Various - 50 Most Famous Records Ever Made - Album No. 3 album flac
Performer: VariousTitle: 50 Most Famous Records Ever Made - Album No. 3
Style: Big Band, Swing, Vocal
Released: 1985
Country: US
MP3 album: 1251 mb
FLAC album: 1159 mb
Rating: 4.9
Other formats: VOC MOD MIDI WAV AA DMF VOX
Genre: Jazz / Pop / Folk and Country
50 Most Famous Records Ever Made - Album No. 3 (Cass, Comp). RCA Special Products.
This is the highest price ever paid for an album that has been commercially released. The Quarrymen – "That'll Be the Day"/"In Spite of All the Danger" (UK 78–rpm, acetate in plain sleeve, 1958). The one existing copy is currently owned by Paul McCartney. Who Bought The Most Expensive Album Ever Made?". Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on April 22, 2015. Retrieved May 3, 2015. Missing or empty title (help). "The 50 most valuable records in this database". Retrieved 2015-12-09.
Various - 45 RPM Records First Anniversary Album. Various - 60 Years Of Music America Loves Best - Volume III - Popular. Various - The Best Of The Big Bands - 20 Unforgettable Swinging Favourites. The Poll Winners Of 1940 - Glenn Miller ● Tommy Dorsey ● Harry James ● Ben. Various - The Glenn Miller Years. Various - Moonlight Serenade. Various - The Big Band Collectors Guild Premiere Showcase. Various - Swing-Swing-Swing.
Making an album is expensive. The cost of studio time, equipment and session musicians adds up quickly, although most record labels set strict budgets for their artists. Occasionally, though, an artist will be given the freedom to do whatever they want. This usually leads to a huge bill and headaches for everyone involved. Making the album wasn’t easy though. Metallica and producer Bob Rock argued a lot about the sound of the record, which led to the band re-recording many tracks and the album being remixed three times. The difficult production period led to a huge bill, but it was well worth it in the end! My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy – Kanye West. He also booked three studios at the same time so he could decide which he wanted to work in on the day.
And, sadly, the last record that Bon Scott ever made. It was a triumph rescued from the jaws of disaster, an album with so much commercial expectation riding upon it that Atlantic Records originally attempted to bully the band into covering The Spencer Davis Group’s 1966 hit Gimme Some Lovin’ in a desperate bid for chart action. Mindful that the pressure was on, Malcolm Young (and the group’s new hot-shot manager Peter Mensch) fired original producer Eddie Kramer, hired in Robert ‘Mutt’ Lange, and forced his band to knuckle down for three month’s solid graft in the studio . Page 3 of 5: The 50 Greatest Rock Album Ever: 30-21. The 50 Greatest Rock Album Ever: 50-41.
Madonna’s third studio album, True Blue, was covered by a striking image of the diva photographed by celebrated photographer Herb Ritts. He would later re-team with Madonna for both the You Can Dance and Like a Prayer covers. Leading up to her debut album, the genre-blurring FKA Twigs made a name for herself on stunning visuals: music videos, EP covers, and even magazine shoots. This porcelain-sheen headshot was an exquisite introduction to the wonder of her music. The most iconic grunge album cover after Nirvana's Nevermind, Hole's Live Through This depicts a sobbing beauty queen with mascara running down her face. The desperation on the woman's face reveals the tragic self-doubt fueling the beauty industry, but she's not made to look entirely ridiculous - we're still forced to view her as a human instead of a broad parody of an archetype.
Their previous album, V. made Pearl Jam the most successful band in the world. They celebrated by suing Ticketmaster and making Vitalogy, where their mastery of rock’s past and future became complete. Soulful ballads like Nothingman are matched by hardcore-influenced rockers such as Spin the Black Circle. Costello‘s third album is all tightly wound paranoia. The concept is personal politics; the original title was Emotional Fascism, and one song is called Two Little Hitlers. The keyboard-driven sound of Accidents Will Happen helped define New Wave. It's one of the weirdest Motown records ever. Gaye's divorce settlement required him to make a new album and pay the royalties to his ex-wife – the sister of Motown boss Berry Gordy. So Gaye made this bitterly funny double LP of breakup songs, including "You Can Leave, But It's Going to Cost Yo.
At the time the most expensive album cover ever made, the Sgt Pepper album cover remains a pop art masterpiece that has influenced everyone from Frank Zappa (We’re Only In It For The Money) to The Simpsons (The Yellow Album). Staged by British artist Peter Blake and his then-wife, Jann Haworth, the Sgt Pepper album cover depicted 58 different people, chosen by John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Peter Blake, Jann Haworth and London art dealer Robert Fraser, presenting a fascinating cross-section of cultures, importance and each Beatle’s individual interests.
The best live album Parker ever recorded. Moondog On The Streets Of New York (Mars EP, 1953). Gaynair made only three albums as leader before his death in 1995. Blue Bogey was the first. The second, Africa Calling, was recorded in 1960, but the demise of Tempo that year led to it staying unreleased for decades. Both albums were recorded in London with British rhythm sections and reveal a saxophonist who had clearly been listening to Benny Golson and Lucky Thompson, but who had infused those influences with a twist of the Caribbean. Recorded live in Atlanta, Georgia in summer 1959, but not released until the following year, In Person is the most viscerally exciting album Ray Charles ever recorded. The better known At Newport, recorded at the Newport Jazz Festival a year earlier, sounds almost tame alongside it.
One of punk rock's most enduring images was actually plagiarised. In 1979, Misfits frontman Glenn Danzig saw the skull on a poster for the film 'The Crimson Ghost' and decided to use it himself. The Rolling Stones' world-famous tongue logo, first used on their 1971 'Sticky Fingers' album and recently purchased by the Victoria & Albert Museum for £50,000, was designed by art student John Pasche in 1970. Pasche was paid just £50 for the logo, and a further £200 in 1972.
Tracklist
| –Benny Goodman And His Orchestra | Let's Dance |
| –Harry James And His Orchestra | All Or Nothing At All |
| –Glenn Miller And His Orchestra | Moonlight Serenade |
| –Duke Ellington And His Orchestra | Take The A Train |
| –Tony Martin With Orchestra | There's No Tomorrow |
| –Fats Waller | Ain't Misbehavin' |
| –Buddy Clark | Linda |
| –Coleman Hawkins And His Orchestra | Body And Soul |
| –Larry Clinton And His Orchestra | Deep Purple |
| –Les Brown And His Orchestra | Sentimental Journey |
| –Harry James And His Orchestra | Sleepy Lagoon |
| –Kay Kyser And His Orchestra | (I've Grown So Lonesome) Thinking Of You |
| –Bunny Berigan & His Orchestra | I Can't Get Started |
| –Ted Weems And His Orchestra | Heartaches |
| –Freddy Martin | Tonight We Love |
| –Charlie Splvak | It's Been A Long Long Time |
| –Tommy Dorsey | I'll Never Smile Again |
| –Wayne King And His Orchestra | Alice Blue Gown |
| –Sammy Kaye | It Isn't Fair |
| –Vaughn Monroe And His Orchestra | Racing With The Moon |
Versions
| Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DVK1-0725 | Various | 50 Most Famous Records Ever Made - Album No. 3 (Cass, Comp) | RCA Special Products | DVK1-0725 | US | 1985 |
| DVM1-0725 | Various | 50 Most Famous Records Ever Made - Album No. 3 (LP, Comp) | RCA Special Products | DVM1-0725 | US | 1985 |









