Showing posts with label Top 50. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Top 50. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 June 2018

A Top 50

Transport yourself back to May 1997, it's a couple of weeks before my 19th birthday and I'm at Middlesbrough Arena to see if Jesus Jones are still any good. The support band walk on stage and get ready to begin, but the singer announces he needs the toilet and wanders offstage again.  As his bandmates stand around like lemons waiting for him to come back, this is my first introduction to a band that will become firmly entrenched in 3rd place of an otherwise ever-changing favourite bands list. That band is A.

A aren't a band that would make many people's favourite bands lists, if you're not scratching your head right now saying "Who?" then you probably know them for Nothing, their 2002 hit single that bore little resemblance to the vast majority of their other songs.  I know them as a band with massive tunes, massive guitars, too many E numbers and in Jason Perry a man with a voice that just begs you to sing along in an equally high pitch. The best singalong band bar none.

After the Jesus Jones gig I was impressed enough to watch out for their name in future and sure enough, 8 days later, Kerrang gave away a free CD, Radio Kerrang Vol. 2, that featured Foghorn. The purchase of the No. 1 7" and How Ace Are Buildings debut quickly followed.  Then a few months after that, and one change of bassist later, their lineup solidified and I saw them again at my first festival, Reading 97. After seeing another support slot with Symposium in 98 and two more festival gigs, it seems strange looking back to think I've never seen them headline.

There were a fair few bands around in those late 90s Britrock times with a decent album full of harmonies or terrace chant choruses, bands like 3 Colours Red, Symposium or Silver Sun, but A consistently delivered, ticking all of the boxes on several albums.  They never really seemed to be taken as a serious proposition though, probably because they never took themselves too seriously, but that's ignoring the fact they had some amazing songs, head and shoulders above more celebrated bands from similar genres.

So despite only having 4 studio albums and 83 songs in total to draw on, this is one of the best top 50s I've done, the top half in particular being absolutely incredible and a great legacy from a great band.  If you haven't already, and you like loud guitars coupled with massive tunes, it goes without saying that I'd recommend them highly.

1. No. 1 (from How Ace Are Buildings)
2. Nothing (from Hi-Fi Serious)
3. W.D.Y.C.A.I (from Hi-Fi Serious)
4. Old Folks (from Monkey Kong)
5. She Said (B-side to Old Folks)
6. Monkey Kong (from Monkey Kong)
7. Foghorn (from How Ace Are Buildings)
8. Bad Idea (from How Ace Are Buildings)
9. Cheeky Monkey (from How Ace Are Buildings)
10. Hopper Jonnus Fang (from Monkey Kong)
11. Someone Else (from Teen Dance Ordinance)
12. Rush Song (from Teen Dance Ordinance)
13. Starbucks (from Hi-Fi Serious)
14. Winter of 96 (from How Ace Are Buildings)
15. Something's Going On (from Hi-Fi Serious)
16. Better Off With Him (from Teen Dance Ordinance)
17. Singalong (from How Ace Are Buildings)
18. Five in the Morning (from How Ace Are Buildings)
19. Out of Tune (from How Ace Are Buildings)
20. I Love Lake Tahoe (from Monkey Kong)
21. Miles Away (from Monkey Kong)
22. Alright (B-side to No. 1)
23. Summer on the Underground (from Monkey Kong)
24. Down on the Floor (from Monkey Kong)
25. Good Time (standalone single)
26. Hi-Fi Serious (from Hi-Fi Serious)
27. Coming Around (B-side to Starbucks)
28. For Starters (from Monkey Kong)
29. If It Ain't Broke Fix It Anyway (from Monkey Kong)
30. Champions of Endings (B-side to Starbucks)
31. T-Shirt Money (B-side to Nothing)
32. Just Like Paradise (B-side to Something's Going On)
33. Took It Away (from Hi-Fi Serious)
34. Human Condition (B-side to Something's Going On)
35. Shut Yer Face (from Hi-Fi Serious)
36. The Distance (from Hi-Fi Serious)
37. House Under the Ground (from How Ace Are Buildings)
38. Ender (from How Ace Are Buildings)
39. Get Out More (B-side to Rush Song)
40. I Wonder (B-side to Better Off With Him)
41. Black Hole (from Teen Dance Ordinance)
42. The One (B-side to Rush Song)
43. We're Equal (B-side to Old Folks)
44. 6 O'Clock On a Tube Stop (from Hi-Fi Serious)
45. Pacific Ocean Blue (from Hi-Fi Serious)
46. Full Pelt (B-side to Good Time)
47. Afterburner (from Teen Dance Ordinance)
48. Die Tonight  (from Teen Dance Ordinance)
49. Worst Thing That Can Happen (from Teen Dance Ordinance)
50. The Art of Making Sense (from Teen Dance Ordinance)

Sunday, 5 June 2016

Top 50 of 1990

1990 was a turning point of sorts for me.  Previously I had watched Top of the Pops and heard music generally and I had a record collection made up of about 10-15 singles and around 8 albums, but in terms of genre and identity they were all over the place, something I heard and liked - musical innocence in its purest form if you like.

In 1990 I turned 12 and started taping things from the top 40 with the intention of keeping it, I think I had already been doing this before but I don't think anything stuck around for very long.  I still have some of the recordings from 1990.  Me and my older brother also started making charts, our favourite 20 songs from this week's top 40, we would disappear off separately on Sunday night then come together and share them number by number.  You can find my top 40 for the year that I compiled at the time here.

If you look at that chart, it has some of the singles I bought that year (Gazza, Aztec Camera, FAB featuring MC Parker), it has plenty of pop that I couldn't necessarily recall today, but it also has the seeds of where I was about to go with my musical tastes.  My brother was starting to listen to indie music, in particular those associated with Manchester, baggy and associated hangers on for starters, hence the presence in that chart of the likes of The Charlatans and the Soup Dragons.  Within a year The Farm and EMF would release albums that would kick off my record collection proper, they would become "my" bands, but that's for the next blog.  As an aside the EMF and Farm songs featured there are eligible for the 1991 chart I'll be doing next as the albums were released then, rather than being separated out because the singles were released in 1990.

After a while I started to separate the tapes I had into Rock, Indie and Dance.  I had by far the most indie tapes, rock and dance were fairly equal for a time.  As you'll see below dance didn't stand the test of time with me, although my first rock tapes contained some entries in here like Holy Smoke, Thunderstruck and Hangar 18 as well as other songs that didn't quite make it (Poison's Unskinny Bop anyone?).

As with 1989, in particular with the American bands, some of the songs in this chart didn't become known over here until the following year as the world caught up.  So albums like Extreme's Pornograffiti and The Black Crowes' Shake Your Money Maker were two of the first rock albums I ever bought, just not actually in 1990.  Mix in some of the aforementioned indie and rock, throw in some Senseless Things, Pantera and Manics that I caught up with after discovering them in the next year or two and you have a very solid year of songs.  No really classic albums I don't think, but 1991 was poised and ready to change all that in a big way.........

1. Senseless Things - Tangled Lines
2. Megadeth - Holy Wars....The Punishment Due
3. Pantera - Cemetery Gates
4. Pantera - Domination
5. Inspiral Carpets - This is How it Feels
6. Senseless Things - Is It Too Late?
7. Iron Maiden - Bring Your Daughter....to the Slaughter
8. Charlatans - The Only One I Know
9. Megadeth - Hangar 18
10. Extreme - Decadence Dance
11. Black Crowes - Jealous Again
12. Black Crowes - Hard to Handle
13. The La's - There She Goes
14. AC/DC - Thunderstruck
15. Charlatans - Then
16. Manic Street Preachers - New Art Riot
17. Extreme - More Than Words
18. Black Crowes - She Talks to Angels
19. Pantera - Cowboys From Hell
20. Stone Roses - One Love
21. Manic Street Preachers - Strip it Down
22. Pop Will Eat Itself - 92°F
23. Extreme - Hole Hearted
24. Extreme - Get the Funk Out
25. Senseless Things - Leo
26. Carter USM - Rubbish
27. Happy Mondays - Step On
28. Extreme - It('s a Monster)
29. 1000 Homo DJs - Supernaut
30. Black Crowes - Stare it Cold
31. Slayer - War Ensemble
32. Black Crowes - Twice as Hard
33. Extreme - Song For Love
34. Napalm Death - Suffer the Children
35. Napalm Death - Vision Conquest
36. Extreme - He-Man Woman Hater
37. Black Crowes - Sister Luck
38. Inspiral Carpets - She Comes in the Fall
39. Happy Mondays - Loose Fit
40. Extreme - Pornograffiti
41. Megadeth - Rust in Peace....Polaris
42. Helmet - Repetition
43. Iron Maiden - Holy Smoke
44. Pantera - Heresy
45. New Order - World in Motion
46. James - Come Home
47. Aztec Camera - Good Morning Britain
48. Megadeth - Tornado of Souls
49. Megadeth - Lucretia
50. Slayer - Seasons in the Abyss


Sunday, 8 May 2016

Top 50 of 1989

All of the preceding charts were a mixture of childhood pop reminiscence and time-travelling discovery at a later date, but by 1989 the pop had dried up.....or maybe it hasn't stood the test of time particularly well. Perhaps I was also growing out of it as the likes of Stock/Aitken/Waterman were taking over the charts.  All the songs that made it onto my pop shortlist ended up losing out including Technotronic's Pump Up the Jam, Bobby Brown's My Prerogative and On Our Own and the one that came closest, Jason Donovan's Too Many Broken Hearts (perhaps assisted by my later cover), the latter two expanding my ever growing 7" collection.

