Best album of every year since....

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It takes guts,ya gotta admit.Specially around here.

Scott Seward, Monday, 3 March 2003 03:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

andy paltridge would be in heaven

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Monday, 3 March 2003 03:01 (twenty-one years ago) link

4 Genesis albums?

jm (jtm), Monday, 3 March 2003 03:14 (twenty-one years ago) link

That would be FIVE Genesis albums

Nobody has ever made better music than 1972-77 era Genesis.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Monday, 3 March 2003 03:16 (twenty-one years ago) link

come back becky, all is forgiven

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Monday, 3 March 2003 03:18 (twenty-one years ago) link

any mother would be proud of that list. what a SMART boy.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Monday, 3 March 2003 03:20 (twenty-one years ago) link

I may agree with 63-65.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Monday, 3 March 2003 03:20 (twenty-one years ago) link

That's a brave list son. I hope they go easy on you.

J-rock (Julien Sandiford), Monday, 3 March 2003 05:19 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'm not sure I agree with the specific choices for more than a few years (possibly 65, 66, 67, 85, 86, 97); I'd have to do more research than I'm inclined to do before I knew what the competition was in any given year. But I think the list contains at least 13 great albums. (It also contains 10 I've never heard straight through. And 7 I'd confidently state are crap. There's a small amount of overlap in these last two categories.)

Paul in Santa Cruz (Paul in Santa Cruz), Monday, 3 March 2003 07:04 (twenty-one years ago) link

I like how the list isn't entirely composed of white males

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 3 March 2003 07:15 (twenty-one years ago) link

perhaps he's trying to tell us something about his tastes

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 3 March 2003 08:25 (twenty-one years ago) link

http://www.saigan.com/kidscorner/comics/casper.jpg

jack cole (jackcole), Monday, 3 March 2003 08:35 (twenty-one years ago) link

Are we sneering here? Seems to me that GH is just being entirely honest about his favourite music. What problem does anyone on I Love Music have with this, exactly?

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 3 March 2003 08:38 (twenty-one years ago) link

oh the irony

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 3 March 2003 08:41 (twenty-one years ago) link

The "concealing sarcasm under a veneer of irony" construct is a very tired one.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 3 March 2003 08:44 (twenty-one years ago) link

I also like how the list isn't merely cosmetically causcasion, how this sucker's aryan to the bone. I like how the list makes a better punchline to the old Athens joke 'what would music sound like if black people didn't exist?' (stock response: R.E.M.), and a rebuttal to Leonard Bernstein's late 80s remark that James Brown had destroyed pop music (he didn't mean it postively), as if to go 'nuh uh - Neil Finn! Neil Finn!', god save the un-mongrelized world and all that jazz (well not 'jazz' of course, unless we're talking Paul Whiteman, "King of Jazz").

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 3 March 2003 08:58 (twenty-one years ago) link

Never doubt my sincerity - I LOVE MUSIC! (note music, so not rap of course ha ha - melody people!)

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 3 March 2003 08:59 (twenty-one years ago) link

the fact that Marcello is chiding people for "sneering" is endlessly amusing

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:03 (twenty-one years ago) link

...but the guy is just being honest, and is asking us to do the same as he, so let me give it a crack here...

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:06 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'll do this starting w/the year of my birth, then. these are all top-of-head answers but they're close enough. and yes, I am truly embarrassed at how many of them are "canonical" so to speak:

1975 Bob Dylan, Blood on the Tracks
1976 Eno, Another Green World
1977 Al Green, The Belle Album
1978 Talking Heads, More Songs About Buildings and Food
1979 Chic, Risque
1980 Wanna Buy a Bridge?
1981 The Clash, Sandanista!
1982 Prince, 1999
1983 Marshall Crenshaw, Field Day
1984 The Replacements, Let It Be
1985 The Indestructible Beat of Soweto
1986 Elvis Costello & the Attractions, Blood & Chocolate
1987 Prince, Sign 'O' the Times
1988 Public Enemy, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back
1989 Beastie Boys, Paul's Boutique
1990 L.L. Cool J, Mama Said Knock You Out
1991 Nirvana, Nevermind
1992 Only for the Headstrong: the Ultimate Rave Compilation
1993 Pet Shop Boys, Very
1994 Pavement, Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain
1995 Luna, Penthouse
1996 Ocean of Sound
1997 Yo La Tengo, I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One
1998 Fatboy Slim, On the Floor at the Boutique
1999 Built to Spill, Keep It Like a Secret
2000 Luomo, Vocalcity
2001 The Avalanches, Since I Left You
2002 The Streets, Original Pirate Material
2003 [so far] The New Pornographers, Electric Version, but don't hold me to that please

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:14 (twenty-one years ago) link

i never sneer. evidence to the contrary please.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 3 March 2003 09:16 (twenty-one years ago) link

unlike the increasingly tiresome mr blount, who presumably thinks that the beatles were racists for releasing the "white album."

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 3 March 2003 09:18 (twenty-one years ago) link

The "concealing sarcasm under a veneer of irony" construct is a very tired one.
-- Marcello Carlin (marcellocarli...), March 3rd, 2003.

that for instance

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:18 (twenty-one years ago) link

or your last one

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:18 (twenty-one years ago) link

1975 Bob Dylan, Blood on the Tracks

This came out in 1974. Otherwise, yes, great list, marry me, etc.

Jody Beth Rosen (Jody Beth Rosen), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:19 (twenty-one years ago) link

was recorded in '74, was re-recorded last-minute in Nov or Dec (I think Dec) of '74, was issued in Jan '75

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:20 (twenty-one years ago) link

(also, '81 should be EC's Trust and '86 should be something other--Parade maybe? not because I can't have 2 EC's but because B&C didn't seem right even as I wrote it. but hey.)

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:21 (twenty-one years ago) link

one was a question, the other was a comment on another poster who is clearly sneering at someone else's taste. explain what connection either has with sneering.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 3 March 2003 09:22 (twenty-one years ago) link

if they had titled it the 'whites only album' perhaps. and show me where I used the term 'racist'. in your defense 'increasingly tiresome' (your oxford's showing, time for tea and crumpets), does probably mark the first time you've dared to sneer without hiding behind a pseudonym old chap.

