Tom93M
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Reviews 139
Approval 98%

Soundoffs 104
Album Ratings 449
Objectivity 70%

Last Active 03-06-14 4:09 pm
Joined 02-22-11

Review Comments 1,105

Average Rating: 3.71
Rating Variance: 0.63
Objectivity Score: 70%
(Fairly Balanced)

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2014
Metronomy Love Letters4.0
Eagulls Eagulls4.0
Temples Sun Structures3.5
Broken Bells After The Disco4.0
Bombay Bicycle Club So Long, See You Tomorrow4.0

2013
Jake Bugg Shangri La2.5
Arcade Fire Reflektor4.5
Arctic Monkeys AM4.5
Swim Deep Where The Heaven Are We2.5
AlunaGeorge Body Music4.0
Beady Eye BE3.5
Miles Kane Don't Forget Who You Are4.0
Tribes Wish To Scream2.0
Depeche Mode Delta Machine4.0
David Bowie The Next Day4.0

2012
Jake Bugg Jake Bugg4.0
Purity Ring Shrines4.5
DIIV Oshin4.0
Maximo Park The National Health3.0
The Tallest Man on Earth There's No Leaving Now3.0
Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs Trouble3.5
Future of the Left The Plot Against Common Sense4.0
The Walkmen Heaven4.0
Crocodiles Endless Flowers4.0
Japandroids Celebration Rock3.0
O. Children Apnea3.0
The Hives Lex Hives3.5
Lemonade Diver3.5
Regina Spektor What We Saw from the Cheap Seats4.0
alt-J An Awesome Wave3.5
Laurel Halo Quarantine3.5
Beach House Bloom4.0
Santigold Master of My Make-Believe3.5
Light Asylum Light Asylum4.5
Mystery Jets Radlands4.0
Cancer Bats Dead Set on Living3.5
Jack White Blunderbuss4.0
Dry The River Shallow Bed2.5
Neon Trees Picture Show3.0
Dead Sara Dead Sara3.0
Florence and the Machine MTV Unplugged4.0
Alabama Shakes Boys & Girls3.0
Killing Joke MMXII2.5
Graham Coxon A+E3.0
Black Breath Sentenced To Life3.5
Paul Weller Sonik Kicks3.5
Chromatics Kill for Love3.5
Oberhofer Time Capsules 23.0
Breton Other People's Problems3.5
The Shins Port of Morrow3.0
Tanlines Mixed Emotions3.0
Thieves Like Us Bleed Bleed Bleed4.0
Sharks No Gods3.0
Mirrorring Foreign Body4.0
Miike Snow Happy to You2.5
That Fucking Tank TFT2.0
VCMG Ssss3.5
Julia Holter Ekstasis3.0
Like lifting in off in a plane, one which frequently promises to fly you somewhere exciting, only to keep circling the clouds, with little flashes of sunlight that beam through holes in the clouds reamaining just not bright enough.
Ceremony (USA-CA) Zoo2.5
Kap Bambino Devotion3.0
The Men Open Your Heart4.0
The Magnetic Fields Love At The Bottom Of The Sea3.0
Conflicting and inconsistant but frequnetly charming nonetheless. The chick's vocals are more irritating than an itch in your arse crack when you are unable to scratch it and some of the tunes are too twee for their own good, but other tunes make good use of the synth motif and all in all, create breif, fun pop music.
Bleeding Knees Club Nothing To Do3.5
LostAlone I'm a UFO in This City3.5
Yeti Lane The Echo Show4.0
Last Dinosaurs In A Million Years3.0
Pond (AUS) Beard, Wives, Denim4.0
Disappears Pre Language3.0
Dirty Three Toward The Low Sun3.5
Cheap Girls Giant Orange2.5
The Menzingers On the Impossible Past2.5
Perfume Genius Put Your Back N 2 It3.0
Farewell Republic Burn the Boats3.0
fun. Some Nights3.5
Sleigh Bells Reign of Terror3.5
Frankie Rose Interstellar3.5
Burning Hearts Extinctions4.0
The Ting Tings Sounds from Nowheresville2.0
Shearwater Animal Joy2.5
The Saddest Landscape After The Lights3.0
Field Music Plumb3.0
Blondes Blondes3.0
A Place to Bury Strangers Onwards To The Wall3.0
Sharon Van Etten Tramp3.5
Mark Lanegan Blues Funeral3.0
Beth Jeans Houghton & Hooves Of Destiny Yours Truly, Cellophane Nose3.0
The Twilight Sad No One Can Ever Know3.5
Leonard Cohen Old Ideas2.0
Leonard speaks his way through his lines, and whilst his prose is without fault the rest of Old Ideas is not. The music is consistenly a mere bland backdrop and nothing more, whilst Cohen's voice, perhaps down to his grand old age, fails to lift off ground to anywhere interesting. Lyrically fine but a shame about the rest.
Hospitality Hospitality2.5
Prinzhorn Dance School Clay Class3.5
Grimes Visions4.0
Errors Have Some Faith In Magic3.0
Django Django Django Django3.0
A warped and wacky indie debut. Dense, hypnotic and exotic, Django's debut is set to shake up the stale alternative waters present in early 2012.
Lana Del Rey Born to Die2.5
The singles, which are front loaded, make for a strong enough start before the remainder (and majority) of the cuts stretch out the kitsch and retro-modernism to breaking (boring) point. By the time you hit the halfway point, Lana's voice is less cute and more samey; the music continually devoid of hooks; and her debut left an average reminder of how a desire for fame, and a particular route towards it, cannot be sustained by a couple of good tunes and rouged red lips.
Lamb of God Resolution3.0
Foxy Shazam The Church of Rock and Roll3.0
John K. Samson Provincial3.5
Cloud Nothings Attack on Memory4.0
Porcelain Raft Strange Weekend4.0
Nada Surf The Stars Are Indifferent to Astronomy2.5
Just as the stars are indifferent to astronomy; Nada Surf are indifferent to entertaining me. Just middle-of-the-road rock. Skippable.
Pulled Apart By Horses Tough Love2.5
They're just a bunch of big meanies from Leeds, really. I mean, look at the album art - who smashes a poor little kitty ornament!? It probably belonged to a pensioner; a poor little old lady who shares her home with stray Toms. Well, Pulled Apart By Horses do, and for this I cannot forgive them. Having an average album that does nothing new, has so-so vocal work and middle-road guitars doesn't help much, either.
Islet Illuminated People3.0
First Aid Kit The Lion's Roar3.5
Chairlift Something3.5
The 2 Bears Be Strong3.5
House music brought to life with a fresh, fun, frankly ridiculous and simply entertaining modern slant. As fun as it is annoying.
Leila U&I4.0
A clinical, claustrophobic cauldron of eerie robotic ambience and synthetic melodrama, crafted by able and confident hands; U & I is an obscure but thrilling electronic journey.
Howler America Give Up3.5
Diagrams Black Light2.0
It seems lazy, even as an amatuer music jounro, to describe an album as such, but when the word 'boring' is the overiding feeling gathered from listening to this debut LP, one can't argue... Mainly because one has fallen asleep.
Foe Bad Dream Hotline2.5
Too clean to be punk yet too dirty to be pop; Bad Dream Hotline doesn't really know which way to go and suffers in a confused middleground as such.
Trailer Trash Tracys Ester3.0
Casiokids Aabenbaringen Over Aaskammen3.0
Chintzy Casio parps (never would'a guessed) crafted by a group of Norwegians looking through sunny shades. Bright, light and unique pop that floats by pleasantly without compelling that much.
Tribes Baby3.5
The Big Pink Future This2.5
The early tracks lay out a promise the remainder cannot deliver upon. The sound is strangled and swampped with epic walls of synth, and The Big Pink's obvious desire to hit the charts has led to an inconsistent and over-ambitious 2nd album, that features a few worthwhile tracks, with 'few' sadly remaining the key term.
Rose Elinor Dougall The Distractions EP2.5
Gabrielle Aplin Home3.0
The Maccabees Given to the Wild4.0
Superheaven The Difference In Good and Bad Dreams2.5
Guided by Voices Let's Go Eat The Factory2.5
One hand: Interesting ideas; other hand: swathes of inconsquential ones. An unkemp slice of fuzz; promising at times but such highlights are buried under the weight of neighbouring trivialities.

