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Coach PlyoGuy
Приєднався 27 сер 2012
Rock and Roll Over (1976)
The Kiss Rock and Roll Over Album Review is brought to you by circular saws and space flight. j/k This might be your favorite Kiss album. I think it's pretty good. It has the most hilarious song on it called Ladies Room. But what Kiss does here is stick to their magic formula of hard rock and verse chorus verse chorus solo chorus outro for slick three minute grooves.
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Відео
Chicago X (1976)
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The chocolate bar album is a foray into pop music. Coach PlyoGuy picks for the album are Together Again and Gently I Wake You.
Led Zeppelin Album Review: Presence (1976)
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Led Zeppelin's Presence is a mix of prog and blues.
Kiss Album Review: Destroyer (1976)
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Produced by Bob Ezrin nearly everything is in 8 bar increments. This album exposed some issues between Gene/Paul and Ace/Peter.
Pink Floyd Album Review: Wish You Were Here (1975)
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...is the follow up to Dark Side of the Moon.
Kiss Album Review: Alive! (1975)
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Kiss released a live album after their third studio album Dressed to Kill. Alive! capitalized on Kiss's frantic live shows with faster tempos, louder bass, drilling guitars, pumped up crowd noise, and fake cannons. For the most part, the versions of the songs on Alive! are considered to be the definitive or premier versions for Kiss fans compared to the studio versions which are considered thin...
Chicago Album Review: Chicago 8 (1975)
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Chicago 8, an elaborate mix of pop, rock, hard rock, and blues, has a much different feel and demeanor from it's golden predecessor Chicago 7, a triumphant, double-disc display of jazz, rock, soul, pop, and funk. Chicago 8 doesn't have as many ideas compared to Chicago 1, 2, 3, and 7. The new ideas don't have as much zip or pop in comparison, but it's still enjoyable to listen to.
Kiss Album Review: Dressed to Kill (1975)
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The third Kiss album. Dressed to Kill is the drop before Kiss Alive.
Led Zeppelin Album Review: Physical Graffiti (1975)
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Led Zeppelin's behemoth, double-disc album Physical Graffiti is a fan favorite and a rock 'n' roll classic. The album contains 8 newly recorded songs plus 7 tracks of older material: Rover, Houses of the Holy, Bron Yr Aur, Down by the Seaside, NIght Flight, Bookie with Stu, and Black Country Woman. Link to Jesus Make Up My Dying Bed Blind Willie Johnson ua-cam.com/video/sQWvquj_ieU/v-deo.htmlsi...
Yes Album Review: Relayer (1974)
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Relayer is the follow up to Tales From Topographic Oceans. Patrick Moraz takes over keys and synths from Rick Wakeman, and Yes produces a tighter, more structured, and jazzier piece of music. A masterpiece.
Les Mills Pump Review (2011 Beachbody)
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I am not a BODi coach. I do not sell this program or have any incentive to gain financially from this video. This is truly an independent review. I recently picked up Les Mills Pump (2011). Currently day 66. Week 10. In this video I discuss: 1. Overview (The Rep Effect, Kia Kaha) 2. The Trainers (Joe, Ben, Ben, Asa, Sheldon, Dan, Rachael, Les Mills, Susan, Cory, Jackie, Jericho) 3. The Circuit/...
Kiss Album Review: Hotter Than Hell (1974)
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Kiss Album Review: Hotter Than Hell (1974). Five of these songs made Kiss Alive - Got to Choose, Hotter than Hell, Parasite, Let Me Go Rock 'n' Roll, Watchin' You. Goin' Blind is on Kiss Unplugged.
King Crimson Album Review: Red (1974)
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Red is Coach PlyoGuy's favorite album! Just look at those three guys on the cover.
King Crimson Album Review: Starless and Bible Black (1974)
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One year after Larks' Tongues in Aspic, King Crimson releases the follow up called Starless an Bible Black. The album is a mixture of properly rehearsed and recorded studio songs with lyrics and vocals and three improvs (We'll Let you Know, Starless and Bible Black, and Trio). Link to "Mac Bass Life" Great Deceiver tabs ua-cam.com/video/c538PVLVKbI/v-deo.htmlsi=vQDPTxza6dkFggZs Link to UA-cam c...
