Top 99 Greatest Music Albums by Repo

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Rank ‘Em #3: Accept

It’s one of those “Where were you?” moments that shook the metal community back in 1982. The opening track “Fast a Shark” on Restless & Wild. The opening fake out of German Alps folk music. The frenetic, jolting record scratch. And The Scream that announced a change of the guard. That something new was on the horizon. Speed Metal. Accept from Germany ( and Raven from the UK) were on the forefront of this new sound which would be tightened and bolted down to become thrash in the ensuing years.

How would you rank their albums? Which of their albums are essential?

Did they have the first Speed Metal album with Breaker in 1981?

Are any of their albums past Metal Heart worth checking out?!?!

PS. I was going to have another battle – this time between Raven & Accept entitled Speed Kings and how during the early 80s these two duked it out for speed metal supremacy, but I just don’t think Raven’s all that. And Accept are!
[First added to this chart: 05/13/2020]
Year of Release:
1982
Appears in:
Rank Score:
275
Rank in 1982:
Rank in 1980s:
Overall Rank:
Average Rating:
Comments:
51. (49) Down2
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The (Teutonic) Metal Gods

If you were trying to pick one band that encapsulated the sound of metal, it would have to be British Steel/Screaming For Vengeance - era Judas Priest. That’s a given. But Accept’s early 80s output would be a close second! In fact, no other metal band dominated the early 80s metal scene quite like Accept besides Iron Maiden (whose run of FIVE utterly essential albums over FIVE years is downright mind boggling.) But Accept (sorta) had (nearly) FOUR classic albums over that same span with Breaker, Restless & Wild, Balls To The Wall, and Metal Heart.

But, I’m getting ahead of myself. It took two albums for Accept to find themselves. Their first two albums (self-titled and I'm A Rebel) are competent but entirely generic late 70s hard rock. But then BAM! Accept arrive fully formed on Breaker in 1981. People will tell you that Breaker’s a transitional album. That's utter bullshit. Especially the first side which is an unqualified masterpiece of 1981 heavy metal and completely on the forefront of where metal was going. Especially the title track “Breaker” itself which just may be the very first speed metal song. Check it out here and see what every future metal band was about to mainline.

Completely metallic, mechanical, fast, dirty and brutal. Taking their key twin influences of, let’s say, 80% Priest and 20% Bon Scott-era AC/DC and running with it. That's right. AC/DC. People forget, perhaps because the Brian Johnson second-rate era far outlived the Bon Scott one, that AC/DC were one of the rawest, dirtiest and heaviest bands on the planet back in the late 70s. If you don’t know this, do yourself a favor and spin “Go Down” or “Dog Eat Dog” from Let There Be Rock. That shit is nasty!

tldr: There are THREE albums by Accept that I feel are ESSENTIAL for the metal canon.

THE THREE U NEED
1. Breaker (1981)
2. Restless & Wild (1982)
3. Balls To The Wall (1983)

And for those three years, they were one of the biggest, most important bands in metal. And the metal axis shifted ever so slightly Eastward. To Germany. And the Continent.
[First added to this chart: 05/08/2020]
Year of Release:
1981
Appears in:
Rank Score:
110
Rank in 1981:
Rank in 1980s:
Overall Rank:
Average Rating:
Comments:
Total albums: 2. Page 1 of 1

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Top 99 Greatest Music Albums composition

Decade Albums %


1930s 0 0%
1940s 1 1%
1950s 3 3%
1960s 9 9%
1970s 28 28%
1980s 37 37%
1990s 3 3%
2000s 9 9%
2010s 9 9%
2020s 0 0%
Artist Albums %


Real Estate 3 3%
Scorpions 2 2%
Bert Jansch 2 2%
Bob Dylan 2 2%
Townes Van Zandt 2 2%
Saint Vitus 2 2%
Accept 2 2%
Show all
Country Albums %


United States 49 49%
United Kingdom 29 29%
Germany 5 5%
Mixed Nationality 4 4%
Canada 3 3%
Australia 2 2%
Switzerland 2 2%
Show all
Compilation? Albums %
No 95 96%
Yes 4 4%
Live? Albums %
No 98 99%
Yes 1 1%
Soundtrack? Albums %
No 98 99%
Yes 1 1%

Top 99 Greatest Music Albums chart changes

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by Cluster & Eno
Leavers
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by Trouble
TitleSourceTypePublishedCountry
No Bullshit: Repo's Top Metal Albums! RepoCustom chart2023
Favorite 1980s Metal Albums NoisyBeastCustom chart2017
Top 34 Music Albums of the 1970s Repo1970s decade chart2020
The Hitchhiker's Guide To The New Wave Of British Heavy Metal MW19704UCustom chart2024
Top 99 Music Albums of the 1970sExist-en-ciel1970s decade chart2025
Top 100 Music Albums of the 2000sExist-en-ciel2000s decade chart2025
Favorite 1980s Metal Albums II NoisyBeastCustom chart2017
Top 100 80's Hard Rock AlbumssaltysurpriseCustom chart2020
NWOBHM (1979-1984) RepoCustom chart2023
1982: Metal RepoCustom chart2024

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Top 99 Greatest Music Albums ratings

Average Rating: 
95/100 (from 78 votes)
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This chart is rated in the top 1% of all charts on BestEverAlbums.com. This chart has a Bayesian average rating of 95.4/100, a mean average of 95.4/100, and a trimmed mean (excluding outliers) of 96.6/100. The standard deviation for this chart is 8.9.

