Sunday, July 10, 2011

Album #61: 3 (Melt) by Peter Gabriel


1.
Sound: Prog rock with various highlights
Mood: Mad to dancing to mourning
Important Songs: Intruder; Biko
Song You Must Hear: No Self Control
Quote: “I like you lying awake your bated breath charging the air”
      “I shoot into the light”
Notes: I love Peter Gabriel, but there is something special about this album.  The different portraits of insanity, and the results of insanity, and dance songs filling the middle.  There is so much to think about, so much to examine and so much to feel, no matter how uncomfortable it all is. 

Album #62: How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb by U2


1
Sound: Mid-80s U2
Mood: Preachy
Important Songs: Vertigo, Sometimes You Can’t Make It On Your Own
Song You Must Hear: Love and Peace or Else
Quote: “Where you live should not decide whether you live or whether you die.”
Notes: Bono had done a solo tour, but not to sing, rather to speak of the needs of Africa.  He had always been a bit religious and bleeding heart, but this was the ultimate.  So U2’s latest album is the most bleeding heart, and the most psychedelic of them all.  Just my style. 

Album #63: 12 Songs by Neil Diamond


1.     
Sound: Singer/Songwriter
Mood: Reflective, occasionally upbeat
Important Song: Delirious Love (with Brian Wilson)
Song You Must Hear: Hell Yeah
Quote: “Running in circles gunna get you nowhere.  Why you wanna go there?  Where’s it gunna lead?”
Notes: I’m a Neil Diamond fan for as long as I can remember.  But he drifted from his excellent songwriting of the 60s and 70s to be a campy figure for a while.  This album brings the old Neil Diamond back.  It is said that producer Rick Rubin (of Johnny Cash’s American Recordings fame) asked Neil to write songs for the album.  After about a month, Neil came back and said he’d written the songs.  Rubin asked, “How many?”  Neil said, “About a hundred.” Rubin replied, “Come back when you’ve written more.”  From that large selection of songs, they picked 12 that were the best.  It really sounds like it. 

Album # 64: Amadeus Soundtrack by Academy of St. Martins In the Field


1.       
Sound: Mozartish
Mood: Dramatic
Important Songs: Symphony 25; Serenade for Winds K.361, 3rd movement
Song You Must Hear: Deis Irae
Notes: Although I had been introduced to classical music earlier, this is the album that made me love it.  I had the movie to give context to the music, but the music itself is so powerful, so moving.

Album #65: Highway 61 Revisited by Bob Dylan


1.    
Sound: Folk rock
Mood: Jaunty
Important Songs: Like a Rolling Stone; Ballad of a Thin Man
Song You Must Hear: Highway 61 Revisited
Quotes: "The sun’s not yellow, it’s chicken.”
“Then they bring them to the factory where the heart-attack machine is strapped across their shoulders.”
Notes: This is a highly praised album, and I need not heap more upon it.  It is enough to say that it changed the music world and all the rest of the worlds around it. 

Album #66: Sabbath Offerings by Rockharbor Worship


1.     
Sound: Church Worship Band
Mood: Worship
Important Songs: Beauty of Your Peace, Be Near
Song You Must Hear: Reverence
Quote: “I’m falling on my knees, offering you all of me.”
Notes: Most worship groups don’t know what worship is.   They think their purpose is to entertain, or to make music that is easy to sing to. However, the purpose of worship music is to create a space where one’s spirit can meet God.  You don’t want it too fast or with too much intellect.  The Rockharbor worship band on this album knows what they are about. This is a powerful album for worship—simple, paced, spiritual, but they don’t force one into worship.  They just provide the opportunity. 

Album #67: No Compromise by Keith Green


1.      
Sound: Pounding piano
Mood: Heart-wrenching and joyful
Important Songs: Asleep In The Light, You!
Song You Must Hear: Make My Life A Prayer To You
Quote:  “After all the things that you have shown me I’d be a fool to let them slip away.”
Notes: This album, more than any other, changed my life.  It was my liturgy and the goal of my soul.  The driving piano pushed the message further into my heart.  This is not a worship album, but an album intended to restore a fallen heart back to Jesus. 

