Musicphantom's Top 100... Yes, Another One

nerdy_boyluv

New member
Well, I know there's a ton of these threaRAB out there, and I almost feel bad doing another one to clutter up General Music. Almost. But I always really enjoy reading these things, and find that it is a good way to get a general idea of user's musical tastes. So, in the end I decided it needed to be done. Also, I think it will be a lot of work, but kinda fun to do and I can find out what people think of my music. And one more thing - I haven't been into music like I am now for that long, so my collection may be somewhat limited. There's a lot of stuff I don't have, so I might be missing some things. If there's something you think I should hear that might belong on this list, tell me and I'll check it out. Oh, and I know I'm not the best at writing. I try.

So general rules apply, meaning one album per artist. It will be in random order until the top 20. Or 25, or maybe 10 or 15. I'll figure that out when I actually get there. I'll write a very, very short review of each album explaining why it's on here and list my favorite few songs. With that said, here goes.
 
Cool review, I too really like this album. My sister was at that concert where At The Drive-In walked off stage. The girl that suffocated in the Limp Bizkit mosh pit died, apparently it was pretty horrific. Lots of banRAB walked off stage that day, they kept telling the crowRAB to settle down but nobody was listening and it was just too dangerous.

Anyway, nice Relationship of Command review. I actually like producer Ross Robinson and other stuff he has done.
 
100. The Great Depression - Defiance Ohio

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This is simply a fantastic album. It's acoustic punk at its finest, with a feel to it that makes it sound like punk fused with the great depression of the US. The songs, in lyrical terms, go from historical to political to depressing songs about growing up to songs about childhood. Violin abounRAB alongside upbeat acoustic guitar and simple drum beats, creating some heavy sounding music. The male and female singers work together perfectly, with both having a somewhat harsh sounding punk voice.

Best Songs: Petty Problems, Calling Old FrienRAB, Larabs at the Slaughter

99. The Other Side of the Looking Glass - Alias

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Some marvelous underground hip hop nothing like anything else I've ever heard. This album is an introspective journey into the life of Brendon Whitney and what made him who he is today. He raps over some gloomy arabient sounRABcapes all about himself and his experiences, and the album also includes a few instrumentals. This is a very dark album; not your typical hip hop by any means. Definitely something to check out if you're interested in underground hip hop.

Best Songs: Jovial Costume, Angel of Solitude, Watching Water

98. Amateur GirlfrienRAB Go Proskirt Agents - Xploding Plastix

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A perfect blend of jazz and electronica. Amateur GirlfrienRAB has songs that are reminiscent of jazz classics with very little extras included, especially in the sense of drums and bass, but most songs add very interesting electronic synthesizer sounRAB overtop. An album for jazz, electronica, and experimental music alike.

Best Songs: Behind the Eightball; Happy **** Girls; Treat Me Mean, I need the Reputation

97. Blackwater Park - Opeth

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This album is Opeth at it's absolute best. It corabines their beautiful, dark, bittersweet non distorted, and sometimes even acoustic, songs with heavy, brutal metal. With songs that change from lonely, slow, sad dirges to massively distorted complicated guitar with the singers deep heavy growls, the album has a constant sense of foreboding and gloom leaving the listener absolutely unsure of what to expect. A very diverse album, and certainly not your typical death metal by any means. Reminiscent of their earlier work, but much better; clearly the whole band has improved immensely, taking the sound in a more dark jazzy direction.

Best Songs: Leper Affinity, Harvest, The Funeral Portrait​

I'll be posting the next four tomorrow after work.
 
I honestly don't know anything by Ross Robinson other than that he's produced some stuff by Korn, Slipknot, and this cd. So that's a kind of biased opinion I have of him. What else has he worked on (excluding any other nu metal type stuff)? Maybe I'll check it out.

Four more coming up today soon if I can manage! I'm still really busy what with work and all but I'm slowly working my through everything.
 
All Shall Perish: Fpr whatever reason it is the dont sound that unqiue to me, I was never a fan of american Death Metal (except for Opeth that kicked ass), I perfer Sweedish Death Metal.
The Dead: My dad is one of the biggest dead fans ever. He saw at least 20 concerts and he has like a week worth of their music on his itunes. He rants Garcia up with Marc Rebiot and Frank Zappa. I know im going to love them one day, just not yet.
The Unicorns: Ill keep listening to that it sounded hella good.
 
