Looking at the playlist, we have a lot of representatives from the rock world - and rightfully so. These are the Golden Years of rock and there's many great tracks added on there. I see the 70s as the decade when all the ideas that were created in the 60s - concept albums, studio productions, expanding songwriting techniques and importing ideas from other genres just come together and explode rock music into something else. Progressive rock has a bit of a bad name, but at it's best it's very hard to beat in my view.
I think it's worth looking back as well at the years before whenever looking at a new year. If we class Pet Sounds/Sgt Pepper as the birth of rock, or modern music, then just listen to how far it's come in 5/6 years. The songs on the playlist sound alien to music of just a few years before. Can you imagine Roundabout by Yes, Blue by Joni Mitchell or When The Levee Breaks being released in 1964? I can't.
However, 1971 wasn't just about great rock music. In all genres, similar things were happening - sounds were progressing. We start to hear very experimental music made by the 'Krautrock' bands such as Tangerine Dream - these will eventually lead to some of the first electronic ambient albums and the first fully electronic music. Whilst they don't get the credit they necessarily should have, the idea of the counter-culture from the 60s hasn't gone away - it's gone back 'underground' again and is busily making music that's crazy, mad, unlistenable but ultimately influential. Rock music was still progressing.
Anyway, aside from rock, there were great singles and albums in other genres too. Here's my nominations
I know we have had "What's Going on" on the album thread, but it's such a magnificent album that it needs representing on the playlist. When Berry Gordy of Motown heard the album he hated it and didn't want it releasing. In some ways, I can understand his view point - I don't think Gaye did anything like this before, or even after. I'm glad it was released as it's one of my absolute favourite albums and I'll never tire of hearing it. For it's anger and depressing view of the world, it's beautiful and uplifting.
The album is a 'concept' album in that it's dealing with the views of a Vietnam soldier returning home and finding there's a lot of problems - money, racism, drugs. In 'Mercy Mercy Me' we have, similar to Big Yellow Taxi, another of the first songs about environmental issues.
I could nominate most of the album, but the title track is just utterly beautiful.
Marvin Gaye - What's Going on
Whilst we're a few years away from the arrival of Disco, we are seeing some of the Philadelphia Soul artists around now. With the big productions with plenty of strings and brass, touches of funk, great grooves and soul and very a slick produced sound Philly Soul is definitely a pre-cursor of Disco. It certainly influences the disco sound. I love Philly records, they are catchy, uplifting and so smooth. Perfect for when the suns out and rest assured, I'll be putting some classic Philly on whilst enjoying a beer in the garden!
The song I'll nominate has much of the above although it's a slower ballad but you can recognise a lot of the Philly Soul elements and the high pitched singing almost sounds like the Bee Gees in a few years.
You Are Everything - The Stylistics
Funk is starting to grow as the 70s move on and the sound is becoming 'harder' now with the emphasis moving firmly onto the groove. The beat, the groove is literally what it's about - and that will massively influence Disco. A lot of the James Brown funk tracks have been sampled to death, but there's something about them that still sounds fresh today... and of course, it's impossible not to tap your feet or move. And as I said the other day, there's jazz all over this record in terms of the drums, bass and horns etc but this isn't jazz either! :)
This is funk at it's purest.
James Brown - Soul Power
To finish, as I said in the introduction this is ultimately the era of classic rock music and there are few better bands than Yes. Fragile is a classic album and again I could nominate several tracks from it. I find it incredible to listen to this album and you can hear a huge amount of technically impressive musicianship, jazz all over the place and yet it's unmistakingly a rock song with pop melodies. It's a song that everyone loves despite it being practically impossible to play - what timing is the beat? I have no idea and it seems to change almost like it's freeform (to my untrained ears).
Anyway, if you want a song with a classic riff, incredible vocals, huge rises to the top and then drops and a couple of bridges in then name a better song that South Side Of The Sky! Some songs just need playing LOUD and this is one.
Yes - South Side Of The Sky