180-gram 45 RPM double LP
Ranked No. 40 on Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Albums list
Love anticipates late 1960s turbulence with prophetic songs, dark themes
Any discussion about the finest psychedelic rock record ever recorded is incomplete if it doesn’t grant consideration to Love’s Forever Changes. Ranked by Rolling Stone as the 40th greatest album ever made, and named by Mojo the second-greatest psychedelic set in history, the effort is an internationally recognized seminal work of art.
Nearly unlimited headroom, vast instrumental separation, transparent clarity, artifact-free atmospherics, and faithful balances appear out of jet-black backgrounds. The music appears to float on clouds, with the woody tones emanated by the acoustic guitars and brassy signatures of horns emerging with lifelike detail. Turn it up as loud as you want; the sole limitation will be your system’s potential.
Lado 1 | |
1 | Alone Again Or |
2 | A House Is Not a Motel |
3 | Andmoreagain |
Lado 2 | |
4 | The Daily Planet |
5 | Old Man |
6 | The Red Telephone |
Lado 3 | |
1 | Maybe the People Would Be the Times or Between Clark and Hilldale |
2 | Live and Let Live |
3 | The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This |
Lado 4 | |
4 | Bummer in the Summer |
5 | You Set the Scene |