38. Elephant The White Stripes
Heller rock and roll album, particularly the anguished Queen inflected raw but baroque blues of "There's No Home for You Here Girl." That "Bohemian Rhapsody" inspired bridge is just breath taking. Also, take the time to parse out the folksy campfire closing song with drummer/ex Meg playing referee between Jack and his new English girlfriend, "Holly Golightly."
39. Van Lear Rose Loretta Lynn
The tough blues stylings of producer and duet partner Jack White make this the jammingest jammin' Loretta Lynn record ever. Stories like the Van Lear Rose are what country music is all about. The Grammy winning "Portland Oregon" really sounds good driving down the back roads. High point of inspired freaky deakiness of her whole career: check out her "Little Red Shoes." It's practically psychedelic.
40. Vivid Living Colour
I don't even care about the guitar heroics, but you can't deny the force of "The Cult of Personality." That just works on every level, and most of the album's nearly as good.
41. Junior High Junior Brown
This is just a five song EP, but it's all killer, no filler. This'll set you on the right Junior Brown path. "Highway Patrol" rocks in a righteous honky tonkin' way, as does the witty "My Wife Thinks You're Dead." Plus he's got the weepy ballad to show off his baritone, a good instrumental showcase, and even a bit of island flavor.
42. Dream of the Blue Turtles Sting
Sting grows wearisome as a personality, but this record has a lot of great songs. "Fortress Around Your Heart" rates pretty high, as does the "Moon Over Bourbon Street." You can't very well discount "If You Love Somebody Set Them Free."
43. Use Your Illusion I Guns n Roses
You have to love a great GnR ballad like "Dust n Bones," but this has all kinds of great songs. Even prime time Mick and Keef would have been proud to claim the honky-tonkin' classic kiss off of "You Ain't the First." And that's even before you get to the big epic hits "Don't Cry" and "November Rain."
44. Little Sparrow Dolly Parton
Dolly fills out some of her best songwriting and fanciest picking with the spine tingling vocal harmonies of, among others, Alison Kraus. The title cut is as good as anything the woman ever made. "I Get a Kick Out of You" also makes surprisingly effective bluegrass.
45. A Mighty Wind Original Soundtrack
Perhaps partly from knowing the context of it in the movie, "A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow" still breaks my heart every time I hear it- and that must be often. "The Good Book Song" really blows my mind. It's really catchy and clever. I could almost imagine that song showing up at some nice Protestant vacation bible school setting. These are some excellent songs.








Article comments
— go to most recent comments1 - Rob
Pretty good list. Must've taken a lot of thinking and time on your part. It's probably the Canadian in me, but I would add:
Blue Rodeo - "5 Days in July". This one's a classic. The songwriting doesn't get any better then this. Cuddy and Keelor were at there peak on this one. Just brilliant.
54-40 - "Dear Dear". Filled with great hooks.
Sarah Harmer - "All of Our Names". The songs are very well written and Sarah's voice is like silk. This album is flawless.
2 - Al Barger
Thanks. This post is still under construction. Someone helpfully published it from draft before it was quite soup. I'll have it finished up by the end of the day.
3 - gonzo marx
/disagree
many of these picks don't make my own top 500
but some deserve top 100 status
you completely lost me with anything from george michael...so much for "Objective"
but your mileage may vary
Excelsior!
4 - Eric Berlin
Nice complication of one man's opinion(s), Al.
As I went through, I thought, What happened to #53... then realized it was still in progress.
Man, Sinead at #1, eh? She wouldn't even register on my Top Whatever radar. Nothing against her, of course. I think of her and I think bald head and the tearing of the pope's picture and wailing Nothing Compares.... about 788 times.
Very hard to argue with The White Stripes in the Top 10. Your take on "The Nurse" made me go back and really give it a listen... which was a pure joy, of course.
5 - Eric Berlin
Just realized... no Beck, no REM.
Oof!
I may have to compile my own One Man's...
6 - godoggo
Really, you shouldn't be permitted to quote Ellington.
7 - Al Barger
Yes Mr Berlin, do please make your own list. Beck and REM were purposeful omissions on my part.
Again, I can understand how Sinead might well alienate a lot of folks, but nonetheless she absolutely has the goods. Plus, I LIKED hearing "Nothing Compares 2 U" hundreds of times.
Still, if you got burned out on that song, go back to that first album, which was not played to death on pop radio.
Also, I'm trying to limit myself at this point to only listening to the White Stripes album once a day. Gluttony is a mortal sin, and all.
8 - Al Barger
Mr Berlin, yes the omissions of Beck and REM were purposeful. They're both WAY overrated.
