Some big media account on Twitter asked people what they think the best music album ever was, front to back.

While some albums are more iconic than others, the fascinating thing about the question is how it tends to be a sign of what era someone came of age in (i.e. which decade they grew up as a teenager), and what cultural part of that era they were more in line with. Sure, some people go back and find older iconic music and appreciate it the most, the absolute greats of the past, but the more typical outcome is that someone finds music from their coming-of-age years to be what somehow sticks out.

For me it was rock in the 2000s, and my mental answer to the question of "best album?" was Meteora by Linkin Park.

While it was a very popular album and also well-remembered, it doesn't generally go down on the ageless list of greats. In other words, it's always kind of a top two or three genre item. I could argue why other more iconic albums are better, and why they "should" be my answer. For example I could go a little bit before my time, but still close enough, and say Nirvana's Nevermind was better. That would poll better.

But basically, as a product of my time, Meteora is just the one that struck the right chords at the right time when I was a teenager. It's the one that spoke to me. I would listen to it casually, and then also listen to certain songs in it before martial arts tournaments to get myself in the combat zone. Even as my musical tastes changed over time, that's the album I listened to the most of all time, and so when I hear it in the present day, I still appreciate it a ton.

The fact that they crossed genres appealed to me a lot. Their main vocalist, Bennington, struck their melodic and emotional aspect. The other vocalist, Shinoda, was their hip-hop guy, with a rougher or more practical aspect. Mr. Hahn brought an electronic aspect, and Delson brought the rock guitar aspect. Some of their stylization was anime-aligned, and I was into anime at the time. Basically whatever vibes I might be feeling as a teenager at the time, there was something in Linkin Park that spoke to it, with Meteora being among their best and which came out at the right time when I was 15. It's like Bennington would speak to my emo aspect and help me acknowledge it, while Shinoda and the others would pump me back up, and tell me to not fuck around and get back out there, and boost my confidence. Yin and Yang.

Another reason I thought of this is that here in 2023, Linkin Park released a 20th anniversary edition of Meteora, which included a couple songs like "Lost" that didn't make it into the original. It all hits a bit harder for us fans based on the fact that the lead singer, Chester Bennington, is no longer with us. RIP.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7NK_JOkuSVY&ab_channel=LinkinPark

Anyway, I’m doing a series of “real thoughts” uniquely on Nostr, and this is the second one.

Conclusion: Sometimes what hits harder subjectively is worth appreciating, rather than just whatever can be argued to be the best objective answer. Somewhere on that border between "objectively good" and "came out at the right time and hit the spot for you and imprinted itself" is your answer that is worth exploring and sharing.

What's your answer?

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epic choice (and RIP Chester) live that album. I'm gonna have to think about this one!!!

Same. Meterora was the first album I ever purchased

Same. I still remember the fold-out CD jacket.

Lots of options…but….I’m gonna say Sufjan Stevens Illinois album.

https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJ9uMbcoY6lI4wHOZSq_wV2cSbcz7b-xl

Lyn - as an album Meteora is top 3 for me. Add to that - Justice for All by Metallica. And Bass Culture by Linton Kwesi Johnson. All above can put you into a state of mind, or take you out of a state of mind.

In terms of pure frontman power nothing beats this though - https://youtu.be/Nco_kh8xJDs

Metallica's Black album. And not because the music was the greatest, the band was arguably past their prime.

But this was the tape (yes, cassette tape) that I hiked many miles through Yosemite to, over passes, through canyons, down the side of waterfalls. It may have been the only one I had bothered to pack, but this tape gave me something to march on to.

~30 years later, and it is immediately my first choice, although I know far better albums, musicians, etc.

You’ve just reminded me of some things..

Using a pencil to rewind one side of a tape to save batteries.

Opening a tape up to perform surgery and cut off mangled pieces and sellotaping them back together (several times)

Pressing ffwd and play at the same time when the batteries were low to try and get the song playing properly - it worked ok!