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:22 (twenty-one years ago) link

Blood and Chocolate is MUCH better than Trust. And better than Parade too.

Jody Beth Rosen (Jody Beth Rosen), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:23 (twenty-one years ago) link

yeah, JBR, yr prob. right. (MC is not, though)

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:24 (twenty-one years ago) link

side one of Blood and Chocolate is better than side one of Parade but side two of Parade kicks side two of Blood and Chocolate's ass

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:25 (twenty-one years ago) link

1986 : the smiths - the queen is dead
1987: butthole surfers - locust abortion technician
1988: sonic youth - daydream nation
1989: stone roses - stone roses
1990: mazzy star - she hangs brightly
1991: the orb- adventures beyond the ultraworld
1992: lemonheads - it's a shame about ray
1993: autechre - incunabula
1994: jeff buckley - grace
1995: blur - the great escape
1996: sparklehorse - vivadixiesubmarinetransmissionplot / manics - everything must go
1997: yo la tengo - i can feel the heart beating as one / radiohead ok computer
1998: mercury rev - deserters songs
1999: low - secret name
2000: susuma yokota - sakura
2001: radiohead - amnesiac
2002: beachwood sparks - make the robot cowboys cry
2003: bonnie prince billy - master and everyone

weasel diesel (K1l14n), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

mc disagrees with m matos => mc is not right.

and i note three clear sneers in mr blount's last post.

unfortunately, mr blount, your voice is not your own, you are the product of a discourse based on the unstable illusion that black music and black people are somehow "perfect."

(and note further how such apologists always cite james brown as though he were the essence of purity rather than the biggest bore in the last half-century of popular music; though coltrane runs him a close second).

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 3 March 2003 09:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

Public Enemy, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back

This alb is great, influential, etc, but I'd take the other great, influential 1988 alb, Daydream Nation.

Jody Beth Rosen (Jody Beth Rosen), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

but side one of B&C is better than any EC side ever. still, Trust is my favorite of his and way fucking better than S! which I love nevertheless. also, I will stop paying MC the attention he so desperately craves starting right now.

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:27 (twenty-one years ago) link

Ms. Lambert - I actually cited Leonard Bernstein citing James Brown and please show me where exactly I stated black culture and black people are 'perfect' (quotes please! cite examples!) or where I cite James Brown as the 'essence of purity'. I will agree that my voice is not my own in any implications that you might be a pathetic twit, old chap.

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:32 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'm trying to do my own list and I'm frustrated at how punk-centric the late '70s inclusions are (if this were a singles list it'd be all disco, naturally). Blah blah Marquee Moon blah Los Angeles blah.

Jody Beth Rosen (Jody Beth Rosen), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:32 (twenty-one years ago) link

hanging on every word like ian curtis, of course...but then i don't need to crave attention any more, mr matos, just questioning the general attitude to GH's original post, rather than nodding my head and saying "oh what a jerk HAHAHAHA!" as other posters here seemed to be doing.

"ms lambert"? that's so november 2002. i've moved on since then, mr blount. have you?

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 3 March 2003 09:34 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'd also Daydream Nation of Nation of Millions except I just remembered that Daydream Nation was made by white people and Nation of Millions was made by black people so clearly that can't be right, the voices that are not my own would never allow that


I'd also do a list but it'd be so damn canonical or quirkily contrarian it'd be pointless (like arguing with Marcello "I'm off the meds again, and by the way I went to Oxford, righty-o!" Carlin aka Denise Lambert aka ....)

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:35 (twenty-one years ago) link

like i said, mr blount, i have moved on since november 2002. i do not require medication and do not incline to be aka anyone any more.

you, sadly, appear to have become stuck there.

why don't you just do a list of records you, like, like?

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 3 March 2003 09:39 (twenty-one years ago) link

1963: The Beatles: Please Please Me
1964: The Beatles: A Hard Day's Night
1965: The Beatles: Rubber Soul
1966: Beach Boys: Pet Sounds
1967: The Beatles: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band
1968: The Zombies: Odessey & Oracle
1969: The Beatles: Abbey Road
1970: Beach Boys: Sunflower
1971: Beach Boys: Surf's Up
1972: Genesis: Foxtrot
1973: Genesis: Selling England By The Pound
1974: Genesis: The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
1975: 10cc: The Original Soundtrack
1976: Genesis: A Trick Of The Tail
1977: Genesis: Wind And Wuthering
1978: The Jam: All Mod Cons
1979: Squeeze: Cool For Cats
1980: Japan: Gentlemen Take Polaroids
1981: Japan: Tin Drum
1982: Elvis Costello: Imperial Bedroom
1983: Depeche Mode: Construction Time Again
1984: Depeche Mode: Some Great Reward
1985: Scritti Politti: Cupid & Psyche '85
1986: XTC: Skylarking
1987: The Dukes Of Stratosphear: Psonic Sunspot
1988: N.W.A.: Straight Outta Compton
1989: XTC: Oranges And Lemons
1990: Jellyfish: Bellybutton
1991: Crowded House: Woodface
1992: XTC: Nonsuch
1993: Crowded House: Together Alone
1994: Dodgy: Homegrown
1995: The Merrymakers: No Sleep Till Famous
1996: Dodgy: Free Peace Sweet
1997: Radiohead: OK Computer
1998: Neil Finn: Try Whistling This
1999: Travis: The Man Who
2000: Coldplay: Parachutes
2001: Travis: The Invisible Band
2002: Doves: The Last Broadcast

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:41 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'm sorry if I "sadly" don't buy the 'I may have been a pathetic ass in November 2002 but I'm different now, really' routine, Marcello.

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:43 (twenty-one years ago) link

doesn't make any difference to me whether you "buy" it or not, mr blount. i don't depend on you to justify my life, much as you might like to flatter yourself that i do.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 3 March 2003 09:52 (twenty-one years ago) link

Boys, toys back in the pram, please. You're both far too clever for this childishness.