2011
The Black Keys El Camino3.5
Rammstein Made in Germany 1995 - 20114.0
Solid run-through of Germany's finest export's 15+ year career. Points for the remastering and new track, 'Mein Land'; points deducted for perhaps a slighty too skimpy tracklist to paint the fullest picture. Still a thrilling and well pieced-together introduction to Rammstein for those unfamililar, all in all.
Olafur Arnalds Living Room Songs4.0
The Sea Lions Everything You Always Wanted To Know About...3.0
Brief, jangly indie pop that's frequently enjoyable but wholly uncompelling and somewhat absent from a distinctive human touch, with frontman Pillado's monotone vocals finding themselves drowned by the surrounding noise too much to take hold and connect.
The Soft Moon Total Decay EP3.5
Florence and the Machine Ceremonials4.5
The Strange Boys Live Music3.5
Coldplay Mylo Xyloto3.0
M83 Hurry Up, We're Dreaming4.0
Class Actress Rapprocher4.5
Zola Jesus Conatus3.5
Machine Head Unto the Locust4.5
The Smiths Complete5.0
Veronica Falls Veronica Falls3.5
Kasabian Velociraptor!3.5
Flash Fiktion Flash Fiktion2.5
Shimmering Stars Violent Hearts3.5
St. Vincent Strange Mercy4.0
Neon Indian Era Extrana4.0
Crosses EP3.0
Frightened Rabbit A Frightened Rabbit EP3.0
Handsome Furs Sound Kapital3.5
Joy Division & New Order Total: from Joy Division to New Order3.0
There's not much more that can be said, other than, if you're interested, just go and listen! All the New Order hits are present: the irrepressible 'Blue Monday', 'True Faith', the gorgeous 'The Perfect Kiss' - to keep it short and sweet, this is all great music and pretty much essential listening for those who've yet to discover either band. And 'Total' offers that opportunity, with a not a single duff track and a unique chance to view both Joy Division's and New Order's work in one brief, yet spectacular bundle. Could 18 tracks from two different bands ever be sufficient enough to be called a total career retrospective? The answer is no, but that's irrelevant, because, at the end of the day, if these 18 tracks were released as a singular, standard studio album, and not a career spanning compilation, 'Total' would be hailed as one of the greatest albums of the alternative genre, and that, to my ears, is enough to warrant it?s existence.
Arctic Monkeys Suck It and See3.5
Frank Turner England Keep My Bones4.5
Maybeshewill I Was Here For a Moment, Then I Was Gone3.0
SebastiAn Total4.0
Miles Kane Colour of the Trap3.5
Fleet Foxes Helplessness Blues3.5
KMFDM WTF?!2.5
Metronomy The English Riviera3.5
Foo Fighters Wasting Light4.0
Cold Cave Cherish The Light Years4.0
Pygmy Lush Old Friends4.0
Funeral Party The Golden Age Of Knowhere3.0
The Pains of Being Pure at Heart Belong3.0
The Vaccines What Did You Expect From The Vaccines?2.5
Art vs. Science The Experiment3.5
Yuck Yuck3.5
Young Galaxy Shapeshifting4.0
Young Galaxy shape shift into a creature of previously unknown confidence and subtle electro-pop beauty.
Iceage New Brigade4.0
Iron Lamb The Original Sin2.5

2010
Rabbit Junk Project Nonagon4.0
Detroit Diesel Terre Humaine2.5
Combichrist Noise Collection Vol. 13.5
Kings of Leon Come Around Sundown4.0
Combichrist Making Monsters3.0
Serj Tankian Imperfect Harmonies1.5
Disturbed Asylum3.0
Korn Korn III: Remember Who You Are3.5
Stone Temple Pilots Stone Temple Pilots (2010)2.5
Various Artists Cold Waves & Minimal Electronics, Vol. 14.5
More than just a carefully and loving compiled collection of icy, obscure synth from the futuristic 80s, Cold Waves Vol. 1 is an education, and nothing less than essential for anyone with an interest in this niche, but highly forgotten and quietly influnetial field of electronic music.
Sleigh Bells Treats3.5
Deftones Diamond Eyes4.0
Broken Bells Broken Bells3.5
The Courteeners Falcon2.5
Class Actress Journal of Ardency3.0

2009
Them Crooked Vultures Them Crooked Vultures3.0
Biffy Clyro Only Revolutions3.5
Cold Cave Love Comes Close4.0
Creed Full Circle3.0
Rammstein Liebe Ist Für Alle Da4.5
Neon Indian Psychic Chasms3.5
Alice in Chains Black Gives Way to Blue4.0
Five Finger Death Punch War Is The Answer4.5
Arctic Monkeys Humbug3.0
Kasabian West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum3.5
Art vs. Science Art vs. Science3.0
Depeche Mode Sounds Of The Universe4.0
30 years in the music industry doesn't seem to have worn down Depeche Mode's steam or creativity one iota. Familiar yet fresh, 'Sounds of the Universe' is a consistent and satisfying listen.
The Prodigy Invaders Must Die4.0
Faunts Feel.Love.Thinking.Of.3.5
Combichrist Today We Are All Demons3.0

2008
The Smiths The Sound of The Smiths4.5
The Cure 4:13 Dream3.5
The band sounds fresher and more contemporary than they have since the early nineties. It really benefits the album - the track-list is bubbling with warmth, confidence, maturity and most markedly, potential for the future of a band that seemed too old to walk months ago. '4:13 Dream' is thoroughly enjoyable, and solid from start to finish, leaving one with a quiet confidence for 'Part 2', should it ever see the light of day.
Oasis Dig Out Your Soul3.5
Kings of Leon Only By The Night3.0
Disturbed Indestructible3.0
Yazoo In Your Room5.0
'Don't Go' out, stay 'In Your Room', with 'Only You' and the complete Yaz collection. 2 remastered albums, a 3rd disc full of b-sides, remixes and extended cuts, and a bonus DVD ensues this is the most complete and handy boxset of the duo ever made.
Nine Inch Nails The Slip3.5
The Courteeners St. Jude3.5
Crystal Castles Crystal Castles3.5
Atlas Sound Let the Blind Lead Those Who Can See...2.5

2007
Five Finger Death Punch The Way Of The Fist4.5
The Cribs Men's Needs, Women's Needs, Whatever3.5
Arctic Monkeys Favourite Worst Nightmare4.0
Kings of Leon Because Of The Times3.5
Klaxons Myths of the Near Future3.5
Machine Head The Blackening5.0
Combichrist What The Fuck Is Wrong With You People?4.0
Chromatics Night Drive3.5

2006
Shiny Toy Guns We Are Pilots3.0
Faunts M44.5
Kasabian Empire3.0
The Black Angels Passover4.0
Daft Punk Musique Vol. 1 (1993-2005)4.0
Deathstars Termination Bliss4.0
The Kooks Inside In/Inside Out4.0
Arctic Monkeys Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not5.0

