Letâs face it: With most âBest Albumsâ lists, you know the broad strokes of the ranking before you even click.
Part of that predictability is understandable: Most iconic records earn their reputation. But these rankings shouldnât be fossilized, and a shit-ton of amazing LPs have been shoved aside in the pursuit of maintaining the status quo.
We didnât ignore the unimpeachable on our list â youâll see plenty of the staples youâve come to expect. But we also hope weâll spark your curiosity and encourage you to hunt for a title you may have missed over the last 35 years.
35. Bruce Springsteen â Tunnel of Love (1987)
How does one follow up a rock album that recalibrates stadium sound systems and offers a stark look at hard times in America? With love songs, of course. Such a boss move by the Boss. Tunnel of Love â released three years after Born in the U.S.A. (and two years after getting married) â is more pop than rock, but it still hinges on the harshness of Springsteenâs classic rasp. He sings about the emotional roller coaster from being in love to figuring out how to find it. In the title track, he makes you second-guess if going through the tunnel of love is a drive worth taking. Even the cover art is a change from Springsteenâs rugged persona: He trades in his worn-in blue jeans and back-pocket red hat for a black suit and bolo tie. Love, itâs powerful. – Jason Stahl
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34. The Mars Volta â De-Loused in the Comatorium (2003)Â
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The true progressive rock of the post-classic era usually raises an eyebrow or pisses someone off â like guitarist-composer Omar RodrĂguez-LĂłpez and singer Cedric Bixler-Zavala accomplished with their head trip debut LP, De-Loused in the Comatorium, a twisted concept album more of feeling than linear story. The duo maintained the surrealist snarl of their previous post-hardcore act, At the Drive-In, while weaving in feral psychedelia, Latin groove and Zappa-like virtuosity. Itâs the purest prog imaginable â no record before or since has sounded quite like it. – Ryan Reed
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33. Sigur Ros â ĂgĂŚtis byrjun (1999)Â
Icelandâs Sigur RĂłs made a seismic shift with ĂgĂŚtis byrjun, evolving from the disjointed ambience of 1997âs Von into a fluid, grandiose collision of dream-pop (âSvefn-g-englarâ), orchestral balladry (âStarĂĄlfurâ) and twinkly post-rock (âOlsen Olsen,â the one full track here sung in a phonetic gibberish widely known as âHopelandic.â) – R.R.
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32. Guns Nâ Roses â Appetite for Destruction (1987)Â
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Guns Nâ Rosesâ deliciously grimy debut LP oozes hits like pus from a wound â and it sort of feels like an oozing wound, in the best way possible. Axl Roseâs nasal hooks are melodically infectious, but they also feel like they could infect you with a disease. Appetite for Destruction is one of the best-selling albums of all-time for a reason: The wicked riffs of âWelcome to the Jungleâ and âSweet Child oâ Mineâ were built to demolish arenas, and they still get the goddamn job done. – R.R.
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31. k.d. lang â IngĂŠnue (1992)Â
After chasing the spirit of classic country on her early albums, k.d. lang leaned into her artful side with the impressionistic IngĂŠnue. Largely co-written with her longtime collaborator Ben Mink, the collection ambles into cabaret grace, using an array of lap-steel guitars, tuned percussion, strings, keyboards and accordions. Those expanded arrangements reframe her voice, which gleams like pure sunlight on the blissful âSave Meâ and âConstant Craving.â
– R.R.
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30. The Waterboys â This Is the Sea (1985)
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For a while it seemed like the Irish folk rock group the Waterboys floated above all other bands. Iâm not saying they were better than everyone else â they were better than most â but they somehow were less bound by gravity. Their sound was ethereal but still solid, they werenât the Cocteau Twins for instance. This was their third album and band leader Mike Scott, then in his 20s, said it was the culmination of everything he wanted to achieve as a young musician. He wrote the anthemic and enduring âWhole of the Moonâ to impress his then girlfriend, who asked him if songwriting was easy. âYes it is!â he exclaimed, and, showing off, wrote the immortal lyric âI saw the crescent, you saw the whole of the moonâ on the spot.