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Monday, 3 March 2003 09:55 (twenty-one years ago) link

that response is also a tired and dreary construct. you similarly are capable of better. early morning aerobics to burn off lazy kneejerk opinions; nothing wrong with that.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 3 March 2003 10:01 (twenty-one years ago) link

pre 1963: Vaughn Meader - The First Family
1964: The Beatles - Second Album
1965: Patti Page - Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte
1966 - Bob Booker and George Foster - When You're in Love the Whole World is Jewish
1967 - The Rolling Stones: Between the Buttons
1968 - Pigmeat Markham: Here Comes the Judge
1969: Elvis Presley: From Elvis in Memphis
1970: Moms Mabley - Live at Sing Sing
1971: Loretta Lynn: Coal Miner's Daughter
1972: The O'Jays - Back Stabbers
1973: Merle Haggard: I Love Dixie Blues
1974: Lynyrd Skynyrd: Second Helping
1975: Led Zeppelin: Physical Graffiti
1976: Redd Foxx - You Gotta Wash Your Ass
1977: Brian Eno - Before and After Science
1978: Joe Ely - Honky Tonk Masquerade
1979: Joy Division: Unknown Pleasures
1980: The Fall - Grotesque (After the Gramme)
1981: Kid Creole & the Coconuts: Fresh Fruit in Foreign Places
1982: Television: The Blow-Up
1983: Eddie Murphy - Comedian
1984: Prince - Purple Rain
1985: Husker Du - Flip Your Wig
1986: Randy Travis - Storms of Life
1987: Less than Zero OST
1988: Sonic Youth - Daydream Nation
1989: Pylon - Hits
1990: Jerry Clower - An Officer and a Ledbetter
1991: Nirvana - Nevermind
1992: Too Short: Shorty the Pimp
1993: Nirvana - In Utero
1994 - Dimples: Baby Makin Music
1995: Batman Forever OST
1996: v/a - Only in America
1997: Bob Dylan - Time Out of Mind
1998 - The Drive-By Truckers: Gangstabilly
1999: Cool Breeze: East Point's Greatest Hits
2000: Macabre: Dahmer
2001: The Ex - Dizzy Spells
2002: The Streets - Original Pirate Material

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 3 March 2003 10:23 (twenty-one years ago) link

I hate this list too.

1976 Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band
1977 Television, Marquee Moon
1978 Blondie, Plastic Letters
1979 Gang of Four, Entertainment!
1980 Feelies, Crazy Rhythms
1981 Tom Tom Club
1982 Richard and Linda Thompson, Shoot Out the Lights
1983 R.E.M., Murmur
1984 Prince, Purple Rain (god, this was a tough choice)
1985 Talking Heads, Little Creatures
1986 Elvis Costello & the Attractions, Blood & Chocolate
1987 Smiths, Strangeways, Here We Come
1988 Sonic Youth, Daydream Nation
1989 Jane Siberry, Bound By the Beauty
1990 Deee-Lite, World Clique
1991 Guns 'n' Roses, Use Your Illusion I
1992 Madonna, Erotica
1993 Nirvana, In Utero
1994 Kristin Hersh, Hips and Makers
1995 Luna, Penthouse
1996 Sugarplastic, Bang, the Earth is Round
1997 Tsunami, A Brilliant Mistake
1998 Hole, Celebrity Skin
1999 Mike Ness, Cheating at Solitaire
2000 Radiohead, Kid A
2001 Basement Jaxx, Rooty
2002 Sonic Youth, Murray Street

Jody Beth Rosen (Jody Beth Rosen), Monday, 3 March 2003 10:23 (twenty-one years ago) link

1979 Gang of Four, Entertainment!

Actually I think my real answer is XTC's Drums and Wires.

Jody Beth Rosen (Jody Beth Rosen), Monday, 3 March 2003 10:28 (twenty-one years ago) link

I can't remember before 99 or so.

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 3 March 2003 10:34 (twenty-one years ago) link

"I'm Your Man" is the only one of those mentioned 1988 ones that is any good at all (and possibly House Of Love - I haven't heard anything by them other than "Shine On" - which was nice and catchy)

Geir Hongro, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 00:56 (fifteen years ago) link

it's hard not to be canonical and a bit boring about old music unless you know the era (or at least a specific genre of it) really well. Probably there were albums released in those decades that I'd like a lot more than the ones I listed if I was aware of them

this is exactly why i don't know (or really care tbh) about old music, i already know i can never know the era like i know mine, and i also know that my appreciation of my favourite music is almost always heightened by knowing my era, so...getting into the past always seems like an unnecessarily sisyphean task. also, my reaction to anything canonical is to avoid it for as long as possible, the entire process of canonisation appalls me.

i do like miles davis, alice coltrane &c...i think i've had like 2, maybe 3 can albums on my computer for over 2 years now and still haven't got round to listening to them.

lex pretend, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 07:30 (fifteen years ago) link

Canonisation is good and important. The classical canon exists for a reason and it's the same with the rock canon. Plus all musical genres should be judged from a criteria not too unlike classical music.

Geir Hongro, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 08:44 (fifteen years ago) link

clash of the tits

Frogman Henry, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 09:47 (fifteen years ago) link

judged from a criteria not too unlike classical music

Lol, by these criteria every album on your list is shite. Oh hang on, what am I doing?

Matt DC, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 09:58 (fifteen years ago) link

"This is exactly why i don't know (or really care tbh) about old music, i already know i can never know the era like i know mine, and i also know that my appreciation of my favourite music is almost always heightened by knowing my era, so...getting into the past always seems like an unnecessarily sisyphean task."

I pretty much agree with this. Most of the time when I get into old music it's more because the specific artifact represents some idea or style that seems really crucial to me in an atemporal sense. Like, with Can, I don't really care about the position in 1970s music, their influence on post-punk etc. It's really much more about what they were doing with rhythms and grooves, which strikes me as existing on this horizon of, um, jagged funkiness (stay with me here) that a lot of my favourite music gets to but has difficulty getting past (perhaps in the same sense that you can't get past a horizon. So the reference points for Can for me are not so much Faust or P.I.L. and more other stuff from a whole host of styles which I feel exists on that same horizon. I made a comp the other day with Can's "Spoon" and Talking Heads' "The Great Curve" but also 2-step, A Guy Called Gerald jungle, Matias Aguayo, dancehall, Bubba Sparxx, 'O'Rang... It makes more sense to me to think of Can in a constellation like that, one that, I guess, effaces the canonical hierarchy between all these things but without extinguishing the point of difference that is uniquely Can's. I think Can are important, but I don't think you (or, perhaps, rather, I) can grasp that importance terribly well by approaching them with some more typical canonical framework such as "krautrock".

