Jump to content

Concept album

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jmcdaid (talk | contribs) at 00:47, 4 August 2013 (1970s). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

A concept album is a studio album where all musical or lyrical ideas contribute to a single overall theme or unified story.[1] In contrast, typical studio albums consist of a number of unconnected songs (lyrically and otherwise) performed by the artist. It has been argued[2] that concept albums should only refer to albums that bring in themes or story lines from outside of music, given that a collection of love songs or songs from within a certain genre are not usually considered to be a "concept album."

History

1940s and 1950s

Woody Guthrie's Dust Bowl Ballads (1940) is considered one of the first concept albums, consisting of semi-autobiographical songs about the hardships of American migrant laborers during the 1930s.[3]

In the early 1950s, before the advent of rock and roll, concept albums were prevalent in jazz music. Singer Frank Sinatra recorded several concepts albums, including In the Wee Small Hours (1955; songs about loneliness and heartache) and Come Fly with Me (1958; songs about world travel).[4] Singer/pianist Nat King Cole's concept albums include Everytime I Feel The Spirit (1958; gospel and spiritual songs) and After Midnight (1956; collaborations with jazz instrumentalists in the style of late-night jam sessions).

After finding success with stand-alone singles, country icon Johnny Cash turned to themed albums, such as Songs of Our Soil (1959; songs about death and mortality) and Blood, Sweat and Tears (album) (1963; songs about blue-collar workers).

1960s

Since Colorful Ventures (1961), The Ventures became known for releasing concept albums, including surf music, country, outer space, television themes, and psychedelic music.[5]

In 1966, several albums were deemed as concept albums by their thematically-linked songs, and became inspiration for other artists to follow. The Beach Boys' Pet Sounds portrayed Brian Wilson's state of mind at the time, and was in turn a major inspiration to Paul McCartney. Album writers Brian Wilson and Tony Asher insist that the narrative was not intended, though Wilson has stated that the idea of the record being a "concept album" is mainly within the way the album was produced and structured.[6] Later in 1966, Wilson began work on Smile, an intentional narrative, though it was scrapped and later revived in November 2011. Freak Out!, Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention's sardonic farce about rock music and America as a whole, and Face to Face by The Kinks, the first collection of Ray Davies's idiosyncratic character studies of ordinary people, are conceptually oriented albums. However, of the three, only Pet Sounds attracted a large commercial audience.

The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967) would later bring about the notion of the concept album, with the earlier prototypes and examples from traditional pop music and other genres sometimes forgotten. Original reception described the album as a concept by select definitions of the term. There was, at some stage during the making of the album an attempt to relate the material to firstly the idea of aging, then as an obscure radio play about the life of an ex-army bandsman and his shortcomings. These concepts were lost in the final production. While debate exists over the extent to which Sgt. Pepper qualifies as a true concept album, there is no doubt that its reputation as such helped inspire other artists to produce concept albums of their own, and inspired the public to anticipate them. Lennon and McCartney distanced themselves from the "concept album" tag as applied to that album.[7]

Days of Future Passed, released the same year as Sgt. Pepper's, was fellow UK musicians The Moody Blues' first foray into the concept album. Originally presented with an opportunity to rock out Dvořák's Symphony No. 9 "From the New World" by their new stereophonic label, the band instead forged ahead to unify their own orchestral-based threads of a day in the life of a common man.[8]

The Who Sell Out by The Who followed with its concept of a pirate radio broadcast. Within the record, joke commercials recorded by the band and actual jingles from recently outlawed pirate radio station Radio London were interspersed between the songs, ranging from pop songs to hard rock and psychedelic rock, culminating with a mini-opera titled "Rael."[9]

In October 1967, the British group Nirvana released The Story of Simon Simopath (subtitled "A Science Fiction Pantomime"), an album that tells the story of the title character. It was only a moderate commercial success. The album S.F. Sorrow (released in December 1968) by British group the Pretty Things is generally considered to be among the first creatively successful rock concept albums – in that each song is part of an overarching unified concept – the life story of the main character, Sebastian Sorrow.[10]

Released in April 1969, was the rock opera Tommy composed by Pete Townshend and performed by The Who. This acclaimed work was presented over two discs (unusual at the time) and it took the idea of thematically based albums to a much higher appreciation by both critics and the public. It was also the first story-based concept album of the rock era (as distinct from the song-cycle style album) to enjoy commercial success. The Who went on to further explorations of the concept album format with their follow-up project Lifehouse, which was abandoned before completion, and with their 1973 rock opera, Quadrophenia.[11]

