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Author Topic: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive  (Read 44933 times)

David_Dovey

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One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« on: 01 Sep 2008, 09:27 »

(a.k.a. List Threads Are Pretty Cool Amirite?)

OK, so this is a thing that has been going around music blogs and I figured it might be nice to see what QC comes up with, although it may be slightly limited by the average age of posters here. Although, that being said that may be a good thing.

As the title says, pick one (try hard to keep it to one, folks) favourite, or meaningful, or significant album for every year you were alive. You can pick albums that you like now, albums that you liked then, or albums that you think you may have liked then, but didn't.

If you're looking for a hand, then Wikipedia has lists of albums released in each year (try searching for "[year] in music").

And hey, to keep this thread interesting to read, maybe discuss your choices a little. What years were hard to pick? What years were easy? Which albums didn't make the list, but you kind of wish they could've? If you're picking albums based on old preferences, have they stood the test of time?
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David_Dovey

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #1 on: 01 Sep 2008, 09:35 »

THIS SHIT TOOK ME TWO AND A HALF HOURS

I'm gonna try to restrict myself to one album per artist, just for interest.
Also, I'm picking an album for 2008, and I thoroughly encourage you to do so as well.

1986- Metallica- Master of Puppets

Easy pick. My favourite album from what once was my favourite band. Probably the only Metallica album I still listen to on anything approaching a regular basis. Did face strict competition from "Licensed to Ill" by the Beastie Boys and "Reign in Blood" by Slayer, although I expect the Beasties will make an appearance later on in the list.

1987- Big Black- Songs About Fucking

The only competition was from "Appetite For Destruction" and "Surfing With The Alien," both of which I consider very solid albums, but don't hold any particular sentimental value for me. In the end I choose the Steve Albini album with the swear word in the title. Weak year for me in general.

1988- Public Enemy- It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back

Would've faced stiff opposition from "...And Justice For All" by Metallica were it not for my little self-imposed rule- although I'm pretty sure it still would've come out on top. Nothing else of interest from this year.

1989- Beastie Boys- Paul's Boutique

Argh Jesus. On another day it could've easily been "Repeater" by Fugazi. Incredibly tempted to break my own advisory and award a tie.

1990- Pantera- Cowboys From Hell

Another pretty dire year. Only other contender was "Painkiller" by Judas Priest.

1991- Rites of Spring- End on End

Technically not an actual album, but a compilation of an LP and an EP. But shit, 1991 is fairly barren for me. I don't like "Nevermind" and I'm not really a fan of "Loveless" either, so this is what I get.


1992- Rage Against The Machine- Rage Against the Machine

Not my first choice, but the old "one album per band" rule excludes "Vulgar Display of Power"- incidentally my preferred Pantera album.

1993- Fugazi- In On the Kill Taker

Not a charity pick. Probably flip-flops with "Repeater" as my favourite Fugazi album. "Undertow" by Tool and "Chaos A.D." by Sepultura the other contenders, but don't really touch "...Kill Taker" in my view

1994- Kyuss- Welcome to Sky Valley

I really expected 1994 to be a really hard year to pick, and it was. But not for the reasons I thought it would be. Nothing really jumped out at me here. There was "The Downward Spiral," there was "At Action Park," there was "Selected Ambient Works vol. 2," all fine albums to be sure, but none of them seemed like a defining pick. Maybe it's only because I listened to "...Sky Valley" today, but it seemed like the best of a mixed bunch.

1995- Dream Theater- A Change of Seasons

OK so this is an EP, and an EP with only one good track at that, but boy, what a track. And the other contenders- Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness & Orchid by Opeth- were nothing to really write home about for me.

1996- Tool- Ænima

This is how this works. In 1996, Tool released an album that was good but not as good as the one they released in 2001. In 1996 Daft Punk released an album that was good but not as good as the one they released in 2001. The only thing I could decide was that I liked Tool's 1996 album better than Daft Punk's 1996 album. So they get this year, and the robots get 2001. Which is appropriate, I guess.

1997- Radiohead- OK Computer

This was originally going to be Spiritualized's "Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space" but I kicked it out so I could use another Spiritualized album later on. If I was counting comedy albums "Rant in E Minor" would've beaten both of them.

1998- Refused- The Shape of Punk to Come

Quite simply one of my favourite albums of all time. This year there was also "Hello Nasty" by the Beasties, "Amplifier Worship" by Boris, and "My Arms, Your Hearse" by Opeth

1999- Opeth- Still Life

So basically every year after this is ridiculously hard and I feel like making everything a ten way tie but I'm also anal retentive so here's the Opeth album I'm going to use. It also happens to be my favourite, which is good because it edges out my favourite Dream Theater, In Flames, Nine Inch Nails and Rage Against the Machine albums as well.

2000- Shellac- 1000 Hurts

Ask me again in a few days and I'll probably tell you "Brave New World" by Iron Maiden, or "Mer de Noms" or "The Art of Drowning" by AFI. Shellac takes it based on every single one of their albums being in the running in their respective years.

2001- Daft Punk- Discovery

See the 1996 blurb.

2002- Boris- Heavy Rocks

I felt bad about not including "In Absentia" or "McLusky Do Dallas" or "Songs For the Deaf" or several others but I was basically planning to use Heavy Rocks no matter what year it was in.

2003- Atmosphere- Seven's Travels

Gets in based on sentimental value, mostly. Not to say it isn't an amazing album but it had some tough competition- as is the norm as we get to the more recent years.

2004- Killswitch Engage- The End of Heartache

Oh thank shit for that. Finally a relatively easy year for once. Apart from this, there was "The Human Equation," "The Empire Strikes First" by Bad Religion, "Leviathan" by Mastodon- a close second-, and "The Difference Between Me and You is that I'm Not on Fire" by mclusky. But aside from Leviathan, nothing really challenged.

2005- Parkway Drive- Killing With A Smile

Practically interchangeable with:
Ulver- Blood Inside/ Soulwax- Nite Versions/ Porcupine Tree- Deadwing/ Pure Reason Revolution- The Dark Third/ Karnivool- Themata/ Eleventh He Reaches London- The Good Fight For Harmony/ Death From Above 1979- You're A Woman, I'm a Machine/ Boris- Pink/ some other stuff probably. By a gigantic margin the most ridiculously difficult year to pick. I guess technically I still haven't. Argh.

2006- The Decemberists- The Crane Wife

A year with a lot of good albums, but nothing really jumping out at me except for this and "Blood Mountain" by Mastodon, who once again take a close second. "Crane Wife" edges over the line thanks to sentimental value.

2007- LCD Soundsystem- Sound of Silver

It's probably still a little too close to home to really make a good judgement on this, and I consider 2007 to be a banner year in Music That Makes Me Happy, so this was very hard. "Sound of Silver" takes it in a photo finish from Baroness' "The Red Album," and "Colors" by Between the Buried and Me, among others.

2008- Spiritualized®- Songs in A&E

Currently front-runner for album of the year, and the one album out of my current list of this year's albums that I feel like I'd keep in the list if I made it again a few years down the track.


I'm not expecting anyone else to put as much work/thought/time into it as me but I sincerely hope someone else does this. People, make me feel like less of a complete wanker!
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minkles

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #2 on: 01 Sep 2008, 10:35 »

1990: Pixies- Bossanova
1991: Pixies- Trompe Le Monde
1992: XTC- Nonsuch
1993: The Flaming Lips- Transmissions from the Satellite Heart
1994: Guided by Voices- Bee Thousand
1995: Radiohead- The Bends
1996: Belle and Sebastian- Tigermilk
1997: Radiohead- OK Computer
1998: Neutral Milk Hotel- In The Aeroplane Over the Sea
1999: The Flaming Lips- The Soft Bulletin
2000: Modest Mouse- The Moon and Antartica
2001: The Shins- Oh, Inverted World
2002: Spoon- Kill the Moonlight
2003: The New Pornographers- Electric Version
2004: Arcade Fire- Funeral
2005: The National- Alligator
2006: The Decemberists- The Crane Wife
2007: Radiohead- In Rainbows
2008: The Black Keys- Attack and Release
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MobyDickhole

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #3 on: 01 Sep 2008, 11:09 »

^that is a really good list.
I might just use that one...

I just need to find an album for 1989...
Either
Slint- Tweez
or
Jesus and Mary Chain- Automatic

I think I'm gonna go with Slint.
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imagist42

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #4 on: 01 Sep 2008, 11:09 »

David_Dovey: You realize Daft Punk's Homework was released in 1997?

Okay, since I wasn't really interested in music (like, at all) until I was 14, this is mostly going to be a list of music I like now that was released in earlier years.

1989: Pixies - Doolittle
1990: Sonic Youth - Goo
1991: My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
1992: Pavement - Slanted and Enchanted
1993: The Cranberries - Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We?
1994: Weezer - Weezer (Blue Album)
1995: The Smashing Pumpkins - Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness
1996: Belle & Sebastian - oh man is it ever so difficult to choose between Tigermilk and If You're Feeling Sinister
1997: Radiohead - OK Computer
1998: Neutral Milk Hotel - In the Aeroplane Over the Sea (close call with Elliott Smith's XO)
1999: The Flaming Lips - The Soft Bulletin
2000: Modest Mouse - The Moon & Antarctica
2001: The Strokes - Is This It
2002: I HATE THIS YEAR SO MUCH THERE IS JUST NO WAY TO CHOOSE BETWEEN YANKEE HOTEL FOXTROT, KILL THE MOONLIGHT and YOU FORGOT IT IN PEOPLE URRRRRRRRGH
2003: NOOOOO LIFE HATES ME SO MUCH NOW THAT TRANSATLANTICISM, ELECTRIC VERSION and WHO WILL CUT OUR HAIR WHEN WE'RE GONE ARE ALL PITTED UP AGAINST EACH OTHER
2004: Arcade Fire - Funeral (or Franz Ferdinand's S/T, if I'm being honest with myself)
2005: Wolf Parade - Apologies to the Queen Mary (I'm lucky I'm only counting LPs or I'd have a tough time reconciling with Voxtrot's Raised by Wolves EP)
2006: The Decemberists - The Crane Wife
2007: if I didn't say LCD Soundsystem - Sound of Silver some time-traveling version of myself (past or future) would lop off my head, and the paradox would be worth it
2008: Okkervil River - The Stand Ins

POSTSCRIPT: I hate minkles ever so much. I mean I knew most of my choices could be taken for granted but damn, son!
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Christophe

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #5 on: 01 Sep 2008, 11:40 »

1988- Sonic Youth- Daydream Nation
1989- Pixies- Doolittle
1990- Teenage Fanclub- A Catholic Education
1991- Beat Happening- Dreamy
1992- Polvo- Cor-Crane Secret
1993- Fugazi- In On The Kill Taker
1994- Jawbox- For Your Own Special Sweetheart
1995- June of 44- Engine Takes to the Water
1996- Silkworm- Firewater
1997- Chisel- Set You Free
1998- Hum- Downward is Heavenward
1999- The Dismemberment Plan- Emergency and I
2000- Q and Not U- No Kill No Beep Beep
2001- Unwound- Leaves Turn Inside You
2002- Mclusky- Mclusky Do Dallas
2003- Envy- All The Footprints You've Ever Left And Fear Expecting Ahead
2004- Elliott Smith- From A Basement On A Hill
2005- Make Believe- Shock Of Being
2006- The Velvet Teen- Cum Laude!
2007- Bottomless Pit- Hammer of the Gods
2008- Nothin' yet.
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sean

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #6 on: 01 Sep 2008, 11:43 »

Paging Paul to this thread, Paul to this thread please

Oh man dude, thats almost mean.