Chicago Album Review: Chicago 7 (1974)
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Chicago Album Review: Chicago 7 (1974)
Yes Album Review: Tales from Topographic Oceans (1973)
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Yes Album Review: Tales from Topographic Oceans (1973)
ELP Album Review: Brain Salad Surgery (1973)
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ELP Album Review: Brain Salad Surgery (1973)
Chicago Album Review: Chicago 6 (1973)
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Chicago Album Review: Chicago 6 (1973)
Led Zeppelin Album Review: Houses of the Holy (1973)
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Led Zeppelin Album Review: Houses of the Holy (1973)
King Crimson Album Review: Larks' Tongues in Aspic (1973)
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King Crimson Album Review: Larks' Tongues in Aspic (1973)
Pink Floyd Album Review: Dark Side of the Moon (1973)
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Pink Floyd Album Review: Dark Side of the Moon (1973)
Yes Album Review: Close to the Edge (1972)
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Yes Album Review: Close to the Edge (1972)
Chicago Album Review: Chicago V (1972)
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Chicago Album Review: Chicago V (1972)
Emerson, Lake, & Palmer Album Review: Trilogy (1972)
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Emerson, Lake, & Palmer Album Review: Trilogy (1972)
Pink Floyd Album Review: Obscured by Clouds (1972)
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Pink Floyd Album Review: Obscured by Clouds (1972)
King Crimson Album Review: Islands (1971)
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King Crimson Album Review: Islands (1971)
Emerson Lake & Palmer Album Review: Pictures at an Exhibition (1971)
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Emerson Lake & Palmer Album Review: Pictures at an Exhibition (1971)
Thanks for reviewing this album. Few others here on UA-cam have bothered to do it! It is a very funky album, which I enjoy. I agree with you that I don't think that Peter is singing about his actual mama. 😆
@@mpmternst oooh yeah 👍 X is a pretty god damn good record. Maybe I’ll listen to it tonight!
Great ranking, I love Porcupine Tree. you might disagree with some of my placements but here’s mine: 11. On the Sunday of Life 10. Up the Downstair 9. Signify 8. The Sky Moves Sideways 7. Stupid Dream 6. Closure/Continuation 5. Lightbulb Sun 4. The Incident 3. Deadwing 2. In Absentia 1. Fear of a Blank Planet
The solo on I Want You is Paul the 1st ½ and Ace the 2nd ½ FYI. 😊
@@billyjoe222 thanks for that! Is the first 6 bars Paul and then the second 6 bars are Ace? I wonder how they did it live especially in 96. I’ll have to pay attention next time when I watch!
My favorite Kiss album as well as the first one I ever owned.
@@jerry2968 solid choice.
Fragile and close to the edge the two best. Relayer, time and a word and the yes album, on second level
Great album 77 tour was great live music!
I have a Hard day's night on United Artesrs cd a boot leg!
Grace under pressure came after Signals not Power Windows
@@kendetulio4009 this is correct. ✅ if I said otherwise it’s a big big mistake.
As Plant said, Presence was pained and druggy. Yup.
Release, Release is an amazing Yes track. love the channel 😎
I like the part with the Alan White solo and then Steve comes in over the top of it. Fake applause and crowd noise too.
Great ranking - I love Finally off The Ladder though 😁
Finally we put it to the test….
@@coachplyoguy2637 Dedicate to the true believer in you! ;)
Very interesting ranking. I didn't agree with a lot of it, but I love a good changeup! I enjoy a different opinion than the majority! Cheers!
Good job
Good ranking. I concur with your high ranking of 'Animals', a super dark LP! (The photo was taken by Peter 'Sleezy' Christopherson of Throbbing Gristle). I would make 'Dark Side' higher. I understand the fatigue people have for Dark Side, we've all heard it thousands of times. Still, it is a great LP from start to finish. 1) Wish You Where Here 2) Animals 3) Dark Side of the Moon 4) Meddle 5) Piper at the Gates of Dawn 6) The Wall
@@Octavian7771 new David Gilmour solo album comes out Friday. I hope it’s better than Rattle That Lock. Don’t like it at all. As for the rankings, Dark Side is like the perfect album. It’s just not the kind of Pink Floyd that I like. Longer songs. Space to explore. They explore on DSOTM on some tracks like Great Gig and Any Color You Like. I guess Breathe and Time, too. I’ve been listening to the Endless River at 3:00 am all week when I can’t sleep. That’s what it’s good for. Put me to sleep
Has Adrian Belew sung Starless? I hope not.
@@AP-sd1fl wow that’s a good point. I have not heard Andrew sing on Starless. I have Heavy Construction and Vroom Vroom live albums. I wonder what it would sound like. He’s not my favorite vocalist.