Five months after the release of Tommy, The Kinks released another concept album, Arthur (Or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire) (September 1969), written by Ray Davies; though considered by some a rock opera, it was originally conceived as the score for a proposed but never realised BBC television drama. It was the first of several concept albums released by the band through the first few years of the 1970s. These were: Lola Versus Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One (1970), Muswell Hillbillies (1971), Preservation: Act 1 (1973), Preservation: Act 2 (1974), Soap Opera (1975) and Schoolboys in Disgrace (1976).[12]

1970s

With Progressive Radio and Album-oriented rock (AOR) replaced the 45 RPM single on most radio stations in the 1970s, many musicians used the new format to stretch their creative legs. Talented players and writers now had more time to reveal compositions leisurely, unconfined by a three-minute pop time limit. Progressive Rock artists produced many concept albums during this decade, with varying degrees of success.

Jethro Tull's 1971 album Aqualung is not a concept album, despite often being labelled one. Its supposed concept is an indictment of the church for interfering with man's relationship with God.[13] 1972's Thick as a Brick was however, deliberately crafted in the style of a concept album and would reach #1 on the Billboard top 200 within the year. They would follow with A Passion Play in 1973. A single track split onto two sides, it would reach #1 in the US within one month of its release.[14]

Emerson, Lake & Palmer's 1971 release,Tarkus would reach #1 in the UK Albums Chart with a side long epic condemning the "futility of war."[15] Pictures at an Exhibition (album) would follow later the same year, a live performance occupying both sides of one LP based on the Modest Mussorgsky classical piece of the same name.

Pink Floyd's concept albums include 1973's genre defying masterpiece The Dark Side of the Moon, 1975's Wish You Were Here, 1977's Animals and the double album rock opera 1979's epicThe Wall.

Yes would follow the success of 1972's Close To The Edge, a nineteen-minute song composed of four movements, with what would seem the next logical step. Four movements spread over four sides of a double LP, the sprawling lyrical and instrumental interpretation of Indian Shastric scriptures, 1973's epic Tales from Topographic Oceans. Pushing as far from the "three-minute pop song" as rock had ever ventured, it would become a defining album of prog rock. Its critical backlash, however would contribute to the genre's popular decline and the rise of punk rock.[16][17] The group's keyboardist Rick Wakeman released many concept albums on his own including The Six Wives of Henry VIII and Journey to the Centre of the Earth, The Myths and Legends of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table, 1984 and in 1999 Return to the Centre of the Earth, often performed live accompanied by lavish dramatic stage productions.

Genesis, Like Yes, would from their beginning, expand compositions until eventually occupying a full side of an LP with the 23 minute Supper's Ready on the 1972 album Foxtrot (album). In 1974 the band would release their grandest concept:The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway. The double disc, composed of individual tracks assemble to tell the surreal story of the New York City street punk.

Gentle Giant, perhaps the most virtuosic and complex of the British prog bands, would release several concepts beginning with Three Friends in 1972, their first to achieve chart success in America. In A Glass House would follow in 1973, The Power and the Glory in 1974, and Interview in 1976. The band's intricate compositions would lend themselves to concept album hallmarks with theme and texture often recurring throughout an LP to create a cohesive and interrelated whole.

ELO's 1973 LP, On the Third Day contained a side long suite, but it's 1974 followup was a full album orchestral narrative Eldorado (Electric Light Orchestra album). It would chart at #16 in the US and #7 in Canada in 1975.

The Alan Parsons Project was a British progressive rock group which specialized entirely in concept albums, I Robot being the greatest success.

In addition to Britain, bands from the European mainland were pushing the limitations of the three-minute song format regularly requiring two sides of a single LP to complete a statement.

Magma, from France, would debut in 1970 with an eponymous concept about refugees fleeing a doomed Earth to settle on the fictional planet Kobaïa.[18] From Greece, Aphrodite's Child helmed by keyboardist VangelisPapathanassiou released 666 in 1972. The double album based on various passages from The Bible, was controversial for it's title, and sleeve notes. Italy's Banco del Mutuo Soccorso released Darwin! in 1972, a success that would lead the band to signing with Emerson, Lake & Palmer's Manticore Records. Triumvirat, a German progressive rock band signed with EMI to produce several concept albums including Mediterranean Tales, Pompeii and in 1975, what is considered by many to be a masterpiece of the genre, Spartacus.[19]

The Americas also produced their share of concept albums during this period.

