The Undeniable Top 10 Pop Albums of All Time

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The Undeniable Top

Saying this upfront, compiling a list of Top 10 anything is a recipe for more blowback than solidarity no matter how you slice it. So here is the specific idea of this commissioned Top 10 from me: ten albums that represented loud and proud in their individual sub-genres but that also boasted mass e e ive crossover appeal thus ultimately making them โ€œpopโ€ albums, as in โ€œpopular.โ€

These are by no means my personal favorite albums by these artists (in most cases) and they are not each artistโ€™s artistic breakthrough or apex (though with the first four it is arguable). They are as I hypothesized aboveโ€ฆand away we go.

10. Saturday Night Fever โ€“ Bee Gees/Various (SRO – 1977)

The omnipresence of The Brothers Gibb (Barry, Robin and Morris, a.k.a. the Bee Gees) โ€“ as a vocal group and as songwriter/producers of a string of instantly identifiable and undeniable hit pop records โ€“ was never more clearly reflected than in the multi-million selling/chart-topping 2-LP soundtrack to the fluke hit Disco flick โ€œSaturday Night Fever.โ€

Their music dominated Top 40 airwaves and heavily crossed over to Black and international radio dials. While many consumers may have never even taken the second disc out of its sleeve โ€“ reveling exclusively in Side 1โ€™s smash factory of โ€œStayinโ€™ Alive,โ€ โ€œHow Deep Is Your Love,โ€ โ€œNight Fever,โ€ โ€œMore Than a Womanโ€ and Yvonne Ellimanโ€™s โ€œIf I Canโ€™t Have Youโ€; all of which the brothers composed โ€“ it was merely the beginning.

The group not only included a second version of โ€œMore Than a Womanโ€ – sung and performed by another group of singing brothers, Cape Verdeans Tavares โ€“ the soundtrack also included two of the Bee Geesโ€™ previous hits โ€œJive Talkinโ€™โ€ and โ€œYou Should Be Dancing,โ€ six dance class e e ics by KC & The Sunshine Band (โ€œBoogie Shoesโ€), MFSB (a cover of the Nite-Litersโ€™ โ€œK-Jeeโ€), percussion king Ralph MacDonald (โ€œCalypso Breakdownโ€), New Jersey funksters Kool & The Gang (โ€œOpen Sesameโ€), innovative orchestrator Walter Murphy (a flip of the olโ€™ Ludwig Vanโ€™s 5th Symphony โ€œA Fifth of Beethovenโ€) and Philly Dance group The Trammpsโ€™ (the explosive โ€œDisco Infernoโ€).

The jam-packed package rounds out with three instrumental pieces of score by David Shire. When the infamous Disco backlash happened at the end of the `70s, MANY copies of this particular album – which epitomized the commercial zenith of the genre – were โ€˜burn baby burnedโ€™โ€ฆand over 2,500 of the surviving copies can be purchased via the Discogs website for as little as 50 cents! But no coverage of Disco nor Pop music of the era can be discussed without referencing the ecstasy and the infamy of the infectious Bee Gees-inflected โ€œSaturday Night Feverโ€

9. Purple Rain โ€“ Prince and The Revolution (Warner Bros. – 1984)

Mercurial music man Prince Rogers Nelson has had more lightning rod albums such as Dirty Mind, 1999 and Sign Oโ€™ The Times, but he truly arrived on a first-name basis with the Pop world with the explosion of his 9-song contribution to the film prophetically created to be his launching pad to superstardom, โ€œPurple Rain. โ€Every song became an audio-video class e e ic: from the liberating opener โ€œLetโ€™s Go Crazyโ€ to the glorious finale โ€œPurple Rainโ€ and every song in between – โ€œTake Me With Uโ€ (a duet with film co-star Apollonia), the power ballad โ€œThe Beautiful Onesโ€ (which builds to an ear-shattering climax), the instrumental workout โ€œComputer Blueโ€ that leads into the sex-drenched โ€œDarling Nikkiโ€ (which topped Tipper Goreโ€™s โ€œFilthy 15โ€ hitlist of X-rated songs that begat the Parental Advisory Sticker on recordings), the revolutionary โ€œWhen Doves Cry,โ€ and the one-two showtime punch of โ€œI Would Die 4 Uโ€ and โ€œBaby Iโ€™m a Star.

โ€The-crazy-little-mixed-up-film-that-could also featured Princeโ€™s Minneapolis Funk nemesisโ€™ Morris Day & The Time and sexy pop tarts Apollonia 6 (a revamp of Vanity 6), but their songs from the film were strategically included on albums of their own.