I think itâs one of the great songs of all time, and itâs not even the best song on the album â âThis is the Seaâ is even more stirring and beautiful and lifts you, weightless, into the sky with its simple guitar strum, string and wind instruments, and lyrics that must have sat Dylan down for a bit:
These things you keep,
Youâd better throw them away.
You wanna turn your back
On your soulless days.
Once you were tethered
And now you are free.
Once you were tethered
Well now you are free.
That was the river,
This is the sea!
– Bob Guccione, Jr.
29. Kendrick Lamar â To Pimp a Butterfly (2015)
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Kendrick Lamar wove together timely social commentary with his acclaimed third LP, exploring subjects like institutional racism and police brutality. He created a topical tapestry with a poem that traipses through all 16 songs, ending with the revelation that heâd read the words to late rap legend 2Pac, for whom the project was originally named. But the record â which earned 11 Grammy nominations in 2016, winning Best Rap Album â was also thrilling on a sonic level, with Lamar injecting jazz, spoken-word and vintage funk into his malleable sound. – Mary Elisabeth Gibson
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28. Jeff Buckley â Grace (1994)Â
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We should all be outraged that generic dramedies and police procedurals have turned Jeff Buckleyâs godly rendition of âHallelujahâ into a soundtrack clichĂŠ. Luckily, that famed Leonard Cohen cover is only one-tenth the brilliance of Grace, the songwriterâs lone studio album. For one, people tend to forget that Buckley, a famed Led Zeppelin fan, liked to get loud: âEternal Lifeâ conjures that band if they lingered into the era of grunge and funk-metal. But his delicacy was equally devastating: Itâs hard to believe a flesh-and-blood human being created the high falsetto that closes âCorpus Christi Carol,â a finger-strummed cover of that traditional hymn. – R.R.
27. Arcade Fire â Funeral (2004)Â
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The first cut has it all: the raw nerve emotion in Win Butlerâs vocal and lyric, the tasteful grandiosity in the arrangement. âNeighborhood #1 (Tunnels)â opens with a chiming piano and palm-muted slow-burn guitar before a ramshackle disco beat breaks the whole thing open â and so we go, dizzy from the glorious twists and turns. Just like Alexander, the âolder brotherâ mentioned in âNeighborhood #2 (LaĂŻka),â we âset off for a great adventure.â Arcade Fire grew even more ambitious after their debut, but all the magic and wonder of their music was there from the start. – R.R.
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26. R.E.M. â Automatic for the People (1992)Â
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Athensâ finest leapt into the cinematic with their eighth record, a mostly mid-tempo meditation on melancholy themes. Sure, tracks like the motormouthed âThe Sidewinder Sleeps Toniteâ and cowbell-pulsed âIgnorelandâ are nominally rock. But Automatic for the People feels most alive in its somber acoustic spaces, like the piano ballad âNightswimmingâ and folky waltz âTry Not to Breathe.â Sadness rarely sounds so comforting. – R.R.
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25. Modest Mouse â The Moon & Antarctica (2000)Â
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Modest Mouse signed to a major label, Epic, for their third LP. But instead of aiming for radio, the trio targeted outer space: The Moon & Antarctica is their psychedelic epic, the indie-rock Dark Side of the Moon â pairing Isaac Brockâs philosophical musings with layered electric guitars that seems to contain the universe. â R.R.
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24. OutKast â Stankonia (2000)Â
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OutKast demolished any sense of genre boundary on their maximalist fourth LP, mingling Dirty South rhymes with smooth R&B-funk choruses (âMs. Jackson,â âSo Fresh, So Cleanâ) and euphoric beat-psychedelia. Working primarily with co-writer/co-producer David Sheets (Mr. DJ), Big Boi and AndrĂŠ 3000 exponentially amplified the yin-yang balance they achieved on 1998âs Aquemini: âB.O.B.â is the pinnacle, contrasting the formerâs effortless cool with the latterâs hyper freakiness. – R.R.
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23. Enya â Watermark (1987)Â
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The Irish singerâs second LP was an unexpected U.K. and U.S. hit, anchored by the wave-swept regality of âOrinoco Flowâ â the catchiest song ever associated (accurately or not) with the New Age genre. But with Enyaâs lavishly overdubbed voices and atmospheric keys, Watermark is much more than that famous âSail Awayâ chorus. – R.R.
