Best album Quiz of the seventies secondo DeBaser.

Here you find the "Best album Quiz of the seventies" chart according to DeBaser users. If you want to participate too, prepare your own chart of the same type!

You’re immediately hit by the killer riff of 'Killer' with its flutes and sax; Hammill’s desperate and ruthless voice narrates a monster’s solitude that reflects all of us. alan clark

King CrimsonIn the Wake of Poseidon
Album - 15 may 1970

Peace, one of the many forgotten treasures of the Crimson King, the most poetic, simple, incisive, poignant thing KC has ever offered. Dario Pierini

GenesisTrespass
Album - 1970

"The magic starts immediately, from the first chord of 'Looking For Someone', a song that speaks of loneliness." Old King Cole

Miles DavisBitches Brew
Album - 1970

Until you have thoroughly heard this album several times, you will never ever understand what modern jazz is. puntiniCAZpuntini

Soft MachineThird
Album - 6 june 1970

Third is born, a superb monument of experimental music and the entire art of the Twentieth century. DaveJonGilmour

King CrimsonLizard
Album - 11 december 1970

"Lizard is more fascinating, more exciting than I remembered!" pier_paolo_farina

Deep PurpleDeep Purple in Rock
Album - 1970

"Child in Time... an unforgettable moment, even on the first listen." paloz

Pink FloydAtom Heart Mother
Album - 10 october 1970

For me, perhaps, this is the most coherent work of Pink Floyd, and the most choral. DaveJonGilmour

Gentle GiantGentle Giant
Album - 27 november 1970

This album is undoubtedly a work that can be considered as the perfect transition from Rock to Prog Rock that occurred in 1970. puntiniCAZpuntini

10° SantanaAbraxas
Album - 6 november 1970

An incredible mix of sounds, dreamy atmospheres, and Latin rhythms gives this record a particular charm. MadWorld

11° High TideHigh Tide
Album - 1970

"An excellent violin, a very distorted guitar... a hoarse voice... perhaps scared, perhaps weeping." Robert Fripp

"A sinister work, majestic, deeply moving and intense, one of the greatest masterpieces of progressive and music in general." Rocky Marciano

13° Frank ZappaBurnt Weeny Sandwich
Album - 23 september 2006

Not one blunder, not one mistake. No unnecessary beating around the bush. The rhythms are thousands, fresh, alive, and none clash with another. Perfect. DanteCruciani

Keith Emerson, the true star of this acrobatic trio, capable of providing great enjoyment to the ear, but without leaving much emotion at the end of the delightful listening experience. Grasshopper

15° NucleusWe'll Talk About It Later
Album - 1 april 1971

Something that enriches us. Hetzer

16° Led ZeppelinLed Zeppelin III
Album - 5 october 1970

Immigrant Song, a musical monolith in which Plant’s cries of invasion propel an invincible shock wave. claudio carpentieri

"Their fairy-tale jazz-rock with strongly bucolic hues... manage to carry me away." CosmicJocker

18° Black SabbathBlack Sabbath
Album - 13 february 1970

Ladies and gentlemen, black hard rock is born, and the foundation is laid for all the dark sound of the years to follow. Nesci

19° The Allman Brothers BandAt Fillmore East
Live - 1 july 1971

The songs unfold like great jam sessions with multiple solo parts by all the musicians. RocKnR0ll

20° The WhoLive at Leeds
Live - 16 may 1970

Less than forty minutes, but an actual punch in the stomach, a pure distillation of that thing that someone called Rock and which instead I like to call Rock. jack daniel's

21° Crosby, Stills, Nash & YoungDéjà vu
Album - 11 march 1970

"This record exudes ‘west coast’ from every pore, you can almost smell the lands of the American west just by pulling the vinyl out of the cover." Surferkangaroo

22° Jethro TullBenefit
Album - 20 april 1970

"Benefit was the continuation of Stand Up: it contained heavy rock riffs along with a few more acoustic and delicate episodes." the green manalishi

