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Rolling Stone magazine's newest list

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Rolling Stone asked musicians, critics, historians and key industry

figures to rank their 50 favorites. The 273 participants included Beck,

U2's The Edge, Jackson Browne, Art Garfunkel, Missy

Elliott and members of Red Hot Chili Peppers, Metallica

, Linkin Park and The Doors. The Ernst & Young accounting firm

devised a point system to weight votes for 1,600 submitted titles.

 

Voters were invited to identify favorites from any period or genre,

allowing a smattering of country (Johnny Cash , jazz (Miles

Davis) and seminal blues (Howlin' Wolf). The list also accommodates

greatest hits collections and live recordings; four James Brown

picks include two sets of hits and Live at the Apollo (1963) . Chuck

Berry, Little Richard, Jerry Lee Lewis, Hank Williams

, The Drifters and Loretta Lynn, who flourished during

the era of 45s, are represented only by hits compilations.

 

"Artists whose best works were singles are not going to be well

represented," Levy notes. For example, he adds, "Disco is

under-represented because it's a singles-driven genre."

 

1. Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, The Beatles

 

2. Pet Sounds, The Beach Boys

 

3. Revolver, The Beatles

 

4. Highway 61 Revisited, Bob Dylan

 

5. Rubber Soul, The Beatles

 

6. What's Going On, Marvin Gaye

 

7. Exile on Main Street, The Rolling Stones

 

8. London Calling, The Clash

 

9. Blonde on Blonde, Bob Dylan

 

10. The Beatles ("The White Album"), The Beatles

 

11. The Sun Sessions, Elvis Presley

 

12. Kind of Blue, Miles Davis

 

13. Velvet Underground and Nico, The Velvet Underground

 

14. Abbey Road, The Beatles

 

15. Are You Experienced?, The Jimi Hendrix Experience

 

16. Blood on the Tracks, Bob Dylan

 

17. Nevermind, Nirvana

 

18. Born to Run, Bruce Springsteen

 

19. Astral Weeks, Van Morrison

 

20. Thriller, Michael Jackson

 

21. The Great Twenty-Eight, Chuck Berry

 

22. Plastic Ono Band, John Lennon

 

23. Innervisions, Stevie Wonder

 

24. Live at the Apollo (1963), James Brown

 

25. Rumours, Fleetwood Mac

 

26. The Joshua Tree, U2

 

27. King of the Delta Blues Singers, Vol. 1, Robert Johnson

 

28. Who's Next, The Who

 

29. Led Zeppelin, Led Zeppelin

 

30. Blue, Joni Mitchell

 

31. Bringing It All Back Home, Bob Dylan

 

32. Let It Bleed, The Rolling Stones

 

33. Ramones, Ramones

 

34. Music From Big Pink, The Band

 

35. The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars, David Bowie

 

36. Tapestry, Carole King

 

37. Hotel California, The Eagles

 

38. The Anthology, 1947 - 1972, Muddy Waters

 

39. Please Please Me, The Beatles

 

40. Forever Changes, Love

 

41. Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols, The Sex Pistols

 

42. The Doors, The Doors

 

43. The Dark Side of the Moon, Pink Floyd

 

44. Horses, Patti Smith

 

45. The Band, The Band

 

46. Legend, Bob Marley and the Wailers

 

47. A Love Supreme, John Coltrane

 

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

 

49. At Fillmore East, The Allman Brothers Band

 

50. Here's Little Richard, Little Richard

 

51. Bridge Over Troubled Waters, Simon and Garfunkel

 

52. Greatest Hits, Al Green

 

53. The Birth of Soul: The Complete Atlantic Rhythm and Blues Recordings, 1952 - 1959, Ray Charles

 

54. Electric Ladyland, The Jimi Hendrix Experience

 

55. Elvis Presley, Elvis Presley

 

56. Songs in the Key of Life, Stevie Wonder

 

57. Beggars Banquet, The Rolling Stones

 

58. Trout Mask Replica, Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band

 

59. Meet the Beatles, The Beatles

 

60. Greatest Hits, Sly and the Family Stone

 

61. Appetite for Destruction, Guns n' Roses

 

62. Achtung Baby, U2

 

63. Sticky Fingers, The Rolling Stones

 

64. Phil Spector, Back to Mono (1958 - 1969), Various Artists

 

65. Moondance, Van Morrison

 

66. Led Zeppelin IV, Led Zeppelin

 

67. The Stranger, Billy Joel

 

68. Off the Wall, Michael Jackson

 