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22. Sufjan Stevens â Illinois (2005)Â
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Sufjan Stevens once (perhaps facetiously) pledged to record an album inspired by the characters and landmarks of all 50 U.S. states. He only recorded two, and he really only needed one: Illinois is a serpentine symphony of heartbreaking folk balladry (âJohn Wayne Gary, Jr.â), carnivalesque prog-pop (âCome On! Feel the Illinoise!â) and orchestral ambience â a nation of ideas unto itself. â R.R.
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21. Eminem â The Marshall Mathers LP (2000)
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âMay I have your attention, please? Will the real Slim Shady please stand up?â Eminemâs darker alter-ego certainly did on his second album, which amplified the âhorrorcoreâ shock value of his 1999 debut. The Marshall Mathers LP drew controversy for lyrics widely deemed misogynistic and homophobic. But Eminem charmed hip-hop fans with his rapid-fire rhythmic prowess, topping the Billboard 200 and winning a Grammy for Best Rap Album. Juxtaposing the vivid with the unsettling helps make The Marshall Mathers LP one of the greatest albums of all time. – M.G.
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20. John Mellencamp â The Lonesome Jubilee (1987)
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This was Mellencampâs ninth record, the one following his breakout success Scarecrow, and the first under his real name â without fanfare he finally exorcised the âCougarâ that had karmically been a drag on his career up until this point. And that uncoupling was appropriate because this record was a revelation â a departure from not only his sound, but any rock ân roll record at the time. It was fresh and exciting and gave as much a sense of a place as anything Springsteen achieved.
The sound was created by merging conventional rock with Appalachian string instruments, which Indiana-moored Mellencamp grew up on and appreciated for their melancholy and exuberance, like the hammered dulcimer, steel guitar, banjo and accordion, plus the gorgeous violin playing of Lisa Germano, who made the instrumentâs sound spiral into the sky like a Roman Candle. The songs were narratives of small town reality, of him getting his ass kicked for stepping out of line on âCherry Bomb,â and one day suddenly realizing youâve grown up:
17 has turned 35
Iâm surprised that weâre still livinâ
If weâve done any wrong
I hope that weâre forgiven
âPaper in Fireâ, the albumâs first single and a big hit for him, was partly inspired by the Bible (âFor a foolâs compliment is as quickly gone as paper in fire, and it is silly to be impressed by it,â from Ecclesiastes, since you asked) and partly by the Steve McQueen movie Hud, where the lyric âwe keep no check on our appetitesâ comes from. The Bible and a Steve McQueen movie as muses â that neatly sums up the wide peripheral musical vision of John Mellencamp. âRooty Toot Tootâ was a nursery rhyme he made up for his daughter, which one of his musicians suggested might make an uplifting song. And it did. â BGJ
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19 Â Radiohead â Kid A (2000)Â
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Iâll never forget my first listen of Kid A â mostly because it felt like mourning. After driving 30 minutes to buy the CD from Sam Goody, I unwrapped the plastic and plopped the disc into the car stereo â only to hear a fuzzy electric piano, thumping digital kick and Thom Yorkeâs squashed, disorienting voice. âWhat the fuck is this?â I asked myself, expecting the triple-guitar sprawl of their previous LP, OK Computer. By the time I reached my driveway, Iâd hurled the case on the backseat in disgust. By the end of the night, I was converted. Radioheadâs fourth record is electronic, sure: the title-trackâs digital pulse, the crackling programmed insanity of âIdioteque.â But itâs also more adventurous than the billing implies, drawing on krautrock, jazz and eerie orchestration. It challenged Radiohead fans â and Radiohead themselves â as it kicked open doors we all assumed would stay shut. – R.R.
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18. Pearl Jam â Vs. (1993)Â
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Pearl Jamâs grunge credentials were mostly superficial: the flannel, Seattle, the Singles soundtrack. And they proved it on Vs., the weirder, edgier sequel to their blockbuster debut, Ten. The bandâs classic rock guitars still roar on anthems like âDissidentâ and âRearviewmirror,â but the recordâs DNA lies in the experiments and detours: the creepy funk of âRats,â the manic punk twang of âGlorified G,â the folk serenity of âElderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town.â â R.R.