Album #68: Tigerlily by Natalie Merchant


1. 
Sound: Simple, small band
Mood: Grey
Important Songs: Carnival, Wonder, Jealousy
Song You Must Hear: San Andres Fault
Quote: “It's you I can't deny, It's you I can't defy, A depth so deep into my grief.”
Notes: This is Natalie Merchant’s first solo album after leaving 10,000 Maniacs, and it is brilliant.  There are just a few performers, a guitarist, a drummer.  But it is Natalie’s voice that just haunts this entire album.  Unforgettable. 

Album #69: Swamp Ophelia by The Indigo Girls


1.
Sound: 00’s female folk
Mood: Angry, sad
Important songs: Fugitive, This Train Revised
Song You Must Hear: Least Complicated
Quote: “I stood without clothes, danced in the sand, I was aching with freedom kissing the damned.”
Notes: The center of this album is consistent, excellently written and made folk, easy on the ears.  But the bookends of the album demand to be heard: Fugitive and This Train Revisited.  Fugitive is amazing, almost psychedelic folk.  This Train Revisited has a gospel sense with a rock drive.  Overall, however, this album is amazing. 

Album #70: Hail To The Thief by Radiohead


1
Sound: 00’s alternative; Radioheadish
Mood: Varied
Important songs: There, There;   2+2=5
Song You Must Hear: We Suck Young Blood
Quote: “Hypocrite, opportunist: Don’t infect me with your poison.  A bully in a china shop.”
Notes: Another album that causes me to be hypnotized.  But Radiohead so rocks.  I love their layers, their haunting lyrics, their hooks. 

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Album #71: Outdoor Elvis by The Swirling Eddies


1.     
Sound: Garage band
Mood: Hilariously sarcastic
Important songs: Strange Days, Billy Graham
Song You Must Hear: Hide the Beer, the Pastor’s Here
Quote: “Coco, you seem awfully sad today… that’s more like calculated existential angst.”
“Be our friend, save us Outdoor Elvis; we have sinned, forgive us Outdoor Elvis… we might have to set a trap to bring him back…”
Notes: The best album of the genre of sarcastic Christian.  Usually such sarcastic Christians sound like bitter Republicans, but the Swirling Eddies (who is just a re-named Daniel Amos) make as much fun of themselves as anyone else.  And their typical target are money-grubbing televangelists (the chorus of “Attack of the Pulpit Masters” is: moneymoneymoneymoneymoneymoneymoneymoneymoneymoneymoney(deepbreath)moneymoneymoney…”) which I greatly appreciate.  It is truly funny, and the songs are (usually) quite good.

Album (Extra): Eagles' Greatest Hits: 71-75



Sound: Southern California Country
Mood: Imploring
Important Songs: All of them
Song You Must Hear: Tequila Sunrise
Quotes: “It seems to me some fine things have been laid upon your table, but you always want the ones that you can’t get.”
Notes: These are some of the most famous songs ever.  Yet their country harmonies and excellent melodies make the album fit together as most compilations never do.  Listen to it again.  You’ll be glad you did.

Album #72: In the Fishtank 11 by Black Heart Procession and Solbakken


1.     
Sound: Rock
Mood: Hypnotic
Important songs: Dog Song; Nervous Persian
Song You Must Hear: Voiture En Rouge
Notes: A Dutch label named Konkurrent has an ongoing project in which they will take a band, or two, or thee and throw them in a room for two days and tell them to produce music together.  That pressure cooker of production makes some intense mixes.  Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t, but it certainly worked for Black Heart Procession (one of my favorite bands) and Solbakken. The spookiness of BHP is toned down, but Solbakken adds a driving beat and some international tones to BHP’s somber melodies. 