In 1989 I turned 11, so I don't think I was aware of most of the songs here in that year but I certainly became aware of most of them over the next 2 or 3 years.  Many of these songs and albums were part of my grounding in music even if it didn't necessarily take place in that year, in fact a few of the albums featured here didn't actually break over here until subsequent years, with an accompanying breakthrough single.

So with pop gone and the two bands that dominated the 80s charts, Iron Maiden and Metallica, between albums it allowed other bands to shine.  Bands like Faith No More, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Nine Inch Nails, Sepultura and Soundgarden produced very good albums in 1989, in all cases they would follow it up with one even better that would further shape my tastes in years to come.  The Senseless Things' Postcard CV in particular was a huge influence on my own songwriting and was another that was to be followed up by even greater songs.

The musical landscape, as well as what would become my musical taste, was starting to change, definitely for the better with a new rock/alternative slant and a healthy dose of indie pushing its way in.  My musical awakening was beginning.....

1. Senseless Things - Too Much Kissing
2. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Higher Ground
3. Faith No More - Epic
4. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Knock Me Down
5. Nine Inch Nails - Head Like A Hole
6. Faith No More - From Out of Nowhere
7. Senseless Things - Teenage
8. Stone Roses - I Am the Resurrection
9. Senseless Things - Standing in the Rain
10. Nine Inch Nails - Sin
11. Carcass - Reek of Putrefaction
12. Nine Inch Nails- Terrible Lie
13. Faith No More - Falling to Pieces
14. Extreme - Mutha (Don't Wanna Go To School Today)
15. Faith No More - The Real Thing
16. Stone Roses - Waterfall
17. Manic Street Preachers - Suicide Alley
18. Sepultura - Inner Self
19. Sepultura - Beneath the Remains
20. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Taste the Pain
21. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Nobody Weird Like Me
22. Faith No More - Woodpecker From Mars
23. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Stone Cold Bush
24. Soundgarden - Loud Love
25. Senseless Things - Girlfriend
26. Senseless Things - Back to Nowhere
27. Carter USM - Sheriff Fatman
28. Stone Roses - I Wanna Be Adored
29. Senseless Things - Trevor
30. Stone Roses - Made of Stone
31. Nirvana - About a Girl
32. Soundgarden - Hands All Over
33. Extreme - Play With Me
34. Senseless Things - Someone in You
35. Stone Roses - She Bangs the Drums
36. Extreme - Flesh 'N' Blood
37. Nine Inch Nails - Sanctified
38. Faith No More - Zombie Eaters
39. Inspiral Carpets - Find Out Why
40. Pop Will Eat Itself - Def.Con.One
41. Wonder Stuff  - Don't Let Me Down, Gently
42. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Johnny, Kick a Hole in the Sky
43. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Subway to Venus
44. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Good Time Boys
45. Nine Inch Nails - Down In It
46. Bolt Thrower - World Eater
47. Sepultura - Mass Hypnosis
48. Extreme - Kid Ego
49. Extreme - Little Girls
50. Nine Inch Nails - Ringfinger

Sunday, 17 April 2016

Top 50 of 1988

In 1988 I turned 10 and at the time I think I owned 4 albums and about 10 singles.  So it's kind of nice that a song from one of those albums managed to make it to number 1 this time around and break the Metallica/Iron Maiden stranglehold of the three previous charts.

This chart is the first year to break out on its own, given the previous ones were 1970-82, 1983-85 and 1986-87.  And to be honest there wasn't a massive depth of quality in my collection to choose from.  As in previous charts the golden years of Iron Maiden and Metallica had seen them dominate and with 1988 being the last year that their big hitting albums coincided in the same year, this (coupled with my expanding record collection in future years) will mean this will never happen again in future charts.

The number of bands included here seems much smaller and as an example of quality I had Senseless Things songs hitting the top 20 here that didn't even make their own top 50!  That's not to say that all the songs included here aren't very good, they are.  But compared to other charts, the pop had kind of dried up and turned into Stock/Aitken/Waterman-type stuff (which admittedly I liked at the time but most hasn't stood the test of time well) and all of the metal, rock and indie bands that I own releases by were really just getting started, dipping their toes into the water, their best work yet to come.  So watch this space for 1989 and onwards, the competition is going to get a lot tougher........

1. Aha - Stay On These Roads
2. Iron Maiden - Moonchild
3. Metallica - Blackened
4. Metallica - One
5. Bathory - A Fine Day to Die
6. Iron Maiden - The Evil That Men Do
7. Aha - You Are The One
8. Iron Maiden - The Clairvoyant
9. Iron Maiden - Seventh Son of a Seventh Son
10. Aha - Touchy!
11. Aha - The Living Daylights
12. Aha - Out of Blue Comes Green
13. Aha - This Alone is Love
14. Iron Maiden - Can I Play With Madness
15. Senseless Things - When You Let Me Down
16. Senseless Things - Passions Out of Town
17. Senseless Things - You Don't Want Me
18. Iron Maiden - Only the Good Die Young
19. Metallica - The Shortest Straw
20. Metallica - Breadfan
21. Senseless Things - I Want to Go Back
22. New Order - Blue Monday 88
23. Pet Shop Boys - Heart
24. Metallica - The Frayed Ends of Sanity
25. Metallica - Dyer's Eve
26. Metallica - To Live is to Die
27. Megadeth - In My Darkest Hour
28. Inspiral Carpets - Keep the Circle Around
29. Slayer - Mandatory Suicide
30. Pet Shop Boys - Left to my Own Devices
31. Stone Roses - Elephant Stone
32. Rollins Band - What Am I Doing Here?
33. Slayer - South of Heaven
34. Senseless Things - I've Lost My Train
35. Senseless Things - Where the Secret Lies
36. Wonder Stuff - A Wish Away
37. Carter USM - A Sheltered Life
38. Happy Mondays - W.F.L.
39. Metallica - The Prince
40. Senseless Things - The Only One
41. Metallica - Harvester of Sorrow
42. Metallica - ...And Justice For All
43. Rollins Band - Wreck-Age
44. Iron Maiden - Infinite Dreams
45. Napalm Death - Unchallenged Hate
46. Napalm Death - Mentally Murdered
47. Soundgarden - Flower
48. Megadeth - Hook in Mouth
49. Rollins Band - If You're Alive
50. Rollins Band - Burned Beyond Recognition

Sunday, 13 March 2016

Top 50 of 1986 to 1987

Last time out I covered 1983 to 1985, this time it slims down to a two year period, from 1986 to 1987.  During those years I was aged 7 to 9 years old and still had a very small record collection, adding albums by Rick Astley and Wet Wet Wet as well as singles by the likes of Europe, Living in a Box and Hue and Cry.  Some of those artists made it here, others didn't.

As with the two previous charts there are still a lot of albums discovered much later, if you followed the 1970-82 and 83-85 charts the pattern of Metallica and Maiden entries will be of no surprise but there were a few more bands starting to hit their stride from slower beginnings, bands like Faith No More and Red Hot Chili Peppers.  Not to mention the usual selection of chart hits that hung around in my brain long enough to still impress.

There's a distinct feeling here of things starting to get a little more alternative, the aforementioned FNM and RHCP increasing their number, the pop songs included being a little less cheesy and more hard-hitting in places, the metal growing ever more extreme.  The number of releases to choose from in my collection is still relatively small from these years meaning repeats of bands are inevitable, but the sounds within are definitely starting to open out.