2005
System of a Down Hypnotize3.0
Rammstein Rosenrot3.0
Faunts High Expectations/Low Results3.0
Depeche Mode Playing The Angel4.5
After the snail-paced 'Exciter', Depeche inexplicably rocketed back up to their familiar dark and moody brand of electronic pop. The best Depeche Mode album since 'Songs of Faith and Devotion'.
Disturbed Ten Thousand Fists4.0
Soft Cell The Bedsit Tapes3.0
Eerie demos from Soft Cell at their most raw and experimental; tailored to uber-fans, alone.
Oasis Don't Believe the Truth3.5
System of a Down Mezmerize3.5
Nine Inch Nails With Teeth3.5
Combichrist Everybody Hates You3.5

2004
Kasabian Kasabian4.0
Very exciting and solid debut, holding promise for a much-hyped band. The album begins perfectly, with the mega-anthem 'Club Foot', and carries on delighting with 'Processed Beats' and the catchy 'Reason Is Treason. The remainder takes an electronic route, remaining interesting if a little unfocused at times. With a little bit of refinement, a brushing off of pressure and more focus, Kasabian could have evolved into something which the hype justified.
Rammstein Reise, Reise4.5
Depeche Mode Remixes 81–042.5
The Cure The Cure3.0
'The Cure' was one of the quickest recordings in the band's history, and it seems to have had an adverse effect on the sound of the album. It sounds carefree, relaxed and comfortable in its own skin, and it's nice to see a set of songs that haven't been fussed over too much. Having said that, nothing here is all that compelling; it's simply a middle-of-the-road Cure album, best suited to more serious fans than casual admirers.r
Panzer AG This Is My Battlefield2.5
LaPlegua would go on to greater full-time success with Combichrist than on this early side project, although 'This is my Battlefield' does offer a few exciting moments to attract genre fans attention for long enough.
Franz Ferdinand Franz Ferdinand4.0
The Cribs The Cribs3.0

2003
Machine Head Through the Ashes of Empires3.5
Stone Temple Pilots Thank You4.5
David Bowie Reality3.5
Reality is a confident, mature and self-assured album featuring a consistent set of polished songs. Tony Visconti returns in the producers chair and his skilful hand is once again appreciated as he channels Bowie's ideas into fully-functioning modern gems. There's nothing as rocking as 'Slow Burn' this time around, but the album has a slightly weirder edge to it, with odd sparkles of noise and subtle inclusions of Bowie's treasured Stylophone flecked throughout. Still, it's more of the same when it comes down to it, and that's precisely why Reality shapes up as a great listen; practically on a par with Heathen.
Combichrist The Joy Of Gunz3.0
Dave Gahan Paper Monsters2.5
The Clash The Essential Clash4.0

2002
System of a Down Steal This Album!3.0
David Bowie Best of Bowie3.5
Disturbed Believe4.0
Queens of the Stone Age Songs for the Deaf4.0
David Bowie Heathen4.0
Heathen is a great album and Bowie's best since 1980's Scary Monsters, but it's not a 'classic' album. It is, however, a classic Bowie album - even though it comes a star short of five - in the sense that it hints at the same characteristics possessed by an artist who crafted those iconic masterpieces years ago. It's not because this album ranks alongside such efforts, but rather because it captures Bowie's mind in a similar frame as it was back then ? not worried about living up to expectations or consciously trying to innovate, just recording what was right for him at the given moment. Heathen is not a classic album, but comes as close to such a title as any modern Bowie record could ever hope to because there's an undercurrent of awareness that understands that creating such an experience is nigh on impossible. Instead, Heathen just makes the best out of the present, and ultimately, the results are nothing less than a delightful success to behold for fans and casual listeners alike.
Oasis Heathen Chemistry2.5
2001
System of a Down Toxicity5.0
Depeche Mode Exciter2.5
Mellow, tranquil, chilled, relaxed - none of these words are likely to spring to mind when you think 'Depeche Mode', yet they're the only moods you'll hear on 2001's 'Exciter'. Arguably the bands least satisfying album so far.
Rammstein Mutter5.0
Joy Division Les Bains Douches 18 December 19794.5
Creed Weathered3.0

2000
The Beatles 14.0
Joy Division The Complete BBC Recordings4.5
There's not much more you could ask for other than more performances, but until we build that time machine and steer Curtis away from the heartbreaking end he brought about, we'll have to enjoy these brilliant numbers without thinking 'what if', and instead just appreciate the opportunity to experience a small vibe of what it must have been like standing at the front of packed room in a small north west club, as the boys stumbled on stage to wash the crowd in gloomy post-punk perfection. All in all, The Complete BBC Recordings is a handy way acquiring both Peel sessions and the much bootlegged Something Else performances in one handy, and thrilling bundle. A must-have for fans, a curio for everyone else.
Disturbed The Sickness4.5
Oasis Standing on the Shoulder of Giants2.5
The Cure Bloodflowers3.0
Ultimately, the album is too self-conscious and familiar to be the epic return to form it was intended to be, yet, appositionally, it works precisely because of those two complaints. 'Bloodflowers' paints a wontedly satisfying portrait of an ageing band that can still appease its followers, but only when it resorts to using the same old pretty, yet slightly un-compelling, colours and brushstrokes.

1999
David Bowie Hours3.5
Hours is a mellow, refreshing and consistent listen. It marks a new level of maturity in Bowie's writing and carries subtleties that instil pleasantly reminiscent thoughts of earlier days in the chameleon's lifespan, without ever sounding retro or out of date. It's not the most thrilling of listens, but Hours's subtle and oftentimes beautiful compositions, served as good indicators of the quality of what would come next in a career that spanned over five decades and took as many turns as a theme park rollercoaster.
Creed Human Clay3.0
Nine Inch Nails The Fragile4.0
Joy Division Preston 28 February 19804.0

1998
Oasis The Masterplan4.5
Duran Duran Greatest4.0
As with most pop groups, it's the hit singles, not the full length albums, that provides the definitive picture. Greatest is a compilation effort that certainly understands and implements this, and within the realm of Duran, one couldn't ask for a more effective and enjoyable album.
Depeche Mode The Singles 86–984.5
System of a Down System of a Down4.0

1997
Oasis Be Here Now2.0
Rammstein Sehnsucht3.5
Creed My Own Prison3.5
Radiohead OK Computer5.0
David Bowie The Deram Anthology 1966-19683.0
For those Bowiephiles looking to investigate this very early phase of the chameleon's work, 'The Deram Anthology' offers the best package yet. Collects 'David Bowie' (Bowie's debut LP) in its entireity, alongside several non-album singles, such as the infamous 'Laughing Gnome', and alternate takes on certain tracks, making for a more complete picture than just 'David Bowie' on its own.
Depeche Mode Ultra3.0
That this album exists at all is an impressive feat, after all the obstacles that came Depeche Mode's way prior to its release. A few decent tracks but too many instrumentals and slow tracks unfortunately make Ultra one of the bands weakest releases.
Machine Head The More Things Change...3.5
David Bowie Earthling3.0
Its all very solid and enjoyable, but at the same time, one must question whether a dance-flavoured incarnation of David Bowie was what the fans wanted. Earthling is well-made for sure, but at the end of the day, when one thinks of Bowie and what?s great about his musicianship, the word 'dance' certainly doesn't jump to mind, and that's precisely why Earthling is both satisfying and underwhelming, as odd as such a notion seems. Its consistency and tact cannot be faulted, but its necessity and overall importance in the shaping of Bowie's musical portrait can perhaps be debated. Conclusively, Earthling is enjoyable but skipable - personal preference serving as the only sound critical advice that truly matters when deciding whether the album should find a place on your record shelf or not.
Leaether Strip Anal Cabaret: A Tribute to Soft Cell3.0
An EBM take on 5 influential Soft Cell tracks, thoroughly solid and worthwhile for both Soft Cell and Leaether Strip fans.
The Prodigy The Fat of the Land4.0

