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Bruce Cockburn

Blog

12…5Próximo
  • music Sweet music

    Jun 14 2009, 22h34 por BROTHERLOG

    I go to Montreal and come back with one of my best hordes of music yet. Probably the best score is Before and After Science, a clean copy, but without the pictures, but 4$!!

    Surprise of the haul is Sweet's Off The Record. I picked it up for the wonderful album art, another in their close-ups-of-audio-visual-equipment series, this one of a needle. I have most of the bands other releases but this one really hit a nerve. Galloping heavy guitar riffs inspired or inspiring of Judas Priest and Iron Maiden, but mixed in with Yes vocal harmonies. All in all a great great great rock and roll album.

    Loving Richie Havens, picked up Stonehenge following my purchase of his first release at hipster headquarters in Brooklyn in April. It isn't killer but I feel I must buy any record titled "TocarStonehenge".

    Got the re-release of Psychocandy, which was number one on my list. If you're like me and you love reverb and distortion and still feel the world just doesn't understand you and everyone else is a sell-out, this album would be for you. Pretend you never read this and "discover" it on your own like a real child of darkness. ;)

    Steve Hillage Fish Rising. I put this on right after Off The Record and for a moment forgot that I'd changed LP's. That's how good Off The Record is. What a treat it has been for me to discover Hillage. On to Gong! I've been cataloging my vinyl recently and discovered that 80's douche rockers Cockrobin were produced by Steve Hillage. It doesn't really show, or at least in the track and a half I could tolerate.

    I join the Swim.Drink.Fish music club. The bands so far don't seem that attuned with my current musical interests except Bruce Cockburnand maybe Great Lake Swimmers.

    http://www.swimdrinkfishmusic.com/
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  • Review: Bruce Cockburn - Humans

    Abr 9 2009, 13h50 por sil_mich

    Humans (1980)

    Bruce Cockburn is a formidable guitarplayer and musician. But also a man with a mission, to tell about the misstandings in the world. I preffer the musician above the mission. For the cruelty in the world, and there is a lot, I will use different kind of media, like TV, books, newspapers and blogs.

    On a song it's like a brainwash. An attempt to change my mind. Which I really don't like. Thats why I have a very low appreciation for this album. Not my cup of tea.

    Stars: (4 of 10).

    Conclusion: If you're in need of filling your mind with a moral attitude, listen to this album, if not, let it be.
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  • Did you enjoy that slice of douchebaggery?

    Dez 27 2008, 18h12 por Tempus-Fugit

    If you liked and/or hated reading this journal and/or making fun of this, I've since moved to the username Breaking-Wheel. My reason being that I just don't like this one anymore. Eventually, I'll have an explanation of my last journal entry, and may even start a Weekly Ten Songs thing again.

    Yeah, yeah, more prick-waving, I know. I'll get to it later.

    P.S. listen to some Bruce Cockburn -- but remember his last name is pronounced "Coburn," so you don't try to explain it to your best friend and wind up in a pointless conversation about how much he must have got teased in middle school... I've done that for you already.
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  • Tournament of Swans, Round Two

    Jul 24 2008, 3h20 por alfvaen

    (See the explanation posted with the previous round if you're too confused.)


    Here we are again, for Round Two of the Tournament of Swans. Our starting allotment of 64 tracks has been reduced to 32, so oddly enough this round took less time to do. Let's see the results, without further ado:

    1. Relax (Come Fighting) by Frankie Goes to Hollywood
    vs.
    2. 7 8 9 by Barenaked Ladies
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Frankie
    Comments: "7 8 9" is amusing enough, a bit jokey, but loses out to "Relax" in edginess.

    3. Heat of the Moment by Willy DeVille
    vs.
    4. TocarHell in a Handbasket by Drywall
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Willy
    Comments: I still don't know whose voice it is on that Drywall track (doesn't sound like Stan Ridgway, at any rate), but it's annoying enough for Willy DeVille to advance another round.

    5. The Message by Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five
    vs.
    6. Close But No Cigar by Weird Al Yankovic
    Difficulty: *****
    Winner: Flash
    Comments: "The Message"'s classic status, and more serious tone, may be all the keep it from getting defeated by what is beginning to sound like one of Weird Al's standout tracks.

    7. We're Just Temporary Ma'am by White Whale
    vs.
    8. Ultraviolence by New Order
    Difficulty: **
    Winner: The Whale
    Comments: "Ultraviolence" advanced as far as it was likely to, given my general apathy for New Order album tracks. Not to belittle the White Whale song, which still shows no signs of slowing down (but we'll see how it does in the next round...)

    9. My Hippy Angel by Bob Geldof
    vs.
    10. TocarTake Me Away by Fefe Dobson
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Fefe
    Comments: Teenage angst with some hard rock guitar beats a gentler hippy angel in my books, apparently.

    11. TocarStreets of Banaras by Ann Mortifee
    vs.
    12. The Last Word by Mary Chapin Carpenter
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Ann
    Comments: Once again Ann Mortifee's powerful vocals bring her victory over a lower-key performance.

    13. As Good as New by ABBA
    vs.
    14. TocarThe Rhythm of the Heat by Peter Gabriel
    Difficulty: *****
    Winner: BABA
    Comments: Very close, and perhaps if the Gabriel song weren't the "Plays Live" version, it might have won out, but "As Good As New" is making its way into my favourite tracks here...

    15. Tomber by Laurence Jalbert
    vs.
    16. TocarJunior by John Mellencamp
    Difficulty: *****
    Winner: Laurence
    Comments: Another hard call, and perhaps Jalbert's more emotional voice overcame Mellencamp's compelling, but musically low-key, street-person story.

    17. Chance (single version) by Big Country
    vs.
    18. TocarFoxglove by Bruce Cockburn
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: The Country
    Comments: This is still not my favourite Big Country song, but Bruce Cockburn's tiny instrumental was still unable to compete.