69. Superfly, Curtis Mayfield

 

70. Physical Graffiti, Led Zeppelin

 

71. After the Gold Rush, Neil Young

 

72. Purple Rain, Prince

 

73. Back in Black, AC/DC

 

74. Otis Blue, Otis Redding

 

75. Led Zeppelin II, Led Zeppelin

 

76. Imagine, John Lennon

 

77. The Clash, The Clash

 

78. Harvest, Neil Young

 

79. Star Time, James Brown

 

80. Odessey and Oracle, The Zombies

 

81. Graceland, Paul Simon

 

82. Axis: Bold as Love, The Jimi Hendrix Experience

 

83. I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You, Aretha Franklin

 

84. Lady Soul, Aretha Franklin

 

85. Born in the U.S.A., Bruce Springsteen

 

86. Let It Be, The Beatles

 

87. The Wall, Pink Floyd

 

88. At Folsom Prison, Johnny Cash

 

89. Dusty in Memphis, Dusty Springfield

 

90. Talking Book, Stevie Wonder

 

91. Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, Elton John

 

92. 20 Golden Greats, Buddy Holly

 

93. Sign 'o' the Times, Prince

 

94. Bitches Brew, Miles Davis

 

95. Green River, Creedence Clearwater Revival

 

96. Tommy, The Who

 

97. The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, Bob Dylan

 

98. This Year's Model, Elvis Costello

 

99. There's a Riot Goin' On, Sly and the Family Stone

 

100. In the Wee Small Hours, Frank Sinatra

 

101. Fresh Cream, Cream

 

102. Giant Steps, John Coltrane

 

103. Sweet Baby James, James Taylor

 

104. Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music, Ray Charles

 

105. Rocket to Russia, Ramones

 

106. Portrait of a Legend 1951 - 1964, Sam Cooke

 

107. Hunky Dory, David Bowie

 

108. Aftermath, The Rolling Stones

 

109. Loaded, The Velvet Underground

 

110. The Bends, Radiohead

 

111. Court and Spark, Joni Mitchell

 

112. Disraeli Gears, Cream

 

113. The Who Sell Out, The Who

 

114. Out of Our Heads, The Rolling Stones

 

115. Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs, Derek and the Dominos

 

116. At Last, Etta James

 

117. Sweetheart of the Rodeo, The Byrds

 

118. Stand!, Sly and the Family Stone

 

119. The Harder They Come Original Soundtrack, Various Artists

 

120. Raising Hell, Run-DMC

 

121. Moby Grape, Moby Grape

 

122. Pearl, Janis Joplin

 

123. Catch a Fire, Bob Marley and the Wailers

 

124. Younger Than Yesterday, The Byrds

 

125. Raw Power, The Stooges

 

126. Remain in Light, Talking Heads

 

127. If You Can Believe Your Eyes and Ears, The Mamas and the Papas

 

128. Marquee Moon, Television

 

129. 40 Greatest Hits, Hank Williams

 

130. Paranoid, Black Sabbath

 

131. Saturday Night Fever Original Soundtrack, Various Artists

 

132. The Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle, Bruce Springsteen

 

133. Ready to Die, The Notorious B.I.G.

 

134. Slanted and Enchanted, Pavement

 

135. Greatest Hits, Elton John

 

136. Tim, The Replacements

 

137. The Chronic, Dr. Dre

 

138. Rejuvenation, The Meters

 

139. All That You Can't Leave Behind, U2

 

140. Parallel Lines, Blondie

 

141. Live at the Regal, B.B. King

 

142. Phil Spector, A Christmas Gift for You, Various Artists

 

143. Gris-Gris, Dr. John

 

144. Straight Outta Compton, N.W.A

 

145. Aja, Steely Dan

 

146. Surrealistic Pillow, Jefferson Airplane

 

147. Dreams to Remember: The Otis Redding Anthology, Otis Redding

 

148. Deja Vu, Crosby Stills Nash and Young

 

149. Houses of the Holy, Led Zeppelin

 

150. Santana, Santana

 

151. Darkness on the Edge of Town, Bruce Springsteen

 

152. The B-52's, The B-52's

 

153. Moanin' in the Moonlight, Howlin' Wolf

 

154. The Low End Theory, A Tribe Called Quest

 

155. Pretenders, The Pretenders

 

156. Paul's Boutique, Beastie Boys

 

157. Closer, Joy Division

 

158. Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy, Elton John

 

159. Alive, Kiss

 

160. Electric Warrior, T. Rex

 

