Top 13 Music Albums of 1996
by DriftingOrpheus

There are 0 comments for this chart from BestEverAlbums.com members and this chart has not been rated yet. Please log in or register to leave a comment or assign a rating.

View the complete list of 57,000 charts on BestEverAlbums.com from The Charts page.

Share this chart
Collector's summary (filtered)Log in or register to discover the great albums that are missing from your music collection!
This chart is currently filtered to only show albums from Japan. (Remove this filter)
Sort by
Buy album United States
  • Amazon
  • eBay
  • iTunes
  • Spotify
  • #Sponsored
Fishmans' penultimate album, Long Season, is tricky to recapitulate. The music itself seems beyond the realm of tangibility, reminiscent of a soothing summer daydream, effortlessly invoking the ethereal. Despite not being a Japanese speaker, Shinji Sato's tender coos resonate through the sheer emotion that they delicately channel. Sato's vocals function as an extension of the instrumentation rather than a separate entity, consolidating into a 35 minute cloudburst of dream pop and psychedelia. The record in earnest consists of five parts, all weaving together to manifest the full anatomy of Long Season.

As Long Season (Part 1) surfaces, a spacey, smoky atmosphere comes into focus, bubbling with an alien strut. The track evolves into a cascading keyboard loop which is majestically serene while carrying an ever-present promise of combustibility. This is when Sato's first declarations are audible, "At dusk we drove, calling the wind and calling you, we ran from one end of Tokyo to the other, halfway dreaming." The track shimmers during its climax as Honzi's violin and accordion join the fray with exuberant grace. The track seamlessly drifts into Long Season (Part 2) as the keyboard loop is adorned with percussive twinkles and Sato's own protuberant guitar solo. As Kin-ichi Motegi's drums cushion the final moments of Long Season (Part 2), (Part 3) introduces itself with a decidedly ambient complexion. Commencing with a damp, distant quality, (Part 3) is notably restrained when compared to the previous two movements. The track blossoms with Motegi's second drum flourish, a solo that lasts the length of the track serving as a distinct bridge between both boundaries of the record. (Part 4) comes into view with relaxed, remote guitar strikes. Whistling is interwoven throughout the DNA of (Part 4) betwixt a duplicated vocal melody and a swirling, ominous backing whirl. (Part 5) is a different shade of (Part 1), reintroducing the hypnotic keyboard riff with heightened immediacy and scope. The track builds to Sato's own haunting falsetto, broadcasting a billowing a sense of catharsis and rebirth amidst the sonic revisitation. (Part 5) is as majestic as the LP gets and is among the most gorgeous movements in recent memory.

Long Season (Part 5) sounds suspiciously like a swan song in many distinct manners. It recounts the past and treats a movement only 25 minutes removed to be one of complete nostalgia. Sato's own vocals at the finale are so undeniably vulnerable that one would be inclined to think of it more in terms of a finale for him rather than the LP, like a final championing of life and its wonders. The backing vocals stand to up the ante as intrinsic collateral for such a moment. Eerily enough, this movement would be the final piece of music Sato would play live. Long Season in its entirety would be played in Fishmans' final performance which was featured on the beloved live album, 98.12.28 Otokotachi no Wakare. Sato died suddenly of a heart attack three months after the band's final gig. These days, the outfit has reached an entirely new audience far from their native Japan. Long Season has been instrumental in moving the needle and has been retrospectively lauded as a masterpiece, one that graces the ears of new listeners each and every day. It's a testament to the band and the music they were producing. The record outdistanced its own release and becomes more inviting with age. Aligned with the recurring nature of its content like a persistent dream, Long Season is a crisp Spring day that will never end and more importantly, will never wither at the hand of a cruel Winter.

"What is the song are you humming,
What things can you remember,
We are half in a dream."

-Long Season (Part 1)

Standout Tracks:

1. Long Season (Part 5)
2. Long Season (Part 1)
3. Long Season (Part 4)

94.3
[First added to this chart: 06/12/2020]
Year of Release:
1996
Appears in:
Rank Score:
5,660
Rank in 1996:
Rank in 1990s:
Overall Rank:
Average Rating:
Top rated album (85/100 - 512 votes)  85 (512 votes)
Comments:
Buy album United States
  • Amazon
  • eBay
  • iTunes
  • Spotify
  • #Sponsored
91.8 [First added to this chart: 02/22/2022]
Year of Release:
1996
Appears in:
Rank Score:
353
Rank in 1996:
Rank in 1990s:
Overall Rank:
Average Rating:
Comments:
Buy album United States
  • Amazon
  • eBay
  • iTunes
  • Spotify
  • #Sponsored
79 [First added to this chart: 01/15/2022]
Year of Release:
1996
Appears in:
Rank Score:
124
Rank in 1996:
Rank in 1990s:
Overall Rank:
Average Rating:
Comments:
Total albums: 3. Page 1 of 1
Don't agree with this chart? Create your own from the My Charts page!

Top 13 Music Albums of 1996 composition

Country Albums %


United States 4 31%
Japan 3 23%
Australia 2 15%
Mixed Nationality 2 15%
China 1 8%
United Kingdom 1 8%

Top 13 Music Albums of 1996 chart changes

There have been no changes to this chart.

Top 13 Music Albums of 1996 similarity to your chart(s)


Not a member? Registering is quick, easy and FREE!


Why register?


Register now - it only takes a moment!

Top 13 Music Albums of 1996 ratings

Not enough data Help Average Rating = (n ÷ (n + m)) × av + (m ÷ (n + m)) × AV
where:
av = trimmed mean average rating an item has currently received.
n = number of ratings an item has currently received.
m = minimum number of ratings required for an item to appear in a 'top-rated' chart (currently 10).
AV = the site mean average rating.
Please log in or register if you want to be able to leave a rating

Top 13 Music Albums of 1996 favourites

Please log in or register if you want to be able to add a favourite

Top 13 Music Albums of 1996 comments

Be the first to add a comment for this Chart - add your comment!

Please log in or register if you want to be able to add a comment

Your feedback for Top 13 Music Albums of 1996

Anonymous
Let us know what you think of this chart by adding a comment or assigning a rating below!
Log in or register to assign a rating or leave a comment for this chart.
Recent Member  Charts
1. Top 59 Music Albums of 2009 by joathome (2026)
2. Top 68 Music Albums of 2004 by joathome (2026)
3. Top 50 Albums of 2016 by Crossfader (2016) by asimpkins (2026)
4. Top 50 Music Albums of the 2010s by ForegroundNoise (2026)
5. My 100 most listened albums in 2025 by RasmV (2026)
6. Top 73 Music Albums of the 2020s by javicho07 (2026)
7. Top 5 Music Albums of 2023 by javicho07 (2026)
8. Albums I've Added 3 by RasmV (2026)
9. Platinum Zone Oceania by fabm0 (2026)
10. Top 57 Greatest Music Albums by Ilolahti (2026)
11. Best Album of 2026 by KitchenSink (2026)
12. Top 100 Music Albums of the 1960s by martintho (2026)
13. Top 65 Music Albums of 1996 by juanr1096 (2026)
14. Top 84 Music Albums of 2021 by joathome (2026)
15. Top 100 Music Albums of the 1990s by culwin (2026)
16. Top 47 Music Albums of 1991 by culwin (2026)
17. Top 100 Music Albums of 2016 by juanr1096 (2026)
18. Most listened to artists in November 2020 by Johnnyo (2026)
19. 1979 by U R C by Johnnyo (2026)
20. Top 100 Music Albums of 2025 by awesomness425 (2026)
Back to Top