How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
Aw, you guys are too kind. Love your "Kind of Blue" story, Joey -- I think it's interesting how so many of your favorite albums are linked to a specific friend from your past; I'm such a solitary listener by comparison, all the albums I end up really connecting deeply with seem to be ones I experience in a really introverted, possibly antisocial manner (with a few significant exceptions).
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
i'm the same way..I want to write a more detailed story on kind of blue during my parents 70s parties,Kevin Davis wrote:Aw, you guys are too kind. Love your "Kind of Blue" story, Joey -- I think it's interesting how so many of your favorite albums are linked to a specific friend from your past; I'm such a solitary listener by comparison, all the albums I end up really connecting deeply with seem to be ones I experience in a really introverted, possibly antisocial manner (with a few significant exceptions).
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
doug rr wrote:i'm the same way..I want to write a more detailed story on kind of blue during my parents 70s parties,Kevin Davis wrote:Aw, you guys are too kind. Love your "Kind of Blue" story, Joey -- I think it's interesting how so many of your favorite albums are linked to a specific friend from your past; I'm such a solitary listener by comparison, all the albums I end up really connecting deeply with seem to be ones I experience in a really introverted, possibly antisocial manner (with a few significant exceptions).
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
I seriously can't even remember the first time I heard any of my top 10 albums, if I could even figure out which would be my top 10. Durdencommatyler and Kevin Davis have some pretty great stories in here, that are actually better pieces of recommendation than a Pitchfork review using the same reminiscent format would.
I do remember the first time I heard Endtroducing was the day between the last day of high school and a big party that was going down the night before the whole walking ceremony thing. I threw that on high as hell, thought it was the most amazing soundscape ever designed. It was in a list of shit to download and check out in my younger days, and it blew me the hell away.
I do remember the first time I heard Endtroducing was the day between the last day of high school and a big party that was going down the night before the whole walking ceremony thing. I threw that on high as hell, thought it was the most amazing soundscape ever designed. It was in a list of shit to download and check out in my younger days, and it blew me the hell away.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
Yeah, me either.Jammer XCI wrote:I seriously can't even remember the first time I heard any of my top 10 albums, if I could even figure out which would be my top 10.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
I was going to speak more about this exact point once I finished up all 10 essays. We'll definitely come back to this.Kevin Davis wrote:Aw, you guys are too kind. Love your "Kind of Blue" story, Joey -- I think it's interesting how so many of your favorite albums are linked to a specific friend from your past; I'm such a solitary listener by comparison, all the albums I end up really connecting deeply with seem to be ones I experience in a really introverted, possibly antisocial manner (with a few significant exceptions).
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
Vince Guaraldi - "A Charlie Brown Christmas"
This is the newest addition to my top ten; even though this music has been with me my whole life, having watched the Charlie Brown special pretty much every Christmas since I was 5 or 6, I didn't actually buy the soundtrack album and digest it fully as a program of music until maybe ten or so years ago. So the process of "discovering" this album was really more of a process of slow, inadvertent absorption, before eventually buying the record and seeing how all the pieces fit.
As jazz goes, "A Charlie Brown Christmas" goes down easy and is comparatively unchallenging. But (as is true of Guaraldi's other music as well), it is rich with melodic ideas, is strikingly ambient for a trio record, and mixes the playful with the melancholy in a way that more accurately reflects my relationship with the holiday season with each passing year. I've always loved and still love Christmas, but I always feel an especially poignant sense of loss -- an awareness of how much life has passed me by, of how many people have come through my life who I'll likely never see again -- around this time, precisely by virtue of having such an array of memories being set against the same cultural cues (music, TV specials, community events) year after year. This music captures that bittersweet feeling in a way that no other seasonal music does.
I include all this as part of the "discovery" story as I feel like it's been a strange breed of album that's taken a lifetime to really pin down, lovely and enjoyable as it even from first listen. The album didn't really begin climbing my rankings of favorites until it became part of my adult family's seasonal listening routine; as my relationship with the holidays has become more complex and grown to encompass a wider range of emotions, "A Charlie Brown Christmas" has been increasingly adept at reflecting those emotions back to me in a way in which I wouldn't be able to necessarily articulate myself. This album has also become the first music that I feel like I've really passed along to my kids, insofar as I know that even if I stopped playing this album for them now, they could hear it as adults and still have (hopefully fond) memories of it, same way I inherited it from my parents' generation.
