Thursday, September 18, 2008

Top Ten Albums of All Time

Although it is extemely difficult to choose my top ten favorite albums, these are the albums that come to mind as having the most staying power and influence for what I currently listen to. I don't break these out on a regular basis now, but they will always be in my collection and occasionally warrant a good listen.


Pink Floyd – “Meddle”
Nostalgia, nostalgia, nostalgia. This album has been with me on many of my travels and always puts a smile on my face. Musically, I feel Pink Floyd had more profound albums. However, David Gilmour’s voice on this record is the male version of an angel singing from the heavens. Just listen to "Fearless" and you will agree.

U2 – “Joshua Tree”
Perhaps one of the best traveling albums ever, Joshua Tree was U2’s “Exile on Main St.” They captured the vastness of America’s Southwest and the spirit of lost and aching souls. Before Bono became a world healer in cool glasses, he was a singer and a songwriter. And this album proves it.

Sonic Youth – “Goo”
This was an incredible effort from one of the genre’s greatest bands. It is also one of the most “user friendly” albums by Sonic Youth. Original riffs and odd tunings melt the wax that binds the candle on this one. It captures teenage lust, angst, heartbreak and despair with a twinge of hope to keep you coming back for more.

Pavement – “Slanted and Enchanted”
The debut album from a band that almost single-handedly started what is now known as indie rock. Armed with simple power chords, spacious melodies and quirky lyrics, the album continues to be revered by longtime listeners as well as new listeners who are just now discovering this little gem.

Ween – “The Mollusk”
A remarkable album from the brothers Ween, The Mollusk defies all normality while much of it copies earlier styles of music, and that is what Ween does best. For me, the album particularly stands out due to its spacious and otherworldly soundscape. Synthesizers, guitars and original lyrics, the album has just enough old fashioned rock and roll mixed in there to avoid keeping your distance from its detailed intricacies.

Tribe Called Quest – “Low End Theory”
Tribe’s second album, Low End Theory fuses hip hop with jazz, funk, quirky rhymes and intelligence. It’s almost impossible to not bounce your head to the album’s funky and original beats and laugh at Phife Dawg’s outlook on life and “love.” Q-Tip’s smooth voice creates a certain seriousness and toughness to the tracks, giving the Tribe legitimate street credibility while pleasing those who don’t ordinarily listen to hip hop.

The Cure – “Pornography”
Early Cure albums are so much different than what the band has produced the past 15, or even 20 years. Robert Smith’s latest attempts to remain musically relevant are comparatively lackluster. 1982’s Pornography was as dark and sullen as the Cure gets. Songs like “One Hundred Years” and “Hanging Garden,” the band’s magnum opus, were responsible for spawning a new breed of music fans. Suddenly college kids liked dark music.

Slayer – “South of Heaven”
In my opinion, South of Heaven is the best metal album ever made. Although Reign in Blood is widely considered their best, I feel that South of Heaven is better musically and sonically. The transition of the album’s opening track into “Silent Scream” is absolutely blood curdling and still makes the hair on the back of my neck stand at attention. Rick Rubin knew how to capture the band’s torrential downpour of sound and exploit their talent as musicians, even though it was his first attempt with a metal band. This was the last album they recorded on Def Jam Records.

Beastie Boys – “Paul’s Boutique”
Following the commercial success of the Beastie’s first album, Licensed to Ill, must have been extremely hard. And it was. Parting ways with legendary producer Rick Rubin and exiling to Los Angeles from their native New York City surroundings, the Beastie Boys had something to prove. And they did. The entire album is worth listening to from beginning to end, every time. Much of it is due to the ample sampling, taken from 105 songs and sounds total, which was done before the industry became so sue happy. Paul’s Boutique is timeless and will always be at the apex of hip hop’s greatest achievements.

Johnny Cash – “At Folsom Prison”
The man in black’s raw 1968 live recording at Folsom State Prison will always be embedded in my brain. I found the album at a very early age and was mesmerized by the authentic and manic presentation in which it was recorded, and Cash’s unmistakable bass-baritone voice. Songs like “Cocaine Blues” and “The Long Black Veil” will always have a life of their own and this live recording spans many musical genres and has inspired musicians from many different backgrounds. It is as punk rock as it is country.