record was slightly out of time in 1970, as its commercial appeal relied mostly on its Beatles-ish psych-pop tunes (to be fair though, it was recorded in '68 and '69 but went through a troubled releasing process) while mainstream rock was evolving into something more complex, and not entirely up to my tastes. Syd Barrett's genius was fully understood by the music community only in the last decade, as a good number of very good bands and songwriters (I may or may not pick a couple of them in the later rounds) discovered and got influenced by his off-kilter songwriting approach.

 
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Mr. S£im Citrus

Doryphore of KingsFans.com
Staff member
Well, now that we're here, time to change the style a little bit. Astute observers will note that my top five looks remarkably similar to my picks in the original Album draft and, now that I... mostly... got the five I wanted ( :: glares at Kingsgirl4 :: ), I'll probably diversify a bit. Not too much, mind you: my rock collection is neither non-existent nor extensive, but I'll certainly be lifiting the "No hip-hop" rule I imposed on myself for the original Album draft.

Starting with the eighty-sixth pick of this draft:




Digital Underground, Sex Packets (cassette version only) (1991)

Hits the ground running with the group's most well-known track, The Humpty Dance. A spectacular fusion of hip-hop and seventies funk, with many of the songs sampling from music and artists I'd had no previous knowledge of at sixteen, and which I now love. Sex Packets was like a gateway drug for me, an introduction to the likes of George Clinton, Bootsy Collins, Jimi Hendrix, Parliament, Funkadelic, and some of the funkier parts of James Brown, which didn't get as much airplay from my parents as his tamer work.

The album only had two singles, Humpty and the moderate club hit, Doowutchyalike, and was their most commercially successful album by far. It's considered to be something of a concept album about "Sex Packets," an imaginary product that is supposed to work like a G.S.R.A. (Genetic Supression Relief Antidote), a pharmaceutical substance which is allegedly developed by the government to provide its intended users such as astronauts with "a satisfying sexual experience in situations where the normal attainment of such experiences would be counter-productive to the mission at hand." Additionally, DU frontman Greg "Shock G" Jacobs had once made the rather dubious claim that the album loosely served as inspiration for the box office bomb Strange Days, starring Ralph Fiennes although, TTBOMK, this has never been corroborated.

I both have and enjoy DU's entire collection and, while this is probably only my second-favorite Digital Underground album from beginning to end, the album that I do consider my favorite doesn't have any of my Top Ten favorite DU tracks, and this one has four. So, why did I specify the cassette-only version? Two reasons:

  1. The song order on the cassette version is very different from the LP and CD versions. Since I heard the cassette version first, the song order on the other two seems... wrong... to me. IMO, the songs flow better on the cassette version than when they're "jumbled around" on the CD; and it's even worse on the LP, where most of the songs seem to be in reverse order, from my point of view... Although, at least in the latter case, it does lend some synchronicity to the end with how Doowutchyalike closes ("End the record how we like.").
  2. The missing songs: the cassette version has three songs that are not included on the CD version (Hip Hop Doll, Sound of the Undergroud, A Tribute to the Early Days), and four songs that are not included on the LP version (the aforementioned three, plus Gutfest '89). As well as the full version of Gutfest, which is more than two minutes longer than the version on the CD.
Let's just say, for the sake of the draft, that I'm taking the CD version... If anyone asks, that's the one I've got. It's just, when you're not looking, I'm gonna switch it out with my homeade rip of the cassette version.
(cite: Wikipedia).
 
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Capt. Factorial

ceterum censeo delendum esse Argentum
Staff member

Let's just say, for the sake of the draft, that I'm taking the CD version... If anyone asks, that's the one I've got. It's just, when you're not looking, I'm gonna switch it out with my homeade rip of the cassette version.
Heck, I'll give you credit for the .mp3 version, and you can reorder the songs however you like!
 

Bricklayer

Don't Make Me Use The Bat
^
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when you know an album so well you have clear favorites as to song order on the LP, cassette, and CD versions, you gotta have that on your island.

