CD's That Still Sound Good Years Later

In this forum you can discuss anything from sports, news, or what ever is on your mind.

Moderator: SMLCHNG

Post Reply
Jahfin
Inactive User
Posts: 8084
Joined: October 6, 2003 5:38 pm

CD's That Still Sound Good Years Later

Post by Jahfin »

By NEIL STRAUSS
New York Times

While it can feel like Christmas every day, reviewing music can also
be a Sisyphean task. As soon as one week of releases has been
listened to and evaluated, a new week begins, bringing with it
another half-dozen mail crates full of new music.

So the reviewer's perspective is different from that of the average
CD shopper. The reviewer craves something fresh, something that
grabs one's attention on the first listen. That's why young artists
who offer novelty often become critics' favorites, be they Dizzee
Rascal, Sigur Ros or the Fugees.

The true test of a CD's merit, however, comes when the blush of the
new wears off. If the music still sounds just as good a year later,
then it might even be deemed great.

In 10 years of writing this column, I've listened to thousands of
CD's. In retrospect, however, perhaps the most important years for
music of that decade were just before it, in the late 80's and early
90's. That was when Public Enemy, Nirvana, Dr. Dre, the Pixies,
Pavement, Jane's Addiction, Guns N' Roses and the Aphex Twin all
released seminal CD's that defined their genres, from gangsta rap to
alternative rock to electronica.

Yet every now and then in the last 10 years one album has stood out
and remained in steady rotation in my CD player or, nowadays, on my
iPod. And there have been many of those. They may not be among the
most important or the most popular releases of the last decade; they
are simply personal favorites, listed below in no particular order,
that have charmed their way to the top of my listening pile and are
highly recommended as permanent additions to almost any CD
collection or iPod playlist.

'CESARIA EVORA,' Cesaria Evora (Nonesuch, 1995): No matter what
genre of music you prefer, it's hard to deny the beauty of this
happy-sad CD of the music of Cape Verde. The rhythms are sensuous;
the arrangements are impeccable; and Ms. Evora's voice rings
plaintive and all-feeling above it all.

'CAR WHEELS ON A GRAVEL ROAD,' Lucinda Williams (Mercury, 1998):
Whatever you call this CD — alt-country, folk-rock or bonafide
Southern twang — it sits at the apex of the genre. The song that
tugs the heart every time is "Drunken Angel," in which Ms. Williams
shows her love for the songwriter Blaze Foley (who was shot in a
fight) by getting angry at him for his senseless death.

'MTV UNPLUGGED IN NEW YORK,' Nirvana (DGC, 1994): I find myself
listening to this atypical Nirvana CD more than their
classic "Nevermind." Perhaps this is because rather than being
musically immediate (like "Nevermind"), "Unplugged" is emotionally
immediate, with Kurt Cobain turning cover songs like the Meat
Puppets' "Lake of Fire" and Leadbelly's "Where Did You Sleep Last
Night" into blistering lamentations of his own.

'GRACE,' Jeff Buckley (Columbia, 1994): One of the most impressive
debuts of the last decade, "Grace" showcased the depth, sensitivity
and heaven-kissed voice of a timeless talent who never lived to see
the release of his next CD. His version of Leonard
Cohen's "Hallelujah" is so heart-stopping that the wonderful
original version is now second best.

'AQUEMINI,' OutKast (LaFace/Arista, 1998): Where the other genius
rap and R&B producers of the last few years — Neptunes, Timbaland,
R. Kelly — have produced perfect singles, OutKast has delivered full
CD's that don't let up. OutKast may have cleaned up at the Grammys
and on the pop charts this year with the wondrous sprawl
of "Speakerboxxx/The Love Below," but "Aquemini' is this
irrepressible Atlanta duo's inventive masterpiece.

'MOON SAFARI,' Air (Source/Caroline, 1998): Combining electronic
dance, French chansons and lounge music with an ear for analog
instruments and immaculate production, this French duo created the
best easy-listening music CD with substance of the 90's.

'THE BENDS,' Radiohead (Capitol, 1995): Both this CD and its follow-
up, "O.K. Computer," are among the most virtuosic, spellbinding rock
releases of the last decade, blazing a path that other bands can
watch from a distance. And though "O.K. Computer" is a better work
of art, the more rock-driven "The Bends" has the better songs.

'TO BRING YOU MY LOVE,' P. J. Harvey (Island, 1995): Raw, slow and
intense, this CD is as close to a blues dirge as any white British
woman has ever come.

