Finalize dropped albums list with correct 8 albums and balance new albums

- Corrected dropped albums to exactly 8 albums through detailed comparison analysis
- Updated dropped albums list (ranks 501-508) with proper albums that were truly removed
- Fixed "New in 2023" markings to show only 8 albums (balancing the 8 dropped)
- Downloaded cover art for all 8 dropped albums
- Removed incorrect cover art files for albums that weren't actually dropped
- Updated data files with corrected artist/album name formatting for accurate matching

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Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
This commit is contained in:
Johan Lundberg 2025-07-01 03:32:16 +02:00
parent e64b267ee3
commit 88a6434132
31 changed files with 1082 additions and 217 deletions

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Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description
500,Arcade Fire,Funeral,"Merge, 2004","Loss, love, forced coming-of-age, and fragile generational hope: Arcade Fires debut touched on all these themes as it defined the independent rock of the 00s. Built on family ties (leader Win Butler, his wife, Régine Chassagne, his brother Will), the Montreal band made symphonic rock that truly rocked, simultaneously outsize and deeply personal, like the best pop. But for all its sad realism, Butlers is music that still finds solace, and purpose, in communal celebration.
500,Arcade Fire,Funeral,"Merge, 2004","Loss, love, forced coming-of-age, and fragile generational hope: Arcade Fires debut touched on all these themes as it defined the independent rock of the 00s. Built on family ties (leader Win Butler, his wife, Régine Chassagne, his brother Will), the Montreal band made symphonic rock that truly rocked, simultaneously outsize and deeply personal, like the best pop. But for all its sad realism, Butlers is music that still finds solace, and purpose, in communal celebration.
"
499,Rufus featuring Chaka Khan,Ask Rufus,"ABC, 1977","Fronted by Chaka Khan, one of soul musics most combustible singers, Rufus built its mid-Seventies sound on heavy-footed, guitar-slathered funk. But after spending 16 months in the studio working on Ask Rufus, they came out with a record that gave their songs more room to breathe, anticipating the lithe, loose arrangements of Nineties neo-soul. Khan glided through the head-nodding “Everlasting Love” and the twisty-turny “Better Days,” and fans appreciated the adjustment: Ask Rufus was the groups first platinum record.
"
@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description
"
490,Linda Ronstadt,Heart Like a Wheel,"Capitol, 1975","Linda Ronstadt completed her transition from California hippie-folk darling to soft-rock queen on her chart-topping fifth album, covering Hank Williams, Buddy Holly, Little Feat, and Kate and Anna McGariggle on the gorgeous title track. Her version of the Betty Everett oldie “Youre No Good” hits a perfect mix of desire and paranoia. Along with being a showcase for Ronstadts peerless versatility, Heart Like a Wheel is Seventies pop-rock craft at its sweetest and sturdiest.
"
489,Phil Spector and Various Artists,Back to Mono (1958-1969),"ABKCO, 1991","When the Righteous Brothers Bobby Hatfield first heard “Youve Lost That Lovin Feelin,” with partner Bill Medleys extended solo, he asked, “But what do I do while hes singing the whole first verse?” Producer Phil Spector replied, “You can go directly to the bank!” Spector built his Wall of Sound out of hand claps, massive overdubs, and orchestras of percussion. This box has hits such as the Ronettes “Be MyBaby” and the Crystals “Da Doo Ron Ron,” which Spector called “little symphonies for the kids.”
489,Phil Spector and Various artists,Back to Mono (19581969),"ABKCO, 1991","When the Righteous Brothers Bobby Hatfield first heard “Youve Lost That Lovin Feelin,” with partner Bill Medleys extended solo, he asked, “But what do I do while hes singing the whole first verse?” Producer Phil Spector replied, “You can go directly to the bank!” Spector built his Wall of Sound out of hand claps, massive overdubs, and orchestras of percussion. This box has hits such as the Ronettes “Be MyBaby” and the Crystals “Da Doo Ron Ron,” which Spector called “little symphonies for the kids.”
"
488,The Stooges,The Stooges,"Elektra, 1969","Fueled by “a little marijuana and a lotta alienation,” Michigans Stooges gave the lie to hippie idealism, playing with a savagery that unsettled even the most blasé clubgoers. Ex-Velvet Underground member John Cale produced a primitive debut wherein, amid Ron Ashetons wah-wah blurts, Iggy Stooge (né James Osterberg) snarled seminal punk classics such as “I Wanna Be Your Dog,” “No Fun,” and “1969,” bedrock examples of the weaponized boredom that would become a de rigueur punk posture.
