OT: Lazy Sunday - Favorite Album of all Time

Submitted by Nieme08 on

Yet another "favorite (insert whatever)" discussion I thought could be interesting and maybe enlightening to the music fans we have around here.  What is your favorite album of all time?  I have to say "Dark Side of the Moon" by Pink Floyd.  I can't say that any individual song is among my top 10 or 20 but the album as a whole is a masterpiece. The organization of the album is perfect. It flows so well it sounds like one 50 minute song. Fantastic. "The White Album" by The Beatles is another great one. What does everyone think?

E.L. blue fan

May 9th, 2010 at 7:03 PM ^

by Soundgarden is my all time favorite. Nirvana, Guns and Roses, and Pearl Jam are the most talked about bands from that period and they were all great but Superunknown by Soundgarden was just so good.  

MGoAndy

May 9th, 2010 at 7:23 PM ^

White Blood Cells - The White Stripes

Is This Is - The Strokes

Silent Alarm - Bloc Party

Wide Open

May 10th, 2010 at 8:30 AM ^

Touchdown USA does feature the greatest band and greatest song in the universe on it, but it has tOSU's fight song on it too.

It's like Metallica's version of "Turn the Page". You don't know whether to sit back and enjoy, or hurtle yourself off the nearest cliff.

maineandblue

May 9th, 2010 at 8:00 PM ^

Let's go with top 10, pretty much tied for number 1:

 

1. John Hartford: Steam Powered Aereoplane (not to be confused w/ Aeroplane over the Sea, which is in my top 20 or so)

2. Blind Melon: self titled

3. Okkervil River: Black Sheep Boy

4. Bob Dylan (w/ The Band): Planet Waves

5.  Pink Floyd: The Final Cut

6. Drive By Truckers: Pizza Deliverance (though everything else is top 50 if not 20)

7. Radiohead: The Bends

8. Wilco: Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

9. Whiskeytown: All tied...can't pick one

10. Weakerthans: Reconstruction Site

maineandblue

May 9th, 2010 at 9:31 PM ^

Yeah, good to see your enthusiasm reflected by your avatar.

 

I was actually slightly let down by Reunion Tour, but it's really because I thought all their previous albums were pure gold. Will have to come back to it and see whether it's grown on me. I recently got the new live album and dvd...absolutely stellar.

Dark Blue

May 9th, 2010 at 10:28 PM ^

I've noticed that as I've grown older, I've kind of grown away from Fallow and Left and Leaving. Not saying that they're not great albums because they most definetly are. My Favorite Chords is still one of my all time favorite songs. Reunion Tour kind of called out to the grown up version of me.

maineandblue

May 9th, 2010 at 10:05 PM ^

Asbury Park is pretty close ot a top 10 album for me.

Don't know if you're into this type of thing, but I've been obsessed w/ the new Titus Andronicus. They sound like Bruce with a punk style and attitude. Kinda similar to Ted Leo, who does sort of a similar thing and is also awesome, imhe.

Hemlock Philosopher

May 9th, 2010 at 8:02 PM ^

I give you five because as the mood changes... My top five, an eclectic mix... Manu Chao Clandestino, Terry Allen Lubbock on Everything, the Beastie Boys Hello Nasty, Metallica Black Album and Live Throwing Copper. 

michiganfanforlife

May 15th, 2010 at 12:56 AM ^

and the "Flaming Lips" are also playing dark side  of the moon from beginning to end. Then we get to check out Stevie Wonder, Les Claypool, Jay-Z, Michael Franti, Medeski Martin & Wood, and many other bad-ass bands...

jvp123

May 9th, 2010 at 8:18 PM ^

There are albums that I dig, like Definately Maybe by Oasis or Is This It? by The Strokes or Absolution by Muse, but when it comes to the question of "Favorite Album" I think of an album I can listen to back to front and would recommend others to do the same. That album, for me, is Our Lady Peace's "Spiritual Machines". If you dig old Our Lady Peace (pre-Gravity), then this one is highly recommended. Hell, I think you could probably find all the songs on youtube these days. Pure songwriting genius.

Six Zero

May 9th, 2010 at 9:34 PM ^

was like a hint at something big that was about to happen, except it didn't.  That guitarist left to go play with Pete Yorn, and then they kinda sold out.  But yeah, lose all the author reading his work excerpts throughout the album and just take it all in for what it is, and it's a pretty great album.

Strokes, of course, were probably my single biggest interest in music in the last decade.