List of the 1975 albums
It’s fitting that the Clash’s London Calling, which is ranked Number One on our list of the best albums of 1980, came out in January of that year, and if you listen to the records that follow it on the list, there’s a palpable sense of clearing away the past to invent the future. In terms of music, the new decade kicked off like someone had fired a starter’s pistol. All rights reserved.It was the end- the end of the Seventies - and everyone was more than a little antsy to get going on whatever was about to come next.
List of the 1975 albums full#
The full Official Top 100 biggest selling vinyl albums of the decade: 1 He takes up six slots in our Top 100: his final album Blackstar, released just days before he died (15) Legacy (17) The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust (26) Hunky Dory (43) ChangesOneBowie (82) Aladdin Sane (90) and Nothing Has Changed (93). The death of iconic rock star David Bowie in 2016 led to a surge in demand for his catalogue on vinyl. Brother Noel Gallagher's third post-Oasis album Who Built The Moon, also from 2017, is at 47 on the decade's bestselling vinyls list. Liam's second album Why Me Why Not is already in the Top 100 too – it's the highest vinyl album released this year. Liam Gallagher's solo debut As You Were shifted 16,000 vinyl copies in its first seven days on sale in 2017, giving him the biggest one-week vinyl sales in over 20 years, 22nd on our end-of-decade rundown. Oasis' first two albums both get a Top 20 slot, with debut Definitely Maybe at 13, and its follow-up (What's The Story) Morning Glory farther up at 7, but the Gallagher brothers have been doing OK outside the band too. The biggest band of all time – that's The Beatles in case you were wondering – make a few appearances thanks to anniversaries of some of their classic albums leading to reissues: Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (8), Abbey Road (12), The Beatles (44), and Revolver (54). The Guardians of the Galaxy soundtrack, Awesome Mix Vol.1, is one of the bestselling vinyl albums of the decade following its release in 2014 (106,000), and our Top 5 of the 2010s' biggest vinyl albums is rounded off by The Stone Roses' 1989 self-titled debut (92,000). Representing the 21st century, Amy Winehouse's game-changing second album Back to Black is second, notching up 125,000 vinyl sales, and we're back to the '70s for the third biggest vinyl album of the Tens: 1973's Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd has 113,000 sales on wax. The album recently returned to Number 1 on the Official Vinyl Albums Chart following a reissue on clear vinyl. Top of the heap is the 1977 classic from Fleetwood Mac, Rumours, which has been a regular fixture of the Top 100 for the last few years thanks to its vinyl edition, on 130,000 vinyl sales since the decade began. There's been a demand from some fans to hear vintage albums on the format they were originally recorded for, which has led to an increasing fondness by artists to reissue classics on vinyl, sometimes on very collectable limited editions, such as coloured discs or double LP sets with extra content.Īs a result, the biggest vinyl albums of the last decade are very much a greatest hits of the last 63 years of the Official Albums Chart, with a few modern takes thrown in.
The vinyl revival led Official Charts to launch the Official Vinyl Albums and Singles Charts, which are updated every week.
it's now more widely available than it has been in years – you can even buy vinyl albums in supermarkets. In the last decade, however, vinyl has made a comeback. Since vinyl ceased to become the dominant physical format in the 1980s, fandom of the black plastic was restricted to DJs and collectors, with the odd enthusiast poring over stacks of vinyl in local record shops. One of the most remarkable music trends of the 2010s has been the resurgence of a format once seen as obsolete.