From 1975 to 1979, Canadian progressive power trio Rush released three albums containing sidelong epics, regarded by some as concept albums (though not actually concept albums by strict definition of the term; that is, none of the other songs on the album have anything to do with each other or the 20-minute sidelong epic, so there is no pervasive concept or story). The first of these was released in 1975, titled Caress of Steel. The second was their breakthrough album, 2112, released the following year in 1976. Their third was released in 1978, Hemispheres.

Kansas released Leftoverture in 1976 and Monolith in 1977.

Styx (band) began its series of successful concept albums in 1977 with The Grand Illusion, followed by Pieces of Eight in 1978.

Concept albums were hardly the exclusive product of progressive rock bands in the 1970s. From Country to Glam, artists from all genres would embrace the popularity of the LP to explore broader concepts that the 45 would have made impossible.

Michael Nesmith blossomed creatively after quitting The Monkees, as an originator of what would become Country rock and in 1974 released the elaborately packaged concept album The Prison: A Book With a Soundtrack.[20]

Willie Nelson is a pioneer of concept albums within country music.[21] In 1974 he released Phases and Stages describing a divorce from the viewpoint of the woman on Side One and the man on Side Two. His 1975 album, Red Headed Stranger, about the fatal estrangement of a cowboy from his unfaithful wife, followed and would reach #1 on the American country charts.[22]

Elton John's 1970 album Tumbleweed Connection is a concept album based on the country and western/Americana themes.[23] Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy from 1975 chronologically tells the story of his and lyricist Bernie Taupin's meeting to the recording of their first album, Empty Sky. Hugely successful, it became the first album to enter the Billboard Hot 100 at No. 1 (similarly entering at No. 1 on the RPM national album chart in Canada).

David Bowie also made popular concept albums; 1972's The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars, about the fictional character Ziggy Stardust and his band; the post-apocalyptic Diamond Dogs in 1974.

Alice Cooper released Welcome to My Nightmare in 1975, about the dreams of a disturbed child. 1978's concept From the Inside (Alice Cooper album) was based on Cooper's stay in a New York sanitarium.

1980s

Though the progressive rock genre was beginning to decrease in popularity, concept albums had become a medium that continued. The progressive bands that were still around were still having major successes with concept albums.

Genesis reinvent themselves as a sleek trio with the release 1980's Duke. This tale of fame, wealth, success and lost love is their first full LP concept since 1974's Lamb. It is a huge success and begins a new era for the band. Turn It On Again and Misunderstanding are top 20 hits.

The concept: How fame, wealth, success and broken love affairs can adversely affect the individual (Duke) concerned.

Inspired by The Wall, and dreadful sales of their previous album, glam-rock band Kiss would recruit Lou Reed for lyrical assistance and released Music from "The Elder" in 1981. A respectable and ambitious concept album in the mold of 2112, it would become the group's poorest selling and charting album in their history, primarily because of its radical departure in musical style compared to Kiss's previous offerings, but has grown in cult status over the following decades[24]

Roger Waters of Pink Floyd would continue his use of the concept album format with his 1980's solo albums The Pros And Cons Of Hitch Hiking and Radio K.A.O.S..

Bruce Springsteen's 1987 album, Tunnel of Love, is unified under the concept of love and the struggles of love. Written at a time where he was going through a divorce, Tunnel of Love is considered to be one of his best and most lyrically sound albums.

Singer-songwriter Kim Carnes and her husband David Ellingson wrote and produced Kenny Rogers's 1980 album "Gideon", which was based on the theme of a Texas cowboy.[25]

In 1985, the British neo-progressive rock band Marillion achieved their only UK Number One album – and the best-selling album of their career – with Misplaced Childhood, a concept album featuring lyrics by frontman Fish which were partly autobiographical. The album was played as two continuous pieces of music on the two sides of the vinyl and produced the band's two biggest hit singles, "Kayleigh" and "Lavender".

Styx continued to have multiplatinum albums with their 1981 release Paradise Theater (a concept album about a decaying theater in Chicago which became a metaphor for childhood and American culture) and 1983's Kilroy Was Here (a science fiction rock opera about a future where moralists imprison rockers).[26] The elaborate concept would produce the bands last top ten hit in the U.S. with "Mr. Roboto", but arguments over the direction of the band toward increasingly dramatic concept productions led to breakup in 1984.[27]

The British group A Flock of Seagulls, released their self-titled concept album based on an alien invasion.

