Top 64 Greatest Music Albums by
ForegroundNoise 
My old tutor sits opposite me, the wrinkled contours of his face and erratic white wisps of hair blurring the boundaries between him and the old mahogany office surrounding us. Before he speaks, he seems for a moment to be no less a part of the furniture than the armchair he sits in. He starts suddenly, a thought occurring to him.
“Do you remember that first classics society meeting, right when you first got here? Where you had to bring a poem or painting or something and talk to us all about it?” The words break the silence in a flurry, as if he’s afraid someone is about to catch him in the act.
“Yes.” My tone betrays my anticipation.
“Well, I bet no-one ever told you what that whole thing was really all about did they?” He is leaning in now, the smile plastered across his face so infectious it starts to illuminate the dark room.
“You see the problem is, is that everyone is looking the art. There, ha!” he nods to himself; a finger points upwards. “That’s your first mistake.” I raise an eyebrow in response, but he is submerged in thought, eyes cast down to the carpet.
“Some people are worried about the art. They want the right bit of art not the wrong bit; they want to show off how clever they are that they know this bit of art and you don’t. Some aren’t so fussed about it; they just pick whatever they like. Some even take a look at it all and think ‘No not for me, I don’t think so’, and try and take the whole thing apart. Show us a scrap of paper with a scribble on it. ‘I’m not playing your game’ - oh yes you are! See what they don’t know, is that as soon as they were invited to play they were playing it. All of us were. The art was never the important bit, I was never looking at the art, I was looking at YOU.”
With the final word his eyes move back to me. The finger points forward.
“Yes, you, there! Whatever you picked, whatever you did, you can't help but give us a reflection of yourself. That's what I was looking for. Not the art. I wasn’t looking at what you were saying about it. I was looking at what it was saying about you.”
***
I've fallen out of love with this chart in recent times, probably because there's something a little too overwhelming in having to represent my favourites out of every album ever. The problem that arises with these colossal, era-spanning anthologies is that they find it hard to strike a balance between acknowledging the cultural context and subsequent limitations of some of these records, and just eulogising the past.
Lately I've found it much more rewarding to focus on my decade and year charts so this one might be left to gather dust for a while. As of 2021/05/13 I've given up trying to order these from best to bestest, and instead have decided to list out some favourites ordered (roughly) by genre; this is NOT in order of favourite to 64th favourite. More extensive decade lists to follow as soon as I can.
Much love,
FN xx
- Chart updated: 08/11/2024 11:15
- (Created: 09/28/2017 14:21).
- Chart size: 64 albums.
There are 47 comments for this chart from BestEverAlbums.com members and Top 64 Greatest Music Albums has an average rating of 93 out of 100 (from 87 votes). Please log in or register to leave a comment or assign a rating.
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This chart is currently filtered to only show albums from the 2010s. (Remove this filter)
conscious rap • jazz rap
(Top Dawg, 78:51)
"I'm African-American, I'm African
I'm black as the heart of a fucking Aryan"
"You ain't no king!" rings the affront hangs in the air, as if begging for a response, before the oozing base and panting drum beat of "King Kunta" cuts through the silence, bringing to life a track that simultaneously references the mutilation of Kunta Kinte in Alex Haley's novel Roots, the use of yams as a symbol of African heritage and authenticity in Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man and Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart whilst undercutting Kendrick's rap industry rivals and securing his credentials as the "greatest rapper in the world", a title which 66 minutes into the runtime he feels he has earned the right to be called.
And by this point in the record it's difficult to disagree; Kendrick continues the unusual song structures that characterised good kid, m.A.A.d city but turns his sights from the senselessness of self-destructive gang violence to the institutional racial oppression that's responsible for it, interweaving his politically conscious lyrics with samples that celebrate the diverse legacy of African American music. This is an album to challenge the misconceptions surrounding hip hop's potential as an art form; this is an album to challenge the reluctance of elitist white journalism to accept hip hop into the top tier musical canon. If what they say is true and rock n' roll is dead let's hope for more albums like this one.
____________________________________________________________________________ [First added to this chart: 10/01/2017]
abstract hip hop • experimental hip hop
(Tan Cressida, 24:39)
"Flashing through the pain, depression this is not a phase
Picking out his grave, couldn't help but feel out of place"
No doubt much of the aversion to Earl on this site lies with a cadre of pearl-clutching rockists, unable to distinguish his sluggish cadence on a track like ‘Peanut’ from the non-lyric ramblings of a Gunna or a Lil Mosey (something old-head hip hop fans can be just as guilty of: https://www.instagram.com/p/B35nPCSAMFx/?utm_source=ig_emb). Make that mistake however, and midway through the song you’d miss the bitter melancholy of the lyrics: "Flashing through the pain, depression this is not a phase/Picking out his grave, couldn't help but feel out of place".
The grave in question belonged to Earl’s late father, whose voice on ‘Playing Possum’ flits between a juddering hypnagogic pop sample and an acceptance speech read aloud by Earl’s mother. MF DOOM is often cited as Earl’s key influence, but listening to this track and ‘Azucar’ reminds me of the urgent vitality in J Dilla’s final album. Like Dilla, by embracing forward-thinking production styles, Earl has perfected a sound that dares to be hopeful for its future whilst acknowledging the enormity of its past; a description fittingly apt for the man himself.
____________________________________________________________________________ [First added to this chart: 05/19/2021]
ambient • drone • electroacoustic
(Kranky, 48:54)
____________________________________________________________________________ [First added to this chart: 05/23/2018]
neoclassical darkwave • death industrial
(Profound Lore, 66:01)
"I'll only say this once
Life is cruel, and time heals nothing
And everyone you love will leave you
But not me
So will you join me?
Will you join me?
If you lay your life down, no man can take it"
At the end of 2019 I’d been dreaming up a piece on Lingua Ignota (real name Kristin Hayter) and female subjectivity in metal and its subgenres. And who knows, maybe at some point it will see the light of day. But for now, here is as good as any place to let some of those half-formed ideas unfurl themselves.
Laying claim to an authentically ‘female’ voice in the context of Hayter’s music is more than just a rhetorical gimmick, since it was a voice that was for a long time forced into silence. A survivor of domestic violence, Hayter was embedded within the Rhode Island noise scene but for several years was prevented from ever performing her music at the threat of an abusive ex-partner. Escaping the relationship, Hayter found herself frustrated at the coping strategies suggested by books for abuse survivors, strategies she felt “enforced patriarchal models of civilised femininity”. Hayter didn’t want to serenely accept her suffering, she wanted to rage at its injustice. Lingua Ignota was born.
Heavy metal’s relationship with explicit content has always been something that intrigues me. Much of the genre feels pulled in two directions at once, in that its ethos wants to identify with horror, yet more often that not, the musicians’ own morbid fascination stems from the luxury of having little to no brushes with genuine human suffering (Metallica wrote this zinger about living in a sanatorium - “They keep me locked up in this cage/Can't they see it's why my brain says ‘rage’?” - after watching One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest).
It’s in contrast to these vapid estimations at true horror that Hayter’s power as a songwriter lies. Metal has a rich history of male provocateurs describing sadistic violence upon women under the guise of shock value; Hayter repurposes this language to convey the much more frightening prospect of being the one undergoing that violence.
Though I have tried to voice Lingua Ignota, the best I can do is gesture towards the real thing. I’ll instead leave you with these words from Hayter herself:
"I don't find most of the graphic depictions of (forgive my language here) 'sending this dumb slut back to hell hearing her final screams as my throbbing erection pounds her maggot-filled cunt' upsetting to my feminine sensibilities, most of it isn't even well-executed enough to be taken seriously. I just find that it occupies this weird space of being simultaneously very loaded and totally obsolete, especially when we consider that none of these guys are actually sodomising female corpses in their free time. So my thoughts were to flip this whole paradigm and to try to make it meaningful, to reframe extreme imagery for survivors of violence, upon whom very dark shit has actually been visited".
____________________________________________________________________________ [First added to this chart: 05/19/2021]
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Top 64 Greatest Music Albums composition
Decade | Albums | % | |
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1930s | 0 | 0% | |
1940s | 0 | 0% | |
1950s | 0 | 0% | |
1960s | 5 | 8% | |
1970s | 19 | 30% | |
1980s | 8 | 13% | |
1990s | 15 | 23% | |
2000s | 13 | 20% | |
2010s | 4 | 6% | |
2020s | 0 | 0% |
Artist | Albums | % | |
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フィッシュマンズ [Fishmans] | 1 | 2% | |
cLOUDDEAD | 1 | 2% | |
The Red Crayola With The Familiar Ugly | 1 | 2% | |
Charles Mingus | 1 | 2% | |
Natural Snow Buildings | 1 | 2% | |
The Fall | 1 | 2% | |
Milton Nascimento / Lô Borges | 1 | 2% | |
Show all |
Country | Albums | % | |
---|---|---|---|
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32 | 50% | |
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19 | 30% | |
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3 | 5% | |
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3 | 5% | |
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2 | 3% | |
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2 | 3% | |
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1 | 2% | |
Show all |
Top 64 Greatest Music Albums chart changes
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Top 64 Greatest Music Albums ratings