Best anything I can never answer.

That goes for Books, Movies, and Music.

Best I can do is top 10 lists and then I get hung up on genre.

“Kind of Blue” and “Love Supreme” are easily in my Top-10 jazz albums, but would they rise to my top all time list?

These are tough questions.

Mastodon - Crack the Skye

Hybrid Theory by Linkin Park comes to mind

"Get Rich or die tryin" by 50 cent in 2003 may not be "the best" but has aged well for me.

"Yeezus" by Kayne West holds up for me too.

Thriller 👍🏾🫡

Personally I think that Radiohead's OK Computer is a modern classic that has aged well. For "best ever" that's obviously a subjective thing, but if the criteria is which album would be put forward by the most people, I would have thought something with universal appeal like The Beatles' Revolver would probably win it.

Yes, OK Computer is near my top as well.

I could have gone for OK Computer from the list of better known albums, but to introduce a few less know great albums, you should check:

- John Zorn, Naked City

- Toot Toot, https://youtu.be/wLlPjAoSDcI

- Pepe Deluxe, Beautitude

Sublime - Sublime immediately came to my mind. Also, Green Day - Dookie

Green Day simply rocks. But seems to be walking alone in this poll.

You can't go forcing something if it's just not right, I suppose.

'Simply rock' is their downfall I guess.

OMG. Fantastic every time I listen to her.

“How Could Hell Be Any Worse”- BAD RELIGION 1982 is the one that comes to memory. Spoke to how I was feeling and thinking at thirteen. Changed the coarse for me on many levels including my distrust of the government.

Mothers Milk RHCP, and just ice forr all and black album by Metallica, Dirt by Alice and chains, Nevermind by Nirvana, Ten by Pearl Jam. And many more masterpieces...

Has to be an Alice in Chains album for me. I hate picking between them, but it's probably Dirt. Thembones, Down in a Hole, Rooster, Angry Chair... And then to finish the album with Would?, it always made me want to listen to the whole thing all over again.

The singer, Layne Staley, had a pretty sad story behind him. A long, slow death. I didn't know of Mad Season, a side band of Layne's, until later, but the song Wake Up is chilling in retrospect.

My version of this is Ryan Adams Demolition. Not considered an all time great, but it was for me, and if you know, you know.

Head says abbey road.

Heart says Sam’s Town by The Killers.

Named my daughter after that Beatles album. She will forever have her named misspelled by those who forget the ‘e’.

vincent gallo - when

A talented Artist guy friend who lived near him told me he wasn’t a nice person irl.

So I stopped liking his stuff. Still like one of his films tho. No idea what he’s been creating lately.

This album sticks out for me from the time when I was a teenager.

Without much thought, for those who have heart by a day to remember. I’ll be surprised if anyone else knows that album.

Throwing Copper by the band Līve was never at the top of any critic's list back in the day and even the majority of people who grew up on mid 90s rock would probably only recognize them as "that band with the bald guy who sang about a placenta." But they were one of my favorite bands of the time and that is their quintessential album. I wouldn't say it's anywhere near the best album of all time, but it's in my top 3.

https://open.spotify.com/album/4x3WRtf82yJsYauSpBcMFj?si=ERl1We4lTt2eOW2ktCildg&context=spotify%3Aalbum%3A4x3WRtf82yJsYauSpBcMFj

Agree! Every song on that album was great

I love this one. "Selling the Drama" hits hard.

Rush - Moving Pictures. How only three guys could generate that boggles the mind. Drummer writing all the lyrics is icing on the cake

Torn between Warren G’s “Regulators” & Snoop Doggy Dogg’s “Doggystyle”

Wu-Tang Clan - 36 Chambers

Iconic, influential, and holds up

Whole heartedly agree. I like every song on the album, and also on hybrid theory.

I knew you were cool because of your Econ/bitcoin knowledge but this takes you to a whole new level haha!