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So, there are some defining picks I really do want to get to soon before anybody else blunders into them, but this is an itch I needed to scratch:

Funhouse - Pink - 2008



Modern pop is a difficult category for me. Somewhere along the line the labels seized control of the whole enterprise and turned it a giant autotuned machine driven by soulless producers sitting in a sound booth. Even when it sounds good, its hard for me to respect the art, or the artists. And then along comes Pink, and suddenly I could do both in a big way. The songs on her monster 2008-09 album Funhouse are fun, smart, heartfelt. You get a big dose of her rebellious sass in the monster hit So What, but its the introspection and honesty and vulnerability of songs like Sober and I Don't Believe You that really jump out at you in a pop world infested by shallow morons "singing" about hot they looked at the club last night. Add in the fact that she has one of the best and most expressive voices of her generation and you've got a killer pop album running the gamut from big singalong rock anthems to beautiful ballads. I'm a fan, so I didn't want to miss out this time.


Other video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26EP0ght2kI
 
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with the eighth pick in the 6th round of the 2013 Desert Island Music Draft, i select...

El-P - Cancer 4 Cure (05/22/12):



01 Request Denied
02 The Full Retard
03 Works Every Time (feat. Paul Banks)
04 Drones over BKLYN
05 Oh Hail No (feat. Mr. Muthaf***in' eXquire & Danny Brown)
06 Tougher Colder Killer (feat. Killer Mike & Despot)
07 True Story
08 The Jig is Up
09 Sign Here
10 For My Upstairs Neighbor (Mums the Word)
11 Stay Down (feat. Nick Diamonds)
12 $4 Vic / FTL (Me and You)

Genre: hip hop, alternative hip hop, noise rap

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cancer_4_Cure


note: the version of "Drones Over BKLYN" above is censored, for those who might be averse to colorful language...

here's something different for the sixth round. i wrote an official review of this album at the end of last year, and an edited version of that review appears below:

Social condition always affects the artistic tenor of a particular moment in time, and 2012 is clearly a year in which many talented musicians are thrashing back against the calamity. However, Brooklyn's El-P has been doing it longer than most. His 2002 solo debut, Fantastic Damage, was a perfect document of New York's post-9/11 malaise, and 2007's I'll Sleep When You're Dead was a masterful augmenting of El-P's formula. At 37 years old and highly-respected in the independent hip hop community for his talent both as a producer and as an emcee, Jaime Meline clearly has little left to prove, either to himself or to others. But El-P's Cancer 4 Cure arrived in the listener's eardrums as the result of unfortunate circumstances.

In 2008, El-P lost friend and labelmate Tero "Camu Tao" Smith to cancer, a death that sent shockwaves through a much-revered portion of the indie hip hop community. In the time since Camu's passing, El had been busying himself with his duties as CEO of the Definitive Juxtaposition record label, but the strain of contemporary music's commercial realities would eventually force El-P to fold Def Jux in February of 2010, until further notice. The upside, of course, was that El would finally have the time to devote to his next solo album. 2012's Cancer 4 Cure is clearly a labor of struggle, and its smog-filled, retro-futuristic neon buzz scans like a triumphant return for a man sorely missed in the five years since his last album.

"Request Denied" very ominously opens with a quietly-ringing guitar sample and a soft, droning synth. Then William S. Burroughs chimes in from beyond the grave, warning that "This is war to extermination; fight cell by cell through bodies and mind screens of the earth. Souls rotten from the Orgasm Drug. Flesh shuddering from the Ovens. Prisoners of the earth, come out. Storm the studio." From this literary Armageddon, Cancer 4 Cure explodes forth in a punchdrunk frenzy of claustrophobic drum breaks, squawking guitar solo, and Rhodes organ flourishes. Unexpectedly, "Request Denied" takes its jittery time ushering Brooklyn's finest to the mic. When you're as exceptional a producer as El-P, I suppose you can show up fashionably late to your own party, marking the album's first rap salvo a full three minutes into "Request Denied." But it's an introductory fury of syllables-per-second that scorches the final 1:30 in front of it. By the song's end, El is "Drunk and defiant, sunset started up all night / crawl through the cracks in the halls of the battered up / scattered up, middle finger, d*** held / brick kids screaming at the top of our airbags / 'this is our timing, we are not dying.' NOT FOR YOU / NOT FOR YOU / NOT FOR YOU." In a world where sons and daughters are so often called to fall on the swords of those who can shield their own from harm, "Request Denied" is an uninhibited roar of a rallying cry. That final chorus of "not for you"s projects outward from the rooftop like a bat signal: El-Producto has returned.