This is the newest addition to my top ten; even though this music has been with me my whole life, having watched the Charlie Brown special pretty much every Christmas since I was 5 or 6, I didn't actually buy the soundtrack album and digest it fully as a program of music until maybe ten or so years ago. So the process of "discovering" this album was really more of a process of slow, inadvertent absorption, before eventually buying the record and seeing how all the pieces fit.
As jazz goes, "A Charlie Brown Christmas" goes down easy and is comparatively unchallenging. But (as is true of Guaraldi's other music as well), it is rich with melodic ideas, is strikingly ambient for a trio record, and mixes the playful with the melancholy in a way that more accurately reflects my relationship with the holiday season with each passing year. I've always loved and still love Christmas, but I always feel an especially poignant sense of loss -- an awareness of how much life has passed me by, of how many people have come through my life who I'll likely never see again -- around this time, precisely by virtue of having such an array of memories being set against the same cultural cues (music, TV specials, community events) year after year. This music captures that bittersweet feeling in a way that no other seasonal music does.
I include all this as part of the "discovery" story as I feel like it's been a strange breed of album that's taken a lifetime to really pin down, lovely and enjoyable as it even from first listen. The album didn't really begin climbing my rankings of favorites until it became part of my adult family's seasonal listening routine; as my relationship with the holidays has become more complex and grown to encompass a wider range of emotions, "A Charlie Brown Christmas" has been increasingly adept at reflecting those emotions back to me in a way in which I wouldn't be able to necessarily articulate myself. This album has also become the first music that I feel like I've really passed along to my kids, insofar as I know that even if I stopped playing this album for them now, they could hear it as adults and still have (hopefully fond) memories of it, same way I inherited it from my parents' generation.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
Excellent, excellent write up, as usually, KD. This part especially touched me:
And also the end about passing the music on to your kids. I'll never have kids but I imagine if I did, this idea of passing down my favorite music to them would be a huge part of our relationship. That's a powerful thing.Kevin Davis wrote:I've always loved and still love Christmas, but I always feel an especially poignant sense of loss -- an awareness of how much life has passed me by, of how many people have come through my life who I'll likely never see again -- around this time, precisely by virtue of having such an array of memories being set against the same cultural cues (music, TV specials, community events) year after year. This music captures that bittersweet feeling in a way that no other seasonal music does.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
#1: Tom Waits - Bone Machine
The summer of 1993 was brutal in Olathe Kansas. Temperatures topped out steadily in the 80s well into October. I started Middle School/Junior High that September. It would end up being a crucial year for me in a lot of ways. My seventh grade year was when I discovered acting and theater. It was the year I met the girl who would become my first serious girlfriend and to whom I would lose my virginity in a year's time. It was also the year that my favorite band released their best record. Just before the autumnal equinox, like a balm to ease my teenage growing pains, Nirvana released In Utero: an album I'll talk more about later in this exercise.
The warm weather was a blessing and a curse. The biggest benefit was that it allowed me to continue my weekend lawn-mowing service. I manicured many a neighbor's lawn for a fair fee. This income coupled with the modest allowance my parents gave me kept me well fashioned in my favorite films, albums, and flannel prints. If you asked my father, he'd tell you the biggest drawback of the extended summer weather was that it kept my windows open and kept me outside. This meant that he was subjected to my music at "an unreasonable volume" later into the year than he felt comfortable with. Pearl Jam's Ten and Vs, Nirvana's Nevermind, Incesticide and (the brand spanking new and therefore relentlessly replayed) In Utero were the staples. Mixed in were healthy helpings of Alice In Chains, Stone Temple Pilots, Metallica and They Might Be Giants; all bands my father had exactly zero interest in diving into and experiencing. I'm sure he longed for the days when I would listen to Weird Al Yankovic and Paula Abdul ad nauseam. He knew my days of listening to his music were fading; perhaps gone forever.
Toward the end of October, Dad couldn't take it anymore. He was at the end of his rope, and so he made me a generous offer. He said he would take me to Best Buy and buy me a new CD. I could save my lawn money and allowance that week. He would foot the bill... BUT the catch was that he got to choose the album. I was completely at his mercy.