My other big one at the time was audioslaves first album but I didn’t like the songs quite as much and not all were good songs

Paul Simon: Graceland

That's really difficult to answer, so I'm going to cheat and list my top 2.

Don't Look Down - The Fear in Love

Jimmy Eat World - Futures

Thanks for sharing nostr:npub1a2cww4kn9wqte4ry70vyfwqyqvpswksna27rtxd8vty6c74era8sdcw83a

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In the early 2000's I got really into extreme metal and would BitTorrent everything that came out on Supernova under the metal tag. I remember downloading Blackwater By Opeth knowing nothing about it and being blown away. It married the 70's prog records that my parents had that I listen to as a 90's kid with death metal. A sort of stange sense of nostalgia but also something new, and to your point at the right time in my life.

Opeth always was one of those legends. :)

Linkin Park is one of my go to bands when snowboarding. Love the energy boost. ⚡️❤️

My personal best album is Hysteria by Def Leppard. 🎵

Probably a tie between:

Live - Throwing Copper

Counting Crows - August and Everything After and

Tool - Ænema

I’m sure I’m forgetting a few.

*Ænima

Agreed.

Good one . I was between Lateralus and 10000 Days .

All great! Ænima came to mind first as I listened to it so much. Would be challenging to compare each album song vs song.

A Perfect Circle - Mer de Noms deserved to be on my list too.

There’s a few albums I listened to nonstop back in the day but now barely do. Funny how that works.

No specific album, but I think 🇬🇧Brit New Wave era was tremendous in fantastic albums.

🇬🇧John Peel had exquisite taste!

Probably "How I Got Over" by The Roots for me. almost perfect album.

But Meteora's sound and aesthetic was a high point for sure.

Subjectively:

“Commit this to Memory” by Motion City Soundtrack. The right album at the right time. https://open.spotify.com/album/14cwHpqeVuYbwQxmY5tgQT?si=D32jiTIgSAelLRoLyl5YPA

I feel like I'd be shamed for naming something too new. Like it has to age and withstand the test of time before you can suggest it as a best. I find myself wanting to go to the first album that I giga latched onto to repel those criticisms.

Foo Fighters - The Colour and the Shape

I've probably grown to love other albums, probably at a greater personal intensity. But it doesn't feel like a legal maneuver to suggest album release post 2010.

Call me in 20 years and we'll see if I change it.

Interesting. I wouldn't know which album to pick, there are so many (great ones in many decades) and the concept of the greatest one somehow isn't compatible with music imo, it's not a sport.

See for me it’s the opposite. I have a broad taste in music, everything from Norwegian black metal to Japanese ambient and almost everything in between.

While Pink Floyd are not my favourite band by any stretch, Dark Side of the Moon is, in my opinion, the greatest album of all time and was released long before I was born.

Guess great music is timeless.

Hard agree. Dark Side is pure genius.

Regardless of genre, and it’s not my personally favorite album, and it’s a cliché claim, but Illmatic is a once in a lifetime album. It transcends greatness.

I once worked with a guy who, when 2 of us were having this *exact convo, chimed in and said "The Verve! The CD with Bittersweet Symphony on it! Best album of all time!"

The musician coworker and I looked at each other and later laughed cuz we both thought the Verve CD wouldn't go down in history by many rock critics as the best album of that month, let alone year or all time.

I think it's a trap though. "Best" is too subjective to genre, time, context etc.

If you're tapping progression, musical proficiency, innovation and honesty, I'd say a couple Bob Marley Albums can contend, a couple Jimi Hendrix records, of course the Beatles and the Stones... annnnnd, hm. Bob Dylan. Oh, and Neil Young.

For me it’s Radiohead OK Computer 👌🏼🥂

Interesting and genuine "Real Thoughts" note series from Lyn Alden.

What hits me the most is that my answer to the best album of all time for me subjectively is the same one she picked. Which basically if I said this album is my all-time true love of music on platform like FB, I can expect some of my "friends" to make the joke of it or even look down at my music preference.