161. The Dock of the Bay, Otis Redding

 

162. OK Computer, Radiohead

 

163. 1999, Prince

 

164. Heart Like a Wheel, Linda Ronstadt

 

165. Let's Get It On, Marvin Gaye

 

166. Imperial Bedroom, Elvis Costello

 

167. Master of Puppets, Metallica

 

168. My Aim Is True, Elvis Costello

 

169. Exodus, Bob Marley

 

170. Live at Leeds, The Who

 

171. The Notorious Byrd Brothers, The Byrds

 

172. Every Picture Tells a Story, Rod Stewart

 

173. Something/Anything?, Todd Rundgren

 

174. Desire, Bob Dylan

 

175. Close to You, The Carpenters

 

176. Rocks, Aerosmith

 

177. One Nation Under a Groove, Parliament/Funkadelic

 

178. Greatest Hits, The Byrds

 

179. The Anthology 1961 - 1977, Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions

 

180. The Definitive Collection, Abba

 

181. The Rolling Stones, Now!, The Rolling Stones

 

182. Natty Dread, Bob Marley and the Wailers

 

183. Fleetwood Mac, Fleetwood Mac

 

184. Red Headed Stranger, Willie Nelson

 

185. The Stooges, The Stooges

 

186. Fresh, Sly and the Family Stone

 

187. So, Peter Gabriel

 

188. Buffalo Springfield Again, Buffalo Springfield

 

189. Happy Trails, Quicksilver Messenger Service

 

190. From Elvis in Memphis, Elvis Presley

 

191. Funhouse, The Stooges

 

192. The Gilded Palace of Sin, The Flying Burrito Brothers

 

193. Dookie, Green Day

 

194. Transformer, Lou Reed

 

195. Bluesbreakers, John Mayall With Eric Clapton

 

196. Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era 1965 - 1968, Various Artists

 

197. Murmur, R.E.M.

 

198. The Best of, Little Walter

 

199. Highway to Hell, AC/DC

 

200. The Downward Spiral, Nine Inch Nails

 

201. Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme, Simon and Garfunkel

 

202. Bad, Michael Jackson

 

203. Wheels of Fire, Cream

 

204. Dirty Mind, Prince

 

205. Abraxas, Santana

 

206. Tea for the Tillerman, Cat Stevens

 

207. Ten, Pearl Jam

 

208. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, Neil Young With Crazy Horse

 

209. Wish You Were Here, Pink Floyd

 

210. Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain, Pavement

 

211. Tattoo You, The Rolling Stones

 

212. Proud Mary: The Best of Ike and Tina Turner, Ike and Tina Turner

 

213. New York Dolls, New York Dolls

 

214. Bo Diddley/Go Bo Diddley, Bo Diddley

 

215. Two Steps From the Blues, Bobby Bland

 

216. The Queen Is Dead, The Smiths

 

217. Licensed to Ill, Beastie Boys

 

218. Look-Ka Py Py, The Meters

 

219. Loveless, My Bloody Valentine

 

220. New Orleans Piano, Professor Longhair

 

221. War, U2

 

222. The Neil Diamond Collection, Neil Diamond

 

223. Howlin' Wolf, Howlin' Wolf

 

224. Nebraska, Bruce Springsteen

 

225. The Complete Hank Williams, Hank Williams

 

226. Doolittle, Pixies

 

227. Paid in Full, Eric B. and Rakim

 

228. Toys in the Attic, Aerosmith

 

229. Nick of Time, Bonnie Raitt

 

230. A Night at the Opera, Queen

 

231. The Kink Kronikles, The Kinks

 

232. Mr. Tambourine Man, The Byrds

 

233. Bookends, Simon and Garfunkel

 

234. The Ultimate Collection, Patsy Cline

 

235. Mr. Excitement!, Jackie Wilson

 

236. The Who Sings My Generation, The Who

 

237. Like a Prayer, Madonna

 

238. Can't Buy a Thrill, Steely Dan

 

239. Let It Be, The Replacements

 

240. Run-DMC, Run-DMC

 

241. Black Sabbath, Black Sabbath

 

242. The Jerry Lee Lewis Anthology: All Killer No Filler!, Jerry Lee Lewis

 

243. Freak Out!, The Mothers of Invention

 

244. Live Dead, Grateful Dead

 

245. Bryter Layter, Nick Drake

 

246. The Shape of Jazz to Come, Ornette Coleman

 

Automatic for the People, R.E.M.

