By “important” I mean that it didn’t just become hugely popular, but it also changed a music genre or launched an entirely new one, or otherwise made a huge impact on music in general.

  • SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca
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    3 hours ago

    The Ramones’ Ramones.

    Factoid: They used the name Ramone based off a fake name Paul McCartney used at hotels, Paul Ramon.

  • brzrd@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Miles Davis:

    • Kind of Blue
    • In a Silent Way
    • Bitches Brew
    • Tutu

    Cornerstone records from which everything from the Headhunters, Return to Forever, Mahavishnu Orchestra and the great exploration of jazz, psychedelic, rock and everything else in between.

  • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    9 hours ago

    Every album I really like should be on this list. Every album you really like should be on this list. You cannot rationalize subjectivity.

    • redhorsejacket@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      I did a big write up about how this is a thought-terminating cliche, but it felt too much like preachy lecturing, so I’ll try a different tack: why do you feel that subjectivity cannot be rationalized?

  • [object Object]@lemmy.world
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    Wendy Carlos’ ‘Switched-On Bach’ turned synthesizers from a tool of avantgarde experimentalists into a mainstream instrument.

    Captain Beefheart’s ‘Trout Mask Replica’ remains probably the most widely cited avantgarde-rock album, perplexing listeners to this day. (Gotta say, I never had a problem with it, perhaps because I don’t know music theory.)

    Kraftwerk’s ‘Autobahn’ is an obvious one, though ‘Trans-Europe Express’ and ‘The Man-Machine’ probably had more influence on synthpop and techno.

    Lou Reed’s ‘Metal Machine Music’ was trashed on release by critics, and returned en masse by the buyers, but it presaged industrial and noise music, and possibly noise-rock.

    Then again, though industrial music properly started with live performances, if you wanted to revisit its roots, you’d listen to Throbbing Gristle’s ‘The Second Annual Report’ or the more warmly received ‘D.o.A: The Third and Final Report’.

    The ‘No New York’ compilation was exemplary of the ‘no wave’ experimental jazz-rock of the downtown NYC scene and gave the genre its name.

    Liaisons Dangereuses’ self-titled album was the progenitor of ebm, e.g. with the track ‘Los niños del parque’.

    This Mortal Coil’s ‘It’ll End in Tears’ “set the template” for dream pop, although the sound itself was already around in the work of Cocteau Twins and the ethereal wave movement.

    The Winstons’ 1969 track ‘Amen, Brother’ didn’t start anything itself, but the ‘Amen break’ is one of the most sampled in history, beginning with the 80s breakbeat, and with jungle, drum-and-bass and breakcore having been predominantly built on this one sample.

    Napalm Death’s ‘Scum’ is the origin of grindcore.

    John Zorn’s ‘Naked City’ is a landmark in jazz-fusion: although the concept existed before, no one mixed jazz with other genres so aggressively outside of free-jazz. (Though arguably the band Massacre anticipated Zorn’s approach.)

    The Prodigy’s ‘Experience’ is said to have birthed edm albums as a concept:

    Moby credited ‘Experience’ with changing his perception about dance albums; previously he felt that “dance albums had always failed […] because they didn’t work over the full length of the record. Mostly they were singles collections which was exactly what I didn’t want to do,” and noted that ‘Experience’ “impressed me because they’d managed to create a full listening experience which encompassed various styles. This was the kind of vision I had for my debut album.”

    The ‘Artificial Intelligence’ compilation on Warp started idm.

    ‘Wipeout’‘s electronic soundtrack, along with its acid visuals and nightclub-oriented promotion (by Designers Republic) was a big factor in targeting the first PlayStation to college-age people, instead of kids as it was with previous consoles. This shifted the console market from kids’ toys to entertainment for everyone.

    Therion properly invented symphonic metal around ‘Symphony Masses: Ho Drakon Ho Megas’ / ‘Lepaca Kliffoth’ / ‘Theli’.

    The ‘Hotline Miami’ soundtrack played a large role in the popularity of synthwave and the 2010s revival of associated genres like darkwave, coldwave, ebm, and to some extent post-punk.

    If you’re into edm, you might want to check out Ishkur’s Guide to Electronic Music for various branching points.

    • Hapankaali@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Some very good suggestions, and not just the already well-known stuff among mainstream audiences from most of the other comments.

      I would personally cite Cocteau Twins over This Mortal Coil, not only did they predate them, but Treasure is also the better (and more influential) record in my opinion.

      Therion has been quite explicit with its acknowledgment of Celtic Frost as a major influence (even taking the name) - though their records suffer from subpar production, and one could argue Therion was able to fulfill the ambition of Celtic Frost.

      One shouldn’t mention no wave without mentioning Swans, who were massively influential to grunge, post-punk, post-rock and heavy music in general. The colossal Soundtracks for the Blind is their magnum opus.

      Aside from Kraftwerk, the krautrock scene spawned several more highly influential groups, including Neu! (who invented the remix), CAN (cited as a major influence by Radiohead and many others) and Popul Vuh (pioneers of early ambient, electronic and “new age” music).

      A few more suggestions not related to yours: Oddly enough Zappa hasn’t been mentioned yet in the comments (as of writing this comment), probably the most influential pop music artist of the 20th Century, though his music can be challenging at times and not all of his humour has aged very well. We’re Only In It For the Money is probably the best starting point.

      Brian Eno - Apollo. Not Eno’s first ambient album, but probably his most accomplished one.

      Talk Talk - Spirit of Eden. It’s hard to believe you are listening to what used to be a new wave band only a few years earlier if you play this record. It was so far ahead of its time their label dropped them amidst an acrimonious lawsuit.