    19. What If We Don't Get What We Want? by 13 Engines
    vs.
    20. TocarMermaid Smiled by XTC
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: The Engines
    Comments: The sole XTC track in the tourney loses to the more interesting 13 Engines song.

    21. TocarEric's Theme by Vangelis
    vs.
    22. Kissing Gate by Sam Brown
    Difficulty: **
    Winner: Ms. Brown
    Comments: Still a pretty weak song, but vocals beats instrumental 95% of the time. (ISTR there was something in the "Stop Making Sense" liner notes to the effect of "Lyrics were invented to keep people listening to music longer than they normally would. I also claim that music makes me more willing to listen to poetry than I normally would, too.)

    23. There Won't Be Trumpets by Stephen Sondheim
    vs.
    24. TocarThe Killing Moon by Echo & The Bunnymen
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Echo
    Comments: A stronger Sondheim song might have won, but this may be E&TB's best song, so it triumphs again.

    25. TocarBus Stop by The Hollies
    vs.
    26. TocarDouble Take by Blondie
    Difficulty: **
    Winner: The Hollies
    Comments: "Bus Stop" unsurprisingly wins its second round, but it has yet to face much real opposition.

    27. Nightswimming by R.E.M.
    vs.
    28. Careful With That Axe, Eugene by Pink Floyd
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Floyd
    Comments: This time around I seemed to be noticing more of the awkwardnesses of Stipe's lyrics, which gave Eugene the edge he needed.

    29. Look Down by Claude-Michel Sch&omul;nberg
    vs.
    30. The Story of One Chord by Mojo Nixon & Skid Roper
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Marius & Co.
    Comments: The drama of Les Misérables trounces the silliness of Mojo. Apparently I was not in a very jokey mood this round...

    31. Love Don't Need No Tyranny by Tanita Tikaram
    vs.
    32. TocarFuture Call by Jill Cunniff
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Jill
    Comments: These songs are really very similar, upbeat songs from female vocalists with a strong musical backing, but Jill wins by a nose for being a little catchier.

    Next week, or so, Round Three, where the 16 winners in this round duke it out with each other...
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  • Tournament of Fools, Round One

    Jul 16 2008, 14h06 por alfvaen

    This is borrowed directly from a recent series of journals by JoeIsListening, wherein one takes 64 songs selected at random from one's playlist and puts them in an elimination tournament which I gather is based somewhat on basketball playoffs or something. I don't know from basketball, so I won't comment on that. To quote from Joe, "These will be divided into 32 musical face offs. Losers go away and the winners advance until 'there can only be one.'" I eliminated any under-1-minute tracks from the list, but didn't bother with a ten-minute-plus track or a number of 8-9 minute ones.

    I am also borrowing Joe's Difficulty-O-Meter, which "gauges the degree of difficulty in deciding which song advances. The scale runs from * (no contest, no thought required) to ***** (pass the razor blades)".

    Now, I've got close to 30,000 tracks in my system, many of which I could not hum even a snatch of upon seeing the title, so this could be interesting, or not as much. Let's see.

    1. Lebanese Blonde (French mix) by Thievery Corporation
    vs.
    2. Relax (Come Fighting) by Frankie Goes to Hollywood
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Frankie
    Comments: Both of them good grooving tracks, but I think "Relax" got the edge because of my greater familiarity with it, and perhaps it's a bit less laid-back and a little more forceful.

    3. TocarBroken Birds by Jane Siberry
    vs.
    4. 7 8 9 by Barenaked Ladies
    Difficulty: *
    Winner: The Ladies
    Comments: Little contest here--a pretty much acoustic track from a past-her-prime Siberry doing a misguided album of songs she wrote as a teenager, versus a catchy children's song from Canada's top popsters.

    5. Heat of the Moment by Willy DeVille
    vs.
    6. TocarDreamin' by Lou Reed
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Willy
    Comments: Willy DeVille mostly wins by default, because the Lou Reed track, from his subdued "Magic & Loss", is just not very strong. We'll see how Willy does in the next round...

    7. TocarHell in a Handbasket by Drywall
    vs.
    8. Framed by Saga
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Drywall
    Comments: This is far from my favourite track from Stan Ridgway's "Drywall" project, but it's still at least distinctive enough to edge out a less-familiar prog-rock track from Saga.

    9. TocarAfterglow by Genesis
    vs.
    10. The Message by Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five
    Difficulty: *
    Winner: Flash
    Comments: A weak track from a weak Genesis album against one of the classic songs of rap music? Okay, I'm not rap's biggest fan, but Grandmaster Flash nailed this one.

    11. Slip Inside This House by The 13th Floor Elevators
    vs.
    12. Close But No Cigar by Weird Al Yankovic
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Al
    Comments: A catchy, appealing tune from Weird Al's latest album, even if not one that stuck out on first listen, holds its own against Roky Erickson's eerie tune.

    13. We're Just Temporary Ma'am by White Whale
    vs.
    14. The Warrior by Scandal
    Difficulty: *****
    Winner: The Whale
    Comments: Okay, "The Warrior" is a classic of 80's pop-rock, where White Whale are just some obscure upstart indie-rock band, but "We're Just Temporary Ma'am" is catchy and has a great title, which won out over nostalgia by a hair.

    15. Prayer Meeting by Chet Atkins
    vs.
    16. Ultraviolence by New Order
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: The Order
    Comments: While "Ultraviolence" is one of those tracks that I couldn't hum you a bar of right now, it still outdoes a Chet Atkins instrumental cover version from "Solid Gold '68". Or, at least, this particular one.

    17. My Hippy Angel by Bob Geldof
    vs.
    18. TocarThe Luxury by The Tragically Hip
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Sir Bob
    Comments: While the Tragically Hip have some great songs, I have trouble getting into a lot of their album tracks, while Geldof's song is a fun listen.

