The Beatles, The Beatles (Apple) -
Released: November 22, 1968
A wondrous treasure of songs and styles. Not four
solo albums rolled into one as some say, but at least partly a full
fledged group effort, though most of Paul McCartney’s contributions
ended up as solo recordings thanks to the evil moods of John Lennon,
who’s sharp tongue kept lashing out both at him and his songs. John was
high on heroin, Yoko and his own ego, so Paul preferred to work on his
own songs alone (or with Ringo).
Paul, bless him, did not reciprocate, but rather
threw himself wholeheartedly into both Lennon and Harrison’s songs,
recreating the old group magic, his contributions to “While My Guitar
Gently Weeps”, for instance, are crucial. The irony is that because
Paul’s own recordings differ from the group efforts, they actually turn
the album into a richer listening experience. John Lennon must have
appreciated this in the end as his acoustic solo performance of “Julia”
was the very last song recorded for the “White Album”.
I don’t think there is a single genre or style in
popular music not present on “The Beatles”. The greatest double album of
all time? I think so.
Contents: Back in the U.S.S.R./Dear
Prudence/Glass Onion/Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da/Wild Honey Pie/The Continuing
Story of Bungalow Bill/While My Guitar Gently Weeps/Happiness Is a Warm
Gun/Martha My Dear/I’m So Tired/Blackbird/Piggies/Rocky Raccoon/Don’t
Pass Me By/Why Don’t We Do It in the Road?/I Will/Julia/Birthday/Yer
Blues/Mother Nature’s Son/Everybody’s Got Something to Hide Except Me
and My Monkey/Sexy Sadie/Helter Skelter/Long, Long, Long/Revolution
1/Honey Pie/Savoy Truffle/Cry Baby Cry/Revolution 9/Good Night
The Rolling Stones,
Beggars Banquet (Decca) - Released: December 6, 1968
The Stones going back to basics after the psychedelic
(but actually quite underrated) “Their Satanic Majesties Request”. Some
tracks are almost unplugged acoustic blues, and even the thundering
“Street Fighting Man” is actually an acoustic number, there’s no
electric guitars on it.
The mood of the album is a disillusioned and resigned
response to the chaotic 1968, a year of aggressive student
demonstrations, assassinations (Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King
Jr.), bloody battles in Vietnam (the Tet-offensive and the battle of Khe
Sahn), the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. The hypnotic and dark
“Sympathy For The Devil” opens the album, while the gospel like “Salt Of
The Earth” closes it, offering some sort of bleak consolation.
Contents: Sympathy for the Devil/No
Expectations/Dear Doctor/Parachute Woman/Jig-Saw Puzzle/Street Fighting
Man/Prodigal Son/Stray Cat Blues/Factory Girl/Salt of the Earth
The Band, Music From
Big Pink (Capitol) - Released: July 1, 1968
“Music From Big Pink” came as a revelation when it
arrived in July 1968. No studio tricks, no backwards guitars, no
interstellar overdrives, just a plain and simple record consisting of
songs about basic values performed by a collective of musicians who
loved each other’s company and who treated each song, every note they
played, with love and awe. They looked like men from the mountains, men
of soil - so distant from Carnaby Street that they probably had
travelled through time.
I won’t say that “Music For Big Pink” saved rock, but
it did show that there were other paths to walk, and it sure reclaimed
some of what was being lost in the drugged out mumbo jumbo of
psychedelia. Levon Helm, Rick Danko and Richard Manuel have all left us.
On “Music For Big Pink” they shine forever.
Contents: Tears of Rage/To Kingdom Come/In a
Station/Caledonia Mission/The Weight/We Can Talk/Long Black Veil/Chest
Fever/Lonesome Suzie/This Wheel’s on Fire/Shall Be Released
Mothers Of Invention,
We’re Only In It For The Money (Verve) - Released: March 4, 1968
The sleeve is a hilarious parody of “Sgt. Pepper”,
already an icon in 1968, but EMI interfered. Zappa had to invert the
concept, so the inner gatefold became the outer sleeve. He blamed The
Beatles, but Paul McCartney who loves the cover, claims that it was not
their decision at all.
The record itself satirizes the hippie movement so
cleverly that the targets at first didn’t realize the joke was on them.
It also lashes out at left wing politics and right-wing squares without
missing a beat, the punch line being that anybody belonging to a
movement should be approached with caution and contempt.
The songs themselves are very funny and extremely
easy on the ear, sometimes almost infantile, but never outstaying their
welcome as the music constantly takes some unexpected left turns. I’d
say this is Frank Zappa’s first masterpiece. Even if the record company
censored some snippets of the lyrics behind his back.