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Top 99 Greatest Music Albums comments

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Rating:  
100/100
From 8 hours ago
Ahhh Donovan… nice :). Great chart x
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Rating:  
100/100
From 11/06/2024 21:17
I feel refreshed seeing the authentic fruits of your musical explorations - you lived a whole different era from the majority here on BEA. The world is not so narrow, I wish more specialist listeners brought online exposure to the unique acts that impressed them. I intend to check out Exciter, Black Hole, The Vibrators and Naked Raygun to fill in my blind spot around more interesting forms of punk and metal being cooked up by non-mainstream acts on through the 80's. Woo also seriously piques my interest. There is great public value in the experience you have shared.
Helpful?  (Log in to vote) | +1 votes (1 helpful | 0 unhelpful)
Rating:  
100/100
From 10/09/2023 09:56
Have I ever properly thanked you for making me check out Mazzy Star, Yo La Tengo, Real Estate early 70s-era Dylan, as well as revisiting Townes Van Zandt? Either way, thank you again.
Helpful?  (Log in to vote) | +1 votes (1 helpful | 0 unhelpful)
From 06/28/2023 09:46
There are 3 elements to a great chart for me.

1. Some great words to tell us why the album is there.
2. A similar taste to your own - a musical message in a bottle
3. Some new picks for my own wish list.

This chart is bristling with new recommendations for my playlist. Whole genres I’ve never explored.

2 out of 3 ain’t bad.
Helpful?  (Log in to vote) | +1 votes (1 helpful | 0 unhelpful)
Rating:  
85/100
From 10/28/2022 03:50
One really interesting and diverse list, quite unlike anything I have ever seen here or anywhere else! Many very unusual choices and genres make this a great list. The chart has virtually nothing in common with my own chart or other lists by major magazines, Joe S. Harrington, David Keenan or Piero Scaruffi.

The notes are better than anything I have seen outside of Harrington or Keenan, too.

A minor quibble of mine is the way in which albums of the same genre are clustered together. (When I see that I always wonder if the compiler is not being careful enough to be sure they are being ranked as accurately as thought possible.) even with this reservation, it is an exceptionally interesting and well-written list.
Helpful?  (Log in to vote) | +1 votes (1 helpful | 0 unhelpful)
Rating:  
100/100
From 10/25/2022 08:24
Still wanna the greatest charts ever made on both this site and others like RYM. I think you've inspired me to do the same one day by making a chart of lesser known records, and outta those picks, create an alternate universe so flamboyant, colorful, and exciting based on descriptions and stuff.

I think something in the beautiful Donovan description summed it up "these songs doesn't know that radio exists", because some of the favorites on this chart raises this question; what would musicians/artists do if radio never existed". The answer lies in that they probably would make something so flamboyantly authentic as a lotta these wondrous records, and we could only listen to music by hand and choice etc.

God bless!
Helpful?  (Log in to vote) | +2 votes (2 helpful | 0 unhelpful)
Rating:  
85/100
From 10/24/2022 03:20
What I like about this chart:
1. we have ZERO albums in common:
2. we have only 4 artists in common, and that may very well become 1 artist in common when I do a review of my chart over the next month;
3. the 1 artist we have in common is Dylan - although our album preferences differ significantly (I am sure that doesn't come as any surprise - you can check out my '64 Dylan albums rated' chart if you have time :));
4. this chart oozes someone who actually breathes, eats, smells, tastes, touches, feels music more than hears it;
5. knowing the effort needed to make even short comments on album choices, the EFFORT in this chart is EXTRAordinary;
6. rather than a regurgitation of the BEA top 100, this chart has only 6 albums rated in the top 1000! and the highest ranking album is at #197 on the overall chart;
7. this chart actually made me go on a wild musical album/artist discovery hunt - I didn't actually find anything that I 'fell in love with' but sometimes the journey is more valuable than the end point ~ at least it gave me a few hours of hope; that maybe out there, somewhere, there is an artist/album undiscovered in my musical universe who will excite me in ways that I cannot explain;
8. ...and finally, the 2 Australian albums - excellent choices!
Helpful?  (Log in to vote) | +3 votes (3 helpful | 0 unhelpful)
Rating:  
100/100
From 08/29/2022 05:28
super frikin interesting. love this chart!!!
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Rating:  
100/100
From 07/11/2022 09:17
naang naang!! <3 hope ur doing well friend
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Rating:  
100/100
From 02/16/2022 00:47
man this is great. I can't even say I agree with A SINGLE ONE of your picks but damn this is very well put together chart. Just the passion you seem to have for music is insane and I love it!!!
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Best Albums of 1989
1. Doolittle by Pixies
2. Disintegration by The Cure
3. The Stone Roses by The Stone Roses
4. Paul's Boutique by Beastie Boys
5. On Fire by Galaxie 500
6. 3 Feet High And Rising by De La Soul
7. Bleach by Nirvana
8. Pretty Hate Machine by Nine Inch Nails
9. Full Moon Fever by Tom Petty
10. New York by Lou Reed
11. Technique by New Order
12. Like A Prayer by Madonna
13. The Real Thing by Faith No More
14. The Sensual World by Kate Bush
15. Rhythm Nation 1814 by Janet Jackson
16. Floating Into The Night by Julee Cruise
17. Hats by The Blue Nile
18. 13 Songs by Fugazi
19. Oh Mercy by Bob Dylan
20. Pump by Aerosmith
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