Tim F, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 11:10 (fifteen years ago) link

yeah, you can still read old music internally without having a surplus of circumstantial knowledge (knowing what mingus phrases quote monk phrases etc). linking it with whatever you have heard and making those kind of connections is what makes listening to old music out of context so exciting imo.

strgn, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 11:17 (fifteen years ago) link

absolutely, i can relate with the lyrics of say, byrne, bowie, wilson and richman, probably more than yer average r'n'b or hiphop lyrics. totally white aesthetic i apppreciate, but if a white middle-englander can escape into the world of gangsta rap then i don't see why he or she can't transport themselves into 60s california. are you saying, lex, that you don't see the point of listening to music unless you can relate it directly to your era?

the next grozart, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 11:25 (fifteen years ago) link

Personally, I listen to a lot of old music exactly because it's so different from today's music. I don't know any current artists who'd give me the same vibe as Fela Kuti or Curtis Mayfield or Alice Coltrane. And I love finding about all the musical as well as other connections between the musicians and tunes of the past, it simply gives one's appreciation of the music and the era more depth, kinda like doing historical research. But I guess there's a difference between the type of music fan who wants to keep up with the music of today and only selectively listens to old music, often based on its connections to current music (I used to be like this when I was younger), and the type of fan who's lost track of current directions in music and only selectively listens to new music, but finds older music a more exciting and more easily manageable whole to dig into (I'm like this now). I'm not saying either approach is better than the other, but for a person like me, whos simply doesn't have the time and the energy to keep up with all the current developments and trends even in genres I like (let alone recorded music as a whole), the latter approach seems more comfortable and intriguing.

Tuomas, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 11:30 (fifteen years ago) link

(x-post)

Tuomas, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 11:31 (fifteen years ago) link

I think Lex's point is that there's a social aspect to enjoyment of Lil Wayne that is missing for David Bowie by and large.

Tim F, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 11:36 (fifteen years ago) link

i guess? i think what i like is the sense that the aesthetic i'm listening to is a living, breathing one. it's not that i can't transport myself into whatever aesthetic, i don't find i'm missing anything when i listen to the supremes or joni or whoever, it's perhaps that i just don't see the point of making the effort to get into an aesthetic which was the zeitgeist of people 40 years older than me.

when i first went to university i made a real effort for maybe 5 months to get into the old music i thought/was told i "should" like and i'm not joking, it almost all sucked...dylan, stones, beatles, bowie. dreadful! so many hours wasted trying to get into them. those 5 months may have put me off delving into the past 4 life.

xpps yeah the social aspect is impt, but it's also the sense that this artist or this scene could go anywhere or do anything and i ~don't know what it is~. watching a tennis match on replay when you already know the result vs watching a tennis match live. the former, you can appreciate the skillz etc but there's no thrill, it's done and dusted, we have the result and we're into the next round already, keep up.

lex pretend, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 11:44 (fifteen years ago) link

I think Lex's point is that there's a social aspect to enjoyment of Lil Wayne that is missing for David Bowie by and large.

I can see the point, yes, but I don't think it's wholly valid. If you are a person who's interested in old music and know about the musical and social history of the era, then you can put it into context, even if the context is unavoidably partial (but then again, so is today's context - no one can ever see the whole context to anything). If this weren't true, you couldn't really appreciate old books or movies either, right?

Tuomas, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 11:49 (fifteen years ago) link

It's like anything (but specifically it might be like Eng Lit at school) - the past is much more fun when you find out things for yourself and make/invent your own connections. Helpful too if you're an old geezer like me who's lived through multiple nows and can still gain random or not-so-random pleasure from any of them.

Unhelpful is the schoolmaster/cod liver oil swallow it/it's good for you approach that too many people in power still take. For example I was put off listening to "classic soul music" - i.e. JB, Aretha, Stax etc. - for the best part of the eighties because of didactic twats in the NME, The Face etc. telling me the eighties music I liked was crap and fake and plastic and that I should listen to half an hour of Aretha every morning to learn about dignity. This at a time when hip hop, House, Jam & Lewis etc. were rewriting the rulebook practically every day - so if nothing else there wasn't any TIME to listen to "old" music, there was more than enough exciting new stuff to keep up with and find and yet there were all these palsied old twats in the NME and the fanzines moaning about ten years after punk it's all gone down the bog Buzzcocks and I'm YELLING fuck aren't you listening to Husker or Swans or Sonic Y or Big Black get out of your fucking provincial indie ghetto.

Then I discovered all that classic soul stuff for myself, spontaneously, and I realised how fucking great it really was, but I wouldn't have gone near it with all that capitalised Red Wedge Soul Passion & Honesty jaded music-crit baggage loaded onto it.

What's amusing now is to see people like Reynolds, who back then was in the vanguard of reaction against all of this, now moaning on about things they don't understand and haven't experienced properly (viz. Funky House, but that's just one example) and how we should all fall in obeisance to the Wire/Dissensus doctrine and so Pip Pyle RIP >>>>>> all modern music and that's just stupid, he's just turned into everything he used to hate. Or whinge whinge whingers oh the Verve album's a pile of shit and I felt guilty about buying it but I bought it FOR FUCK'S SAKE rap + R&B + grime + dancehall's going through a CLASSIC phase RIGHT NOW get out of the fucking graveyard and learn about living again, stop swallowing the corporate Guardian Music/Radio 2/Q line, pop music's in a BLOODY GREAT STATE at the moment and it's all there to be investigated and heard and loved. Right now I do feel that it's one of these times when again I don't really have the urge to delve back into the past (apart from the albums blog but that's a different past which nobody goes into much and not one affiliated to Rock's Rich Tapestry, thank fuck); I'm hearing amazing new tracks every bloody day at the moment and if I can still get a kick from now at my age then there's no excuse for anyone else.