'HEARTBREAKER,' Ryan Adams (Bloodshot, 2000): It took an old soul to
write a breakup album as classic-sounding as this, with depth, hurt
and attitude in equal measure. Four years and hundreds of listens
(not to mention Mr. Adams's subsequent celebrity girlfriends hoping
to be the next to inspire a CD this beautiful) have not dimmed its
poignancy in the least.

'DR. OCTAGON,' Dr. Octagon (Bulk/Mo' Wax, 1996): Between the in-his-
own-world raps of Kool Keith and the virtuoso beats, samples and
scratches of the Automator, this futuristic CD of melted brain candy
may just be the pinnacle of alternative rap so far.

And my honorable mentions:

"As Heard on Radio Soulwax, Part 1," 2 Many D.J.'s (Waxed Soul, 2002)

"Unearthed," Johnny Cash (Lost Highway/American, 2003)

"The Marshall Mathers LP," Eminem (Web/Aftermath/Interscope, 2000)

"Woody Guthrie and Songs of My Oklahoma Home," James Talley
(Cimarron, 1999)

"Reasonable Doubt," Jay-Z (Roc-A-Fella, 1996)

"There's Nothing Wrong With Love," Built to Spill (Up, 1994)

"Time Out of Mind," Bob Dylan (Columbia, 1997)

"Party Music," the Coup (75 Ark, 2001)

"White Blood Cells," White Stripes (Sympathy for the Record
Industry, 2001)

"Dummy," Portishead (Go! Discs/London Records, 1994)

"The Sophtware Slump," Grandaddy (V2 Records, 2000)

"Danse Macabre," the Faint (Saddle Creek, 2001)
tdparrothead
Behind Door #3
Posts: 3576
Joined: December 11, 2002 1:33 pm
Number of Concerts: 0
Location: 400 miles from where I really wanna be...

Post by tdparrothead »

All of Johnny Cash's American Recordings albums should be there. They are some of the greatest albums EVER.
daddymention
I Love the Now!
Posts: 1553
Joined: April 24, 2002 8:00 pm
Favorite Buffett Song: Tryin' to Reason With Hurricane Season & Cowboy in the Jungle
Number of Concerts: 31
Favorite Boat Drink: Pizza Port Carlsbad- Poor Man's IPA & Zombies
Location: San Diego, CA

Post by daddymention »

Billy Joe Shaver "Live at Smith's Olde Bar"
Waylon Jennings "Waylon Live" ....expanded edition from Sept. 1974
Dwight Yoakam "Gone"
1ST CONCERT: SAT. AUG 6, 1988 - PACIFIC AMPHITHEATRE, COSTA MESA, CA - LOGE 11 SEC 2 ROW U SEAT 42 $20.35
SHOWS: DAVID-31, STEFANIA-27, SHANE-11, EMMA KATE-7
PARROT HEAD SINCE 1984
ragtopW
Last Man Standing
Posts: 39130
Joined: December 18, 2001 7:00 pm
Number of Concerts: 0

Post by ragtopW »

what is amazing to me is Boise gets no mention on the top cities list
but built to spill has an unforgettable CD Whatever...
on my list to wear out
both Evangelines, Bat out of Hell, Under the table and dreaming,
Jefferson Starship Miracles , at least two Chris Ledoux cds
and don't laugh but I listen to the Gin Blossoms Hello I must be going
a lot don't know why just like the Hell out of that cd, no one else I know
even listens to it or ever did. anyway my 02. 8) 8)
ph4ever
Last Man Standing
Posts: 50507
Joined: July 31, 2002 1:26 pm
Favorite Buffett Song: CILCIA or OPH
Number of Concerts: 299
Favorite Boat Drink: Rhum with my Chum or beer
Location: Home in the GREAT state of Texas!
Contact:

Post by ph4ever »

Jackson Browne Running on Empty
The Boss - Born to Run
Jerry Jeff Walker Viva Terlingua
All of Pink Floyd cd's
All of Led Zeppelin's cd's
AC/DC back in Black
Nirvana
Patsy Cline

some music is just timeless
Well...(said in my best Bubba voice) I've been on sabbatical.
Sidew13
God's Own Drunk
Posts: 21743
Joined: March 28, 2002 7:00 pm
Favorite Buffett Song: Breath in, breath out, move on
Number of Concerts: 6
Favorite Boat Drink: Something with coconut rum
Location: Pickens, South Carolina