    19. TocarRocket by Primitive Radio Gods
    vs.
    20. TocarTake Me Away by Fefe Dobson
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Fefe
    Comments: Though Dobson's Avrilesque charms are overly obvious, they nonetheless outweigh those of that PRG guy.

    21. Stay Awake by Suzanne Vega
    vs.
    22. TocarStreets of Banaras by Ann Mortifee
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Ann
    Comments: This was an interesting pairing. I love Suzanne Vega's a cappella take on the Mary Poppins song, but somehow her quiet, deadpan song paled next to Ann Mortifee's intense, histrionic soprano workout.

    23. TocarFurry Old Lobster by Jonathan Coulton
    vs.
    24. The Last Word by Mary Chapin Carpenter
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Mary
    Comments: Mary Chapin Carpenter wins out over Jonathan Coulton for having more clever lyrics, but this is admittedly one of Coulton's weaker numbers.

    25. As Good as New by ABBA
    vs.
    26. TocarThe Nightfly by Donald Fagen
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: BAAB
    Comments: The throbbing disco beat and harmonies have it over Fagen's soft jazz and wry weary-radio-DJ lyrics.

    27. TocarQuestions in a World of Blue by Julee Cruise
    vs.
    28. TocarThe Rhythm of the Heat by Peter Gabriel
    Difficulty: **
    Winner: Pete
    Comments: Julee Cruise is just a little too wispy to take on the primal power of even the live version of one of Gabriel's best tracks.

    29. Tomber by Laurence Jalbert
    vs.
    30. TocarTapestry by Carole King
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Laurence
    Comments: Laurence Jalbert, who on this song strikes me as a sort of Francophone Melissa Etheridge, edges out Carole King on this one.

    31. You Took My Heart by Chris Isaak
    vs.
    32. TocarJunior by John Mellencamp
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Cougar
    Comments: John Mellencamp's story was a little more compelling than Isaak's bouncy lament.

    33. Chance (single version) by Big Country
    vs.
    34. TocarMessages by Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: BC
    Comments: The OMD track just wasn't striking me, which left Big Country on top by default.

    35. Animation by Jon Anderson
    vs.
    36. TocarFoxglove by Bruce Cockburn
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Bruce
    Comments: The Jon Anderson track just went on and on, leaving the field open for Cockburn's little guitar instrumental.

    37. What If We Don't Get What We Want? by 13 Engines
    vs.
    38. TocarRooms on Fire by Stevie Nicks
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Lucky 13
    Comments: An uncharacteristically low-key track from alt-rockers 13 Engines, which takes out past-her-prime Stevie.

    39. TocarMermaid Smiled by XTC
    vs.
    40. TocarPerfect World by Talking Heads
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: XTC
    Comments: I'm not that familiar with the XTC track, actually, but it manages to beat out one of my less-than-favourite Heads tracks.

    41. TocarManto's Arrow and the Sphinx by Andreas Vollenweider
    vs.
    42. TocarEric's Theme by Vangelis
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Vangelis
    Comments: Despite (or, perhaps, because of) what sounds like Lisa Gerrard wailing in the background, Andreas Vollenweider is unable to beat the majestic track of "Chariots of Fire".

    43. Kissing Gate by Sam Brown
    vs.
    44. TocarFading Lights by Genesis
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Ms. Brown
    Comments: Not my favourite Sam Brown track, but it's better than the dull and overlong Genesis song, at least.

    45. TocarWhat a Day That Was by David Byrne
    vs.
    46. There Won't Be Trumpets by Stephen Sondheim
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Mr. Sondheim
    Comments: Perhaps if the Byrne song had been the "Stop Making Sense" version, it might have beaten out this minor Sondheim song from the "Side By Side By Sondheim" revue.

    47. TocarThe Killing Moon by Echo & The Bunnymen
    vs.
    48. Pull Me Down by Skydiggers
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Echo
    Comments: For a song I was unfamiliar with, the Skydiggers track was unexpectedly strong, but not enough to beat out the classic E&TB song.

    49. TocarSo Serious by Electric Light Orchestra
    vs.
    50. TocarBus Stop by The Hollies
    Difficulty: **
    Winner: Holly
    Comments: It'll take more than that silly ELO song to defeat one of the best pop songs of the 60's! I can see "Bus Stop" getting quite far in this competition, in fact...

    51. TocarDouble Take by Blondie
    vs.
    52. Islands of the Future by Gentlemen Without Weapons
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Blondie
    Comments: Oh, my. The Blondie song is pretty silly, and from their latter days, but what is it up against? While Gentlemen Without Weapons sounded more pop than new-age with their synthesizers filled with animal and natural sounds, this song contains a gagworthy voiceover from a young Fairuza Balk that eliminates it from this round.

    53. TocarGrimsby by Elton John
    vs.
    54. Nightswimming by R.E.M.
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: REM
    Comments: The Elton John song is okay, but not great, and the REM song has been growing on me lately.

    55. Careful With That Axe, Eugene by Pink Floyd
    vs.
    56. TocarThe Horns of Rohan & The Battle of the Pelennor Fields by Bo Hansson
    Difficulty: **
    Winner: Floyd
    Comments: Oh, please. There's no way that Hansson and his synthy Lord of The Rings soundtrack can compete with such an epic of prog. I mean, with screaming and everything!

    57. Look Down by Claude-Michel Schönberg
    vs.
    58. Saskatchewan Sea by The SplendourBog
    Difficulty: ****
    Winner: Les Miz
    Comments: The SplendourBog song is an interesting ode to Canada's flattest province, but it can't decide whether to be serious or jokey, so the Les Misérables track, not one of my favourites but decent enough, narrowly pulls ahead of it.

    59. The Story of One Chord by Mojo Nixon & Skid Roper
    vs.
    60. Lovers Anonymous by 10cc
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Mojo
    Comments: The Mojo & Skid track is silly stuff, and so is the 10cc I suppose, but the 10cc track has the disadvantage of being pretty dull musically, so it drops out.