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17. Peter Gabriel â So (1986)
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Peter Gabriel dabbled in radio-friendly fare in his pre-So days â from the fairytale-like zest of Genesisâ âI Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)â to the mechanical Fairlight synth rush of âShock the Monkey.â But he leaned into a chorus-first approach on his fifth LP, embracing starry-eyed duet ballads (âDonât Give Up,â with an angelic Kate Bush), horn-propelled Stax soul (âSledgehammerâ) and worldbeat uplift (âIn Your Eyesâ). â R.R.
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16. N.W.A â Straight Outta Compton (1988)Â
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âYou are now about to witness the strength of street knowledge.â The famous, often imitated warning that opens N.W.A.âs Straight Outta Compton was well-earned. The following hour of music startled a national audience, put the budding subgenre of gangsta rap on the cultural map and established a new bastion of hip-hop on Americaâs West Coast. Over the driving samples curated by Dr. Dre, DJ Yella, and Arabian Prince, the tracks are swarmed by the groupâs three emcees: the booming Ice-Cube, the clever MC Ren and leader Eazy-E, whose gun peers down at you on the albumâs cover. Their world is the streets of Compton, and every verse is another hustle, another fight picked at a party, another slew of insults and bullets, another boast to a world that had previously ignored them. Itâs poetic justice that the albumâs first two songs shocked the group into the public eye: The title track is a perfect series of introductions, establishing each memberâs signature timbre, flow and attitude. âFuck tha Policeâ turned this audacity towards the conversation of state violence, and itâs remained an anthem ever since. With Straight Outta Compton, N.W.A. set new standards for rap music and changed the genreâs geography in the process, solidifying their cityâs legacy alongside their own. â Tomas Miriti Pacheco
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15. Kate Bush â Hounds of Love (1985)Â
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If Kate Bushâs early albums are enchanted fairy tales, Hounds of Love is a refined fantasy novel. Over seven years removed from her pirouetting breakout single âWuthering Heights,â she blossomed here into her eraâs definitive art-pop artist â flaunting sturdier melodies; more accessible, Fairlight-fueled arrangements and a voice deepened in both physical and emotional range. The recordâs unconventional split structure is part of its splendor: The first half bundles all the hooks: the glassy synth climb of âRunning Up That Hill (A Deal With Godâ), the euphoric surge of âCloudbustingâ; the second simmers into an atmospheric concept suite called The Ninth Wave. Hounds of Love perfectly illuminates both of these creative poles: the songwriter and the sorceress. â R.R.
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14. Tracy Chapman â Tracy Chapman (1988)Â
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Itâs not quite right to say no one had heard anything like Tracy Chapman before, when in 1988 she ignited like an exploding sun on the horizon of alternative musicâs cresting and our parentsâ rock music setting. In the â70s there had been the exquisite and punishing Joan Armatrading, another Black songstress and aching social conscience. Society wasnât ready to permanently embrace Armatradingâs raw, penetrating lyrics and pain-communicating voice and make her a lasting superstar. But a little over 10 years later, Tracy Chapman did get universal recognition and vast commercial success â although she too, surprisingly, more or less disappeared from public view, dissolving over time into the background despite releasing albums until 2008.
Her self-titled, edgy debut album, which sold an astonishing 20 million records â astonishing for a folk album, edgy or not â produced two of the best songs of the last several decades, âFast Carâ and âTalkinâ âbout a Revolution.â Reviews were mostly positive although a couple took issue with the worn leftist trail of talking about a revolution. Except, 32 years later, arenât we still? â BGJ
13. Soundgarden â Superunknown (1994)Â
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Everything before Superunknown was a warm-up. On their fourth LP, Chris Cornell and crew built upon their ultra-heavy sound by getting darker, catchier and more psychedelic: The Grammy-adorned âBlack Hole Sunâ is structurally closer to McCartney than Mudhoney; âMy Waveâ is a mutating, detuned monster set largely in 5/4, with perhaps the gnarliest wah-wah bass sound ever recorded; and âSpoonmanâ is somehow the most obvious single on the album, even as it shifts through time signatures with prog-like glee and weaves in a legit spoon solo. – R.R.