1996
The Cure Wild Mood Swings2.5
'Wild Mood Swings' is rather solid throughout and has a small cluster or gems, but, most markedly, it floats around in the air more than it touches ground. It doesn't have that crucial direction of either gloom/gothic territory or radio-freindly rock turf, that made earlier albums great. Essentially, it's a middle-of-the-road Cure album - far from terrible, but skipable for all but the devout and those wishing to get the complete picture about this seminal post-punk outfit.
Ocean Colour Scene Moseley Shoals4.0

1995
Alice in Chains Alice in Chains2.5
David Bowie Outside3.5
Ultimately, Outside is too challenging for its own good - even those who grasp its 'non-concept' can't argue against an overly long runtime and an inconsistent set of songs. Still, the album contains some of the most exciting and thrilling moments out of all Bowie's nineties work, and it's certainly the most ambitious album he attempted that decade. It's not the masterpiece it should've been, then, but it?s still an impressive and oftentimes brilliant experience, that all Bowie fans should try at least once before they decide to throw its splintered, complex carcass on the rubbish heap with his other misguided efforts, because Outside, despite itself, is far from deserving such a treatment.
Oasis (What's the Story) Morning Glory?5.0
Radiohead The Bends5.0
Rammstein Herzeleid4.0
1994
Oasis Definitely Maybe5.0
Machine Head Burn My Eyes5.0
Blur Parklife4.5
Nine Inch Nails The Downward Spiral5.0
Alice in Chains Jar of Flies4.5

1993
David Bowie Black Tie White Noise2.5
Black Tie White Noise is an odd mix of drum and bass, wonderful Lester Bowie jazz trumpet warbles, and a passing intrusion of guitar and piano. It?s certainly not the most memorable or enjoyable phase of Bowie?s work, but the set is incredibly more consistent and ambitious than anything he did post-Scary Monsters. A conistent and enjoyable set, but one that isn't likely to blow you away or make you reassess your choice for best Bowie album, but if you give the record a fair spin you'll get a instant hit of warmth, simply because Black Tie White Noise showed fans that David Bowie was not ready to give up yet.
Depeche Mode Songs of Faith and Devotion4.0
A risky album that dared to change the universally acclaimed sound that appeared on 'Violator' and explore a slightly rockier edge. On the whole it works rather well and even though it doesn't beat their late 80's highs, it comes damn close.
1992
Alice in Chains Dirt5.0
The Cure Wish4.0
If you hit play without any expectations or notions of what this record should be it really begins to shine, and show off of its strength - its consistency acting as flexing muscles, inspiring appreciation and awe in observers. If you don?t think of this as the follow-up to 'Disintegration' and instead, just chalk it up as another Cure record (which it is, at the end of the day), then after several plays, 'Wish' slowly but surely begins to mark itself out as a very enjoyable album - on a par with 'Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me' and trailing not too far behind 'The Head On The Door' - two exceptional reasons to make sure this album finds its way into the sweaty palms of any Cure admirer who's been putting the record off, for far too long.
Pantera Vulgar Display of Power5.0
1991
Nirvana Nevermind5.0

1990
Alice in Chains Facelift3.0
Pantera Cowboys from Hell4.0
Depeche Mode Violator5.0
Violator set a new benchmark in its genre. Dark and unique enough to be classed as alternative, yet full of sharp pop sensibilities and perceptive enough to reach a larger audience. Seriously one of the best albums, ever.
The La's The La's5.0

1989
Nine Inch Nails Pretty Hate Machine4.5
The Cure Disintegration5.0
'Disintegration' is the finest album The Cure ever constructed, featuring a consistently brilliant atmosphere on a level the group never quite managed before. Albums like 'Pornography' were immensely dark but suffered the tiniest amount from omnipresent melodrama, and that?s precisely why 'Disintegration' is a better album - because it takes all the captivating angst and darkness from the past, but expresses said emotions with a newfound grasp of subtlety and sophistication, so that any of the issues that held previous efforts back are simply erased; overcome; bettered. This is truly the work of a master of its field; the master being The Cure and the field being alternative rock. 'Disintegration' is more than just merely the best Cure record - it's one of the greatest alternative rock albums of the entire decade.
The Stone Roses The Stone Roses5.0

1988
Joy Division Substance4.5
Camouflage Voices & Images2.0
If there's one simple and effective overview of this album, it would surely be to make it crystal clear that Camouflage were OBSESSED with Depeche Mode when making their 1988 debut, 'Voices & Images'.

1987
The Smiths Strangeways, Here We Come4.0
Pixies Come On Pilgrim4.0
Depeche Mode Music for the Masses4.5
Depeche hit the big time with a mellow and sophisticated album that demonstrates a band comfortably matured into its own dark sound. Not a weak moment on the whole disc, superb.
Nitzer Ebb That Total Age2.5
David Bowie Never Let Me Down1.5
Never Let Me Down is not the worst album in existence (see: Justin Bieber's My World), but it is the worst album in Bowie's catalogue. It mirrors nothing approaching the quality of his vastly unique and influential seventies work - it doesn't even come close to the lesser delights of Let's Dance, or its disappointing follow-up, Tonight. It's absent from character and identity; creativeness and passion - merely a collection of poorly executed stadium pop - the small glimmers of hope it offers are swiftly buried under heaps of dross material. Never Let Me Down let us down. Big time.
The Smiths Louder Than Bombs4.5
The Smiths The World Won't Listen3.5
Art of Noise In No Sense? Nonsense!3.5
The Cure Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me4.0
Count them up and you'll see there's an abundance of worthwhile moments - far more than there are skipable ones. Most albums would dream of containing as many gems as this outing and that's what 'Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me' encapsulates, really - a bloated concept, but one with enough value to warrant an investment of time and care from the listener. It may be a big, fat, smothering kiss, but there's still good reason to want to find 'Kiss Me's shade of lipstick smudged on the collar of your shirt.

1986
New Order Brotherhood3.5
The Smiths The Queen Is Dead5.0
Depeche Mode Black Celebration5.0
Depeche Mode's most brilliantly dark hour. Contains a plethora of anthems to be played alone, at midnight including classics like 'A Question of Lust' and 'Stripped'. Its greatest charm comes in its ability to be both depressing yet uplifting. A Classic.
Art of Noise In Visible Silence3.0
Art of Noise Daft3.5

