The List

3 Fascinating Concept Albums That Deserve More Attention

Who doesnโ€™t love concept albums? When one is in the mood to get cerebral, rather than zoning out to cool-sounding tunes, a concept album is the right remedy. We all know about the great concept albums from bands like The Who and Pink Floyd, but what about the more underrated gems? Letโ€™s look at a few examples, shall we?

โ€˜Whatโ€™s Going Onโ€™ by Marvin Gaye

Some people still debate whether or not Whatโ€™s Going On, Marvin Gayeโ€™s magnum opus of a progressive soul record, is actually a concept album. However, while it doesnโ€™t follow the cookie-cutter storytelling motions that many concept albums from the 1970s followed, Whatโ€™s Going On does follow a sort of song cycle with an overall narrative. 

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The whole narrative of this album is told from the perspective of a Vietnam vet, who returns home to find his country rife with suffering and social injustice. Itโ€™s really an amazing piece of work, and definitely the best to come from Gaye.

โ€˜The Point!โ€™ by Harry Nilsson

This classic pop-rock 1970 concept album by Harry Nilsson follows the story of a young man named Oblio. Heโ€™s a round-headed lad in a place where itโ€™s the law for everything to be pointy. A strange concept indeed, but itโ€™s quite captivating. It would later be made into a film, too. According to Nilsson himself, the idea for The Point! came from (you guessed it!) an ac*d trip.

โ€œI was on ac*d and I looked at the trees and I realized that they all came to points, and the little branches came to points, and the houses [each] came to [a] point,โ€ said Nilsson. โ€œI thought, ‘Oh! Everything has a point, and if it doesn’t, then there’s [still] a point to it.’โ€

โ€˜Arthur (Or The Decline And Fall Of The British Empire)โ€™ by The Kinks

Ray Davies wrote the whole of Arthur (Or The Decline And Fall Of The British Empire) in 1969, and itโ€™s one of the most underrated concept albums out there. The story follows the lives of an immigrant and her husband, a carpet layer, and their trials and tribulations in post-war England where opportunities were slim.

Sadly, this album didnโ€™t get the commercial success it deserved. However, it has gained a cult following in the decades that followed its release.

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