Album #73: So by Peter Gabriel


1.  
Sound: A little bit of everything pop
Mood: Inconsistent
Important songs: Big Time, Don’t Give Up, Sledgehammer
Song You Must Hear: In Your Eyes
Quotes: “Long words.  Excellent words.  I can hear them now.”
   “And I pray to a big god as I kneel in the big church.”
Notes:  Gabriel explores every kind of uniqueness here, and difference is the mood of the album.  It is as if Gabriel was given a room full of music toys and he couldn’t decide which one, so he played with them all. And, somehow, every song is fantastic and the album, unbelievably, works as a whole. 

Album #74: Jars of Clay by Jars of Clay


1. 
Sound: Acoustic rock with mandolin
Mood: Depressive
Important Songs: Flood, Love Song for a Savior
Song You Must Hear: Liquid
Quotes: “Don't try to reach me, I'm already dead”
Notes: The most unified sound that Jars of Clay produced.  This is an amazing album.  Great to listen to in order to pull you out of depression.  Or keep you in it.  Whatever. 

Album #75: Madman Across The Water by Elton John


1.       
Sound: Acoustic piano singer/songwriter with strings
Mood: Melancholy
Important Songs: Levon, Tiny Dancer
Song You Must Hear:  Madman Across the Water
Quote: “Boredom’s a pastime that one soon acquires…”
Notes: Elton John is the king of the single, but his albums usually leave me cold because they are so much a collection of singles.  Madman is different in that the whole album has a feel, a sense of wholeness.  He is such a master of the piano that when he gives himself to a mood, as he does this album, it is a magnificent statement of that feeling. 

Album #76: Up by Peter Gabriel


1.      
Sound: Progressive electronic
Mood: Smooth with the occasional punch
Important Songs: More Than This
Song You Must Hear: Signal to Noise
Song You Must NOT Hear: Darkness (this one makes me jump)
Quotes: “The news that truly shocks is the empty empty page”
Notes: I didn’t even think of this album at first because I just play it with my other Peter Gabriel, until I realized that I find myself singing some of the songs so often.  Because it has Gabriel’s progressive, interesting music, but it (generally) has a smooth texture, it is perfect music for me to write to.  Gabriel has allowed himself to really grow as an artist and I see this as being the final product of years of musical exploration.

Album #77: Breakfast In America by Supertramp


1.    
Sound: Pop/Rock with a Wulitzer electric piano at the fore
Mood: At times lighthearted, at times angry
Important songs: The Logical Song, Goodbye Stranger, Take the Long Way Home
Song You Must Hear: Breakfast In America
Quotes: “They’ll run for cover when they discover everyone’s a nervous wreck now.”
“Don’t you look at my girlfriend—she’s the only one I got.”
“You gave me Coca-Cola.  You said it tasted good.  And you watch the television and it tells you that you should.”
Notes: Apart from it having some of the strongest singles of the late 70’s/early 80’s, Breakfast also has some of the cleverest lyrics.  They make you feel smart just because you can sing them. My best friend (who is now my wife) and I would sing these songs standing in long lines at Disneyland, much to the consternation of those around us.  Happy memories…

Album #78: Band of Joy by Robert Plant and Band of Joy


1.       
Sound: American Roots
Mood: Fun, light
Important Songs: Angel Dance, House of Cards
Song You Must Hear: Central Two O Nine
Quote:  “I heard the voice of Jesus say, ‘Satan your kingdom will come down.’”
Notes: It’s like O Brother with some psychadelia thrown in.  I’ve never heard Plant sound so… well, joyful.  The Band of Joy was the band Plant was a part of before Zeppelin, and it re-formed a number of times after that.  Their blues/folk/old-timey sound with rock influences is just fantastic. 