 

248. Reasonable Doubt, Jay-Z

 

249. Low, David Bowie

 

250. The River, Bruce Springsteen

 

251. The Otis Redding Dictionary of Soul, Otis Redding

 

252. Metallica, Metallica

 

253. Trans-Europe Express, Kraftwerk

 

254. Whitney Houston, Whitney Houston

 

255. The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society, The Kinks

 

256. The Velvet Rope, Janet Jackson

 

257. Stardust, Willie Nelson

 

258. American Beauty, Grateful Dead

 

259. Crosby Stills and Nash, Crosby Stills and Nash

 

260. Buena Vista Social Club , Buena Vista Social Club

 

261. Tracy Chapman, Tracy Chapman

 

262. Workingman's Dead, Grateful Dead

 

263. The Genius of Ray Charles, Ray Charles

 

264. Child Is Father to the Man, Blood, Sweat and Tears

 

265. Cosmo's Factory, Creedence Clearwater Revival

 

266. Quadrophenia, The Who

 

267. There Goes Rhymin' Simon, Paul Simon

 

268. Psycho Candy, The Jesus and Mary Chain

 

269. Some Girls, The Rolling Stones

 

270. The Beach Boys Today!, The Beach Boys

 

271. Going to a Go-Go, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles

 

272. Nightbirds, Labelle

 

273. The Slim Shady LP, Eminem

 

274. Mothership Connection, Parliament

 

275. Rhythm Nation 1814, Janet Jackson

 

276. Anthology of American Folk Music, Harry Smith, ed.

 

277. Aladdin Sane, David Bowie

 

278. The Immaculate Collection, Madonna

 

279. My Life, Mary J. Blige

 

280. Folk Singer, Muddy Waters

 

281. Can't Get Enough, Barry White

 

282. The Cars, The Cars

 

283. Five Leaves Left, Nick Drake

 

284. Music of My Mind, Stevie Wonder

 

285. I'm Still in Love With You, Al Green

 

286. Los Angeles, X

 

287. Anthem of the Sun, Grateful Dead

 

288. Something Else by the Kinks, The Kinks

 

289. Call Me, Al Green

 

290. Talking Heads: 77, Talking Heads

 

291. The Basement Tapes, Bob Dylan and the Band

 

292. White Light / White Heat, The Velvet Underground

 

293. Greatest Hits, Simon and Garfunkel

 

294. Kick Out the Jams, MC5

 

295. Meat Is Murder, The Smiths

 

296. We're Only In It For the Money, The Mothers of Invention

 

297. Weezer (Blue Album), Weezer

 

298. Master of Reality, Black Sabbath

 

299. Coat of Many Colors, Dolly Parton

 

300. Fear of a Black Planet, Public Enemy

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301. John Wesley Harding, Bob Dylan

 

302. The Marshall Mathers LP, Eminem

 

303. Grace, Jeff Buckley

 

304. Car Wheels on a Gravel Road, Lucinda Williams

 

305. Odelay, Beck

 

306. Songs for Swingin' Lovers, Frank Sinatra

 

307. Avalon, Roxy Music

 

308. The Sun Records Collection, Various Artists

 

309. Nothing's Shocking, Jane's Addiction

 

310. BloodSugarSexMagik, Red Hot Chili Peppers

 

311. MTV Unplugged in New York, Nirvana

 

312. The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, Lauryn Hill

 

313. Damn the Torpedoes, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers

 

314. The Velvet Underground, The Velvet Underground

 

315. Surfer Rosa, Pixies

 

316. Rock Steady, No Doubt

 

317. The Eminem Show, Eminem

 

318. Back Stabbers, The O'Jays

 

319. Burnin', Bob Marley and the Wailers

 

320. Pink Moon, Nick Drake

 

321. Sail Away, Randy Newman

 

322. Ghost in the Machine, The Police

 

323. Station to Station, David Bowie

 

324. The Very Best of Linda Ronstadt, Linda Ronstadt

 

325. Slowhand, Eric Clapton

 

326. Disintegration, The Cure

 

327. Jagged Little Pill, Alanis Morissette

 

328. Exile in Guyville, Liz Phair

 

329. Daydream Nation, Sonic Youth

 

330. In the Jungle Groove, James Brown

 

331. Tonight's the Night, Neil Young

 

332. Help!, The Beatles

 

333. Shoot Out the Lights, Richard and Linda Thompson

 

334. Wild Gift, X

 

335. Squeezing Out Sparks, Graham Parker

 