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12. Dr. Dre â The Chronic (1992)
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Dr. Dre changed hip-hop forever with The Chronic, his first post-N.W.A. solo project, making Death Row Records one of the most influential labels in the industry. It set a benchmark for all future rap albums â though few compare. Lead single âNuthinâ But a âGâ Thangâ introduced the LPâs smooth style, perfect for cruising with the top down or enjoying a piece of that âfunky stuff.â The album is filled with marijuana references, making euphemisms like âchronicâ part of the rap lexicon. (You know you wanted to be a contestant on the $20 Sack Pyramid.) It also introduced the world to artists like the Lady of Rage, Warren G., Nate Dogg and a little-known emcee from Long Beach named Snoop Doggy Dogg. In 2020, The Chronic was selected to be preserved at The Library Of Congress because of its âcultural, historical and aesthetic importanceâ â making it only the sixth rap album added to the registry. No matter how many times you listen to The Chronic, you realize youâve still never been on another âride like this before.â â J.S.
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11. Metallica â Metallica (1991)Â
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Metallicaâs fourth LP, âŚAnd Justice for All, developed their formative thrash metal into a more progressive style, flaunting complex arrangements and track lengths that occasionally swelled to around the 10-minute mark. But the quartet realized theyâd perfected their own progginess and wisely scaled back for their multi-platinum sequel, best known as âThe Black Album.â Working with producer Bob Rock, whoâd recently helmed MĂśtley CrĂźeâs blockbuster Dr. Feelgood, Metallica labored through rigorous sessions and wound up with tighter, catchier songs that didnât sacrifice a scrap of heaviness. âThe Unforgivenâ is the ultimate metal ballad, with James Hetfield alternating his signature growl with the sweetest vocals of his career; the similarly tender âNothing Else Mattersâ wraps its clean guitars and harmonies around an unobtrusive string arrangement. And the horns-up hits â âEnter Sandman,â âSad but True,â âWherever I May Roamâ â are forever embedded in the metal canon. – R.R.
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10. Le Mystère des Voix Bulgares (1987)Â
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Translated as The Mystery of Bulgarian Voices, sung by the Bulgarian State Television Female Vocal Choir, this album â launched in America in 1987 by perennially interesting label Nonesuch â had actually been first released, to almost no fanfare and very little notice, in 1975 in Europe. It mutated into a cult recording, with a several-generations-removed-from-the-original cassette eventually landing in Bauhaus singer Peter Murphyâs lap. Entranced, he took them to a British label friend, Ivo Watts-Russel, who tracked down the Swiss musicologist who had first compiled the tracks, by both recording the singers himself and taking existing songs from the archives of Radio Sofia, and licensed them.
It was an unexpected sensation in America. The album is mostly acapella and the singing is exceptionally, mystifyingly accomplished. This was no novelty record. This wasnât William Shatner sings the Rolling Stones or anything like that â musicians from Jerry Garcia and David Bowie to Linda Ronstadt and Kate Bush were besotted with it, and echoed sentiments like Graham Nashâs âevery musician⌠should rethink everything he knows about singing.â Astonished converts insisted their friends listen to the ethereal and moving collection of 13 traditional Bulgarian folk songs somewhat jazzed up â but not too much â by the all-women TV ensemble. Each of us in turn proselytized to someone else, enchanted and insistent. â BGJ
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9. Tori Amos â Little Earthquakes (1992)Â
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Itâs tough to imagine the musical world before Little Earthquakes, or before Tori Amos, for that matter. Though not her first album, and after an essential lifetime of playing professionally, it was Little Earthquakeswith its furiously stunning piano playing, a singing voice embodying all of the great goddesses of mythology, and lyrics that cut through every womanâs soulâthe combination came just in time. The result is an album that some will claim have actually saved their life. The chorus for its first single âMe and a GunââIt was me/And a gun/And a man/On my backâisnât the stuff of the predicable Top 40 necessarily, but itâs infinitely much more important and impactful. It set the tone for Toriâs career of speaking for every woman who didnât have a voice of her own. Though the album peaked at No. 58 on Billboard, all we have to say isâforget the charts. From its opening track âCrucifyâ through âSilent All These Years,â âWinterâ and âChina,â Tori launched a musical crusade to speak for the Everywoman. And with Little Earthquakes she was just getting started. â Liza Lentini