Anyway, this is the best thread idea I've seen in the music forum in a while! I'll conjure something up when I get a chance. Also, lists threads are lame when you really just are listing. Do what Dovey did and write something about each album you choose! Its more fun to write and it makes the rest of the forum possibly care about your post.
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squawk

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #7 on: 01 Sep 2008, 12:02 »

I was born in 1992 (there are people alive and talking who were born in the nineties?! Who didn't exist during Spiderland?!?!) but I always feel like I was born four years too late, for uh, some reason. I always miss out on the good bands when they're around! How lame.

1992 - Sloan - Smeared
It's, um, it's young Sloan! They want to be Sonic Youth! It's adorable. I wish I could use Spiderland.

1993 - Fugazi - In on the Kill Taker
What the heck I can't find anything for this one, unless I want to use PABLO HONEY... oh I like fugazi though... i'll just steal that one

1994 - Built to Spill - There's Nothing Wrong With Love
Oh no! Do I use Pavement, Elliott Smith, or Built to Spill? Or SILKWORM? I like Doug Martsch. I couldn't put Keep It Like a Secret though.

1995 - Low - Long Division
all low is good

1996 - Silkworm - Firewater
What an awesome year! Except at the time I was four and cared only about Power Rangers and Mario Kart.

1997 - Elliott Smith - Either/Or
Of all the phases I go through where I say any Elliott Smith album is my favorite, I probably say this one the most often.

1998 - Beck - Mutations
it's pretty

1999 - Beulah - When Your Heartstrings Break
69 Love Songs came out this year too. But my goodness do I love Beulah.

2000 - Radiohead - Kid A
At eight years old this was the album that sparked the Radiohead obsession that has now lasted me half my life, and it is a pretty perfect album. The Sophtware Slump came out this year also.

2001 - Daft Punk - Discovery
Do you know how awesome the video for "One More Time" is when you're nine years old and bored and trying to find something to watch on a portable TV on your umpteenth trip to Las Vegas? That is my first memorable Daft Punk experience. The actual first one was probably just watching the video for "Around the World" and being weirded out.

2002 - Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
Also a perfect album. Fuck this was a hard year.

2003 - Belle and Sebastian - Dear Catastrophe Waitress
B&S's best. Maybe. And oh goodness it is getting so hard to choose now aaaaaaaa
Other contenders: Other Beulah, Postal Service, Shins, Weakerthans, Wrens, Unicorns. Fuck!

2004 - The Arcade Fire - Funeral
Too many friggin' choices for this year. Settled on AF though, because this was an album I actually listened to at that time! And with the help of the Inter Net, it also was one of first things that led me to finding new music on my own and NOW LOOK WHERE I AM i have a compulsive downloading problem and such

2005 - Wolf Parade - Apologies to the Queen Mary
Oh boy, 2005, I can actually remember this one well. Final choice is Wolf Parade though! So hard, though. I am disappointing all my favorites. Like Sleater-Kinney. Wait. What?

2005 - Sleater-Kinney - The Woods
OKAY THERE
First S-K album I bought and now they are the loves of my life

2006 - Peter Bjorn and John - Writer's Block
Rekindled my special love for Swedish bands. I have played the shit out of this album.

2007 - The 1900s - Cold and Kind
Um dang I wanted to pick like Deerhoof or something but this album came out in October and I've probably listened to it like eighty times since then? That is an inordinate amount for me.

2008 - Okkervil River - The Stand Ins
The Stand Ins The Stand Ins The Stand Ins The Stand Ins The Stand Ins The Stand Ins
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Kyros

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #8 on: 01 Sep 2008, 12:38 »

Oh christ, this is gonna be fun.


1988 - Daydream Nation - Sonic Youth
1989 - 13 Songs - Fugazi
1990 - Goo - Sonic Youth
1991 - Dreamy - Beat Happening
1992 - Slanted & Enchanted - Pavement
1993 - In Utero - Nirvana
1994 - There's Nothing Wrong with Love - Built to Spill
1995 - Wowee Zowee - Pavement
1996 - Firewater - Silkworm
1997 - I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One - Yo La Tengo
1998 - In the Aeroplane Over the Sea - Neutral Milk Hotel
1999 - Emergency & I - The Dismemberment Plan
2000 - De Stijil - The White Stripes
2001 - Change - The Dismemberment Plan
2002 - Murray Street - Sonic Youth
2003 - More Parts Per Million - The Thermals
2004 - Sonic Nurse - Sonic Youth
2005 - In Case We Die - Architecture in Helsinki
2006 - The Body, The Blood, The Machine - The Thermals
2007 - Spoon - Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga
2008 - Los Campesinos! - Hold On Now..Youngster

Phew, that was kinda fun.
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Nodaisho

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #9 on: 01 Sep 2008, 12:41 »

This one is going to take me a while, but I would like some clarification. I assume, though it isn't stated explicitly, that it had to be released that year. At first I was just thinking that it was supposed to be significant to how your life was at that point, if you could find one that fits, but now it looks like it is just pick the best album of that year?
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pwhodges

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #10 on: 01 Sep 2008, 13:11 »

 8-)

I'm here, but you'll have to wait a bit for a list because of the rest of my life - and what's more I'll tweak the rules to suit myself.

(EDIT) The first 40 were easy; now it takes a bit longer to fill the gaps

(EDIT) Scroll down - you can't miss it!
« Last Edit: 02 Sep 2008, 04:11 by pwhodges »
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mat_mantra

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #11 on: 01 Sep 2008, 13:15 »

Good christ, someone please post who was born in/before the early eighties like me.  And this might take days of research, so bump for future goodness

Quote
Warning - while you were typing a new reply has been posted. You may wish to review your post.

Thank you, Paul, for making me feel youthful again
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Barrabas

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #12 on: 01 Sep 2008, 14:33 »

1988 - N.W.A. - Straight Outta Compton
1989 - De La Soul - 3 Feet High and Rising
1990 - Pantera - Cowboys from Hell
1991 - R.E.M. - Out of Time
1992 - Pavement - Slanted and Enchanted
1993 - Snoop Dogg - Doggystyle
1994 - Weezer - Blue Album
1995 - Scott Walker - Tilt
1996 - DJ Shadow - Entroducing
1997 - Earthling - David Bowie
1998 - Neutral Milk Hotel - In the Aeroplane over the Sea
1999 - The Flaming Lips - The Soft Bulletin
2000 - Eels - Daisies of the Galaxy
2001 - Radiohead - Amnesiac
2002 - Teeth of Lions Rule the Divine - Rampton
2003 - Goldfrapp - Black Cherry
2004 - Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Abattoir Blues/The Lyre of Orpheus
2005 - Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
2006 - Sunn O))) + Boris - Altar
2007 - 65 Days of Static - Destruction of Small Ideas
2008 - Radiohead - In Rainbows
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sean

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #13 on: 01 Sep 2008, 14:59 »

Okay so here goes mine.

1991 - Slint - Spiderland
This one feels completely obvious to me. With post-rock being my favorite genre, I obvioulsy owe these guys a lot. While of course they didn't single handedly come up with the genre, they did a big thing I think for it with this album and have earned their spot here.

1992 - Pavement - Slanted & Enchanted
Man, I should listen to more music from 1992. I really didn't know what to pick for this one, and even Pavement is a stretch for me (I don't listen to much Pavement). Oh well, I guess you can't have an obvious choice for every year.

1993 - Sunny Day Real Estate- Thief, Steal Me a Peach 7"
To some of you, this may seem like I need to listen to more music from '93 as well. However, this two song EP is insane. It's practically the perfect blend of the hardcore based emo of the late 80's and the indie emo movement that these guys would start a year later.

1994 - Low - I Could Live In Hope
My god, Low is amazing. This record could earn this spot based on the track of Lullaby, but goddamn this a solid record all around.

1995 - Hum - You'd Prefer an Astronaut
Hum is so great. As Jeph has said a bajillion times, these guys are fucking heavy. And incredible.

1996 - Dirty Three - Horse Stories
1996 was a pretty boss year for music. (almost as rad as '97). Low's The Curtain Hits the Cast and Silkwom's Firewater, two amazing albums, were released. However, for me this has to go to Horse Stories. This album is one of my favorites, ever. The beautiful and violent violin playing is just jaw dropping.

1997 - Godspeed You Black Emperor! - F# A# Infinity
Holy shit '97 was an absolutely deadly year. Young Team, OK Computer, Perfect From Now On, Homework, etc. Man, why couldn't I have been born ten years earlier. Anyway, this album is outstanding. I owe so much to these guys in terms of my music, and a bunch of other stuff too. While they have better albums, I feel its best to acknowledge them where they started.

1998 - Catch 22 - Keasby Nights
This one is pretty much all sentimental. My god, when I was younger I loved this record. While I hardly spin it nowadays, this record still holds a special place in my heart and deserves every right to be in this spot.