    61. TocarI Wanted Your Heart by Magazine
    vs.
    62. Love Don't Need No Tyranny by Tanita Tikaram
    Difficulty: ***
    Winner: Tanita
    Comments: Neither of these are songs I'm that familiar with, but the Magazine track was grating on me a bit on this listen, so Tanita takes it through greater tunefulness.

    63. Amelia by Joni Mitchell
    vs.
    64. TocarFuture Call by Jill Cunniff
    Difficulty: **
    Winner: Jill
    Comments: While I like a number of Joni Mitchell songs, this isn't one of them. I mean, my favourite album of hers is "Chalk Mark In A Rain Storm", for heaven's sake. Jill Cunniff's isn't quite Luscious Jackson, but it's still a more fun listen.

    Next week, or so, Round Two, where the 32 winners in this round duke it out with each other...
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  • Alright everyone, gimme YOUR lists

    Jun 26 2008, 2h33 por musictwig

    Worst cover tunes

    Well, actually best and worst cover tunes...

    Subject to change, of course:

    Best

    The Cliks - TocarCry Me A River (Justin Timberlake)
    Duran Duran - TocarPerfect Day (Lou Reed)
    Jann Arden - TocarLove Is A Battlefield (Pat Benatar)
    Barenaked Ladies - Lovers in a Dangerous Time (Bruce Cockburn)
    Tori Amos - Smells Like Teen Spirit (Nirvana)
    Cake - Mahna Mahna (The Muppet Show)
    Sacre - Mad World (Tears for Fears)

    Worst


    Duran Duran
    - Tocar911 Is A Joke and Ball Of Confusion
    pretty much every song on The Duran Duran Tribute Album

    to be continued
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  • SW Playlist 13 May 2008

    Mai 21 2008, 13h05 por kall0cain

    1. Nine Inch Nails - The Slip
    2. Beequeen - Seltentrum
    3. Portishead - Third
    4. Boston - Boston
    5. Lee Hazelwood - Strung Out on Something New
    6. Nurse With Wound - Zero Mix
    7. Pan American - The River Made No Sound
    8. Rapoon - Time Frost
    9. Bruce Cockburn - first album
    10. Siddhi - Whispering Wood
    11. Meat Beat Manifesto - Archive Things
    12. Hills Are Mountains - s/t
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  • The 100 Best Fucking Albums Ever

    Mai 20 2008, 16h19 por 6:00

    Simply my favourite albums of all time, regardless of genre. If I were on a sinking ship with these records, I’d likely drown trying to save them all. Comments are, of course, welcome.

    100. King Crimson – Thrak – 1995

    Artful, playful, dark and angular modern music from the kingpins of classic prog.

    99. Fugazi – The Argument – 2001

    The controlled fury of Fugazi’s classic hardcore attack meets the washed-out moody ambience of post-punk, with awesome results.



    98. The Raconteurs - Consolers of the Lonely – 2008

    An instant, eclectic classic from can-do-no-wrong composer Jack White and Co.

    97. Judas Priest – Unleashed in the East – 1979

    The best live record of the 70’s, from one of metal’s all-time greatest innovators.

    96. Neil Young & Crazy Horse – Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere – 1969

    Young’s finest hour, this album is a repository for both his wildest studio jamming and some of his best songwriting ever.

    95. Bruce Cockburn – Life Short Call Now – 2006

    Canada’s rock poet laureate brings forth a life-affirming late-career masterpiece.

    94. DJ Shadow – Endtroducing..... – 1996

    Breathtaking new music assembled from the scraps of the old; as post-modern as music gets.

    93. Scorpions – Taken by Force – 1978

    Germany’s finest metallic spawn reach their apogee, well before success warped them beyond all recognition.

    92. Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth – Mecca & The Soul Brother – 1992

    Thoughtful and inventive art is the order of the day on this soulful jazz-rap essential.



    91. Wintersleep – Untitled – 2005

    Unfairly overlooked post-grunge classic from Nova Scotia’s finest.

    90. Soundgarden – Badmotorfinger – 1991

    An arty, difficult album of teeth-kicking metal from the most talented band in grunge.

    89. Emperor – IX Equilibrium – 1999

    A whirlwind masterwork of earsplitting black metal.

    88. Peter Gabriel – Up – 2002

    Repeat listening yields incredible rewards from this, the enigmatic Gabriel’s latest.

    87. The D.O.C. – No One Can Do It Better – 1989

    Verbal dexterity, awesome production and pure unadulterated swagger make The D.O.C.’s debut the best west coast rap album ever made.

    86. Talking Heads – The Name of This Band Is Talking Heads – 1982

    Everyone’s favourite paranoid post-punks come alive on this drop-dead-fun live offering.

    85. Ted Leo & the Pharmacists – The Tyranny Of Distance – 2001

    Brash punk indulges in his love of all things indie and Thin Lizzy, produces his finest record yet.

    84. Carcass – Heartwork – 1993

    Simply the most badass death metal album ever cut.

    83. Def Leppard – High 'n' Dry – 1982

    Ace AC/DC-worship from the burgeoning pop metal superstars.

    82. Chroma Key – You Go Now – 2000

    Minimalist electro masterpiece for those who’d rather mope than move it.



    81. Santana – Abraxas – 1970

    The sound of the cosmically stoned, speaking to the cosmos with only his axe.

    80. Megadeth – Rust in Peace – 1990

    A delicious musical meal, with riff after sautéed riff piled high as the eye can see.

    79. Thin Lizzy – Black Rose – 1979

    The best harmony guitars in rock history were never better than this heartfelt tribute to their Irish homeland.

    78. Tool – Lateralus – 2001

    The term ‘magnum opus’ exists to describe this endlessly rewarding prog treasure.

    77. The Beatles – Rubber Soul – 1965

    Everyone should have a favourite Beatles record, and this one is mine.