1985
Depeche Mode The Singles 81→854.0
The Cure The Head on the Door4.5
'The Head On The Door' is easily one of most accomplished and enjoyable albums the band ever produced. It's refreshing and consistent; pleasantly familiar at times, but excitingly experimental at others and alternative, yet hooky enough to be immediately catchy. Robert Smith penned some of his sharpest lyrics here and, with a full band that was sorely missed since Gallup's departure, some of his strongest melodies too. The full band setting helped usher in rejuvenation for a group whose future appeared to be hanging by a thread, a year previous, and to top it all off, singles like 'Inbetween Days' managed to make headway in popularising the band outside of their home turf; just scrapping into the Billboard Hot 100 at #99. To put it simply; with 'The Head On The Door', The Cure reached heady heights indeed.
New Order Low-Life4.5
Tears for Fears Songs from the Big Chair4.0
The Smiths Meat Is Murder3.5
1984
The Smiths Hatful of Hollow5.0
Depeche Mode Some Great Reward4.5
Depeche Mode took their first foray into greatness with this dark, cynical, ironic classic. Packed with hits and criminally underrated tracks, its essential listening.
Metallica Ride the Lightning4.5
Depeche Mode People are People2.0
Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark Junk Culture4.0
Art of Noise (Who's Afraid Of?) The Art Of Noise!5.0
A tidal wave of relentless oddball electronic experimentalism, The Art of Noise produce a listening experience like no others.
The Smiths The Smiths5.0
David Bowie Tonight2.0
Whether it was a favour to a friend, a sad demonstration of artistic drought, a cash generator or a combination of all three, Tonight shapes up as consistently average listen - hence it disappointing status for long-term fans who've experienced bigger and better Bowie records. Apart from its two highlights, 'Loving The Alien' and 'Blue Jean' (which aren't all that astounding, anyway), Tonight represents the first Bowie album in a long time that can be well and truly skipped by all but the absolute devout.
The Cure The Top3.0
'The Top' captures The Cure in a transitional period, and as such, some of its experiments and ideas don't quite gel, but when they do work they're intriguing and surprisingly effective. The key to getting the most out of 'The Top' is to simply understand that it's experimental and transitional, so it's uniqueness can take a little longer than usual to set in, and even then, not every track will be a big hit, given the album's eclecticism. With all that mind, the best consumer advice one could issue, is thus: take it with a pinch of salt and just enjoy it for what it is - an odd, chaotic, wild, unrestrained, and more than anything else, crucial chapter in the band's history.
Alphaville Forever Young4.5
A stunning synth-pop debut that came from a band who sadly arrived a little too late to receive all the recognition they deserved.

1983
The Cure Japanese Whispers2.5
An odd album that provides fans with an opportunity to collect The Cure's 1983 non-album singles that proved to be a massive change of direction for Smith and his ever-changing gang of goths. Both 'The Lovecats' and 'Let's Go To Bed' are essential, but sadly, the rest of the disc is not. An average, but important step in The Cure's history.
The Jam Snap!5.0
Depeche Mode Construction Time Again4.0
The addition of Alan Wilder seemed to propel the bands creativity into overdrive. The result was an album more rich, dense and sample-heavy than any other DM record that came before.
Yazoo You and Me Both3.0
Yazoo's swansong showed signs that the incredibly short-lived duo were losing momentum, but manages to redeem itself with stellar efforts like 'Nobody's Diary'.
New Order Power, Corruption and Lies4.5
Power, Corruption & Lies is the true birth of the New Order that influenced and enraptured many throughout the eighties and still holds dominion today - in fact it's rather astonishing how fresh, relevant and utterly satisfying this three decades old music still is. New Order named their debut album 'Movement', as if to announce to the world that they had moved on from the past, but if that album didn't really satisfy in that respect, than this second attempt undoubtedly did. Power, Corruption & Lies is simply New Order grasping their identity and modelling it to the ears of listeners in a glorious, confident and compelling pose - provocative, cool, sophisticated and unreservedly refreshing, its eight tracks are nothing less than essential to fans of groundbreaking music, in general.
David Bowie Let's Dance3.0
Let's Dance is a mixed effort in every sense. It boasts three glistening pop classics early doors, but shapes up as a tedious and uncompelling record towards the end. It doesn't really feel like a Bowie album either. Nile Rodger's shiny, but terribly anachronistic production and its deliberately commercial slant make it a distant and disappointing counterpart to Bowie's incredibly unique seventies antecedents. Still, it was one of the most successful and popular albums of the eighties, and its early tracks are delightful, ultimately saving it from condemnation. But whether the album is worthwhile firmly lies in the eyes of the beholder. Picking up Let's Dance will get you a flawed and unessential, but sometimes hugely enjoyable record - its value depending on just how much you wish to put your red shoes and dance the blues.
Tears for Fears The Hurting4.5
On 'The Hurting', Tears For Fears accomplished a great deal. They established the sound and style they'd become known for in a quality and manner that suggests they'd had been around for years, as well as showing the world they were a more ambitious pop band than most, with the primal scream theory inclinations and assured takes on grim subject matters being impressively risky focal points for a new band to tackle. Fortunately for 'Tears', it all worked out, and 'The Hurting' rose to the #1 spot in the UK album charts back in 1983 when it was released. To conclude, 'The Hurting' is an ambitious debut album executed to a near flawless standard, and the genuine emotion, minimalist pop hooks and superb vocals stand the test of time more than most artists of this era could ever hope for.
Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark Dazzle Ships4.5
On 'Dazzle Ships' OMD risked a lot and they lost some of the chart success they managed to pull off in the past three years, but also become immensely more credible at the same time. They could've just deployed tried and tested chart geared hits like previous successes, but the point is they didn't. They chose to experiment, and whilst the album might not necessarily be as immediately grabbing as older chart topping hits like 'Enola Gay' when each track is digested separately, but when served as a cohesive album played from start to finish without interruption, 'Dazzle Ships' compels just as much and proves that sometimes, the risk is worth the gain.
Soft Cell The Art Of Falling Apart3.5
Ironically, the 'Falling Apart' bit of the album title is the best summation of Soft Cell's 2nd LP. Great in places, but overall, far less consistent than their debut, providing an expirence only tailored to fans, alone.

1982
Berlin Pleasure Victim2.0
Depeche Mode A Broken Frame3.5
Without Vince Clark's influence, DM created one of the most intriguing albums in their catalogue, sprinkled with oddity, melancholic beats and a lone underrated classic 'The Sun and the Rainfall'.
Simple Minds New Gold Dream (81-82-83-84)4.0
The Cure Pornography4.5
The album works best when the listener draws the curtains shut, waits until the dead of night, plugs in a pair of headphones, and allows himself to be transported into 'Pornography's dark whirlpool of sound, determined to drag him down into the bowels of hell. And it's not as hard as it may seem to be drawn so deep into Smith's deprived world, as 'Pornography' is simply one of the most convincing and grandiose albums The Cure ever produced. It may be incredibly melodramatic, but that doesn't stop it from also being one of the most spectacular and dark albums the post-punk genre ever gave birth to.r
Yazoo Upstairs at Eric's5.0
Catchy and concise yet innovating and influential, it's quite possibly Vince Clarke's finest hour.
Duran Duran Rio3.5
Rio, as a cohesive album, remains an optional extra open to those who've exhausted one of the compilations to death and want more, and holds little worth to those who are only interested in the hits (like most causal listeners will be) - a group that should just pick up the 'Greatest' CD to collect all the essential tunes in one brilliant package.
Roxy Music Avalon4.0
After a 2 year break, Ferry and co. seemed to buck their ideas up. It was the 80's, they'd been going for 10 years and their last pair of LP's were middling, to say the least. For a band to come back and release a swansong to close their reign, especially one as important and influential as Roxy, one couldn't ask for a much maturer, sophisticated and successful end. Not quite as thrilling as their early sevnties material but gorgeously pop-charming nonetheless. Well done, lads.
Soft Cell Non-Stop Ecstatic Dancing4.0
An ecstasy-fulled EP that turned up the BMP count and became one of the first 'house' albums of its time, influencing the techno/dance genre.
ABC The Lexicon of Love4.5