Built around Cancer 4 Cure's most vicious drum break, "Drones Over BKLYN" is an absolute bonecrusher of a song, the kind of sci-fi diss track that Ray Bradbury might have listened to if he had ever made it to the moon: "I'd sooner wash my d*** in acid than ask what you think / I'd f*** myself with a stun gun before gassin' your team / you patch me in and I'll dumb out with a channeled disease / it sucks to be nothin' / nobody struts when they're down on their knees / this whole racket's for the bees / f*** my life already / f*** the law / f*** the sun / say goodnight, already." HOLY S***. Curiously, each swear word in "Drones" is punctuated by a kick drum/synth stab combo that pseudo-censors his vulgarity, as if El knows he’ll never be able to escape the watchful eyes of those who seek to suppress. And instead of delivering the kind of satisfying hook one might expect of a banger like this, El pitch-shifts his voice into an eerie contemplation of Orwellian paranoia: "I can see them in my eyes when they’re closed / I can hear them at night / I can feel them plot a course through the sky / I believe in their flight." "Drones" is a masterstroke of dystopic rap, and, as such, also features a star-gazing and jazzy coda, the kind of victory lap that an artist born again in his craft will occasionally feel the compulsion to take.

While tracks like "The Full Retard," "Drones Over BKLYN," and "Oh Hail No" are Cancer 4 Cure's hardest-hitting bangers, "The Jig is Up," "Sign Here" and "For My Upstairs Neighbor (Mums the Word)" are its narrative centerpieces, steeped in El-P's patented brand of paranoia. "The Jig is Up" introduces the album's midsection with an overload of anxiety: "Tell me who sent you here / what agency? / Who's paying for this time you're wasting? / Who signs when you submit receipts? / What did they have on you to bribe you with? / What's the threat they held above that very pleasing face? / What do they want from me?" The song's seesaw beat seamlessly gives way to "Sign Here," and the listener may not even recognize that a new track has begun. It's a persona piece that tackles the power struggle in relationships by turning it into an interrogation: "Let's play 'Interrogation.' / It goes: what's your name (LIAR!!) / I'll call you rotating one-eighty / face down, undulating / adjust the angle of your presentation to me (HIGHER!!) / hold that position while I… / there's nothing coy allowed within these walls / be nothing less than honest / please sign this document attesting voluntary process / you wouldn't acquiesce to this full-probe / if you still didn't want it." DAMN. El's woozy and nearly-spoken delivery really enhances the sleazy intent of the character he's created. "For My Upstairs Neighbor" similarly invents an elaborately imaginative scenario, this time a hallway encounter between neighbors. El fantasizes about telling a fellow tenant to kill the boyfriend who is clearly abusing her: "As you passed I stopped and put my hand on your left arm / and we both paused, I meant no harm / and you look startled as I leaned in to your ear / and said the first-and-last-thing ever to you: 'Do the thing you have to and I swear I'll tell them nothin'." It's a brilliantly-rendered story that captures the insulation of New York life.

C4C closes out with lengthy final space-aged track "$4 Vic / FTL (Me and You)." No longer in persona, El shouts out his home state directly: "This goes out to the maniacs / and aristocrats, grifters / to the zealots and monarchs / what up, brainiacs? / compulsively acidic rainiacs? / repulsively predictable painiacs? / to the liars / for the devil's night fires / same to you, too, town crier / top o' the mornin', morbid / quite a day we're havin', gorgeous / salutation's unimportant / hello, uninspired / I thought I'd drop on by / and wish you all the luck desired." El props up these dedications with a considerable amount of negative space. "$4 Vic" is among C4C's most spare tracks, and El takes his time in arriving at the declaration, "I can no longer contain what's under my disguise / I've always had a cancer for the cure / that's what the f*** am I!!” El-P could never be accused of writing music of an agreeable persuasion. He's not looking to uplift his listeners. Instead, he's got a synthesizer and a beat for each and every wrong he perceives in the world, a cancer for the cure, an ability to connect to the parts of us that recognize just how f***ed up things can get. It's not a bright, sunshine-y day. But I suppose some of us prefer it that way.
 