    76. Green Carnation – Light of Day, Day of Darkness – 2001

    An unequivocally affirmative answer to the oft-asked question, “Can one song be over an hour long?”



    75. Cynic – Focus – 1993

    In twenty years the world might be ready for this futuristic vial of liquid-flowing jazz metal.

    74. Radiohead – The Bends – 1995

    The flesh-and-blood essence of Radiohead, before they allowed their experiments to obscure their remarkable emotional power.

    73. Pain of Salvation – Remedy Lane – 2002

    A haunting evocation of lost love that endures in the heart long after the last song has played.

    72. Elton John – Goodbye Yellow Brick Road – 1973

    A panoramic pop masterpiece, from a time when there was no sound Elton couldn’t master with ease.

    71. Thought Industry – Black Umbrella – 1997

    Acidly bitter and hilarious alt-rock from the chameleon kings of Kalamazoo, MI.

    70. Max Webster – High Class In Borrowed Shoes – 1977

    Somewhere between goofy as hell and canny as can be sit Canada’s best party band, Max Webster.

    69. Anathallo – Floating World – 2006

    An impossibly ornate art rock symphony from the inimitable Anathallo; surely the next big thing in weirdly beautiful underground music.

    68. Genesis – Wind & Wuthering – 1976

    Main brain Peter Gabriel lopped himself off this beast, but the Hydra-like Genesis prove four heads are better than one with this sly progressive classic.

    67. Ulver – Blood Inside – 2005

    Ulver reverse the jets on their increasingly esoteric trajectory and deliver their most accessible effort in a decade.



    66. The Roots – Things Fall Apart – 1999

    The incendiary sprawling socially-conscious hip-hop/jam rock opus from a band who truly know no other way.

    65. Savatage – The Wake of Magellan – 1998

    Savatage finally nail down the perfect fusion of heartstring-tugging rock opera and skullcrushing heavy metal, to glorious effect.

    64. Run-D.M.C. – Run-D.M.C. – 1983

    Run-D.M.C. drag hip-hop out of the block party and onto the mean streets on this seminal rap classic.

    63. Rush – Permanent Waves – 1980

    An invigorating celebration of life itself from the wise old fathers of prog metal.

    62. Fates Warning – Awaken the Guardian – 1986

    Is it the musical embodiment of spiritual transcendence, or just a wild headbang from a bunch of masters at the top of their gang? I’ll get back to you when I figure it out.

    61. Agalloch – The Mantle – 2002

    An album too grim and beautiful to listen to outside, for fear of finding myself inexplicably buried alive in a snowdrift by the record’s end.

    60. Coroner – Mental Vortex – 1991

    A head-spinning thrash master class from Switzerland’s technical wizards.

    59. Explosions in the Sky – The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place – 2003

    A reassuring grip on your hand, promising that you will never be alone.

    58. King’s X – Dogman – 1994

    In a just world, this is what 90’s popular rock would have sounded like.

    57. The New Pornographers – Challengers – 2007

    The world’s best power pop band indulges their more melancholic side, with fabulous results.

    56. Spoon – Girls Can Tell – 2001

    The ultimate after-hours record to fill the emptiness of another wasted night at a shitty club.



    55. Earth – The Bees Made Honey In The Lion's Skull – 2008

    Out of the strong came forth sweetness.

    54. Queensryche – Operation: Mindcrime – 1988

    Reagan-era paranoia set to a note-perfect post-Maiden soundtrack.

    53. Eminem – The Eminem Show – 2002

    Shady the angry young man gives way to Marshall the maverick pop impresario… and improves tenfold.

    52. Diamond Head – Lightning to the Nations – 1980

    The stars aligned and for one brief, shining moment Diamond Head was the best metal band in the world. And this record proves it.

    51. Corrosion of Conformity – Deliverance – 1994

    Like kerosene with a whisky chase, this southern-fried sludge classic is nothing but pure power.

    50. David Bowie – Hunky Dory – 1971

    Bowie’s had good records before this one, and some great ones after, but this is my heart’s fav.

    49. Elvis Costello & The Attractions – Trust – 1981

    Elvis ‘Can-Do-It-All’ Costello does… uh… well, does it all quite frankly.

    48. The Trews – Den Of Thieves – 2004

    My favourite Canuckistani roots rockers put out an album that matches Sloan in scope and early Black Crowes in fun and vigour.



    47. Mercyful Fate – Don't Break the Oath – 1984

    In which the angel from the cover of Judas Priest’s Sad Wings of Desiny plunges further into the flames, and emerges… pissed.

    46. OSI – Free – 2006

    Icy submersion therapy for catatonic victims of fried nerve-endings.

    45. The Decemberists – The Crane Wife – 2006

    Colin Meloy and Co. embark on their most grandiose journey yet, and in every regard achieve their aims.

    44. Vàli – Forlatt – 2004

    The great unknown neo-folk classic of the last coupla hundred years.

    43. The Who – Tommy – 1969

    In which Pete Townshend demonstrates once and for all that no concept is so ridiculous that pop brilliance cannot render a masterwork.

    42. Alice in Chains – Jar of Flies – 1994

    Melancholy, thy name is Jar of Flies.

    41. Amorphis – Eclipse – 2006

    Timeless pounding melodic metal from Finland’s greatest musical treasure.

    40. Queensryche – Rage for Order – 1986

    Queensryche move from the castle to the nightclub, bring forth a fearless masterpiece of high-minded art metal and inject shivery sex appeal into the nerdiest of forms.



    39. Peter Gabriel – III – 1980

    An album that will always sound modern, composed using synths with as much computing power as a calculator.

    38. De La Soul – 3 Feet High and Rising – 1989

    Sunny, joyous sample-collages form the background for one of the most inventive rap albums ever cut.

    37. Talk Talk – The Colour Of Spring – 1986

    With one leg in pop and the other in post-rock, Talk Talk produce an album of gentle beauty and incredible grace.

