10. Neil Young - Harvest: I didn't really know many Neil Young songs at the time I bought this. I think I bought this CD because it had Heart of Gold on it. It is a real gem from beginning to end. This is probably the saddest, most heartfelt album I have ever heard. Man Needs A Maid can still make me well up and feel so lonely in this world.
9. Buckethead & Friends - Enter The Chicken: This was a big risk for me. I only knew Buckethead from his one performance with Axle Rose pretending to be the new GNR. This was produced by Serj Tankian (SOAD) and is a real mix from a guitar virtuoso. I would consider Buckethead to be this generation's Jeff Beck, with slightly better hair. It only took a preview of the first song to give me the gusto to buy the album. Most people probably would not find the album very accessible, but for anyone who likes the guitar, this guy can sling it.
8. Motley Crue - Too Fast For Love: I knew the popular Crue songs from their later albums but I really like the song Live Wire. So I decided to buy this album, their first. This is basically a demo tape and that is what gives it charm. I enjoy this one up and down, especially the bonus tracks on the reissue I bought. I still can not understand how Toast of the Town did not make it onto their original cut. A little grittier than their later releases with still a good sense of the showmanship Crue would become known for.
7. The Darkness - Permission To Land: I saw the video for I Believe In A Thing Called Love and I was hooked. I ran out and bought this album without really knowing anything about The Darkness. They bring back the classic styles of the 80's metal with big guitars, big hair and some really high notes. This one is a good time the whole way through. No song is too serious and no love song too sappy. Just a rebirth of the good old days hair bands.
6. Carrie Underwood - Some Hearts: Yes, this is on my list. I have watched American Idol since the 3rd season. I've like the contestants but no one ever seemed like they could make an album that would appeal to anyone other than 15 year old girls. Then came this one. I bought it cause my wife wanted it but after 1 listen I couldn't help myself. This one makes my list because we bought it before it became the hit that it is. Some Hearts is classic country with some new attitudes and an outstanding voice powering the whole thing. Even in some of my biggest rock/metal moods, I can always stop for a little country with this album.
5. Queens of the Stoneage - Songs For The Deaf: I only knew Lost Art of Keeping a Secret (which I thought was OK) by Queens when I saw this CD sitting on the new release shelf at Borders. I was just browsing so I listened to the first track and knew I had to have it. I own some of their other albums now but this is still by far their best. They use the sounds of tuning a radio and fake DJs to give the album a flow. Their dark hard rock style is different but feels familiar. It is as if I used to know this band but yet just heard them for the first time. I wore this CD out almost every day on my trips to DeKalb.
4. The Rolling Stones - Bridges to Babylon: You read this and think, how could buying a Rolling Stones CD be a risk? Well probably anything they put out after 1980 is a risk. I bought this for the single Anybody Seen My Baby and found a whole album of fresh music from the Stones, in 1997! From Flip the Switch, Low Down to Saint of Me, Gun Face & You Don't Have to Mean It, I fell in love with this album. It is a good mix of pace and voices with Keith taking the lead on a few classics. It showed me how great they really where and that maybe they had some gas left in the tank after all. Maybe they didn't just put out an album as an excuse to tour and make millions.
3. The Dandy Warhols - Thirteen Tales From Urban Bohemia: I had no idea who the Dandy Warhols were when I saw the video Bohemian Like You. I loved that song and decided I needed to buy the CD just because. Listening to the album straight through takes you on this amazing journey. All the songs are very different and yet somehow flow together. It draws heavily on classic rock influences but really spans the whole genre. They even blatant ripoff the Stones, The Beatles & The Velvet Underground at times, but yet it all seems to be in tribute. The album become a lesson in what rock is and should be. It is a great CD for a car ride, it really makes the time pass by.
2. System of a Down - Mesmerize/Hypnotize: I had been let down by SOAD in the past with Toxicity, it just didn't appeal to me. B.Y.O.B. was their lead single and made me think I needed to give them another chance. This is two halves of a double album that were released seperately about 5 months apart (good move on their part). This masterpiece is full of meaningful lyrics shouting out against war, the government and the famous. It is a wild ride with so much difference between each song in their styles and tones. Heck, you could say that just within one song. For a metal band, they harmonize extremely well and really push the limits of their music. The biggest thing is that the album sounds similar to Toxicity, which I didn't like, but is somehow much more accessible. The rage in songs like Attack, melancholy wit of B.Y.O.B., the heartfelt messages of Soldier's Side, Loneliest Day and the statements in between leave me very satisfied. These two are mainstays on my IPod.
1. Iron Maiden - A Read Dead One: This one represents a personal discovery for me. I was just getting into hard rock/metal once I hit high school. I had heard the name Iron Maiden in conversations about classic metal bands but couldn't say that I knew what they sounded like. I went to a used CD store and there was a copy of A Real Dead One. It was a complication live album of several performances across Europe in 1993. The first song was Number of the Beast. Listening to the opening with the bible verse then hearing them slam into that riff and the amazing dual guitar solo in the middle of the song, I was hooked! There is nothing overall special about this album other than it was my first Maiden experience. There are several great albums that I would recommend over this one but it will always hold a special place with me. It was a risky purchase that lead to an awakening. I know follow them very closely, own all their albums and have yet to hear something come from them that I did not enjoy.
Honorable Mention:
The Vines - Highly Evolved
Twisted Sister - Stay Hungry
The White Stripes - White Blood Cells
The Killers - Hot Fuss
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6 comments:
WHERE ARE THE ZUTONS!!!!!??????
I kind of thought it was funny that in one post you mention you hate how Carrie Underwood can come up on your shuffle after a heavy metal song and then she's in your best of list has her between Queens of the Stoneage and The Darkness.
I love that irony.
Oh and the Dandy Warhols album is an awesome one.
Exactly, it pisses me off sometimes and other times it makes me happy when it shuffles like that. But now I have gone to your method of listening to the songs by Alpha, havent come close to finishing yet
By the way, I can't stand System of the Down. I know a lot of people like them (my lovely wife included), but they just make my skin curl. I can't even pin-point why. I think I am just getting way too old.
Hopefully it isn't becoming all just noise for you!
That's the fear we all live with.
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