Ten Albums I Recommend

Ten albums I would recommend you add to your collection (No compilations or ‘best of’ collections permitted): – this is just off the top of my head. If I did the list tomorrow, it would probably be different:

1. Metallica – the black album
2. Patty Griffin – Living with Ghosts
3. Foo Fighters – The Color and the Shape
4. Rufus Wainwright – Rufus Wainwright (his first one)
5. Robbie Williams – the ego has landed
6. Fleetwood Mac – Rumors
7. Tracy Bonham – The Burdens of Being Upright
8. Cliff Eberhardt – The Long Road
9. Nirvana – MTV Unplugged
10. Any Clancy Brothers album you can get your hands on – although I recommend you starting with their recording at Carnegie Hall.

I got this from Dan – whose list is awesome, mainly because it includes Sleater-Kinney!!

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35 Responses to Ten Albums I Recommend

  1. Dan says:

    Clancy Brothers live at Carnegie Hall is a solid choice. I grew up on that album.

  2. peteb says:

    Remind me to order the Wainwright siblings’ [individual] albums tomorrow.. I keep forgetting.

  3. mere says:

    here is my list
    Plastic Letters- Blondie
    American Idiot- Green Day
    The Dreaming- Kate Bush
    London Calling- Clash
    The Final Cut- Pink Floyd
    Green- Throwing Muses
    Automatic for the People- REM
    Rock Spectacle- BareNaked Ladies
    the first album w/Birthday- Sugarcubes
    Mirrorball- Sarah Mclaughlin

  4. red says:

    Yeah, Blondie! Yeah Clash! Yeah Green Day.

    Awesome list.

  5. mere says:

    I could go on and on. I loved Dan’s list- Smiths, Bob Mould, Replacements…I’m having flashbacks..I wish I had a turntable so I could play my Husker Du albums.. :(

  6. Michael Doherty says:

    My absolute earliest memory from childhood (early ’60′s) is waking up one Saturday night/Sunday morning to very loud Clancy Brothers music. We lived in what would be called a railroad flat in Brooklyn….you walked through everybody else’s bedroom to get to the living room. I got out of bed, and walked towards the music. When I opened the French doors to the living room, every aunt, uncle, grandmother, great aunt and great uncle on my dad’s side (all of whom were off the boat) were marching in a circle around the living room. Each of the were carrying “band instruments”: an inverted Kirby vacuum was the bagpipe, the long pole attachment to the vacuum was the drum major’s marching stick, wooden spoons were flutes, saucepans were drums…etc. And every one of them was either wearing large stockpots or large empty cookie tins on their heads as a headress. They were, of course, the East 51st Street Emerald Society Air Bagpipe Band. I’ve always wondered exactly how much whiskey needs to be imbibed to get to that stage. Oh, and I bet that whoever carried the “bagpipe” wishes that ultra-light Orecks had been invented much earlier, too.

  7. red says:

    Michael – I honestly don’t know what to say. That is absolutely gorgeous. Thank you for sharing it here!

  8. Michael Doherty says:

    No, thank you! You sparked the memory for me with your list and made me laugh. I don’t find the Clancy Brothers on too many Top Ten album lists on the Internet six months past St. Patrick’s Day.

  9. red says:

    hahahaha

    Yeah – they’re always on my top 10. :)

  10. Another Music Meme: Ten Albums

    I stole this one from Sheila . Ten albums I would recommend you add to your collection (No compilations or ‘best of’ collections permitted) Like Sheila, my suggestions would vary from day to day. I also tried to stay away…

  11. Just1Beth says:

    I love the image of an “Air Bagpipe Band”. I, too, grew up with the Clancy Brothers (as well as The Chieftans). I used to cringe as a teenager when friends were walking up to the door, to pick me up to go out. “Ma! Turn that DOWN!” I would hiss at my mother. (For those of you who don’t know my mother, let me tell, you- you do NOT hiss at Nance. At least without KNOWING you are going to end up in big trouble!!!) I was a Senior in High School on St.Patrick’s Day when I realized I knew ALL the words to all the songs of the great Irish bands. We were at Casey’s Bar and Grille (my mom and dad and little sister) and I absentmindedly was singing along with the music, when I realized I knew ALL the words, recognized all the music and what’s more, LIKED IT! I have never turned back.

  12. red says:

    My personal favorite is William Bloat. I know there are multiple versions of the song – but this is the one I know. I sing it in the shower:

    In a mean abode on the Shankill Road
    Lived a man named William Bloat;
    He had a wife, the bane of his life,
    Who always “got his goat.”

    So one day at dawn, with her nightdress on—
    He slit her bloody throat.