    36. AC/DC – Highway to Hell – 1979

    The soundtrack to the greatest party you’ll never be invited to.

    35. R.E.M. – Reckoning – 1984

    R.E.M. already sounded grandfather-wise on this, their second effort, and zenith of the peerless I.R.S. years.

    34. Sigur Ros – Agaetis byrjun – 1999

    The sound of life itself, rendered audible in all its fragility and bombast.

    33. Blue Oyster Cult – Secret Treaties – 1974

    One of God's own prototypes. A high-powered mutant of some kind never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die.

    32. Judas Priest – Sin After Sin – 1977

    And in the lull between revolutions, Judas Priest try to capture something like the essence of art… and succeed almost in spite of themselves.

    31. Mos Def & Talib Kweli – Mos Def & Talib Kweli are Black Star – 1998

    So penetrating and wise that, by record’s end, you realize the world would probably be a better place if it were run by Mos and Talib.

    30. Warren Zevon – Sentimental Hygiene – 1987

    Rising from the ruins he himself had wrought, Zevon recruits R.E.M. to be his backing band and rips out the toughest, punchiest album of his career.



    29. The Shins – Oh, Inverted World – 2002

    Quite possibly the most perfectly crafted pop album of this century.

    28. Atheist – Elements – 1993

    Immaculately crafted on every level, Atheist take their music to new heights while revealing new depths of poetic inspiration.

    27. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Let Love In – 1994

    The most vivid and accomplished work of Leonard Cohen’s profoundly dark reflection.

    26. The Mountain Goats – The Sunset Tree – 2005

    The summation of insanely prolific years in the indie wilderness, The Sunset Tree is almost certainly the best 35th release by any band ever.

    25. Chroma Key – Dead Air For Radios – 1999

    Kevin Moore strips away the layers of prog pretension that obscured him in Dream Theater, and the pure songwriting chops revealed are a gem of unsurpassed worth.

    24. TV on the Radio – Young Liars – 2003

    Unclassifiable, unquantifiable and incomparable. Some of the most concentrated greatness ever to grace these ears.

    23. Boston – Boston – 1976

    A sound so pure and perfect that listening to it might actually qualify as detox therapy.

    22. Savatage – The Dungeons Are Calling – 1984

    So metal your blood will turn to mercury upon listening.



    21. Neutral Milk Hotel – In the Aeroplane Over the Sea – 1998

    Whether the lyrics are genuinely artistic or merely pretentious, the real appeal of the thing lies in the incredibly unique, ragged melodicism of the music.

    20. Metallica – Ride the Lightning – 1984

    Metallica always thought they were the best metal band in the world, and lo and behold that became emphatically true here on their sophomore LP.

    19. Black Sabbath – Sabbath Bloody Sabbath – 1973

    Black Sabbath were ever an idiosyncratic beast, and their unique charms became only more pronounced on this brave attempt at progressive rock.

    18. Alice in Chains – Dirt – 1992

    Dominated by dismal and jarring angst-scapes, AiC force you to live for the glorious shafts of light that pierce the gloom.

    17. The Clash – London Calling – 1980

    The Clash do so much and do it so well that it’s impossible to begrudge them their few missteps.

    16. The Who – Quadrophenia – 1973

    One of the most consistent double LPs ever released. Practically every track is The Who at their brainy, electric best.



    15. George Harrison – Brainwashed – 2002

    A dark horse classic from the soul of the Beatles. Criminally underrated given its posthumous release.

    14. Elvis Costello & The Attractions – Blood & Chocolate – 1986

    The perfect fusion of Costello’s acerbic songwriting, electric toughness and incomparable melodic sense.

    13. Amorphis – Elegy – 1996

    A tribute to Finland’s folk tradition that feels as mythic and mystic as its source material.

    12. Thought Industry – Short Wave on a Cold Day – 2001

    Only divine inspiration could’ve produced such an immense work of gorgeous art-pop.

    11. The Decemberists – Her Majesty, the Decemberists – 2003

    By stripping away many of their musical affectations, The Decemberists produce a roots-y folk-pop classic. Their most touching and emotive work to date.

    10. AC/DC – Powerage – 1978

    AC/DC’s most warm and full-bodied work, a blues-slurred record for drinking with the lads when the lights have gone down.

    9. Bruce Springsteen – Born to Run – 1975

    The record where Springsteen finally succeeded in rendering his vision on the mythic scale he had always envisioned them. An unimaginable high in rock history.



    8. Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band – Live Bullet – 1975

    It took Seger almost ten years to finally become a break out star, and he did it with this monumental live classic. A great introduction to his superb early work.

    7. King’s X – Ear Candy – 1996

    King’s X are one of the ultimate hard luck stories in rock, but you’d never know it from this life-affirming album; pristine melodic rock at its finest.

    6. Stevie Wonder – Innervisions – 1973

    Not since Milton has a blind man so captivatingly communicated his impressions of the world around him.

    5. Metallica – Master of Puppets – 1986

    The anchor and anvil of 80’s metal, and the standard by which the genre is judged. Long live the kings.

    4. Thought Industry – Outer Space Is Just a Martini Away – 1996

    Somewhere between the caustic thrash/hardcore of the early years and the literate alternative that followed sits Outer Space…, the summary of all this wonderful band was and would be.



    3. Warren Zevon – Warren Zevon – 1976

    One of the all-time great songwriters reflects upon the nature of Los Angeles and America. The results are savagely funny, deeply moving and even haunting, often all at once.

    2. Mos Def – Black On Both Sides – 1999

    One of the most singular talents in pop music history faces the daunting task of crafting his first solo LP. The result is nothing short of perfection. Not only the best rap album ever made, but also one of the most impressive albums ever made by anyone, in any genre.


    1. R.E.M. – Automatic for the People – 1992

    I have no words for this, an album that means more to me than any other. Truly sublime.