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8. Madonna â Like a Prayer (1989)Â
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Stop what youâre doing right now and give thanks and praise to Madonna. Yeah, yeah, you might think her cross-dressing, crotch-grabbing, pointy-bra act is old hat now, but her willingness â and perhaps, desire â to shock and get banned is what made us want more. Importantly, for the landscape of women in music, she lit a blowtorch and poured taboo-based gasoline on restrictions for women in music. And she lit that baby up. Just mere months after ultra-conservative Ronald Reagan passed the Presidential Republican torch to George H. W. Bush, Madonna released her fourth album, Like a Prayer. Its first single, the title track, continued her long-standing blond ambition of pissing off the Catholic Church, its video banned by just about everyone with the short-standing power to do so. Follow-up single âExpress Yourselfâ became an eternal anthem for women everywhere. The sweet sound of âCherishâ came after that, proving that if thereâs one thing you can count on with Madonna, itâs unpredictability. Like a Prayer hit No. 1 in most countries, including the U.S. It was dedicated to Madonnaâs mother, who passed when Madonna was a little girl. â L.L.
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7. U2 â The Joshua Tree (1987)Â
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By 1987, U2 had already stampeded into the U.S., evolved from the wide-eyed post-punks of Boy to the political rebels of War and become rock radio mainstays with âPride (In the Name of Love).â But they had an even bigger, grander vision with The Joshua Tree: Fascinated with the concept of America (in particular the concept versus reality, hence the albumâs working title The Two Americas), Bono, The Edge, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen, Jr. teamed with producers Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois to capture a cinematic snapshot the country. Writing staples like âWhere the Streets Have No Name,â the gospel-tinged âI Still Havenât Found What Iâm Looking Forâ and âWith or Without You,â U2 werenât just setting out to conquer America, but also the world. Impressively, Bono managed to tackle a mining strike, heroin, Central American conflict and biblical references in one project. And he did so on a career-defining album that remains one of the best in rock history. â Daniel Kohn
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6. Nirvana â Nevermind (1991)Â
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As grunge emerged in the Pacific Northwest, one momentous album brought it to the world. Nirvana became a regional favorite with 1989âs Bleach, touring on the strength of that cunning LP. But when Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic joined forces with their fifth drummer, Dave Grohl, that potential bloomed into a pinnacle of music history. Hunkering down at Sound City with producer Butch Vig, the trio recorded 1991âs Nevermind, one of the most vital works of the past 30 years. Balancing fury and sensitivity, vulnerability and disenchantment, the trio jump from the distorted anarchy of âSmells Like Teen Spiritâ to the dreamy desolation of âSomething in the Way.â They tackle heavy themes: religion and suicide (âLithiumâ), disgust with rape culture (âPollyâ). But despite its darkness, Nevermind is deeply melodic â few, if any, have made feeling bad sound so good. â D.K.
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5. Public Enemy â It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back (1988)
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Public Enemy were at their most explosive on It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back. The combo of Chuck Dâs thundering poetics and Flava Flavâs unchecked adlibs over DJ Terminator Xâs wild scratching lifts you into a new state of mind. This is their mission after all: Songs like âBring the Noiseâ and âRebel Without a Pauseâ open with the voices of Malcolm X and Jesse Jackson, before the sampling cuts out and another wave of blaring, horn-backed lessons crashes in. âNight of the Living Baseheadsâ is a masterclass of metaphor, and âChannel Zeroâ makes a brain-rotting conspiracy out of network television. Through all these truth-bombs, It Takes A Nation finds its greatest strength in its own self-awareness: As a sophomore album, it saw the potential in the groupâs debut, Yo! Bum Rush The Show and knew the only thing to do was turn up the volume. â T.M.P.