The second part of Devil´s Triangle is not Hand of Siren, but Hand of Sceiron.
"Devil´s Triangle matches up with Moonchild". What?!
@@AP-sd1fl i might have read that from wiki (which is ttl sht). I would like to revise that statement to: “the closest thing King Crimson did to Devils Triangle is Dangerous Curves from the power to believe. Pretty god damn close actually except for the sounds of the synths vs mellotron.”
As much as I like Test for Echo and Vapor Trails, there's no way that they are better than Power Windows, Signals, or Clockwork Angels! Hold Your Fire gets wayyyyyy to much hate... Mission, Time Stand Still, Lock and Key, and Open Secrets are all top-tier songs! Counterparts is also an awesome album, but definitely not top 5 for me. Power Windows should be up there with Grace Under Pressure. Clockwork Angels should be in the top half (they were in their early 60s, and went out with a bang!!!).
1. Piper at the gates of dawn 2. Relics 3. Atom heart mother 4. Saucerful of secrets 5. Ummagumma 6. Wish you were here 7. Obscured by clouds 8. Meddle 9. Darkside of the moon 10. More 11. Animals 12. Division bell 13. The Wall 14. Endless river 15. A momentet lapse of reason 16. The final cut
A historic piece of music. The lyrics on that album explain the human condition and what underpins modern politics. On tbe left there is a tendency for art, love, hedonism, music… the emotional / creative hemisphere. On the right there’s a tendency for logic, reason, justice, truth… order. If you have an imbalance or if any of the two are to stand alone, you experience misery and chaos. In order for the human race to survive and thrive both hemispheres must be in balance and brought together. When I was a kid I loved the album but didn’t really understand the underlying message . But as an adult it means so much more. Truly a brilliant work or music. Possibly their best album. Hadn’t listened in over 20 years until this evening and your video came up. Glad to see that people are stilll talking about it. 🇺🇸😎
@@deenixon3225 excellent. Thanks for the comment. My favorite Rush album, too.
I was 17 or so and just starting to get high. This album was a good one to listen to. The higher production values made it a lot more interesting. God of Thunder with headphones while stoned really blew my mind. And Detroit Rock City is a really good song! It's a great concert opener! This was when I was starting to expand my listening tastes to different types of rock, and this album fit right into what I wanted back then.
Bob Ezrin made this a succes, like he did in 1973 with Alice Cooper Billion Dollar Babies. Bob brought them to the top and without him Kiss was due to getting downhill. It's Kiss' best album together with Rock and Roll Over and Love Gun. Best song on Destroyer is Shout It Out Loud. It was a 45RPM backed with Beth. And then ..... the awful disco of Dynasty and I Was Made For Loving You. The sell out.
King of the Nighttime World is a cover song from a couple years earlier. Paul spiced it up and added his name to the credits.
@@bodowen i did not know that! Who was the original? I would have done a comparison had I known….
Horrible. I quit listening to them after that album.
@@billadkins5150 I’m pleased to know that I am not the only fan that doesn’t like Destroyer. They changed too much too fast. Rock n Roll Over is a good correction.
Great album, my favorite post-Dark Side Floyd album. Probably because of Richard Wright’s synthesizers. Many fans say “No Waters, no Floyd”. I say “No Wright, no Floyd”. Thanks for posting another excellent UA-cam video. Can’t wait for your Going for the One review.
This is one my top ten favorite albums. This is also the very first album I ever heard on a CD. I had driven to Chicago to visit friends, and one of them had a brand-new CD player. CDS were VERY new, and he was the only person I knew that had one. He put this album on, and at first I thought nothing was playing because there was no sound coming out of the speakers. But then you could hear the synths building up in the background, and that's when I realized that the one thing I couldn't hear was tape hiss or the little tics and sounds you get from records. And the sound built and built and then it went full dramatic and was AMAZING. I was saving up money to get a new computer (I had a little hobbyist Z80 from Timex), and I was looking at Commodores, but when I heard the CD, I went to NYC to Crazy Eddie's and bought an Emerson CD Player. All the CDs in the music store were in a single four-row bin. As for this album.... I love it from beginning to end. "Shine on" is wonderful to lay back and close your eyes and chill to. As for the singing, I'm pretty sure it's all Gilmore.
What year was your trip to Chicago? I can’t remember the first cd I ever heard. Might have been Appetite or some Garth Brooks cd. Sign of the times I guess.