336. Superunknown, Soundgarden

 

337. Aqualung, Jethro Tull

 

338. Cheap Thrills, Big Brother and the Holding Company

 

339. The Heart of Saturday Night, Tom Waits

 

340. Damaged, Black Flag

 

341. Play, Moby

 

342. Violator, Depeche Mode

 

343. Bat Out of Hell, Meat Loaf

 

344. Berlin, Lou Reed

 

345. Stop Making Sense, Talking Heads

 

346. 3 Feet High and Rising, De La Soul

 

347. The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, Pink Floyd

 

348. At Newport 1960, Muddy Waters

 

349. Roger the Engineer (a.k.a. Over Under Sideways Down), The Yardbirds

 

350. Rust Never Sleeps, Neil Young and Crazy Horse

 

351. Brothers in Arms, Dire Straits

 

352. 52nd Street, Billy Joel

 

353. Having a Rave Up With the Yardbirds, The Yardbirds

 

354. 12 Songs, Randy Newman

 

355. Between the Buttons, The Rolling Stones

 

356. Sketches of Spain, Miles Davis

 

357. Honky Chateau, Elton John

 

358. Singles Going Steady, Buzzcocks

 

359. Stankonia, Outkast

 

360. Siamese Dream, The Smashing Pumpkins

 

361. Substance, New Order

 

362. L.A. Woman, The Doors

 

363. Ray of Light, Madonna

 

364. American Recordings, Johnny Cash

 

365. Louder Than Bombs, The Smiths

 

366. Mott, Mott the Hoople

 

367. Is This It, The Strokes

 

368. Rage Against the Machine, Rage Against the Machine

 

369. Reggatta de Blanc, The Police

 

370. Volunteers, Jefferson Airplane

 

371. Siren, Roxy Music

 

372. Late for the Sky, Jackson Browne

 

373. Post, Bjork

 

374. The Eagles, The Eagles

 

375. The Ultimate Collection (1948 - 1990), John Lee Hooker

 

376. (What's the Story) Morning Glory?, Oasis

 

377. CrazySexyCool, TLC

 

378. Funky Kingston, Toots and the Maytals

 

379. Greetings from Asbury Park, Bruce Springsteen

 

380. Sunflower, The Beach Boys

 

381. Modern Lovers, Modern Lovers

 

382. More Songs About Buildings and Food, Talking Heads

 

383. A Quick One (Happy Jack), The Who

 

384. Pyromania, Def Leppard

 

385. Pretzel Logic, Steely Dan 386. Enter the Wu-Tang: 36 Chambers, Wu-Tang Clan

 

387. Country Life, Roxy Music

 

388. A Hard Day's Night, The Beatles

 

389. The End of the Innocence, Don Henley

 

390. Elephant, The White Stripes

 

391. The Pretender, Jackson Browne

 

392. Willy and the Poor Boys, Creedence Clearwater Revival

 

393. Good Old Boys, Randy Newman

 

394. For Your Pleasure, Roxy Music

 

395. Blue Lines, Massive Attack

 

396. Eliminator, ZZ Top

 

397. Rain Dogs, Tom Waits

 

398. Anthology, The Temptations

 

399. Californication, Red Hot Chili Peppers

 

400. Illmatic, Nas

 

401. (Pronounced Leh-Nerd Skin-Nerd), Lynyrd Skynyrd

 

402. Dr. John's Gumbo, Dr. John

 

403. Radio City, Big Star

 

404. Sandinista!, The Clash

 

405. Rid of Me, PJ Harvey

 

406. I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got, Sinead O' Connor

 

407. Strange Days, The Doors

 

408. Time Out of Mind, Bob Dylan

 

409. 461 Ocean Boulevard, Eric Clapton

 

410. Pink Flag, Wire

 

411. Double Nickels on the Dime, Minutemen

 

412. Mezzanine, Massive Attack

 

413. Beauty and the Beat, Go-Go's

 

414. Greatest Hits, James Brown

 

415. Van Halen , Van Halen

 

416. Mule Variations, Tom Waits

 

417. Boy, U2

 

418. Band on the Run, Wings

 

419. Dummy, Portishead

 

420. With the Beatles, The Beatles

 

421. The "Chirping" Crickets, Buddy Holly and the Crickets

 

422. The Best of the Girl Groups, Volumes 1 and 2 , Various Artists

 

423. Greatest Hits, The Mamas and the Papas

 

424. King of the Delta Blues Singers, Vol. 2, Robert Johnson

 