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Rating | Date updated | Member | Chart ratings | Avg. chart rating |
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100/100 ![]() | 12/25/2024 18:33 | Exist-en-ciel | ![]() | 99/100 |
85/100 ![]() | 01/06/2023 08:58 | Johnnyo | ![]() | 80/100 |
95/100 ![]() | 07/09/2022 03:54 | leniad | ![]() | 85/100 |
85/100 ![]() | 04/09/2022 08:31 | ![]() | ![]() | 75/100 |
100/100 ![]() | 11/09/2021 18:39 | ![]() | ![]() | 91/100 |
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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 93.4/100, a mean average of 93.6/100, and a trimmed mean (excluding outliers) of 94.3/100. The standard deviation for this chart is 7.7.
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Thanks— hoping you find a couple gems in there (a lot suit your chart's taste— I think you'll find at least 4-5 records you'll really enjoy). I've been meaning to update that chart for quite some time. Needs a bit of a new coat of paint— maybe in a month or two. One of the main concepts for that chart was originally 'uniquely/weirdly made albums', but I like what it turned into. Bit of a different world going on with those cuts.
Really good chart
love your chart, some albums i like that never swa so high in others list

Man, I love this chart.
Very nice, lots of interesting stuff!

Amazing chart, I love the presentation and short descriptions
I could instantly tell I was going to give this chart 100

Thanks for the chart comment. Love all the album notes too!

First of all, thank you so much for your comment in my page! I really was touched by your words.
About your chart here, I have to admit that I don't know 80% of this. The ones I do I know the value and know that they are great! Also, I feel like you are a powerhouse of music knowledge and would love to keep trading more information and passion for this! Last but not least, wish you to complete this with 100 albums. cheers!

thanx mate :)
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