1940s–50s: Origins In the 2016
BBC documentary
When Pop Went Epic: The Crazy World of the Concept Album, it is suggested that the first concept album is
Woody Guthrie's 1940 album
Dust Bowl Ballads.
The Independent regards it as "perhaps" one of the first concept albums, consisting exclusively of semi-autobiographical songs about the hardships of American migrant labourers during the 1930s. In the late 1940s, the
LP record was introduced, with
space age pop composers producing concept albums soon after. Themes included exploring wild life and dealing with emotions, with some albums meant to be played while dining or relaxing. This was accompanied in the mid-1950s with the invention of the
gatefold, which allowed room for
liner notes to explain the concept. in
Capitol Records Studio A, 1956, during the recording of his album ''
Songs for Swingin' Lovers!'' Singer
Frank Sinatra recorded several concept albums prior to the 1960s rock era, including
In the Wee Small Hours (1955) and
Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely (1958). Sinatra is occasionally credited as the inventor of the concept album, beginning with
The Voice of Frank Sinatra (1946), which led to similar work by
Bing Crosby. According to biographer Will Friedwald, Sinatra "sequenced the songs so that the lyrics created a flow from track to track, affording an impression of a narrative, as in
musical comedy or
opera. ... [He was the] first pop singer to bring a consciously artistic attitude to recording." Singer/pianist
Nat "King" Cole (who, along with Sinatra, often collaborated with arranger
Nelson Riddle during this era) was also an early pioneer of concept albums, as with his
Wild Is Love (1960), a suite of original songs about a man's search for love.
1960s: Rock and country music In the early 1960s, concept albums became highly featured in American
country music, but the fact went largely unacknowledged by rock/pop fans and critics, who would only begin noting "concept albums" as a phenomenon later in the decade, when albums became closely aligned with countercultural ideology, resulting in a recognised "
album era" and the introduction of the rock concept album. The author Carys Wyn Jones writes that
the Beach Boys'
Pet Sounds (1966),
the Beatles'
Revolver (1966) and ''
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band'' (1967), and
the Who's
Tommy (1969) are variously cited as "the first concept album", usually for their "uniform excellence rather than some lyrical theme or underlying musical motif". Other records have been claimed as "early" or "first" concept albums. The Beach Boys' first six albums, released over 1962–64, featured collections of songs unified respectively by a central concept, such as cars, surfing, and teenage lifestyles. Writing in
101 Albums That Changed Popular Music, Chris Smith commented: "Though albums such as Frank Sinatra's 1955
In the Wee Small Hours and
Marty Robbins' 1959
Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs had already introduced concept albums, [the Beach Boys' 1963 album]
Little Deuce Coupe was the first to comprise almost all original material rather than standard covers." Music historian
Larry Starr, who identifies the Beach Boys' 1964 releases
Shut Down Volume 2 and
All Summer Long as heralding the album era, cites
Pet Sounds as the first rock concept album on the basis that it had been "conceived as an integrated whole, with interrelated songs arranged in a deliberate sequence."
The 100 Greatest Bands of All Time (2015) states that
the Ventures "pioneered the idea of the rock concept album years before the genre is generally acknowledged to have been born". Writing in his
Concise Dictionary of Popular Culture,
Marcel Danesi identifies the Beatles'
Rubber Soul (1965) and the Who's
The Who Sell Out (1967) as other examples of early concept albums.
Brian Boyd of
The Irish Times names
the Kinks'
Face to Face (1966) as the first concept album: "Written entirely by
Ray Davies, the songs were supposed to be linked by pieces of music, so that the album would play without gaps, but the record company baulked at such radicalism. It's not one of the band's finest works, but it did have an impact." ' 1967 album ''
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band'' "Popular consensus" for the first rock concept album, according to AllMusic, favours
Sgt. Pepper. Music critic and journalist Neil Slaven stated that
Frank Zappa's
Absolutely Free, released the same day as
Sgt. Pepper, was "very much a concept album, but The Beatles effortlessly stole his thunder", and subsequently
Sgt. Pepper was hailed as "perhaps the first 'concept album' even though the songs were unrelated."
1960s–70s: Rock operas, progressive rock, soul, and disco Author Bill Martin relates the assumed concept albums of the 1960s to
progressive rock: recreating their concept album
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway (1974) for a live performance. Band member
Peter Gabriel is wearing a costume for one of the album's characters.
Popmatters Sarah Zupko notes that while the Who's
Tommy is "popularly thought of as the first rock opera, an extra-long concept album with characters, a consistent storyline, and a slight bit of pomposity", it is preceded by the shorter concept albums ''
Ogdens' Nut Gone Flake (Small Faces, 1968) and S.F. Sorrow (The Pretty Things, 1968). Stewart Mason of AllMusic also retrospectively described The Story of Simon Simopath by British psychedelic pop band Nirvana, released in 1967, as an "unashamedly twee early concept album" with a "deliberately childlike tone", and the album was also selected for The MOJO Collection'' as one of the most significant albums in musical history due to its early forays into the format. On the consolidation of the format, author Jim Cullen states: "The concept album reached its apogee in the 1970s in ambitious records like
Pink Floyd's
Dark Side of the Moon (1973) and the
Eagles'
Hotel California (1976)." In 2015,
Rolling Stone ranked
Dark Side of the Moon at number one among the 50 greatest progressive rock albums of all time, also noting the LP's stature as the second-best-selling album of all time. Pink Floyd's
The Wall (1979), a semi-autobiographical story modeled after the band's
Roger Waters and former member
Syd Barrett, is one of the most famous concept albums by any artist. In addition to
The Wall, Danesi highlights
Genesis'
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway (1974) and
Frank Zappa's ''
Joe's Garage'' (1979) as other culturally significant concept albums. According to author Edward Macan, concept albums as a recurrent theme in progressive rock was directly inspired by the counterculture associated with "the
proto-progressive bands of the 1960s", observing: "the consistent use of lengthy forms such as the programmatic
song cycle of the concept album and the multimovement suite underscores the hippies' new, drug-induced conception of time."