    1965
    1969 - 2

    60s - 3

    1970
    1971
    1973 - 4
    1974
    1975 - 2
    1976 - 3
    1977 - 2
    1978 - 2
    1979 - 3

    70s - 19

    1980 - 4
    1981
    1982 - 2
    1983
    1984 - 4
    1986 - 5
    1987
    1988
    1989 - 2

    80s - 21

    1990
    1991 - 2
    1992 - 3
    1993 - 3
    1994 - 4
    1995 - 2
    1996 - 4
    1997
    1998 - 3
    1999 - 5

    90s - 28

    2000
    2001 - 6
    2002 - 6
    2003 - 3
    2004 - 2
    2005 - 3
    2006 - 5
    2007
    2008 - 2

    00s - 29

    1972 & 1985: The only years from 1969 - 2008 with no albums making this list.
    2001/2002: The years with the most albums on the list (6).
    Metal: The most oft-listed genre, at just over 1/3 (36) of the list. It was followed by alternative rock (28), pop (12) and rap (9).
    Thought Industry: Band with most albums on the list (3)
    Brent Oberlin, Kevin Moore, Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills: Individual musicians with the most appearances on this list.

    The Last Album Eliminated:


    101. Polyrhythm Addicts – Rhyme Related – 1999

    Three insanely talented MC's come together and create one of the best underground rap albums of the past ten years.
    Ler mais 54 comentários Adicionar comentário
  • Cruisin' for a bruisin': soundtrekkie's 10

    Abr 28 2008, 21h26 por soundtrekkie

    Phew, I made it!

    After going through my own top 64 song challenge, it is a joy to only have to pick 10 songs and join in the fun. In no particular order:

    1. Jericho - k.d. lang
    I wanted to pick a Joni tune but this version has some staying power and is a bit more emotionally present than the original. Not that I don't love the original... You know how it is.

    2. Ruin My Day - Jon Brion
    This song has had a lot of press on Popdose (my favorite place on the internets! tm) lately and it was my choice for "best breakup song" at my local music appreciation event. Jon's one of my faves and there are doubtful few songs better than this.

    3. TocarJason and the Argonauts - XTC
    English Settlement is one of the best albums ever. (Discuss?) This one always makes me play steering wheel percussion.

    4. TocarThe Be All and End All - Bic Runga
    So, I have something for songs in 6/8. My favorite Kiwi girl makes a lush appearance. Prepare to have your hearts annihilated, boys.

    5. TocarAstounding Moon - Tim Finn
    One of Tim's new ones. When I saw him in January, this is the one that we were hoping to hear. Just so you know, he's in better voice now than he has been in years and is astoundingly handsome and charming in person.

    6. The City of the Sun - Kevin Gilbert
    Kevin, you remind me that music is awesome. A crazy, proggish song by one who could've ruled them all.

    7. God If I Saw Her - Anthony Phillips
    My Genesis-related track (if you don't count Kevin). It's funny that I'm so into this song. Maybe it's the Phil and Peter living in recorded peace and harmony. Genesisian equality.

    8. TocarLast Night Of The World - Bruce Cockburn
    This is from my favorite "driving through the desert at midnight with the windows open marveling at the multitude of stars" album. What's yours?

    9. All I Want - The Weepies
    My list has become a recurring discussion in my house and I've gone back and forth on The Weepies so many times that Earl finally yelped, "Just do it already!" So I went with the lesser known holiday themed All I Want.

    10. TocarFree Time - Michael Penn
    I went with a track from Penn's surprisingly superior sophomore slump. I love him on acoustic but he is so inventive on electric, I have to give them equal time. You know, in my free time.


    Let's do this!
    Ler mais 3 comentários Adicionar comentário
  • The GREATEST

    Jan 29 2008, 20h42 por mdroel20

    list of my favorite artists songs and albums!

    Aerosmith
    TocarJaded
    Get A Grip

    AFI
    TocarThe Missing Frame
    DECEMBERUNDERGROUND

    Against Me!
    Trash Unreal
    New Wave

    Alanis Morissette
    Hand In My Pocket
    Jagged Little Pill

    All American Rejects
    Dance Inside
    Move Along

    American Hi-Fi
    Another Perfect Day
    American Hi-Fi

    Angels & Airwaves
    TocarStart The Machine
    We Don't Need to Whisper

    The Audition
    You've Made Us Concious
    Contraversy Loves Company

    Barenaked Ladies
    Light Up My Room
    Stunt

    The Beach Boys
    TocarWouldn't It Be Nice
    Pet Sounds

    The Beatles
    I've Just Seen a Face
    Abbey Road

    Ben Folds
    TocarLate
    Songs for Silverman

    Ben Folds Five
    TocarMess
    Whatever and Ever Amen

    Ben LeeTocarShine
    Something to Remember Me By

    Better Than Ezra
    Desperately Wanting
    Friction, Baby

    Big Country
    TocarIn A Big Country
    The Crossing

    Billy Joel
    TocarUptown Girl
    The Stranger

    Billy Talent
    TocarRed Flag
    Billy Talent II

    blink-182
    TocarGoing Away To College
    Take Off Your Pants And Jacket



    Bloc Party
    TocarThis Modern Love
    Silent Alarm

    Blues Traveler
    TocarRun Around
    Four

    Bob Dylan
    Blowin' in the Wind
    The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan

    Bon Jovi
    TocarThis Ain't A Love Song
    Slippery When Wet

    Bowling for Soup
    TocarGirl All the Bad Guys Want
    A Hangover You Don't Deserve

