#6622 by SDavis22
Thu Apr 05, 2007 9:12 pm
Thu Apr 05, 2007 9:12 pm
If anyone would like some recommendations on the very best, and original, pure Rock and Roll albums, I've got a few! Here they are, in no particular order:
Chuck Berry - One Dozen Berrys ('58 )/Chuck Berry Is on Top ('59)/St. Louis to Liverpool ('64)
Carl Perkins - Dance Album ('57)
Everly Brothers (Who influenced the Beatles' John Lennon/Paul McCartney two-part harmonies) - Everly Brothers ('58 )/It's Everly Time ('60)/The Fabulous Style of the Everly Brothers ('60)
Bo Diddley - Bo Diddley ('57)/Go Bo Diddley ('59)
Elvis Presley - Elvis Presley ('56), Elvis ('56) <---both extremely rowdy for the mid-50s...
Bill Haley and His Comets - Shake Rattle and Roll ('55)
The Crickets (Buddy Holly's group) - The 'Chirping' Crickets ('57)
Buddy Holly - Buddy Holly ('58, this was his last record before dying)
Little Richard (the true 'king of Rock and Roll') - Here's Little Richard ('57), Little Richard ('58 )
Gene Vincent - Bluejean Bop! ('56), Gene Vincent & His Blue Caps ('57)
The Beatles (their Rock and Roll albums) - Please Please Me ('63), With the Beatles ('63), A Hard Days' Night ('64)
Fats Domino - This Is Fats Domino ('57)/The Fabulous Mr. D ('58 )
Roy Orbison - For the Lonely: 18 Greatest Hits (this came out in '88... he didn't have any early great records - just great singles)
The Coasters - The Coasters ('58 )
The Yardbirds - Five Live Yardbirds ('64)
The Who - The Who Sings My Generation ('65)
The Rolling Stones (their Rock and Roll, or 'Hard R&B' records) - England's Newest Hitmakers ('64), 12X5 ('64), Rolling Stones Now! ('65), Out of Our Heads ('65), December's Children ('65)
and, of course...
Jerry Lee Lewis - Jerry Lee Lewis ('57)/Jerry Lee's Greatest ('61)
- he had three great late sixties records (Another Place Another Time/She Still Comes Around.../She Even Woke Me Up...) but they're more Country than Rock and Roll...
***Last but not least is Jerry Lee Lewis' record Live At the Star Club, Hamburg ('64). It is considered the very best live record of all time and is also considered the VERY BEST Rock and Roll ever recorded by anybody (all of Rock and Roll's subsequent sub-genres included) Allmusic.com states that this record makes Punk, Heavy Metal, Hard Rock and any other 'hardcore' genre sound tame... That sounds like a stretch, I know, but after hearing it I'm a believer. You've got to hear it!
Chuck Berry - One Dozen Berrys ('58 )/Chuck Berry Is on Top ('59)/St. Louis to Liverpool ('64)
Carl Perkins - Dance Album ('57)
Everly Brothers (Who influenced the Beatles' John Lennon/Paul McCartney two-part harmonies) - Everly Brothers ('58 )/It's Everly Time ('60)/The Fabulous Style of the Everly Brothers ('60)
Bo Diddley - Bo Diddley ('57)/Go Bo Diddley ('59)
Elvis Presley - Elvis Presley ('56), Elvis ('56) <---both extremely rowdy for the mid-50s...
Bill Haley and His Comets - Shake Rattle and Roll ('55)
The Crickets (Buddy Holly's group) - The 'Chirping' Crickets ('57)
Buddy Holly - Buddy Holly ('58, this was his last record before dying)
Little Richard (the true 'king of Rock and Roll') - Here's Little Richard ('57), Little Richard ('58 )
Gene Vincent - Bluejean Bop! ('56), Gene Vincent & His Blue Caps ('57)
The Beatles (their Rock and Roll albums) - Please Please Me ('63), With the Beatles ('63), A Hard Days' Night ('64)
Fats Domino - This Is Fats Domino ('57)/The Fabulous Mr. D ('58 )
Roy Orbison - For the Lonely: 18 Greatest Hits (this came out in '88... he didn't have any early great records - just great singles)
The Coasters - The Coasters ('58 )
The Yardbirds - Five Live Yardbirds ('64)
The Who - The Who Sings My Generation ('65)
The Rolling Stones (their Rock and Roll, or 'Hard R&B' records) - England's Newest Hitmakers ('64), 12X5 ('64), Rolling Stones Now! ('65), Out of Our Heads ('65), December's Children ('65)
and, of course...
Jerry Lee Lewis - Jerry Lee Lewis ('57)/Jerry Lee's Greatest ('61)
- he had three great late sixties records (Another Place Another Time/She Still Comes Around.../She Even Woke Me Up...) but they're more Country than Rock and Roll...
***Last but not least is Jerry Lee Lewis' record Live At the Star Club, Hamburg ('64). It is considered the very best live record of all time and is also considered the VERY BEST Rock and Roll ever recorded by anybody (all of Rock and Roll's subsequent sub-genres included) Allmusic.com states that this record makes Punk, Heavy Metal, Hard Rock and any other 'hardcore' genre sound tame... That sounds like a stretch, I know, but after hearing it I'm a believer. You've got to hear it!
Last edited by SDavis22 on Mon Apr 09, 2007 5:26 pm, edited 3 times in total.