Imagine if โ€œJungle Love,โ€ โ€œThe Birdโ€ and โ€œSex Shooterโ€ had also been included on a more traditional โ€œPurple Rainโ€ soundtrack? Heavy Weather, indeed.

8. Frampton Comes Alive! โ€“ Peter Frampton (A&M – 1976)

British guitarist, vocalist and songwriter Peter Frampton had been a member of the bands The Herd and Humble Pie before signing to A&M Records as a solo artist in the early `70s. He released four mildly performing studio albums at the company which was beloved for sticking behind artists it truly believed in. That loyalty paid off grandly when a double-LP live album was painstakingly cobbled together by Frampton from shows performed in four separate venues from northern California to Pittsburgh.

This juggernaut spawned the crossover Top 40 AM radio hits โ€œShow Me The Wayโ€ and โ€œBaby, I Love Your Wayโ€ as well as the deeper FM radio staples โ€œLines On My Faceโ€ and โ€œDo You Feel Like We Do.

โ€The real magic was in the way Frampton re-sequenced and sweetened the raw live tapes to create a live rock concert experience that, unlike most live rock albums of the period, sounded great and truly transported you into the experience โ€“ from the quiet intimacy of numbers like โ€œ(All I Want to Be Is) By Your Side,โ€ โ€œWind of Changeโ€ and the acoustic instrumental โ€œPenny For Your Thoughtsโ€ to the rave ups โ€œSomethingโ€™s Happening,โ€ โ€œI Wanna Go to the Sunโ€ and a cover of the Rolling Stonesโ€™ โ€œJumping Jack Flashโ€ (the only song of the 14 not penned by Frampton โ€“ cha-ching).

Slap a cheeky foldout photo of Peter clutching a black custom Les Paul guitar with his golden backlit locks on the cover that doubled as a gatefold bedroom poster and you have the rock shot heard `round the globe.

Click NEXT for the next album.

7. Thriller โ€“ Michael Jackson (Epic – 1982)

From child star to supernova, Michael Jackson became โ€œThe King of Popโ€ behind the unprecedented success of his second Quincy Jones production, Thriller โ€“ the undisputed international biggest selling album of all-time. Interestingly, of the 9-song albumโ€™s seven Top 10 Pop charters, Epic led off with the weakest for the pre-release first single: the Paul McCartney duet โ€œThe Girl is Mine. โ€ Next came the bedrock paranoia funk of โ€œBillie Jean,โ€ the song thatโ€™s accompanying music video broke the color barrier at MTV followed by Jacksonโ€™s historical performance on the โ€œMotown 25โ€ television special.

The hard-rockinโ€™ โ€œBeat Itโ€ boasted a โ€œWest Side Storyโ€-inspired anti-gang video and a searing guitar solo from special guest Eddie Van Halen. โ€œWanna Be Startinโ€™ Somethinโ€™โ€ lit up the dancefloor while โ€œHuman Natureโ€ fired up imaginations (including that of Miles Davis who recorded a jazz version). The catchy and soulful โ€œP. Y. T. (Pretty Young Thing)โ€ was needed Funk from the pen of Q-discovery James Ingram.

And the title track โ€œThrillerโ€ (one of three penned by the masterful Rod Temperton) made history as an extended length music video (it debuted as an MTV television special) pairing Michael on a date gone โ€œbadโ€ with Black Playboy playmate Ola Ray and featuring a priceless spoken word breakdown by legendary master of the macabre Vincent Price.

Tempertonโ€™s other two compositions were the achingly sensual โ€œThe Lady in My Lifeโ€ (which, as arranged by Onaje Allan Gumbs, led jazz guitarist Stanley Jordanโ€™s Magic Touch album to scores of weeks at the top of the Billboard Contemporary Jazz chart) and the album cut favorite โ€œBaby Be Mine. โ€ Thriller was the #1-selling Pop album for the Christmases of 1982 and 1983, and resides in the Library of Congress National Registry of culturally significant recordings.

6. Greatest Hits โ€“ Sly & The Family Stone (Epic – 1970)

There had been greatest hits collections before Slyโ€™sโ€ฆbut none as perfectly executed and well-timed. The Family Stone got off to a rocky start in 1967 with its hitless debut LP, A Whole New Thing but their joyful music and sparkling image of a band of Blacks & Whites/brothers and sisters was about to rise.