Marcello Carlin, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 12:05 (fifteen years ago) link

I meant that, like, you hear Lil Wayne on the radio and in clubs and the like far more easily than David Bowie. You'd have to have an incredibly selective social network with kind of idiosyncratic social practices to surround yourself with seventies glam in public to the extent that you can with chart rap. But it turns out this isn't what Lex meant really anyway!

Anyway I don't disagree with your general point Tuomas. I wasn't trying to say that a work's historical context isn't important to me, but that the stuff I like also has to be able to transport itself out of that context as well. The experience can't be entirely curatorial. The, as you say, unavoidability of partiality-of-context makes overly canonical presentations of taste seem a bit fictional and even dishonest to me, and I always think that something is being repressed when i read people talk about the music in those terms. For me there's got to be a relationship of mutually creative articulation between actual history and the listener's, more, erm, astrological take on the music they like.

x-post - what Marcello said! Specifically the first three paragraphs but I agree with the rest too pretty much.

Tim F, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 12:06 (fifteen years ago) link

In reynolds' defence, at least he appears to like donk-bounce...

Tim F, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 12:14 (fifteen years ago) link

But it turns out this isn't what Lex meant really anyway!

it's what i meant as well! talked about that more on the past vs future music thread the other week, but i totally agree re the social factor - it's kind of the tangible manifestation of my nebulous "living, breathing aesthetic" thing.

really relate to marcello's 2nd para, it's no coincidence that all the music i love i got into either accidentally or before i was aware of music criticism generally. there's so much "you must listen to this album in this way" baggage with old music and, as with marcello in the 80s...new music takes up all my time now! those can albums i have, on every occasion i've nearly listened to them i've ended up being distracted by "ooh another young jeezy leak" or "ahh must go on beatport spree today actually" or "whoop whoop new ciara video on youtube".

the music of the past i most want to get into is 80s freestyle but i have no idea where to begin (debbie deb greatest hits is as far as i've got).

lex pretend, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 12:15 (fifteen years ago) link

"xpps yeah the social aspect is impt, but it's also the sense that this artist or this scene could go anywhere or do anything and i ~don't know what it is~. watching a tennis match on replay when you already know the result vs watching a tennis match live. the former, you can appreciate the skillz etc but there's no thrill, it's done and dusted, we have the result and we're into the next round already, keep up."

Yes this is so true. Something similar I wrote w/r/t funky house:

"Later on, we'll be able to look back and discern a narrative, to signpost almost precisely the moments when the goalposts were shifted and the paradigm transformed. But right now all such narrative flourishes are up for grabs, and the resulting sense of uncertainty is as satisfying as it is disarming for a critic like me. Critics like to look into the rearview mirror and think they see the future; what distinguishes UK funky house from any other style currently going is not merely that this story hasn't been written, but that it's moving so fast and so multi-directionally that such attempts at prophecy seem feeble even before they hit the page. To be able to accurately predict the future is fun, but to be in the thick of it, to hear the future emerging so unexpectedly that it confounds your predictions... there's quite seriously nothing better."

Tim F, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 12:21 (fifteen years ago) link

*goes off and checks Blissblog update for donk content*

OK, I'll let him off on that front...

Marcello Carlin, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 12:31 (fifteen years ago) link

This list will probably be different in a day or two's time, but for now...

1965 Dylan - Highway 61 Revisited
1966 Beatles Band - Revolver
1967 Sgt Pepper
1968 Everly Brothers - Roots
1969 Dusty in Memphis
1970 Curtis Mayfield - Curtis
1971 Rod Stewart - Every Picture Tells a Story
1972 David Bowie - Ziggy Stardust...
1973 John Cale - Paris 1919
1974 Sparks - Kimono My House
1975 Keith Jarrett - Koln Concert
1976 ELO - A New World Record
1977 Eno - Before and After Science
1978 Eno - Music for Airports
1979 Sister Sledge - We Are Family
1980 David Bowie - Scary Monsters
1981 Kraftwerk - Computer World
1982 Associates - Sulk
1983 Tom Waits - Swordfishtrombones
1984 Lloyd Cole - Rattlesnakes
1985 Kate Bush - Hounds of Love
1986 REM - Lifes Rich Pageant
1987 Bruce Springsteen - Tunnel of Love
1988 Todd Terry - To the Batmobile...
1989 Blue Nile - Hats
1990 KLF - Chill Out
1991 KLF - The White Room
1992 kd Lang - Ingenue
1993 Saint Etienne - So Tough
1994 Morrissey - Vauxhall and I
1995 Teenage Fanclub - Grand Prix
1996 DJ Shadow - Endtroducing
1997 Simon Warner - Waiting Rooms
1998 Air - Moon Safari
1999 Underworld - Beaucoup Fish
2000 Various - Sound of the Pirates mixed by Zed Bias
2001 Paul McCartney - Driving Rain
2002 Beth Gibbons and Rustin Man - Out of Season
2003 The Cardigans - Long Gone Before Daylight
2004 LMP - A Century of Song
2005 Saint Etienne - Tales from Turnpike House
2006 James Yorkston - The Year of the Leopard
2007 Soulsavers - It's not how far you fall...
2008 The Caretaker - Persistent Repetition of Phrases

Billy Dods, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 13:14 (fifteen years ago) link

Interesting how your list gets progressively less "canonical" the nearer it gets to now.

(nice to know I'm not alone in remembering Simon Warner though; he deserved better than permanent residency in the MVE bargain basement...)

Marcello Carlin, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 13:33 (fifteen years ago) link

it surprises me how many people pick compilations for one year

blueski, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 13:39 (fifteen years ago) link

xpost
Yeah, I think what gets overlooked in the canonical debate is that there were just fewer albums released back in the 60s/70s, well, at least relative to the previous few years.

Other thing on a personal level is that I've pretty much gave up on reading the music press now, though still get Mojo through my letterbox, so I'm not 100% sure what the 'canonical' releases of the past few years have been, other than say Arcade Fire/Radiohead. Nowadays I'm not particularly interested in where something ranks in the wider world of current critique or pop culture history, I'm really just interested in where and how it fits into my world.

Billy Dods, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 13:45 (fifteen years ago) link

For me the past few years have very definitely been a case of, not so much how new music will fit into my world, but how it might change or even enlarge my world. And, one way or another, sooner or later, the best new music still somehow manages to reach me without recourse to the dying dinosaur that is the music press. Which has to be a good thing.