"
@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description
"
453,Nine Inch Nails,Pretty Hate Machine,"TVT, 1989","“The music I always liked as a kid was stuff I could bum out to and realize, Hey, someone else feels that way, too,'” Trent Reznor said in 1990. “So if someone can do that with my music, its mission accomplished.” Led by the hit “Head Like a Hole,” Nine Inch Nails debut album took bleak Midwestern goth-industrial disco to the rock masses, a move that would shape pop culture just as much as Nirvanas Nevermind did. When Reznor sang, “Grey would be the color if I had a heart,” on “Something I Can Never Have,” millions felt his pain.
"
452,Diana Ross and the Supremes,Anthology,"Tamla/Motown, 1974","In the heyday of Motown, the Supremes were their own hit factory, all glamour and heartbreak. Diana Ross and her girls ruled the radio with tunes from the Motown brain trust of Holland, Dozier, and Holland. The Supremes could blaze with confidence, as in “Come See About Me.” Or they could sound elegantly morose, as in “My World Is Empty Without You” and “Where Did Our Love Go?” But in “Love Is Like an Itching in My Heart,” when Miss Ross gulps, “There aint nothing I can do about it,” its a spine-tingling moment.
452,The Supremes,Anthology,"Tamla/Motown, 1974","In the heyday of Motown, the Supremes were their own hit factory, all glamour and heartbreak. Diana Ross and her girls ruled the radio with tunes from the Motown brain trust of Holland, Dozier, and Holland. The Supremes could blaze with confidence, as in “Come See About Me.” Or they could sound elegantly morose, as in “My World Is Empty Without You” and “Where Did Our Love Go?” But in “Love Is Like an Itching in My Heart,” when Miss Ross gulps, “There aint nothing I can do about it,” its a spine-tingling moment.
"
451,Roberta Flack,First Take,"Atlantic, 1969","At the peak of psychedelic soul music, Roberta Flack debuted with a classy quietude and thoughtful grace, recording with jazz musicians and complex horn and string arrangements. Her record was widely admired, but it didnt become popular until three years later, after her pained version of Ewan MacColls 1950s folk ballad, “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” scored a love scene in Clint Eastwoods movie Play Misty for Me, and the song spent six weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 chart.
"
@ -175,7 +175,7 @@ Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description
"
413,Creedence Clearwater Revival,Cosmo's Factory,"Fantasy, 1970","Cosmos Factory was CCRs third classic album in under a year. John Fogerty began it with the seven-minute power-choogle “Ramble Tamble,” raging against “actors in the White House.” The hits include the country travelogue “Lookin Out My Back Door,” the Vietnam nightmare “Run Through the Jungle,” the Little Richard tribute “Travelin Band,” and the Stax-style ballad “Long as I Can See the Light.” But the triumph is CCRs 11-minute cowbell-crazed jam on “I Heard It Through the Grapevine,” proof these guys could mix hippie visions with populist grit.
"
412,Smokey Robinson and the Miracles,Going to a Go-Go,"Tamla/Motown, 1965","Motown at its most debonair and sexy. Smokey Robinson works his sweeping soul falsetto over unbelievably sad ballads, including “The Tracks of My Tears” and “Ooo Baby Baby,” as the Miracles sob along. Robinson made it seem effortless to write a constant string of hit singles for the Miracles, as well as the rest of the Motown roster, but this album also has some of his finest deep cuts, especially the helpless yearning of “Choosey Beggar.”
412,Smokey Robinson,Going to a Go-Go,"Tamla/Motown, 1965","Motown at its most debonair and sexy. Smokey Robinson works his sweeping soul falsetto over unbelievably sad ballads, including “The Tracks of My Tears” and “Ooo Baby Baby,” as the Miracles sob along. Robinson made it seem effortless to write a constant string of hit singles for the Miracles, as well as the rest of the Motown roster, but this album also has some of his finest deep cuts, especially the helpless yearning of “Choosey Beggar.”
"
411,Bob Dylan,Love and Theft,"Columbia, 2001","The blood and glory of 1997s Time Out of Mind had raised the bar: This was the first Dylan album in years that had to live up to fans expectations. He didnt just exceed them — he blew them up. Dylan sang in the voice of a grizzled drifter whod visited every nook and cranny of America and gotten chased out of them all. Love and Theft was full of corny vaudeville jokes and apocalyptic floods, from the guitar rave “Summer Days” to the country lilt of “Po Boy.”