1999 - The Flaming Lips - The Soft Bulletin
This is I guess what you could call my first "indie rock" record. After starting to read QC, I say this album mentioned a whole bunch and thought, oh man this must be good. So I went and bought it not knowing what to expect. While I was a bit confused at first its pure blissfulness pulled me in. So, I guess its this album that introduced me to the whole independent music thing. Bravo Flaming Lips.

2000 - Faraquet - The View From this Tower
This one was possibly the hardest one for me, since A Silver Mt. Zion put out He Has Left Us Alone...  in 2000 too but since they have a spot later on Faraquet is awarded this spot. And the spot is not undeserved. Absolutely brilliant math rock tunes fill this album, making it one of my favorite releases.

2001 - Saetia - A Retrospective
To be fair, these songs were all released before 2001 so this is sort of cheating. However, this discography is filled with some of the best scremo tracks out there. Long live Saetia!

2002 - Do Make Say Think - & Yet & Yet
Man, Do Make Say Think are great, and this is such an amazing album. Its filled with beautiful subtle bliss till you hit Reitschule, which is when all that building subtle bliss blows up in your face.

2003 - Envy - A Dead Sinking Story
SDLJFSDLKFJ KLJ oh my god this album is incredible. This album is the perfect example of how to blend hardcore and post-rock. In that regard, it's pretty much flawless. Envy fucking nailed it with this album.

2004 - 65daysofstatic - The Fall of Math
God I love this record. Just straight up rocking the fuck out the entire time. So great.

2005 - Broken Social Scene - s/t
If The Soft Bulletin started me off on interdependent music, this album roped me in and never let me look back ever again. After hearing this I could never look back and nothing could be better.

2006 - Mono - You Are There
Hey, are you in a post-rock band? Do you like post-rock? Then here this album. It may as well be a guide on how to do it right. This here is pretty much crescendo based post-rock perfection.

2007 - Efterklang - Parades
This album is so pretty and wonderful and happy. I love it.

2008 - Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra La La Band - 13 Blues for Thirteen Moons
This is my current album of the year, and I really doubt much will change that. For some reason, I connect with this album in ways I can't even dream of connecting with most other albums to (to be fair, a few other album on this list do a similar thing though i did not mention it). This is just a fucking brilliant piece of music as far as I am concerned.

My god this took so long.
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Thrillho

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #14 on: 01 Sep 2008, 15:20 »

1988 - NWA - Straight Outta Compton - The album that changed my view on gangsta rap for the better.
1989 - Bob Dylan - Oh Mercy - Bob rediscovers his mojo and creates his only classic album in a whole decade. I'd say eight of then songs on this album break my heart.
1990 - Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - The Good Son - An album by my favourite artist containing some of my favourite songs, like 'The Ship Song.'
1991 - Primal Scream - Screamadelica - Baggy meets prog. An album that's rarely failed to make me feel good, or at least make me do the Bez dance to 'Slip Inside This House.'
1992 - R.E.M. - Automatic For The People - A warm, healing album that washes over you rather than you listening to it. An album I've not had for long but already one that I know I can use in emotional moments.
1993 - Blur - Modern Life Is Rubbish - The album that started Britpop. What a run it was. Parklife's the better album, but it all began here.
1994 - Weezer - Weezer - My favourite album ever.
1995 - Faith No More - King For A Day, Fool For A Lifetime - Angel Dust is the better album, but this has aged better as far as both the production and the music. It's darker, too - and it's certainly my favourite by a band that's only really entered my top ten in the last year.
1996 - Tupac - All Eyez On Me - Certainly Tupac's, and possibly gangsta rap's defining album. The first disc alone is probably the best rap album I've ever heard, even without the great stuff on the second.
1997 - Notorious B.I.G. - Life After Death - Biggie's own double. One of few rappers to come near Tupac in stature and skill, if he could freestyle he'd be better. This album is imperfect, but it's sprawling, varied, as commercial as it is dark.
1998 - Refused - The Shape Of Punk To Come - To call this punk is almost insulting. A jaw-dropping masterpiece that's almost parallel with my political leanings.
1999 - blink-182 - Enema Of The State - Puerile, but so often affecting. By turns hilarious and emotional for me, an album that defines my youth.
2000 - Linkin Park - Hybrid Theory - An album I don't listen to much any more, but what pretty much kicked off my independent thought as far as music fandom.
2001 - Ryan Adams - Gold - Recorded before 9/11, but an album that for me helped the healing process after it, because 'New York, New York' had nothing to do with New York, really.
2002 - Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot - The album Warners paid for twice; the album I'd pay for ten times. In here for 'I Am Trying To Break Your Heart' alone.
2003 - SikTh - The Trees Are Dead And Dried Out, Wait For Something Wild - A band I sorely miss - an album unlike virtually any other I've heard. Amazing musicality, brutality and beauty co-existing.
2004 - Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - Abattoir Blues/The Lyre Of Orpheus - The album I discovered Nick Cave via, and for my money still his best.
2005 - BRMC - Howl - Strip away the noise, discover roots rock. Make your masterpiece.
2006 - Twilight Singers - Powder Burns - My album of the year for 2006. A modern classic.
2007 - Gallows - Orchestra Of Wolves - A reissue, sort of, re-released on Warners with new artwork and two new songs that are as good as anything else on the album. One of music's great modern hopes in my estimation.
2008 - Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!! - Almost as good as its predecessor, better than half his catalogue. The old buzzard's still got it.

I should note that there's 10 or 12 albums I could've picked for 1994, that's my favourite year for music.
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Durin

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #15 on: 01 Sep 2008, 15:26 »

1992: Incesticide by Nirvana
Not fantastic but I really couldn't find much else.

1993: In Utero by Nirvana
This one is actually pretty good in my book

1994: Blue Album by Weezer
Simply awesome
1995: The Bends by Radiohead
Used to be my favorite album by them

1996: Evil Empire by Rage Against the Machine
Couldn't find anything else...

1997: OK Computer by Radiohead
My first favorite by them

1998: F♯A♯∞ by Godspeed You! Black Emperor.
There was a reissue this year. Totally counts! If I didn't have this. I'd have stuck it in '97

1999: Scenes from a Memory by Dream Theater
I just started getting into this band. Really fun CD. A close contender was Enema of the State by Blink 182. Aka MY EARLY CHILDHOOD

2000: N/A yes a N/A

2001: Origin of Symmetry by Muse
My current favorite album by Muse. I was thinking about putting Blink 182 here as well
 
2002: By the Way by Red Hot Chili Peppers
Nothing else for me to pick from...

2003: The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place by Explosions in the Sky
Yes. I didn't even try to find anything else. This won

2004: Absolution by Muse
Easy to do

2005: Mezmerize by System of a Down
Getting bored with this

2006: 10,000 Days by Tool
There definitely is better stuff, but I recently got this as well so I felt like sticking it here.

2007: In Rainbows by Radiohead
This was in competition with Explosions in the Sky

2008: The Slip by Nine Inch Nails
I just downloaded this, and really like it. First thing that came to mind.

This got hard for me because I got lazy, and my lack of a decent music collection. I'm going to have to redo this list someday.
« Last Edit: 01 Sep 2008, 15:36 by Durin »
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ImRonBurgundy?

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #16 on: 01 Sep 2008, 15:38 »

1987- Merzbow- Ecobondage
1988- Merzbow- Storage
1989- Merzbow- Flesh Metal Orgasm
1990- Merzbow- Cloud Cock OO Grand
1991- Slint- Spiderland
1992- Merzbow- Hannover Interruption
1993- Merzbow- Metalvelodrome: Exposition of Electro-Vivisection
1994- Merzbow- Noisembryo: Psycho-Analytic Study Of Coital Noise Posture
1995- Merzbow- Magnesia Nova
1996- Merzbow- Electric Salad
1997- Merzbow- Hybrid Noisebloom
1998- Merzbow- Aqua Necromancer
1999- Merzbow- Blues Maggots
2000- Merzbow- Live at Radio 100
2001- Merzbow- Hard Lovin' Man
2002- Merzbow- Ikebukuro Dada
2003- Merzbow- Animal Magnetism
2004- Merzbow- Yoshinotsune
2005- Merzbow- Merzbuddha
2006- Merzbow- Metamorphism
2007- Merzbow- Coma Berenices
2008- Merzbow- Arijigoku
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Durin

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #17 on: 01 Sep 2008, 15:57 »

1987- Merzbow- Ecobondage
1988- Merzbow- Storage
1989- Merzbow- Flesh Metal Orgasm
1990- Merzbow- Cloud Cock OO Grand
1991- Slint- Spiderland
1992- Merzbow- Hannover Interruption
1993- Merzbow- Metalvelodrome: Exposition of Electro-Vivisection
1994- Merzbow- Noisembryo: Psycho-Analytic Study Of Coital Noise Posture
1995- Merzbow- Magnesia Nova
1996- Merzbow- Electric Salad
1997- Merzbow- Hybrid Noisebloom
1998- Merzbow- Aqua Necromancer
1999- Merzbow- Blues Maggots
2000- Merzbow- Live at Radio 100
2001- Merzbow- Hard Lovin' Man
2002- Merzbow- Ikebukuro Dada
2003- Merzbow- Animal Magnetism
2004- Merzbow- Yoshinotsune
2005- Merzbow- Merzbuddha
2006- Merzbow- Metamorphism
2007- Merzbow- Coma Berenices
2008- Merzbow- Arijigoku

I'd say there's a trend but 1991 shows I'm foolish in my thinking.
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Thrillho

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #18 on: 01 Sep 2008, 16:09 »

Durin, you are my new favourite.

Bend over so I can appreciate you.
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Lamrock

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #19 on: 01 Sep 2008, 16:41 »

1993: Blur - Modern Life Is Rubbish
1994: Beck - Mellow Gold (extremely hard knocking Parklife and The Blue Album)
1995: Pulp - Different Class
1996: Weezer - Pinkerton
1997: Radiohead - OK Computer
1998: Beck - Mutations
1999: Blur - 13
2000: Radiohead - Kid A
2001: The Strokes - Is This It?
2002: Spoon - Kill The Moonlight
2003: Blur - Think Tank
2004: Franz Ferdinand - Franz Ferdinand
2005: Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
2006: TV On The Radio - Return To Cookie Mountain
2007: LCD Soundsystem - Sound of Silver
2008: Los Campesinos! - Hold On There, Youngster...
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Tehz

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #20 on: 01 Sep 2008, 17:11 »

This took me well over three hours to finish (bye bye, afternoon). At the same time, I felt it was a good exercise, and I had a lot of fun doing it. My entries start off kind of bare bones, then get much longer as I move further into the furture; I started to get really into it after a little while. I hope you guys read and enjoy!