Marcello Carlin, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 13:51 (fifteen years ago) link

i don't understand the "my world" vs "wider world" distinction in the slightest.

lex pretend, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 13:55 (fifteen years ago) link

what do you mean? you don't understand why people care about the wider world part?

blueski, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 14:08 (fifteen years ago) link

Unhelpful is the schoolmaster/cod liver oil swallow it/it's good for you approach that too many people in power still take. For example I was put off listening to "classic soul music" - i.e. JB, Aretha, Stax etc. - for the best part of the eighties because of didactic twats in the NME, The Face etc. telling me the eighties music I liked was crap and fake and plastic and that I should listen to half an hour of Aretha every morning to learn about dignity.

This pretty much echoes my experience. There's probably a whole bunch of people who didn't get into soul music for years because NME, Face etc just made it seem really boring and un-fun. Pretty sad to contemplate this, in retrospect.

Pashmina, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 14:18 (fifteen years ago) link

i just thought ignoring everything from before you were born until you were in your mid 20s was the norm

blueski, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 14:24 (fifteen years ago) link

I like this discussion, one of several good ones round these parts lately on what I've come to think of as pastism, an adherence to the past at the expense of the present. I've become almost totally wedded to past musics, and the talk around here lately has jarred me to try to figure out why and what that implies. This classical music teacher John Rohnsheim gives a nice critiqueof pastism among both composers and audience:

Q: Do you think you should totally . . . you should know tonality, before you go off, before you create what's inside you?

Well, see . . . I . . . this might reflect my own opinion of today's music, in some form, OK? See, I'm against neo-clacissism. . . I'm not against it, it's just worthless. You can't repeat the past. People who try to repeat the past, there's something gone wrong - no, it's an end of something. Obviously we're in a decadent period of the arts. Everybody's making things over again. That's a sure sign that no one has anything to say. And that goes on all the time, including rock music now. The Rolling Stones traveling, 59,000 people go to Cincinnati Stadium to see the Rolling Stones last weekend? 59,000 people? They made millions of dollars? What in the hell are the Rolling Stones saying that's so vital for young people? My god, they existed when things were . . different! Are they doing anything really different? What's going on? Films being made over, ah, going back to tonality and doing things with tonality . . .

Q: So you think its like beating your head against the wall.

A: (shouts) NO!!! Just people who don't know what to do, they have no imagination. AND, you are a servant of now. You can't . . be . . from a different era. . . you can't pretend that you're living one thousand years ago, or one thousand years from now. You are a NOW person, you have to confront what NOW is, and somehow transcend it! Don't let it control you, but you control it. So we are, so . . . Tonality is Dead! Done! Finished! Boring! Dull! Boom! And all the people that compose, who make fashion now? Boring as hell! Terribly boring. They have no vitality. No conflict. Dullards. My opinion, and I know people who actually play in . . I can name two people, I know people who play in these groups, these musicians, I know these musicians, I've worked with them. I've told them, they agree with me, but they still do it.

dad a, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 14:27 (fifteen years ago) link

Lol, by these criteria every album on your list is shite.

Not using the criteria that was used in the 18th and 19th century to judge the music that has actually become classic. Particularly prog holds up fine using 19th century criteria.

Geir Hongro, Wednesday, 27 August 2008 21:11 (fifteen years ago) link

65- Johnny Cash- Sings Ballads of the True West
66- Merle Haggard- Swingin' Doors & The Bottle Let Me Down
67- Loretta Lynn- Don't Come Home a Drinkin' (With Lovin' On Your Mind)
68- Johnny Cash- At Folsom Prison
69- Merle Haggard- Same Train, Different Time
70- Kris Kristofferson- Kristofferson
71- Dolly Parton- Coat of Many Colors
72- Nitty Gritty Dirt Band- Will The Circle Be Unbroken?
73- Waylon Jennings- Honky Tonk Heroes
74- Tanya Tucker- Would You Lay With Me (In a Field of Stone)?
75- Guy Clark- Old No. 1
76- Waylon Jennings- Waylon Live
77- Emmylou Harris- Luxury Liner
78- Willie Nelson- Stardust
79- Hank Williams Jr.- Whiskey Bent & Hellbound
80- George Jones- I Am What I Am
81- John Anderson- 2
82- George Strait- Strait From the Heart
83- The Judds- Wynonna & Naomi
84- George Strait- Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind?
85- Mekons- Fear & Whiskey
86- Steve Earle- Guitar Town
87- Randy Travis- Always & Forever
88- Rodney Crowell- Diamonds & Dirt
89- Keith Whitley- I Wonder Do You Ever Think Of Me
90- Dwight Yoakam- If There Was a Way
91- Garth Brooks- Ropin’ the Wind
92- Alan Jackson- A Lot About Livin’ & a Little ‘Bout Love
93- Jimmie Dale Gilmore- Spinning Around the Sun
94- The Mavericks- What a Crying Shame
95- Emmylou Harris- Wrecking Ball
96- Lyle Lovett- The Road to Ensenada
97- Shania Twain- Come On Over
98- Vince Gill- The Key
99- Lucinda Williams- Car Wheels on a Gravel Road
00- Terri Clark- Fearless
01- Alejandro Escovedo- A Man Under the Influence
02- Dixie Chicks- Home
03- Brooks & Dunn- Red Dirt Road
04- Big’n’Rich- Horse of a Different Color
05- Gary Allan- Tough All Over
06- Alan Jackson- Like Red on a Rose
07- Josh Turner- Everything Is Fine
08- Jamey Johnson- That Lonesome Song

President Keyes, Thursday, 28 August 2008 15:59 (fifteen years ago) link

A bit expanded and revised since last time...