The next albums Dance to the Music and Life yielded 1 + 2 hit punches, respectively. It was the fourth album, Stand, that set AM and FM radios ablaze with no less than 5 smash hits that doubled as mindset markers for 1969โ€™s Summer of Love: โ€œStand,โ€ โ€œI Want to Take You Higher,โ€ โ€œEveryday People,โ€ โ€œYou Can Make It If You Tryโ€ and โ€œSing a Simple Song.โ€

Following an electrifying wee-hours set at Woodstock, the band had arrived at its apex in a mere two and a half years of recording. Superstar songwriter and leader Sly Stone (born Sylvester Stewart) was beginning to veer off the rails under both the wings and the weight of his fever-pitched rise into power, popularity and persuasion.

When Stone failed to deliver a new album as scheduled in 1970, CBS Records President Clive Davis mandated a very special Greatest Hits package โ€“ one that sidestepped the rising darkness and foreboding in Slyโ€™s last effort (โ€œDonโ€™t Call Me Nigger, Whiteyโ€ and โ€œSex Machineโ€) in favor of all the danceable uplift that got him thereโ€ฆPLUS THREE NEW SONGS that would also be smash hits: โ€œEverybody is a Star,โ€ โ€œHot Fun in the Summertimeโ€ and โ€œThank You (Falletinme Be Mice Elf Agin).โ€

Again, record companies had assembled greatest hits on artists that maybe included one or two new songsโ€ฆbut none had done one boasting three new hits!

Sly & The Family Stoneโ€™s Greatest Hits celebrated not only the end of a Peace/Love/Unity era but also the band as it was conceived. Sly turned the corner into the `70s recording his next effort, Thereโ€™s a Riot Goinโ€™ On, largely alone or with shadowy figures.

5. Kind of Blue โ€“ Miles Davis (Columbia โ€“ 1959)

Trumpeter Miles Davis walked into Columbia 30th Street Studio on March 2, 1959 with a sextet that featured John Coltrane on tenor saxophone, Julian โ€œCannonballโ€ Adderley on alto saxophone, Wynton Kelly (for one song then Bill Evans on all the rest) on piano, Paul Chambers on bass e e and Jimmy Cobb on drumsโ€ฆplus a few ideas sketched on paper.

Though he knew he was shooting for something refreshing, reflective and relaxing, he had no idea how his modal approach to Jazz would seduce listeners around the world.He got three songs down that day and another two on April 22, overall inspired by his disappointment in returning to an icy America after a rapturous reception in Europeโ€ฆthe exclamation point being assaulted by two policemen with blackjacks outside of a nightclub he was headlining (his name on the marquee) after walking a pretty white woman to her cab.

Thus, the title: Kind of Blue.At turns brooding, swinginโ€™, sensual and evocative, all five compositions โ€“ โ€œSo What,โ€ โ€œFreddie Freeloader,โ€ โ€œFlamenco Sketches,โ€ โ€œAll Bluesโ€ and โ€œBlue in Greenโ€ โ€“ have become class e e ics, and the LP the hands-down best-selling Jazz album of all-time. It is the proverbial if you own but one Jazz album at all, this is the one that says it all.

4. Tapestry โ€“ Carole King (Ode – 1971)

After years of brilliance writing songs in New Yorkโ€™s fabled Brill Building โ€“ most with partner Gerry Goffin โ€“ singer/songwriter/pianist Carole King struck out as an artist in her own right and became the face of a movement with Tapestry: her artistic declaration of independence.

Unlike Joni Mitchell who started out as a folky or Laura Nyro whose singular songs of introspection were made great hits by others but never the artist herself, Carole King was a masterful Pop songstress who could write in many styles and make them all sound authentic.

She got to have her cake of stardom and eat at the table of respected crafters of song. So penetrating and ubiquitous were her songs that they were covered by men and women alikeโ€ฆand a lot of Black artists ranging from Billy Paul, The Isley Brothers (who covered three of them on their album Brother, Brother, Brother) and Gulf Coast instrumental quartet The Crusaders (featuring Larry Carlton on guitar) to a pairing of Donny Hathaway & Roberta Flack, and Quincy Jones (who SANG the Western story song โ€œSmackwater Jackโ€ as the title track of his third album for A&M Records).

New songs โ€œI Feel The Earth Move,โ€ โ€œSo Far Awayโ€ and โ€œItโ€™s Too Lateโ€ fit snugly with Caroleโ€™s interpretations of songs wrote that were hits for others – โ€œWill You Still Love Me Tomorrow,โ€ โ€œYouโ€™ve Got a Friendโ€ and the LPโ€™s epic finale โ€œ(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Womanโ€ which no-less than the Queen of Soul had already made her own – provided the soundtrack for `71/`72 making Tapestry a must have across genre lines.