1981
New Order Movement4.0
Although New Order hadn't really found their sound yet (however, non-album tracks like 'Temptation' held big hints of the future, with danceable electro rhythms driving the song), it ends up making Movement stronger. The clinging to the past juxtaposed against the small adjustments in sound, left the album in a unique and distinctive place in the bands stellar catalogue, sounding unlike anything else they'd do in the eighties. Movement is a challenging listen because of two main reasons; the first being the unfortunate context surrounding the band at this time, and the second being the music itself, and the fact it doesn't really sound like the New Order most are familiar with. But artistically, this is why it, appositionally, stands up as a rather brilliant album - simultaneously being a suitably grim and moody funeral hymn, and a subtle step in a different sonic direction. It's cold, unnerving atmosphere isn't easy to warm to, but for those willing to appreciate the album for its necessity in the bands history, 'Movement' has more to enjoy than may seem apparent on the surface. New Order needed to release some of the anguish and sorrow inside of them before they could move on, and 'Movement' builds the necessary atmosphere for them to bid farewell to the tragic past, and for Joy Division fans to do the same, should they wish to be part of the procession, themselves.
Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark Architecture & Morality5.0
What makes the album really special is the fact that it feels more important than the 'synthpop' constraints would have you believe. It's aged extremely well, and the power of hits like 'Joan of Arc' still ring true. It's far too considered and beautifully executed to be brushed off as an unnecessary product of electro-pop cluttered 80s Britain - it's too clever, subtle and, more than anything else, gorgeous, to be ignored. A cohesive album that is extremely consistent in not only its tone, but also its quality; 'Architecture & Morality' is one of the great gems that many may have overlooked or missed - and that is simply a crime. If you're unsure about the pretentiously named Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, or whether this record is worth the time; one can only plead to you as a fan of great music to another, to give it a chance - and if you?re a fan of electro-pop at any level, you may find that that chance may be one of the most satisfying you ever took.
Adam and the Ants Prince Charming3.0
The Human League Dare!4.5
To the late 70's futurist kids that discovered the 'League' through the bands first two icy-cold, detached, robotic records, 'Dare!' was a betrayal. It completely removed itself from the sound it nailed so well and replaced it with straight ahead, chart-leaning synth-pop tunes like 'Don't You Want Me'. To the aforementioned group it was a betrayal. To everyone else it was a revelation.
Joy Division Still3.5
Depeche Mode Speak & Spell4.0
Unlike any other Depeche Mode album, it remains a charming piece of early synth-pop, despite featuring outdated synths, shaky vocals and few concerned lyrics. Worth a listen for its place in British electronic music history.
Heaven 17 Penthouse and Pavement3.5
Penthouse and Pavement is a very self-assured debut from a band that want you to think almost as much they want you to dance, and with the 9 tracks on their debut (re-issues and re-masters have added a few more bonus tracks) they've done a rather stellar job. If Heaven 17 hadn't quite hit their stride completely on Penthouse and Pavement, they had at least picked the shoes in which they'd walk with total confidence just over year later in the follow-up, 'The Luxury Gap' in 1983.
Tronics Love Backed By Force3.5
The Cure Faith4.0
'Faith' is, as you might expect, just as grim and gothic as its surrounding albums - as grey as the artwork adorning the album cover. It does, however, mark another step-up in quality from last years effort, featuring a more diverse set of tracks and some of Smith's most sharply considered lyrics to date. Truth be told, there isn?t a single weak track on the album, with a string of essentials in 'All Cats Are Grey', 'The Funeral Party', 'Primary', 'Doubt' and, of course the title track; 'Faith' is simply one of the strongest Cure albums in the band?s 30 year catalogue.
Soft Cell Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret5.0
One of the most unique acts in early 80s synth-pop, Soft Cell had a flair for creating sleazy, sinful slices of dark electronic music. If all you've heard is 'Tainted Love' then you're really missing out.

1980
Japan Gentlemen Take Polaroids3.5
Bauhaus In the Flat Field4.0
Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark Organisation4.0
David Bowie Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps)4.5
Quite simply, Scary Monsters is a fantastic album - featuring stellar moments such as the frenetic, childlike nightmare, 'Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps)', the beautifully constructed 'Teenage Wildlife', the glistening 'Up The Hill Backwards', and the top class pop delights of 'Fashion' and 'Ashes to Ashes'. At the time of its release it was fresh and exciting, and fortunately the years have done little to erode such sentiments. Scary Monsters would be the last classic album Bowie would release for a number of years, leaving one with a bitter final thought: if only the rest of the chameleon's eighties material was as golden as this?
Simple Minds Empires and Dance3.5
Killing Joke Killing Joke4.5
Joy Division Closer5.0
The Cure Seventeen Seconds3.5
Because the album is so sparse and instrumentally driven, it takes a good few spins before its beauty can be registered in the mind of the average listener, and if one were to nit-pick, one would conclude that there isn't much variety, with most of the album blending into one, continuous, droning wave. However, 'nit-pick' is the key phrase, as 'Seventeen Seconds' is a subtle and very solid Cure record - not their finest work, sure, but still a crucial step into new territory. And well handled it was, at that, with 'Play for Today', 'A Forest', 'Seventeen Seconds' and one or two other contenders all amounting to essential listening status for Cure fans.
Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark3.0
The Cure Boys Don't Cry4.5
The four 'new' tracks, two of which are essential Cure tunes ('Killing an Arab' and 'Boys Don't Cry'), when combined with the best material from 'Three Imaginary Boys' (such as the plodding '10.15 Saturday Night' and the infectiously catchy 'Grinding Halt'), mix together to create a package that is ultimately more satisfying than the debut album, with its trim, streamlined track-list. Shedding any of the weaker songs from the previous year's effort, and featuring gems aplenty; 'Boys Don't Cry' is a perfect summation of the bands loveable early phase (before Smith embarked on his gothic desires with a trail of dark albums) and serves as a perfect place for any Cure neophytes to delve into the bands work.
The Jam Sound Affects4.5
The Human League Travelogue3.0
An awkward transitional phase, Travelogue remains a mere curious (but crucial) footnote in the bands history.
The Durutti Column The Return of the Durutti Column4.0
Adam and the Ants Kings of the Wild Frontier4.5
John Foxx Metamatic4.5
In short, 'Metamatic' saw Foxx being able to distil and refine his style into its purest, most effective and influential form yet. Truthfully, there isn't really a weak moment on the entire disc, and whilst some tracks standout more than others, after a few plays, 'Metamatic' really begins to shine as one of the most enjoyable, very early 80s British electronic albums, that demonstrated all that was great about the country's growing fascination for the cold, danceable electro beats of Kraftwerk, and fashionable futurist themes and moods - something which 'Metamatic' does a better job of than most of its contemporary rivals. John Foxx, (aided by, at-the-time unknown; sharp, young engineer Gareth Jones) took his visionary tales of the future (first toyed with when he sang for Ultravox) to the next level, producing an album that features a genuinely eerie and clinical electronic atmosphere to match his jarring, detached vocals and astute sci-fi lyrics. 'Metamatic' is a stunning, confident and well-executed debut album, and is impossible to ignore for any fan of influential electronic music, especially if they love sci-fi, to boot.
1979
The Clash London Calling5.0
Simple Minds Reel to Real Cacophony4.0
The Human League Reproduction4.0
The birth of a child, never as dark and cold as he was here, in his baby steps.
Bauhaus Bela Lugosi's Dead4.5
Joy Division Unknown Pleasures5.0
David Bowie Lodger4.5
It might not be as groundbreaking as Low or Heroes, nor is as instantly gratifying - its relentless oddness easily overwhelming for fans of cut and dried rock music - but for those who invest the appropriate amount of time into Lodger, they'll find an incredibly enjoyable album on their hands. What's more, Lodger goes to great lengths to demonstrate just how brave and challenging Bowie was as an artist who could've easily rested on the success of Heroes or Low, and merely churned out more of the same. But the point is he didn't. He took a step forward and tried something new, so if nothing else convinces you to give Lodger a chance than perhaps the presence of Bowie's undeniable ambition and credibility will.
The Cure Three Imaginary Boys4.0
The album marks itself out as one of the most distinctive Cure LP's, regardless (and most probably, because) of any creative tensions present during recording, with as many (almost) jolly post-punk outings as it has gloomy ones; and a youthful exuberance and seemingly carefree buzz (see: the 54 second closer, 'The Weedy Burton', or the studio chatter of 'Foxy Lady') that makes the album a sheer delight to listen to - adding balance to the more moody tracks and making it all easier to digest, in the process. It may seem a little different than most Cure albums, but, crucially, it's a pleasant difference. 'Three Imaginary Boys' is a fantastic and influential slice of post-punk that sits comfortably as a nice parallel to the Cure's darker albums, of which, would soon arrive after this surprisingly, non-gothic, (sometimes) happy, and wholly underappreciated debut.
Tubeway Army Replicas3.5
Gary Numan The Pleasure Principle4.5
'The Pleasure Principle' is one of the most important and iconic electronic albums of its time, and fortunately, for all the right reasons. Arriving at the tail-end of 1979, the record helped blueprint the way for swathes of other young British groups who were bored of punk and were looking to experiment with new-fangled synthesisers as tools for making pop music. As it turned out, few did it better, with 'Cars' becoming a serious chart presence on both sides of the Atlantic, the album reaching number one in the UK, and Numan himself failing to scale the lofty heights he reached here, ever again, with a series of increasingly disappointing albums leading him down a steady slope to cult-status, rather than maintaining the sheer commercial superstardom he managed here. 30 years on, tracks like 'Cars', 'Metal' and 'M.E.' are still blisteringly good, and Numan's icon has swelled immeasurably since his solo debut, with a mass of covers and remixes of his most memorable songs, and references of influence by the likes of artists such as Nine Inch Nails' Trent Reznor. In short, 'The Pleasure Principle' is a fantastic listen, and nothing less than essential to fans of electronic music at any level, despite one or two minor niggles.