Album #79: Construction Time Again by Depeche Mode



Sound: Electronic 80’s pop
Mood: Preachy
Important Songs: Pipeline, Everything Counts
Song You Must Hear: Love In Itself
Quote: “Everybody’s waiting for judgment day so they could go, ‘Told you so’”
Notes:  I took a week to drive from So California to Portland to go to Bible school, angry at the injustices I saw in India.  I played this album over and over because it perfectly reflected my mood.  The chaotic pop also made it plenty interesting.  And I think I am in love with Martin Gore’s voice. 

Album #80: War by u2


1.      
Sound: Early U2 (I don’t know what else to call it)
Mood: Angry and kind of sad
Important Songs: Sunday Bloody Sunday, New Years’ Day, 40
Song You Must Hear: Refugee
Quote: “How long to sing this song?”
Notes: An amazing early work by U2.  It is driving, and points out the horrors of society, but it is also reflective and heartwrenching.  A compassionate liberal’s bleeding heart, out for everyone to see. 

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Album #81: An Innocent Man by Billy Joel


1.      
Sound: Singer/Songwriter with a 50’s twist
Mood: Varied
Important Songs: Tell Her About It, Uptown Girl, An Innocent Man
Song You Must Hear: This Night
Quote: “Some people find that it’s easier to hate than to wait anymore.”
Notes: This is Joel’s tribute to the 50’s songs he grew up with.  It only occasionally sounds like 50’s music, but it gives him the focus he needed to really reach with his music and make an album that feels like a whole. 

Album #82: Days of Future Passed by The Moody Blues


1.       
Sound: 60’s rock with a symphony
Mood: Varied
Important Songs: Forever Afternoon (Tuesday?); Nights In White Satin
Song You Must Hear: Nights in White Satin
Quote: “...fantasy strides, over colourful skies, Of form disappearing from view.”
Notes: This is the Moody Blues’ most ambitious project.  They created a full rock symphony which passes through all the moods and colors of the day.  It sometimes is as pretentious as it sounds, and sometimes it doesn’t work.  But when it does, it is amazing, especially what is arguably the most haunting song ever written, Nights in White Satin and the powerful Twilight Time.  As a whole, it works brilliantly. 

Album #83: Rumors by Fleetwood Mac


1.   
Sound: Folksy pop rock
Mood: Varied
Important Songs: Dreams, Don’t Stop, You Make Lovin’ Fun
Song You Must Hear: The Chain
Quote: “Is it over now?  Do you know how?  Pick up the pieces and go home.”
Notes: Growing up in the late 70s, it seemed that everyone had this album.  And for good reason.  It feels like a rock symphony, covering a lot of emotional territory but it all holds together.  And the music is so varied.  Excellent.

Album #84: Joshua Judges Ruth by Lyle Lovett


1.       
Sound: Folk gospel
Mood: Lighthearted but reflective
Important Songs: Church; Baltimore
One Song You Must Hear: Flyswatter/Ice Water Blues
Quote: “And the dove flew down beside him/And a fork appeared right in his hand/And with everybody watching/The preacher ate that bird right there and then.”
Notes: Lovett toned the country down here and turned up the gospel blues.  There is great whimsy, but also somber ballads to have a wonderfully mixed album.

Album #85: Metallica by Metallica (The Black Album)


1.       
Sound: Mainstream metal
Mood: Dark
Important Songs: The Unforgiven, Wherever I May Roam, Enter Sandman
One Song You Must Hear: Enter Sandman
Quote: “Broken is the promise, betrayal/The healing hand held back by the deepened nail.”
Notes: Metallica is always dark, but the music in this album has both more variety, but also a common sound throughout and the tone of rejection adds to its unity.


Album #86: Trimmed and Burning by Glenn Kaiser and Darrel Mansfield


1.       
Sound: Old time acoustic blues
Mood: Serious, old style preachy
Important Songs: Great Change Since I Been Born; Nobody’s Fault But Mine
One Song You Must Hear: Jesus is Comin’ Soon
Quote: “Roads I useta would walk, I don’t walk no more.”
Notes: Glenn Kaiser is one of the great Chicago bluesmen and Darrel Mansfield is a So Cal rocker.  They got together to play this collection of covers from Blind Willie Johnson and Rev. Gary Davis.  Kaiser’s vocals and Mansfild’s harp almost make the blues sound metal. Wow. 

