The best Music album of the past 20 years...

tymeblind

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radiohead's ok computer, as per spin magazine...





http://www.cnn.com/2005/SHOWBIZ/Music/06/20/music.spintop100.ap/index.html


The top album of the last 20 years is ...
Spin magazine puts Radiohead above Nirvana, Public Enemy

Monday, June 20, 2005; Posted: 11:33 a.m. EDT (15:33 GMT)

OK Computer
Radiohead's 1997 album topped Spin's picks.
SPIN'S TOP 10
1. "OK Computer," Radiohead
2. "It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back," Public Enemy
3. "Nevermind," Nirvana
4. "Slanted and Enchanted," Pavement
5. "The Queen Is Dead," Smiths
6. "Surfer Rosa," PIxies
7. "3 Feet High and Rising," De La Soul
8. "Sign 'O' the Times," Prince
9. "Rid of Me," PJ Harvey
10. "Straight Outta Compton," N.W.A


NEW YORK (AP) -- Spin magazine named Radiohead's "OK Computer" the top album of the past 20 years, praising a futuristic sound that manages to feel alive "even when its words are spoken by a robot."

The British band's album edged out Public Enemy's "It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back" and Nirvana's "Nevermind" on a list in Spin's 20th anniversary issue, currently on newsstands.

"Between Thom Yorke's orange-alert worldview and the band's meld of epic guitar rock and electronic glitch, ('OK Computer') not only forecast a decade of music but uncannily predicted our global culture of communal distress," reads the editorial note on what separated the 1997 disc from the other 99 ranked albums.

Sandwiched between Radiohead's straight-ahead rock disc "The Bends" and the more experimental, electronic "Kid A," "OK Computer" was the album that propelled Radiohead to worldwide, stadium-sized popularity. Though it never went higher than No. 21 on the Billboard charts, it won critical raves and a Grammy for best alternative music performance.

Spin's Chuck Klosterman says the album "manages to sound how the future will feel. ... It's a mechanical album that always feels alive, even when its words are spoken by a robot."

Years earlier, Spin ranked Nirvana's "Nevermind" the greatest album of the nineties. In the time since, however, editor-in-chief Sia Michel and others simply found they were reaching for "OK Computer" more than the slightly less relevant "Nevermind."

"Whereas when Nirvana came out, everybody was talking about negation and slackers and everything like that -- seven years later, it was the dot-com boom and 22-year-olds were making $80,000 on Web sites," Michel recently told The Associated Press.

Also in the top 10, in order, are Pavement's "Slanted and Enchanted," The Smiths' "The Queen is Dead," Pixies' "Surfer Rosa," De La Soul's "3 Feet High and Rising," Prince's "Sign 'O' the Times," PJ Harvey's "Rid of Me" and N.W.A's "Straight Outta Compton."

The entire list of 100 is just as eclectic; a photograph of an atypical trio of Dr. Dre, Bono and Beck dons the issue's cover.

The amount of hip-hop on the list may surprise some (25 albums in all -- 26 if you count Rage Against the Machine), given that Spin is predominantly a rock magazine. Michel, however, points out that Spin started several years before hip-hop mag Source was founded: "We put hip-hop on the cover before anyone else did."

"Because we started this list in 1985, we pretty much hit hip-hop in its golden age," she says. "There were so many important, groundbreaking albums coming out right about that time."

After gathering suggestions from everyone at the magazine, a tribunal of Michel and editors Jon Dolan and Charles Aaron sorted out the ultimate records of "the Spin era." Their criteria, Michel says, was the basic brilliance of the record, its innovation and its overall relevance.

"Relevance doesn't have to mean it sold 10 million copies," she says. "Someone like the Pixies never really sold records, but Nirvana has said it wouldn't exist without the Pixies."

Both the approach and content stands in stark contrast to fellow rock magazine Rolling Stone's 2003 issue on the top 500 albums of all time. Topping that collection was the more hallowed (and less surprising) like of the Beatles, the Beach Boys, Bob Dylan and the Rolling Stones.

Some of the most recent entries to Spin's list are 2004's "College Dropout" by Kanye West, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' 2003 "Fever to Tell" and Wilco's 2002 "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot."

Of course, judgments of these kind are always subject to debate.