1992: Slanted and Enchanted - Pavement

My favorite Pavement album, so I'd say it definitely deserves its spot here. Its songs may not be as catchy as Crooked Rain's, and Jesus Christ is the recording a sloppy mess, but it's things like this that give the album a special kind of charm. Gary Young, where art thou?

1993: Icky Mettle - Archers of Loaf

This album is kind of like the drunk, unemployed cousin of Slanted and Enchanted; it sounds somewhat similar, but the lyrics are angrier and Eric Bachmann's vocals are gruffer and meaner than Malkmus'. Regardless of the overall malcontented tone, so many of the songs are so damn catchy that you just can't help but love it. I dare you to not sing along with the chanting "all I ever wanted, all I ever wanted" part of "Web in Front", I fucking dare you. You will lose.

1994: There's Nothing Wrong With Love - Built to Spill

This is my favorite album by Built to Spill, but it isn't their best; this is a theme that will continue throughout this list. Once again, the songs are catchy as all hell, probably amongst the catchiest I've ever heard. While Doug Martsch's mastery of the electric guitar isn't as evident as it is on later albums, he still manages to melt collective listener face with tracks like "Some" and "Distopian Dream Girl". And c'mon, who doesn't like "Car"? I know guys who listen to nothing but death metal and ska who like "Car", and that is no lie.

1995: The Bends - Radiohead

For years after I first bought this album, I considered it my favorite of all time. While I'm not so sure I can give it the overall top spot anymore, it's still definitely up there, and it will always hold a special place in my heart. Without The Bends, I would not be the person I am today. During a period of time where I listened to almost nothing but radio-friendly pop-punk and psuedo-emo (I was thirteen, shut up), this album was like nothing I'd ever heard, and my horizons were drastically broadened because of it. Becoming a Radiohead fan indirectly led to me becoming a Flaming Lips fan and a Modest Mouse fan, and becoming a fan of those two led to me becoming a fan of other bands...almost entirely indirectly, but regardless, it all started with this album. For that reason (and because it's a fucking incredible album, one I can still listen to from beginning to end on a regular basis), my copy will never leave my collection.

1996: Richard D. James Album - Aphex Twin

As a guy who doesn't listen to very much electronica at all, I have no idea why I love this CD so much. Regardless, Richard James' self-titled album is one of the highlights of my library, one I truly can say that I'm very proud to own. The story behind how I came to buy it is kind of a strange one; my friends and I loved the David Firth animated music video for "Milkman" (http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/190638), and when I actually found the album that had the song on it, I had to buy it. I did so kind of as a joke, just to show it to my friends as "the album with that Milkman song on it", but after getting it home and listening to it, my mind was blown; the fact that I really had no idea what to expect when I first popped it in just added to how amazing most of the songs sounded to me. Plus, it has the best fuckin' album art I've ever seen.



C'mon, that's just awesome.

1997: The Fury of the Aquabats! - The Aquabats!

Just like the Aphex Twin album I just went over, The Fury of the Aquabats! might seem kind of out of place amongst all these alternative rock and indie rock albums, but just the fact that I really don't own too much else like it just makes it all the more lovable. For anyone not in the know, The Aquabats(!) are a ska/punk band (their sound is more new-wave influenced now, but I digress) who dress like superheros and write songs about being superheros, fighting villains and saving the day and whatnot. Besides having some of the funniest lyrics I've ever heard, the majority of the songs are so happy and bouncy that I actually have to make an effort not to stand up and dance whenever I listen to them. Furthermore, all the guys in the group are actually really talented musicians, and it shows with the ripping guitars, Travis Barker's complex drum lines (yep, he was in this band for a few years) and the old sci-fi movie-influenced synth. God damn, I love this album so much.

Also, this is completely irrelevant, but these guys put on the best live show ever, complete with fighting monsters onstage, concertgoers arriving dressed as heroes/villains for no good reason, and engaging in conversation with the audience in between songs. Seriously, you need to see these dudes live.

1998: In the Aeroplane Over the Sea - Neutral Milk Hotel

Ok, I fucked up. I originally had a different album here, one that I wasn't too enthusiastic about writing about. I somehow managed to forget to mention this classic. I don't really feel like typing another paragraph right now, so I'll just say that this was one of my first indie rock purchases, and for that reason and that reason alone this album will remain an integral part of my collection forever.

1999: The Soft Bulletin - The Flaming Lips

Even though I vastly prefer their fuzz-heavy alternative rock sound to their more recent experimental work, The Soft Bulletin is still my favorite album by the Lips. While the lyrics are pretty much of the same variety as they were in the band's earlier albums (mostly about life, death, love, and drugs), they fit in much better with the symphonic, synth-heavy music. The album has this overall epic tone to it, deserving to be played loud. The songs offer a variety of things to the listener: hope ("Waitin' For A Superman", "Race for the Prize"), a pretty decent lovey-dovey kind of mood ("Buggin', "Slow Motion"), plus a number of other emotions. It really depends on how the listener interprets the songs' meanings; no two people with get the exact same effect from the album.

2000: The Moon and Antarctica - Modest Mouse

Wow, where do I start with this one? I bought this one after months and months of procrastination; seeing it in the store but choosing something else over it (but always reassuring myself "I'll get it next time I see it"), having it recommended to me by people who already owned it, seeing the glowing reviews online and telling myself "Wow, I really should get that", but it took me until December 2006 before I finally got my hands on a copy.

Within the first day of owning it, I listened to it nearly four times over, and for the next few weeks, it was practically all I listened to.

What's my favorite thing about it? Isaac Brock's introspective lyrics? Maybe. Jeremiah Green's fucking masterful drumming? Could be. The fact that the whole album flows like water, leading seamlessly from one song into another for pretty much the whole thing? Perhaps. Even more difficult to decide is which song is my favorite. It could be “3rd Planet”, the song that convinced me to buy the album in the first place. It could be “The Stars are Projectors”, the 8 minute 47 second epic that bounces from one mood to another, finally ending with a mind-blowing orchestral meltdown that's both terrifying and uplifting at the same time. Maybe it's “Lives”, an acoustic track that uses a folky-sounding string section to rocket the already high emotional level of the song sky-high. I could debate what facet/song of the album is my favorite for hours and maybe even come to an eventual conclusion, but for now, I'll just leave it at this: The Moon and Antarctica is Modest Mouse's best album, the best album to come out during 2000, and one of my favorite albums of all time. It has so much to offer, ranging from chill-out songs to fuck-this-life-I'm-pissed songs. You simply must own it.

2001: Sad Sappy Sucker - Modest Mouse

Two Modest Mouse albums on the same list? Hell, in a row? Yes, and I have good reason to do so. While the album was released in '01, it was recorded in the early 90's, back when some of the members of the band were still in/fresh out of high school. Originally meant to be their first album, This is A Long Drive For Someone With Nothing to Think About was chosen over it, and S.S.S. sat on a shelf collecting dust for years until K Records finally released it. Despite being shoddily recorded and having songs that rarely last more than two minutes or so, the album still somehow manages to be one of my favorite Mouse albums. Brock was still a pretty damn great lyricist even then, Jeremiah Green could still hold his own as a drummer, and Eric Judy...was nowhere to be seen on most of the songs, but John Wickhart was a pretty decent bassist. The majority of the songs are simple in structure and have nowhere near the emotional depth of their later work, but at the same time, the album has this overall despondent mood, one I can't really describe. It might have something to do with knowing the band's backstory, how Isaac was living in a shed outside his mother's trailer during most of the recording, but that's not important. The album sounds dirty and melancholy, a portrait of white trash culture recorded entirely in lo-fi. I wouldn't recommend it to a first-time Modest Mouse listener or even a second-time, but hardcore fans shouldn't ignore it for a minute.

2002: You Forgot it in People - Broken Social Scene

Ugh, goddammit. I'm literally having a hard time coming up with the right words to describe this. It's a waste of time just sitting here typing a few sentences, deciding that what I just typed doesn't do it justice and then starting over again, so I'll just keep it brief. This album is a masterpiece, one that you must hear for yourself. Its songs represent almost every kind of mood a song can represent (without going to extremes, of course). The whole thing has a lovelorn, almost dreamy kind of atmosphere to it, the kind of album you just put on and relax, and think. Still, I feel my words are inadequate for a record of such excellence; it defies description, at least based on my writing experience. It's not for everyone, but if you dig atmospheric, deeply layered baroque pop, this should be your next purchase.

2003: The Ugly Organ – Cursive

I'm a generally happy guy, and a pretty decent amount of the music I listen to is light-hearted; good-mood music, so to speak. However, when I'm feeling depressed, angry, and in some cases, suicidal (okay okay, it never really gets that bad), I turn to Cursive. Tim Kasher's frenzied screams are the perfect prescription for such a mood, and while not my favorite album by them (that would be 2000's Domestica, but The Moon and Antarctica deserves the “best of” honor for that year), The Ugly Organ is still pretty terrific regardless. New member Gretta Cohn's weeping cello adds a whole new dimension to Cursive's already desperate sound, using it almost like a third guitar in some songs, weaving crooked and harsh noises in with the chaos surrounding them. While it doesn't seem as personal an album as Domestica (The Ugly Organ is a concept album following a fictional character with songs about (I'm assuming to be) fictional events, where as Domestica was a concept album following events based on Kasher's real life), it still can fill even the most cheerful a listener with despair. The final track, “Staying Alive”, lifts that emotional weight, filling you with hope as a chorus chants “The worst is over”. The worst may be over for the time being, but let's hope it doesn't stay that way for Kasher for too long (that sounds just horrible to say, doesn't it?); otherwise, we may never hear a great Cursive album ever again.

2004: I'm drawing a blank here. Don't get me wrong, I own albums released in 2004; hell, I even like the majority of them. But none of them seem good enough to talk about here. None of them left a big impression on me, none of them changed the way I look at life of introduced me to a slew of other similar artists who later became some of my favorites. Nope, nothing along those lines here. This may be cheating, as I'm certain I could easily write about one of the albums I own released during that year, but it'd be like lying; I could praise it as much as I want, but they'd be nothing but empty compliments. Sorry, everyone. I let you down.