Album #87: The Beautiful Letdown by Switchfoot


1.   
Sound: Rock/Pop
Mood: “Get over yourself, already.”
Important Songs: Meant To Live; Dare You To Move
One Song You Must Hear: Ammunition
Quote: “If we’re adding to the noise, turn off this song.”
Notes: A bunch of songs with great hooks and with lyrics that don’t take any excuses.


Album #88: Nevermind by Nirvana


1.       
Sound: Grunge with hooks
Mood: Angry/insane
Important Songs: Smells Like Teen Spirit; Come As You Are
One Song You Must Hear: Lithium
Quote: “I’d rather be dead than cool (I don’t know why)
Notes: Nirvana put out the most powerful rock of the 90’s. Yeah, they were influential, but the fact is, they knew how to put together some powerful songs.  Perhaps In Utero is the better album, but I can listen to Nevermind over and over. 

Album #89: Funny Girl Soundtrack


1.       
Sound: Broadway Streisand
Mood: Over the top
Important Songs: People, My Man
One Song You Must Hear: Don’t Rain On My Parade
Quote: “One shot, one gun shot and BAM!  Hey Mr. Arnstein, here I am!”
Notes:  I grew up with my mother listening to Barbara Streisand, especially this album.  This is a great musical and some fantastic music.  If you like Streisand, this album is a must.  If you don’t, well, you should probably avoid it. 

Album #90: Name Above All Names by Chuck Girard


1.       
Sound: Prophetic folk
Mood: Preachy but encouraging
Important Songs: Name Above All Names; When The Rain Came Down
One Song You Must Hear: When The Rain Came Down
Quote: “Don’t shoot the wounded, they need us more than ever.”
Notes: Chuck is a charismatic Christian and it certainly comes through in this album in which he is often speaking with God’s voice.  This might seem a little weird and maybe in the song Kingdom Come it is, but most of the time it is comforting and encouraging.

Album #91: Run Devil Run by Paul McCartney


1.      
Sound: 50’s rock n’ roll with an edge
Mood: Upbeat
Important Songs: Run Devil Run; All Shook Up
One Song You Must Hear:  She Said Yeah
Quote:  “Run devil run—the angels havin’ fun making winners out of sinners.”
Notes: After Linda McCartney passed away, Paul eventually went back into the studio, but he wasn’t able to write yet.  So he and his studio band just played a number of the classic 50’s rock tunes he loved growing up.  Some of these were covered by the early Beatles, but not with this power.  "Run Devil Run" is the name of a real store McCartney saw in the Southern U.S. which sold pharmaceuticals and witch doctor charms. 

Album #92: Chase the Kangaroo by The Choir


1.     
Sound: 80’s electronic
Mood: Mildly depressed
Important songs: Sad Face, Chase the Kangaroo,
One Song You Must Hear: Clouds
Quote:  “A sad face is good for the heart; maybe right now I don’t understand…”
Notes: The Choir is still around, but this is their best album.  It was written by the drummer after his wife had had three miscarriages in a row.  It reflects both his faith and the circumstances that was crushing his heart.

Album #93: So Runs The World Away by Josh Ritter



Sound: Modern Folk
Mood: Literate
Important songs: Folk Bloodbath; Another New World; Lark
One Song You Must Hear: Another New World
Quote: “I’m hoping it ain’t true that the same God who looked over them looks over me and you.”
Notes: If Paul Simon was just starting out today, I bet he’d sound like Josh Ritter.


Album #94: In The Wee Small Hours by Frank Sinatra


1.      
Sound: Jazzy balads
Mood: Sad, lonely musings
Important songs: I Get Along Without You Very Well; In the Wee Small Hours
Quote: “When you’re alone, who cares for scarlet skies?”
Notes: Frank Sinatra is a classic performer, and here he is at his melancholy best.

