Ten Albums That Changed My Life

Last year, in the middle of lockdown, several readers asked me to do the popular “Ten Albums in Ten Days” challenge on social media. I am nowhere near organized enough to do that, but those messages planted a seed. So, in between major reports, I put together this list, with some context, written in the same vein as my article Ten Wines That Changed My Life from a few years ago. Every now and then writing about something other than wine is cathartic. I hope this article might provide something different to read over the holidays. I was fortunate to grow up in a house with a lot of music, even though neither of my parents and none of my relatives are musicians, with the exception of my sister. Growing up in Venezuela, I was exposed to a pretty wide range of music ranging from the Latin American folk music that was on television, the more pop Latin American music my parents liked and a steady diet of Air Supply, Bee Gees and other pop/disco music our housekeeper played on the radio. My dad also had a large collection of recordings of Neapolitan and Sicilian folk songs that he liked to play and also sing for fun. Later, I realized that music was probably the bridge to opera. Moving to the US in 1981 was quite a shock. The airways were jam-packed with Southern rock. At school, the jocks were into Led Zeppelin, REO Speedwagon and AC/DC, while the quieter, more introspective kids liked The Cure and Kate Bush. It was all new to me. Later I discovered jazz and fusion, which took me to Berklee where I was exposed to all kinds of music that influenced me greatly. 1. AC/DC – Back in Black (1981) Back in Black is the first record I can remember hearing after moving to the US. One of my friends brought it over to the house. The sound alone was just mesmerizing. There was a clarity that was immediately evident, even at high volume. I loved the sheer power of the music. It was addictive. AC/DC sounded like the lightning bolt in their logo: electric. Angus Young became a huge influence. Not just for his guitar playing but for his raw energy and total commitment. Angus is all in, all the time. Released in 1981, Back in Black was the first album featuring new vocalist Brian Johnson and the second AC/DC album produced by legendary producer “Mutt” Lange. It was dedicated to Bon Scott, the band’s former vocalist, who has passed a few months earlier in an accident stemming from alcohol poisoning. Back in Black was recorded over just a few weeks in what must have been magical sessions, as the band is in tremendous form. Forty years after its release, Back in Black remains one of the top selling albums of all time. The others in its company include Michael Jackson’s Thriller, Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon, the Eagles’ Greatest Hits and Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours, which is a testament to the album’s brilliance and the way it was able to cross over into a more mainstream audience. AC/DC sounds simple and repetitive. In a way it is. And yet, the music is nearly impossible to replicate. That’s why cover bands always sound horrible when they try to play these songs. AC/DC is all about the intangibles, things that are very hard to describe, much less notate on paper or teach. It’s all about a feeling, a vibe. “Shoot to Thrill” is a great example of Malcolm Young’s percussive rhythm guitar, Cliff Williams’ pounding bass and Phil Rudd’s huge pocket on the drums. Angus is on fire all over this record. “Hells Bells,” “Back in Black” and “You Shook Me All Night Long” are all great examples of his Chuck Berry on steroids vibe. Many years later, on a Saturday afternoon, I drove into the parking lot in my parents’ food and wine shop. I spotted a flashy Mercedes convertible with the top rolled down and a rock and roll vanity plate, not exactly the sort of thing one sees every day in Sarasota, FL. I walked into the store and saw a man dressed all in black wearing newsboy cap. “D’ya have anythin’ cheap ‘n’ cheerful?” he asked me in a thick working class, northern British accent I could barely understand. I sold him a few bottles of Mas de Gourgonnier. “Thanks. Say hi to your mum for me, will ya?” Brian Johnson said as he walked out of the door. Back in Black still sounds amazing today. One of the measures of success for any band is the ability to create a multi-generational audience. My son, now 15, heard this music in the Iron Man movies and now he wants to learn how to play the songs! 