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What constitutes an official review? Is that published somewhere?
it and a couple other of my album reviews were published by a now-defunct independent arts/culture magazine in Chico called Sentient. it's also published on my blog as part of my Top 10 Albums of 2012. i can send you the link via PM if you'd like. i'd post it publicly, but at least one other album from that Top 10 will appear in this draft at some point, and i'd hate to give it away...

;)

edit: reading back over it, i'm also now aware of the fact that "official review" sounds much snootier than i intended it to be when i wrote it. so consider this a backpedal...
 
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For this pick, I am going with one of my favorite groups:

The Shins - Oh, Inverted World - 2001

Theshinsohinvertedworld.jpg

I am a huge "The Shins" fan and their debut album, in my opinion, is their best effort. It's weird, but not an irritating kind of weird... all the songs are songs, not weird noises or talking or jokes or mind-crazed guitar, just songs... great songs, weird songs, but great, weird songs. Songs like " Caring is Creepy", "New Slang", "Know Your Onion!", and the list goes on and on. This is another one of those albums I could listen to the whole thing without a weak track. Also, this is their debut album, and like many debut albums, it was made with little money for extras and probably a lot of time went into writing the songs... making it superior to the other albums.

Love this album; one listen and I was hooked. This very well could be the band you are looking for.


Here is "New Slang" performed live on KFOG

Here is the full album: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EvRnYLKJ4gA
 
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With my 6th selection, I choose:

The Blues Brothers Band - The Blues Brothers: Music From the Soundtrack - 1980




I took this film in the Desert Island Movie Draft 2 years ago, as it has always been a favorite of mine. The film is original and comical in it's own right, but the true greatness is in the collaboration of the music throughout from Aretha Franklin, to Ray Charles, to James Brown, to an epic performance by Cab Calloway. This album is entirely performed by the Blues Brothers Band and therefore is eligible as an original album release. Also I do admit to coveting the guest performer list...Here's another background noise album that can play on loop and is still varied and enjoyable throughout the years.

Track List:

1. She Caught the Katy - 4:10
2. Peter Gunn Theme - 3:46
3. Gimme Some Lovin - 3:06
4. Shake a Tail Feather - 2:48
5. Everybody Needs Somebody to Love - 3:21
6. The Old Landmark - 2:56
7. Think - 3:13
8. Theme From Rawhide - 2:37
9. Minnie the Moocher - 3:23
10. Sweet Home Chicago - 7:48
11. Jailhouse Rock - 3:19

More: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Blues_Brothers:_Music_from_the_Soundtrack#Soundtrack
 
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With my next selection I am taking one of my all time favorite albums. When this came out it totally blew my mind. I had never heard anything that was such a perfect mix of Rap and Rock. To this day, I hear the songs and still think they sound fresh, like they could have been released yesterday. Bravo LP!

Linkin Park - Hybrid Theory

untitled.jpg


Wiki
 
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VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
With my 6th selection, I choose:

The Blues Brothers Band - The Blues Brothers: Music From the Soundtrack - 1980




I took this film in the Desert Island Movie Draft 2 years ago, as it has always been a favorite of mine. The film is original and comical in it's own right, but the true greatness is in the collaboration of the music throughout from Aretha Franklin, to Ray Charles, to James Brown, to an epic performance by Cab Calloway. This album is entirely performed by the Blues Brothers Band and therefore is eligible as an original album release. Also I do admit to coveting the guest performer list...Here's another background noise album that can play on loop and is still varied and enjoyable throughout the years.