1967: Love - Forever Changes
1968: Silver Apples - Silver Apples
1969: Scott Walker - Scott 4
1970: The Velvet Underground - Loaded
1971: Can - Tago Mago
1972: Neu! - Neu!
1973: Fripp and Eno - (No Pussyfooting)
1974: Cluster - Zuckerzeit
1975: Kraftwerk - Radio-Activity
1976: David Bowie - Station to Station
1977: Brian Eno - Before and After Science
1978: Magazine - Real Life
1979: Joy Division - Unknown Pleasures
1980: Young Marble Giants - Colossal Youth
1981: Echo and the Bunnymen - Heaven Up Here
1982: The Cure - Pornography
1983: The Chameleons - Script of the Bridge
1984: Talk Talk - It's My Life
1985: The Jesus and Mary Chain - Psychocandy
1986: Depeche Mode - Black Celebration
1987: Prince - Sign 'o' the Times
1988: Sonic Youth - Daydream Nation
1989: Spacemen 3 - Playing with Fire
1990: Cocteau Twins - Heaven or Las Vegas
1991: My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
1992: Tom Waits - Bone Machine
1993: The Afghan Whigs - Gentlemen
1994: Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - Let Love In
1995: Slowdive - Pygmalion
1996: Swans - Soundtracks for the Blind
1997: Mogwai - Young Team
1998: Spiritualized - Royal Albert Hall October 10 1997
1999: Low - Secret Name
2000: Radiohead - Kid A
2001: Jay-Z - The Blueprint
2002: Boards of Canada - Geogaddi
2003: Four Tet - Rounds
2004: Madvillain - Madvillainy
2005: Daft Punk - Human After All
2006: Junior Boys - So This Is Goodbye
2007: PJ Harvey - White Chalk
2008: Portishead - Third

stephen, Monday, 1 September 2008 21:47 (fifteen years ago) link

twelve years pass...

50 YEARS OF MUSIC ACCORDING TO ME (Yes, I am bored, why do you ask?)

1966 - The Horace Silver Quintet - The Cape Verdean Blues
1967 - Bob Dylan - John Wesley Harding
1968 - The Beatles - The Beatles
1969 - The Flying Burrito Bros - The Gilded Palace of Sin
1970 - Grateful Dead - Workingman's Dead
1971 - Judee Sill - Judee Sill
1972 - Wishbone Ash - Argus
1973 - Can - Future Days
1974 - Steely Dan - Pretzel Logic
1975 - Bob Dylan - Blood on the Tracks
1976 - Ramones - Ramones
1977 - Electric Light Orchestra - Out of the Blue
1978 - The Cars - The Cars
1979 - Van Morrison - Into the Music
1980 - The 2nd Chapter of Acts - The Roar of Love
1981 - X - Wild Gift
1982 - Donald Fagen - The Nightfly
1983 - Dolly Mixture - Demonstration Tapes
1984 - R.E.M. - Reckoning
1985 - The Pogues - Rum Sodomy & the Lash
1986 - Prince and The Revolution - Parade
1987 - Death - Scream Bloody Gore
1988 - Leonard Cohen - I'm Your Man
1989 - Boredoms - Soul Discharge
1990 - Sonic Youth - Goo
1991 - Autopsy - Mental Funeral
1992 - The Pharcyde - Bizarre Ride II the Pharcyde
1993 - A Tribe Called Quest - Midnight Marauders
1994 - Nas - Illmatic
1995 - Rancid - ...And Out Come the Wolves
1996 - UGK - Ridin' Dirty
1997 - Pavement - Brighten the Corners
1998 - Tom Varner - The Window Up Above: American Songs 1770-1998
1999 - Sleater-Kinney - The Hot Rock
2000 - Hypnosia - Extreme Hatred
2001 - Ellen Allien - Flieg mit Ellen Allien
2002 - F.M. Knives - Useless & Modern
2003 - Sun Kil Moon - Ghosts of the Great Highway
2004 - Mihály Dresch Quartet - Egyenes Zene
2005 - Richard Hawley - Coles Corner
2006 - Bob Dylan - Modern Times
2007 - Ulver - Shadows of the Sun
2008 - William Parker - Double Sunrise Over Neptune
2009 - Bat for Lashes - Two Suns
2010 - Ghost - Opus Eponymous
2011 - Destroyer - Kaputt
2012 - Grimes - Visions
2013 - Haim - Days Are Gone
2014 - Hail Spirit Noir - Oi Magoi
2015 - Julia Holter - Have You in My Wilderness

Cutting this off at 2015, to give the newer stuff more time to sink in, and because 50 years seemed like a good round number.

o. nate, Wednesday, 19 May 2021 21:11 (two years ago) link

Nice list o. nate

Urbandn hope all ye who enter here (dog latin), Wednesday, 19 May 2021 21:15 (two years ago) link

Some years I’m struggling to pick just one out of, like, five. Other years I’m finding it hard to select any at all (mostly late 70s-mid 80s).

pomenitul, Wednesday, 19 May 2021 22:14 (two years ago) link

Alright, I'll bite…

Disclaimer #1: classical notwithstanding because it’s just too complicated otherwise.

Disclaimer #2: it’s an extremely boring list for the most part, but it’s accurate relative to my FeELiNgS.

1963 Charles Mingus – The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady
1964 Yusef Lateef – Eastern Sounds
1965 Son House – Father of Folk Blues
1966 The Beatles – Revolver
1967 The Jimi Hendrix Experience – Are You Experienced
1968 Van Morrison – Astral Weeks
1969 Miles Davis – In a Silent Way
1970 Black Sabbath – Paranoid
1971 Alice Coltrane – Journey in Satchidananda
1972 The Rolling Stones – Exile on Main St.
1973 Pink Floyd – Dark Side of the Moon
1974 Edward Vasala – Nan Madol
1975 Pink Floyd – Wish You Were Here
1976 Jean-Michel Jarre – Oxygène
1977 Ashra – New Age of Earth
1978 Ralph Towner – Batik
1979 PiL – Metal Box
1980 Joy Division – Closer
1981 The Cure – Faith
1982 David Darling – Cycles
1983 R.E.M. – Murmur
1984 Mercyful Fate – Don’t Break the Oath
1985 Tom Waits – Rain Dogs
1986 Slayer – Reign in Blood
1987 Sonic Youth – Sister
1988 Talk Talk – Spirit of Eden
1989 Pestilence – Consuming Impulse
1990 Depeche Mode – Violator
1991 Talk Talk – Laughing Stock
1992 Aphex Twin – Selected Ambient Works 85-92
1993 Nirvana – In utero
1994 Portishead – Dummy
1995 Dissection – Storm of the Light’s Bane
1996 Underworld – Second Toughest in the Infants
1997 Radiohead – OK Computer
1998 Gorguts – Obscura
1999 Tenhi – Kauan
2000 Boards of Canada – In a Beautiful Place Out in the Country
2001 Robert Rich – Somnium
2002 Agalloch – The Mantle
2003 Darkspace – Dark Space I
2004 Steven R. Smith – Antimony
2005 Murcof – Remembranza
2006 Negură Bunget – OM
2007 Frode Haltli – Passing Images
2008 Grouper – Dragging a Dead Deer Up a Hill
2009 Sunn O))) – Monoliths & Dimension
2010 Deathspell Omega – Paracletus
2011 Tim Hecker – Dropped Pianos
2012 Dordeduh – Dar de duh
2013 Gris – À l’âme enflammée, l’âme constellée…
2014 D’Angelo & The Vanguard – Black Messiah
2015 2 8 1 4 – 新しい日の誕生
2016 Radiohead – A Moon Shaped Pool
2017 Lingua Ignota – All Bitches Die
2018 Ungfell – Mythen, Mären, Pestilenz
2019 Tomb Mold – Planetary Clairvoyance
2020 Turia – Degen van licht