2. Ozzy Osbourne – Diary of a Madman (1982) From the first measures of “Over the Mountain” Diary of a Madman makes a statement. Diary is Ozzy Osbourne’s second solo album. It remains, in my view, one of the most epic rock records of all time. The songs are magnificently nuanced and complex. Sonically, Diary is an impressive achievement for its era, a time when studios were far less technologically advanced than they are today. Diary features the brilliant playing of Randy Rhoads on guitar, bassist/composer Bob Daisley and drummer Lee Kerslake. From the time I first heard Diary I was completely captivated by Randy Rhoads and the way he incorporated strong classical musical influences in a totally unique style that would shape the playing of so many guitar players in the years and decades that followed. Randy Rhoads grew up in a musical family. His mother, Dolores, operated the Musonia music school in North Hollywood. A brilliant musician herself, Mrs. Rhoads played 15 instruments and was a music educator her entire adult life. She studied under a number of luminaries at UCLA, including Arnold Schoenberg, and was the first woman to hold a first-chair position in a UCLA orchestra, which had previously not been allowed. Randy was teaching at his mother’s school and playing in Quiet Riot when Ozzy Osbourne plucked him out of obscurity. Diary of a Madman is full of the classical music influences that are such a signature Randy’s style. “Over the Mountain” and “Flying High Again” are brilliant compositions full of complex rhythm playing and guitar pyrotechnics. The title track is a rich tapestry of rich modal harmonies, odd time signatures, march-like rhythms and huge vocal overdubs that recall orchestral music. On most of the songs the guitars are tuned down a half-step, a common technique in blues, rock and metal genres used to move songs from the ‘sharp’ guitar keys, to ‘flat’ keys, which yields a darker, more powerful sound. Tuning down is also often used to make songs more comfortable for vocalists. Many of the guitar parts are double and triple tracked, which results in a spacious, expansive sound because of the small imperfections from the various takes when they are panned left/right or stacked on top of each other. For example, in “Over the Mountain” the guitar solo starts double tracked, panned left and right, then transitions to a single guitar panned center before going back to the verse, again panned left and right. But what impressed me most about Randy was that he was always a student. Even as a rock star in a quickly emerging band who was winning all sorts of accolades for his work, Randy was famous for seeking out the local guitar teacher for a lesson while on tour. Can you imagine the look of some of these teachers when Randy Rhoads showed up for his lesson! During the last part of his life, Randy turned to classical guitar for inspiration. Sadly, that would turn out to be a very short time, as Randy passed away at just 25 in a freak airplane accident. His death made a very deep impression on me back then, and it still does to this day. In just a very few short years, Randy made huge contributions to his field and influenced countless guitar players. His induction into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame earlier this year was long overdue. When I was a kid, my bedroom walls were completely covered with photos of musicians. Only one person had an entire wall. That was Randy Rhoads. A name that belongs up there with Hendrix, Page, Beck, Van Halen and the greats among greats. 3. Pat Metheny Group – Travels (1983) “Try to be the worst player in every band you are in, because if you are around good musicians, that makes you better,” Pat Metheny said in an interview many years ago. That resonated, and I am glad they did. From that day on, I resolved to always surround myself with the best people possible and to be the weakest player in any group I was part of because I knew I would have the most upside in those situations. It’s how I approached building my ensembles at Berklee and how I think about our team at Vinous today. Travels is a live recording take from a handful of Pat Metheny Group shows in 1982. It is a magical double album that captures the magic of the Group, but especially the kinetic musical relationship Metheny enjoyed with longtime collaborator Lyle Mays. Jazz is, of course, an improvisational art. The dialogue between players is such a critical element of what makes the music special, which is why so many jazz recordings are essentially live, but in the studio. Concert recordings add the energy of the audience, which is every bit as important. Travels also features Metheny’s groundbreaking work with the guitar synthesizer, of which he was one of the earliest and most visible proponents. I discovered Travels through “Phase Dance.” which my high school guitar teacher Nick Simmons assigned me. Nick was a brilliant musician and artist. My first guitar teacher, Mr. Gould, taught me jazz rhythm playing, chord voicings and how to comp in a big band. He also got me my first gig, playing in the Sarasota High School Admirals, a Count Basie style-big band that performed constantly, for which I will forever be grateful. But he was my grandfather’s age. Nick was tall and young, with flowing long hair and a super-friendly Midwestern demeanor. He made lessons fun. He also turned me on to Metheny, Chick Corea, John McLaughlin, Al Di Meola, Miles Davis and a whole slew of music none of my friends knew anything about. Nick had studied with Metheny and in his later years became known as a celebrated watercolorist before taking his life a few years ago. He made a huge impact on me. Like all great teachers, Nick instilled confidence. “Are You Going with Me?” is a