1. Metallica - Master of Puppets
2. Slayer - Angel of Death
3. New Order - True Faith
4. Iron Maiden - Caught Somewhere in Time
5. Iron Maiden - The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner
6. Metallica - Battery
7. Europe - The Final Countdown
8. Faith No More - Faster Disco
9. Iron Maiden - Heaven Can Wait
10. Iron Maiden - Alexander the Great
11. Pet Shop Boys - It's a Sin
12. Metallica - Damage Inc
13. Iron Maiden - Wasted Years
14. Guns N' Roses - Welcome to the Jungle
15. Iron Maiden - Stranger in a Strange Land
16. Megadeth - Peace Sells
17. Guns N' Roses - Sweet Child O' Mine
18. Slayer - Raining Blood
19. Metallica - Last Caress/Green Hell
20. Iron Maiden - Deja Vu
21. Guns N' Roses - Paradise City
22. Faith No More - Introduce Yourself
23. Pet Shop Boys - Always on my Mind
24. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Backwoods
25. Cutting Crew - (I Just) Died in your Arms
26. Aha - Manhattan Skyline
27. Napalm Death - Instinct of Survival
28. Faith No More - We Care a Lot
29. Sepultura - Troops of Doom
30. Europe - Rock the Night
31. Faith No More - Chinese Arithmetic
32. Faith No More - R n' R
33. Metallica - Welcome Home (Sanitarium)
34. Pet Shop Boys - Suburbia
35. Europe - On Broken Wings
36. Pet Shop Boys - Opportunities
37. Faith No More - Anne's Song
38. Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up
39. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Fight Like a Brave
40. Aha - Cry Wolf
41. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Me and My Friends
42. Starship - Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now
43. Napalm Death - Scum
44. Napalm Death - The Kill
45. Faith No More - The Crab Song
46. Faith No More - Spirit
47. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Subterranean Homesick Blues
48. Jan Hammer - Crockett's Theme
49. Julian Cope - World Shut Your Mouth
50. Megadeth - Wake Up Dead

The next chart will be the first single year, 1988.

Sunday, 29 November 2015

Top 50 of 1983 to 1985

The previous blog from 1970 to 1982 was basically collecting up all of the loose ends and moulding them together to get this journey through my record collection moving.  Yes, there were some themes with three Iron Maiden albums in particular jostling for position and taking up a large share of proceedings, but it was a long time period so felt a little disjointed.

1983 to 1985 is obviously much shorter in terms of time, so may seem a little more cohesive, but still the albums and songs I own from this period are not as abundant as later years.  A lot of the entries come from two particular metal giants, Metallica starting life with Kill 'Em All and Ride the Lightning and Iron Maiden starting to come into their prime with Piece of Mind and Powerslave.  But intermingled with those songs are some classics from the worlds of pop, rock and metal alike.

1985 saw my first record purchase, Aled Jones' Walking in the Air on 7", which sadly didn't make it here.  My first album, Aha's Hunting High and Low fared better with four entries, pretty successful longevity for a first album purchase.  With me being aged between 4 and 7 for the period of this chart it doesn't take a genius to work out that I wasn't into the majority of these songs at the time, but at least I could say I was aware of around 10 or so, some leaving a last impression on my young mind.  It would take a few more years before my record collection really started growing but in the coming years there were still plenty of classic albums to rediscover.

1. Metallica- For Whom the Bell Tolls
2. Aha - The Sun Always Shines on TV
3. Iron Maiden - Aces High
4. Phil Oakey & Giorgio Moroder - Together in Electric Dreams
5. Killing Joke - Love Like Blood
6. Iron Maiden - Powerslave
7. The Cult - She Sells Sanctuary
8. Aha - Take On Me
9. Metallica - Fade to Black
10. Iron Maiden - The Trooper
11. Dead or Alive - You Spin Me Round
12. Ray Parker Jr - Ghostbusters
13. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Jungle Man
14. Huey Lewis and the News - The Power of Love
15. Iron Maiden - Rime of the Ancient Mariner
16. Metallica - Creeping Death
17. Metallica - Whiplash
18. Metallica- Metal Militia
19. Iron Maiden - 2 Minutes to Midnight
20. Dire Straits- Money for Nothing
21. Iron Maiden - Flight of Icarus
22. Metallica - The Four Horsemen
23. Europe - Seven Doors Hotel
24. Metallica - Ride the Lightning
25. Metallica - Fight Fire With Fire
26. Megadeth - Mechanix
27. Megadeth - Killing is my Business and Business is Good
28. Metallica - The Call of Ktulu
29. Faith No More - We Care a Lot
30. Kajagoogoo- Too Shy
31. Smiths - This Charming Man
32. Aha - Train of Thought
33. Metallica - Hit the Lights
34. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Nevermind
35. Smiths - How Soon is Now
36. Faith No More - Mark Bowen
37. Aha - Hunting High and Low
38. Misfits - Die, Die My Darling
39. Metallica - Motorbreath
40. Misfits - Green Hell
41. Metallica - Seek & Destroy
42. Metallica - Phantom Lord
43. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Get Up and Jump
44. Simple Minds - Don't You (Forget About Me)
45. Madness - Uncle Sam
46. Julian Cope - Reynard the Fox
47. Foreigner - I Want to Know What Love Is
48. Duran Duran - Is There Something I Should Know?
49. Spandau Ballet - Gold
50. Red Hot Chili Peppers- Catholic School Girls Rule

The next chart will be 1986 to 1987.

Sunday, 25 October 2015

Top 50 of 1970 to 1982

While I was trying to think of which band should be the next to receive the top 50 treatment, I hit upon the idea of doing a top 50 per year.  Now I don't actually own a lot of albums from before I was born, so the initial part of doing that would probably prove problematic.....no bother, I'll group the first few together I thought, culminating in this first chart covering 1970 to 1982.

The 1970s are a period that I associate with my dad's record collection, the stuff that stuck in my head were some of the more rocky albums like Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath and a load of prog stuff, even though I don't think he actually owns that many albums by the aforementioned bands.  No matter, I'm only counting things that I own anyway and for this time period that mainly consists of the first 3 Iron Maiden albums, a host of best ofs, the odd 80s compilation and a few random selections creeping in here and there.  Certainly where Maiden are concerned that shows and I make no apology for it, it's just the way the chart falls!

Some of the selections were difficult to rank due to some pretty different genres battling for attention.  There was also a much smaller window for knowing the songs at the time (given that I was born in 1978), although Madness and Adam and the Ants are two that stand out here where that was the case.  So most of these entries come from the "before my time" school, revisiting older classics in later years to see what all the fuss was about.  Some stand the test of time well, others can never be the same without the context of "being there".  However, this is only the start, and "being there" will play a huge part in the coming charts as my musical journey continues.....

1. Iron Maiden - Hallowed Be Thy Name
2. Iron Maiden - Phantom of the Opera
3. Jeff Wayne - The Eve of the War
4. Motorhead - Ace of Spades
5. Iron Maiden - Run to the Hills
6. Ramones - Sheena is a Punk Rocker
7. Iron Maiden - Iron Maiden
8. Misfits - Last Caress
9. Iron Maiden - Number of the Beast
10. Ramones - Blitzkrieg Bop
11. Sex Pistols - Pretty Vacant
12. Jeff Wayne - The Artilleryman & The Fighting Machine
13. Duran Duran - Rio
14. Ultravox - Vienna
15. Madness - House of Fun
16. Dexy's Midnight Runners - Come on Eileen
17. Misfits - Halloween
18. Sex Pistols - Anarchy in the UK
19. Duran Duran - Girls on Film
20. Misfits - Astro Zombies
21. Madness - Our House
22. Ramones - Rockaway Beach
23. Deep Purple - Speed King
24. Motorhead - Overkill
25. Iron Maiden - Running Free
26. Iron Maiden - Prowler
27. Iron Maiden - Sanctuary
28. The Teardop Explodes - Reward
29. Chas & Dave - The Sideboard Song
30. Iron Maiden - Wrathchild
31. Adam and the Ants - Stand and Deliver
32. Killing Joke - Follow the Leaders
33. Duran Duran - Planet Earth
34. Rainbow - Since You've Been Gone
35. Black Sabbath - Paranoid
36. Joy Division - Love Will Tear Us Apart
37. Joy Division - Transmission
38. Chas & Dave - Margate
39. Iron Maiden - Children of the Damned
40. Iron Maiden - Charlotte the Harlot
41. Sex Pistols - God Save the Queen
42. Deep Purple - Black Night
43. Duran Duran - Hungry Like the Wolf
44. Michael Jackson - Billie Jean
45. Iron Maiden - The Prisoner
46. Iron Maiden - Invaders
47. Iron Maiden - Murders in the Rue Morgue
48. Madness - Baggy Trousers
49. Motorhead - Bomber
50. Led Zeppelin - Black Dog

The next chart will be 1983 to 1985.