425. Changesone, David Bowie

 

426. The Battle of Los Angeles, Rage Against the Machine

 

427. Presenting the Fabulous Ronettes Featuring Veronica, The Ronettes

 

428. Kid A, Radiohead

 

429. Grievous Angel, Gram Parsons

 

430. At Budokan, Cheap Trick

 

431. Anthology, Diana Ross and the Supremes

 

432. Sleepless, Peter Wolf

 

433. Another Green World, Brian Eno

 

434. Outlandos D'Amour, The Police

 

435. To Bring You My Love, PJ Harvey

 

436. Here Come the Warm Jets, Brian Eno

 

437. All Things Must Pass, George Harrison

 

438. #1 Record, Big Star

 

439. In Utero, Nirvana

 

440. Sea Change, Beck

 

441. Tragic Kingdom, No Doubt

 

442. Boys Don't Cry, The Cure

 

443. Live at the Harlem Square Club, 1963, Sam Cooke

 

444. Criminal Minded, Boogie Down Productions

 

445. Rum Sodomy and the Lash, The Pogues

 

446. Suicide, Suicide

 

447. Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!, Devo

 

448. In Color, Cheap Trick

 

449. The World Is a Ghetto, War

 

450. Fly Like an Eagle, Steve Miller Band

 

451. Back in the USA, MC5

 

452. Music, Madonna

 

453. Ritual de lo Habitual, Jane's Addiction

 

454. Getz/Gilberto, Stan Getz and Joao Gilberto Featuring Antonio Carlos Jobim

 

455. Synchronicity, The Police

 

456. Third/Sister Lovers, Big Star

 

457. For Everyman, Jackson Browne

 

458. John Prine, John Prine

 

459. Strictly Business, EPMD

 

460. Love It to Death, Alice Cooper

 

461. How Will the Wolf Survive?, Los Lobos

 

462. Here, My Dear, Marvin Gaye

 

463. Tumbleweed Connection, Elton John

 

464. The Blueprint, Jay-Z

 

465. Golden Hits, The Drifters

 

466. Live Through This, Hole

 

467. Love and Theft, Bob Dylan

 

468. Elton John, Elton John

 

469. Metal Box, Public Image Ltd.

 

470. Document, R.E.M.

 

471. Heaven Up Here, Echo and the Bunnymen

 

472. Hysteria, Def Leppard

 

473. A Rush of Blood to the Head, Coldplay

 

474. Live in Europe, Otis Redding

 

475. Tunnel of Love, Bruce Springsteen

 

476. The Paul Butterfield Blues Band, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band

 

477. The Score, Fugees

 

478. Radio, LL Cool J

 

479. I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight, Richard and Linda Thompson

 

480. Faith, George Michael

 

481. The Smiths, The Smiths

 

482. Armed Forces, Elvis Costello and the Attractions

 

483. Life After Death, The Notorious B.I.G.

 

484. Branded Man, Merle Haggard

 

485. All Time Greatest Hits, Loretta Lynn

 

486. Maggot Brain, Funkadelic

 

487. Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, The Smashing Pumpkins

 

488. Voodoo, D'Angelo

 

489. Guitar Town, Steve Earle

 

490. Entertainment!, Gang of Four

 

491. All the Young Dudes, Mott the Hoople

 

492. Vitalogy, Pearl Jam

 

493. That's the Way of the World, Earth, Wind and Fire

 

494. She's So Unusual, Cyndi Lauper

 

495. New Day Rising, Husker Du

 

496. Destroyer, Kiss

 

497. Yo! Bum Rush the Show, Public Enemy

 

498. Tres Hombres, ZZ Top

 

499. Born Under a Bad Sign, Albert King

 

500. Touch, Eurythmics

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I'm pretty fine with the top 25 part of the list, but there's no way in fucking hell that the Clash should be #8. I hate the fact that as soon as someone in a band (especially the frontperson) dies that they are suddenly immortalized and given much more credit than they honestly deserve.

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Overlooked - Midnight Oil, Faith No More, King's X, Dream Theater, Iron Maiden, Queensryche.

These lists are always pretty much against anything metal-related. No Slayer

or Ozzy on here either. They consider metal too cheesy, but stuff like George

Michael, TLC and Cyndi Lauper make it on here.

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I'm pretty fine with the top 25 part of the list, but there's no way in fucking hell that the Clash should be #8. I hate the fact that as soon as someone in a band (especially the frontperson) dies that they are suddenly immortalized and given much more credit than they honestly deserve.