23° Amon Düül IIYeti
Album - 1970

Yeti is the most played CD in the car radio of Charon’s boat; it’s truly primordial and mind-expanding music, disinhibiting. Festwca

24° Robert WyattThe End of an Ear
Album - 4 december 1970

The music present in "The end of an ear" is unlabelable except as "free form," a musical proposal of Burroughs’ "cut up". DaveJonGilmour

25° MagmaMagma (Kobaïa)
Album - 27 september 2006

It’s an artificial language created by Vander’s incredible imagination; it’s intriguing to hear singing in this strange language. ReCremisi87

26° Tim BuckleyLorca
Album - 1970

Tim Buckley was a dreamer, a utopian, as far away as he could be from any commercial logic. ajejebrazorf

27° TrafficJohn Barleycorn Must Die
Album - 1970

Traffic transformed the folk song 'John Barleycorn (Must Die)' into one of the most inspired acoustic ballads ever, with a delicate weave of guitars and fairy-tale flute. Grasshopper

28° TreesOn the Shore
Album - 1971

The splendid voice of Celia Humpris may pale in comparison to champions Sandy Denny or Jacqui McShee, but it has a sensitivity all its own. supersoul

29° EggEgg
Album - 1970

"This is music to listen to, not to dance to, harmonically and rhythmically complex, created to be as original as possible, requiring the listener's utmost attention." Giona

30° Neil YoungAfter the Gold Rush
Album - 19 september 1970

I find it soothing that a handful of songs can tell me what I’m feeling in the form of music. ilfreddo

31° Frank ZappaChunga’s Revenge
Album - 23 october 1970

There's no escaping that even Zappa's 'minor' albums contain at least a handful of brilliant ideas. DanteCruciani

32° Black SabbathParanoid
Album - 18 september 1970

With 'Paranoid' Black Sabbath are at the peak of their creativity, pioneers of a genre that will see them on altars for many years. kain3325

33° Kevin AyersShooting At The Moon
Album - 6 june 2009

Kevin Ayers is indeed a genius, but one of the lazy ones. supersoul

34° NicoDesertshore
Album - 1970

The temple of Pöffgen is a psychic construction; the brazier burns eternally. Caspasian

35° East of EdenSnafu
Album - 1989

Disparate elements and a lot of eccentricity perfectly amalgamated make this album worthy of entering the Olympus of Progressive. stargazer

36° QuatermassQuatermass
Album - 1970

A metaphor for the music contained in the album: ancient yet at the same time projected into the modern. ghigno92

37° Creedence Clearwater RevivalCosmo's Factory
Album - 13 april 2007

The Creedence Clearwater Revival are like a punch straight to the face, hurting at first glance, with their wild and angry fury against the world they themselves renounce and criticize. tonysoprano

38° FamilyA Song for Me
Album - 12 february 2007

After the two previous masterpieces, at the dawn of the 1970s, the acclaimed company Chapman-Whitney, accompanied by the loyal Rob Townsend on drums, gifts us with another excellent album, despite the dual lineup changes (John Weider and John Palmer, the very skilled multi-instrumentalists, replacing Grech and King). For me, it's a stunning album, perhaps not as wild and utterly uncategorizable as the debut, but still very varied and rich in ideas, insights, and spine-tingling performances. Palmer's acquisition is superb. "Wheels" remains the masterpiece of this third album, not so much for the majestic instrumental performance of the band, which is not particularly superior to those of the other tracks, but for Chappo's interpretation, which I find absolutely sublime. more

39° CressidaCressida
Album - 1970

The overall atmosphere is dreamy, sometimes contemplative and always soft. Eliodoro

40° Van MorrisonMoondance
Album - 1970

"Van Morrison never got along too well with logic: the same previous album is proof of this, and the zig-zag turns of his long career would later demonstrate it." Grasshopper

41° Fairport ConventionFull House
Album - 1970

The remaining members prove everyone wrong by releasing this 'Full House,' whose music maintains a vertiginous level of quality. Stefano Potenza