Brian Eno, Another Green World
On Another Green World, Brian Eno seems to be suspended halfway between the art rock of his Roxy Music days and the ambient sound he would pioneer by the decade’s end. But instead of feeling transitional or uncertain, the album feels peerless and unmoored from time. Each song seems to conjure a new genre out of thin air: the avant-funk of “Sky Saw,” the buzzing experimental pop of “St. Elmo’s Fire,” the hypnotic drone of “The Big Ship”—all light years ahead of their time.
Keith Jarrett, The Köln Concert
Solo piano recordings don’t usually sell four4 million copies, but The Köln Concert is a remarkable exception. Recorded in the titular city late one night in early 1975, in a concert that Jarrett almost canceled, these transcendent, improvisational movements, which often find the pianist vamping over deceptively simple two-chord progressions, captured jazz fans’ hearts and established Jarrett as an in-demand piano virtuoso. The imperfect nature of the recording, which lets you hear Jarrett’s ecstatic grunts and pedal thumps, makes you feel like you’re in the audience, witnessing the concert yourself.
KC and the Sunshine Band, KC and the Sunshine Band
Funk, disco and soul mingle freely together on the second album from KC and the Sunshine Band, an indelible collection that packs myriad hooks in under 30 minutes. With this album, the multiracial group scored two No. 1 hits and filled a radio void left by Sly and the Family Stone’s slide into a druggy funk haze. You may think you haven’t heard this album, but the cultural ubiquitousness of “That's the Way (I Like It)” and “Get Down Tonight”—in commercials, sporting events and movie needle drops—ensures that they’ll sound familiar anyway.
Led Zeppelin, Physical Graffiti
By 1975, Led Zeppelin were veritable rock gods, trashing hotel suites, selling out stadiums and embellishing their stage show with lasers and dry ice. As the band got bigger, so did the albums, culminating with Physical Graffiti, an immense, sprawling double album that boasts three songs stretching past the eight-minute mark. Eclecticism reigns, with its best songs—the James Brown-esque funk stomper “Trampled Under Foot,” the Eastern-enamored “Kashmir,” the twangy “Down by the Seaside”—reinventing listeners’ conceptions of who Zeppelin were and what they could sound like.
Joni Mitchell, The Hissing of Summer Lawns
Few artists transformed their sound as mightily between 1970 and 1975 as Canadian songwriter Joni Mitchell, who immersed herself in freewheeling jazz-pop fusion as a backdrop for these sneakily complex songs of feminist malaise. Stretching beyond folk-rock instrumentation, as she had on Court and Spark, Mitchell grew more musically restless, incorporating congas and Dobro resonator guitar on the anti-patriarchal “Don’t Interrupt the Sorrow” and sampling an African percussion loop on the remarkably ahead-of-its-time “The Jungle Line.” It has some sonic overlap with Paul Simon’s Still Crazy After All These Years (also released in 1975), which “isn’t quite jazz, but has that same sort of sophisticated vibe for singer-songwriters,” says rock critic Erlewine. “There’s definitely this lane that’s opening up, where it’s not just the guitar and the voice.”