We shook on it, like all gentleman must, and headed off the nearest Best Buy location. On the way we talked about music. We talked about why I liked Nirvana and Pearl Jam so much. We talked about how those things moved me the way The Moody Blues and The Eagles moved him. Those bands spoke to something very real and ineffable deep down. I had all these strange and terrifying emotions and these bands were tapping into those things, giving them voice. He said he could understand the sentiment but was ultimately unmoved. He couldn't understand how the bombast and the fuzz and the abrasive vocal styles of those modern grunge and heavy metal bands could offer the same exaltation provided by the expert precision, talent, and majesty of more polished bands like Led Zeppelin or Pink Floyd. I talked about Mike McCready's guitar solos on Ten. He countered with David Gilmore's work on The Dark Side of the Moon. I asked which one was Dark Side? Was that the one with Money on it? Dad said, "How do you not know Dark Side of the Moon? It's the most famous rock album of all times!" (One thing I adore about my dad is his insistence in adding an 's' at the end of 'all time.')
I was all, "Dad, do you even own that album? I've never heard you play it."
"I have it on vinyl."
"That turntable hasn't worked in my lifetime."
"Yes, it has."
"You NEVER play it."
"It doesn't work right now!"
"Ah. Well, my mistake."
"That's it, you're getting Dark Side of the Moon. You need to listen to some real music for a change."
He parked the car, marched into Best Buy, grabbed a copy of The Dark Side of the Moon, paid for it, marched back to the car and threw the thing in my lap. I worked that plastic shrink wrap from the jewel case as Dad sped home. My father didn't say another word to me until after dinner that night. He asked if I liked the album. I said it was really great. He said, "Told you. Best of all times."
It ended up being one of my favorite gifts that my father ever gave me. The album is... exquisite. It's about as close to perfect as a record can be. And it lead me on a fantastic journey through psychedelic rock, to glam rock, to new wave, to prog-rock. Things I love about Bowie and Talking Heads and Jethro Tull can all be found somewhere on The Dark Side of the Moon. It's a revelatory piece of art. It's ageless and profound. Even in spite of my early aversion to instrumental music and long stretches of rock music without vocals, THIS album connected. It transcended all of that. It was my all time favorite album for more than a decade. And, really, it's only been the last three years or so that it's fallen out of the #3 spot. I think it's because the challenges of records like Bone Machine and Vitalogy and The White Album have become far more satisfying to me as I've gotten older. It's not that Dark Side is too polished but I like an element of discomfort in my listening, I think. At least, I do right now.
One final thought about the album: it's crazy how good every track is. Money, probably the biggest hit from that album, and one of Pink Floyd's all time biggest hits, is not even in the top half in terms of "best" song on the album. That's bonkers to me. It's completely stupid that one band was able to compose such a diverse, deep, and melodic record that is equally beautiful and strange; joyful and maddening. Of all the great albums that enjoy tremendous success and new discovery throughout the years, The Dark Side of the Moon is the only one that makes 100% sense to me. I totally get why this thing spent 14 years on the Billboard Top 200 chart. And I'm glad I discovered it when I did, at a time when it seemed like exactly the wrong album for me, when I was at an age in which I wanted to disagree with my parents, at a time when none of my friends had any interest in Pink Floyd, at a time when "drop the leash/get out of my fucking face" was about as powerful and profound a piece of poetry as I could imagine, that's when Dark Side found me -- was literally delivered to me. And fuck man! It hit. Everything changed. The doors that opened to me musically because of that record! And I've never dived into it too deeply, but I'd be willing to bet there is some crazy bond that my father forged with me that day that will last long after both of us are gone.
- Spoiler: show
- Spoiler: show
- Spoiler: show
- Spoiler: show
The summer of 1993 was brutal in Olathe Kansas. Temperatures topped out steadily in the 80s well into October. I started Middle School/Junior High that September. It would end up being a crucial year for me in a lot of ways. My seventh grade year was when I discovered acting and theater. It was the year I met the girl who would become my first serious girlfriend and to whom I would lose my virginity in a year's time. It was also the year that my favorite band released their best record. Just before the autumnal equinox, like a balm to ease my teenage growing pains, Nirvana released In Utero: an album I'll talk more about later in this exercise.