London Calling has been regarded as one of the greatest albums of all time for a long time - way before Joe Strummer kicked it. From where I sit, perhaps only Exile on Main St. manages to be as good as long and as consistently as London Calling.

 

My personal issue with the list was a lack of rap and 1990's music...until I hit about number 300, where they seriously flood in most of the major highlights. There are some really weird choices for ranking works by a particular artist (U2's latest album higher than War? Riiight...), but you know, it's mostly good. The whole numbering thing is lame though, once you get outside the first stream of albums. What makes 484 that much better than 483?

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Greatest hits albums are for housewive and little girls. They shouldn't be on the list. And I agree with Edwin. After about the first fifty or so it's hard to start quibbling numbers and placement. An argument can be made for each album on there that they're at least notable.

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Guest Doyo
My personal issue with the list was a lack of rap and 1990's music...until I hit about number 300, where they seriously flood in most of the major highlights.

 

I count 13 rap albums in the top 300. Pretty good for a relatively new form of music and a much

better showing than heavy metal got. People on another board I was looking at were complaining

about there being too much rap on here. And what about country music? That has been around

for years and there is little on the list.

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and rolling stone takes a cue from the death valley driver crew. DEAN would be so proud.

 

while as a fan it's nice to see the beatles annihilate everybody else on the list, it reeks of blatantly obvious rigging: "now, everyone knows the beatles are the best band ever, so we need to put as many of their albums in the top 100 as possible." would anyone in their right mind argue

39. Please Please Me, The Beatles

is better than

54. Electric Ladyland, The Jimi Hendrix Experience
?

 

also, i'm surprised that 'sgt pepper' is still number one. 'revolver' has replaced it in almost every major modern list i've seen, & i haven't heard anyone in the last 5 years say that 'pepper' is their favorite record.

 

the lack of newer stuff on the list is disconcerting. looks like the most recent album to crack the top 50 is 'nevermind' (puke), and the highest-ranking work from the last 10 years appears to be 'the bends' at 110.

 

bitching like that aside, it really is a pretty good list.

 

303. Grace, Jeff Buckley

this especially makes me proud.

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London Calling has been regarded as one of the greatest albums of all time for a long time - way before Joe Strummer kicked it. From where I sit, perhaps only Exile on Main St. manages to be as good as long and as consistently as London Calling.

Thank you, Edwin.

 

I was very pleased to see The Low End Theory as high as it is. It's one of, if not the best Hip-Hop album of all-time. illadelph haliflife is VERY high on the best Hip-Hop albums ever as well.

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Guest Doyo
and rolling stone takes a cue from the death valley driver crew. DEAN would be so proud.

actually, the dvd crew got the idea from the PWI 500, but don't tell anybody

 

303. Grace, Jeff Buckley

this especially makes me proud.

 

Yeah that is a good album. It made around number 70 on the VH1 top album list.

 

Newer stuff needs to age a while before people really appreciate it.

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Newer stuff needs to age a while before people really appreciate it.

i don't really buy that. i think that over time, certain albums become institutions while others don't, and there's none of that with the newer stuff yet: nobody really knows what the next 'sgt pepper' will be, so people just pick recent stuff that they really love and just not worry about it.

 

i'm sure the people polled all do put newer stuff on their favorites lists, they just tend to all pick different newer stuff. 10 people put jeff buckley on their list, 10 people put outkast on their list, 10 people put TLC on their list; and all 30 of those people have the stones on their list, just cause the older albums are more rigidly defined as "classic."

 

the lower 250 are quickly getting much more interesting to look at, at least for me.

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Guest Fire and Knives

Fuck Sgt. Pepper and his stupid little band. Miles Davis smokes him.

 

K.

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I'm pretty fine with the top 25 part of the list, but there's no way in fucking hell that the Clash should be #8. I hate the fact that as soon as someone in a band (especially the frontperson) dies that they are suddenly immortalized and given much more credit than they honestly deserve.

"London Calling's" been on just about everyone's top 30 list in the music industry since... like, 1990, dude. Joe Strummer's death may have made people give him more credit than he deserved for that last album of his, but London Calling and the self-titled album have been favorites since their release. Perhaps they ARE overrated to some, but in this case, it's not a "they only like that 'cuz the one guy's dead" thing.

 

EDIT: Right, Edwin beat me to it. Fucker. :)

 

EDIT ONCE AGAIN: Is there anywhere that we can see individual artist's Top 50 lists? I'm interested in Beck's. Heh.