1978
Ultravox Systems Of Romance3.5
Magazine Real Life4.5
The Jam All Mod Cons4.0

1977
Ultravox Ha!-Ha!-Ha!4.0
David Bowie "Heroes"5.0
Heroes, for all it's differences, is essentially more of the same and that's precisely why it shapes up as a fantastic record. It presents a slightly more optimistic and refreshing slant on Low's formula for those who couldn?t stomach its icy, fractured melodies, whilst still sounding similar enough to its predecessor to be hailed as the natural successor to what Low blueprinted. It may not gather as much credit as Low, simply because that album came first, but over the years it's received the mass of critical acclaim it ultimately deserves. And rightly so, as Heroes is just as thrilling and essential as Low, managing to shake things up just enough to separate itself from its similarly outstanding older brother, resulting in yet another glistening highlight in Bowie's extensive catalogue of genius.
Sex Pistols Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols5.0
Iggy Pop Lust For Life4.5
The Clash The Clash4.5
Kraftwerk Trans-Europe Express5.0
Iggy Pop The Idiot5.0
Although The Idiot is most effectively categorised as post-punk, its influences and mix of genres are disparate to say the least. Taking elements of funk, krautrock, industrial, rock and electronica, the album boats a highly distinctive and deceptively varied sound. Despite its undercurrent of eclecticism, The Idiot is a very metallic and clinical record - its subtle traces of seemingly incompatible genres are capably moulded into a menacing post-punk cadence by Bowie's Alomar/Davis/Murray rhythm section. The Idiot is every bit as stunning as you'd expect from two of rock's most iconic and important stars, and then some. A consistently stunning and ground-breaking listen which breathed life into Iggy Pop's declining career, The Idiot is unequivocally one of the most defining and essential albums of its era.
The Damned Damned Damned Damned4.0
David Bowie Low5.0
Low is the pinnacle of David Bowie's career. It completely rejuvenated his creativity, and presented the world with a distinctly different sound to the glam rock or plastic soul of the past. Low's fractured arrangements, detached vocals and seamless blend of synthetic and traditional instruments influenced a generation of musicians, serving as a blueprint to the forthcoming post-punk explosion. What's more impressive is that Low is only the first part of a groundbreaking trilogy; but even when separated from its partner albums, Low unfolds as an endlessly thrilling and awe-inspiring experience, to be missed by none.
Brian Eno Before and After Science4.5

1976
David Bowie Station to Station4.5
Station to Station was a groundbreaking release. At only 6 tracks long and featuring a distinct lack of commerciality, it's easy to underestimate its importance, but the experimental blend of plastic soul and detached arrangements proved to be massively influential over the following years. It also marked Bowie's departure from soul, and hinted at the sound he was moving towards - the metallic, fractured rock of his Berlin trilogy. Station to Station is definitely a transitional album; contemporary interviews and even the lyrics hinted at Bowie?s desire to return to Europe - most starkly on the title-track ("The European cannon is here"). Transitional albums are usually a mess, but Station is an exception - gracefully ducking its head below the parapet, saving itself from condemnation via the incredibly unique and influential sound it boasts. The end result is an album that ranks alongside Bowie's finest accomplishments.

1975
Brian Eno Discreet Music4.0
Brian Eno Another Green World5.0
David Bowie Young Americans3.5
'Young Americans' is also a lot more than just an interesting genre exercise, as it represented one of the first significant excursions by a white man into a genre that was previously seen as a 'black-only' style of music and is the process, Bowie opened the floodgates for blue-eyed funk imitators everywhere. Some would call it a genre-exercise and one that the fans didn't necessarily wish to be subjected to, and whilst that's true to some extent, 'Fame', 'Win', 'Fascination', 'Right' and of course 'Young Americans', that view tends to wear a little thin in favour of one that labels the album a different, but still delicious flavour, of Bowie. For those who just couldn't get over the leftfield change of style, they didn't have to wait long - by the time disco had exploded the restless musical chameleon Bowie had moved on to pastures new, but what else did you expect from one of music's great innovators?
Roxy Music Siren4.0
As per, there's still a great deal of eclecticism on 'Siren', with odd country-glam outings like 'End Of The Line' and atmospheric, airy numbers like 'Sentimental Fool' sitting comfortably aside funky pop-rock tracks like 'She Sells' and 'Could It Happen To Me', without ever sounding out of place or unwarranted. 'Siren' is simply one of Roxy Music's most cohesive, well realised, surprising, and brilliant albums, with not a single average track, nor a moment were it doesn't thrill or shock with its unexpected, eclectic twists and turns. Highly influential, critically lauded and commercially successful (with Love is the Drug reaching #2 in the UK singles chart, in '75), 'Siren' is an album that deserves its place on 'Rolling Stones' list of the '500 Greatest Albums of All Time'.
1974
Roxy Music Country Life5.0
'Country Life' also captures the final showing of the early Roxy style, i.e. before funk and soul elements seeped into the mix more and more until the group gradually became a vehicle for front-man Ferry?s seductive crooner persona to run wild with romantic glimmer and enticing, silky soft rock tunes (something that would become fully realised with Roxy?s final outing, the brilliant 'Avalon'). As such, the record is simply all that was great about the art rock sound of early Roxy, but taken to the extreme and its natural, satisfying succession point. A truly phenomenal album, 'Country Life' enraptured and influenced an innumerable amount of listeners, and with glistening gems such as 'The Thrill Of It All', 'All I Want Is You', 'Out Of The Blue' and 'Prairie Rose' being just a few of the high points, its not very difficult to understand why. No matter the taste preference for a certain time period or style in the bands eclectic discography, 'Country Life' is undoubtedly one of the best Roxy albums, and some would say (with great reason), the best.
David Bowie Diamond Dogs4.0
Diamond Dogs is a messy, conflicting concept marked by a tenuous transition from glam rock to plastic soul, and that's precisely why it was such a crucial and important record in Bowie’s catalogue. It captured an artist mid-evolution, baring witness to his first steps away from the past, and as such, it remains an intriguing listen. An album of many firsts, Diamond Dogs features a small platter of sparkling Bowie classics, and even with its flaws, the overall experience shapes up as a fabulous, nightmarish ride through a grim and terrified vision of a dystopian future. Conclusively, this dog's howls might not be diamond, but where it matters, they're most definitely still gold.
Brian Eno Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy)5.0
Kraftwerk Autobahn4.5
Brian Eno Here Come the Warm Jets5.0