"
@ -381,7 +381,7 @@ Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description
"
310,Wire,Pink Flag,"Harvest, 1977","This first-generation U.K. punk band made sparse tunes that erupted in combustible snippets on its 21-track debut album. America never got it, but Pink Flag — as revolutionary discs tend to do — influenced some important bands, including Sonic Youth and the Minutemen. It also might be one of the most-covered punk LPs ever: Minor Threat did “12XU,” R.E.M. did “Strange,” the New Bomb Turks did “Mr. Suit,” Spoon did “Lowdown,” the Lemonheads did “Fragile,” and on and on.
"
309,Joy Divison,Closer,"Factory, 1980","One of the most depressing albums ever made, with droning guitars and synthesizers, chilly bass lines, stentorian vocals, and drums that sound as if theyre steadily beating out the rhythm of doom. And thats not even considering the lyrics, which are about singer Ian Curtis failing marriage and how he suffered from epilepsy. (Curtis hanged himself on May 18th, 1980, at the age of 23 — the rest of the band regrouped as New Order.) On Closer, Joy Division fully earned their reputation as Englands most harrowing punk band.
309,Joy Division,Closer,"Factory, 1980","One of the most depressing albums ever made, with droning guitars and synthesizers, chilly bass lines, stentorian vocals, and drums that sound as if theyre steadily beating out the rhythm of doom. And thats not even considering the lyrics, which are about singer Ian Curtis failing marriage and how he suffered from epilepsy. (Curtis hanged himself on May 18th, 1980, at the age of 23 — the rest of the band regrouped as New Order.) On Closer, Joy Division fully earned their reputation as Englands most harrowing punk band.
"
308,Brian Eno,Here Come the Warm Jets,"Island, 1974","The former Roxy Music keyboardists first solo album pioneered a new kind of glammy art rock: jagged, free-form, and dreamy, sounding like nothing else in rock at the time. “Babys on Fire” and “Needles in the Camels Eye” are vicious rockers with detached vocals, and Robert Fripps warped guitars swarm and stutter, while “On Some Faraway Beach” and the title track are glistening slo-mo-drone pastorales. “I called it warm jet guitar because it sounded like a tuned jet,” Eno said later.
"
@ -431,7 +431,7 @@ Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description
"
285,Big Star,Third/Sister Lovers,"PVC, 1978","Big Stars first two albums were crisp power-pop full of bright Sixties melodies. Their third album very much wasnt. The band recorded it, their final LP, in 1974, but it didnt get released until 1978, in part because singer Alex Chilton sounds like hes having a nervous breakdown. Its a record of gorgeous, disjointed heartbreak ballads such as “Take Care,”“Nighttime,” and “Blue Moon.” Even when theyre more optimistic, the songs almost seem to disintegrate as they unfold, finally collapsing into the sublime apocalypse of the album-closing “Kanga Roo.”
"
284,Merle Haggard,Down Every Road 1962-1994,"Capitol, 1996","Haggards tough country sound was born in Bakersfield, California, a.k.a. Nashville West. His songs are full of drifters, fugitives, and rogues, and this four-disc set — culled from his seminal recordings for Capitol as well as MCA and Epic — is the ultimate collection from one of countrys finest singers. Songs like “Mama Tried” and “All My Friends Are Going to Be Strangers” are archetypal statements of lonely tough-guy individualism, and like James Browns Star Time, the quality stays rock solid over four CDs.
284,Merle Haggard,Down Every Road 19621994,"Capitol, 1996","Haggards tough country sound was born in Bakersfield, California, a.k.a. Nashville West. His songs are full of drifters, fugitives, and rogues, and this four-disc set — culled from his seminal recordings for Capitol as well as MCA and Epic — is the ultimate collection from one of countrys finest singers. Songs like “Mama Tried” and “All My Friends Are Going to Be Strangers” are archetypal statements of lonely tough-guy individualism, and like James Browns Star Time, the quality stays rock solid over four CDs.