@@coachplyoguy2637 I can't remember the exact year. It was so long ago. I think it was the mid 80s. I'm pretty sure it wasn't into the 90s yet. I bought David Bowie's "Let's Dance" on CD, and it was one of the first albums I bought on CD that I didn't already own on vinyl. Same with Tina Turner's "Private Dancer" (what great albums!) So.... 1984-ish? Consumer Reports put out an issue where they rated CD players for the first time. They said their normal testing methods were no longer applicable because all the players (there were only a handful) had virtually perfect audio and they had to rely on things like programmability, speed to change tracks, and how hard you had to hit it to make it skip, LOL.
@@bobcarn wow then you were an early adopter for sure. Nobody in my neighborhood had them until late 80s early 90s. We were still buying cassette tapes.
my ranking is different , anyway is "trendy" with your ones (some positions are "inverted") in the top Certamente, cercherò di allineare le colonne in modo più preciso utilizzando solo spazi, ottimizzando per il font Roboto, che è a larghezza variabile. Cercherò di assicurarmi che le colonne di anno e voto siano il più possibile allineate. My Ranking - FROM THE WORST TO THE BEST ========================================= Heaven and Earth (2014) 4.0/10 Open Your Eyes (1998) 5.8/10 Union (1991) 6.5/10 Magnification (2001) 7.3/10 Keys Studio (1996/7) 7.5/10 The Ladder (1997) 7.5/10 Fly from Here (2011) 7.5/10 Time And A Word (1969) 7.5/10 Talk (1994) 7.5/10 Big Generator (1985) 7.5/10 90125 (1983) 7.8/10 Yes (1968) 7.8/10 Fragile (1971) 8.0/10 Relayer (1974) 8.3/10 ABWH (1989) 8.5/10 Drama (1980) 8.7/10 Tormato (1978) 8.7/10 The Yes Album (1970) 9.0/10 Close To The Edge (1972) 9.0/10 Going For The One (1977) 9.3/10 Tales from Topographic Oceans (1973) 9.5/10
@@FrankBond0077 the ladder was September ‘99 in USA. Pretty good list my friend.
I forgot ‘Turn the Page’ was on ‘Hold Your Fire’. I may have to demote it out of my top few Rush albums
@@magicsinglez Haha that made me laugh out loud.
I just feel bad for you so I'm leaving a comment. 43 views, a 30 min video, churn it down to 7-10 min. I'm a ex producer, worked with large bands and magazines I know the industry. Don't offer up too many offtopic thoughts, get to the point and hit em with facts. There's a reason old magazine reviews are only 10-12 paragraphs, people can't pay attention long enough. Change your title to something like 'Why you Need to Hear Kill Alive 75'. Engagement is key. Quick and dirty, you have a lot to say but 80% is bloated knock it down.
@@elvisisalive2716 well there’s this old saying: if I had more time I would have written a shorter letter. And that’s the paradox of where I stand as an amateur UA-camr. My friends have told me the same thing. My background is in proposal management, writing, and presentation coaching for business presentations. I know the hard work it takes to craft a message and get it down perfectly to connect with the audience and resonate. If I thought I could make a career doing this, then that’s the effort I would put into it. So could I do it? Strong maybe. Do I want to put the work effort in??? That’s a serious commitment. For the other stuff, I will try to do better job of limiting the random thoughts that pop up…plenty of bats in my brain. Thanks for the comment and thanks for listening/watching. Late edit: you don’t have to feel bad for me. There’s ppl with serious problems I don’t have that.
@@coachplyoguy2637 See , your response was perfect, to the point and on topic, you got this ;) . You have a lot to say and are well spoken, keep at it and fine tune your ideas.
@@elvisisalive2716 yep yep got it.
@@coachplyoguy2637eh fuck that guy. I enjoyed every minute of this.
@@bodowen thanks for the feedback. When I get feedback like that from elvisisalive2716 it's typically because they saw the thumbnail and were intrigued enough to click and suffer for a couple of minutes. They were expecting to hear something else like lots of praise or fanfare for the album. But I've made these about what I am hearing and what is the band doing with the content and the arrangements because nobody is doing that. It requires a lot of work in the background by yours truly, and sometimes I just get it flat out wrong. I figured out recently I got a whole Rush album wrong. Ha! Mea culpa coming soon.