That thought and expectation forces me to pick some other greats like "What's the Story (Morning Glory)?", anything from The Beatles, or even some sophisticated jazz stuff. All of which are awesome but don't truly sit right in my heart.

Thanks Lyn for bringing up this kind of conversation. ⚡

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I honestly couldn't agree more! Meteora was the first cd I ever bought, along with Chuck by Sum 41 back in 2003. Chester and Mike had such an influence over me growing up. I taught martial arts and would practice my katas to it. Even though Linkin Park is thrashy and violent at times, I always found it soothing and motivating. When Lost was released it immediately sent me back to those teenage years where I felt angry and lost most days. RIP Chester

Radiohead - OK Computer (1997)

Why?

Right time, right place. Beginning of my college years. Ended up recording an acoustic version of this with a friend - guitar and cello. That was fun and memorable, even if we hacked our way through a lot of it. No weak links in the album front to back.

Beginning of a new era. The creativity and foresight of the album's lyrical theme, to point to how technology will change society forever is aging with stunning accuracy.

Transformation. You can hear the clear evolution of a band from pure rock toward something different, hinting toward their later albums with more use of unconventional sonic elements and instrumentation.

Thanks for this post, Lyn. The best part is that this prompted many of us to fire up the HiFi and take a trip back down memory lane.✌️💜

What do you say, we do a 'Desert Island Disk' episode or Nostr post at some point?

Fleetwood Mac Rumours

Amazing choice. Right there with you. #RIPChester

Rolling Stones - Exile On Main St

Live - Throwing Copper

https://youtu.be/VQJp135efOY

Loved Meteora. “Hybrid theory” also hit the spot. I’d also put limp bizkit’s “Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water”

Steven Wilson, Hand Cannot Erase. Such a deep and moving album. Yeah, only 8 years old but it will age well.

Beautiful post Lyn, very articulate. So many genres, memories and flavours encapsulate the choices. Too many to mention but if you like music for introspection, memory reflection and great background music for work and study try Air's "Moon Safari" Ahead of it's time from a technological standpoint as well, which also encompasses a BTC theme. https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nUcs122smRRQq5XGBSM8lkyrZtPH6fvL0

Love Moon Safari!

I’m always forced to give the same answer: NIN Downward Spiral. And I listen to everything from the 40s on up, multiple genres.

Tool - Lateralus

As you said, it’s a teenage thing, so for me it’s Enveloped Ideas album by The Dawn.

Great post Lyn! Appreciate it!

I would say that music can perfectly preserve the emotions of a certain moment. In puberty, a person is full of search and emotion, more than at any other time. That's why most people carry their favorite music with them since puberty and adolescence. Personally, I have a lot of favorite music from many different periods of my life. Can't pick just one album, or a band, or song.

Pet Sounds followed closely by Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

Oh yes, Meteora in my discman and extra batteries in the bag. What a time. I'm nowadays in rockmetal theatre, so I have hard and good music everywhere around, but Chester's singing will always have a very special place in my heart.🥰

There’s so many… What I have occasionally visited through my life, also as recent as few weeks back, is this technological side of music. Tells about my age, the visual part, story, the wind on hair. Freedom, luxury, gangsters.

Jan Hammer.

Rage Against the machine. Great to release the teenage angst.

For me that's Extreme's III Sides To Every Story.

I listened to the album for the first time when a friend if mine used God Isn't Dead? in one of his movies and was absolutely blown away by the epic three-in-one song finale of that masterpiece.

NOSTR needs more of these non-NOSTR, non-tech posts to broaden its appeal and compete with X. Kudos. Anyway, the correct answer is Abbey Road.

The Lion & the Cobra was really big for me, music that resonates has wonderous powers.

The Ghosts that Haunt Me by the Crash Test Dummies.

Wonderful album, full of powerful emotional archetypes for me.

I'm old, old, old, but The Who has always delivered the goods for me.