"
283,Donna Summer,Bad Girls,"Casablanca, 1975","The Boston-born Donna Summer was the Queen of Disco by the end of the Seventies — but she wanted more. With her double-vinyl epic Bad Girls, she set out to conquer every corner of pop music in the name of disco, along with her longtime producers Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte. “Hot Stuff” was her rock anthem, while “Bad Girls” found the sweet spot where the toot-toot meets the beep-beep. The underrated highlight: “Sunset People,” her post-Steely Dan snapshot of L.A. malaise.
"
@ -559,7 +559,7 @@ Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description
"
221,Rage Against the Machine,Rage Against the Machine,"Epic, 1992","“I believe in this bands ability to bridge the gap between entertainment and activism,” declared Zack de la Rocha, whose radical politics found sympathetic muscle in Tom Morellos howling one-guitar army, making a furor unheard since the MC5 and Clash. “Killing in the Name” took on historical racism within U.S. policing, a message that remains sadly prescient, and songs like “Bombtrack” and “Wake Up” were funky fusillades that proved rap rock could change minds as well as roil arena mosh pits.
"
220,"Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young",Déjà Vu,"Epic, 1970","Neil Young was just getting his solo career underway when he joined his old Buffalo Springfield bandmate Stephen Stills, ex-Byrd David Crosby, and former Hollie Graham Nash in the first of the West Coast supergroups. Youngs vision and guitar transformed the earlier folk-rock CSN into a rock & roll powerhouse. The CSNYcombination was too volatile to last, but on their best album, they offered pop idealism (Nashs “Teach Your Children”), militant blues (Crosbys “Almost Cut My Hair”), and vocal-choir gallop (Stills “Carry On”).
220,"Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young",Déjà Vu,"Epic, 1970","Neil Young was just getting his solo career underway when he joined his old Buffalo Springfield bandmate Stephen Stills, ex-Byrd David Crosby, and former Hollie Graham Nash in the first of the West Coast supergroups. Youngs vision and guitar transformed the earlier folk-rock CSN into a rock & roll powerhouse. The CSNYcombination was too volatile to last, but on their best album, they offered pop idealism (Nashs “Teach Your Children”), militant blues (Crosbys “Almost Cut My Hair”), and vocal-choir gallop (Stills “Carry On”).
"
219,Raekwon,Only Built 4 Cuban Linx...,"Loud/RCA, 1995","The finest Wu-Tang solo joint stands out due to Raekwons understated, eternally unflustered cool and densely woven verses. Abetted by hyperactive sideman Ghostface and hypnotically stark beats courtesy of the RZA, Raekwon crafts breathtaking drug-rap narratives. On “Knowledge God,” an Italian drug dealer with a “hairy chest” and “many minks” meets his colorful demise in just six words: “Sixteen shots in his fish tank.” Its the rare hip-hop album that rivals the mob movies it celebrates for gripping detail.
"
@ -577,7 +577,7 @@ Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description
"
212,Nina Simone,Wild Is the Wind,"Philips, 1966","Aretha was the Queen of Soul, but Nina Simone, as one of her album titles proclaimed, was its high priestess, and this 1966 LP is among her most enthralling and eclectic. With her dusky voice at its most commanding, Simone works her way through roadhouse soul (“I Love Your Lovin Ways”) and dramatic set pieces (the melancholic “Lilac Wine,” later covered by Jeff Buckley). It peaks with “Four Women,” an ambitious saga of racially diverse women and their struggles, written by Simone.
"
211,Joy Divison,Unknown Pleasures,"Factory, 1980","Joy Division came from the northern England industrial gloom of Manchester, four blue-collar lads chasing a new kind of goth-punk grandeur. Right from the opening, “Disorder,” Unknown Pleasures sounds like nothing else, with the doomed Ian Curtis yelping his dark poetry (“I got the spirit!”) over Peter Hooks bass pulse. But for all the despair, theres something inspiring in the surge of “Interzone” and “New Dawn Fades.” Black-clad young bands have been imitating Joy Division ever since.
211,Joy Division,Unknown Pleasures,"Factory, 1980","Joy Division came from the northern England industrial gloom of Manchester, four blue-collar lads chasing a new kind of goth-punk grandeur. Right from the opening, “Disorder,” Unknown Pleasures sounds like nothing else, with the doomed Ian Curtis yelping his dark poetry (“I got the spirit!”) over Peter Hooks bass pulse. But for all the despair, theres something inspiring in the surge of “Interzone” and “New Dawn Fades.” Black-clad young bands have been imitating Joy Division ever since.