"The art department was just railing against us all the time and campaigning against things," says Michel. The lack of inclusion of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, she says, pushed them to the brink: "That was a band that the art department was like, 'You guys are crazy! Don't even talk to us!' "
 
tymeblind said:
radiohead's ok computer, as per spin magazine...





http://www.cnn.com/2005/SHOWBIZ/Music/06/20/music.spintop100.ap/index.html


The top album of the last 20 years is ...
Spin magazine puts Radiohead above Nirvana, Public Enemy

Monday, June 20, 2005; Posted: 11:33 a.m. EDT (15:33 GMT)

OK Computer
Radiohead's 1997 album topped Spin's picks.
SPIN'S TOP 10
1. "OK Computer," Radiohead
2. "It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back," Public Enemy
3. "Nevermind," Nirvana
4. "Slanted and Enchanted," Pavement
5. "The Queen Is Dead," Smiths
6. "Surfer Rosa," PIxies
7. "3 Feet High and Rising," De La Soul
8. "Sign 'O' the Times," Prince
9. "Rid of Me," PJ Harvey
10. "Straight Outta Compton," N.W.A


NEW YORK (AP) -- Spin magazine named Radiohead's "OK Computer" the top album of the past 20 years, praising a futuristic sound that manages to feel alive "even when its words are spoken by a robot."

The British band's album edged out Public Enemy's "It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back" and Nirvana's "Nevermind" on a list in Spin's 20th anniversary issue, currently on newsstands.

"Between Thom Yorke's orange-alert worldview and the band's meld of epic guitar rock and electronic glitch, ('OK Computer') not only forecast a decade of music but uncannily predicted our global culture of communal distress," reads the editorial note on what separated the 1997 disc from the other 99 ranked albums.

Sandwiched between Radiohead's straight-ahead rock disc "The Bends" and the more experimental, electronic "Kid A," "OK Computer" was the album that propelled Radiohead to worldwide, stadium-sized popularity. Though it never went higher than No. 21 on the Billboard charts, it won critical raves and a Grammy for best alternative music performance.

Spin's Chuck Klosterman says the album "manages to sound how the future will feel. ... It's a mechanical album that always feels alive, even when its words are spoken by a robot."

Years earlier, Spin ranked Nirvana's "Nevermind" the greatest album of the nineties. In the time since, however, editor-in-chief Sia Michel and others simply found they were reaching for "OK Computer" more than the slightly less relevant "Nevermind."

"Whereas when Nirvana came out, everybody was talking about negation and slackers and everything like that -- seven years later, it was the dot-com boom and 22-year-olds were making $80,000 on Web sites," Michel recently told The Associated Press.

Also in the top 10, in order, are Pavement's "Slanted and Enchanted," The Smiths' "The Queen is Dead," Pixies' "Surfer Rosa," De La Soul's "3 Feet High and Rising," Prince's "Sign 'O' the Times," PJ Harvey's "Rid of Me" and N.W.A's "Straight Outta Compton."

The entire list of 100 is just as eclectic; a photograph of an atypical trio of Dr. Dre, Bono and Beck dons the issue's cover.

The amount of hip-hop on the list may surprise some (25 albums in all -- 26 if you count Rage Against the Machine), given that Spin is predominantly a rock magazine. Michel, however, points out that Spin started several years before hip-hop mag Source was founded: "We put hip-hop on the cover before anyone else did."

"Because we started this list in 1985, we pretty much hit hip-hop in its golden age," she says. "There were so many important, groundbreaking albums coming out right about that time."

After gathering suggestions from everyone at the magazine, a tribunal of Michel and editors Jon Dolan and Charles Aaron sorted out the ultimate records of "the Spin era." Their criteria, Michel says, was the basic brilliance of the record, its innovation and its overall relevance.

"Relevance doesn't have to mean it sold 10 million copies," she says. "Someone like the Pixies never really sold records, but Nirvana has said it wouldn't exist without the Pixies."

Both the approach and content stands in stark contrast to fellow rock magazine Rolling Stone's 2003 issue on the top 500 albums of all time. Topping that collection was the more hallowed (and less surprising) like of the Beatles, the Beach Boys, Bob Dylan and the Rolling Stones.

Some of the most recent entries to Spin's list are 2004's "College Dropout" by Kanye West, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' 2003 "Fever to Tell" and Wilco's 2002 "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot."

Of course, judgments of these kind are always subject to debate.

"The art department was just railing against us all the time and campaigning against things," says Michel. The lack of inclusion of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, she says, pushed them to the brink: "That was a band that the art department was like, 'You guys are crazy! Don't even talk to us!' "



Ahhhhhh
glad I never picked up a copy of Spin
 
Its so hard to create a taxonomy of music. I loved Public Enemy, loathed Morrissey and the Smiths, thanked God Nirvana and Kurt killed Hair Bands, have every Pixies album, and get a kick out of "Straight outa Compton."

What of the Haynes Boys, Jason and the Scorchers, Yo Yo Ma, Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, Lou Reed's "New York is a master work, as is "Magic and Loss." REM should be on the list with Johnny Cash and a million others.

I know its a magazine thing.

Its a load of bollocks, but something to think about.

Nice thread.