Album #95: The Mission Soundtrack by Ennio Morricone


1.       
Sound: Classical/Tribal
Mood: Dramatic
Important Songs: On Earth As It Is In Heaven; Penance
One Song You Must Hear: Gabriel’s Oboe (2nd version)
Notes: An amazing soundtrack. The mix of music styles is marvelous.  I don't have a lot to say about it, but I listen to this more than one might think.

Album #96: Pet Sounds by The Beach Boys


1.       
Sound: Surfer music with everything plus the kitchen sink
Mood: Personally reflective and occasionally playful
Important Songs:  God Only Knows; Wouldn't It Be Nice
One Song You Must Hear: I Know There's An Answer
Quote: “I keep looking for a place to fit where I can speak my mind; I’ve been trying hard to find the people I won’t leave behind.”
Notes: The Beach Boys most varied and yet focused album.  It has something for everyone but the overall impression is some somber personal reflection that is both difficult and joyous at the same time. Brian Wilson's masterpiece.

Album #97: Tommy by The Who


1.   
Sound: Early Rock Opera
Mood: Pointed storytelling with some sly humor
Important Songs: Pinball Wizard, I’m Free
One Song You Must Hear: We’re Not Gonna Take It
Quote: “I’m the gypsy, the Acid Queen… I’m guaranteed to tear your soul apart.”
Notes: Famous for being the first rock opera (which is debated), this Who album not only tells a compelling story, but has some powerful music by the Kings of Mod themselves.  There are some compelling, disturbing and thoughtful themes here.



Album #98: S&M by Metallica and the San Francisco Symphony


1.       
Sound: Metal and John Williams
Mood: Chaotic, frantic, angry
Important Songs: The Call of Ktulu/Master of Puppets
One Song You Must Hear: Master of Puppets
Quote: Shouted by crowd: “Master… master!”
Notes: This album is a celebration of two powerful forms of music, metal and symphonic.  Together, they make a powerful statement. It is a live album with almost no new Metallica material, but what they do with the old material is amazing.  The only reason this album isn't up higher is because it never reaches the heights of the first three songs.  Still, I hope you aren’t driving in front of me when I listen to this album.  Who knows what I will do.

Album #99: Eye In the Sky by The Alan Parsons Project


1
Sound: Brilliantly produced 80s rock
Mood: Nihilistic
Important Songs: Sirius/Eye In The Sky;  Old and Wise
Quotes: “Nothing to live for, nothing to die for, we’re lost in the middle of a hopeless world.” 
“Someday, in the midst of time, they will ask me if I knew you, I’ll smile and say you were a friend of mine.”
One Song You Must Hear: The Silence and I
Notes: There are a variety of styles, and not all of them work.  But the first side of this album is a masterpiece, and the final song, Old and Wise, makes an almost optimistic coda to this most pessimistic of albums. 

Album #100: If I Left the Zoo by Jars of Clay


1.      
Sound: Progressive folk with some 60s electric touches
Mood: Somber
Important Songs: Goodbye, Goodnight; Collide
One Song You Must Hear: Collide
Quote: “You never minded calling me a child… well, I guess that’s how I acted all the while.”
Notes:  This is as close as Jars of Clay comes to really rocking.  This album doesn’t hold together as a unit as some of their others, especially their first, but great songs here. 

Top 100 Albums: Honorable Mentions



       Here are the albums that didn't quite make my final 104 albums of my top 100, but they still deserve a mention:

       Volume 3--Traveling Wiburys
              Welcome To The Cruel World—Ben Harper
       Strangeways, Here We Come by The Smiths
       The Big Picture—Michael W. Smith
       Fire and Ice by Steve Camp
              Flood—They Might Be Giants
       The End of the Innocence—Don Henley

     We tip the hat to the 80s and 90s greats that could have been...



