My Top 10 Albums
I’m doing write-ups on my personal top 10 albums because that’s fun for me… tl;dr, just check out the headings below.
My report card grades are due tonight at 11:59 PM and I’m sick of scoring student work, so I’m letting myself work on this challenge one album at a time as my reward for hitting various work checkpoints. Listening to these various albums while grading has already brightened my mood. Nothing fights a feeling of enclosure more effectively than music that expands the mind.
The key word in the challenge to me is “album.” To me, an album should be more than a collection of songs. A great album must be greater than the sum of its parts, so that listening to it in its entirety elevates the whole experience; on a great album, there should be no skippable filler. For this reason, I have taken a liberty with the challenge instruction to identify the “best song” by naming an excellent song outside of the best-known singles. If I couldn’t find such a song and could only justify a choice with tracks that made the radio and Billboard charts, then I deemed the album insufficiently great for this list. I also deliberately tried for variety to make my list more interesting: at least a little diversity of genre, and no more than one album per artist (or else there would have been a hell of a lot more Pink Floyd). I’m also leaving off musical soundtracks as primarily belonging to a different art form, or else Hamilton would have made my list.
I’ll begin by noting that my honorable mention albums include Nine Inch Nails’ The Fragile and literally everything David Bowie ever did, but probably Station to Station. (Sorry, David Bowie.)
10. Soundgarden, Superunknown – “Let Me Drown”
I had a devil of a time choosing a song from this album, best remembered for “Black Hole Sun,” because each track is a showcase. Whether the song is rollicking or brooding or both – which is the case with “Let Me Drown” – Chris Cornell’s power vocals cut through the grunge and add whole other layer. The earlier Badmotorfinger is a snarling badass of an album, but give me the tuneful and varied songwriting of Superunknown, grunge in its most elevated form.
9. The Decemberists, The Hazards of Love– “The Hazards of Love 1 (‘The Prettiest Whistles Won’t Wrestle The Thistles Undone’)”
Given my criteria for a great album, it should not be surprising that I’ve got a concept album on my list. This one is a fairytale: a young woman finds a wounded fawn who transforms into a handsome young man, under the spell of his mother, a witch, and the two sheltered youths fall in love – pregnancy, the witch’s jealousy, and a kidnapping provide complications leading up to a tragic end. The deeply creepy “Hazards of Love 3 (Revenge)” is a highlight – ghostly children taking revenge on their murderous father! – but it’s the first full song on the album that provides its best intro. Colin Meloy’s endearing voice and delight in wordplay are on full display, and the track immediately draws the listener into the fable.
8. Lady Gaga, The Fame Monster – “Dance in the Dark”
I don’t generally do pop music, but this album is an exception. I first checked out Lady Gaga because of the crazy and awesome music videos she made in this era – the art form was moribund at best in 2009, but Gaga made videos an event again, for which we are all in her debt. It’s hard to escape the headliners on the album (“Bad Romance,” “Alejandro,” “Telephone”) but it’s all so damn good. This overshadowed track has a driving beat, earworm synth, and, at its core, a pair of evocative and simple lines: “Baby loves to dance in the dark / Cause when he’s looking she falls apart.” Despite the number of repetitions, the lines remain plaintive until the end, thanks to Gaga’s skillful singing and a well-timed spoken word bridge that expands the song’s scope. Considered as a whole, The Fame Monster grapples not only with fame but with love, joy, possession, fear, and their intersections.
7. Muse, Absolution – “Falling Away with You”
Once Muse got big, the band wallowed in its own pretension and facile slogans; the sound remained good, but the self-importance lessened it for me. Absolution, though, came before all that. I first sought out the album because I caught “Hysteria” on the radio, and it rocks, hard. Muse can do that; they can also create beautiful, melodic layers. Absolution balances it all. As much as any track, “Falling Away with You” contains these competing, complementary styles. The lyrics, here and elsewhere, would not hold up on a page sans accompaniment, but they’re not meant to: the arrangements and upper-range vocals invest them with largeness. Later Muse is self-righteous and pandering, but on this album, you hear searching instead of answers. It’s music reaching for something beyond itself.