      Ulver has been cited as a major influence by modern electronic music artists (e.g., Carpenter Brut). Their output is extremely diverse and creatively shifts dramatically from album to album. I would recommend Perdition City as a starting point.

      Godspeed You! Black Emperor - F#A#∞. Not coincidentally released shortly after Soundtracks for the Blind, a massive creative leap nonetheless and one of the defining post-rock records of the 1990s.

  • gigastasio@sh.itjust.works
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    10 hours ago

    Black Sabbath’s self titled 1970 debut.

    Generations of metalheads the world over owe their lives, allegiance, and gratitude to Tony’s fucked up hand.

  • neidu3@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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    My suggestions:

    • Boston (self titled) pretty much transformed how music was produced, using the studio as an instrument.
    • Jimi Hendrix - “Are you Experienced”. Because a guitar had never been played like that before.
    • Nirvana - “Nevermind”. Arguably not the first grunge album, but it pretty much put the final nail in the coffin of 80’s music.

    Honorable mention: Pantera - “Cowboys from Hell” finally moved metal beyond fluffy hair and leather pants that had saturated the genre for too long, and effectively ended the glam era.

  • wookiepedia@lemmy.world
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    DJ Shadow - Endtroducing

    This singlehandedly brought to the forefront sample-based trip hop for all to hear. Soulful, haunting, melodic, and with an ever evolving back beat, filled with social consciousness. Herbie Hancock’s Rock It introduced the world to the idea of turntables as instruments and Endtroducing was an album length love letter to that instrument.

  • man_wtfhappenedtoyou@lemmy.world
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    Nothing - Meshuggah

    It wasn’t their first album by any means, but I think it was the most influential on metal music, it kind of spawned its own sub-genre (djent-core?). On this album they really honed in on the sound they made steps toward with Chaosphere, and it influenced the sound of metal moving forward into the late 00s and 2010s.

    I haven’t really been into metal as much as I was back when this came out, but it was really interesting to see this swedish metal band I randomly heard about in an AOL chatroom take off and become hugely popular and influential.

    • neidu3@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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      1 day ago

      I’d argue that you got the band and the reason right, but with the wrong album. Chaosphere. Not as djenty as their later albums, but the seeds and saplings are clearly there.

      Plus every metal drummer I knew back then tried to learn New Millennium Cyanide Christ.

      • man_wtfhappenedtoyou@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Yeah I was debating between saying Chaosphere or Nothing, I can definitely see your argument as well. Really cool band with incredible musicians all around.

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    1 day ago

    Rubber Soul - The Beatles
    To me this marks a turning point in the Beatles’ output, from fun, rock ‘n’ roll/pop music, to serious artistry, more challenging themes and lyrics and more interesting instrumentation.

    Sample track: In My Life

    Dubnobasswithmyheadman - Underworld
    Hugely important in British dance music, a total departure from their first two albums and the start of a run of classic electronic music. It’s a shame they’re still best known for Born Slippy, because there’s so much more to Underworld than that, and it started here.

    Sample track: Dirty Epic

    The Velvet Underground and Nico - The Velvet Underground
    Famously known as an album that not many people bought, but all of those who did started a band. Hugely influential, full of great songs, some gentle and fragile, others cacophonic and dissonant. A masterpiece.

    Sample track: Venus in Furs

    • neidu3@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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      1 day ago

      Seconding Rubber Soul. In the same way Pantera managed to separate metal from the glam, Beatles separated pop/rock from the campiness of earlier and contemporary bands.

  • dragon-donkey3374@sh.itjust.works
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    Fear Factory - Demanufacture.

    I couldn’t decide whether it was this album or Soul of a new machine that pioneered clean singing in metal but I chose Demanufacture since it has such a timeless sound.

  • TipRing@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    Steely Dan’s Aja includes the first recorded rock shuffle thanks to Bernard Purdie. Not to mention Steve Gadd’s masterpiece solo on the title track.

  • StinkyFingerItchyBum@lemmy.ca
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    Rush - Fly by Night

    Their second album is the first where they found their prog rock selves.

    From wikipedia: The members of Rush have noted that people “either love Rush or hate Rush”,[170] resulting in strong detractors and an intensely loyal fan base. In 1979, The Rolling Stone Record Guide called them “the power boogie band for the 16 magazine graduating class”.[171] A July 2008 Rolling Stone article said, “Rush fans are the Trekkies/trekkers of rock”.[172] Rush have been cited as an influence by artists including Alice in Chains,[173] Anthrax,[174] the Cro-Mags,[175] Dream Theater,[176][177][178] Exciter,[179] Fates Warning,[180] Fishbone,[181] Foo Fighters,[182] Iron Maiden,[183] Jane’s Addiction,[184] Living Colour,[185] Manic Street Preachers,[186] Megadeth,[187][188][189] Meshuggah,[190][191] Metallica,[178][192] No Doubt,[193] Pearl Jam,[194] the Pixies,[195] Primus,[196] Queensrÿche,[197] Rage Against the Machine,[198] the Red Hot Chili Peppers,[199] Sepultura,[200] the Smashing Pumpkins,[196] Elliott Smith,[201] Soundgarden,[202] Stone Temple Pilots,[203] System of a Down,[204] Testament,[205][206] Tool,[207][208] and Steven Wilson.[209] Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails said in the 2010 documentary Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage that Rush is one of his favourite bands, and he has also cited the band’s early 1980s period in particular as a major influence on him in regard to incorporating keyboards and synthesizers into hard rock.[210]

    • neidu3@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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      1 day ago

      I wanted to mention rush, but I couldn’t narrow it down to one album.

      On a related note, I got tickets to see Rush next year, as I figured it’ll be my last chance.
      I decided to treat myself:

      That’s as close to the stage as I could justify with my paycheck. Closer is ridiculously priced, even by ticketmonster standards.