Nirvana - Nevermind

Metallica - And Justice For All

NWA - Straight Outta Compton

All 3 were amazing at their time, every song hit the right way and all 3 changed my life forever as a kid

Meteora is great. My pick is any Deftones album. Honorable mention to any Rage Against the Machine album.

For me it's either Moving Pictures by Rush or Love Bomb by The Tubes (produced by Todd Rundgren).

The B side of Love Bomb is one continuous song, each movement of which is an individual banger.

U2's Joshua Tree. I'm older.

U2 joshua tree

The right album, for the right person, at the right time contains a power and quality beyond what can be objectively perceived.

(Substitute book, conversation, song, etc for album here and the principle remains.)

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Jagged Little Pill by Alanis Morisette and Mezzanine by Massive Attack mostly these two. Outside classic music it was Massive Attack that shaped my taste.

Pearl jam. Ten.

This was brilliant.

My favorite is Joshua by French 79 based on pure listening pleasure.

https://open.spotify.com/album/3yzN5sQahqRFKNtDM2YZSO?si=7oUE60ShSKypucaOXdt1Aw&context=spotify%3Aalbum%3A3yzN5sQahqRFKNtDM2YZSO

I found perfection in A Perfect Circle Mer de Noms. Still do. Followed very closely by Nirvana Nevemind, Pink Floyd Wish You Were Here & self-titled Audioslave. I'd be hard pressed to say any of those are better than another. 20+ years since discovery & all of them are still in the daily rotation.

Muse - absolution

My favorite album is Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On.

Long before my time (I’m a 90s kid), I only discovered it in my 30s. I was always into grunge/alt/indie rock.

Never listened to R&B, but man, that album makes me cry. I’ve never heard anything so beautiful, feels so inspired, connects so deeply.

gotta be kanye's mbdtf rn

there is no best. such a simpleton question.

Linkin Park - Hybrid Theory

Queen - A Kind of Magic

Madsen - Madsen

These albums fit different phases of my life and were a perfect match at that time.

Tommy by The Who.

What a great thread instead of the doom and gloom on Twitter. I had a listen to meteora at the gym today as they must have been a bit after my time, enjoyed. Early 90’s bands wen I grew up living the the UK Radiohead, the cure, james. Good times still listen to them today. August and everything after probably my most listened to album, they played a big part of my life from uni onwards. Dave Matthew’s also after spending some time in the states in 2000 god that makes me feel old.

For me it was Metal church, the human factor. Similar reasons, not that it is objectively good..

The singer changed a few times over the years, and then Mike Howe was back, I immediately bought tickets for the show, and then a few months after finally getting to see the band that helped through those 16 yo angst.. he passed away. But I did get thank both the singer and the founder for helping me through those times.

https://open.spotify.com/album/6adhNik5xQ3vWR1MnolVyH?si=CM8KYtROTxe0iX3R4drNYg

I feel like there are millions of 'correct' answers to this question. Music, like all art, is a subjective experience and no-one is wrong when they say what the 'best' album in the world is, to them.

What about culture books? For me The Drifters was a big one. Also Atlas Shrugged.

For me it was Rush’s Moving Pictures. I grew up in a small town in Oklahoma and the only radio stations were religious based, country, and top 40. The first time I heard Rush was on the back steps of the high school AKA the smoking area. Yes we had a smoking area at school. In 1984 Rush was going to be in Tulsa so a bunch of us drove down to Tulsa spent the night on the sidewalk in front of the convention center to get tickets for us and at least 20 others. It was a great show and I’m still friends with those guys. We get together about every 5 years and had one of those gatherings last week. We’re mostly in other states now but anytime we get together it’s like we just saw each other yesterday. Every time I hear Rush it always reminds me of a simpler carefree time. And Moving Pictures was a perfect album from start to finish. Thanks for sharing Lyn. I always love how certain songs can bring back great memories

Agree with LP. In the end was my most listened to song even to this day. The concept of albums started fading around this time due to MP3s.