What music do you want to play really loud?


What music do you want to crank up your system for?
I want to know the title and the artist, any type of music.
My choice is The Wall by Pink Floyd.
royy
This is going back a way, but most of Chicago's first album "Chicago Transit Authority" sounds great loud. Only one of theirs I really liked.
Slipknot, Korn, Metallica, Sepultura, Soulfly, early Santana, Iron Maiden, Megadeth, Ravel's Bolero, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and many more
Patti Smith "Pumping (My Heart)"
Paul Westerberg "My Problem"
Lou Reed "Sweet Jane" from RnR Animal

Minimalist riff rock - treadmill only - must be loud enough to ensure that I forget where I am.

Marty


"stoopid" by snot, enter sandman,queens of stoneage,nirvana oh yeh kraftwerk live etc.
Carmina Burana, any Wagner, Bruckner, or Mahler.
Any reggae.
Opera.
Organ music.
Anything when I'm cleaning house.
Whos Next! Perhaps the greatest Rock and Roll album ever made. It still stands as my benchmark for the true essence of rock and roll.
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I like turning up most of the classic rock I listen to. Funny thing is that most of the current music I listen to, I have to turn it down because of the compression being used today.
Any Mahler symphony, the Copland 3rd Symphony or Stravinski's Rite of Spring. Also, any well-recorded organ disc.
R U Gonna Go My Way Live - check out Cindy. She's an even better jazz drummer but can rock out with the best of them! I was lucky enough to see this tour.
06-03-09: Detlof
What's "loud" ?

According to Jimi Hendrix on Barclay LP, "loose Ends"

"Play it until the ear, the ear goggles."
Ten Years After - One of these Days

Robin Trower - Bridge of Sighs - every song

Yes - Close to the Edge

Rolling Stones - Let it Bleed - Because the inside cover says "This record should be played loud"
Thanks Albert,
My ears still ring and my eyes won't pop back into their sockets........only, why did those ladies wear those strange mufflers???
Detlof, :^).

You probably read the comment at Youtube
"Very funny." - Martin Bulloch, Mogwai I made this video out of and old 70's music video with a Danish dude doing a cover of Apache by The Shadows. Thanks for your great response to this video :)

I know the whole thing is a joke that Mogwai is having on (and with) us, but it's still still compelling. Perhaps the Mogwai overlay of music, the fond memories of the 70's, or perhaps I just find European women attractive, regardless of how badly they dance.
I have never owned a stereo that goes loud enough for

Foghat - Slow Ride
Blue Oster Clut - Godzilla
Black Sabath - Iron Man
AC/DC - Back in Black
Booker T - Green Onions
Edgar Winter - Frankinstein!

These are songs - I turn the volume all the way and is still not close to loud enough. It would be nice if it would go allot louder.
lately "Free Molten Gold" compilation & "Quicksilver Messenger Service Sons of Mercury", "Harry Nilsson 49 songs", Delaney & Bonnie Home, Jethro Tull Stand Up, Dave Mason Alone Together........the WAF says it's a mid-late life crisis.....LMFAOFF!!!!!!!!!cheers!!!!!!!
"My favorite things" from the soundtrack of The Sound of Music - you know "Raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens" rock on dude!!! Metal out with Julie Andrews and the Von Trapps!!! True 60's psychadelic - if you remember the movie then you weren't there. The hell with distortion - this tune is why you need 125 dB peak horns because nothing else can deliver the live experience at the Bijou.
Crank up some re-mastered Beatles. If you have a good system tell me what you think of "just seventeen" from their first album or "Day Tripper." Many more, just great LOUD!
A couple of years ago I found a CD of Roger Daltry's concert at Canegie Hall, featuring the Juliard Orchestra. Before you get in a snit over how bad The Who must sound with french horn, bassoon and kettle drum, think about it. In actuality, many of the songs written by The Who are among some of the most lyrically and tunefully satisfying compositions of the 20th Century. Okay, this may be overboard, but as a listener and a musician, this album kindled in me an appreciation for that group, exposing a gap in my listening experience that is nearly embarrassing to mention. The arrangements were developed my Michael Kamen, and his direction is brisk, sure, and strong. Play this one up, LOUD.
Best new wave band from 1981 in Czechoslovakia:
Pražský výběr- Zubatá http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nwxRQlCUd7w
or Olda je přítel můj http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEIKmLzVxlY&feature=related
Grand Canyon Suite - Dvorak; Sweet Jane live from Rock n' roll Animal - Lou Reed; Crime of the Century - Supertramp; Blood on the Rooftops - Genesis; Royal Scam - Steely Dan; Only Living Boy in New York - Simon and Garfunkel
Cars are a good choice, but the songs I prefer loud are Dangerous Type and Double Life.
Lately it's been "Kid Creole - Live" on the way to work. Loud enough to keep me awake on the commute. Loud enough so that - if I don't turn it down when I lower the window to swipe the card key reader for garage access, the attendants look at me kind of funny. Like: Who's the guy with the blaring Latin Jazz/Disco/Funk thing going on?
Ca Plane Pour Moi- Sonic Youth cover
Cinnamon Girl- Neil Young
Bad Day-R.E.M.
In Rainbows- Radiohead
Symphony No. 7- all of it- Beethoven
Symphony No. 8- Scherzo- Bruckner
Piano Concerto No. 2, 2nd Mvmt- Brahms
Danse Macabre-Saint-Saens