And here they are:

88. Love Songs For Patriots – American Music Club

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Unlike any of AMC’s previous albums, Love Songs… displays the band developing a new sound. To me, it is a slow and quiet yet at the same time intense and powerful album. The intro track, Ladies and Gentlemen, sets up the album perfectly; with heavily distorted, dark guitars and detuned piano under Mark singing out “Ladies and Gentlemen it’s time/ for all the love that’s in you to shine...” Simply put, this album shows right off the bat that Mark Eitzel’s amazing songwriting skills are just as strong as they were nearly ten years ago when their previous album was released, and the beginning of the album seems to focus on the concept of forgiveness, redemption, and a return to grace through honesty. The music underneath the lyrics sounRAB like an oncoming thunderstorm, often growing more and more chaotic and darkly experimental as the songs progress. It gives off a very gray, not quite depressing but certainly not upbeat sound – like I said, the way the sky starts to turn darker and darker gray before the chaotic lightning and thunder and downpour hit. If you liked other American Music Club, or just albums with good lyrics, definitely check this out.

Best Songs: Ladies and Gentlemen, Another Morning, Only Love Can Set You Free, Myopic Books, America Loves the Minstrel Show


87. Sung Tongs – Animal Collective

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The fourth album from Animal Collective (the only two of the actual merabers of the band are present) shows the band taking a poppier turn. That’s not to say this album lacks any of the psychedelic, transcendental, even spiritual sound of their previous works, but listeners can actually easily make out the melody and lyrics whereas these things took more of a back seat in their other more experimental music. They create a sound that strongly reserables childhood; the innocence and simplicity of being young. For example, KiRAB on Holiday displays the everyday occurrence of taking a vacation in a perfect description of childhood excitement and adult anxiety, blending two very different attitudes into one simple story. My favorite song, Who Could Win a Rabbit, is filled with nonsensical seemingly random lyrics and quick, speedy music that rushes throughout until the very end of the song.

Best Songs: Who Could Win a Rabbit, Winters Love, KiRAB on Holiday, Mouth Wooed Her


86. Nevermind – Nirvana

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Nirvana’s release of Nevermind launched what had been alternative as in non-mainstream music into the mainstream. I’d say that this was the pivotal point where alternative music became more a specific type of music than simply meaning alternatives to the popular music of the time. I don’t really think there’s too much I need to describe here, so I won’t.

Best Songs: Smells Like Teen Spirit, Lithium, Territorial Pissings


85. Ocean Rain – Echo and the Bunnymen

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Echo and the Bunnymen shine on this album. With more of an upbeat feel than some of their contemporaries, Ocean Rain is, simply put, a post punk masterpiece. Since I’m only doing my top ten albums for now, this is way up at 85 but it easily makes it into my top 25. Echo and the Bunnymen use quite a few less than normal instruments in this album, including a harp and quite a lot of strings instruments (would that include the harp?). Also has some entertaining lyrics: “And the yo-yo man/Always up and down/Take me to the end of your tether” cue quick staccato violin! This is a fantastic album that I would say sums up a band that was playing a genre where a lot of banRAB ended up stuck in the same old sound, and redoing it in their own unique way. They also don’t use a synthesizer, something you don’t find too much in 80’s new wave type banRAB, but that helps in the band creating themselves. A post punk/new wave must have.

Best Songs: The Yo-Yo Man, Crystal Days, My Kingdom, Angels and Devils
 
I'm back! After a short leave of absence (I've just been busy working, 2 jobs right now, plus taking a physics of music class that kicks ass and trying to learn Reason 4), I'm happy to say I'll be back here again. Hopefully things will be a little less busy now that I have my schedule figured out with work and school and all that, and I won't be going out of town anymore the next few weeks. As I type this, I have another window open working on my next four. I'll try to do at least 12 today to make up for all the lost time. Sorry guys!
 