The warm weather was a blessing and a curse. The biggest benefit was that it allowed me to continue my weekend lawn-mowing service. I manicured many a neighbor's lawn for a fair fee. This income coupled with the modest allowance my parents gave me kept me well fashioned in my favorite films, albums, and flannel prints. If you asked my father, he'd tell you the biggest drawback of the extended summer weather was that it kept my windows open and kept me outside. This meant that he was subjected to my music at "an unreasonable volume" later into the year than he felt comfortable with. Pearl Jam's Ten and Vs, Nirvana's Nevermind, Incesticide and (the brand spanking new and therefore relentlessly replayed) In Utero were the staples. Mixed in were healthy helpings of Alice In Chains, Stone Temple Pilots, Metallica and They Might Be Giants; all bands my father had exactly zero interest in diving into and experiencing. I'm sure he longed for the days when I would listen to Weird Al Yankovic and Paula Abdul ad nauseam. He knew my days of listening to his music were fading; perhaps gone forever.
Toward the end of October, Dad couldn't take it anymore. He was at the end of his rope, and so he made me a generous offer. He said he would take me to Best Buy and buy me a new CD. I could save my lawn money and allowance that week. He would foot the bill... BUT the catch was that he got to choose the album. I was completely at his mercy.
We shook on it, like all gentleman must, and headed off the nearest Best Buy location. On the way we talked about music. We talked about why I liked Nirvana and Pearl Jam so much. We talked about how those things moved me the way The Moody Blues and The Eagles moved him. Those bands spoke to something very real and ineffable deep down. I had all these strange and terrifying emotions and these bands were tapping into those things, giving them voice. He said he could understand the sentiment but was ultimately unmoved. He couldn't understand how the bombast and the fuzz and the abrasive vocal styles of those modern grunge and heavy metal bands could offer the same exaltation provided by the expert precision, talent, and majesty of more polished bands like Led Zeppelin or Pink Floyd. I talked about Mike McCready's guitar solos on Ten. He countered with David Gilmore's work on The Dark Side of the Moon. I asked which one was Dark Side? Was that the one with Money on it? Dad said, "How do you not know Dark Side of the Moon? It's the most famous rock album of all times!" (One thing I adore about my dad is his insistence in adding an 's' at the end of 'all time.')
I was all, "Dad, do you even own that album? I've never heard you play it."
"I have it on vinyl."
"That turntable hasn't worked in my lifetime."
"Yes, it has."
"You NEVER play it."
"It doesn't work right now!"
"Ah. Well, my mistake."
"That's it, you're getting Dark Side of the Moon. You need to listen to some real music for a change."
He parked the car, marched into Best Buy, grabbed a copy of The Dark Side of the Moon, paid for it, marched back to the car and threw the thing in my lap. I worked that plastic shrink wrap from the jewel case as Dad sped home. My father didn't say another word to me until after dinner that night. He asked if I liked the album. I said it was really great. He said, "Told you. Best of all times."
It ended up being one of my favorite gifts that my father ever gave me. The album is... exquisite. It's about as close to perfect as a record can be. And it lead me on a fantastic journey through psychedelic rock, to glam rock, to new wave, to prog-rock. Things I love about Bowie and Talking Heads and Jethro Tull can all be found somewhere on The Dark Side of the Moon. It's a revelatory piece of art. It's ageless and profound. Even in spite of my early aversion to instrumental music and long stretches of rock music without vocals, THIS album connected. It transcended all of that. It was my all time favorite album for more than a decade. And, really, it's only been the last three years or so that it's fallen out of the #3 spot. I think it's because the challenges of records like Bone Machine and Vitalogy and The White Album have become far more satisfying to me as I've gotten older. It's not that Dark Side is too polished but I like an element of discomfort in my listening, I think. At least, I do right now.
One final thought about the album: it's crazy how good every track is. Money, probably the biggest hit from that album, and one of Pink Floyd's all time biggest hits, is not even in the top half in terms of "best" song on the album. That's bonkers to me. It's completely stupid that one band was able to compose such a diverse, deep, and melodic record that is equally beautiful and strange; joyful and maddening. Of all the great albums that enjoy tremendous success and new discovery throughout the years, The Dark Side of the Moon is the only one that makes 100% sense to me. I totally get why this thing spent 14 years on the Billboard Top 200 chart. And I'm glad I discovered it when I did, at a time when it seemed like exactly the wrong album for me, when I was at an age in which I wanted to disagree with my parents, at a time when none of my friends had any interest in Pink Floyd, at a time when "drop the leash/get out of my fucking face" was about as powerful and profound a piece of poetry as I could imagine, that's when Dark Side found me -- was literally delivered to me. And fuck man! It hit. Everything changed. The doors that opened to me musically because of that record! And I've never dived into it too deeply, but I'd be willing to bet there is some crazy bond that my father forged with me that day that will last long after both of us are gone.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
tragabigzanda wrote:I'd maybe bump Life & Limb for Epic Problemtragabigzanda wrote:Top 10 maybe?