Here's the link. It's VH1 ultimate albums Alive. m.ua-cam.com/video/OdLMC_9KAK8/v-deo.html&pp=ygUOVkgxIGtpc3MgYWxpdmU%3D
VH1 did a " Behind the music " ep on Kiss Alive. In it Eddie Kramer talked about and demonstrates some of the production techniques he did to create the album. If I remember correctly ( I could be wrong) they did record a couple of live concerts using a mobile recording set up. Most of Peter's tracks were kept from the live shows. I'm sure the video is available on YT.
@@jmsdeco I had read that before about the drum tracks, so must have been the same source. I should find that Behind the Music. Two years ago I watched an entire behind the music on Kiss. And I watched the Kisstory on A&E a few times. Those helped to reignite my Kiss fandom. Thanks for the comment and for watching.
This album was the one I got when I first started listening to harder rock (as opposed to pop). You're right. It's all the good songs from their first three albums, but better! All are amped up and energetic and it feels like you're at a concert.
Relayer is likely the most technical album ever made. Mind-blowing
Relayer and Tales are my two favorites - nearly interchangeable.
ive listened to 90125 COUNTLESS TIMES. Never gets old. Always sounds like the first time. Fragile next
Most 80s albums seem really dated when I hear them now whether it’s new wave, Rush, Chicago, etc. even 90125 sounds 80s to me. I’ve been listening to Chicago a lot this year and the song Hard Habit to Break has a part in it that reminds me of 90125. It probably not popular that I have 90125 ranked where I have it but that’s ok. I still like the album. It’s just not high up on the list for me.
Kiss was one of the first rock bands I got into when I was a teenager in high school. It's great fun rediscovering these old albums.
Kiss is a nice little guilty pleasure for me. I like all eras and all members!
Great album! Poorly produced and engineered, but it kind of added a bit of charm to it.
@@billadkins5150 exactly!
The original album came with an iron-on transfer of the cover.
@@3rdRockRider that is so awesome. Do you have that?
Always thought "Anyway You Want" sounded like a hit.
@@broncodeviltexas I like the song. I really like the “dah doot dah dew” by the horns in the coda. I think I mentioned that in the review. Thanks for listening. Did you like the review?
OK, Three of a perfect pair is one of my favorite albums. You have lost me now. I am no longer interested in your thoughts.
It’s my son’s favorite album, and he is 15.
I saw them in 1975 and to be honest I did not fully appreciate them yet. I bought their first album when it came out, but it overwhelmed me as a 14/15 year old. I agree that they may be my favorite band now for many years.
Thanks for the comment! King Crimson is still my favorite band even though I had hard and heavy Rush and Chicago stages afterwards. I still have Crimson 1, then probably Yes, Rush, Wilson/Porcupine Tree, and Chicago in that order. Pink Foyd is up there, too. Sorry you don’t like my TOAPP assessment. I don’t remember what I said in that video anymore, but that album has some good tunes on it. I like it better than Thrak. And I think Thrak is pretty good damn good. It’s just lacking it big KC songs. No epics. Nothing too memorable that I would stake my own rep on as a recommendation. Getting back to TOAPP, Larks 3 is good. The title track is good. I like Dig Me. Industry is OK. I don’t know I just like the other albums better. KC FOR LIFE!!
Pleased to hear someone give praise to "Test for Echo" and "Counterparts". I actually would probably rank them higher, but your rank is higher than every other video I've seen.
Those are two of my "go to" albums for Rush. I've heard the 70s albums so many times and I generally like their 90s material better than the 80s. Vapor Trails and Roll the Bones included also.
@@coachplyoguy2637 Yes. I don't skip a single song on either album.
Sounds like Roger was inspired by John and Yoko’s experimental albums… David’s “The Narrow Way” part is the best on the album.
Less a review. More of a description.
Gezzzzz your review is boring, I'm out, for the record PG is classic LZ probably their best.
Then I recommend you not watch the LZ rankings video I made last year where I had PG 7 of 8.
Hi you are not good at reviewing music so don't quit you day job.
Top 4 are on point, no matter the order. After that, this is one of the wonkiest rankings imaginable! Enjoyed the watch 👍
You're a silly man. This made me laugh. "Physical Graffiti isn't necessarily a bad album." 🤪
Are you a dental technician? Why are you giving us all the structural details of the songs. Fine if you want to throw that in briefly. But you neglect from what I heard, to talk about how the songs made you feel. Were they bright and happy and good spirited? Did Plant really shine on this or that one? Maybe you did eventually, but I clicked off at 9:41.
That’s what I’m planning for Chapter 2s. Net it down to 5 minutes or less of listener (me) impact. I’m recording the first one this week Rush (1975).