6. Kendrick Lamar, To Pimp a Butterfly – “How Much a Dollar Cost”
Rap: not my genre. Kendrick Lamar, however, is a genius, and this is the album that brought me to his work. There’s consistent development of themes throughout, but a fascinating variety of styles to the music: he raps over free jazz(!), he raps over a funk track (featuring George Clinton), he raps a politically-charged banger (“The Blacker the Berry,” the first Kendrick track that blew my mind). There is other-level wordplay here, and I really want to talk about “King Kunta,” but I committed to avoiding hit singles, so… “How Much a Dollar Cost” is a fable with slow-paced music that belies the building intensity of Lamar’s flow. Wealthy as he is, he meets a homeless beggar (“Guilt trippin’ and feelin’ resentment / I never met a transient who demanded attention”) but doubts the man’s sincerity. He accuses him of drug and alcohol abuse (“I comprehend, I smell grandpa’s old medicine / Reekin’ from your skin, moonshine and gin”) and putting on an act (“I’m imaginin’ / Denzel but lookin’ at O’Neal, Kazaam is sad / Thrills, your gimmick is mediocre”). But as happens in fables, the haughty man who refuses to help the poor pays for his arrogance. It’s good storytelling. The whole album is good storytelling, with Kendrick’s signature wit, flow, depth, and ability to dramatize the tensions in his life. There’s more than just a portrayal of conflict across Kendrick’s albums: there’s a complex and brilliant man’s whole thought process laid bare in all its nuanced, searching glory.
5. The Smashing Pumpkins, Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness – “Thru the Eyes of Ruby”
My favorite song of all time by anybody is “Muzzle” because the poetic lyrics have brought me comfort on more occasions than I can count; the greatest Smashing Pumpkins song is “1979.” Both are here, but since my goal is to show others why I love this glorious double album, I want to write about the overlooked “Thru the Eyes of Ruby.” The song is gentle, and the song repeatedly builds into a swirling mass of distorted guitars, and there is no contradiction in those characteristics. Billy Corgan’s pinched singing voice is similarly distorted and complements the music perfectly. The lyrics are worth the trouble, though: the album was packaged with a booklet containing all of them, and I spent many fond hours in my teenage years pondering them. “Thru the Eyes of Ruby” has some characteristic gems. “Your innocence is treasure, your innocence is death / Your innocence is all I have.” In the song’s final lines, Corgan repeats, “The night has come to hold us young.” The words invite thought.
The album’s first disc is titled Dawn to Dusk, and the second Twilight to Starlight. Some evening when you’ll be driving the interstate into the night, put the Smashing Pumpkins on and let them carry you where you’re going.
4. Joy Division, Unknown Pleasures – “Shadowplay”
Some of the songs on this album evidence the “punk” in “post-punk,” and some are moody dreamscapes, but all of them combine to create an atmosphere like no other band’s work. “She’s Lost Control” is the headliner, but I have long considered “Shadowplay” a highlight. It’s impossible to separate the music from the tragedy that ended Joy Division, but even if you don’t know the story, there’s always something menacing just outside the edges as you listen. Nonetheless, the album feels like a melancholy embrace, in no small part because Ian Curtis’s haunting, earnest baritone vocals. Turn the lights and volume low, close your eyes and play Unknown Pleasures through. The feelings run deep.
3. Arcade Fire, The Suburbs – “The Suburbs”
You’ll find many who say Arcade Fire’s first album, Funeral, is the alpha and omega, but for all that debut’s greatness, I love The Suburbs more. When driving home to the town of my birth, this album rises inevitably from the car stereo. Youth, maturation, change, loss, struggle, nostalgia – the lyrics have a lot to unpack, and the music just as much. “The Suburbs” was, technically, a single, but since its Wikipedia entry opens with a note that it “reached number 94 on the Canadian Hot 100,” I feel that it’s still a valid option for my low-recognition song choices. I use the lilting opening chords for my ringtone, and if I’m not too quick to pick up, I hear the opening lines that instantly transport listeners to a time of life: “In the suburbs I / I learned to drive, / And you told me we’d never survive / Grab your mother’s keys, we’re leaving.” And with that, the journey to the past begins.
2. Nirvana, Unplugged in New York – “Jesus Doesn’t Want Me for a Sunbeam”
Nirvana is the legend of the 90s. Name the band and nine people out of ten probably think of “Smells Like Teen Spirit” first. But if you want to hear the beating heart within the iconoclast, listen to Unplugged straight through. Of all the songs the band played that night, the cover of “Jesus Doesn’t Want Me for a Sunbeam” fits most strangely into their oeuvre, and that’s why it’s an essential listen.
1. Pink Floyd, Dark Side of the Moon – “Us and Them”
It’s omnipresent in our culture, one of the bestselling albums of all time, and near the top of virtually every great album list ever created—and there’s a reason for that. Ask anyone in the world to name songs on Dark Side of the Moon, and I’ll guarantee that person will list “Us and Them” fourth at the earliest; it’s the sixth track in order, and “Time,” “Money,” and “Brain Damage/Eclipse” all get more radio play. But what a magical song it is. What a magical album it is. Not many artists in any medium have attempted to encapsulate the human experience in a single work. If anyone has ever succeeded, Pink Floyd pulled it off on Dark Side of the Moon.
