Top 37 Greatest Music Albums by stupidusATmailDOTcom 
Bands/artists in their prime. Arranged according to release dates.
(BTW. Since the boxes below only allow for 1024 characters to try to sum up why you too should listen to these fine records if you haven't already, I'm probably less inclined to write anything at all. Well, whatever, never mind.)
- Chart updated: 12/22/2014 21:15
- (Created: 02/28/2012 16:39).
- Chart size: 37 albums.
There are 7 comments for this chart from BestEverAlbums.com members and Top 37 Greatest Music Albums has an average rating of 82 out of 100 (from 8 votes). Please log in or register to leave a comment or assign a rating.
The entries in this chart have a zero rank score because the chart has not been updated within the last ten years (points from overall charts are decayed over a ten year period).
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This chart is currently filtered to only show albums from Red Hot Chili Peppers. (Remove this filter)


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The album that grows on you. I've never really understood why RHCP has felt it necessary to "funkify" their sound for so long - or rather, at all. To me it's always felt out-of-place'ish, more or less forced, not to mention, unnecessary.
I appreciate the band's drive, good humor, openness and all such positive qualities and then some. But in hindsight, hanging desperately onto funky elements all those years has only managed to hold the band back, never to fully find it's own sound. I don't think RHCP merely reinvented itself in BTW: I think they finally found home.
There are fillers, sure, but that's always the case with RHCP. For some strange (and likely very poor) reason RHCP always crams too much stuff on one record. Maybe they (and the people they choose to collaborate with) have never heard the expression: quit while you're winning. [First added to this chart: 03/16/2012]
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Top 37 Greatest Music Albums composition
Decade | Albums | % | |
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1930s | 0 | 0% | |
1940s | 0 | 0% | |
1950s | 0 | 0% | |
1960s | 0 | 0% | |
1970s | 0 | 0% | |
1980s | 2 | 5% | |
1990s | 24 | 65% | |
2000s | 9 | 24% | |
2010s | 2 | 5% | |
2020s | 0 | 0% |
Artist | Albums | % | |
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Megadeth | 1 | 3% | |
NOFX | 1 | 3% | |
Red Hot Chili Peppers | 1 | 3% | |
Slowdive | 1 | 3% | |
Nada Surf | 1 | 3% | |
Coldplay | 1 | 3% | |
The Smashing Pumpkins | 1 | 3% | |
Show all |
Top 37 Greatest Music Albums chart changes
Biggest climbers |
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![]() Deserter's Songs by Mercury Rev |
Biggest fallers |
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![]() Mutations by Beck |
![]() Showbiz by Muse |
![]() Anola by Penniless |
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Top 37 Greatest Music Albums ratings

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Showing latest 5 ratings for this chart. | Show all 8 ratings for this chart.
Rating | Date updated | Member | Chart ratings | Avg. chart rating |
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85/100 ![]() | 03/29/2018 16:39 | vruslov | ![]() | 89/100 |
70/100 ![]() | 05/20/2017 13:51 | Juneof44 | ![]() | 83/100 |
95/100 ![]() | 01/21/2017 18:00 | Seab | ![]() | 93/100 |
70/100 ![]() | 05/12/2015 15:49 | ![]() | ![]() | 88/100 |
80/100 ![]() | 04/02/2015 13:57 | ![]() | ![]() | 75/100 |
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Top 37 Greatest Music Albums comments
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Vinnid: Thanks. Yup, everybody should hear Souvlaki at least once before they die. ;)
Great chart man! I really need to listen to souvlaki!
Antonio: Much obliged. Keep rocking!

A very Good Chart With Taste To Metal To Rock
Brandon: Yup, obviously I was a teen in the early 90s. Would have picked 60s myself but no such luck I'm afraid. But music-wise 90s definitely wasn't a bad era to find oneself in.
Please, allow me to explain a little about my musical tastes.
Besides 60s music (Doors, Beatles, Hendrix, Zombies) I'm a sucker for old sentimental schlagers, chansons and ballads, really dig Motown and old school vocal groups (Platters, Drifters), enjoy old classical music (Vivaldi, Bach), classic jazz standards, flamenco, bossa nova, tango and even some modern electronic music, reggae and country.
I don't like to associate folk music with the quintessential middle class white guy who has just learned to strum a couple of chords on a guitar his mother bought him and who honestly thinks he has important lessons to give us all because someone just told him what the word political means.
The folk music I mean and hear is rowdy, usually funny and downright obscene as hell.
I don't find Rollings Stones (apart from Angie and Paint it Black) or Springsteen even remotely interesting musically and can't bear to listen to Bob Dylan's singing (much prefer Cohen instead).
I'm not a fan of punk music either if and when it just means crappy playing combined with crappy singing and crappy songwriting. And I have no idea why DJs are promoted as musicians these days.
I find rap/hip-hop incredibly hard if not impossible to really relate to as yet another small town white boy who has no connection whatsoever to Afro-American life and reality. I am of course aware of their less than rosy history in the New World.
But as far as "black" music goes I'm much more geared towards hearing ragtime, negro spirituals, work songs, Delta blues and the like. I'm pretty much as inclined to listening to rap music as I am inclined to listening to ambient noise, death metal, modern r'n'b and 80s lame disco hits with god awful samples.
I know music performed by the likes of Piaf, Holliday, Armstrong, Elvis, Sinatra, Jobim, Morrissey, Bowie, and so on and so forth, will put me sonically at ease.
Over and out.
PS. I found "I Could Live in Hope" to be a tad too bland and flat for my taste. It honestly felt more than just a little imitative work. To me Slowdive's "Souvlaki" felt almost like totally effortless, natural, process (which I'm sure it was anything but) whereas Low's music felt a bit like a fan's overlong hallelujah. It seemed to be almost completely void of those needed dynamics (IMO) that set apart music from a blanket of sounds. But I'm glad you liked it. That's the only thing that matters.
So thanks for the tips and take care!
Brandon, you did realize that my listing has nothing to do with one album being better than the next one? Like it says on top, the albums are simply arranged from the earliest to the latest.
And no, I do not consider all of these albums I've mentioned to be masterpieces, let alone important ones. But probably their best stuff around (as far as I'm aware).
Be that as it may, Souvlaki would definitely be one of the albums I'd like to take with me in case I was stranded on a deserted island (with some means to play it of course).
BTW. I'm all ears if you think I may have missed something (more) beautiful, painful, honest or playful than what's on display here. You can reply here directly or send me email.
Word of warning though: I like songs (meaning I can sing/hum/strum along to music), not attempts at songs. From what I have gathered over the years the best music tends to be rather formulaic - and more often than not rather simple to boot.
On that note, I could care less about hearing more avant-garde, sound collages, prog rock, and so on and so forth because all too frequently such aural landscapes rarely reach beyond musical masturbation (=technical proficiency).
By doing things differently just for the sake of doing things differently rarely amounts to much if anything at all.
But I am old and retarded, so take that with a grain of salt. :)
Thanks Jman. I think so too :) But I need help in expanding the list. Why don't you throw my way your 10 or so favorite albums, and I'll check 'em out (and sorry about the late reply, I'm just that way).
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