classic, the first solo handled by Mays, the second by Metheny, both on synthesizers, which were very new innovations at the time. Metheny just soars on this track. The guitar synthesizer features again heavily on “Extradition.” “The Fields the Sky” is a great example of Metheny’s style with the Group. One of the themes is the use of chords over a pedal tone in the bass, a device found in many Metheny compositions. The playing is full of slurs, slides and other phrasing idiosyncrasies that give Metheny’s playing such a vocal quality. Metheny’s playing on “Farmer’s Trust,” “Travels” and “Goin' Ahead/As Falls Wichita, So Falls Wichita Falls" is so melodic, so exquisitely tasteful. All along the way Lyle Mays is just brilliant, his keyboard solos building with ebbs and flows into stunning climaxes of lyricism as heard in tracks like “San Lorenzo.” The audience reaction is rapturous, as it should be. Steve Rodby on bass, Dan Gottlieb on drums and Nana Vasconcelos on vocals and percussion paint stunning backdrops for the genius of Metheny and Mays. Travels is a monumental recording. This is a fine example of “Phase Dance” from the early 1980s. 4. Miles Davis – Amandla (1989) “What are America’s contributions to culture?’ Andy Beckstoffer asked me, as we sat in his office and pored over vineyard maps. “Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon and jazz” he answered a few seconds later, before I could reply, wasting not a moment’s time. Typical Beckstoffer. Obviously, America’s contributions to culture include much more than wine and music, but Beckstoffer was making a point about Napa Valley more than anything else. Miles Davis led a remarkable life that saw him participate in, and ultimately shape, many of the evolutions of jazz music. Jazz, of course, has its origins in ragtime, blues and other related genres. Louis Armstrong is an early star of the style of jazz popular in the 1920s. The mid-1930s see the birth of big bands led by Benny Goodman, Count Basie, Tommy Dorsey and others. During this era, jazz is popular music, the dance music of the time. A major development takes place around the mid-1940s, when jazz starts to transition from a genre of popular music to a more improvisational style of music. In the post-World War II era, jazz moves to a focus on smaller ensembles and an emphasis on instrumental virtuosity and improvisation, some of that led by the hard economic realities of the time that made it hard for larger ensembles to survive. This is the era of bebop, led by such visionaries as Thelonious Monk, Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker, who gave Miles his first big professional break. Bebop represents the beginning of the deconstruction of jazz. Whereas the big band era featured structured songs and scored arrangements, bebop consists of a melody, known as the head, a series of improvisations, then the head again. Harmony is still mostly diatonic, but improvisations are now highly chromatic, often over a set of substituted chords that are superimposed on the underlying harmonic structure. The feeling of time starts to loosen as well. Bebop is like a Picasso painting. It is an art of suggestion and implied rather than overtly made statements. The musicians are virtuosos. In the late 1940s Miles begins experimenting with a range of compositional and improvisation concepts that would result in a series of seminal recordings culminating with Kind of Blue. Recorded in 1959, Kind of Blue remains one of the most iconic jazz recordings ever made. It signals the full arrival of cool jazz, a style where compositions break away from classic chord progressions to modal composition and long, extended improvisations. Miles then leads a move into electronic music and fusion genres with a number of benchmark recordings, most notably Bitches Brew in 1970. Given all of that context, most observers would say Kind of Blue and Bitches Brew are the most influential Miles Davis albums, as they represent the pinnacles of achievement for cool jazz and electronic jazz/fusion respectively. And that makes sense. But Amandla was the first Miles Davis album I heard upon release, the first Miles record I heard that was created in my lifetime, not a previous era. It also appeared during a time of big transition for me personally. Adjusting to Berklee was not easy. One day, you are the most talented kid in your small town, and then the next you are in a big city, surrounded by profoundly talented musicians, by virtuosos. You are nothing. There is something incredibly shocking about seeing that kind of talent up close. The intensity of it and the startling realization that you don’t have that kind of talent and probably never will. Today, there is a lot more awareness about mental health, the dangers of constant comparisons and the potentially devastating effects of too much pressure. But at 18, at that time, I just wasn’t prepared for it. I thought I might never achieve my goal of playing with the top musicians at school. My roommate at the time, Jay Weik, advised me to study composition. He said if I wrote original music, that would attract top players, because