French Euro disco singer Amanda Lear released the concept album Incognito in 1981. The nine track album was based on the Christian classification of vices, the seven deadly sins, with Lear adding two vices of her own: bureaucracy and nostalgia.

Members of the British alternative comedy group The Comic Strip have released concept albums. In 1984, Alexei Sayle released The Fish People Tapes, an episodic serial based on his Capital FM series Alexei Sayle and the Fish People. The same year, Nigel Planer, in character as hippy Neil Pyke, his character on The Young Ones, released Neil's Heavy Concept Album, a parody of late 1960s psychedelic concept albums.

Queensrÿche fared better later the decade, releasing the rock opera Operation: Mindcrime in 1988, which tells a story of a young man, Nikki, awoken from a coma suddenly remembering work done as a political assassin.[28] The comedy group Buckner & Garcia released a novelty concept album, Pac-Man Fever, that went gold and produced a hit single of the same name; all of the songs on the album pertained to popular video games of the time.

The heavy metal band King Diamond gained cult status during the 1980s releasing mostly all concept albums. Releases such as Abigail, "Them," and The Eye told elaborate sagas of horror and the supernatural.

In 1985 Kerrang! magazine ran a coverstory on Phenomena,[29] announcing "the return of the concept album". Tom Galley had started the project, and together with his brother Mell and Metalhammer magazine founder Wilfried Rimensberger developed it into an international multi-media rock music project with contributions from a string of rock superstars, that, apart from so far a total of 5 albums, produced the Dreamrunner album and an ongoing following around the world. Phenomena's main story lines are dealing with the supernatural and unexplained, that were also turned in to scripts for musical, rock opera stage productions, feature films and video games. Iron Maiden also released Seventh Son of a Seventh Son, which follows the folklore and myths of a seventh son of a seventh son having mystical powers.[30]

The Stranglers released two concept albums in 1981: in February, The gospel according to the Meninblack which deals with the Men in black and their link to religion and at the end of the year, La folie which explores all the facets of love.[31]

1990s

In the 1990s prog rock had all but faded from popular music. With the advent of alternative rock, however, a number of artists still continued to use the format.

Roger Waters returned once again to the concept album format for his third solo album, Amused to Death in 1992. On this he explores the influence of television and the mass media featuring Jeff Beck on lead guitar. A segment of the album, What God Wants, Part 1 would reach #4 in the Billboard Mainstream Rock chart.[32] Pulp released The Sisters EP, in which the first two tracks of the four have a linking narrative surroundnig two sisters.

In this decade, the rock band Marilyn Manson created three rock opera concept albums, namely Antichrist Superstar (1996), Mechanical Animals (1998) and Holy Wood (2000), which formed an ambitious concept trilogy. Though each one came with individual conceptual backgrounds, they are also meant to be taken together to form a larger abstract storyline. The albums were released in reverse order thus in the larger overarching 'fourth storyline' is divulged in reverse chronological order.[33][34][35]

In 1994, industrial metal band Nine Inch Nails released The Downward Spiral which focuses on a life going in a downward spiral.[36] In 1996, Meat Loaf released Welcome to the Neighborhood, a concept album that tells the story of a relationship. Heavy metal band Iced Earth, released their 1996 album The Dark Saga which is based upon the comic book character Spawn, created by Todd McFarlane. Alternative metal band Fear Factory, released several concept albums in the 90s. Also, in 1994 Charly García recorded "La hija de la Lágrima". He was the first musician in Argentina to record a concept album.

In 1999, progressive metal band Dream Theater released Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory, a story concept album. This was a specific follow-up to a song called "Metropolis Pt. 1: The Miracle and the Sleeper", which was released on the band's 1992 breakthrough album, Images and Words, and is followed by the 2002 album "Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence". While "Pt. 1" introduced a story, further parts of the "Metropolis" story were unseen on that album or subsequent releases for seven years. Although the band had created a twenty-minute follow-up to Part 1 in the mid-nineties, it hadn't been released. After the band gained complete creative control from their record company, they decided to expand their follow-up of the Metropolis story into a full album: Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory. This album builds on concepts introduced in "Part 1", both lyrically and musically. Although it did not achieve the same levels of commercial success as the band's later releases (it reached #73 on the Billboard 200), it has been hailed by many fans and critics as Dream Theater's masterpiece and the band's defining album.

The Swedish progressive extreme metal band Opeth released two concept albums in the late 90s. In 1998 they released My Arms, Your Hearse, telling the story of a man who has died and become a ghost. Their fourth album Still Life told the story of an exiled man who has come back to his home town to find the woman he loves.