Sunday, 14 September 2014

Red Hot Chili Peppers Top 50

If my announcement that my next top 50 would be the Red Hot Chili Peppers is anything to go by, they're definitely a band that polarise opinion.  Some of you were really looking forward to this one, others poured scorn on them as a one song band or a bit of a joke.  Probably a hint of truth in both of those criticisms, but as I'm here doing this chart I obviously see it from a different angle.  Yes, the lyrics were quite often daft rhymes and in-jokes that most people wouldn't dare utter in public, but despite the socks, lightbulbs and flaming helmets etc. they have always made people move and have always been extremely good at the art of "the song", as many of the higher entries in my chart demonstrate.

I may have heard bits and pieces here and there but I first got into the Red Hot Chili Peppers when I saw a piece on Raw Power in 1992 promoting 'What Hits?', which showed clips from videos throughout their career so far.  I promptly bought said album (nestling in the chronological paper record of my early collection between 'Stigma' by EMF and 'Broken' by Nine Inch Nails) and took it from there.

Alongside listening to the songs, as a 14 year old I remember studying the sleeve and working out which member was which and who were those people who didn't look like Anthony Kiedis, Flea, John Frusciante, Hillel Slovak, Chad Smith or Jack Irons?  Buying 'Blood Sugar Sex Magik' shortly after and trying to match the tattoos on the inner sleeve to the band members.  Buying the first four albums and discovering that, despite being in the original lineup, that Slovak and Irons weren't on the first album and first two albums respectively and that the mystery men were Jack Sherman and Cliff Martinez.  All the details that matter, all before Google was around to help me out.

Those first two albums, the first self-titled from 84 and 'Freaky Styley' from 85, were very patchy, hence their under-representation here.  'The Uplift Mofo Party Plan' was where the "proper" lineup came back together and where they hit their stride, but Hillel Slovak's tragic death interrupted that progress.  Enter Frusciante and Smith and the classic line-up was born.

Career highs of 'Mother's Milk' and 'Blood Sugar Sex Magik' followed and fame was assured, but the guitarist curse struck again as Frusciante departed from the limelight and after a few stops and starts Dave Navarro finally joined for the underrated 'One Hot Minute' album.  Some good songs were produced with Navarro but he never really fit in and it wasn't long before Frusciante was back and the band were reinvented.

Out went the brash funk-rock and bravado on the whole and in came a slightly introspective twist which reintroduced the band to the mainstream with a series of hit singles and the ever-bonkers videos that accompanied them.  I'm sure there were many that abandoned the band at this point, but just as many (if not more) would have joined the story and, like me years before, delved into the rich and variable back catalogue of an excellent band.

1. By the Way
2. Otherside
3. Higher Ground
4. Knock Me Down
5. My Friends
6. Under the Bridge
7. Give it Away
8. Jungle Man
9. Backwoods
10. Blood Sugar Sex Magik
11. I Could Have Lied
12. Breaking the Girl
13. Taste the Pain
14. Stone Cold Bush
15. Suck my Kiss
16. If You Have to Ask
17. Soul to Squeeze
18. Nobody Weird Like Me
19. Parallel Universe
20. Fight Like a Brave
21. Nevermind
22. Warped
23. Me and My Friends
24. Sir Psycho Sexy
25. The Righteous and the Wicked
26. Funky Monks
27. Apache Rose Peacock
28. My Lovely Man
29. Aeroplane
30. The Greeting Song
31. The Power of Equality
32. Can't Stop
33. Cabron
34. Coffee Shop
35. Naked in the Rain
36. Catholic School Girls Rule
37. Good Time Boys
38. Around the World
39. Californication
40. One Big Mob
41. Get Up and Jump
42. Subterranean Homesick Blues
43. Shallow Be Thy Game
44. Dani California
45. Johnny, Kick a Hole in the Sky
46. Organic Anti-Beat Box Band
47. Behind the Sun
48. Scar Tissue
49. Subway to Venus
50. No Chump Love Sucker

By Era
Red Hot Chili Peppers 1
Freaky Styley 3
The Uplift Mofo Party Plan 7
Mother's Milk 8
Blood Sugar Sex Magik 15
One Hot Minute 6
Californication 5
By the Way 3
Stadium Arcadium 1
I'm With You 0
Others 1

Sunday, 17 August 2014

Paradise Lost Top 50

Ask anyone who the most influential British metal band ever are and they'll probably list bands like Black Sabbath, Judas Priest and Iron Maiden.  Add Paradise Lost to that list.  Name a European metal band that formed in the last 20 years that have a healthy dose of melody and melancholy and chances are that Paradise Lost were probably an influence.

If you're a metal fan and haven't yet had them cross your path then you NEED to hear them.  If you aren't a metal fan, but maybe one of those people who has a soft spot for, say, the Black album then go straight for 'Draconian Times' and give it a listen.  It doesn't particularly sound like it, and certainly wasn't anywhere near as successful, but for me with its metal wrapped up inside huge, proper songs approach, it is the European version of the Black album.

I first came across Paradise Lost when I saw the video for 'Embers Fire' on Raw Power/Noisy Mothers and I kept it on my video but didn't really investigate any further until I got a free cassette with Raw magazine promoting the upcoming album 'Draconian Times' in 1995.  As well as four clips from the new album it also had one song each from the previous two albums.  So that was it, I was away, buying the new album and going backwards to fill in the first four pretty soon after.

Starting off as a slower, English take on Death Metal on their first album 'Lost Paradise', they added more melody into the guitars and the occasional splash of keyboards on the follow-up 'Gothic', with the well-defined lead and rhythm guitar interplay of Gregor Mackintosh and Aaron Aedy gradually honed over subsequent albums 'Shades of God' and the breakthrough 'Icon' before arriving at my personal favourite (as can be seen in this chart) and a huge influence on my own songwriting, 'Draconian Times'.

Some people may say stop there, although glancing down again at my chart you can see I'm not one of them.  After experiencing relative success the next album, 'One Second', saw a less metallic, rockier sound with electronic elements.  With 'Say Just Words' expertly bridging the gap between the two albums it eased you into the change of direction, and while some fans said goodbye I for one find this one of Paradise Lost's best albums.  This new direction was taken even further on 'Host' in 1999.  With virtually all traces of metal now banished from their sound, Depeche Mode comparisons were common.

Skipping swiftly over the relatively average 'Believe in Nothing' album (none of whose tracks made this chart), they made a relative comeback with the excellent 'Symbol of Life' album in 2002.  From this point onwards, while the electronic elements were still present, the guitars gradually crept more and more into the foreground until the old Paradise Lost finally returned over the last few albums.  One of the best bands of all time, metal or otherwise, long may they continue.

1. Embers Fire
2. Say Just Words
3. One Second
4. Forever Failure
5. True Belief
6. The Last Time
7. Faith Divides Us - Death Unites Us
8. Once Solemn
9. Erased
10. Hallowed Land
11. Enchantment
12. Pity the Sadness
13. Shadowkings
14. Gothic
15. Pray Nightfall
16. Yearn for Change
17. Another Day
18. As I Die
19. The Enemy
20. Widow
21. Ordinary Days
22. Forever After
23. Last Regret
24. Mortals Watch the Day
25. Shades of God
26. Eternal
27. Isolate
28. Redshift
29. Grey
30. Hands of Reason
31. I See Your Face
32. Dying Freedom
33. Rapture
34. Fear
35. Soul Courageous
36. Praise Lamented Shade
37. This Cold Life
38. The Painless
39. Cruel One
40. Disappear
41. No Celebration
42. As Horizons End
43. Honesty in Death
44. The Rise of Denial
45. Christendom
46. Don't Belong
47. Ash and Debris
48. Tragic Idol
49. Fear of Impending Hell
50. Forging Sympathy

By Era
Lost Paradise 0
Gothic 4
Shades of God 3
Icon 6
Draconian Times 11
One Second 7
Host 1
Believe in Nothing 0
Symbol of Life 4
Paradise Lost 4
In Requiem 3
Faith Divides Us - Death Unites Us 4
Tragic Idol 3

Sunday, 3 August 2014

Debut Albums Top 50

When I first heard about the debut album top 50 I must admit I didn't know what would come out on top.  I had done the top 50 90s albums a year ago and there would definitely be some strong contenders in there, but the best?  Not sure.  And so I got down to making a shortlist, each album got a listen with marks out of 10 for each song and an average score per song was calculated as a rough guide.  Adding in factors like adolescent favourites (or albums that opened the door to new avenues of listening) to ones that maybe hadn't stood the test of time as well as the rest changed the ordering a little bit before I arrived at the list below.  

