July 21, 2008

We meme it, man.

Holy crackers, three months since I last posted! Anyway, I'm back, and I brought a meme.

Now that the corporate crappification of Television Without Pity has been fully effected, I've started getting my daily pop culture fix at The Onion A.V. Club. A recent post over there picks up on a meme that's apparently making the rounds: pick a favorite album for every year you've been alive.

As with most lists, making it was more troublesome than I initially thought. Some years offered an embarrassment of riches: for 1977 I could easily have chosen Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols (which I did not, despite the post title), Elvis Costello's My Aim Is True, or Bob Marley's Exodus. Had I been doing a Top Ten for each year I might also have thrown in Steely Dan's Aja and Thin Lizzy's Jailbreak. But I decided to show some self-discipline and limit myself to just one. (And honestly, '77 was pretty much a lock from the get-go: The Clash is one of a handful of records that I can say, without hyperbole, changed my life.)

Other years proved difficult for the opposite reason: there seemed to be few, or no, albums that I really deemed worthy of inclusion on the list. Take 2001: I like Pink and all, but is she an artist of the same magnitude as most of the others here? No. Nonetheless, I wanted my list to be complete.

I also wondered whether to pick artists and albums that I loved back then, during their own eras, or stuff that I appreciate now, with my (somewhat) more refined palate. I decided that both outlooks should play a part: for 1981 I originally had Stevie Nicks's Bella Donna, which I (and many others) played incessantly at the time, but which I can't really see myself listening to now (although I will crank up the radio if "Edge of Seventeen" comes on). I swapped it out for the Go-Go's Beauty and the Beat, which I still spin now and again. Indeed, everything that made the final version of my list is either in my current collection and still listened to, or is something that I had at one point (probably on vinyl) and mean to replace when I can.

So anyway, here's the list:

1965 Rubber Soul, The Beatles

1966 Revolver, The Beatles

1967 The Doors, The Doors

1968 Electric Ladyland, The Jimi Hendrix Experience

1969 Led Zeppelin II, Led Zeppelin

1970 Plastic Ono Band, John Lennon

1971 Sticky Fingers, The Rolling Stones

1972 The Harder They Come, Jimmy Cliff et al. (movie soundtrack)

1973 Dark Side Of The Moon, Pink Floyd

1974 I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight, Richard and Linda Thompson

1975 Born to Run, Bruce Springsteen

1976 Night Moves, Bob Seger

1977 The Clash, The Clash

1978 Parallel Lines, Blondie

1979 The Wall, Pink Floyd

1980 London Calling, The Clash

1981 Beauty and the Beat, The Go-Go’s

1982 Chronic Town, R.E.M.

1983 War, U2

1984 Let It Be, The Replacements

1985 The Wishing Chair, 10,000 Maniacs

1986 Licensed to Ill, Beastie Boys

1987 Appetite for Destruction, Guns N’ Roses

1988 It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, Public Enemy

1989 Maria McKee, Maria McKee

1990 Facelift, Alice in Chains

1991 Nevermind, Nirvana

1992 Hey Babe, Juliana Hatfield

1993 Exile in Guyville, Liz Phair

1994 Live Through This, Hole

1995 University, Throwing Muses

1996 Sheryl Crow, Sheryl Crow

1997 Jet, Katell Keineg

1998 Got No Shadow, Mary Lou Lord

1999 Fly, Dixie Chicks

2000 Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea, PJ Harvey

2001 M!ssundaztood, Pink

2002 Jennie Bomb, Sahara Hotnights

2003 Streetcore, Joe Strummer & the Mescaleros

2004 Gold Medal, The Donnas

2005 Back to Me, Kathleen Edwards

2006 Fox Confessor Brings the Flood, Neko Case

2007 Magic, Bruce Springsteen

2008 Rockferry, Duffy

4 comments:

Kirk said...

Wow, I'm so not doing this; too much work, + I suck at remembering what year albums came out, so I'd have to look up everything.

-I own ten of those. A couple others Mary-Jane owns.

-most obscure: Katell Keineg. Who/what now?

-there is no excuse for solo Stevie Nicks (as opposed to SN of Fleetwood Mac, which I like just fine). You can never mock my musical tastes again. Hah!

-even if I tried to do this list, I'd have to leave a bunch of years blank, I'm sure. But then, I was never a rock star.

-finally, you are directly responsible for my owning one of these, for which I remain grateful. Remember which one?

Jenny said...

Sure you don't want to give it a try?

Katell Keineg is a Welsh-Breton singer-songwriter, and she's rather brilliant. Amy likes her too. I'm sure you've heard Natalie Merchant's "Carnival"--that's Katell singing backup.

In defense of the Stevie Nicks thing, I was 16 when that record came out. I thought Stevie was the shizz. That year I went to my first real concert: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers at the Meadowlands. Tom brought Stevie out to sing "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around". I thought I'd died and gone to heaven.

I confess I do not remember which record I am responsible for you owning.

Kirk said...

It was Hole's Live Through This. You wrote an eloquent pitch for it in response to some music thread on the wd. Of course I'd heard a couple songs on radio, but your post was the tipping point. Great album (I actually listened to it last week), I even sent you an email after I bought it to tell you.

[I think we've discussed this before, but seriously, better than any Nirvana album.]

Celebrity Skin is pretty great too.

We'll see, we'll see. Seems like a lotta work, though.

Amy said...

I'm getting around to this!

When I first read your idea, I had the same reaction as Kirk. Basically: cool, but too much damn work for the internet. But I would like to do it. For one thing, I'm interested to see the progression from endearingly overproduced to insufferably hipster. Should be good. Also, my list won't be as long as yours or Kirk's. :P

I have ô Seasons ô Castles and two other mp3s. I guess I should probably get a hold of Jet.

Also there is absolutely nothing wrong with Stevie Nicks shut up Kirk.