pomenitul, Thursday, 20 May 2021 00:36 (two years ago) link

I did this awhile ago for 1966 - Face to Face by the Kinks. I'll need to be a lot more bored to do any more.

Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 20 May 2021 01:57 (two years ago) link

Only took me about 15 minutes thanks to RYM.

pomenitul, Thursday, 20 May 2021 02:09 (two years ago) link

Yes, RYM was my secret weapon. Obviously some gaps in my knowledge: pop, dance, r&b, country, the late '90s...

o. nate, Thursday, 20 May 2021 02:30 (two years ago) link

I laffed at this…

andy paltridge (andy)
Posted: March 3, 2003 at 3:08:48 AM

1994: hootie and the blowfish - cracked rear view
1995: semisonic - pleasure
1996: matchbox 20 - yourself or someone like you
1997: stereophonics - word gets around
1998: barenaked ladies - stunt
1999: stereophonics - performance and cocktails
2000: toploader - onka's big moka
2001: jamiroquai - a funk odyssey
2002: toploader - magic hotel

like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Thursday, 20 May 2021 04:25 (two years ago) link

It might take me 15 minutes to choose between two albums, never mind a year's worth, never mind 60 years.

Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 20 May 2021 10:10 (two years ago) link

two years pass...

Since this Kennedy Kid has been alive:

1963 - Ellington/Mingus/Roach - Money Jungle
1964 - Eric Dolphy - Out to Lunch
1965 - Andrew Hill - Point of Departure
1966 - Beach Boys - Pet Sounds
1967 - Love - Forever Changes
1968 - Van Morrison - Astral Weeks
1969 - Miles Davis - In a Silent Way
1970 - Stooges - Fun House
1971 - Sly Stone - There’s a riot goin’ on
1972 - Bowie - Ziggy Stardust
1973 - Roxy Music - For Your Pleasure
1974 - Harmonia - Musik Von Harmonia
1975 - Eno - Another Green World
1976 - Augustus Pablo - King Tubby meets Rockers Uptown
1977 - Bowie - Low
1978 - Elvis Costello & the Attractions -this year’s model
1979 - The Clash - London Calling
1980 - Talking Heads - Remain in Light
1981 - Kraftwerk - Computer World
1982 - Bruce Springsteen- Nebraska
1983 - Tom Waits - swordfishtrombone
1984 - Echo & the Bunnymen Ocean Rain
1985 - Prefab Sprout- Steve McQueen
1986 - The Smiths - the Queen is Dead
1987 - David Sylvian - Secrets of the Beehive
1988 - Talk Talk - Spirit of Eden
1989 - Beastie Boys - Paul’s Boutique
1990 - KLF - Chill Out
1991 - Talk Talk - Laughing Stock
1992 - Pavement - Slanted & Enchanted
1993 - Tindersticks -s/t
1994 - Aphex Twin - Select ambient works 2
1995 - Tricky - Maxinquaye
1996 - DJ Shadow - Endtroducing
1997 - Spiritualized - Lady’s & Gentlemen we are floating in space
1998 - Mark Hollis - s/t
1999 - Flaming Lips - The Soft Bulletin
2000 - Radiohead - Kid A
2001 - Bjork - Vesperine
2002 - Beth Gibbons and Rustin Man - Out of Season
2003 - Broadcast - Ha Ha Sound
2004 - Oren Ambarchi - Grapes from the Estate
2005 - Broadcast - Tender Buttons
2006 - oanna Newson - Ys
2007 - Panda Bear - Person Pitch
2008 - Earth - the Bees made Honey in the Lion’s Skull
2009 - Oneohtrix Point Never - Rifts (compilation)
2010 - Emeralds - Does it look like I’m here ?
2011 - Julianna Barwick- The Magic Place
2012 - Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe - Timon Irnok Manta
2013 - Grouper - the Man who died in his boat
2014 - Mica Levi Under the Skin OST
2015 - David Bowie - Blackstar (1/8/16)
2016 - Huerco S - For Those Of You Who Have Never (and also those who have)
2017 - Ryuichi Sakamoto - async
2018 - Eli Kaszler- Stadium
2019 - Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds - Ghosteen
2020 - Demdike Stare & Jon Collin - Sketches of Everything
2021 - Merope - Salos
2022 - Carmen Villian - Only Love from Now On
2023 - Steve Gunn & David Moore - Let the Moon be a Planet

KorovaMilkbar, Thursday, 21 March 2024 20:58 (one month ago) link

Solid

your mom goes to limgrave (dog latin), Friday, 22 March 2024 00:42 (one month ago) link

Yeah, not gonna even quibble with that list

sawdust lagoon, Friday, 22 March 2024 10:03 (one month ago) link

did anyone do a "every year up to 1963" in the hidden replies?

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 22 March 2024 10:55 (one month ago) link

someone do 2025 to 2050. the future is now.

scott seward, Friday, 22 March 2024 12:29 (one month ago) link


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