"
210,Ray Charles,The Birth of Soul,"Atlantic, 1991","Ray Charles was just about the first person to perfect that mix of blues and gospel, holy and filthy, that we know as soul music. He was knocking around Seattle when Atlantic bought out his contract in 1952. For the next eight years, he turned out brilliant singles such as “Whatd I Say” and “I Got a Woman.” This box collects every R&B side he cut for Atlantic, though his swinging take on “My Bonnie”will have you thinking it covers his Atlantic jazz output as well.
"
@ -829,7 +829,7 @@ Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description
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86,The Doors,The Doors,"Elektra, 1967","After blowing minds as the house band at the Whisky-a-Go-Go, where they were fired for playing the Oedipal drama “The End,” the Doors were ready to unleash their organ-driven rock on the world. “On each song, we had tried every possible arrangement,” drummer John Densmore said, “so we felt the whole album was tight.” “Break on Through (To the Other Side),” “Twentieth Century Fox,” and “Crystal Ship” are pop-art lighting for Top 40 attention spans. But the Doors hit pay dirt by editing one of their jam songs for airplay:“Light My Fire,” written by guitarist Robbie Krieger, after Jim Morrison told everybody in the band to write a song with universal imagery.
"
85,John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band,"Apple, 1970","Also known as the “primal scream” album, referring to the painful therapy that gave rise to its songs, Plastic Ono Band was John Lennons first proper solo album and rock & rolls most self-revelatory recording. Lennon attacks and denies idols and icons, including his own former band (“I dont believe in Beatles,” he sings in “God”), to hit a pure, raw core of confession that, in its echo-drenched, garage-rock crudity, is years ahead of punk. He deals with childhood loss in “Mother” and skirts blasphemy in “Working Class Hero”: “Youre still fucking peasants as far as I can see.” But the unkindest cut came in his frank 1970 Rolling Stone interview. “The Beatles was nothing,” Lennon stated acerbically.
85,John Lennon,"John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band","Apple, 1970","Also known as the “primal scream” album, referring to the painful therapy that gave rise to its songs, Plastic Ono Band was John Lennons first proper solo album and rock & rolls most self-revelatory recording. Lennon attacks and denies idols and icons, including his own former band (“I dont believe in Beatles,” he sings in “God”), to hit a pure, raw core of confession that, in its echo-drenched, garage-rock crudity, is years ahead of punk. He deals with childhood loss in “Mother” and skirts blasphemy in “Working Class Hero”: “Youre still fucking peasants as far as I can see.” But the unkindest cut came in his frank 1970 Rolling Stone interview. “The Beatles was nothing,” Lennon stated acerbically.
"
84,AC/DC,Back in Black,"Atlantic, 1980","In the middle of album rehearsals, singer Bon Scott went on a drinking spree; he choked on his vomit and was found dead in the back seat of a car. After two days of mourning, guitarist Malcolm Young thought, “Well, fuck this, Im not gonna sit around mopin all fuckin year.” He called his brother, guitarist Angus Young, and they went back to work with replacement vocalist Brian Johnson. The resulting album has the relentless logic of a sledgehammer. Back in Black remains the purest distillation of hard rock: “Hells Bells,” “You Shook Me All Night Long,” and the title track have all become enduring anthems of strutting blues-based guitar.
"
@ -839,7 +839,7 @@ Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description
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81,Beyoncé,Beyoncé,"Parkwood/Columbia, 2013","“I didnt want to release my music the way Ive done it,” Beyoncé said. “I am bored with that.” So she dropped her self-titled album on an unsuspecting world at the end of 2013, without a word of warning. Her fifth solo album, Beyoncé showed off her musical scope and feminist outreach, but it was also a visual album with a film for each song, shot around the world: New York, Paris, Rio de Janeiro, and of course, her native Houston. She had high-profile collabs: “Superpower” with Frank Ocean, “Mine” with Drake, “Flawless” with Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, “Drunk in Love” with her husband, Jay-Z. But Beyoncé proved that nobody else was on her level.
"
80,The Sex Pistols,"Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols","Warner Bros., 1977","“If the sessions had gone the way I wanted, it would have been unlistenable for most people,” Johnny Rotten said. “I guess its the very nature of music: If you want people to listen, youre going to have to compromise.” But few heard it that way at the time. The Pistols only studio album sounds like a rejection of everything rock & roll — and the world itself — had to offer. True, the music was less shocking than Rotten himself, who sang about abortions, anarchy, and hatred on “Bodies” and “Anarchy in the U.K.” But Never Mind the Bollocks is the Sermon on the Mount of U.K. punk — and its echoes are everywhere.
