Definitely:
Bowie - Station to Station, Low, Heroes
Sylvie wrote:Talk Talk wins so easily.
pradakid900 wrote:Without doubt these Sylvian albums have provided an impact upon my life in ways which are uncaluable, truly monumental and firmly rooting to a degree that none of these other albums mentioned could dare touch.
digimarsh wrote:but i was suprised to see the Thriller nomintation, me and this person are not thinking along the same lines at all, anyway Sylvian gets my vote.
Burnsjed wrote:digimarsh wrote:but i was suprised to see the Thriller nomintation, me and this person are not thinking along the same lines at all, anyway Sylvian gets my vote.
Really? Considering the author was talking about the competition in "popular' music, and we have had Prince and Kate Bush (and for the record I actually own all of their albums that were nominated) touted, you found fault with the best selling album of all time! Regardless of our personal taste, it is hard to argue against how this album changed the way a lot of people listened to music, and had an enormous influence on other artists for that decade.
Given how subjective all this is, I mentioned Gary Numan's albums, that personally I loved at the time, but sound terribly dated now, but again it is hard to argue against how they made a new genre of music popular.
Though as you rightly mentioned there is only really 1 winner, but then again we are on a DS forum after all.
Btw, if you had to pick a '3 of a kind' from your '11 card trick' from Bowie what would it be?
digimarsh wrote:Burnsjed wrote:digimarsh wrote:but i was suprised to see the Thriller nomintation, me and this person are not thinking along the same lines at all, anyway Sylvian gets my vote.
Really? Considering the author was talking about the competition in "popular' music, and we have had Prince and Kate Bush (and for the record I actually own all of their albums that were nominated) touted, you found fault with the best selling album of all time! Regardless of our personal taste, it is hard to argue against how this album changed the way a lot of people listened to music, and had an enormous influence on other artists for that decade.
Given how subjective all this is, I mentioned Gary Numan's albums, that personally I loved at the time, but sound terribly dated now, but again it is hard to argue against how they made a new genre of music popular.
Though as you rightly mentioned there is only really 1 winner, but then again we are on a DS forum after all.
Btw, if you had to pick a '3 of a kind' from your '11 card trick' from Bowie what would it be?
I always respected Jackson as an entertainer, but whilst ,as you mentioned, he enjoyed huge commercial success i would not say musically he was an artist in the same vain as DS for example. Using the criteria you outlined in your post ,then
his trio are right up there,i will readily conceed.However are we using commercial success as a barometer? if so our very own mr Sylvian does not fair so well. It is as you quite rightly say a matter of taste, so the debate will continue.
Regarding Bowie's triple, i do really like the album "the man who sold the world",it's rather dark and compelling, ect, and was followed by Hunky Dory and then the 'classic' ziggy stardust ,not a bad trio but as someone mentioned earlier;station to station, low and then heroes just about gets the nod,i would say
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