Dude, last 30 years.
Oops, sorry. Guess I'm stuck in the past.
'Objects In Space'
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
Dude, last 30 years.
Oops, sorry. Guess I'm stuck in the past.
Oops, sorry. Guess I'm stuck in the past.
Heh. Just yanking your chain. I can easily think of the canonical reinventing-the-studio from the 60s and early 70s. After that I have the nagging feeling that I'm missing a few. Also, while R.E.M. (for example) were widely imitated, I don't think their use of the studio was as innovative as (say) The Smiths.
I do like Ana Ng! Really. I just like those other ones MORE.
There's very little *bad* TMBG, in my opinion.
That is, records which exploited the studio in some new way such that records which came afterwards reflected that new approach to sound. Obvious examples range from Pet Sounds to It Takes A Nation of Millions To Hold Us Back
I'm still not sure I get it. Is this a technical question or a musical question? Because these are two different things to me. Are you talking about the sort of technical innovations Tom Scholz did in his home studio, or the massively imitated "sound" of My Bloody Valentine's Loveless?
I'm going to have to say Never Mind the Bollocks, because nothing sounded like it before. I don't know how much of that is technical, though, since I'm just a simple unfrozen caveman.
The Talking Heads, Speaking in Tongues
or the massively imitated "sound" of My Bloody Valentine's Loveless?
More like Loveless I guess.
The Talking Heads, Speaking in Tongues
I would've said Remain in Light or even My Life In the Bush of Ghosts was the breakthrough record.
Remain in Light
That's probably what I meant to type.
Dinosaur Jr. - "Bug".
Loveless wouldn't have happened without it.
And while I think "You're Living All Over Me" is a better album, it was the dozen-overdubbed-guitar-attack of "Bug" that was more influential in terms of sound.
I think most of us use iTunes.
Damn. I can't use iTunes, because it won't load onto Windows ME computers.
Any other options?