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4. Sinead OâConnor â The Lion and the Cobra (1987)
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This album, as the cliche invariably goes, came out of nowhere â at least in America no one had ever heard of Sinead OâConnor before this unique, first record filtered into our consciousness. It was certainly not on trend â it wasnât rock, and it wasnât âalternative.â It was sort of Irish folk-pop, made by Irish musicians, sonically mining their Celtic heritage, led by an Irish singer the likes of which no one had ever heard before, and no one has equaled since. Sineadâs voice was incredibly powerful and had the range of a ballistic missile. The emotionality in her singing was literally breathtaking â you didnât breathe listening to some of her lines, as if your breath would interfere with her delivery. âTroy,â her first single from the album, rises and falls like the arc of a Greek tragedy, and the way she sings the lines âThere is no other Troy /For you to burnnnâ swooshes into your chest and mind and stays there.
Every track on the record is astounding, but âTroy,â an anguished song about her mother, is one of the most beautiful and saddening ever written. From any era. âDrink Before the Warâ is captivating and seductive. âMandinka,â her second single, and âI Want Your (Hands on Me)â are famous as a hit (the former), and, the latter, as a track in the movie Nightmare on Elm Street 4. âJackie,â the first cut on the album, is a haunting love song of unrelenting loss (I presume, unless she really did know someone who sailed the seas for a hundred years); it alone could have made Sinead a star. In the era of MTV and mass radio station programming, there wasnât one iota of commercial consideration in the making of this record. It was just pure, sincere, magnificent music â and for all the troubles Sinead has endured in her life and career since, nothing can take that away. â BGJ
3. Smashing Pumpkins â Siamese Dream (1993)
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After the death of Rush drummer-lyricist Neil Peart, Billy Corgan wrote on Instagram, âHis influence on the Smashing Pumpkins is inedible: giving us wings to soar with and a road map to ultimately find our own way.â For whatever reason â maybe Corganâs abrasive vocal style, maybe the distortion â people have never really recognized that influence. But Siamese Dream is the greatest prog-rock album of its generation: meticulously layered, full of dramatic shifts in tone and texture, flaunting chops as fitting for a conservatory as an alt-rock club. Jimmy Chamberlinâs jazz flair and finesse propels the heaviest and spaciest sections alike (both encapsulated on the epic âGeek U.S.A.â), and Corgan could flip effortlessly between guitar hero and hook-writer (âMayonnaise,â âTodayâ) â usually in the same song. â R.R.
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2. Prince â Sign oâ the Times (1987)Â
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Sign oâ the Times opens with its unnerving title track, an incriminating list of social ills â drug addiction, the AIDS epidemic, the Challenger explosion â that Prince pulls from the world around him. Sharply relevant upon its 1987 release, Princeâs heartfelt cries of âoh, why?â echo just as loud through the great uncertainty of 2020. However, the album was not only a testament to a moment in history, but also a phenomenon in and of itself. Princeâs original vision for the project was massive: a triple-album that Warner BroS. forced him to reduce to 16 tracks â an omen of a rift soon to form. Despite the drama, Sign oâ the Times was an astounding feat: Leaping between pop and rock, between funky grooves and high-flying soul, he crafted classics like âAdoreâ and âThe Ballad of Dorothy Parker.â Even the albumâs remastered reissue is revelatory, filled with previously unheard songs from his Vault â allowing us to peer further into Princeâs original concept, and then outward, with lessons for a turbulent world. â T.M.P.
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1. Radiohead â OK Computer (1997)Â
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Kid A is the most innovative Radiohead album, their most startling technical achievement. But Thom Yorkeâs songwriting reaches an impossible-to-duplicate pinnacle on OK Computer, blooming far beyond the triple-guitar alt-rock of The Bends. The frontmanâs angst and paranoia form a thematic glue, a perfect companion for the unnerving soundscapes of âClimbing Up the Walls,â frazzled ballad beauty of âKarma Policeâ and volatile art-rock suite âParanoid Android.â But through the darkness and complexity, these are also Radioheadâs most melodically satisfying songs: âLet Downâ is a legitimate tear-jerker, climaxing with a tangle of clean electric guitars and one of the most perfect falsettos ever recorded. The twinkling âNo Surprisesâ is like the Beach Boysâ âWouldnât It Be Niceâ after a psychedelic sedative. OK Computer inspired dozens of copycats â some bands based their entire careers on single choruses. None of them even flirted with this level of majesty. – R.R.