Ranked in no particular order
Metallica - Black Album: Wherever I may roam
Rage Against the Machine - Evil Empire: Bulls on Parade
Pink Floyd - Darkside of the Moon: Comfortably Numb
Linkin Park - Hybrid Theory: In the End
Linkin Park - Meteora: Lying from You
Bob Marley - Mixed: Three little Birds
Tupac - Greatest Hits: Dear Momma
TFK - War of Change: War of Change
Green day - American Idiot: Holiday
Crimson King - Epitaph: Epitaph
MY FAVORITE ALBUMS
This was harder than I thought, especially ranking them. My favorites are forever in flux.
I. BLOOD ON THE TRACKS by Bob Dylan
favorite song: Shelter from the Storm
II. IF YOU'RE FEELING SINISTER by Belle & Sebastian
favorite song: Get Me Away from Here, I'm Dying
III. GET LOST by the Magnetic Fields
favorite song: With Whom to Dance
IV. MARQUEE MOON by Television
favorite song: Marquee Moon
V. LONDON CALLING by the Clash
favorite song: Guns of Brixton
VI. I'M WIDE AWAKE, IT'S MORNING by Bright Eyes
favorite song: First Day of My Life
VII. EITHER/OR by Elliott Smith
favorite song: Between the Bars
VIII. VERSION 2.0 by Garbage
favorite song: You Look So Fine
VIV. THE AIRBORNE TOXIC EVENT by the Airborne Toxic Event
favorite song: Sometime Around Midnight
X. EVERYTHING ALL THE TIME by Band of Horses
favorite song: the Funeral
1. MF DOOM/Madlib: Madvillainy
Song: Rhinestone Cowboy
Link: https://youtu.be/s4iR668Ki3I
2. Quasimoto/aka Madlib:The Unseen
Song: Bluffin
Link: https://youtu.be/soll26DTlBo
3. MF DOOM: MM..Food
Song: Vomitspit
Link: https://youtu.be/cDYHraHnjJE
4. Marvin Gaye: What's Going On
Song: God Is Love
Link: https://youtu.be/1aNMq-tOtYg
5. Chet Baker: Chet Baker Sings
Song: But Not For Me
Link: https://youtu.be/QwAwtMt8t4s
6. Twilight: Still Loving You
Song: Still Loving You
Link: https://youtu.be/4_RNFof-eMY
7. Mac Miller: Circles (Deluxe)
Song: Right
Link: https://youtu.be/vx0i-iPOlQk
8. JockStrap: Wicked City
Song: Acid
Link: https://youtu.be/oOXho8yVaKk
9. Freddie Gibbs/Madlib: Bandana
Song: Fake Names
Link: https://youtu.be/MmvzeR2AFhA
10. Daryl Hall & John Oates: War Babies
Song: You're Much Too Soon
Link: https://youtu.be/RNj2b2dN3_Y
Top 10: Easy
These are not in order but here you go!
Cry Baby ~ Melanie Martinez/ Fave song: Either: Milk and Cookies or Alphabet Boy
The Search ~ NF/ Fave song: Only
Perception ~ NF/ Fave song: You're Special
Dear Agony ~ Breaking Benjamin/ Fave Song: I will no bow
Phobia ~ Breaking Benjamin/ Fave song: Either: You or The Diary of Jane
Killing All that Holds You ~ 10 Years/ Fave song: Wasteland
One More Light ~ Linkin Park/ Fave Song: One More Light & Sharp Edges
The Lost Book of Fantasy ~ Peter Gundry/ Fave sing: Lament of the Shadow Elves
X ~ Ed Sheeran/ Fave song: Photograph
The Fault in Our Stars soundtrack/ Fave song: All of the Stars ~ Ed Sheeran
My favourite songs.
1:suburban cradles.
2:Linkin park: In the end.
3: Believers
4:Sing me to sleep-Amanda Jenson.
5:The calling.
6:Fake a smile.
7:Rise up
8:No friends.
9:Lost sky-Dreams part 2.
10: We'll meet again.
Others:
Sad sometimes
Lily,
Close to the sun,
Fly away-The fat rat,
Hiding in the blue,
Faded,
Myself-neffex.
1. Minute from The Wassailant by Kofi Young
2. Fight Gods from The Garages Kill the Gods by The Garages
3. Liquid Friend from Percolate by The Garages
4. Shrove Tuesday by Kofi Young
5. Sirens from Ulysses Dies at Dawn by The Mechanisms
6. Téir Abhaile ’Riú from Believe by Celtic Woman
7. Cyborg Abominations from Lolina: Origins by R. L. Hughes
8. Kulupu Jan Tempo from (disambiguation) by jan Misali
9. How the Story Goes from Half-Sin, Half-Virtue by Ben Below
10. Rocks from Night Visions by Imagine Dragons
My taste in music is pretty obscure and kind of all over the place, but this is what I’ve been listening to recently!