2005: Silent Alarm - Bloc Party

Silent Alarm is without a doubt one of my favorite albums ever. I'd rank it within my top ten, easily. Between Kele's super unique vocals and heartfelt  lyrics, Russell's sharp, biting solos, Matt's complex and fast-paced drumming and Gordon's simple yet fitting basslines, the album just works. The members of the band all have fantastic chemistry, and it completely shows on Silent Alarm. One thing the album especially excels at is variety; it features your standard love song fare (“This Modern Love”, “So Here We Are”...Jesus, referring to these songs as “standard' just seems wrong), moody dance-punk (“Banquet”, “Luno”), and some truly breathtaking atmospheric ambient tracks as well (“Plans”, “Compliments”). Although only appearing on some versions, hidden track “Every Time is the Last Time” is so fucking incredible it's worth mentioning even though the chances that your copy has it are pretty bad. If your copy doesn't include it, download it somewhere and put it on repeat. It's one of those songs where no matter what kind of mood you're in, it just makes everything feel right. Those kind of songs are hard to come by these days.

2006: Fuck me. Once again, I don't feel any of the albums I own that came out in '06 are worth talking about. I'm ashamed.

2007: Spirit If... - Kevin Drew

Although not a particularly important album to me, it's still definitely worth mentioning. Les Savy Fav's Let's Stay Friends came so close to taking this year, but Kevin Drew's “solo” album (that term has to be used loosely, as Kevin is nowhere near the only musician present on the album) is not only a really really good listen, oh no; at least not to me. I had known about Broken Social Scene for some time when I finally got around to getting Spirit If..., but I never really felt motivated to run out and get one of their albums. After listening to Drew's album way too many times, I finally felt that motivation; I figured that his full band must sound like this, only better. That was indeed the case, and then some.

I'm not saying that the only reason I regard this album so highly is because it was my gateway to Broken Social Scene; trust me, it's still fantastic. Like I said before, very few of the songs feature Kevin and only Kevin; in fact, I don't think any of them do. Not only do bandmates from B.S.S. make appearances, but a number of other musicians also drop by to say hello in certain tracks; most prominent is Dinosaur Jr.'s J. Mascis, who provides some pretty fucking excellent guitar work on “Backed Out On The...”, making it one of the album's strongest tracks. Overall, Spirit If... sounds kind of like a stripped down Broken Social Scene album, except minus the “stripped down” part; only a handful of songs feature anything less than say, five or six individual musicians at a time. Even still, it's hard to fault this one; Broken Social Scene fans, and indie rock fans in general, owe it to themselves to pick this one up.

2008: Saturdays = Youth – M83

Anthony Gonzalez's latest release is my favorite album of 2008, thus far at least. It combines what I like about their older albums – intense, multi-layered electronic chaos – with a number of elements straight out of 1980's dream pop. Heavy (and cheesy, but that's not really a bad thing here) synth, angelic female vocals, and piano-driven ballads are all commonplace here. It's a bizarre move on Gonzalez's part, but it ends up working much better than one might think. It literally sounds like it could've been released during the 80's; if I didn't know any better, I'd probably think it was. Almost any of the tracks could easily fit in the soundtrack of a classic John Hughes movie. While not M83's best, it has a unique sound that I doubt too many other bands could match nowadays. I'm not sure if I'd want them to make more albums like this, but if they do, then so be it. I'll buy a copy and listen avidly just the same.
« Last Edit: 01 Sep 2008, 18:43 by Tehz »
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Thrillho

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #21 on: 01 Sep 2008, 17:21 »

1999: Blur - 13

Wrong.

The fact that you were born in 1993 and have such Britpoppy music taste scares the shit out of me.
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Lunk

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #22 on: 01 Sep 2008, 17:55 »

This was harder than I expected, which probably means I was forgetting some obvious choices.  I went for a mix of stuff that I really liked at the time or that held some sort of significance, and things I started enjoying more recently.  The early 90s were the hardest for me, probably because it was before I started actively listening to music at the time, and after most of the stuff I've gone back to listen to since, hence duplicate artists (which I tried to avoid for the sake of variety), reissues, etc.

1987: Pixies - Come On Pilgrim
Wanted to get some Pixies in here and 87 was open.  I got my copy of it at a very cool record store in Pittsburgh while I was waiting for my order at the burger joint across the street when I went to visit my brother last Thanksgiving.

1988: The Pogues - If I Should Fall From Grace With God
A great album, and it's become somewhat of a family tradition to listen to it while putting up the Christmas tree.

1989: New Model Army - Thunder and Consolation
Saw them on tour this spring, best show I've ever been to (admittedly out of a fairly limited selection).

1990: New Model Army - Impurity
See above.

1991: My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
No real reason or story, it's just good.

1992: Emmylou Harris - Light of the Stable
Yeah, it's originally from 79 and this is a reissue and I'm probably cheating.  But it's THE definitive family Christmas album that always got played on the ride home from my grandmother's Christmas Eve parties.  It's not my fault I'm too young for the original!

1993: Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - Live Seeds
I recently spent what otherwise would have been a miserable, sleepless night listening to this and watching a thunder storm.  So good.

1994: Edwyn Collins - Gorgeous George
I had known "A Girl Like You" for a while (probably because VH1 used to run Empire Records constantly) but never gave it much thought one way or the other until someone told me to listen to "The Campaign for Real Rock." Such a great track.

1995: Power Rangers soundtrack
Hey!  Why's everyone laughing at me? :(  First CD I ever owned.  I went on about a 3 year Van Halen binge after hearing "Dreams."  Choice possibly influenced by having just finished reading an article about VH being pissed at McCain for using their stuff.

1996: Dave Matthews Band - Crash
I was a huge DMB fan when I was younger.  I don't dislike them now so much as I just never feel the urge to listen to them.

1997: Portishead - Portishead
No real reason or story, it's just good.

1998: Massive Attack - Mezzanine
Dear West Wing: Thank you for introducing me to Massive Attack.  And Dire Straits.

1999: Low & Dirty Three - In the Fishtank
No real reason or story, it's just good.

2000: Mission Impossible 2 soundtrack
I know a lot of it is fairly cringe-worthy, but at the time I was basically listening to 3 bands: Pink Floyd, Queen, and Foo Fighters.  Hence, putting a Foo Fighters and Brian May cover of "Have a Cigar" on an album was a good way to get my money.  Shortly after getting it we took a family vacation and I forgot my CD wallet, so I just had my discman and the disc that was in it at the time - this.  Listening to it now brings back fond memories of sitting on the front deck of my uncle's beach house reading The Golden Compass while listening to it over and over.  Memories associated with the movie itself are decidedly less good, including a hospital visit.

2001: Daft Punk - Discovery
I was trying to come up with something else for some variety since this has already been named a few times, but couldn't.  Similar to Squawk, for some reason the "One More Time" video really stuck with me the first time I saw it.  I rarely reach for music in this vein, but when I do, it's almost always Discovery.

2002: Dropkick Murphys - Live on St. Patrick's Day
This was a present from my brother as he was leaving home.  Played often in answer to my dad's more traditional Irish music.

2003: The White Stripes - Elephant
I got this and a foosball table for my birthday.  My dad was helping me put the table together and almost dropped something very heavy on himself when he started laughing at "Little Acorns."

2004: William Shatner - Has Been
Captain James Tiberius Kirk requires no justification.

2005: New Pornographers - Twin Cinema
My introduction to the band.  Listening to it always makes me smile.

2006: Jesu - Silver
No real reason or story, it's just good.

2007: Gogol Bordello - Super Taranta
Soundtrack to an excellent end of summer road trip.

2008: Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!
"We Call Upon the Author" always reminds me of Ex-PFC Wintergreen: "Prolix! Prolix! Nothing a pair of scissors can't fix!"

[edit]: Naturally I've come up with about 5 albums that I can't believe I forgot since posting.  Oh well.
« Last Edit: 01 Sep 2008, 18:35 by Lunk »
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carrotosaurus

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #23 on: 01 Sep 2008, 18:14 »

I feel like I'm the oldest one on the forum. Anyway, here's a list of favorites for the the years 1984 - 2008. This list is horribly subject to change, but this is how I feel at the moment... This took me 6 billion hours! Ok, so more like 3. Still, it was really hard to pick anything once I got to 2000 and beyond.

1984 - Talking Heads - Stop Making Sense
This live album is the culmination of the brilliance behind the Talking Heads... you know it's going to be brilliant right from the first moments of the boombox drumbeat.

1985 - The Jesus and Mary Chain - Psychocandy
When I first heard it I wasn't really sure what to think of it. Now I can't really get enough of it. There's really not anything like it out there. I'll give Mekons' Fear and Whiskey an honorable mention because it's a great album chock full of raw energy and weird instrumentation.

1986 - Sun City Girls - Grotto of Miracles
This one wasn't hard, because it's a great album and everyone should listen to it. But, special shoutout goes to XTC's Skylarking, because I love Andy Partridge's bending vocals, and this is probably my favorite XTC album. Holy shit I almost forgot Licensed to Ill came out this year too.

1987 - Dinosaur Jr. - You're Living All Over Me
It's a great album, despite some moments of technical difficulties where Mascis can't seem to figure out what pedal he just stomped on and the horrible final track Poledo. You can't listen to Raisans and not want to rock out.

1988 - Sonic Youth - Daydream Nation
I know this one is stereotypical and everyone loves it, but hey, come on, it's Daydream Nation.

1989 - Galaxie 500 - On Fire
Yeah, in case you haven't noticed I'm a shoegaze freak. You just can't go wrong with Galaxie 500. Also, I have to say that The 2 Live Crew's As Nasty As They Wanna Be was a big seller for me growing up so this should at least be mentioned.

1990 - They Might Be Giants - Flood
This was a tough year to pick anything from, there's so many great albums, but I end up listening to Flood more than any other TMBG album, so I have to throw it on here. I'm a huge nerd.

1991 - My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
Because it's the absolute shit. Of all the great albums that came out in 1991, this is the most important.

1992 - Lilys - In the Prescense of Nothing
If you haven't heard this album yet, you should. It's goddamn brilliant.

1993 - Teenage Fanclub - Thirteen
I dare you to find a better opening track than Hang on.

1994 - Guided By Voices - Bee Thousand
I can't get over Bee Thousand. It's one of my favorites and I just can't stop listening to it.