Albums were far more likely to do well if I was there at the time.  Discovering a band on their debut, being the album that you heard first and then following that band through their career is much more likely to leave an imprint on you for life than the ones you find later on and track back, no matter how legendary they may be.  15 out of my top 20 (and 35 out of the 50) were the first albums I owned by the respective bands which kind of proves my point, for me at least.

Due to some of the huge differences in genre and sound in some instances, comparison was occasionally tricky.  I tried to balance up the "how much do I want to play this album right now" factor with its impact on me.  So there you have it, feel free to nod and agree and tear it apart in equal measure!

1. Dragonforce - Valley of the Damned


It sounds like a joke - what do you get if you cross a South African singer, guitarists from Hong Kong and New Zealand, a keyboard player from Ukraine and a French drummer?  The punchline is even stranger - an English power metal band.  When I first heard about Dragonforce with 'My Spirit Will Go On' I thought it might be a better idea to start at the beginning, which led me to this album.  Many many listens later and, by a whisker, it has emerged as the best debut album of all time.  There are no duffers whatsoever, in terms of songs we're talking 9s and 10s all the way and the musicianship, in particular Herman Li and his video game-influenced solos, is incredible.  They've come up with better individual songs since, but they'll be hard-pushed to come up with an album better than this one.
Recommended Song: Valley of the Damned

2. Andrew WK - I Get Wet


I went to Leeds Festival in 2002 for a lot of reasons, but Andrew WK wasn't one of them.  However, I was curious enough to go and see what all the fuss was about (and because Obituary's Donald Tardy was on drums) and I have to say that in terms of fun it was one of the best sets I've ever seen.  Picking up the album not long after was even better.  Yes, most of the songs sound almost exactly the same, yes 'I Love NYC' sounds like the theme tune to 80s kids TV show Fun House, but it was and still is brilliant, the perfect album to put on before you're going on a night out or just to put a great big smile on your face.  And I imagine Andrew WK himself would be immensely proud of that.
Recommended Song: Ready to Die

3. The Haunted - The Haunted


I was already a fan of At the Gates' 'Slaughter of the Soul' before I came across the Haunted through the tried and trusted method of free Metal Hammer CDs, but nothing can prepare you for the full force of the entire debut album.  As my number one album of the 90s in a previous chart this was always going to be high in this selection too, the relentless ferocity just tears your face off and then stops and starts again.  The relaxed, no pressure atmosphere that the songs were bashed out in probably contributed to the no-frills, no prisoners approach which unfortunately hasn't been bettered to date, but we can live in hope....
Recommended Song: Undead

4. Pearl Jam - Ten


If anyone asked me to name my favourite debut album, then off the top of my head 'Ten' would be the first one that comes to mind.  With quite possibly the best A side of any album ever it starts off in style, 'Alive', 'Even Flow', 'Black' and 'Jeremy' classics one and all and an embarrassment of riches for a debut.  The songwriting of Stone Gossard and Jeff Ament was at an all time peak, meshing perfectly with the mournful vocals of Eddie Vedder, and while future albums had some great songs amongst the more average fare, they would never match the consistent high quality of 'Ten'.
Recommended Song: Alive

5. Manic Street Preachers - Generation Terrorists


What is there to say about 'Generation Terrorists'?  Anyone who knows even a little about me knows that the Manics are my favourite band.  So why isn't this number one?  There are a lot of reasons why it should be, over half a typical album's worth of classics on one disc, the whole package with a quote per song and the propaganda surrounding its release, skilfully masterminded predominantly by Richey Edwards.  But unfortunately the length always scuppers it a little bit for me, just a few too many songs that aren't quite up to the standard of the others means that the albums that completely go for it all the way win favour.  But any album with 'Motorcycle Emptiness', 'You Love Us', 'Stay Beautiful' and 'Little Baby Nothing' among others is always going to sail into the top 5.
Recommended Song: Stay Beautiful

6. Feeder - Swim


Only six songs on this debut mini-album but I think, regardless of whether I used this or debut album proper 'Polythene', the outcome would probably have been the same.  At this stage they were in full-on Welsh Smashing Pumpkins mode, although way more fun than that sounds.  Even if you're not a Feeder fan you'll probably know some of these songs from the Gran Turismo games and if you tick neither of those boxes there's definitely something missing from your life.  Huge choruses, tumbling rhythms and big guitars aplenty, Feeder are my second favourite band and this mini-album goes a long way as to explaining why.
Recommended Song: Descend

7. A - How Ace are Buildings?


I've said it before and I'll say it again, A are the best sing-a-long band in the world EVER.  'How Ace are Buildings' was A at their most effervescent, with a studio obviously full of E numbers, ball pools and trampolines.  Or something.  Almost every song is like shaking a can of fizzy drink and letting it loose as the self-styled cheeky monkeys rattle their way through one of the most uplifting albums ever released.  I first saw A live in 1997 supporting Jesus Jones and such is the quality of the songs that one listen was all that was needed to go out and buy this album.  If you haven't you should too, if only for those moments when you need a good cheering up.
Recommended Song: No. 1

8. Senseless Things - Postcard CV


The Senseless Things were a huge influence on my teenage musical years, as you've probably seen me say countless times before, in particular the bass-playing of Morgan Nicholls.  Even though 'The First of Too Many' was the one I heard first, 'Postcard CV' with its ramshackle, race-you-to-the-finish tunes of teenage angst and boredom was the most fun.  Virtually all the songs were short, so never outstayed their welcome and Mark Keds' genius songwriting, Ben's harmonies, Morgan's bubbling bass and Cass' powerful drumming were forever guaranteed to put a smile on this face at least.  And how can you ever refuse an album which has a song called 'Trevor'?
Recommended Song: Too Much Kissing

9. Machine Head - Burn My Eyes


As my journey into metal progressed through classic albums by existing bands such as 'Vulgar Display of Power' and 'Chaos AD', 1994 was way overdue for a new metal band to knock me sideways with a classic debut.  'Burn My Eyes' was that album.  I originally bought it on record and only relatively recently replaced that with a CD, so it has been somewhat neglected of late.  Jogging my memory with this chart reminded me of how refreshing it was then, a nod to the old school but with a contemporary sound, it really was everything that any self-respecting metal fan had been waiting for.  People scoffed at the foray into rap-metal later on, but it was done well and I for one stuck with them until they came out the other side and returned to a similar sound to this debut.  Think 90s and classic metal albums and this will always get a mention.
Recommended Song: Davidian

10. Rage Against the Machine - Rage Against the Machine


No matter what your taste in music, if you were alternatively minded at the time this album came out it will probably be in your list if you were to make one of these charts.  Like nothing you'd heard before, the mixture of rap vocals, rock guitars, funky basslines and Tom Morello's insane guitar sound effects (remember "No samples, keyboards or synthesizers used in the making of this recording"!!) struck a chord with many.  They were never one of my favourite bands, not even close, yet this strolled into the top 10 debuts with ease.  With several classics contained within it was always going to be up there and is just one of those albums you reach for again and again, timeless.
Recommended Song: Know Your Enemy

11. Bush - Sixteen Stone


1994 has the joint highest share of entries in this chart, so was obviously a good year for debuts.  Or else maybe I was just more open to investigating new bands.  Forget all the grunge and Nirvana comparisons, Bush just wrote some great rock songs, especially apparent on this debut.  'Little Things', 'Everything Zen', 'Comedown', 'Glycerine', all amazing songs, even though the critics didn't think so as they dared to crack America before they got wind of their existence.  In a similar way to Pearl Jam they showed their strongest hand early and never really matched the highs of their debut, perhaps deliberately shying away from ever going down the more radio-friendly route again.  Shame.
Recommended Song: Comedown

12. Raging Speedhorn - Raging Speedhorn


In the early noughties there was only one band that could live up to the old Motorhead saying of if they moved in next door to you your lawn would die.  That band was Raging Speedhorn and in both looks and sound the Corby bruisers were intimidating to the max.  With the two-pronged vocal attack and the guitars dripping with tar, the Speedhorn boys bludgeoned their way through their debut album with no thought for the fainthearted.  Full marks for some of the best song titles known to man as well with 'Necrophiliac Glue Sniffer' and 'Dungeon Whippet' among others.  This album influenced me so much at the time that my band even changed direction slightly to incorporate some of my favourite elements, probably the best review that I can give them.
Recommended Song: Superscud

13. System of a Down - System of a Down


System of a Down are pretty insane and in the late-90s were a breath of fresh air into a heavy music scene which, while containing some good bands, was getting a bit dull.  The jittery style, with alternately serious/comedic lyrics and Armenian influences creeping in was utterly unique and people love them for it, I played this album a lot when I first got it, in particular my personal favourites 'Suite-Pee, 'Sugar', 'War?' and 'P.L.U.C.K'.  So far their quality hasn't wavered either and they remain an incredibly consistent band.
Recommended Song: Suite-Pee