Contents: Are You Hung Up?/Who Needs the Peace
Corps?/Concentration Moon/Mom & Dad/Bow Tie Daddy/Harry, You’re a
Beast/the Ugliest Part of Your Body?/Absolutely Free/Flower Punk/Hot
Poop/Nasal Retentive Calliope Music/Let’s Make the Water Turn Black/The
Idiot Bastard Son/Lonely Little Girl/Take Your Clothes Off When You
Dance/What’s the Ugliest Part of Your Body? (Reprise)/Mother People/The
Chrome Plated Megaphone of Destiny
The Zombies, Odessey
And Oracle (CBS) - Released: April 19, 1968
An unparalleled work of beauty, recorded in Abbey
Road in the summer and autumn of 1967. Unfortunately the band split up
before the album was released, so it didn’t stand a chance. It was
somewhat resurrected in 1969 when “Time Of The Season” became a surprise
posthumous hit single in the US. Today it is often included on critics’
and musicians’ lists of the 100 greatest albums of all time.
Contents: Care of Cell 44/A Rose for
Emily/Maybe After He’s Gone/Beechwood Park/Brief Candles/ Hung Up on a
Dream/Changes/I Want Her, She Wants Me/This Will Be Our Year/Butcher’s
Tale (Western Front 1914)/Friends of Mine/Time of the Season
The Kinks, The Kinks
Are The Village Green Preservation Society (PYE) - Released: November
22, 1968
A concept album lamenting the passing of the old
England, its traditions and quiet country life. A masterpiece that
hardly anyone bought at the time, but its status gradually improved over
the years. It has influenced loads of later bands and is considered as a
bona fide classic today.
Contents: The Village Green Preservation
Society/Do You Remember Walter?/Picture Book/Johnny Thunder/Last of the
Steam-powered Trains/Big Sky/Sitting by the Riverside/Animal
Farm/Village Green/Starstruck/Phenomenal Cat/All of My Friends Were
There/Wicked Annabella/Monica/People Take Pictures of Each Other
Jimi Hendrix
Experience, Electric Ladyland (Track) - Released: October 16, 1968
The last Experience-album. There’s r&b, blues,
psychedelia, experimental jams, funk, you name it, and the icing on the
cake: the absolute definitive version of “All Along The Watchtower”.
Contents: ...And the Gods Made Love/Have You
Ever Been (To Electric Ladyland)/Crosstown Traffic/Voodoo Chile/Little
Miss Strange/Long Hot Summer Night/Come On (Part I)/Gypsy Eyes/Burning
of the Midnight Lamp/Rainy Day, Dream Away/1983... (A Merman I Should
Turn to Be)/Moon, Turn the Tides...Gently Gently Away/Still Raining,
Still Dreaming/House Burning Down/All Along the Watchtower/Voodoo Child
(Slight Return)
Small Faces, Ogden’s
Nut Gone Flake (Immediate) - Released: May 24, 1968
Oh what a joyful record (and sleeve)! A masterpiece
of cockney whimsy and friendly psychedelia. The concept part that covers
the whole second side of the album sounds a bit dated, but it’s still
fun if you can stomach the gobbledegook of narrator Stanley Unwin. Side
1 on the other hand, is a non-stop delight.
Contents: Ogdens’ Nut Gone Flake/Afterglow (Of
Your Love)/Long Agos and Worlds Apart/Rene/Song of a Baker/Lazy
Sunday/Happiness Stan/Rollin’ Over/The Hungry Intruder/The Journey/Mad
John/Happy Days Toy Town
Aretha Franklin,
Aretha Now (Atlantic) - Released: June 14, 1968
By now Aretha was established as the female voice of
soul music, and this, her fourth album for Atlantic Records, is so good
you wanna eat it. Includes the marvellous “Think”.
Contents: Think/I Say a Little Prayer/See
Saw/Night Time Is the Right Time/You Send Me/You’re a Sweet Sweet Man/I
Take What I Want/Hello Sunshine/A Change/I Can’t See Myself Leaving You
The Byrds, Sweetheart
Of The Rodeo (Columbia/CBS) - Released: August 30, 1968
An important release as it was the first country-rock
album by a major band. New member, the legendary Gram Parsons steered
them right into the heart of the music, and even if most of his vocals
were replaced with Roger McGuinn’s voice (due to legal complications),
his heart and soul is still there, shining.
Contents: You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere/I Am a
Pilgrim/The Christian Life/You Don’t Miss Your Water/You’re Still on My
Mind/Pretty Boy Floyd/Hickory Wind/One Hundred Years from Now/Blue
Canadian Rockies/Life in Prison/Nothing Was Delivered