In response to Dorrie’s Top 10 Desert Island Discs post, for which I was tagged, here are my top ten albums. Keep in mind that my favorites change so often that next week this list would probably be completely different.
Dorrie’s tag came at a particularly good time. I had been working on this post for the last month or so but couldn’t decide what albums to choose. The tag made me decide to just pick any ten good albums. Also, thanks Nate for the Must Haves idea. That obviously came from TNT.
1) Autolux – Future Perfect
I have a bad habit of over-listening to an album when I find one I like. I listen to it over and over until I wear it out. This is the one album that I listen to over and over without it getting old. Autolux has only one album, Future Perfect, and has been promising another for about a year now. I haven’t seen that second album. I know they’re still around, though, because their MySpace page shows that they’re touring.
Must Haves: Here Comes Everybody, Sugarless
2) Morphine – Cure for Pain
This is another album that I regularly wear out, but unlike Future Perfect, I have to give this one a rest every once in a while. I’m always able to come back to it, though. This is a great album by itself, but it has special meaning to me. Perhaps it’s because it reminds of the late-night trips to the campgrounds in Grand Mesa in Nate’s truck (and, incidentally, passing the Wagonwheel Motel that may be the very Wagonwheel mentioned in the song Thursday).
Must Haves: Thursday, Mary Won’t You Call My Name
3) Minor Threat – First 2 7″’s
The songs on this hardcore punk album are hard, fast, and… short. The entire album can’t be more than 20 minutes, and it’s actually two albums – Minor Threat EP and In My Eyes EP. To me, Minor Threat was far more talented and smarter than any other hardcore band.
Must Haves: Small Man Big Mouth, Minor Threat
4) Meat Beat Manifesto – Original Fire
Jack Dangers is the main person behind the band Meat Beat Manifesto. Being a former (reformed?) club DJ, I have a lot of respect for anyone that can craft beats, samples, loops, and dubs into good music and absolutely no one does it better than Dangers. Meat Beat Manifesto goes well beyond dance music (which I’m not so fond of now). It’s just good, creative electronic music.
Must Haves: Helter Skelter ‘97, Radio Babylon
5) Tino – Tino’s Breaks, Volume 4
Tino is actually another Jack Dangers project. Tino produces music similar to Meat Beat Manifesto, but it’s mostly breakbeats and has a latin accent. Tino is a fictional (?) latin character that is sampled throughout the tracks on all of the Tino albums. It’s actually kind of funny, but you’d just have to hear it. I can’t explain.
Must Haves: Ritmos Latinos, I Like it Mambo
6) Arcade Fire – Neon Bible
This one will certainly surprise Dorrie, to whom I complained a lot about this band being played too much on the radio. Recently, though, this album has grown on me rather significantly. It’s too early to truly be able to say it will remain on this top ten list. I don’t think the music is totally-the-best-omigod-you-have-to-listen; The album is here just because I’ve been listening to it so often lately and enjoying it.
Must Haves: Black Mirror, Ocean of Noise
7) Jane’s Addiction – Jane’s Addiction (Live)
It’s sort of amazing to me how much I like this album considering I don’t care for anything else the band has produced. In any case, it’s special and I can understand why the band is respected as much as they are. Jane’s Addiction’s cover of the Velvet Underground’s Rock & Roll is worth twice the cost of the entire record.
Must Haves: Rock & Roll, Chip Away
8) The Pixies – Doolittle
The Pixies were a cornerstone of the alternative music I grew up listening to, but I didn’t really listen to them until a few years ago when a friend asked me if I had Wave of Mutilation on my iPod. He was in a band that wanted to cover the song. I gave it a listen with him and got hooked on the band. A week later I owned nearly every Pixies album available.
Must Haves: Wave of Mutilation, No. 13 Baby
9) The Toadies – Rubberneck
There are two great bands from Dallas/Ft. Worth, where I grew up, that I didn’t discover until after I moved from Texas in my late twenties: Reverend Horton Heat and the Toadies. Reverend Horton Heat has several albums that, on any other week except this one, would make my top ten list. The Toadies broke up in 2001 and I’m surprised they didn’t produce anything of note other than Rubberneck after being together for more than a decade. I hear, though, that the band is touring again and is playing in Dallas this weekend.
Must Haves: Backslider, Quitter
10) Chemical Brothers – Exit Planet Dust
The Chemical Brothers have been producing music much longer than most people realize. Exit Planet Dust is one of their great albums that was released well before their more well-known albums. Here’s some trivia: The original name for the Chemical Brothers was the Dust Brothers, but when they became popular in America they changed their name because there was already another American band named Dust Brothers.
Must Haves: In Dust We Trust, Thee Little Birdies Down Beats