1995 - Smashing Pumpkins - Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness
Well this was tough, it was between this and Wilco's A.M. but since I listened to the Pumpkins more growing up I'll give it to them. This was a real awesome album when I was in school and I still have the tapes to this day.

1996 - Belle & Sebastian - If You're Feeling Sinister
Yeah 1996 was a great year for music, Songs for a Blue Guitar came out in 96, and so did Emperor Tomato Ketchup and Fuzzy Logic. But even so If You're Feeling Sinister is the better album here.

1997 - M. Ward - Duet for Guitars #2
This one's a real winner. M. Ward's best in my eyes. OK Computer would be a cool choice here too, but I'm way past my Radiohead phase.

1998 - Neutral Milk Hotel - In the Aeroplane Over the Sea
I can't believe how awesome 1998 was for music, but out of all the choices I'm going to have to go with the crowd and pick this classic.

1999 - The Flaming Lips - The Soft Bulletin
One of the most perfect albums ever made. It's pure bliss from start to finish. If I could ignore it ever existed, I would put The Gerbils - Are You Sleepy? in this slot but I can't. Also, The Avalanches released Since I Left You this year, which is in my top ten albums of all time, so it was a really tough choice.

2000 - Sufjan Stevens - A Sun Came
His best. You can all go to hell if you don't agree. Anyway, Kid A also came out this year and that was a big part of my life for a long time. There's a lot of great albums that came out in 2000 actually... No one's mentioned Tarantel's Fear of Bridges which is great, or Six Organs of Admittance's Dust and Chimes which is a materpiece. Sadly, neither are as good in my book as A Sun Came.

2001 - My Morning Jacket - At Dawn
This was a really hard choice! I think At Dawn is totally brilliant. Runners up include Discovery, The Glow, pt. 2 and Oh, Inverted World.

2002 - Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
Fuck you, 2002! I can't believe so many great albums came out this year. Kill the Moonlight, YHF, American: IV, and You Forgot it in People! Wow this was a tough choice. Ultimately, YHF won out, but not after a brutal battle in my head. I bought YHF the day it came out and it has been one of my top listens ever since. Although, the same story applies to Kill the Moonlight...

2003 - Sun Kil Moon - Ghosts of the Great Highway
The folk songs are really amazing and the fuzz tones on the electric guitars are totally spot on. Kozelek's best.

2004 - The Bees - Free the Bees
A bunch of great songs meant to sound like 50s and 60s motown and rock hits. It's awesome. No runners up, crucify me if you want, Funeral was a good album, but it wasn't THAT good.

2005 - Matt Sweeny & Bonnie "Prince" Billy - Superwolf
This was a really really tough year to chose from. While I love Howl and DynamiteKid hit that nail right on the head, there's a ton of others out there. I really like BSS's self-titled album. I think The Clientele's Strange Geometry has a sort of retro charm that really speaks to me. Plus, reverbed out guitars make me cream. Kudos also go to M. Ward's Transistor Radio and Magnolia Electric Co.'s What Comes after the Blues? for being awesome albums. But honestly, Superwolf has been a huge influence on what kind of music I listen to as well as my guitar playing, so I have to say it's the best from 2005.

2006 - Band of Horses - Everything All The Time
Nothing else from 2006 really stood out as much as this one. It's one hell of an album, though.

2007 - Jose Gonzalez - In Our Nature
I must've overlooked this one in 2007 because I only found out about it recently, and it's quickly becoming one of my most-played albums.

2008 - Fleet Foxes - Fleet Foxes
Why wouldn't this be the best album of 2008? It's amazing.
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ashashash

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #24 on: 01 Sep 2008, 19:30 »

1987 - Dinosaur Jr., You're Living All Over Me
Well ... this is an excellent album.

1988 - Sonic Youth, Daydream Nation

1989 - Pixies, Doolittle
Absolutely my favorite Pixies album, and it's definitely one of my favorite albums ever.

1990 - The Cocteau Twins, Heaven or Las Vegas

1991 - My Bloody Valentine, Loveless

1992 - Pavement, Slanted and Enchanted
This is kind of a cop out.  I don't listen to that much Pavement, but this is the only thing I could find that I do listen to from time to time.

1993 - Radiohead, Pablo Honey

1994 - Built to Spill, There's Nothing Wrong with Love
This is the only Built to Spill album I can get really into.  I like their other stuff too, but this is the only one I go back to often.

1995 - Nope.  I really don't know.  Maybe I'll remember something later, but probably not.

1996 - Modest Mouse, This is a Long Drive for Someone with Nothing to Think About
Neutral Milk Hotel's On Avery Island would beat this if I didn't want to put In the Aeroplane Over the Sea on later.  And Cake's Fashion Nugget and Belle and Sebastian's If You're Feeling Sinister are close, too.

1997 - Elliott Smith, Either/Or

1998 - Neutral Milk Hotel, In the Aeroplane Over the Sea
I guess everyone has to put this album or something.
But Boards of Canada's Music Has the Right to Children also came out and it deserves a mention, too.

1999 - The Magnetic Fields, 69 Love Songs

2000 -  Radiohead, Kid A
I didn't want to put Radiohead on here twice, but I was sort of lacking other options.

2001 - The Microphones, The Glow Pt. 2
I love me some Phil Elv(e)rum.

2002 - The Decemberists, Castaways and Cutouts
But also, Broken Social Scene's You Forgot it in People and The Flaming Lips Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots.

2003 - Belle and Sebastian, Dear Catastrophe Waitress

2004 - Devendra Banhart, Nino Rojo
Devendra Banhart is a hilarious person.

2005 - Andrew Bird's The Mysterious Production of Eggs, Boards of Canada's The Campfire Headphase and Deerhoof's The Runners Four all came out this year and I can't possibly choose just one.

2006 - Camera Obscura, Let's Get Out of this Country

2007 - Black Moth Super Rainbow, Dandelion Gum

2008 - Fleet Foxes, Fleet Foxes
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Zingoleb

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #25 on: 01 Sep 2008, 19:33 »

I..I can't do it. I don't know albums that were realized post-Zing. ARGH! ...I'll try...

1990 - Pantera - Cowboys from Hell
1991 - Pearl Jam - Ten
1992 - R.E.M. - Automatic for the People
1993 - Melanie - Freedom Knows My Name/Silence is King (Freedom was the American version, Silence the European; mostly the same album.)
1994 - Pink Floyd - The Division Bell
1995 - Smashing Pumpkins - Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness (Tempted to put The Highwaymen's "The Road Goes on Forever," but there's only one song on there that I like, but that song blows my mind whenever I hear it.)
1996 - The Doors - The Greatest Hits (Yeah, Greatest Hits compilations really shouldn't count, but I don't have too much music from '96, so...)
1997 - Smash Mouth - Fush Yu Mang (When they weren't pop.)
1998 - Lucinda Williams - Car Wheels on a Gravel Road
1999 - Nothing...
2000 - Narada World - Celtic Dance
2001 - Bob Dylan - Love and Theft (Favourite album of his by far.)
2002 - Melanie - Crazy Love (Shouldn't double post artists, but I don't have much. And I can't say 'Songs for the Deaf' by QotSA because I only know one song from it.)
2003 - Warren Zevon - The Wind (Ironically, I don't really care much for it, but the emotion is stirs, the thought of what was happening to him at the time...R.I.P. Warren.)
2004 - U2 - How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb (Eh. I like it okay, but like I said, I don't know that much modern music)
2005 - James Floyd - Some Gentle Moving Thing (An album of poetry...some of the most beautiful stuff I've heard. I like Anoushka Shankar's "Rise" but I haven't heard it all the way through yet.)
2006 - The Beatles - Love
2007 - Carole Edwards - Songs (Not actually an album, but a collection of songs recorded by a friend in 2007. If I had to choose a 'real' album, it would be Half-Corked by Penny Whiskey.)
2008 - Nothing...
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David_Dovey

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #26 on: 01 Sep 2008, 19:50 »

David_Dovey: You realize Daft Punk's Homework was released in 1997?

Well, that would've made my list somewhat easier, although to be fair Aenima still had Kveldssanger by Ulver to contend with in 96. I stand by my choices.

Quote
This one is going to take me a while, but I would like some clarification. I assume, though it isn't stated explicitly, that it had to be released that year. At first I was just thinking that it was supposed to be significant to how your life was at that point, if you could find one that fits, but now it looks like it is just pick the best album of that year?

Protip: As much as I would like to say so, I was not listening to Big Black when I was one year old.
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imagist42

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #27 on: 01 Sep 2008, 22:00 »

I like how just about everyone ever put Slanted and Enchanted for 1992.

Also, as far as the intent of the thread is, I think it was meant to be "albums that accurately reflect/describe that year of your life," but seeing as I barely remember anything pre-high school anymore I ran with the idea of "albums that are important to you released in any given year." Granted, my picks for 1993-95 actually do reflect that period of my life pretty accurately, because I shared a room with my older brothers and those albums/bands constituted half of what they listened to.
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Nodaisho

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #28 on: 01 Sep 2008, 23:19 »

I figured that the very young years would be just awesome albums, since you aren't likely to have much of a musical opinion at that age. Though I can say I was listening to some pretty damn good music at that age, thanks to my dad, I just didn't care much. I was a bit too busy blowing snot bubbles to pay attention.
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David_Dovey

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #29 on: 01 Sep 2008, 23:48 »

Well I guess one of the good things about this topic is it's a little bit vague on the motivations, so theoretically, I could actually do one album for each year based on what I was listening to at the time. The list I posted above, almost half of the albums on it I heard for the first time less than a year ago, and almost every other one are post high-school (5 years ago) at the oldest.

Basically, do it however you want, but most importantly, talk about it!
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Zingoleb

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #30 on: 02 Sep 2008, 00:10 »

The only problem is, I didn't know good music until about 12. Up till about the age of nine I listened to a ton of...you know. Pop. Boy bands...that shit.
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pwhodges

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #31 on: 02 Sep 2008, 04:08 »

OK, here it is; there's no way for this to be small, so just get used to scrolling!  If I did it again, half of it would be different, as some years had four or five to choose from.  In the end I have managed to make them all either year of recording or year of original release - rather than compromising with year of purchase or first hearing as I had expected to do.  You might have expected a higher ratio of classical recording, as my music collection is about 90% classical; but I often picked rock or jazz in preference to suit the interests of this forum.  I am not a particular collector of "historic" recordings, so the earliest recordings reflect my special interest in the music of Béla Bartók (who takes up nearly 20% of my collection).  In only 62 disks, I could not hope to be representative, so many things you might expect are missing - no Stravinsky or Shostakovich happened to fit, for instance.

