YOUR FIRST ALBUM

Got a bit of a late start, being a Minister's kid. First album I bought with my own money was Desolation Boulevard by Sweet. Followed closely by Fragile by Yes, You Can Tune a Piano, But You Can't Tuna Fish by REO, and Tales of The Unexpected by Frank Marino and Mahogany Rush.
 
Got a bit of a late start, being a Minister's kid. First album I bought with my own money was Desolation Boulevard by Sweet. Followed closely by Fragile by Yes, You Can Tune a Piano, But You Can't Tuna Fish by REO, and Tales of The Unexpected by Frank Marino and Mahogany Rush.
All great albums, I had all of those on 8 tracks :)
 
In Philly, downtown, there were these stores that sold records called Sound of Market (market street). Most albums were under $5.00 (cheap at that time). I started going there in 1980 (15 yrs) until 1985. I bought early SRV, Led Zep, Rush, VH, Jimi, and some classic blues. I miss those days. For me, it was the age of discovering music.
 
I would like to know what was the first album you purchased with your own money?
Mine was Grand Funk Railroad the orangish/ red album.
NEXT!!!!!
I won a raffle, and received a gift certificate for 1 album, it was like $10 max

My first album purchased was
Bridge Over Troubled Water
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But the reason I bought that album is because the album I really wanted to buy cost too much money.
I didn't have enough money to buy it. It was about $11.99
The album I wanted to buy was:
 
For me, i had the opportunity to borrow so many records, that it is almost difficult to remember which came first and in which order they followed.

I do recall spending the night at a chum's pad, in an orange grove in Strathmore, California, back around 1978 or 1979, and listening to Hotel California over and over on headphones. It was like being handed a treasure map.

All the nuances and reverb just fascinated me. I also recall the phrase, " Don't Worry, Nothing Will Be OK" etched into the run-off groove of the album. It was just this amazing experience.

The album that really just blew my mind was Def Leppard's Pyromania. The rhythm guitar tone was so crisp. The use of delay, reverb and panning was mesmerizing. The production was just fantastic and it made me want to be a producer.

A bunch of us kids were hanging out at a girl's house on Silvervale Street in Visalia, California, and she was playing this album over the stereo system that was built into the walls of the house.

I remember them talking about the guitar players and that sort of thing, as they passed around the jacket, and i remember waiting my turn to find out who the producer was.

I still love that Pete Willis rhythm guitar tone and i still zone out and listen to Pyromania to this day, but i think that, very early on, being a producer was really high on my list...
 
I would like to say it was Hell Awaits by Slayer, but aged 4 I bought The Wombles Greatest Hits with my pocket money.
If you don't know The Wombles then good for you and keep it that way!

The first contemporary music LP I bought was Power, Corruption & Lies by New Order in 1983.
Up until then I had just tape-recorded my favourites off the radio chart countdown every Sunday.
When I heard New Order's Blue Monday my music taste took a sharp left turn away from the charts.

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