50 Classic Albums Celebrating Their 40th Anniversary in 2012
1972 was a classic year for rock and blues -- and here are 50 arguments to back it up.
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Nineteen hundred and seventy-two is one of those rare years -- like, say, 1967, 1969, 1971 and 1991 -- that saw the release of several seminal rock and modern-blues albums.
As we wrote last year in our 1971 roundup, "Even for a year that falls squarely in the heart of the 'classic rock' era, it was a particularly classic year."
It was the year of Exile On Main St., Thick As a Brick and Close To the Edge, albums that are so renowned that we don't have to name the bands that created them (But, just in case, it was The Rolling Stones, Jethro Tull and Yes). Tull actually outdid themselves that year, also releasing Living In the Past.
On the heavier side of things, while Led Zeppelin took the year off from vinyl, Deep Purple released what is perhaps the Deep Purple album, Machine Head, plus the live classic Made in Japan. Black Sabbath followed up 1971's Master of Reality with Vol. 4 -- and Scorpions, Wishbone Ash and Uriah Heep chimed in as well.
In the world of blues, all three ax-wielding Kings released albums -- Texas Cannonball by Freddie King, Guess Who by B.B. King and I'll Play the Blues For You by Albert King -- not to mention Eat A Peach by The Allman Brothers Band, Rio Grande Mud by ZZ Top, and Never Get Out Of These Blues Alive by John Lee Hooker.
With that in mind, below is our list of 50 classic albums celebrating their 40th anniversary in 2012. Remember: Life begins at 40!
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jefferyparsons7
March 26, 2012 at 1:50pm
Jethro Tull Thick As A Brick was the best album of 1972. It was a hard choice though because there were so many great albums that year.
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GarJaMi
March 25, 2012 at 7:28pm
I've only got eight of the albums on this list, of which my favourite is Argus. Some I've never heard of (Big Star ?). My list from '72 would include "Be Good to Yourself at Least Once a Day" by Man & "First Base" by Babe Ruth. Also "Friendliness" by Stackridge 'tho that's not exactly rockin' guitar music whereas Man & Babe Ruth def' are imho...
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drahnoel
March 16, 2012 at 12:31pm
I was 16 in '72. I'm SO glad I had all this as the soundtrack to my growing up.
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Wood and Metal
March 16, 2012 at 10:41am
One hell of a year for music... and variable quality cover art :S





