1946 Bartok - Concerto for Orchestra (Reiner) [First recording]
1947 Bartok - Solo Violin Sonata (Menuhin) [First recording]
1948 Bach - Concerto for three pianos [My piano teacher, as a young man, is one of the pianists]
1949 Berlin Phonogramm-Archiv, 1900-2000 [I couldn't find a single recording for this year, so I've used a collection of historic recordings that covers it]
1950 Hartmann - Symphony 4 finale (Fricsay) [I prefer the 6th symphony recorded a few years later by the same conductor, but that didn't fit]
1951 Anna Russell [Anna Russell recorded her musical comedy routines over several years - highly recomended!]
1952 Prokofiev - Piano Concerto 1 (Richter) [This Russian disk names the conductor differently on the sleeve and the label, and a recent discography I've looked it up in gives a third name!]
1953 Bartok - String Quartets (Vegh) [The first records I ever bought - still great, though there are now many superb alternatives]
1954 Bach - Piano Concerto in D (Richter) [Same disk as the 1952 Prokofiev]
1955 Sinatra - In The Wee Small Hours [One of the essentials, init]
1956 Bartok - Bluebeard's Castle (Ferencsik) [Another of my earliest purchases, and still one of the best (remember, I have all the recordings of this work ever released) - the original disk came with a Picasso print as the artwork]
1957 Stockhausen - Gesang der Jünglinge [A present from my brother to widen my early interest in modern music beyond Bartók]
1958 Bartok - Sonata for Solo Violin (Menuhin) [One of my very earliest purchases - next after the string quartets, I think]
1959 Orff - Carmina Burana (Kegel) [Not a well-known recording, but I prefer it to the flashier modern ones]
1960 Brahms - Piano Concerto 2 (Richter, Leinsdorf) [just, WOW!]
1961 Bartok - Piano Concertos (Anda, Fricsay) [Still the one to beat]
1962 Hindemith - Symphony 'Mathis der Maler' (Karajan) [Bought for the Bartók on the other side, but a splendid introduction to Hindemith]
1963 Saint Saens - Piano Concerto 2 [This is a private recording of a school concert; my piano teacher is the soloist, and I am playing the orchestral clarinet solo]
1964 Marianne Faithfull - As Tears Go By [This single changed my cousin's world, and inevitably I saw a lot less of her subsequently]
1965 Mahler - Symphony 2 'Resurrection' (Klemperer)
1966 Beach Boys - Pet Sounds
1967 Wagner - Die Meistersinger (Kubelik) [live from Bayreuth.  There is no need to be offended by the nationalism of the last section, any more than by the same in Rossini's Italian Girl in Algiers, or Rule Britannia in Arne's opera Alfred]
1968 Beatles - The Beatles (White Album) [I bought this on the day of release, and took it round to play to my friends Peter Craven and Michael Gerzon; brownie points if you've heard of Michael Gerzon!]
1969 Beatles - Let It Be [Also bought on the day of release - and I still have the big photo book that came with it]
1970 Tavener - Celtic Requiem  [One of the Apple label's great moments]
1971 John Lennon - Imagine  [Simply another essential]
1972 Menuhin & Grappelli [They recorded together over several years, so they usefully fit a gap here]
1973 Paul McCartney and Wings - Band on the Run [What's to say?]
1974 Alkan - Grande Sonate [My piano teacher, Ronald Smith, again.  He was the leader in the rediscovery of this French piano composer who was a neighbour of both Liszt and Chopin, and looked up to by both.  This is perhaps his greatest single work]
1975 Elgar - The Spirit of England (Gibson) [A little-known cantata written in memory of the fallen during the first world war]
1976 Jazz at the Pawnshop [One of the first consciously audiophile LPs (I have the CD release), but excellent jazz playing too]
1977 Sex Pistols - Never Mind the Bollocks  [Not everything's nice]
1978 Siouxsie and the Banshees - The Scream [Michael Gerzon made me buy this]
1979 Geoffrey Burgon - Nunc Dimittis [Written as the theme music for the BBC's TV production of John Le Carré's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy]
1980 Wagner - Parsifal (Kubelik) [Only released a couple of years ago; they recorded a whole Wagner opera before realising that one of the soloists was contracted to a rival company and they couldn't get a release - oops!]
1981 Organ Music from Reading Town Hall (Ennis) [As a student I did some organ building, and for a time hoped to make it my career.  I visited this superb "Father Willis" organ in my home town with a friend who did subsequently become an organ builder - I still have the receipt for "Hire of Town Hall: 2/6d" (UK funny money - about 50c at 1967 exchange rates)]
1982 Britten - War Requiem (Rattle) [My son is in the boys choir]
1983 Dire Straits - Brothers in Arms [My step-son used to play this to death, so I got to know and like it that way]
1984 Frankie goes to Hollywood - Welcome to the Pleasuredome
1985 Alan Parsons Project - Stereotomy
1986 Schubert - Die Winterreise (Schreier, Richter) [The greatest emo song-cycle]
1987 U2 - The Joshua Tree  [I first listened through this standing on a railway station in Munich, overlooking fields around the airport; I was on my way to a programming contract at the Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry]
1988 Beethoven - Missa Solemnis (Kvam) [Terje Kvam was organist of Oslo Cathedral at the time this was recorded, and I spoke to him when I made a lovely informal recording of an anglican-style service there that he was directing]
1989 Francais - Concertino (Hobson) [I got this because I once played the solo piano part of this work in a concert at school]
1990 Handel - Joshua (King) [I sang this work in the 1970s under the conductor Rudolf Piernay.  He is better known as a major London singing teacher, but before he became famous he gave me and my wife singing lessons.  The conductor of this recording went to prison recently for inappropriate behaviour with young teenage boys.  Having been involved on the periphery of a similar (but unrelated) case, I would have some doubts about the safety of this verdict - however, this is simply my personal uninformed opinion]
1991 Slint - Spiderland
1992 Keith Jarrett - The Vienna Concert [I also have some of his recordings of Bach and Handel]
1993 Wagner - Der Ring des Nibelungen (Barenboim)  [live from Bayreuth.  I could have chosen the Decca/London Solti/Culshaw studio recording, but that didn't fit - and I prefer the live one overall]
1994 Messiaen - Complete Organ Works (Weir) [Did you know that Messiaen heard sounds as colours, and used this to relate some of his music to stained glass?  He also used a lot of transcribed birdsong in his post-war works]
1995 Verdi - Requiem (Hickox)  [No special pleading here - just a great recording of a great work]
1996 Kronos Quartet - Howl [Do you know Kronos?  You should]
1997 Mogwai - Young Team
1998 Neutral Milk Hotel - In the Aeroplane over the Sea  [Especially Oh Comely; one of the great songs]
1999 Jacques Loussier - Take Bach (with the Pekinel Sisters) [This late recording by Jacques Loussier includes a pair of Turkish pianists to perform two- and three-piano concertos.  As far as I can tell, it was only released in Turkey, where I bought it on holiday]
2000 Radiohead - Kid A
2001 Bill Hopkins - Études en Série [The first solo record made by my son; I recorded, edited and mastered it]
2002 Jamie Cullum - Pointless Nostalgic [Yeah, I'm soppy too.  This still has the edge on his more commercial releases - but he's one to watch over the years]
2003 Explosions in the Sky - The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place
2004 John Adams - Road Movies [My son played the piano pieces on this in a BBC concert in London, as a result of which Adams asked him to do this recording; my favourite piece here is American Berserk.  It was back-stage at another Adams concert (in the Carnegie Hall) that he met his wife, who has also sung for Adams]
2005 Fiori Musicali [I was on holiday in Dubrovnic, and came across these buskers doing wonderful classical arrangements playing a violin, a flute and two guitars; I bought their CD.  You can hear one track in my Summer Mix for Tommy]
2006 Agalloch - Ashes Against The Grain
2007 of Montreal - Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer? [I prefer Aldhils Aboretum, but that didn't fit]
2008 Redgate & Clarke - Piano works [My son again.  I recorded the same works in a preparatory concert, but this is a studio recording by the record company]

Paul
« Last Edit: 02 Sep 2008, 06:49 by pwhodges »
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orangepeas

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #32 on: 02 Sep 2008, 05:26 »

1986-The Smiths-The Queen is Dead

1987-Substance-New Order

1988-Daydream Nation-Sonic Youth

1989-Doolittle-Pixies

1990-Goo-Sonic Youth

1991:Blues Traveler-Travelers and Thieves
(runners up include: The Low End Theory-A Tribe Called Quest,Nevermind-Nirvana,Screamadelica-Primal Scream,Out of Time-Rem,Dangerous-Michael Jackson) 1991 was a very good year in music,to bad I was too young to even realize it.

1992-Screaming Trees-Sweet Oblivion
(Kerplunk-Green Day, Little Earthquakes-Tori Amos,Blind Melon-Blind Melon)

1993-So Tonight That I Might See-Mazzy Star
(In Utero-Nirvana,Siamese Dream-Smashing Pumpkins,Candlebox-Candlebox,Pork Soda-Primus)

1994-This year was very tuff. Alot of favorite albums came from this year. I'm going to go with the Blue album by Weezer though because this was my first "real" album. It's rad! ( Dookie-Green Day,The Downward Spiral-Nine Inch Nails,The Division Bell-Pink Floyd,Live Through This-Hole,Throwing Copper-Live,Hungry for Stink-L7,Sixteen Stone-Bush and finally Grace-Jeff Buckley...not in that order obviously)

1995-Frogstomp-Silverchair

1996: Sublime-Sublime (Animal Rights-Moby,Pinkerton-Weezer,Ænima-Tool,Endtroducing.....-Dj Shadow,The Score-The Fugees)

1997-Freakshow-Silverchair (Clumsy-Our Lady Peace,Middle of Nowhere-Hanson,The Color and the Shape-Foo Fighters,Urban Hymns-The Verve,Ok Computer-Radiohead)

1998-Mezzanine-Massive Attack

1999-Neon Ballroom-Silverchair...this is the album that changed my life. (I also really like Ágætis byrjun by Sigur Ros)

2000-Tangents: The Tea Party Collection (Renegades by Rage Against the Machine is also in there somewhere. I also remember buying Infest by Papa Roach...yeah, interesting purchase.)