Also, please DO make your own similar post. I urge all Blogcritics to do likewise.
I can understand how Sinead alienated a lot of people. Nonetheless, she absolutely has the goods. Listen to The Lion and the Cobra again. And I LIKED hearing "Nothing Compares 2U" 788 times.
9 - Lisa McKay
Al, I bow to no one in my love for Mr. Costello, but Mighty Like A Rose? If I were put in a position of having to rescue my Costello collection from some natural disaster and had to leave one album behind, that would be the one.
Nonetheless, an interesting list, and you sure have eclectic tastes in music.
10 - Rodney Welch
This ought to be called "The 100 Albums Al Bought in the Last 20 years." Or maybe "The Kind of List You'd Expect From Someone Who Thinks Prince and Elvis Costello Are Not Capable Of Making A Bad Record." How else to explain honoring the suckathon that includes Around the World in a Day, Parade, Lovesexy, Batman AND Diamonds and Pearls? What strange level of fandom do you have to reach where you fail to see that these records are nowhere as good as Sign O' The Times? The same level, I suspect, that regards Costello's Spike on par with his late masterpiece King of America. You also include the absolute lamest Talking Heads disc, Naked, and while it's nice to know someone besides me has heard Zevon's Transverse City, (which in fairness does have one of the Z-man's best songs, "Splendid Isolation") the idea that it's a great record is just silly -- especially by WZ's standards. I'll give you credit for a handful of unusual choices that show insight, but on the whole you make the Spin list look like a model of judiciousness.
11 - gonzo marx
bah...
no Tool or Pantera
but Ben fols five makes towards the top of the list
tsk tsk
nice "Subjective" piece, big Al
Excelsior!
12 - Lisa McKay
Oh, and I think you forgot Soft Bulletin by the Flaming Lips...I'm sure it was an oversight ;-)
13 - Al Barger
Miss Lisa, I will confess to not being totally up to speed on the Flaming Lips. I was considering Yoshimi- but I don't think I've heard Soft Bulletin.
If it's even better than Yoshimi, I need to be hearing it. Downloading it now. And thank you for bringing it to my attention.
14 - Tan The Man
I think A Mighty Wind Original Soundtrack should be higher on that list. No Garth Brooks?
15 - Tiffany
Yay! Some Tori made it.
16 - gonzo marx
Tori made it, but not Alanis or even more egregious an error
no Ani DiFranco
and that omission is as damning as no Tool
nuff said?
Excelsior
17 - Tan The Man
No Tool. No Garth Brooks! <--- The G-Man!
18 - Al Barger
The old man once made the mistake of so much as lightly praising Garth Brooks. As he should know better, I've punished him repeatedly by actually making him listen to Garth. After about 10 minutes, he's begging for Porter or Merle or just anything real. That'll learn him.
Yes, Gonzo, no Pantera. I'd be canonizing frickin' stupid Motley Crue before I'd do that. Hell, I'd pick a damned MARIAH CAREY album before Pantera. I'm just saying...
19 - gonzo marx
poor Al...
it seems that all yer taste is in yer mouth...
i'm just sayin'
seriously, if you cannot hear the superior musicianship of Dimebag Darryl Abbott on guitar, and his brother, Vinnie Paul on drums...
well, i guess we just speak two different languages when it comes to music
so much for "Objective"
Excelsior!
20 - Matthew T. Sussman
Why don't you just poll all Blogcritics music reviewers the way baseball gives baseball writers a ballot for MVP?
5 points for No. 1
4 points for No. 2
and so on.
21 - Norton Malcontent
How is this list possibly objective? The vast majority of your entries are tedious at best. The range of artists you listen to is obviously severely limited due to the fact that you include the same artists over and over. And you can't even get your song references right. It was The Who who sang "It's the singer, not the song" in "Join Together". All in all a pretty lame list.
22 - Al Barger
Actually Matthew, we're in the process of doing just that. It was announced in the BC authors Yahoo group. I'm taking votes from Blogcritics by email, up to 50. And definitely please write an entry like this listing and explaining your picks. We intend to have results by mid next week.
23 - Matthew T. Sussman
Thanks Al. I'll get on that.
24 - gonzo marx
bah..now yer telling me i would hafta join some kind of yahoo group?
color me unsociable
Excelsior!
25 - Eric
I don't think I could listen to this list the whole way through, much less it be the top ever.
First of all, Tears For Fears's best album was Sowing the Seeds of Love.
Second, if you're going to make a statement, just drop U2 out of this list.
Almost Finally Bad by MJ was just that - Bad. Thriller, more than being his seminal work, was a much better album.
Finally.. I get it that you like Prince and Costello... but that many albums makes me wonder if you've heard 500 in your life.