My Top 100 Albums: Raison d'etre


I'm doing a top 100 album list because I'm involved in the Serious Listmaking Team over at the Filmspotting Forum, where we Make Lists for Any Discernible Reason.  But I have a longer explanation of how my list is going to work:

An album is not a vinyl record.  Rather, it is a set of songs made to be a unit of music by an artist or set of artists. A "record" is on vinyl.  An "album" could be on CD, vinyl, tape, reel-to-reel or digital recording.  So there. 

This is what I look for in a “great” album.  It is not enough that the album have great songs.  I may give it good marks for that alone, but that won’t make my understanding of what it takes to make a great album.  A great album has two themes: both musically and conceptually.  It isn’t just a compilation of great songs, but these particular songs, when strung together, are better than when they are apart.  Somehow, they belong together, they are richer and have more subtle cues.   An album is great because it is a collection of certain songs, not just songs that played on the radio.

A great album must also have a unique sound, or a blend of sounds that we don’t really find anywhere else.  It may imitate a genre, but it also transcends the genre to become something different. 

A great album often stirs ones emotion, although that is not necessary.  For this reason, a lot of the albums on my list might be considered “depressing.”  I like depressing music.  I’m okay with that.  But it is not all I like if you read my list carefully.

It is rare that a “greatest hits” album reaches this high level of quality, but it is possible.  The Eagles’ first Greatest Hits album, Rich Mullins Songs or Credence Clearwater Revival’s Chronicle are all albums that go beyond simply collecting hits and have a theme or a feel that drive these collections.  However, the Filmspotting Forum, which has created the rules for this list has dubbed any compilation of previously released songs to be out of bound, so those albums will not appear on my list (which means no Eagles at all, and Creedence only because I found a loophole).

I do, however, have some “live” albums which have previously released songs as part of the set.  However, these performances aren’t previously released, and I am only choosing a live album that has a unique sound not found in the studio versions of the same songs.  Again, the album must be unique, and it must hang together as greater than the sum of its parts.  And, there is no Filmspotting rule against it, so they stay.

My list will seem strange to some because of the mix of Christian and non-Christian albums.  This is a false dichotomy, in my opinion.  Most of Cat Steven’s/Yusuf Islam’s albums are religious and many other non-Christian groups use religious themes as often as some Christian groups (Jethro Tull, U2, for example).   Some say that Christian albums are only good for poor imitations of non-Christian artists, and while for some Christian artists of the 70s and later that is true, that is not true for the best Christian artists.  The best Christian artists are after something different.  For example, there is the sub-genre of the worship album: This is a completely unique genre, intended to speak directly to the spirit and to lead one in prayer to God.  While most worship albums are completely dull and lifeless, there are some artists who have understood what the genre could be and pursued it.  And fewer artists still have been able to capture that essence and put it on an album.  Even so, when Christian artists do something unique with their genre, they can create something spectacular, and my list tries to reflect that. To say “all Christian albums are musically boring” is the same error as if you were putting any other genre in that slot.  Yes, most of the albums in any genre are boring except for the aficionado. But it is the exceptional album that makes the genre worthwhile, and the Christian genre is certainly worthwhile.

What about classical?  I love some classical music, especially choral.  Yet you will find few classical albums here.  Many classical pieces are either less (Allegri’s Angus Dei Op. 11) or more (Handel’s The Messiah) than an album.  Some are the right length (Mozart’s Requiem Mass), but which performer do you choose?  And it wasn’t created as an “album” anyway, it was created as live music.  This is something even a “live album” isn’t—a piece written as a performance without any intention of it being placed on an album.  I have a couple classical albums that were made as album for movie soundtracks.

Finally, my final cheat.  Because a couple compilations are so important to me, as well as a couple classical pieces, I am including them in the list, but I’m not giving them an official rankings, but I’m placing them where they ought to go.  Frankly, I feel the freedom to cheat any way I want because it’s MY list.  And I’ll cheat if I want to.