    Now he was right glad he had done as he had
    As his wife lay there so still
    But a sudden awe of the mighty law
    Filled his heart with an icy chill.
    So to finish the fun so well begun
    He decided himself to kill.

    He took the sheet off his wife’s cold feet,
    And twisted it into a rope,
    And he hanged himself from the pantry shelf—
    T’was an easy end, let’s hope—
    In the face of death, with his latest breath,
    He solemnly cursed the Pope!

    But the strangest turn of the whole concern
    Is only just beginnin’!
    He went to Hell, but his wife got well,
    And she’s still alive and sinnin’—
    For the razor blade was German made,
    But the rope was Belfast linen!

  13. red says:

    beth – i don’t have rehearsal this weekend. I’ll be home. saturday night?

  14. red says:

    I don’t think William Bloat is on the Carnegie Hall album… although the version I have is definitely live. The whoops and hollers at “rope was Belfast linen” make you WISH you were seeing it live.

  15. Dan says:

    mere – I just bought Flip Your Wig and New Day Rising on CD.

  16. Jeff says:

    Some personal favorites:

    Frontier Days, The Del-Lords
    Drums and Wires, XTC
    Equal Rights, Peter Tosh
    Life’ll Kill Ya, Warren Zevon
    Robin Lane and the Chartbusters
    1000 Kisses, Patty Griffin
    Forget About It, Alison Krauss
    Beggar’s Banquet, Rolling Stones
    The River, Bruce Springsteen
    Zuma, Neil Young and Crazy Horse

  17. mere says:

    Jeff! Robin Lane and the Chartbusters???

    classic!!

  18. mere says:

    Dan- I’m so jealous. What great albums.

  19. Cullen says:

    OOooh. Good topic. Off the top of my head:

    Genesis – Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
    Dream Theater – Scenes From a Memory
    Megadeth – Peace Sells But Who’s Buying?
    The Misfits – Walk Among Us
    Sex Pistols – Never Mind the Bollocks Here’s the Sex Pistols
    Slayer – Reign in Blood (and this was a toughie, but as speed metal goes, this is probably one of, if not the best album ever made)
    Rush – Moving Pictures
    Metallica – Master of Puppets
    Rollins Band – Nice
    The Stooges – Raw Power

  20. Timmer says:

    1. The Band – The Last Waltz
    2. Robert Plant and the Strange Sensation – Mighter Rearranger
    3. David&David – Boomtown
    4. Blondie – Live in New York
    5. Bela Fleck and the Flecktones – Flight of the Cosmic Hippo
    6. Patti Smith Group – Wave
    7. Annie – Anniemal
    8. Black Crowes with Jimmy Page – Live at the Greek
    9. The Chieftans – Tears of Stone
    10. Chet Atkins and Mark Knopfler – Kneck and Kneck

  21. Mark says:

    You have no idea how hard it was to keep this down to just ten. Watch for the outtakes on the special edition DVD.

    Gordon – Barenaked Ladies
    Live Noise – Moxy Früvous
    Cereal Killers – Too Much Joy
    Use Your Fingers – The Bloodhound Gang
    Internet Dating Super Studs – The Vandals
    Surrender To Jonathan – Jonathan Richman
    Bone Machine – Tom Waits
    One Step Beyond – Madness
    New York Dolls – New York Dolls
    Flood – They Might Be Giants

  22. Cullen says:

    New York Dolls was an excellent choice Mark. I almost put that instead of the Sex Pistols (McLaren obviously modeled the Pistols after the Dolls).

  23. mitch says:

    Let’s see if I get this one right; stuff you want people to ADD to their collections, right?

    OK:

    Blood On The Bricks, the Iron City Houserockers.
    Shoot Out The Lights, Richard and Linda Thompson
    Men Without Women, Little Steven and the Disciples of Soul (if you remember that one, I tip my hat to you)
    Tunnel Of Love, Springsteen (not my favorite Bruce album (it’s #3), but the one you should add to your collection)
    Stand In The Fire, Warren Zevon
    Steeltown, Big Country
    Tim, The Replacements
    Will The Wolf Survive?, Los Lobos
    Roses In The Snow, Emmylou Harris
    Never Mind The Bollocks…, the Sex Pistols.

    That should give everyone plenty to work on.

    BTW, my dad is/was the least musical person I know. We owned maybe ten records when I was a kid – and the Clancy Bros were one of them. Every Sunday morning, he’d put ‘em on.

    By the risin’ of the moon,
    by the risin’ of the moon,
    and a thousand pikes were flashin’ by the
    risin’ of the moon…
    .