Track List:

1. She Caught the Katy - 4:10
2. Peter Gunn Theme - 3:46
3. Gimme Some Lovin - 3:06
4. Shake a Tail Feather - 2:48
5. Everybody Needs Somebody to Love - 3:21
6. The Old Landmark - 2:56
7. Think - 3:13
8. Theme From Rawhide - 2:37
9. Minnie the Moocher - 3:23
10. Sweet Home Chicago - 7:48
11. Jailhouse Rock - 3:19

More: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Blues_Brothers:_Music_from_the_Soundtrack#Soundtrack
Sorry, Jespher, but the rules state: " Original movie score soundtracks (e.g. Star Wars) are okay, soundtracks (e.g. Above the Rim, The Crow) are not." These songs aren't original to the movie, so they fit into the soundtrack category and not a movie score.

You need to post a replacement pick.

UPDATE: I did some research after making this post and discovered that Slim had covered this situation in the first draft. When asked about musical soundtracks, which this album definitely is, he said, "Additionally, it has been brought to my attention that nearly all musical soundtracks are written and/or performed by the same person/group. This would allow musical soundtracks to claim the same exemption as original score soundtracks."

Therefore, I'm reversing my decision and allowing this pick to stand. Sorry for any confusion. :)
 
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Got a computer for the first time since the draft started :) Updated all the picks with videos and everything.... please check them out guys :) Especially Florence and the Machine as she seems to be quite unknown over the pond :)
 
For my 6th pick, I select the debut album of my most favorite band of all time.

Kill 'em all - Metallica (1983)

2.jpg

I was a little worried somebody was going to take this right after Justice was selected, so instead of I just have to take this now. Although Justice is one of my favorite album of theirs, Kill Em All is just my absolute favorite. This is the album that introduced them to me, and I wouldn't be able to live with myself alone on my island without it. So glad that I was able to take this album with me on my island.

WIKI

 
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'Pieces of a man' - Gil Scott Heron - 1971



here is the wiki page
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pieces_of_a_Man
Although I stole this album from my mothers collection, I don't remember her playing it all that much. I first grabbed it looking to add to my iTunes collection- and soon became obsessed.

Gil Scott Heron is obviously very charismatic. He is also a great writer and carries a strong sensitivity towards his subject matter. Many great songs on this album- but 'the prisoner' and 'pieces of a man' easily my favourites.


Other video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=eC_9xmAN21U
 
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Ok so everything is going alright so far and i think its time to go back to USA after two British picks... This time to Las Vegas

Hot Fuss - The Killers

This Album is just packed with super songs and there isnt anything on there i would skip... Interestingly enough this went to Number One in England but only reached 7th in the US... not sure why as its great!!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_Fuss

Full album: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_X7q8Bim7X4

the two main singles from the album which for me turn the album from very good to great


Other video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5fBdpreJiU
 
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VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
For my next pick, I'm adding a lady whose success has spanned well over four decades.



Live! The Farewell Tour - Cher - 2003


I can't think of a time in my life when there wasn't a Cher song somewhere involved in the mix. Every single song on this album evokes different memories, some good and some bittersweet. And if Cher herself isn't enough, the talent level of the writers of each of the songs is another reason to make sure I've got this album to listen to on my island.

Track LIsting - Writer - Length
1. "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" Adam Clayton, The Edge, Bono, Larry Mullen, Jr. 4:35
2. "Song for the Lonely" Mark Taylor, Paul Barry, Steve Torch 6:47
3. "All or Nothing" Taylor, Barry 3:58
4. "I Found Someone" Mark Mangold, Michael Bolton 3:36
5. "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)" Sonny Bono 3:41
6. "All I Really Want to Do" Bob Dylan 2:01
7. "Half-Breed" Al Capps, Mary Dean 1:34
8. "Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves" Bob Stone 1:31
9. "Dark Lady" Johnny Durrell 1:13
10. "Take Me Home" Bob Esty, Michele Aller 3:48
11. "The Way of Love" Jacques Dieval, Al Stillman 2:34
12. "After All" Dean Pitchford, Tom Snow 3:54
13. "Just Like Jesse James" Desmond Child, Diane Warren 5:39
14. "Heart of Stone" Andy Hill, Peter Sinfield 4:09
15. "The Shoop Shoop Song (It's in His Kiss)" Rudy Clark 2:30
16. "Strong Enough" Taylor, Barry 3:01
17. "If I Could Turn Back Time" Warren 6:17
18. "Believe" Brian Higgins, Stuart McLennen, Barry, Torch, Matthew Gray, Timothy Powell