no one was really doing that. He turned out to be 100% correct. I was looking for role models. I found one in Miles Davis. At some point, it dawned on me that Miles was not a virtuoso trumpet player, but that his skills lay elsewhere, more in the realm of creating ecosystems of sound and music. Of writing and putting together musician who could execute on a vision. I wanted to be Miles Davis. I read everything I could about him. In the end, I led five recitals of my own compositions, all of them with different bands, and performed my own music in other concerts at school. Amandla is the third and final recording from Miles Davis and bassist/producer Marcus Miller. I was immediately captivated by the huge grooves on this album. Kenny Garrett’s saxophone was mesmerizing. The supporting cast includes drummer Omar Hakim, guitarist Michael Landau and Foley, who plays what he calls ‘lead bass,” a bass tuned higher that straddles the line between bass and guitar. I saw the band play at the Boston Opera House on the supporting tour. It was a life-changing experience. Miles’ presence on the bandstand was unreal. He owned the stage. This clip from David Sanborn’s show Night Music captures Miles during this era, not just his music, but his total persona. I learned so much from Miles. The most important of these lessons was the art of constant reinvention. Most musicians live off their greatest hits. This is, after all, the music fans want to hear, and the music most performers deliver. Not Miles. Every band represented a new phase of his artistry. He never played the music of a former era, never looked backwards. He always looked ahead, always pushed the boundaries as hard as he could. Then he pushed some more. Miles was an amazing visionary and leader. Someone with very clear ideas who surrounded himself with the best people, often younger musicians he discovered and featured. 5. Mahler – 5th Symphony (Kubelik) (1971) I greatly enjoyed the composition classes I took at Berklee. It was a complete immersion in everything from jazz to classical music. It was here that I discovered Mozart’s Don Giovanni and Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde. In my Conducting class, I studied Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring and Stravinisky’s Dumbarton Oaks Concerto, among other pieces. One day, my professor played an orchestral excerpt for us. I thought it was the most lyrical and moving music I had ever heard. I was simply floored. The links to Bruckner, Brahms and other Romantic composers were there, but there was something more exciting about this music. The dynamics, the long, dramatic passages, the recurring themes…I was totally mesmerized. It was the Adagietto from Mahler’s “5th Symphony,” his most famous and well-known piece. Gustav Mahler was active during the late Romantic period, an era that bridges the late 1800s and early 1900s, in other words the transition from the Romanticism of Beethoven to the Modernism led by composers such as Berg, Schoenberg and Webern. As jazz does later, classical music follows a trajectory from the highly structured works of composers like Mozart, where tempo, dynamics and structure are very clearly defined and not varied within sections, through a progression into the Romantic period, where tempo becomes more elastic within orchestral movements. Dynamics are modulated for expression while conventional boundaries of structure and harmony are loosened. Orchestras get larger, sometimes adding vocal soloists or a chorus, which, in turn, gives birth to the figure of the modern conductor. Curiously, Mahler was mostly known as an operatic conductor during his lifetime. He held numerous prestigious posts and conducted the leading works of the day. His compositions were generally not well-received, probably a combination of the adventurousness of the music, and an anti-Semitic bias that was so strong that Mahler’s music was banned in parts of Europe under Nazi rule. It would not be until the 1960s, fifty years after Mahler’s death, that his orchestral works were finally given their due. There are many important recordings of the Mahler symphonies. I will not proclaim to be an expert on this music or the many recordings that are out there. But I have always admired Rafael Kubelik’s readings. The discussion with these sorts of recordings is always a conversation about how much is the composer’s intent versus the conductor’s interpretation. Of course, these are unanswerable questions, as most of the time the composers have long since passed. When I listen to Kubelik conduct Mahler I get the feeling there is very little of his own ego, which is a harder statement to make about some of his more famous contemporaries. This recording of the Mahler 5th, which is part of a complete set Kubelik recorded with the Bavarian Radio Orchestra between the late 1960s and early 1970s, has long been a reference point, as far as I am concerned. Below is a selection of notes where Delectable users pair these artists with wine! Read Antonio's full report and discover his remaining five albums that changed his life on Vinous now .