14. Nine Inch Nails - Pretty Hate Machine


The 16th album I owned and an important gateway into finding my own music, 'Pretty Hate Machine' is one of those albums that is and always will be just there.  Up until this point I had listened to pop and then indie, with mild diversions into Extreme and the odd Iron Maiden or Poison song taped off the radio.  This was different and looking at the albums I bought immediately afterwards my record collection would never be the same again.  It's an interesting debut in that it's quite different to what followed it, quite bare in places compared to the choking nature of later albums.  But with classics such as 'Head Like a Hole' and 'Sin' rubbing shoulders with the spooky nature of 'Terrible Lie' and 'Something I Can Never Have' a blueprint of sorts had been laid down.
Recommended Song: Sin

15. Mindset - Mindset


I think I came across Mindset on a free Metal Hammer CD in 97, the song was probably 'Psycho Sound Wave' and I remember thinking they sounded a bit like Helmet, but a bit more lazy.  I think they even got lumped in with nu-metal stuff, but I'm not having a bit of it, this was just an album of 14 songs, all around the 3 minute mark, which mostly contained brilliant straightforward riffs and no-nonsense arrangements.  The perfect album to just stick on if you want to rock.  Ahem.  Seriously, if you like Helmet you could do a lot worse than seek this album out, a lesser-known gem.  And in 'Great Unwashed' you even get lifestyle advice - "You're the great unwashed, shave your pits, take a bath".  Genius.
Recommended Song: Nosebleed

16. Slipknot - Slipknot


At first I didn't want to like Slipknot, there was a lot of fuss and it all seemed like a little bit of a gimmick.  But then I heard the music.  'Spit it Out' wasn't the best advert for the debut album (yes, I'm counting this one as the debut), but it was a gateway to further listening and the more I heard, the more I had to leave my initial misgivings at the door.  This had a similar impact to Korn's debut in my eyes, although with far more of a metal influence than Korn would ever have.  In the live arena they were also phenomenal and I was lucky enough to witness them while the initial magic was still there, but that would have meant nothing without the music to back it up.  Like many bands on this list, another debut that has yet to be bettered further into their career.
Recommended Song: Surfacing

17. Korn - Korn


While Machine Head were busy resurrecting a more old school strain of metal, Korn were busy concocting something entirely different.  There were some pretty dire bands that ended up being tarred with the nu-metal brush, but Korn's debut was unique at the time, "nu" if you will.  Taking Rage Against the Machine's rap and hip-hop influences blended with heavy guitars a notch further, they also introduced Fieldy's 'not-even-bass' bass sound which became a signature part of their music.  But it was mostly all about Jonathan Davis and the vulnerability and whisper-to-scream-to-weird-ragamuffin thing he had going.  A ferocious start, just don't mention the tracksuits.
Recommended Song: Ball Tongue

18. Cradle of Filth - The Principle of Evil Made Flesh


I came into the Cradle of Filth story at 'Dusk and her Embrace' and then worked backwards to fill in the blanks.  This debut was more raw, less lush, they hadn't really gone down the Hammer Horror route at this stage, very much a different twist on the traditional Norwegian black metal that had emerged at the time.  But this wasn't the open sore black metal of the likes of Burzum and Darkthrone, this was a more melodic beast and even though it wasn't fully formed compared to later albums it still beat debuts by much biggers bands in this chart and is the highest placed black metal debut.  By the time the next release came out both guitarists and the keyboard player had gone, but as we got used to over the years with a multitude of lineup changes, the consistency barely wavered.
Recommended Song: The Forest Whispers My Name

19. Iron Maiden - Iron Maiden


I'm certainly not going to claim to have been around for this one, I was coming up to my 2nd birthday when it was released, so it's obviously one of those I caught up on later.  That can sometimes lessen the impact given the progress made in terms of production since then, and so it is a little bit with Maiden's self-titled debut.  Paul Di Anno's rougher vocals fit the not-so-polished, thin-sounding production job perfectly though, compared to the high drama that would follow.  And with career highs of 'Phantom of the Opera', 'Running Free' and their signature title track all featuring it's clearly not messing around.  In my opinion there would be several better Maiden albums throughout the 80s, but this debut is potentially the most influential on this list.
Recommended Song: Phantom of the Opera

20. Metallica - Kill 'em All


As with Iron Maiden I was too young for this one first time round and it's another that suffers with hindsight for not hearing it with fresh ears at the time.  And I was actually surprised when I first heard it as it was the last album from their back catalogue that I picked up around the time of 'Reload'.  It is sonically very different to what came after and the Mustaine influence is strong within a lot of the songs, which probably accounts for the difference.  But put your head back in 1983 and think about what the alternatives were and it becomes a very different animal.  The raw production job turns into a plus point and the speed and enthusiasm just rolls out of the speakers.  They even had the slower, stadium sized songs like 'Seek and Destroy' ready-made for when the time came.  Again, there would be far superior Metallica albums to come but a blistering start.
Recommended Song: Whiplash

21. Babymetal - Babymetal


I imagine this would have raised eyebrows even at number 50, so what the hell am I playing at having it at number 21?!  Am I seriously saying this is a better debut metal album than Megadeth's 'Killing is my Business...' for example?!  Yep, what of it?  A lot of people can't get past the barrier of Babymetal being an obviously manufactured band, I admit that I don't like that element any more than anyone else, but do we see James Arthur and the like having songs written for him by members of Mad Capsule Markets?  It's a subtle difference, but a difference all the same.  Listen to the music - the Slayer-isms of 'Gimme Chocolate', the hybrid of Peter Tagtgren's Pain crossed with Evanescence and traditional Japanese music that is 'Megitsune', the pure ridiculousness that is the Japanese pop meets Korn of 'Doki Doki Morning', it's invariably brilliant.  Ask me again in a year and this might either be number 1 or not in the chart at all, but right here and now it's a big winner.  And no, before you ask, it's all about the music, right? 
Recommended Song: Megitsune

22. Misery Loves Co. - Misery Loves Co.


Of all the albums I played during the compiling of this chart, this was the one that came from out of nowhere to hit the heights of the top half.  Maybe it's because I only own it on record therefore don't play it as often as everything else but the first side is amazing - take 'Psalm 69' and cross it with a pinch of the yet to be released 'Antichrist Superstar' or the yet to be famous Rammstein and you have the self-titled debut from these miserable Swedes.  The second half is decent but doesn't reach the earlier heights, but those 5 songs, 'Need Another One' in particular, are top rock club dancefloor fillers of the highest order.
Recommended Song: Need Another One

23. 3 Colours Red - Pure


Everyone originally knew 3 Colours Red as 'Danny from the Wildhearts brother's band' but not me, I knew them as 'Ben from the Senseless Things' new band'.  Either way they were great, and with this, the previously mentioned A and the mini-album at number 24 below, 1997 was definitely the year of the British sing-along debut.  'Pure' was more of a terrace chant when the song demanded it, especially on the absolutely outstanding 'Sunny in England', sorry 'Eng-er-laaaand'.  Like a lot of the so-called Britrock bands around then they didn't last the distance, but this was part of an excellent legacy.
Recommended Song: Nuclear Holiday

24. Symposium - One Day at a Time


1995-1998 was my main gig-going period and Symposium were the band that turned up in Middlesbrough the most during that time (I saw them 6 times in total, including festivals).  I even ended up in a 3 Colours Red moshpit with Ross and Will after they supported them at one gig.  As I mentioned above, like 3 Colours Red and A, Symposium were fun, fun, fun, and being mere youngsters themselves probably about my age too.  This mini-album was mostly bouncy pop-punk, which they seemed to tire of quite quickly soon after, going a little bit Deftones on their first album proper before imploding and going their separate ways.
Recommended Song: Drink the Sunshine

25. Entwined - Dancing Under Glass


A surprise entry on two counts - one, you're probably mostly thinking "Who?!" and secondly I wasn't even sure this would get in, never mind turn up in the top half.  Released in 1998 on Earache, 'Dancing Under Glass' had a fairly standard, but impressive, metal underbelly, with lush keyboards layered over the top.  Perhaps the rough and ready vocals were the sticking point with breaking out any further, neither particularly gruff or melodic they were a bit of an acquired taste, but for me didn't detract at all from what was an excellent debut.  I did get a demo tape from the band themselves containing new material following this debut, but as far as I know nothing official ever saw the light of day beyond this one album.
Recommended Song: Shed Nightward Beauty