Post by Sidew13 »

ph4ever wrote: Jerry Jeff Walker Viva Terlingua
All of Pink Floyd cd's
All of Led Zeppelin's cd's
AC/DC back in Black
some music is just timeless
great choices
Trying to Take Another Road

Image Image
LaTda
Inactive User
Posts: 2882
Joined: July 17, 2003 1:53 pm

Post by LaTda »

Hendrix, are you experienced
as a matter of fact I'm gonna bring that to work tomorrow :pirate:
...thanks mike :wink:
..no problem :lol:
Sittin on the dock of the bay
tommcat327
On a Salty Piece of Land
Posts: 12351
Joined: May 8, 2003 11:17 am
Number of Concerts: 0
Location: where i probably shouldn't be

Post by tommcat327 »

how come everytime a professional critic(music or movie) makes a list i think he must be an idiot?you can alway count on a movie being great and everyone loving it if the critics hate it.and top music lists are generally made up of stuff i would never listen to unless forced by gunpoint :-?
An armed society is a polite society. Manners are good when one may have to back up his acts with his life.
RhumChum
Hoot!
Posts: 2759
Joined: February 1, 2003 6:20 pm
Favorite Buffett Song: CILCIA
Number of Concerts: 25
Favorite Boat Drink: Rhum, DUH! Okay .. tequilla ... LOL!!
Location: Behind the stadium . . .

Post by RhumChum »

ph4ever wrote:Jackson Browne Running on Empty
The Boss - Born to Run
Jerry Jeff Walker Viva Terlingua
All of Pink Floyd cd's
All of Led Zeppelin's cd's
AC/DC back in Black
Nirvana
Patsy Cline

some music is just timeless
Here, here to Floyd and Zeppeln . . . I would add The Beatles's Abbey Road
If you must choose between two evils, pick the one you've never tried before ...
tommcat327
On a Salty Piece of Land
Posts: 12351
Joined: May 8, 2003 11:17 am
Number of Concerts: 0
Location: where i probably shouldn't be

Post by tommcat327 »

paul simon,negotiations and love songs
dire straits,brothers in arms
bob marley,legend
there's more but i'm tired and slightly drunk
An armed society is a polite society. Manners are good when one may have to back up his acts with his life.
Jahfin
Inactive User
Posts: 8084
Joined: October 6, 2003 5:38 pm

Post by Jahfin »

tommcat327 wrote:how come everytime a professional critic(music or movie) makes a list i think he must be an idiot?you can alway count on a movie being great and everyone loving it if the critics hate it.and top music lists are generally made up of stuff i would never listen to unless forced by gunpoint :-?
To be honest, I don't think that list is bad at all. I haven't heard all of them but I have heard the ones by Lucinda Williams, Nirvana, Jeff Buckley, Ryan Adams and Bob Dylan (under honorable mentions). While I think they're all great records, they aren't necessarily the ones I'd chose. My ever changing list would go something like this:

Waylon-"Honky Tonk Heroes"
David Lindley and El Rayo-X-"El Rayo-X"
Whiskeytown-"Strangers Almanac"
Emmylou Harris-"Elite Hotel"
Gourds-"Bolsa de Aqua"
R.E.M.-"Fables of the Reconstruction"
Flying Burrito Brothers-"The Gilded Palace of Sin"
Beatles-"Hey Jude" (aka The Beatles Again)
Jimmy Buffett-"A1A"
Various Artists-"The Harder They Come" (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Old and In the Way-"Self-titled"
The Itals-"Early Recordings 1971-1979"
Ilph
Inactive User
Posts: 10333
Joined: June 29, 2003 6:54 pm
Number of Concerts: 0
Location: Edwardsville, IL

Post by Ilph »

Aerosmith - Live Bootleg
Garth Brooks - No Fences
Johnny Cash - Live at Folsom Prison
Eagles - Hotel California
Merle Haggard - A Tribute to the Best Damn Fiddle Player In The World
George Strait - Beyond the Blue Neon
aquaholic
Under My Lone Palm
Posts: 5366
Joined: June 16, 2002 8:00 pm
Number of Concerts: 0
Location: Lake Lanier,GA

Post by aquaholic »

LOVE YOU LIVE.........STONES
EXILE ON MAIN STREET......STONES
LIVE.................................J GEILS BAND
YOU HAD TO BE THERE..JB
Post Reply