80,Sex Pistols,"Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols","Warner Bros., 1977","“If the sessions had gone the way I wanted, it would have been unlistenable for most people,” Johnny Rotten said. “I guess its the very nature of music: If you want people to listen, youre going to have to compromise.” But few heard it that way at the time. The Pistols only studio album sounds like a rejection of everything rock & roll — and the world itself — had to offer. True, the music was less shocking than Rotten himself, who sang about abortions, anarchy, and hatred on “Bodies” and “Anarchy in the U.K.” But Never Mind the Bollocks is the Sermon on the Mount of U.K. punk — and its echoes are everywhere.
"
79,Frank Ocean,Blonde,"Boys Dont Cry, 2016","Frank Ocean turned the release of Blond into a daring aesthetic stunt in itself. After years of high expectations after Channel Orange [see No. 148], he fulfilled his Def Jam contract with the visual project Endless, but then — within hours — he released his own Blond. Its a boldly personal statement full of layered harmonies, as Ocean mutates his voice to match every mood. The songs were so nakedly intimate, it felt like a post-hip-hop Pet Sounds in the spirit of Beyoncé (who sings on “Pink + White”) and Elliott Smith (whose voice appears on “Seigfried”). “Ivy” is his most deeply melancholic confession — Ocean mourns a lost love over a distorted guitar, lamenting, “Well never be those kids again.”
"
@ -943,7 +943,7 @@ Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description
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29,The Beatles,The Beatles,"Apple, 1968","They wrote the songs while on retreat with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in India, taking a break from the celebrity grind. As John Lennon later said, “We sat in the mountains eating lousy vegetarian food, and we wrote all these songs.” They came back with more great tunes than they could release. Lennon pursued his hard-edged vision in the cynical wit of “Sexy Sadie” and “Happiness Is a Warm Gun,”as well as the childlike yearning of “Julia” and “Dear Prudence.”Paul McCartneys playful pop energy came through in “Martha My Dear”and his inversion of Chuck Berrys American values, “Back in the U.S.S.R.” George Harrisons spiritual yearning led him to “Long, Long, Long”and “While MyGuitar Gently Weeps,”featuring a guest guitar solo fromEric Clapton. Even Ringo Starr contributes his first original, the country-tinged “Dont Pass Me By.” The Beatles tried a little of everything, and all their adventures paid off.
"
28,DAngelo,Voodoo,"EMI, 2000","In the five years following the release of his 1995 debut, Brown Sugar, DAngelo grew disillusioned with the genre that had just anointed him a rising star. “I dont consider myself an R&B artist,” the then-26-year-old told Jet. “R&B is pop, thats the new word for R&B.” In his quest to create something new, he looked to both the masters of soul (Marvin, Curtis, Stevie) and contemporary innovators (Lauryn, Erykah). The end result was Voodoo, a moving, inventive masterpiece that stands as the ultimate achievement of the neo-soul era. Crafted with producer and drummer Questlove, who called the LP a “vicarious fantasy,” Voodoo places Pink Floyd-style cosmic jams (“Playa Playa”) next to Prince-inspired erotica (“Untitled [How Does It Feel]”). “Im just looking at Voodoo as just the beginning,” DAngelo said at the time. “It took a while, but Im on my way now.”
28,D'Angelo,Voodoo,"EMI, 2000","In the five years following the release of his 1995 debut, Brown Sugar, DAngelo grew disillusioned with the genre that had just anointed him a rising star. “I dont consider myself an R&B artist,” the then-26-year-old told Jet. “R&B is pop, thats the new word for R&B.” In his quest to create something new, he looked to both the masters of soul (Marvin, Curtis, Stevie) and contemporary innovators (Lauryn, Erykah). The end result was Voodoo, a moving, inventive masterpiece that stands as the ultimate achievement of the neo-soul era. Crafted with producer and drummer Questlove, who called the LP a “vicarious fantasy,” Voodoo places Pink Floyd-style cosmic jams (“Playa Playa”) next to Prince-inspired erotica (“Untitled [How Does It Feel]”). “Im just looking at Voodoo as just the beginning,” DAngelo said at the time. “It took a while, but Im on my way now.”
