Welcome back to this special retrospective music-posting feature. The gimmick is simple — each week, you post a list (ranked or unranked) of your favourite 25 (or however many) albums of a given year (or, occasionally decade). We are now moving backwards through the early days of the LP era. The video below, originally posted by Eexalien in the Weekly Music Thread provides valuable context about the early days of the LP.
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- Following the Edison cylinder, the first agreed upon recording format was the 78 rpm record which became the standard around 1910. These records were made of a very fragile material called shellac (a resin secreted by the lac bug). A 10″ 78 rpm record held about 3 minutes per side and a 12″ one between 4 and 5 minutes but the 10″ was the more popular format
- The concept of the music album originated when 78 rpm records were issued in multi-disc packages similar to books. In terms of packaging, these aren’t dissimilar from what we now think of as box sets but in terms of length, most could easily fit on a single 12 inch or even 10 inch LP hence the persistence of the album misnomer in the LP era (the fact that LP was Columbia’s proprietary term contributed greatly to this phenomenon as well).
- By the 1930s, the industry was well aware of the limitations of the 78 rpm record and wanted to use microgroove technology (224 to 300 grooves per inch rather than the previous 90) to replace it. The first 33 1/3 rpm records were issued by RCA Victor in 1931 . Their records held 15 minutes per side but the records were too fragile to support multiple playbacks and the format was abandoned by 1933. WWII got in the way of further developments.
- In 1948, Columbia records launched a superior version of the 33 1/3 rpm record which they dubbed the LP (for long player). In a display or remarkable foresight, they actually began mastering records for the new format as early as 1939 giving them access to a considerable back catalogue right at launch. The 12 inch version of LP is essentially the 45 minute album as we know it now but the 12 inch was initially mostly reserved for classical music. Nearly everything else was issued on 10 inch LPs because of the popularity of 10 inch record players with backwards compatibility with 10 inch 78 rpm records. The 10 inch LP was only phased out around the mid-fifties.
- RCA responded to Columbia’s 33 1/3 rpm format by launching the competing 45rpm format on 7 inch records, a format which they had started developing before the war. The only problem was the 45 rpm record had been initially designed as a less ambitious improvement over the 78 rpm record than their own abandoned 33 1/3 format not as a direct competitor to Columbia’s LP. It had the very glaring limitation of being quite short. This meant that RCA was trying to compete with single disc releases by issuing multi disc sets not dissimilar to those previously issued on 78 rpm. These sets proved to be unpopular and as we now know, the 7 inch 45 rpm format nonetheless found it’s calling as the preferred format for single song releases while the term album became synonymous with the 12 inch 33 1/3 rpm record.
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My personal list is alphabetical Asterisks (*) indicate post publication edits or additions.
[spoiler title=1959]
Cannonball Adderley: Cannonball Adderley Quintet in Chicago
Dave Brubeck: Time Out
Sonny Clark: Cool Struttin’
Ornette Coleman: The Shape of Jazz to Come
Ornette Coleman: Tomorrow Is The Question
John Coltrane and Paul Quinichette: Cattin’ with Coltrane and Quinichette
Miles Davis: And the Modern Jazz Giants
Miles Davis: Kind of Blue
Miles Davis: Porgy and Bess
Walter Davis: Davis Cup (frequently misattributed to Jackie McLean)
Kenny Dorham: Quiet Dorham
Ray Draper: A Tuba Jazz
Duke Ellington: Anatomy of a Murder
Duke Ellington: Back to Back a.k.a Duke Ellington and Johnny Hodges Play The Blues
Duke Ellington: Ellington Jazz Party
Duke Ellington: Ellington Suites
Duke Ellington: Festival Session
Bill Evans: Everybody Digs Bill Evans *
Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong: Porgy and Bess *
Red Garland: All Kinds of Weather
Chico Hamilton: Gongs East!
Chico Hamilton: Three Faces of Chico Hamilton *
Coleman Hawkins: Soul *
Abbey Lincoln: Abbey Is Blue
Blue Mitchell: Blue Soul
Jackie McLean: New Soil
Charles Mingus: Mingus Ah Um
Thelonious Monk: 5 x Monk x 5
Thelonious Monk: Alone in San Francisco
Thelonious Monk: At Town Hall
Eugene Ormandy: Symphony No. 1 (Dimitry Shostakovich)
André Previn: King Size *
Dizzy Reece: Blues in Trinity *
Miklos Rozsa: Ben-Hur (soundtrack)
Nina Simone: Amazing Nina Simone
Nina Simone: At Town Hall
Nina Simone: Jazz as Played in an Exclusive Side Street Club (a.k.a. Little Girl Blue)
Igor Stravinsky: Stravinsky Conducts Stravinsky (Threni / Agon)
Sun Ra: Jazz in Silhouette
Cecil Taylor: Hard Driving Jazz (a.k.a. Stereo Drive a.ka. John Coltrane: Coltrane Time)
Cecil Taylor: Looking Ahead *
Various Artists: Nina Simone and Her Friends
Dinah Washington: What a Difference a Day Makes!
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