Wiki
 
Ok so everything is going alright so far and i think its time to go back to USA after two British picks... This time to Las Vegas

Hot Fuss - The Killers

This Album is just packed with super songs and there isnt anything on there i would skip... Interestingly enough this went to Number One in England but only reached 7th in the US... not sure why as its great!!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_Fuss


the two main singles from the album which for me turn the album from very good to great


interestingly enough, I've actually heard of this band. Mainly because of this:

He directed, edited, and co-produced the music video for "Don't Shoot Me Santa" by the rock band The Killers. -Wikipedia The He being referred to is Matthew Gray Gubler (aka Spencer Reid of Criminal Minds)

solid choice.
 
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Might be a pick that has the potential to be there in the later rounds, but after listening to it today in my car, my draft would just be ruined if I didn't have this on my list..

corrs.jpg

The Corrs - VH1 Presents: The Corrs, Live in Dublin

One of my favorite artists of all time, the all-sibling The Corrs. I honestly would be happy with any of their albums but this live-performance album is like no other. One of my favorite songs of all time performed live, "Runaway," is absolutely a masterpiece. Andrea Corr's voice is one of my favorites in music. The guest appearances by Bono and Ronnie Wood are epic and there is no song on the album that is a "skip" song.

More..

Not from this album, but a taste of "Runaway" performed live. Also, one of the most amazing performances you'll ever see.


So Young - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=29R1xUhWAGM
 
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With the first pick of Round 7, I select...

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Snow Patrol - Eyes Open

My favorite album by Snow Patrol. I actually first discovered them while playing a MLB video game back in 2003-2004. Fell in love with them after I heard that song day-after-day while playing the game throughout the summer. Bought the album and they immediately became a favorite of mine.

Once Eyes Open was released, of course I grew to love them more. Every single song on the album is a must have and Snow Patrol is just one of those bands that have a great soundtrack presence. Many of their songs, both on Eyes Open and others, have been used for many tv shows and movies.

"Open Your Eyes" is one of those songs and is my favorite song by the band. It was actually used on one of the Season Finales of ER a while back. It turned out to be one of the most amazing sequences in the entire series and the song had a major contribution in that.

Other favorites include: "Set the Fire to the Third Bar," "Make this Go On Forever," and "You Could be Happy."

More..

Here's the final 10 minutes of that ER scene - warning issued: Violent and bloody. The Snow Patrol part starts at about the 8-min part.


Set the Fire to the Third Bar - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfa9yxCpWoA

Shut Your Eyes - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x3jFcZjv_kk
 
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VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
With my next pick, I'm grabbing a piece of rock n roll history.

Tommy - The Who - 1969



Wikipedia says: "A double album telling a loose story about a "deaf, dumb and blind kid", Tommy was the first musical work to be billed overtly as a rock opera. Released in 1969, the album was mostly composed by Pete Townshend. In 1998, it was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame for "historical, artistic and significant value". It has sold over 20 million copies worldwide."

It's almost impossible to describe the impact this album had. Everybody I knew had a copy of it and there wasn't a day that went by that you didn't hear Pinball Wizard on the radio.

 
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For my 6th pick, I select the debut album of my most favorite band of all time.

Kill 'em all - Metallica (1983)

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I was a little worried somebody was going to take this right after Justice was selected, so instead of I just have to take this now. Although Justice is one of my favorite album of theirs, Kill Em All is just my absolute favorite. This is the album that introduced them to me, and I wouldn't be able to live with myself alone on my island without it. So glad that I was able to take this album with me on my island.

WIKI

It would not have made it back your way :) great pick!
 
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