2001-Lateralus-Tool (How I Spent my Summer Vacation by the Bouncing Souls and Mediocre Generica by Leftover Crack are the runners up)

2002-Diorama-Silverchair (A Night at the Opera by Blind Guardian,The Beginning Stages of...by The Polyphonic Spree,Murray Street by Sonic Youth and The Coral by the Coral are all favorites to)

2003-Recreation Day-Evergrey

2004-2067-Rheostatics

2005-Ghost Reveries-Opeth

2006-Both Sides of the Gun-Ben Harper

2007-New Moon-Elliot Smith

2008-Nothing yet....
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valley_parade

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #33 on: 02 Sep 2008, 06:31 »

Except at the time I was four and cared only about Power Rangers and Mario Kart.

You say that like it's a bad thing, Anna. I was 9 and Mario Kart was the only thing I remotely cared about.

1987 - Dinosaur Jr. You're Living All Over Me
1988 - My Bloody Valentine Isn't Anything (Hi, I like this one more than Loveless)
1989 - Didn't Bad Religion have like 20 albums in '89? I'm going with the "80-85" comp.
1990 - Sonic Youth Goo
1991 - Teenage Fanclub - Bandwagonesque
1992 - ehh, skip
1993 - Earth 2
1994 - Jawbreaker 24 Hour Revenge Therapy
1995 - Sunny Day Real Estate - LP2
1996 - Weezer - Pinkerton
1997 - Dropkick Murphys - Do or Die
1998 - Jurassic 5 EP
1999 - The Lawrence Arms Ghost Stories
2000 - SKIP
2001 - American Analog Set - Know By Heart
2002 - Mclusky  Mclusky Do Dallas
2003 - Boris Akuma No Uta
2004 - Death From Above 1979 You're A Woman, I'm A Machine
2005 - Sigur Ros  Takk...
2006 - The Falcon Unicornography
2007 - Frank Turner Sleep Is For The Week
2008 - Everybody Out! self-titled
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Daft pun

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #34 on: 02 Sep 2008, 07:12 »

1985 The Jesus And Mary Chain - Psychocandy
1986 ehm
1987 err
1988 Pixies – Surfer Rosa
1989 Pixies - Doolittle
1990 so...
1991 My bloody Valentine - Loveless
1992 Aphex Twin – Selected ambient works 85-92
1993 Lucksmiths – First Tape
        beats Yo La Tengo – Painful / Seefeel - Quique
1994 Disco Inferno – DI Go Pop
        over Bark Psychosis - Hex
1995 Radiohead – The Bends
1996 DJ Shadow – Endtroducing
        over Tortoise – Millions now living will never die
1997 Mogwai – Young Team
        Daft Punk – Homework / Yo La Tengo – I can hear the heart beating as one
1998 Boards of Canada – Music has the right to children
        Beta Band – The Three EP’s / Air – Moon safari
1999 Flaming Lips – The Soft Bulletin
        Sigur Ros – Agaetis Byrjun
2000 Black Rebel Motorcycle Club - BRMC
        At the Drive-In - Relationship of Command / Phoenix - United / Amon Tobin - Supermodified
2001 Daft Punk – Discovery
        Elbow - Asleep in the back / Ted Leo - Tyranny of distance / Zoot Woman - Living in a magazine / Ash – Free all angels
2002 Interpol – Turn on the bright lights
        Boards of Canada - Geogaddi / Flaming Lips - Yoshimi / Broken Social Scene - You forgot it in people / The Cooper Temple Clause
        See this through and leave / Doves - The last broadcast  / The Libertines - Up the bracket / Out Hud – S.T.R.E.E.T. D.A.D.       
2003 The Cooper Temple Clause – Kick up the fire
        British Sea Power – The decline of  / Do Make Say Think – Winter hymn country hymn
2004 65dos – The fall of math
        Autolux – Future perfect / DFA 1979 – You’re a woman, I’m a machine / Futureheads – Futureheads / The Legends – Up against
        the legends
2005 Stars – Set yourself on fire
        Bloc Party – Silent alarm / Decemberists – Picaresque / The Radio Dept. – Pulling our weight / Soulwax – Nite Versions /
        Superpitcher – Today / Thee More Shallows – More deep cuts
2006 The Knife - Silent shout
        Ellen Allien & Apparat – Orchestra of Bubbles / Jesu - Silver
2007 LCD soundsystem – Sound of silver
        Battles – Mirrored / Gui Boratto – Chromophobia
2008 err, I'll say Cut Copy - In ghost colours for now

Holy shit that took ages. I'll try to add explanations and comments when I find the time for it.
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Thrillho

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #35 on: 02 Sep 2008, 08:23 »

1969 Beatles - Let It Be [Also bought on the day of release - and I still have the big photo book that came with it]

You mean the day of release in May 1970?
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pwhodges

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #36 on: 02 Sep 2008, 08:26 »

Yeah - The concert on the rooftop was in Jan 1969.  I used recording or release dates to suit.
« Last Edit: 02 Sep 2008, 08:34 by pwhodges »
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"As long as we're all living, and as long as we're all having fun, that should do it, right?"  (from: The Eccentric Family )

Thrillho

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #37 on: 02 Sep 2008, 08:39 »

Were you there?

Because if you were there, I would give you a handjob right now, cause you are my new hero.
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valley_parade

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #38 on: 02 Sep 2008, 08:45 »

Paul was everywhere. I heard he actually has a time machine and is planning on traveling back to record great lute-work of the 12th century.
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pwhodges

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #39 on: 02 Sep 2008, 09:10 »

Sadly I wasn't there.  :-(   I was about 400 yards away being trained by the BBC.
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"Being human, having your health; that's what's important."  (from: Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi )
"As long as we're all living, and as long as we're all having fun, that should do it, right?"  (from: The Eccentric Family )

Thrillho

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #40 on: 02 Sep 2008, 10:03 »

Ah. Sorry, no handjobs allowed them.
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McTaggart

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #41 on: 02 Sep 2008, 11:08 »

This is really tough. Most of what's happened is me finding albums and bands that I've meant to check out and never did. I've got this shortlist, but I'll need more time to cut it down and flesh it out.

As a side note I've been assembling a list of m favourite tracks of this year while I'm at it, I will be prepared for that one come year end at least.
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Lamrock

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #42 on: 02 Sep 2008, 16:00 »

1999: Blur - 13

Wrong.

The fact that you were born in 1993 and have such Britpoppy music taste scares the shit out of me.
Except for the fact that the only Britpoppy track on the album was the out of place "Coffee & TV". Granted, I do enjoy Blur's britpop very much as well.
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Johnny C

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #43 on: 02 Sep 2008, 16:37 »

1987- Merzbow- Ecobondage
1988- Merzbow- Storage
1989- Merzbow- Flesh Metal Orgasm
1990- Merzbow- Cloud Cock OO Grand
1991- Slint- Spiderland
1992- Merzbow- Hannover Interruption
1993- Merzbow- Metalvelodrome: Exposition of Electro-Vivisection
1994- Merzbow- Noisembryo: Psycho-Analytic Study Of Coital Noise Posture
1995- Merzbow- Magnesia Nova
1996- Merzbow- Electric Salad
1997- Merzbow- Hybrid Noisebloom
1998- Merzbow- Aqua Necromancer
1999- Merzbow- Blues Maggots
2000- Merzbow- Live at Radio 100
2001- Merzbow- Hard Lovin' Man
2002- Merzbow- Ikebukuro Dada
2003- Merzbow- Animal Magnetism
2004- Merzbow- Yoshinotsune
2005- Merzbow- Merzbuddha
2006- Merzbow- Metamorphism
2007- Merzbow- Coma Berenices
2008- Merzbow- Arijigoku



Why do you have to do this

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Thrillho

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #44 on: 02 Sep 2008, 17:27 »

1999: Blur - 13

Wrong.

The fact that you were born in 1993 and have such Britpoppy music taste scares the shit out of me.
Except for the fact that the only Britpoppy track on the album was the out of place "Coffee & TV". Granted, I do enjoy Blur's britpop very much as well.

I got that from the inclusion of almost all their other albums. I'm majorly into Britpop myself as well, but I hated 13. Ironically, my favourite song is 'Coffee And TV,' mostly because it's Graham fronting it.
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WriterofAllWrongs

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #45 on: 02 Sep 2008, 18:11 »

Paul has conquered this thread like a nuclear bomb to hiroshima.  We're basically all eight-armed guys who've been fused to the sidewalk at this point.

1991 - Miscellaneous T - They Might Be Giants
1992 - Automatic For The People - R.E.M
1993 - Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We - The Cranberries
1994 - Portishead - Dummy
1995 - ...I Care Because You Do - Aphex Twin
1996 - Hot - Squirrel Nut Zippers
1997 - Either/Or - Elliott Smith
1998 - Aquemini - Outkast
1999 - The Gay Parade - of Montreal
2000 - Is This It - The Strokes
2001 - Discovery - Daft Punk
2002 - Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots - The Flaming Lips
2003 - Bodysong - Jonny Greenwood
2004 - The Grey Album - DJ Dangermouse
2005 - Extraordinary Machine - Fiona Apple
2006 - St. Elsewhere - Gnarls Barkley
2007 - Strawberry Jam - Animal Collective of course
2008 - I don't even know
« Last Edit: 02 Sep 2008, 18:12 by WriterofAllWrongs »
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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #46 on: 02 Sep 2008, 19:01 »

Squirrel Nut Zippers? What a choice!
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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #47 on: 02 Sep 2008, 19:44 »

Man, I don't even wanna know why everyone's 1996 listing isn't Silkworm- Firewater.
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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #48 on: 02 Sep 2008, 19:49 »

Sorry, too busy listening to Horse Stories.

I don't get why thats not everyone's choice for '96.

(ps Firewater barely lost out on my list)
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WriterofAllWrongs

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Re: One Album For Every Year You Are Alive
« Reply #49 on: 02 Sep 2008, 20:24 »

Squirrel Nut Zippers? What a choice!

Well that album got some hardcore plays throughout my childhood, and is linked to a bunch of memories of those times.  Also big band is so good.
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