3. Innervisions โ€“ Stevie Wonder (Tamla/Motown – 1973)

Stevie Wonderโ€™s 7-album `70s output from the gap-bridging Where Iโ€™m Coming From and Music of My Mind to the brilliant yet too-oft-misunderstood Journey Through The Secret Life of Plants remains an unparalleled string of brilliance, hit-making, virtuosity and prolific profundity.Yet no single album encompasses and encapsulates the scope of that genius finer than Innervisions which landed smack in the middle, circa `73.

The Jazz trip of a poor girlโ€™s all-too-brief flirtation with drug use set to Stevieโ€™s double tracked harmonicas and shimmering Rhodes on โ€œToo High,โ€ the serene dream of universal peace โ€œVisions,โ€ the stark ghetto portraiture of โ€œLiving For The City,โ€ the woman-as-sanctuary love letter โ€œGolden Lady,โ€ the striverโ€™s anthem โ€œHigher Ground,โ€ a tap on the shoulder for those blindly following the Born Again Christian movement โ€œJesus Children of America,โ€ the stone cold truth about matters o f the heart โ€œAll is Fair in Love,โ€ a recess of joy in the Latin-tinged โ€œDonโ€™t You Worry `Bout a Thingโ€ and some parting words on hypocrisy โ€œHeโ€™s Misstra Know-It-All.โ€ Sure, Talking Book, Fulfillingnessโ€™ First Finale and the bountiful Songs in the Key of Life are all amazing in their own way.

Still, Innervisions is a taut and terrific 360-degree masterpiece no matter what angle from which it is approached.

2. Revolver – Beatles (Parlophone – 1966)

The Beatlesโ€™ Revolver found โ€˜The Fab Fourโ€™ making good on the loftier highlights of their sixth LP, Rubber Soul (โ€œNowhere Man,โ€ โ€œNorwegian Wood,โ€ โ€œIn My Lifeโ€ and โ€œThink For Yourselfโ€) with a project that would create a whole new lane for studio experimentation, expansion of songwriting themes beyond love, new sounds, a more unified band concept of showcasing individual membersโ€™ contributions, and complete disregard for recording an album they could play in concert.

Following three months off, the men used the studio as an incubator to revel in what would become a bedrock entry into Psychedelic Rock with songs ranging from George Harrisonโ€™s fuzzy and incendiary โ€œTaxmanโ€ followed by the string octet accompaniment (inspired by Bernard Hermmanโ€™s score for Alfred Hitchcockโ€™s โ€œPsychoโ€) for Paul McCartneyโ€™s character study on loneliness โ€œEleanor Rigbyโ€ to the trippy LSD-fueled sing-a-long of โ€œYellow Submarineโ€ (sung by Ringo Starr) and the transcendental Hindustani classical music that illuminated the ode to hedonism โ€œLove You To.โ€

The quartet was pulling musical and lyrical inspirations from everywhere yet the work has a loosely cohesive and spellbinding feel.

With 16 songs recorded during the sessions (14 that made the U.K. edition, edited to 11 in the U.S. plus a non-album double-A-sided single of โ€œPaperback Writerโ€ and โ€œRainโ€), it is also the bandโ€™s last invitingly interactive LP in its openness for fans to shuffle and sequence the mind-altering selections at will.

No less than nine new recording techniques were introduced on Revolver inspiring the bandโ€™s then-new engineer Geoff Emerick to state, โ€œI know from the day it came out, Revolver changed the way that everyone else made records.โ€

1. Whatโ€™s Going On โ€“ Marvin Gaye (Tamla/Motown – 1971)

What The Beatles, Beach Boys, Bob Dylan and so many others so laboriously attempted to do with the so-called โ€œconcept album,โ€ Marvin Gaye accomplid in wide strides of heart, focus and purpose on Whatโ€™s Going On โ€“ a song cycle so thoughtful yet heartfelt, so prayerful yet angry โ€“ it is the very definition of timely and timeless.

Inspired by his own blues, the blues of America as the `60s melted into the `70s and, most specifically, stories his brother Frankie brought back from Vietnam, Whatโ€™s Going On is a soulful extended meditation on what was F$&ked up about America then (war, the ecology, the children, the tax man) with not much changing as we listen in now.

As crystal clear in lyrical intent and missive as it is richly engaging from merging musical standpoints of Jazz, Soul, Gospel, orchestra and Afro-rhythms, Whatโ€™s Going On is an inner-city storefront church palmed in the hands of a prophet and held up to the sky for God to kiss and make better.โ€“ A. Scott GallowayMarch 8, 2019