Radiohead, as with Jethro Tull two decades earlier, don't need to agree with the concept album classification to have created an album that fits the defining criteria perfectly. 1997's release OK Computer hosts a richly textured song cycle focusing on societal alienation, Technophobia, and Millennial anxiety. It would win a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Album.

2000s

2000 saw the advent of what would become Coheed and Cambria's catalog-spanning science fiction epic, The Amory Wars, based on frontman Claudio Sanchez's comic book series of the same name. Under the name Shabütie, the band released Delirium Trigger, an EP containing five songs, three of which would later be included on the first full installment of the story in musical form, The Second Stage Turbine Blade (2002). To date, the band has recorded seven full-length albums within the framework laid down by Sanchez's story.

The Flaming Lips concept Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots was a commercial and critical success in 2002 even winning a Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance.

Green Day's concept American Idiot was released in 2004. The album describes the story of a central character named Jesus of Suburbia. After its release it went on to achieve success worldwide, charting in 27 countries and peaking at number one in 19 of them, including the US and the UK. It also won a Grammy in 2005 for Best Rock Album and was nominated for Album of the Year.

The Mars Volta's sophomore effort came in the form of 2005's ambitious Frances the Mute. Five mysterious segments segue into each other, clocking in at 77 minutes. It is based upon a diary found in the back seat of a repossessed car.[37]

With the Nine Inch Nails album Year Zero, the concept of the albums songs which "[take] place about 15 years in the future" when "Things are not good." and incorporated sites from the Web.[38]

American singer-songwriter Tori Amos released Strange Little Girls and Scarlet's Walk in 2001 and 2002. The former was a collection of covers of songs written and performed by men, reinterpreted by Amos from a female point of view, while the latter was based around the travels of a woman called Scarlet across America, as well as being related to the concept of post-9/11 America. Five years later, in 2007, she released another concept album called American Doll Posse, which consisted of five female characters based on Greek mythology, who represent different aspects of Amos' personality. Also, the album was her first to have a political nature.

The Antlers acclaimed 2009 album Hospice centers around a hospice worker and a dying patient to represent an emotionally abusive relationship.

2010s

Linkin Park released A Thousand Suns in 2010, which front lyricist Chester Bennington originally stated was to be a concept album, but was later denied by the album's producer's Mike Shinoda; However, critic Christopher Weingarten of The Village Voice and many others attributed it to the concept genre.[39]

Adrian Younge produced an album with Ghostface Killah called Twelve Reasons to Die Concept being about a black mafia member who gets betrayed by his lover.

The Japanese band D released their sixth album Vampire Saga in 2010. The album served to consolidate events and create backstories for the characters in their ongoing Vampire Story, revolving around the vampire king Dreizehn Schwarzschild and his son Justice.

Anaïs Mitchell employed guests like Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon, Ani DiFranco, Greg Brown and The Low Anthem’s Ben Knox Miller as characters like Persephone and Hades, for her 2010 concept Hadestown, about Orpheus' quest to rescue his love from the Underworld.

Arcade Fire's 2010 concept album The Suburbs debuted at #1 and won Album of the Year at the 2011 Grammy Awards. Its themes focus regret and lost youth.

Janelle Monae in 2010 continues her Metropolis, Suite I with The ArchAndroid (Suites II and III) about a mass-produced android bestowed with a soul who is sentenced to be destroyed. ArchAndroid was nominated for Best Contemporary R&B Album.

Sum 41's Screaming Bloody Murder (2011) is sometimes regarded as a concept album based on problems lead singer Deryck Whibley was going through.

Coldplay's 2011 album Mylo Xyloto is considered a concept album. It tells the tale of Mylo and Xyloto and of falling in love and running away together.[40]

Marina and the Diamonds' Electra Heart album (released in 2012) describes the story of the character Electra Heart, created by Diamandis as "a vehicle to portray part of the American dream." The album follows Electra Heart and her four archetypes: the housewife, the beauty queen, the homewrecker, and the idle teen. We see these in her songs and music videos. For example, the housewife archetype comes from Diamandis' music video "Su-Barbie-A," where we see a woman standing on the porch of a typical suburban house. As the camera gets closer, the head of the woman appears to be on backwards, almost like how a Barbie doll's head spins all the way around. Diamandis described the album as "an ode to dysfunctional love" and elaborated, "I based the project around character types commonly found in love stories, film and theatre, usually ones associated with power and control in love, as opposed to weakness or defeat [...] Rejection is a universally embarrassing topic and Electra Heart is my response to that. It is a frank album."