"Some Girls" by the Stones is just about 20 years old. My favorite album cover of all time.

:)
 
hell, make that thirty years old...lol

no good at math ya see.

Put the Ramones and X on my list too. I gotta go to a little league game. Guess what CD Im going to listen to in the car. *neener neener*

Winner gets a free piece of Halibut, done just so....and if your nice I wont put it in your Hubcap Tath. :)
 
eagleyez said:
hell, make that thirty years old...lol

no good at math ya see.

Put the Ramones and X on my list too. I gotta go to a little league game. Guess what CD Im going to listen to in the car. *neener neener*

Winner gets a free piece of Halibut, done just so....and if your nice I wont put it in your Hubcap Tath. :)



you'd do it...just for the halibut

thats a New England joke
 
The top album of the last 20 years is ...
Spin magazine puts Radiohead above Nirvana, Public Enemy

Monday, June 20, 2005; Posted: 11:33 a.m. EDT (15:33 GMT)

OK Computer
Radiohead's 1997 album topped Spin's picks.
SPIN'S TOP 10
1. "OK Computer," Radiohead
2. "It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back," Public Enemy
3. "Nevermind," Nirvana
4. "Slanted and Enchanted," Pavement
5. "The Queen Is Dead," Smiths
6. "Surfer Rosa," PIxies
7. "3 Feet High and Rising," De La Soul
8. "Sign 'O' the Times," Prince
9. "Rid of Me," PJ Harvey
10. "Straight Outta Compton," N.W.A

Well not a bad varied list of bands, but I'm not sure about putting Radiohead above the rest.
Of course this is only one magazine's opinion. I'd like to see what some of the other magazines' list would be and compare.
 
I just don't get the Radiohead cult. It's damned ner as fervent as the cults of "The Mars Volta" or "Yo La Tengo" but way more numerous.

It's as if someone created a specia breed of fanboy from leftover Backstreet Boys fans, scruffed them up, and filled them with extra angst.
 
JazzManJim said:
I just don't get the Radiohead cult. It's damned ner as fervent as the cults of "The Mars Volta" or "Yo La Tengo" but way more numerous.
Hey, At The Drive In put out some near-classic shit before imploding and becoming the more pompous Mars Volta.

Yo La Tengo has as solid a body of work as any band in the last coupla decades.

Radiohead is stunningly overrated. The Bends is a wonderful song-cycle about life in 1995. OK Computer is damned good if overmediacized. The rest of their work is crap.

***

Rid of Me by PJ is an album nobody seems to mention but is easily one of the most crucial of that time.

No list is complete without Slint's Spiderland, some Sleater-Kinney, MBV's Loveless, Sharrock's Ask The Ages, and a host of others.

The worst thing about Spin's list is the mussiness of the criteria. They mention relevance and a bunch of other terms but call it the best albums. Apples and Oranges.
 
modest mouse said:
Hey, At The Drive In put out some near-classic shit before imploding and becoming the more pompous Mars Volta.

Yo La Tengo has as solid a body of work as any band in the last coupla decades.

Radiohead is stunningly overrated. The Bends is a wonderful song-cycle about life in 1995. OK Computer is damned good if overmediacized. The rest of their work is crap.

Pomposity and hype will drive me away from a band as quickly as crap musicianship, which is one of the reasons I reflexively heave at the very thought of The Stripes.

Yo La Tengo is certainly prolific, but I just odn't get their music - and I'm a guy who gets 16-part choral works.
 
i love radiohead and i think OK computer deserves to be up there in that list ... sure its easy to argue against it being there but music is subjective ... and even with my bias view i think the magazine presents a good case for OK computer

nice to see a magazine do an interesting list
 
The Pogues
Rum, Sodomy And The Lash (1985)

Run-D.M.C.
King of Rock (1985)

The Joshua Tree - U2 -1987

Graceland - Paul Simon - 1986

Just a few albums that had a huge impact on the music that followed
 
PJ Harvey's To Bring You My Love is much MUCH better than Rid of Me - but I'm grateful that 'they' (and I use this term loosely) at least acknowledged her, regardless.

I'm gonna dip back 5 yrs. and say that AC/DC's Back in Black is the best all-around album that even a martian from planet XYZ would enjoy.
 
big jon said:
YES, incredible band.
s.c.i.e.n.c.e is my all time fav album, original,catchy,genre busting and amazing live. :D
I've never actually seen them live, but I've got the Live at Red Rock and Live at Lollapalooza. And Brandon Boyd is really hot.
 
LeahLo519 said:
I've never actually seen them live, but I've got the Live at Red Rock and Live at Lollapalooza. And Brandon Boyd is really hot.

Tusk I dont know, are you women only interested in one thing.lol :)
 
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