    I could also sing “Beer Beer Beer” pretty fluently in first grade, which did not amuse the teacher much. On the upside, “Dirty Old Town” was the first song I ever figured out on guitar without the aid of music…

  24. jess says:

    Tracy Bonham! Sheila, you rock my world. I love that album.

  25. get crackin’, bitches

    Since I love to talk about myself, I’m participating in a little exercise I found over at Sheila’s. Here are 10 albums I recommend you add to your collection (no compilations or ‘best of’ collections permitted).

  26. red says:

    jess – Yay! Nobody appears to know who she is excpet for you and me. That’s one of my favorite albums. The stuff she’s done since hasn’t had the same thrilling sound … I’m still waiting, though!!!

  27. mitch says:

    Red and Jess,

    That’s one one from ten years or so ago, with “Dear Mother” on it?

    That was a pretty cool album.

    (“Nobody appears to know who she is except for you and me”…as if. Sheesh).

  28. red says:

    mitch – go out on the street right now and say, “Have you heard of Tracy Bonham”. See the response you get.

    You’re a music lunatic. Of COURSE you would know who she is!!

    And yeah, that was from 1993, 1994.

    “Mother Mother
    Are you listenin’
    Sure I’m sober, sure I’m sane ..”

    And then how she just starts SCREAMING. Great stuff. And she’s teeny. She’s like a small Hobbit creature. But that voice.

  29. Marti says:

    I listened to that Tracy Bonham CD every day when it came out right when I started driving. I still see images of high school when I hear certain songs. *sigh*

    I’m going to have to agree with a previous posters on
    They Might Be Giants Flood
    Moxy Früvous Live Noise
    Barenaked Ladies Gordon

    The obvious choices
    The Beatles Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
    Radiohead Ok Computer
    Nirvana Nevermind

    And the others
    Badly Drawn Boy Have You Fed the Fish?
    The Dukes of Stratosphear (aka XTC) Chips from the Chocolate Fireball
    Camper Van Beethoven Key Lime Pie
    the bogmen Life Begins at $40,000,000

  30. Marti says:

    Correction: The bogmen album is called Life Begins at 40,000,000. No $. Sorry! It’s a play on the album’s cover art.

    Oh, and I think Tracy Bonham came out with a new album last month. She was featured on Breakfast with the Arts along with Gogol Bordello, another faboo band whose album Multi Kontra Culti vs. Irony is worth checking out.

  31. Lisa says:

    I have Tears of Stone by the Chieftains. That’s the one, Sheila, with Brenda Fricker reciting “Never Give All the Heart.”

    Other than that one album, I have none of the ones ANY of you mention. I’m a dork.

  32. Dan says:

    I know of Tracy Bonham. Boston girl, right?

  33. Jen says:

    Oh man, Tracy Bonham! I think I had just gotten my drivers license when the “Mother Mother” song came out and it was the first song I remember ROCKING OUT to by myself in the car. It was fantastic! Thanks for reminding me of her…

  34. roo says:

    Ah, that’s the style that Mary sat on!

    Earliest concert memory: The Clancy Brothers with Tommy Makem at Mechanics Hall in Worcester, MA. I thought they were all relatives of ours, since we sang the same music. Thanks for the connection.

    Making the List of Ten is a seductive challenge, that could easily be overthought. Here goes (in no particular order):

    1. Ani DiFranco- Reckoning/Revelling
    2. Elvis Costello and Anna Sophie Von Otter- For the Stars
    3. Bjork- Post
    4. Michael Hedges- Taproot
    5. Stevie Wonder- Songs in the Key of Life
    6. Johnny Hartman and John Coltrane
    7. Joni Mitchell- Blue
    8. Dar Williams- Mortal City
    9. Mark Knopfler- Sailing to Philadelphia
    10.Glen Gould- Bach: Two and Three-Part Inventions, BWV 772-801

    That was fun! And you’re right; tomorrow the list could be entirely different. There’s too much good music in the world not to rotate the top contenders often.

    Now I’m thinking about mix tapes…

  35. Alex Nunez says:

    Here goes nothing, after #1, it’s no particular order:

    1. Derek and the Dominos – Live At The Fillmore
    2. Radiohead – The Bends
    3. Dave Brubeck Quartet – Time Out
    4. E.S. Posthumus – Unearthed
    5. Jimmy Buffett – A1A
    6. John Lee Hooker – Never Get Out Of These Blues Alive
    7. Jimmy Buffett – Coconut Telegraph
    8. Miles Davis – Kind of Blue
    9. New Order – Technique
    10. The Smithereens – 11

    Why are lists so much fun, red?