26. Liberty 37 - The Greatest Gift


There are a lot of entries in this middle section for British bands from the 90s who were a little under-appreciated, and here comes the Welsh wing.  Before emo was thrown about with wild abandon, Liberty 37 played emotionally-charged rock with some big tunes.  It was a bit of an outsider when I first started compiling this list, but as I listened to the album more and more, tunes I'd forgotten about started flying from the speakers, propelling it almost into the top half.  If you like a bit of alternative rock that tugs at your heartstrings you could do a lot worse than check this album out.
Recommended Song: Stuffed

27. Cecil - Bombar Diddlah


Bursting onto the scene in 1996 with the infamous and incredibly emotional 'No Excuses' (written about the death of James Bulger), Cecil weren't particularly well-known but were a band I always had a place for.  After seeing them live several times in the mid-90s, they were a great live band with loads of energy and Ste Williams' complete mentalist stage persona.  Ultimately they never really fit into any scene or style, just a really good British rock band, and after this mini-album, a full album and a subsequent short-lived name change to Voy, they sadly disappeared from our horizons.
Recommended Song: No Excuses

28. Spin Doctors - Pocket Full of Kryptonite


This surprised me by getting this high, it's one of those so-uncool-it's-cool albums, from the slightly retro sound to the weirdy beardy frontman Chris Barron.  A schoolfriend gave me a copy on tape originally, which I had for quite a while before finally buying the CD, it's an album that immediately puts a smile on your face with its wacky little tunes.  Not to everyone's taste I'm sure, and this may be one of my more controversial choices, but if you were around in 92/93 then you certainly wouldn't have escaped 'Two Princes' taking refuge in your head at some point.
Recommended Song: Little Miss Can't Be Wrong

29. Carrie - Fear of Sound 


I was attracted to Carrie initially by the fact that Zac Foley from EMF was their bassist, in fact having met China Drum on a few occasions they got me and my brother backstage at one of their gigs where Carrie were supporting.  I intended to meet Zac but instead got talking to Paul Brannigan from Kerrang! (doing an on the road feature) and Gerry from Mega City Four who was a roadie for Cable.  Aaaanyway, 'Fear of Sound' was a top debut, regardless of who was in them, packed full of gorgeous harmonies and innuendo.  For the time it's in your CD player the sun will be out, it's that kind of album.
Recommended Song: Breathe Underwater

30. EMF - Schubert Dip


I remember first seeing EMF on the short-lived rebirth of Jukebox Jury where it was probably everyone's first experience of the soon-to-be smash hit 'Unbelievable'.  1991 was my year of finding my own bands, and EMF were one of them, even though my schoolfriends seemed to have this idea of them being a boy band.  'Schubert Dip' was the 11th album I ever owned and considering the 8th and 9th were both Jive Bunny you can see the new leaf being turned, almost in one Kevin the Teenager-style transformation (I had just turned 13 after all).  The main singles, 'Children', 'Unbelievable' and 'I Believe', could have been enough to get the album into this chart on their own, but there were plenty of other excellent songs.  The follow-up 'Stigma' was a better album but this has a special place in my collection.
Recommended Song: Children

31. Black Crowes - Shake Your Money Maker


No doubt about it, 'Shake Your Money Maker' was definitely the Black Crowes' best album.  The follow up had its moments, but for sheer consistency the debut wins hands down.  Sounding lean and mean there was none of the noodling that came with later albums, the songs were sharp and had that strut that only a band fresh out of the blocks has.  It also came into my life at a relatively young age when I only thought about good and bad music, I suspect if I heard this later on I probably would have (wrongly) not given it the time of day.  This also wins a prize for being the only album that me and my Dad both own.
Recommended Song: Jealous Again

32. Sonata Arctica - Ecliptica


As a relatively recent convert to the cause of these proponents of Finnish power metal, I originally bought 2004 album 'Reckoning Day' and immediately went backwards to start from the beginning.  It's a great place to start, as 'Ecliptica' is chock full of great songs, not least the all-time classic 'Fullmoon'.  When it's done well power metal can't fail and Sonata Arctica are one of the best, true you can't avoid some of the dodgy ballads, but on the earlier albums like this one speed and widdling won out.  A good thing obviously.
Recommended Song: Fullmoon

33. Ugly Kid Joe - America's Least Wanted


Mention Ugly Kid Joe and everyone thinks 'Everything About You'.  Great song but there were a lot more songs on this album worthy of a listen.  As my tastes moved onwards from indie into rock and grunge and eventually metal, Ugly Kid Joe were another important stepping stone along the way.  Klaus Eichstadt was my favourite guitarist at the time and this album was a huge air guitar favourite back then.  But whether it was the dumb fun of 'Neighbor' and 'Everything About You' or the quieter depth of 'Busy Bee' and 'Cats in the Cradle' there was a hell of a lot of talent mixed in with the humour.
Recommended Song: So Damn Cool

34. Flowered Up - A Life With Brian


Back to 1991 and further to my comments about EMF, this was my unlucky 13th album and a big favourite at the time, I used to play my cassette single of 'Take It' to death.  It was a lot more guitar-heavy than the rest of the album, especially the other stand-out track, the keyboard-laden indie hit 'It's On' led by future Republica man Tim Dorney.  People generally had Flowered Up down as Southern Happy Mondays copyists but the truth to me at least was that they were way better.  It's a shame that not only was this their debut, but their only album, never to return following the later sad deaths of the Maher brothers.
Recommended Song: Take It

35. Napalm Death - Scum


There was no question at all that this was the most difficult album to place.  28 songs recorded by two almost completely different lineups (drummer Mick Harris was the only constant between the two), and the kind of songs that you're not going to be humming in the shower meant a comparative nightmare.  How on earth do I compare it to the Spin Doctors, say?!  Maybe I was wrong to say Iron Maiden was arguably the most influential album on the list, this one would push it hard.  Any band that has played at these speeds owes a debt to this album, although it probably did become a bit of a burden in a way.  No, their songs aren't all 4 seconds long, no they're not a joke, far from it.  I couldn't sing you many of the songs on this album off the top of my head, but that's not the point.  If you want extreme, this is it.
Recommended Song: Instinct of Survival

36. Dark Funeral - The Secrets of the Black Arts


Despite guitarist Lord Ahriman being the only constant throughout their career so far, you know exactly what you're going to get from a Dark Funeral album.  Lightning-paced, icy black metal with enough melody in the riffs to have you whistling them later in the day, the perfect combination.  This debut starts as they mean to go on, no discernible difference in sound to later albums despite the aforementioned lineup changes and a relentless sprint for the finishing line.  If you've never heard any black metal but have an interest in doing so, Dark Funeral would be my recommendation as an ideal starter band.
Recommended Song: The Secrets of the Black Arts

37. Megadeth - Killing is my Business...


Another one of those 80s albums with a thin production job, Dave Mustaine has "I'm gonna show Metallica what speed really is" written all over this.  And indeed he won the speed, but as you can see from this chart he didn't produce the better debut.  Clocking in at just 7 songs it flies past in a blur of riffs and Dave Ellefson's chunky basslines.  It's surprising how it actually got made given the state they were apparently in at the time, but Mustaine's vision of how he wanted metal to be played was finally down on tape and the Megadeth rollercoaster ride had begun.  For me they peaked in a big way in the early 90s, but this is a worthy debut.
Recommended Song: Killing is my Business...And Business is Good

38. Life of Agony - River Runs Red


If you're not familiar with the band then read their name and the album title.  And again.  Yes, they really are that tough going.  With a mixture of New York hardcore, metal and Keith Caputo's frighteningly good vocals, this debut wasn't quite the finished article (they would hone it further on the follow-up 'Ugly'), but in 'This Time' and 'Through and Through' in particular it contained great songs.  Interspersed between the music were three 'songs' containing a spoken storyline which ends with a mother finding her child in the bathroom having slit his wrists.  Very rewarding but not for the faint-hearted.
Recommended Song: This Time

39. A-ha - Hunting High and Low


The first ever album I owned and unlike a lot of people it's not an embarrassing one.  True, there's a few slices of cheesy pop on there, but is there anyone who doesn't regard 'Take on Me' and 'The Sun Always Shines on TV' as classics?  I hold the latter so highly that I even turned it into a metal song several years later.  It went down on my shortlist almost apologetically, yeah it's a debut put it down, maybe I can include it as my first ever LP, but after it had its listen it's here on merit.  It's just a shame I never did get to go to the primary school fancy dress day as Morten Harket as I originally wanted (I ended up as a goalkeeper instead).
Recommended Song: The Sun Always Shines on TV