Progressive soul musicians inspired by this approach conceived concept albums during this era reflecting themes and concerns of
the African-American experience, including
Marvin Gaye (1971's ''
What's Going On), George Clinton (the 1975 Parliament album Mothership Connection''), and
Stevie Wonder's
Innervisions (1973) and
Songs in the Key of Life (1976). By the mid-1970s, concept albums extended to
disco music artists. Examples include
Phylicia Rashad's 1978 album
Josephine Superstar, which details the life of film star and activist
Josephine Baker; Parliament's
Mothership Connection (1975) featuring
space disco elements such as
sci-fi,
UFOs,
galactic exploration, and
spaceflight;''''
The Undisputed Truth's
Method to the Madness (1976) which is
framed by the group's abduction by aliens and performance for "the Space Gods"; French band
Voyage's
self-titled debut album (1977); and
Dee D. Jackson's space disco album
Cosmic Curves (1978). In the country realm,
Willie Nelson recorded the most prominent concept albums, releasing
Phases and Stages in 1974 and
Red Headed Stranger in 1975. The latter went double platinum in the United States, launching him from being merely a noted songwriter and regional success to worldwide superstardom.
1980s–present: Decline and return to popularity With the emergence of
MTV as a
music video network which valued
singles over albums, concept albums became less dominant in the 1980s. selling 13,000 units in one week.
NMEs Emily Barker cites
Green Day's
American Idiot (2004) as one of the "more notable" examples,
My Chemical Romance’s
The Black Parade (2006) is another example of a modern concept album. , writing for
GQ, noted a resurgence of concept albums in the 2010s due to
streaming: "This is happening not in spite of the rise of streaming and playlists, but because of it. Threatened with redundancy in the digital era, albums have fought back by becoming more album-like." Cucchiara argues that concept albums should also describe "this new generation of concept albums, for one key reason. This is because the unison between the songs on a particular album has now been expanded into a broader field of visual and artistic design and marketing strategies that play into the themes and stories that form the album." As well as presenting individual themes and stories, they follow each other in a progressing storyline, as part of a universe that spans over the course of multiple albums including
Clancy (2024) and
Breach (2025), which is the final installation of the story. Towards the end of the 1980s, however, as
heavy metal suited a fairly niche crowd, a small number of heavy metal artists began producing concept albums, particularly groups with more influences from progressive rock, and this would further develop the
progressive metal and
power metal genres.
King Diamond's Abigail and
Savatage's Hall of the Mountain King, both released in 1987, stand some of the earliest examples of concept albums produced by a heavy metal artist. A year later,
Iron Maiden's,
Seventh Son of a Seventh Son, released in 1988, would become one of the most commercially successful examples of a heavy metal concept album at the time. Thus it could be argued that from the genre's inception, progressive metal has been a hotspot for concept albums, like its rock counterpart. Other notable progressive metal concept albums are
Dream Theater's
Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory,
Opeth's
Still Life, In the 21st century, the field of classical music has adopted the idea of the concept album, citing such historical examples as
Schubert's Winterreise and
Schumann's Liederkreis as prototypes for contemporary composers and musicians. Classical composers and performers increasingly adopt production and marketing strategies that unify otherwise disparate works into concept albums or concerts. Since 2019, the classical music magazine
Gramophone has included a special category for "concept album" in its annual
recordings of the year awards, to celebrate "albums where a creative mind has curated something visionary, a programme whose whole speaks more powerfully than its parts. A thought-through journey, which compels to be heard in one sitting." In a year-ending essay on the album in 2019,
Ann Powers wrote for
Slate that the year found the medium in a state of flux. In her observation, many recording artists revitalized the concept album around autobiographical narratives and personal themes, such as intimacy,
intersectionality, African-American life, boundaries among women, and grief associated with death. She cited such albums as
Brittany Howard's
Jaime,
Raphael Saadiq's
Jimmy Lee,
Jamila Woods'
Legacy! Legacy!,
Rapsody's
Eve,
Jenny Lewis'
On the Line,
Julia Jacklin's
Crushing,
Joe Henry's
The Gospel According to Water, and
Nick Cave's
Ghosteen.
Epic: The Musical, a series of concept albums retelling
The Odyssey, arose to massive popularity, with its first release in January 2023 surpassing three million streams within its first week of release and the musical remaining popular as subsequent "saga" albums were released, the last one being released in December 2024. ==See also==