Berberana

Monistrol Prestige Cuvée Selección Especial Cava Macabeo-Xarel-lo-Parellada

Delightfully floral, with honeysuckle, lemon peel, citrus, and maybe bright melon. Crisp and fresh with a little toast at the finish. Madly in love. Sipping while I listen to Miles Davis on the patio in 92 degree heat. It's perfect. — 3 years ago

Mike, Ron and 2 others liked this

Field Recordings

Foeder Old Potrero Red Blend 2015

Dave G
9.1

Pre-gaming Ozzy tonight! — 6 years ago

Pahlmeyer

Napa Valley Proprietary Red Blend 2002

Somewhat port-like and certainly hearty, but with a sliver of cheese and some Mahler in the background, I'm channeling my inner Peter Seychelles. For Napa Cab, hard to beat. — 8 years ago

Cleo liked this

Taittinger

La Francaise Brut Champagne Blend

On the Lawn at Tanglewood this evening with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. For Opening Night our conductor Andris Nelsons is leading MOZART (Piano Concerto No. 22 in E-flat) with one of our local treasures, Emanuel (Manny!) Ax on piano and then MAHLER (Symphony No. 5), a complex master work for which the BSO happens to be quite well practiced.

Prior notes still apply.

Baked apple, green melon, light citrus & fresh raspberry spread on toasted sourdough.
— 5 years ago

Alex, Bob and 32 others liked this
David T

David T Influencer Badge

I wondered when we see a Tanglewood post.
Severn Goodwin

Severn Goodwin Influencer Badge Premium Badge

Starting today, thru Labor Day weekend, this Lawn is our respite.

Mesquida Mora

Sincronia Mallorca Blanc Chardonnay Blend

Enjoy with Pat Metheny. — 7 years ago

David and Andrew liked this

Domaine Eden

Santa Cruz Mountains Chardonnay 2014

What a great memories!. Today, the taste is accompanied by nice songs from vinyl records ( ACDC and Pink Floyd included). — 5 years ago

Magnetochem, Jeffrey and 5 others liked this

Domaine de Triennes

St Auguste Vin de Pays du Var Red Blend 2008

Tastes like Mahler. Yeah, the composer. — 6 years ago

Louis Roederer

Cristal Brut Champagne Chardonnay Pinot Noir Blend 2000

What a beautiful day.....from Magnum Cristal 2000 in the glas on our way to ACDC in Arnhem....."for those about to Rock...we salute you! — 9 years ago

Martijn, Stef and 16 others liked this