40. Turisas - Battle Metal


With war being a recurring theme in metal songs over the years, we'd had plenty of bands who had taken it further, in particular Bolt Thrower whose every song referenced war in some shape or form.  But no one had quite taken it as far as Turisas, who not only called their debut 'Battle Metal', but also made almost every song sound like some long lost clarion call to arms and dressed like they were ready to face the enemy.  It works magnificently, and while there will be plenty of smirks in their general direction, the people that understand where its coming from just KNOW.  For the inner Viking inside all of us.
Recommended Song: Battle Metal

41. Bal-Sagoth - A Black Moon Broods Over Lemuria


If I was to describe Bal-Sagoth as a less rapier-like version of black metal with lashings of keyboard colour all accompanying lavish tales of swords and sorcery, you'd probably either run out and buy all their albums or just run.  And keep running.  It's impossible to describe Bal-Sagoth without doing them a disservice, what I just said is accurate but they're much more than that.  Debut 'A Black Moon....' is a little more straightforward compared to later albums and the booklet contains only the lyrics and not the stories themselves, but the blueprint was certainly there for the Sheffield warriors to build on.  I discovered Bal-Sagoth in 1997 when one song from this album and its follow-up were included on a Cacophonous label sampler, it's definitely a world worth exploring.
Recommended Song: A Black Moon Broods Over Lemuria

42. Emperor - In the Nightside Eclipse


In my mind Emperor were the best of the Norwegian black metal bands, completely unique to the rest because of the sheer scale of their songs and the amount of music that was crammed in to every one.  Given that they were all very young on this debut, frontman Ihsahn, who was responsible for a lot of the music, is worthy of the tag 'genius'.  Later albums would refine their cold, harsh sound with even more layers, meaning that for me at least this isn't the definitive Emperor album, but more than worthy of a place in this list.
Recommended Song: I Am the Black Wizards

43. Keith Caputo - Died Laughing


Following Life of Agony's change of direction on 'Soul Searching Sun', it always seemed clear to me that it was a nod towards frontman Keith Caputo wanting to go in a more melodic direction.  It kept him in the fold for that one further album, but not long after he left to concentrate on a solo career.  The fruits of which were this album, as far removed from Life of Agony as it was possible to be.  We're in proper singer-songwriter territory here, but with Keith's magnificent voice it lifts it above any negative connotations that might bring.  With acoustic guitars, strings and a positive bounce not heard in his previous band, even though it is laced through with melancholy this sounded like it was the happiest he was ever going to get musically speaking.
Recommended Song: Selfish

44. The Farm - Spartacus


In 1991 The Farm were my favourite band, 'Spartacus' being the 10th album I ever bought and the first one that wasn't just pop.  While my brother was into the Stone Roses, the Charlatans and the Happy Mondays, I was into the less critically acclaimed Flowered Up and the Farm, but obviously wasn't aware of the cool factor then, it wouldn't have mattered to me anyway.  Not unfairly dubbed a bunch of brickies with guitars they could no doubt come up with a damn good tune, 'Groovy Train' and in particular 'All Together Now' being proper bona fide chart hits.  With the iconic washing powder-style cover art it definitely caught my attention as a 13 year old branching out into more alternative music, and this album was the gateway to it all.
Recommended Song: Groovy Train

45. Extreme - Extreme


Yeah I know, I know.  Just look down the list of song titles, listen to the words, it's absolutely horrendous right?  If it came out today, probably yes.  But I used to love Extreme back in 1991/92 when 'Pornograffiti' came out and going backwards to find the self-titled debut there was even more fun in store with guitar histrionics aplenty and HUGE choruses.  Nuno was a genius and I was 14, come on.  Ignoring the slightly dodgy lyrics ('Little Girls' anyone?) it is still an extremely fun album to just blast out and for that reason I don't apologise one bit for its inclusion.  A vote for nostalgia.
Recommended Song: Mutha (Don't Want to Go to School Today)

46. Rollins Band - Life Time


I became a fan of the Rollins Band in 1992 with the excellent 'End of Silence' album and it took me a while to go back and rediscover the earlier albums.  But as with all of them they're one of the few bands that I can tolerate listening to when they go into jam-mode.  Rollins was an unmissable focal point, but in Chris Haskett, Andrew Weiss and Sim Cain there were three musicians who just bounced off each other the whole time, locked into the so-called Hard Blues.  Either in runaway train mode or crawling along on their belly led by Weiss' incredible bass sound this was the beginning of the definitive version of the Rollins Band.
Recommended Song: 1,000 Times Blind

47. Lacuna Coil - Lacuna Coil


This debut mini-album was by no means their best, in fact half of the lineup were gone by the first full album, but the core of bassist/songwriter Marco Coti Zelati and vocalists Andrea Ferro and Cristina Scabbia meant this went largely unnoticed.  Even though they weren't on top form it still manages to make it into this chart, Lacuna Coil are the masters at the Beauty and the Beast combination both in terms of male/female vocals and heavy/melodic music.  They further refined their sound on the first album proper 'In a Reverie', before eventually stripping the music down more, perhaps with one eye on the mainstream.  Still great though.
Recommended Song: Falling

48. Honeycrack - Prozaic


Another of those bands that toured a lot during my main gig-going period, Honeycrack turned up in Middlesbrough three times in fairly quick succession in the mid 90s.  I even managed to make a split-second shadowy appearance on their 'Sitting at Home' video after they filmed most of the footage at Middlesbrough Arena.  With three guitarists and even more harmonies they had a big sound and even before hearing this album the majority of the songs had started camping out in my head from those live gigs, always a good sign.  I was never a fan of the Wildhearts, who they had connections with through Willie and CJ, Honeycrack were miles better and much more fun, although this album finding its way into this chart was still a bit of a late surprise.
Recommended Song: Sitting at Home

49. Linkin Park - Hybrid Theory


With Linkin Park bursting onto the scene and becoming so huge so quickly there was inevitably talk of them being a nu-metal boyband.  Rubbish for me, it was a perfect case of the right band at the right time, they ticked all the boxes of what was popular as the new millennium came around.  Looking at the contents of this chart you can see that I mostly like two things - big guitars and big tunes, and Linkin Park had both of them in spades, nothing more, nothing less.  Yes, it's cool to hate them, but just listen to the likes of 'Crawling' and 'In the End' and tell me that they're not almost perfect slices of rock tunesmithery.  That's all.
Recommended Song: In the End

50. Silverchair - Frogstomp


This album originally didn't make it into the chart and then I had second thoughts.  Recorded when they were just 15, that's a phenomenal fact for an album so good.  True, there are some fairly cringeworthy lyrics on here, mine would have been a hell of a lot worse at 15, but the music and songwriting is remarkably accomplished and better than many of the second wave of grunge chancers around at the time.  A soundtrack to my college days and I expect my first experience of being older than the band I was listening to.  Which is becoming more frequent nowadays....
Recommended Song: Israel's Son

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Debut Albums by Year

1980 1
1981 0
1982 0
1983 1
1984 0
1985 2
1986 0
1987 1
1988 1
1989 3
1990 1
1991 3
1992 5
1993 1
1994 5
1995 4
1996 3
1997 5
1998 4
1999 3
2000 3
2001 1
2002 0
2003 1
2004 1
2005 0
2006 0
2007 0
2008 0
2009 0
2010 0
2011 0
2012 0
2013 0
2014 1

Debut Albums by Country

USA 19
England 18
Sweden 3
Wales 3
Finland 2
Norway 2
Australia 1
Italy 1
Japan 1

Debut Albums by Twitter Favourites

A bit of a first for the top 50s here, but I decided to count up the number of Twitter favourites after I tweeted the top 50 and see which albums my followers rated as well as me.  The results were as follows:

1. Pearl Jam 19
2. Machine Head 18
3. Rage Against the Machine 16
4. Megadeth 15
5= Metallica, Napalm Death 14
7. Nine Inch Nails 13
8= Babymetal, Korn 12
10. System of a Down 11
11= Linkin Park, Manic Street Preachers 10
13= EMF, Slipknot 9
15. Dragonforce 8
16= Feeder, Iron Maiden, Ugly Kid Joe 7
19= Emperor, Silverchair 6
21= Aha, Black Crowes, Lacuna Coil, Rollins Band 5
25= Andrew WK, Cradle of Filth, Dark Funeral, The Farm, Raging Speedhorn, Senseless Things, Turisas 4
32= Bal-Sagoth, Honeycrack, Symposium, 3 Colours Red 3
36= Extreme, Flowered Up, The Haunted, Keith Caputo, Liberty 37, Misery Loves Co., Sonata Arctica, Spin Doctors 2
44= A, Bush, Carrie, Entwined, Life of Agony 1
49= Cecil, Mindset 0