"
27,Wu-Tang Clan,Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers),"Loud, 1993","The first Wu-Tang Clan album launched raps most dominant franchise by inventing a new sound built around a hectic panoply of voices and spare, raw beats. RZA, the groups sonic mastermind, constructed the Wus homemade world, he said, from a mix of “Eastern philosophy picked up from kung-fu movies, watered-down Nation of Islam preaching picked up on the New York streets, and comic books.” On “C.R.E.A.M.,” “Protect Ya Neck,” and the non-metaphorical “Wu-Tang Clan Aint Nuthing ta F Wit,” RZAs offbeat samples (Thelonious Monk, the Dramatics, fellow New Yorker Barbra Streisand) create a grounding for the groups nine members, including future solo stars Ol Dirty Bastard, Raekwon, GZA, Ghostface Killah, and Method Man. Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg had established L.A. as the center of hip-hop innovation and daring, but the Wu reclaimed the crown for the musics birthplace.
"
@ -981,7 +981,7 @@ The album was made in dire straits too. Although the Clash fired singles into t
15,Public Enemy,It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back,"Def Jam, 1988","Loud, obnoxious, funky, avant-garde, political, uncompromising, hilarious Public Enemys brilliant second album is all of these things — all at once. Chuck D booms intricate rhymes with a delivery inspired by sportscaster Marv Albert; sidekick Flavor Flav raps comic relief; and production team the Bomb Squad build mesmerizing, multilayered jams, pierced with shrieking sirens. The title and roiling force of “Bring the Noise” is truth in advertising. “If theyre calling my music noise, ” said Chuck D, “if theyre saying that Im really getting out of character being a black person in America, then fine Im bringing more noise.”
Along with “Bring the Noise,” Nation classics like “Rebel Without a Pause” were conceived at Spectrum City in the band headquarters in Hempstead, New York. For “Rebel,” producer Hank Shocklee of the Bomb Squad looped a piercing sample of James Browns “The Grunt” with Browns “Funky Drummer” (“That song was like my milk,” said Shocklee). To write verses that could match such a sonic assault, Chuck locked himself in his house for 24 hours and emerged with broadsides like the media screed “Dont Believe the Hype.” He wasnt sure of the results until DMC, of Run-DMC, blasted it out of his Bronco on a Saturday night. Says Shocklee, “The whole block was grooving to it.”
"
14,The Rolling Stones,Exile on Main St,"Rolling Stones Records, 1972","A dirty whirl of basement blues and punk boogie, the Rolling Stones 1972 double LP was, according to Keith Richards, “maybe the best thing we did.” Indeed, inside its deliberately dense squall — Richards and Mick Taylors dogfight riffing, the lusty jump of the Bill WymanCharlie Watts rhythm engine, Mick Jaggers caged-animal bark and burned-soul croon — is the Stones greatest album and Jagger and Richards definitive songwriting statement of outlaw pride and dedication to grit and cold-morning redemption.
14,The Rolling Stones,Exile on Main St.,"Rolling Stones Records, 1972","A dirty whirl of basement blues and punk boogie, the Rolling Stones 1972 double LP was, according to Keith Richards, “maybe the best thing we did.” Indeed, inside its deliberately dense squall — Richards and Mick Taylors dogfight riffing, the lusty jump of the Bill WymanCharlie Watts rhythm engine, Mick Jaggers caged-animal bark and burned-soul croon — is the Stones greatest album and Jagger and Richards definitive songwriting statement of outlaw pride and dedication to grit and cold-morning redemption.
In the existential shuffle of “Tumbling Dice,” the ­exhausted country beauty of “Torn and Frayed,” and the whiskey-soaked church of “Shine a Light,” you literally hear the Stones in exile: working at Richards villa in the South of France, on the run from media censure, British drug police (Jagger and Richards had been busted and arrested before), and the U.K.s then-onerous tax code. The music rattles with corrosive abandon but also swings with a clear purpose — unconditional survival — in “Rocks Off” and “All Down the Line.” As Richards explained, “The Stones dont have a home anymore — hence the exile — but they can still keep it together. Whatever people throw at us, we can still duck, improvise, overcome.” Great example: Richards ­recorded his jubilant romp “Happy” with only producer Jimmy Miller on drums and sax man Bobby Keys, while waiting for the other Stones to turn up for work. Exile on Main Street is the band at its fighting best, armed with the blues, playing to win.
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