    Box Car Racer
    TocarWatch The World
    Box Car Racer

    Bruce Cockburn
    TocarLovers In A Dangerous Time
    Stealing Fire

    Bruce Hornsby And The Range
    The Way It Is
    The Way It Is

    Bruce Springsteen
    TocarAtlantic City
    Tunnel of Love

    Bryan Adams
    TocarSummer Of '69
    Reckless

    The Cars
    Just What I Needed
    The Cars

    Cartel
    Wonderwall
    Chroma

    The Church
    TocarUnder The Milky Way
    Starfish

    Coldplay
    TocarThe Scientist
    X&Y

    Collective Soul
    TocarThe World I Know
    Collective Soul

    The Coral
    TocarDreaming of You
    The Coral

    Counting Crows
    TocarRound Here
    August And Everything After

    Cream
    Crossroads (live)
    Wheels Of Fire

    The Cure
    TocarLovesong
    Disintegration

    Cyndi Lauper
    TocarTime After Time
    She's So Unusual

    Damien Rice
    9 Crimes
    O

    Dar Williams
    As Cool As I Am
    Mortal City

    David Bowie
    TocarZiggy Stardust
    The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars

    Death Cab for Cutie
    TocarI Will Follow You Into the Dark
    Plans

    Deep Blue Something
    TocarBreakfast At Tiffany's
    Home

    Elliott Smith
    Angeles
    XO

    Elton John
    TocarI Guess That's Why They Call It The Blues
    Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

    Elvis Costello & The Attractions
    Tocar(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love And Understanding
    This Year's Model

    Fall Out Boy
    TocarHum Hallelujah
    From Under The Cork Tree

    Five for Fighting
    TocarThe Riddle
    The Battle for Everything

    The Flaming Lips
    Do You Realize??
    Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots

    Foo Fighters
    TocarEverlong
    The Colour and the Shape

    Fort Minor
    Right Now Feat. Black Thought & Styles Of Beyond
    The Rising Tied

    Fountains of Wayne
    TocarHey Julie
    Welcome Interstate Managers

    George Harrison
    All Things Must Pass
    All Things Must Pass

    Gin Blossoms
    TocarHey Jealousy
    New Miserable Experience

    Goo Goo Dolls
    TocarIris
    Dizzy Up the Girl

    Green Day
    When I Come Around
    Dookie

    Gym Class Heroes
    12th period: Scandalous Scholastics
    As Cruel As School Children

    Half Past Forever
    In A Moment
    Take A Chance On Something Beautiful

    Hawk Nelson
    TocarLetters to the President
    Letters To The President

    Hotel Lights
    TocarLet Me Be The One
    Hotel Lights

    Howie Day
    TocarCollide
    Stop All The World Now

    Iggy Pop
    Little Know It All feat. Sum 41
    Skull Ring

    Jewel
    TocarYou Were Meant for Me
    Pieces of You

    Jimmy Eat World
    TocarWork
    Bleed American

    John Lennon
    TocarImagine
    Imagine

    Josh Groban
    My December
    Closer

    Journey
    TocarDon't Stop Believin'
    Escape

    Kelly Clarkson
    TocarBehind These Hazel Eyes
    Breakaway

    The Killers
    TocarWhen You Were Young
    Sam's Town

    The Kinks
    Don't Forget To Dance
    Come Dancing

    Linkin Park
    No More Sorrow
    Minutes To Midnight

    Live
    TocarLightning Crashes
    Throwing Copper

    Matchbox Twenty
    TocarUnwell
    More Than You Think You Are

    Matthew Good
    TocarBorn Losers
    Hospital Music

    MC Lars
    TocarHurricane Fresh
    The Graduate

    The Mighty Mighty Bosstones
    TocarThe Impression That I Get
    Let's Face It

    Motion City Soundtrack
    L.G. Faud
    Commit This to Memory

    MxPx
    Don't Walk Away
    Before Everything and After

    New Found Glory
    TocarHold My Hand
    Coming Home

    Nils Lofgren
    Valentine
    Silver Lining

    Nirvana
    TocarLounge Act
    Nevermind

    Papa Roach
    Forever
    The Paramour Sessions

    Paul Westerberg
    Love Untold
    Eventually

    Pearl Jam
    TocarBetterman
    Ten

    The Police
    TocarMessage In A Bottle
    Synchronicity

    The Postal Service
    TocarSuch Great Heights
    Give Up

    The Pretenders
    I'll Stand by You
    Pretenders

    R.E.M.
    TocarThe Sidewinder Sleeps Tonite
    Out of Time

    Red Hot Chili Peppers
    TocarUnder The Bridge
    Blood Sugar Sex Magik

    Relient K
    TocarBe My Escape
    MMHMM

    Rise Against
    TocarSwing Life Away
    Siren Song of the Counter Culture

    Roger McGuinn
    Car Phone
    Back From Rio

    The Rolling Stones
    TocarGimme Shelter
    AFTERMATH

    Ryan Star
    TocarWe Might Fall
    Songs From The Eye Of An Elephant

    Simon & Garfunkel
    TocarThe Boxer
    Bridge Over Troubled Water

    Smashing Pumpkins
    Bullet With Butterfly Wings this one was very tough
    Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness

    Snow Patrol
    You're All That I Have
    Eyes Open

    The Starting Line
    Best of Me
    Say It Like You Mean It

    Sugar Ray
    Answer the Phone
    Sugar Ray

    Sum 41
    With Me
    All Killer No Filler

    Talking Heads
    Psyco Killer
    Little Creatures

    Third Eye Blind
    Blinded
    Third Eye Blind

    Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
    Learning to Fly
    Full Moon Fever

    U2
    With Or Without You
    The Joshua Tree

    Weezer
    TocarMy Name Is Jonas
    Weezer

    "Weird Al" Yankovic
    TocarCallin' in Sick
    Running With Scissors

    The White Stripes
    Icky Thump
    Elephant

    The Who
    TocarSqueeze Box
    Who's Next

    Yellowcard
    Gifts and Curses
    Ocean Avenue

    Zwan
    TocarOf a Broken Heart
    Mary Star of the Sea

    +44
    Lillian
    When Your Heart Stops Beating
    Ler mais Adicionar comentário
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