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Mothership by Led Zeppelin.
Last physical albums i bought was:

-Greatest Jazz Divas (75 original classics)
-Lindsey Stirling's album
-The best of Loreena McKennitt The Journey So Far

Last digital album was Erutan's Raindancer,
Post edited May 03, 2014 by FoxySage
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Maighstir: Scorpions - Crazy World
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darthspudius: That is a classic album. Scorpions at their finest.
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DieRuhe: Let's see... a few days ago I was drunk and in a nostalgic mood, so I thought I'd finish off my Dio collection by getting "Dream Evil" and "Holy Diver." Also, "Can't Get There From Here" by Great White. I was never a big fan, but that's a great "summer" album. If summer ever gets here.
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darthspudius: How can you have a Dio collection but not have Holy Diver? :P
I kinda went backwards. :-)
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darthspudius: That is a classic album. Scorpions at their finest.

How can you have a Dio collection but not have Holy Diver? :P
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DieRuhe: I kinda went backwards. :-)
Funny that considering his first two are easily his best haha.
Probably "The Distance", Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band

Then came the 80s, and music died.
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Psyringe: and music died.
I only hear this from people that don't make music themselves.
Amplifier's The Octopus (and Echo Street, but I mostly ordered them for the former), about two weeks ago. Just got them about four days ago. Overseas shipping can be painful.

Will probably be ordering Strapping Young Lad's The New Black in the next few days.
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Psyringe: and music died.
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Klumpen0815: I only hear this from people that don't make music themselves.
Well, it is a bit of an exaggeration. But it really felt that way. Back then, I had my treasured tapes of Deep Purple, Slade, or Bob Seger, and when I turned on the radio, I heard Rick Astley, Sandra, and Modern Talking. Arguably, that kind of music is brain- and heartless enough to have been created by zombies, which are undead, so music must have died somewhere in between. ;)

People who are making music themselves, have (and had) probably better access to the hidden gems that also exist in even the darkest of cultural ages.
Post edited May 03, 2014 by Psyringe
Omnia - Live on Earth (Damn, would like to see them live this evening, but have to get my girl friend from the train station *sobsob*)
Schelmisch - Persona Non Grata
Faun - Eden
Post edited May 03, 2014 by seikilos
Admittedly the last two albums I got were gifts (although ones I had on my wishlist), not purchases. Those were:
Martina Topley-Bird - The Blue God
New Model Army - Between Dog and Wolf
Entire album? Probably the Super Hexagon soundtrack from when it featured in some recent weekly bundle. That counts, right? :D
I don't buy many entire albums any more.
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Psyringe: Well, it is a bit of an exaggeration. But it really felt that way. Back then, I had my treasured tapes of Deep Purple, Slade, or Bob Seger, and when I turned on the radio, I heard Rick Astley, Sandra, and Modern Talking. Arguably, that kind of music is brain- and heartless enough to have been created by zombies, which are undead, so music must have died somewhere in between. ;)

People who are making music themselves, have (and had) probably better access to the hidden gems that also exist in even the darkest of cultural ages.
Are you saying Deep Purple, Slade and Bob Seger were pop music in the 70's, in the top 10 single hitlists and you were introduced to them by the radio?
Last couple of discs I got:

Running Wild: Pile of Skulls, Masquerade
Scanner: Hyper Trace, Terminal Earth
Omen: Battle Cry
Savatage: Gutter Ballet, Hall of the Mountain King
Starship: Knee deep in the hoopla
Styx: Crystal Ball, The Grand Illusion, Pieces of Eight, Cornerstone
REO Speedwagon: Hi Infidelity
Power Quest: Master of Illusion, Blood Alliance

Oh and I ordered the new Edguy album.
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Psyringe: Well, it is a bit of an exaggeration. But it really felt that way. Back then, I had my treasured tapes of Deep Purple, Slade, or Bob Seger, and when I turned on the radio, I heard Rick Astley, Sandra, and Modern Talking. Arguably, that kind of music is brain- and heartless enough to have been created by zombies, which are undead, so music must have died somewhere in between. ;)

People who are making music themselves, have (and had) probably better access to the hidden gems that also exist in even the darkest of cultural ages.
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Leroux: Are you saying Deep Purple, Slade and Bob Seger were pop music in the 70's, in the top 10 single hitlists and you were introduced to them by the radio?
No, what I meant to do was pointing out the contrast between the music that I loved and was listening to (Purple, Slade, Seger) to the abominable dross that was served by the radio stations especially in the second half of the 80s. ;)

I'm not sure if I can explain it, I don't claim I have a particularly evolved taste in music or even to understand much about it. I loved to put one of my worn-out Deep Purple tapes into my rickety cassette player, close my eyes, and let the music take me on a journey, with 30-minute live tracks full of variation. I loved how I could, for example, listen solely to the base guitar and still have an interesting experience. I love how Bob Seger used to put a dozen instruments into a single track, and how I could discover something new even after listening to it for the twentieth time. And then, the market suddenly became dominated with music that consisted of tracks from three instruments which mostly repeated the same four beats over and over, while some powerless voice whined shallow vocals. There just ... was no journey to take with such music, just infinite boredom. When you heard the first 30 seconds of a song, you had heard it all - actually, in some cases (like Modern Talking) you had heard it all for the next half dozen songs to come. There was nothing new to discover, ever. There was no interesting, exciting, varied, wild, musical carpet to sink into with closed eyes.

Sorry for the avalanche of words. I just find it difficult to explain. ;)
UNKLE - Where Did The Night Fall - Another Night Out
UNKLE - End Titles - Stories For Film
UNKLE - UNKLESounds: Edit Music for a Film - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Reconstruction
Sparklehorse & Danger Mouse - Dark Night Of The Soul