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6 More Must-Listen-to Albums for Classic Rock Enthusiasts

Getting acquainted with the canon of classic rock albums can be a time-consuming pursuit. We here at American Songwriter have already offered a list of 10 essential classic rock albums to explore, as well as a list of five that defined classic rock in the โ€˜70s. But we know full well some of you want to keep going beyond these initial lists as much as we do, so…here we go.

Below are half-a-dozen more albums that are rightfully considered classics. They are required listening for anyone who has yet to explore them, and worth keeping in rotation for those who are well-acquainted.

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1. The Beatles, Sgt. Pepperโ€™s Lonely Hearts Club Band

The โ€œmust-listen-toโ€ label could apply to any album in the Beatlesโ€™ discography, but Sgt. Pepperโ€™s Lonely Hearts Club Band represents the bandโ€™s sound taking a leap unlike any other in their 10-year history. Everything about the album, from the sophisticated recording techniques to the psychedelic effects and imagery to the vibrant cover art, was fresh and new upon its release. This is not to say that the songs were less accessible. Even the more psychedelic songs, like โ€œLucy in the Sky with Diamondsโ€ and โ€œDay in the Life,โ€ are remarkably melodic.

2. Yes, The Yes Album

Of the albums featured here, The Yes Album may be the least accessible, at least for those unacquainted with progressive rock. But it may not take long to grow on new listeners. Four long tracksโ€”โ€Yours Is No Disgrace,โ€ โ€œStarship Trooper,โ€ โ€œIโ€™ve Seen All Good People,โ€ and โ€œPerpetual Changeโ€โ€”form the core of the album, and each exemplifies the musicianship and dynamics that has made early โ€˜70s Yes a staple of classic rock radio.

The Yes Album can be enjoyed on two different levels. Listeners can focus on the drama that unfolds over the course of each track, or they can zero in on breathtaking individual performances, such as Jon Andersonโ€™s crystalline vocals on the โ€œYour Moveโ€ section of โ€œIโ€™ve Seen All Good People,โ€ or Chris Squireโ€™s rumbling bass on โ€œYours Is No Disgrace.โ€

3. David Bowie, The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars

This album is both a seminal work of glam rock as well as one of Bowieโ€™s finest moments. He builds on the cosmic imagery of his 1969 hit โ€œSpace Oddityโ€ by creating Ziggy Stardust, an even more fantastical figure than Major Tom.

Bowieโ€™s far-out lyrics and confident delivery along with Mick Ronsonโ€™s buzzing guitar give songs like โ€œMoonage Daydream,โ€ โ€œZiggy Stardust,โ€ and โ€œSuffragette Cityโ€ exactly the right vibe for a concept album about an alien rocker sent to Earth to save the planet. Itโ€™s hard to overstate how much mileage Bowie gets from his vocal performances on this album. It takes a lot of swagger to pull off lines like Iโ€™m an alligator / Iโ€™m a mama-papa coming for you / Iโ€™m a space invader / Iโ€™ll be a rock and rollinโ€™ bitch for you.

[RELATED: Behind the Strange Album Cover for David Bowieโ€™s โ€˜The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Marsโ€™]

4. Elton John, Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

If the album cover, showing John stepping from a city sidewalk onto the yellow brick road from The Wizard of Oz, doesnโ€™t send the message that listeners are about to hear something epic, the 11-minute opener, โ€œFuneral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding,โ€ gets that point across.

John has no shortage of albums from his โ€˜70s heyday that combine inspired songwriting with great ensemble playing, but itโ€™s hard to top the power of โ€œLove Lies Bleeding,โ€ โ€œAll the Young Girls Love Alice,โ€ or โ€œSaturday Nightโ€™s Alright for Fighting.โ€ Even quieter piano-driven tracks like โ€œGoodbye Yellow Brick Roadโ€ and โ€œHarmonyโ€ feel grand with a little help from Del Newmanโ€™s string arrangements.

5. Steely Dan, Pretzel Logic

Just about any one of Steely Danโ€™s albums would be an appropriate addition to this list, but Pretzel Logic represents a particularly significant moment in their catalog. Itโ€™s when Walter Becker and Donald Fagen began to shed the pretense of Steely Dan being a band. Jim Hodder, their drummer on the first two albums, only provides backing vocals, while a pair of legendsโ€”Jim Gordon and Jeff Porcaroโ€”serve as the timekeepers.

Though Pretzel Logic boasts an impressive cast of session musicians, the real star of the album is the songs. Who besides Becker and Fagen could write a number that begins with some quiet flapamba, tosses in a blend of Latin, jazz and blues elements, and it becomes a No. 4 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 like they did with โ€œRikki Donโ€™t Lose That Number?โ€

That big hit, the album’s leadoff track, foreshadows the variety to be found across the other entries. โ€œAny Major Dude Will Tell Youโ€ is gentle and mellow, โ€œWith a Gunโ€ has a country feel, โ€œMonkey in Your Soulโ€ is funky, and the title track is bluesy, with Faganโ€™s Wurlitzer carrying the melody. Steely Danโ€™s future albums would veer increasingly toward jazz rock, but on this album, they pull off a variety of styles with aplomb.

6. Fleetwood Mac, Rumours

Sitting down with a pair of headphones and giving Rumours a start-to-finish listen is time well spent, whether youโ€™re new to the album or you heard it countless times when it was ruling radio in the late โ€˜70s. Even the uninitiated are likely to be familiar with the album’s biggest hits, like โ€œDreams,โ€ โ€œDonโ€™t Stop,โ€ โ€œGo Your Own Way,โ€ and โ€œYou Make Loving Fun.โ€

But these songs have so many fascinating subtleties that may have been missed or forgotten. Get lulled by the vibraphone on โ€œDreams,โ€ or mesmerized by the interplay between Lindsey Buckinghamโ€™s various guitar parts on โ€œGo Your Own Way.โ€ And in the middle of it all is the albumโ€™s centerpiece, โ€œThe Chain,โ€ a group composition about the disintegration of the romantic relationships between Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, Christine and John McVie, and Mick Fleetwood and his wife, Jenny Boyd. Itโ€™s an ambitious track, but it manages to successfully convey the frustration and heartbreak the band members were feeling.

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