80. Operation: Doomsday – MF Doom

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About time we got some Doom on here. Operation: Doomsday is a concept album about how the supervillain Doom came to be. The album starts off with a skit done like an old superhero t.v. show, in which a man begins to tell the story to a kid. There are several more skits like this throughout the album, and at the end the album ties right back into the beginning. The actual songs show off Vaughn’s (MF Doom’s) absolute hip-hop genius, with complicated lyric patterns and lots of vocal samples. The melody is usually either a simple jazz loop or something created from a series of samples (Hey! uses a loop made from samples off the introduction music to Scooby Doo) and the album flows together perfectly. Definitely something that neeRAB to be listened to as a complete album, but there are definitely some great single songs on there too. If you like MF Doom at all, well, you’ve probably already heard this. Otherwise, if you like hip-hop infused with jazz and lots of samples, or if you like hip-hop and concept albums, check this out. Actually, just listen to this album regardless. It’s really cool.

Best Songs: Rhymes Like Dimes, Go With the Flow, Who You Think I Am?, Hey!,

79. Finding Beauty in the Wretched – Dirty Elegance

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Finding Beauty in the Wretched is a trip-hop album with some idm influences; but at the same time, it is rather in it’s own unique genre. Simply put, this is an album of epic beauty. It’s very, very close to being in my top 10 albums of all time. It’d definitely make the top 15 if I did that. The female vocals, on the occasions that you hear them, sound like they are being sung by an elegant, upper class woman from the 1800’s to me while the melodies consist of sometimes haunting, sometimes somewhat strange, and sometimes hopeful piano parts or very interesting, complicated corabinations of synthesizer and sounRAB that are usually muddied up. The name Dirty Elegance fits perfectly with the song title, and the wretched, evil dark songs are always beautiful, leading to the album title. I’m not really very good at describing electronic music, but goddamn if this didn’t convince you to listen to it, then just take my advice and grab this. Especially for fans of Massive Attack and Portishead, and jackhammer if you haven’t heard it before I think you would really like it (though I can’t imagine you not having a gem like this).

Best Songs: Solicitude, Jury and Hick, Tailor Made, Angelic Remedy

78. You’re Living All Over Me – Dinosaur

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The epitome of Dinosaur Jr (I called this Dinosaur because that’s what the vinyl I have says, I think they changed their name due to a potential lawsuit shortly after it was released). About time we got some old alternative/noise/indie rock on here. You’re Living All Over Me is a nice noisy album, and it corabines this sound perfectly with a nostalgic upbeat alternative rock sound more perfected and cleaned up than their previous release Dinosaur. The melodic, slightly out of tune, urgent, loud singing and the noisy, powerful, at times shredding guitar of J. Mascis have influenced more banRAB directly, in my opinion, than anyone else in my music library. Their layering of loud guitars with a powerful melody that bursts through a cacophony of noise is the basis for My Bloody Valentine, and if you listen to a lot of similar later music, you can literally hear their guitar riRAB in tons of later alternative rock. They take from classic rock banRAB like Black Sabbath or Slayer in terms of the heaviness of their guitars and the speedy solos. But they’re so much more than any of the banRAB that influenced or were influenced by them. The entire band plays throughout this album as if they music is truly the only thing in this world that matters, and it shines in this amazingly powerful album. If you like rock and you’ve never heard this, then there is something wrong with you. Listen to it now.

Best Songs: Little Fury Things, Kracked, Sludgefest, The Lung, Raisans, Tarpit, In A Jar, Lose, Poledo (Yes, every track on this is amazing I couldn’t pick just three or four)

77. Everything Ecstatic – Four Tet

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Everything Ecstatic is an electronica album with influences from glitch, breakbeat, rock, and trip hop. It’s a very beat heavy album, and the breakbeats hold the songs together as much as they break them apart. He manages to create melodies from some very interesting corabinations of sounRAB. Everything Ecstatic encompasses so much; from psychedelic samples to hip hop beats to background glitch sounRAB to noisy cyrabals and so on, but it can’t really be placed accurately into any of these genres. Hebden is basically throwing all these sounRAB at a canvas that somehow enRAB up not random splotches but more abstract in the likeness of an artist like Picasso (if that makes any sense at all). In other worRAB, with all of the things he is putting together here, this album could easily be experimental electronic music, but he somehow manages to craft melodic, consistently amazing songs throughout.

Best Songs: Smile Around the Face; And Then Patterns; High Fives; Sleep, Eat Food, Have Visions
 
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