Heavy metal band Stone Sour released a double concept album. They first released House of Gold & Bones – Part 1 in 2012, which was followed by its sequel, House of Gold & Bones – Part 2, released in 2013. Both were released to commercial and critical acclaim and are considered the band's best effort so far.

Kendrick Lamar's Good Kid, m.A.A.d City is considered a concept album. The theme centers around Kendrick's life in Compton, California and how he strived to escape it. Each song in the album follows this theme and furthers the story line.

See also

References

  1. ^ Shuker, Roy: Popular Music: The Key Concepts, page 5. ISBN 0-415-28425-2. 2002.
  2. ^ Shute, Gareth (2013). Concept Albums. Auckland: Investigations Publishing. p. 13.
  3. ^ "The return of concept album". The Independent. 2 October 2009. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
  4. ^ Jim Cullen (1 June 2001). Restless in the promised land. Rowman & Littlefield, 2001. p. 98. ISBN 978-1-58051-093-6. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
  5. ^ "The Fabulous Ventures – Band History". Sandcastle V.I. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  6. ^ Laura Tunbridge, The Song Cycle, (Cambridge University Press, 2011), ISBN 0-521-72107-5, p.173.
  7. ^ "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band: Rolling Stone". Rolling Stone. 1 November 2003. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  8. ^ Eder, Bruce (2009). "The Moody Blues: Biography". AMG [All Music Group, a subsidiary of Macrovision]. Retrieved 28 July 2009. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  9. ^ "113) The Who Sell Out: Rolling Stone". Rolling Stone. 1 November 2003. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  10. ^ "The Pretty Things: S.F. Sorrow – PopMatters Music Review". PopMatters. 6 January 2009. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  11. ^ "Pete Townshend Biography – Discography, Music, Lyrics, Album, CD, Career, Famous Works, and Awards". Musicianguide.com. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  12. ^ "Ray Davies Biography – Discography, Music, Lyrics, Album, CD, Career, Famous Works, and Awards". Musicianguide.com. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  13. ^ http://www.allmusic.com/album/aqualung-mw0000024632
  14. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Passion_Play
  15. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarkus_(song)
  16. ^ "Yes". Warr.org. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  17. ^ "History of Punk – Genesis, ELP & Yes". Punk77.co.uk. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  18. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magma_(album)
  19. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triumvirat
  20. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prison:_A_Book_with_a_Soundtrack
  21. ^ Stimeling, T.D. (2011). "‘Phases and stages, circles and cycles’: Willie Nelson and the concept album". Journal of Popular Music, 30(3),389-408.
  22. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Headed_Stranger
  23. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumbleweed_Connection
  24. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_from_%22The_Elder%22
  25. ^ "Don't Fall In Love With A Dreamer", Kim Carnes performs live in Santiago, Chile. Retrieved 15 August 2012.
  26. ^ "Music Feature | Concept Albums Are Once Again in Vogue in the Digital Age". PopMatters. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  27. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Styx_(band)
  28. ^ "Columns | Adrien Begrand | Blood and Thunder | The Queen Isn't Dead". PopMatters. 16 March 2006. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  29. ^ Welcome to Phenomena
  30. ^ "The Iron Maiden Commentary". Maidenfans.com. 11 April 1988. Retrieved 18 January 2009. [dead link]
  31. ^ Buckley, David (1997) : "No mercy" (biography of the Stranglers). Coronet books.
  32. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What_God_Wants,_Part_1
  33. ^ Lanham, Tom (2000-11). "Marilyn Manson: Absinthe Makes The Heart Grow Fonder". Alternative Press (#148). Alternative Press Magazine, Inc.: 76‐86. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |trans_title= (help)
  34. ^ Basham, David (16 December 1999). "Manson To Walk in The "Valley of Death" For Next LP". MTV News. MTV Networks (Viacom). Retrieved 17 November 2010.
  35. ^ Basham, David (29 February 2000). "Marilyn Manson Tweaks "Holy Wood" Plans". MTV News. MTV Networks (Viacom). Retrieved 22 March 2011.
  36. ^ Nine Inch Nails – The Downward Spiral (album review) | Sputnikmusic
  37. ^ http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1497564/mars-volta-speak-through-mute.jhtml
  38. ^ Montgomery, James (15 February 2007). "Nine Inch Nails' Conspiracy Campaign – News Story | Music, Celebrity, Artist News | MTV News". Mtv.com. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  39. ^ [1]
  40. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mylo_Xyloto