Hello Morning
Close Captioned
The Kill
Place/Position
Do You Like Me?
Latest Disgrace
Recap Modotti
Nightshop
Break
Life & Limb
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Mon January 12, 2026 9:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- LoathedVermin72
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
tragabigzanda wrote:Silly Joey, everyone knowsWish You Were HereAnimals is the best Floyd album.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
tragabigzanda wrote:Silly Joey, everyone knows Wish You Were Here is the best Floyd album.
That's definitely been my experience with Pink Floyd fans. And with music fans in general as I've gotten older. I love Wish You Were Here. It's a great album and I can't fault anyone for putting it in the top slot. But sometimes it really feels like people do that because Dark Side is too obvious or too ubiquitous. Certainly fatigue plays some small part, right?
Either way, both outstanding records. But Dark Side is my favorite.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
1. Dark Side
2. Wish You Were Here
3. The Wall
4. Animals
5. Meddle
6. Piper at the Gates of Dawn
7. The Final Cut
8. Saucerful of Secrets
9. The Division Bell
10. Atom Heart Mother
11. A Momentary Lapse of Reason
12. Obscured by Clouds
13. More
14. Ummagumma
2. Wish You Were Here
3. The Wall
4. Animals
5. Meddle
6. Piper at the Gates of Dawn
7. The Final Cut
8. Saucerful of Secrets
9. The Division Bell
10. Atom Heart Mother
11. A Momentary Lapse of Reason
12. Obscured by Clouds
13. More
14. Ummagumma
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Mon January 12, 2026 9:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Mon January 12, 2026 9:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
I literally never listen to Pink Floyd anymore. I was actually just discussing this with my wife recently, and she came to the realization that she has grown to actively dislike them.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
tragabigzanda wrote:Yea, for me it's probably a combination of fatigue and running length. Dark Side is a masterpiece...but I find it to be a bit long and cumbersome, whereas WYWH can slide into an afternoon listening sesh real easy...durdencommatyler wrote:tragabigzanda wrote:Silly Joey, everyone knows Wish You Were Here is the best Floyd album.![]()
That's definitely been my experience with Pink Floyd fans. And with music fans in general as I've gotten older. I love Wish You Were Here. It's a great album and I can't fault anyone for putting it in the top slot. But sometimes it really feels like people do that because Dark Side is too obvious or too ubiquitous. Certainly fatigue plays some small part, right?
Either way, both outstanding records. But Dark Side is my favorite.
Wish You Were Here is the longer of the two, though.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
You're gonna go far.durdencommatyler wrote:tragabigzanda wrote:Yea, for me it's probably a combination of fatigue and running length. Dark Side is a masterpiece...but I find it to be a bit long and cumbersome, whereas WYWH can slide into an afternoon listening sesh real easy...durdencommatyler wrote:tragabigzanda wrote:Silly Joey, everyone knows Wish You Were Here is the best Floyd album.![]()
That's definitely been my experience with Pink Floyd fans. And with music fans in general as I've gotten older. I love Wish You Were Here. It's a great album and I can't fault anyone for putting it in the top slot. But sometimes it really feels like people do that because Dark Side is too obvious or too ubiquitous. Certainly fatigue plays some small part, right?
Either way, both outstanding records. But Dark Side is my favorite.![]()
Wish You Were Here is the longer of the two, though.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
I get that, oddly enough. I certainly don't actively dislike them but I don't listen to them anywhere near as much as I used to.LoathedVermin72 wrote:I literally never listen to Pink Floyd anymore. I was actually just discussing this with my wife recently, and she came to the realization that she has grown to actively dislike them.
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Re: How Did You Discover Your Top 10 Albums?
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Mon January 12, 2026 9:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.