1973
John Lennon Mind Games3.0
Roxy Music Stranded4.0
David Bowie Pin Ups2.0
Pin Ups is unnecessary and underwhelming. It was either a big bout of self-indulgence or, more likely, a way of keeping the record buying public satisfied whilst Bowie figured out where he wanted to steer his musical ship next. It's solid and far from terrible, but wholly superfluous, and only recommendable to those Bowie fans who must have a complete collection of his material - even if it does mean acquiring mediocre outings such as Pin Ups.
David Bowie Aladdin Sane4.5
Aladdin Sane takes the glam foundations and lyrical concepts laid down by last years effort and builds upon them to include slight avant-garde leanings (such as the irregularity of the gorgeously odd 'Time'), and rougher rock tracks - rougher in comparison with Ziggy's polished, sparkly glam-rock, anyway. That's precisely why it works - why fix something that isn't broke? Sure, the album was cut super-fast and can seem a tad rushed if one digs beneath the surface; sure, it doesn't expand much on the Ziggy Stardust blueprint; sure, it's perhaps not as ambitious or deep as last years' effort; but when all is said and done, Aladdin Sane still remains as one of the most instantly enjoyable albums Bowie ever recorded, and is too much of an uninhibited delight to condemn.
Roxy Music For Your Pleasure4.5
'For Your Pleasure' is, essentially, a continuation of what Roxy set out to do on their debut, the preceding year, and because of that, its simply more of the astounding work that influenced, and enthralled many. But where appropriate, the album is held back just the tiniest amount by the creative tensions at play between Ferry and Eno, with some tracks being ever so slightly indifferent, in their goals and execution. However, 'slightly' is the key word, as 'For Your Pleasure' is, despite its minor niggles, a thrilling and radical slice of arty, glam rock experimentation at near perfection.
The Stooges Raw Power4.5

1972
Roxy Music Roxy Music4.5
Roxy Music's 1972 debut is a stunning arrival of a band that, even here in its baby steps, explored the boundaries of rock and began on a trail of classic albums that would inspire many, over the years. Its incredibly confident and assured for a debut - already knowing what stamp it wanted to make on the music biz and doing an equally stellar job at carving out its stylistic portrait.
John Lennon Some Time in New York City2.5
David Bowie The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars5.0
There may have been technically better Bowie records; albums that were more compositionally groundbreaking, but crucially, none had the sheer cultural impact The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars enjoyed. The album catapulted Bowie into the big time, and rightly so - it's a fascinating concept executed to an enduringly accomplished standard. It witnessed the birth of the most famous incarnation of David Bowie and ensued his icon status - an accolade still standing proud and proving its influence almost 40 years on. Quite simply, The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars is one of the most important and essential rock albums ever made.
1971
David Bowie Hunky Dory5.0
Hunky Dory is David Bowie's first classic album. It's distinctive yet familiar simultaneously, featuring some of his most essential tracks, as well as a platter of lesser known, gentle pop gems. The scent of the air is sweet and exultant, with a young Bowie doffing his cap in the direction of simple cabaret rock, without the constraints of an omnipotent persona providing the backbone of the tales and tribulations of each song's character. Here, Bowie sounds rather carefree and generally less tense and paranoid than his Ziggy Stardust and Thin White Duke embodiments, with Hunky Dory representing a unique and individual place in his eclectic music catalogue. Instead of most of the songs relating to an androgynous alien rock star or a cocaine-addled soul man's off-kilter view of the world, on this record, Bowie is just being Bowie - singing tales of hypothetical youngsters trying to live life, to an impressively accomplished standard.
John Lennon Imagine5.0
1970
John Lennon John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band5.0
The Kinks Lola vs. Powerman and the Moneygoround4.5
David Bowie The Man Who Sold the World4.5
The Man Who Sold The World was a crucial turning point for David Bowie as it marked the first time he found a solid direction in which to channel his ideas. This time it came in the form of maniacal hard-rock, which, when combined with some of Bowie's finest, twisted, self-searching poetry, made for a truly astounding and groundbreaking release. It may not be as consistent or hit-worthy as some of his later work, but The Man Who Sold The World was undeniably one hell of a way to enter the seventies - a decade which would soon witness the true birth of it's Bowie-shaped master.
1969
The Beatles Abbey Road5.0
David Bowie Space Oddity3.0
Ultimately, Space Oddity is an album without great direction. It suffers from a lack of cohesion and is too inconsistent to be considered a classic. It has classic moments for sure, but they're sadly outweighed by the littering of weaker attempts at finding a niche for Bowie to grasp. On the one hand, Bowie's song writing had dramatically improved, but on the other he still hadn't found the right format to exploit his new-found adeptness. Space Oddity really hammers home the notion that Bowie works best when he expresses himself through a persona. It gives him a focus - a focus which he unfortunately lacked on this particular album, with its uncomfortable darting between cynical protests and feather-soft tales of lost love.

1968
The Beatles The Beatles4.5
1967
The Beatles Magical Mystery Tour5.0
The Doors Strange Days4.0
The Kinks Something Else by The Kinks5.0
The Beatles Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band5.0
David Bowie David Bowie2.5
Ultimately, it's far too odd and curio-worthy to be recommendable to all but devoted Bowiephiles, nor is it an ideal starting point for neophytes - it's uniqueness serving as a poor representation of Bowie's defining sound. Having said that, for those that do wish to venture into this naiive, youthful incarnation of David Bowie, there's enough substance here to pick apart and devour for long enough to seem just about worthwhile, even if it does come in the unfamiliar flavour of whimsical folk-pop.r
The Velvet Underground The Velvet Underground & Nico5.0
The Doors The Doors5.0

1966
The Kinks Face to Face4.5
The Beatles Revolver5.0

1965
The Beatles Rubber Soul4.5
The Kinks The Kink Kontroversy4.0
The Beatles Help!4.0

1964
The Beatles Beatles for Sale4.0
The Beatles A Hard Day's Night4.0

1963
The Beatles With the Beatles3.0
The Beatles Please Please Me3.5

1957
Buddy Holly The Chirping Crickets4.0
Fats Domino This is Fats [Vinyl]3.5
Louis Prima The Wildest!4.0

1956
Duke Ellington Ellington At Newport3.5
Elvis Presley Elvis Presley4.0
The Louvin Brothers Tragic Songs Of Life3.0

1955
Frank Sinatra In The Wee Small Hours4.5
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