Edited by 5_moves_of_doom

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At least "It takes a Nation of Millions" is the highest-ranked rap album and not Ja Rule or someone recent.

 

Thought "Ready to Die" was over-rated (OMG Racist!), but whatever -- it's a goofy list.

 

At least the Tribe and EPMD represent.

 

I'm waiting for the list rating EVERY song/album/whatever of ALL-TIME, and it keeps growing whenever new material comes out...

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17. Nevermind, Nirvana

-Fuck Kurt Cobain in his dead overrated ass. I really liked the album, but since this asshole killed himself it's given way more credit then it deserves.

 

65. Moondance, Van Morrison

-Love this album. I would have put it way way higher

 

133. Ready to Die, The Notorious B.I.G.

-Another case of dead=legend. I have a hard time believing that this is better then any single rock album put out within the last 10 years or so.

 

193. Dookie, Green Day

-Other then a couple Radiohead's this is the first real modern rock one. I love the album, but I didn't think they'd put it on.

 

197. Murmur, R.E.M.

-This is top 20 for me. Great great album

 

207. Ten, Pearl Jam

-If Eddie had blown his brains out this would be #17 and Nevermind would be #207

 

305. Odelay, Beck

-Very very overrated

 

367. Is This It, The Strokes

-Oh fuck the Strokes

 

368. Rage Against the Machine, Rage Against the Machine

-Oh fuck them too

 

390. Elephant, The White Stripes

-Yep, them too...although I like some of their stuff

 

470. Document, R.E.M.

-I'd put Reckoning ahead of this

 

500 best albums and no Donovan or Warren Zevon...oh fuck you Rolling Stone

Edited by Youth N Asia

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Guest Agent of Oblivion

Sabbath was placed criminally low.

 

Nevermind needs to be tied to a fencepost and forgotten about.

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Guest Agent of Oblivion

Holy fuck, there isn't any Tool or AiC on there. How did I not notice that?

 

At least they picked a good Zappa album to represent him.

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Joe Strummer's death may have made people give him more credit than he deserved for that last album of his, but London Calling and the self-titled album have been favorites since their release. Perhaps they ARE overrated to some, but in this case, it's not a "they only like that 'cuz the one guy's dead" thing.

Streetcore is a good album. It's not as good as Global a Go-Go, but it's still great. His death didn't help it out, as his guitarists had to finish the musical parts, but I haven't really read any reviews praising the album or calling it the best ever. The reviews I've read call it the 3rd best Mescalaros album. I think it's the 2nd best, but I'm no critic, what do I know?

 

And no, The Clash aren't overrated.

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No way should <random numbered album #1> been ahead of <random numbered album #2>! TEH OUTRAGE~!

 

Seriously though, I don't have the attention span necessary to read through this list beyond the first 50 or so. Similar KKK said, they call this the list the "all-time" list, when it should really be the "so-far" list, since new stuff will perpetually come out.

 

As for metal's under-representation on the list, as a huge metal fan, but still an honest man, I've come to accept the fact that metal is and has always been viewed as a niche market. On the other hand, as soon as rap crossed-over from the inner-city (with fans who knew the experiences being rapped about) to rich suburban kids, the mainstream started paying quite a bit more attention (in both good and bad ways)

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And what about country music?  That has been around

for years and there is little on the list.

Country, even more than the mainstream, has always been more single oriented than album oriented. It was only with the beginning of the outlaw movement in the seventies when you had artists who were not only good songwriters, but also knew how to pick good songs from others; like Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Merle Haggard, that you began seeing more cohesive albums. If you notice that only albums from rock legends like Little Richard, Jerry Lee Lewis and Elvis are essentially greatest hits albums or compilations. The album as we know it really didn't come into being until the lp was produced and the first concept album was Frank Sinatra's "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning" in 1955. Which is 100 on the above list and would certainly be in my top five, maybe number one.

 

It kind of brings into question what an album really is. Is just a collection of songs good enough to be on a list of the best albums of all time or does their need to be some thought and theme behind it in it's construction.

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Guest BAR

What a fucking horrible list. Not as bad as the 100 greatest guitarists they did though. There were a few nice surprises: Master of Reality being on there, my favourite Sabbath album. (pronounced leh-nerd ski-nerd) was also a nice surprise. Oh well, why do they bother.

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Guest The Winter Of My Discontent
Fuck Sgt. Pepper and his stupid little band. Miles Davis smokes him.

 

K.

Agreed.

 

Hendrix smokes the Beatles.

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