I think the following five classic rock albums from 1967 are perfect pieces of work from beginning to end. You might just agree with me after revisiting these total classics.
โSgt. Pepperโs Lonely Hearts Club Bandโ by The Beatles
To the surprise of absolutely no one, this classic from The Beatles makes it to our list. And how could it not? Many consider Sgt. Pepperโs Lonely Hearts Club Band to be the Fab Fourโs best album. And considering itโs home to hits like โLucy In The Sky With Diamondsโ and โA Day In The Lifeโ, Iโd have to agree with that notion.
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โSurrealistic Pillowโ by Jefferson Airplane
More than any other album out there, when I think of the psychedelic rock boom of 1967 and the Summer of Love, I think of this very album from Jefferson Airplane. Grace Slickโs vocals are on a totally different level, and few collections embrace and, in turn, define the counterculture movement of the 1960s quite like this record. โWhite Rabbitโ still makes fans out of young listeners today, but the whole of this album is quite good as well.
โThe Piper At The Gates Of Dawnโ by Pink Floyd
Nothing beats The Dark Side Of The Moon. However, Iโll always have affection in my heart for Syd Barrett’s one true whole contribution to Pink Floyd, The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn. This was the bandโs debut album, written almost entirely by Barrett, along with some of his improvisational pieces. Thereโs so much whimsy to be found on this album, and it has a psychedelic feel without getting too dark. He really was ahead of his time. โAstronomy Diminรฉโ and โInterstellar Overdriveโ are essential listening.
โAre You Experiencedโ by The Jimi Hendrix Experience
Few albums are as closely tied to a year, nay, a whole decade quite like Are You Experienced. The debut album of The Jimi Hendrix Experience, this record has stood the test of time in ways that similar bands could only dream of. And the whole of the record is driven by Jimi Hendrixโs soaring guitar riffs and otherworldly compositions. This whole dang thingโs essential listening from start to finish.
โJohn Wesley Hardingโ by Bob Dylan
John Wesley Harding isnโt underrated by any folk rock standard. However, I think this Bob Dylan release could stand to get more love in retrospect. Itโs the home of โAll Along The Watchtowerโ, a song that Jimi Hendrix would repopularize in 1968. Itโs a perfectly semi-acoustic record with serious folk influences, and Dylan was quite brave to release this particular record during the year of psychedelia. And without much publicity, either. This is one of the finest and most perfect folk rock albums of 1967, in my opinion.
Courtesy of Capitol/UMe/Apple Corps Ltd.








