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I'm curious: Are all the songs in your favorite music album masterpieces? or how do you determine an album is one of your favorites?

15h 41m ago by lemmy.world/u/NONE_dc in asklemmy
My Take

In my case, the albums that have become my favorites are the ones I feel I absolutely have to listen to from start to finish. Of course, there are standout tracks, and some, though good, might pale in comparison to others. But it’s the experience of listening to the entire album that captivates me.

Examples:

  • "Flowerboy" by Tyler, The Creator.
  • "Affinity" by Haken
  • "Brat" by Charli XCX
  • The debut album by Gentle Giant

:::

What are your favorite albums and why?

A Perfect Circle - Thirteenth Step is my perfect album.

They aren't even my favorite band, but there isn't a bad moment on it.

I'm gonna give it a listen as soon as possible (as soon as i finish another of my hundreds of listens to Deine Lakaien lol). I'm already a Tool nerd, so that's gonna be a fine music session for me :-)

Pretty much. I wouldn't presume to say "masterpieces " but easily the most important quality of my favorite albums is that they're strong from start to finish.

A few that come to me right off:

Lloyd Cole and the Commotions - Rattlesnakes

Fountains of Wayne - Fountains of Wayne

The Presidents of the United States of America - The Presidents of the United States of America

XTC - Black Sea

They Might Be Giants - Flood

The Rainmakers - Flirting with the Universe

Was (Not Was) - What Up Dog?

Morphine - Cure for Pain

I second Flood.

Third. Perfect album.

Presidents! Hell yeah, that's such a fun album

They just might be my all time favorite band.

A bunch of "classics"...

  • Rumours
  • Tapestry
  • An Evening with John Denver
  • ...and then there were three..
  • Boston
  • Double Vision
  • Out of the Blue

Yes... I am an oldster.

I'd put Trick of the Tail on there too!

Absolutely. Maybe Aja?

Does all the songs in your favorite music album are masterpieces?

Never did them wasn't.

I have favorite albums and then I have the 3(maybe 4 now) perfect 10 albums.

What makes a perfect 10 album? Like you I have to listen to it from start to finish. There's not a single skip or down track on the album. They have exquisite and timeless production quality. These albums sound good even in the worst quality. On top notch files they're the best of the best. They hit me at a time in my life where they just clicked emotionally.

For the longest time the 3 were and are:

  1. Animals - Pink Floyd - It's their best album. It has a zen like flow state to it. There's no pretentious bullshit on it. Sounds amazing.

  2. Ten - Pearl Jam - Jeremy is one of the first songs I remember hearing as a child. The rest of the album is just as good. Also amazing sound quality. Flows perfectly across the whole album.

  3. Exoplanet - The Contortionist - It's late summer 2010. An album finally came out that dethroned Colors by BTBAM from 3 straight years of nonstop listening. That album was P1 by Periphery. I didn't think anything could possibly top that album. It spawned a whole new genre almost instantly. Then on the last day of August, Exoplanet drops. I was floored. Much better sound production. It ebbs and flows with a grace not heard of in Deathcore. It has these magical peaks and valleys all throughout the album. Not a single miss. It's crushing. Then it gently sets you down and tucks you in bed as the alarms of the spaceship you just had a musical journey on are softly beeping away in the distance. It's the single best Deathcore album to ever be released. It's so far and above everything else most people don't even count it as Deathcore. It book ended one era of music as another one just began and what a way for Deathcore to end it's dominance.

The fourth album that's slowly adding itself to the list is Lonely People With Power by Deafheaven. It does all of the things the other 3 do. It hit at the exact time I needed that album. It tells these crazy stories throughout lyrically and musically. There's not a single skip on the record. It's honestly up there as one of the best metal of any type albums of all time IMO. The only thing that's preventing me from adding it to the list is time. Those other records have a longevity unmatched by most. If I still feel the way I feel about LPWP in 5 years, then yeah it's a perfect 10.

The album I think of when this question comes up is Consolers of the Lonely by The Raconteurs. Every song is so expertly crafted; it’s a smooth effortless listen from beginning to end. Highly recommend.

Somehow it's really important to me that an album has a coherent concept from beginning to the end to make it something i consider a masterpiece. There aren't many albums that hit that mark.

The most important one for me is from Deine Lakaien - 20 Years of Electronic Avantgarde, where their minimalistic electronic sounds with the haunting vocals find their perfect counterpart with the Frankfurt Philharmonics.

If any of you have a bit of time on their hands, PLEASE give it a listen.

Edit: I really beg you all to give it a whirl. Especially beginning from CD1 - Madiel to CD1 - Over and Done is nearly perfect. I have never found anything resonating with myself as much as this sequence. A special shoutout for The Mirror Men.

Just to add: I haven't been able to go to many festivals in my life because of my bodily issues, but i was at the Wave Gothic Treffen in Leipzig once. My back hurt soo much, but when Deine Lakaien appeared on stage, i was not crying because of my back.

Hello fellow Haken fan! Affinity and Visions are my favorites of theirs. I also love Phantom Island by King Gizzard.

Agreed. Several of my favorites include musical interludes that aren't songs, one of them dissonant and weird, but to me, essential to the flow of the whole album:

  • Rook, by Shearwater
  • The Stand-Ins, by Okkervil River
  • The Execution of All Things, by Rilo Kiley
  • Wincing the Night Away, by The Shin
  • In the Aeroplane Over the Sea, by Neutral Milk Hotel

I guess they're also full of literate lyrics, and unusual subjects, too. 🤔

how do you determine an album is one of your favorites?

  • I listen a lot to it. Some of my favorites albums (or tunes) I've been listening to most of my life since I was a little boy (now nearing my 60s)
  • I have favorite recordings of certain pieces. Even more so in regards to classical music, which happens to be the genre of music I listen the most to and have been listening to since I was a child, thx to my parents listening to it and quickly allowing kid-me me to use their LPs (that was back in the 70s, they were kinda high-tech back then ;)
  • I can sing the song and, when there are, I know the lyrics from memory. That's one of the reasons I can safely say Jacques Brel and Georges Brassens are among my favorite French singers ever. The other reasons being that, for anyone able to understand French, they've written some of the most amazing songs ever... But there would be many more favorites of mine that have written master pieces, and not just in French ;)

The Prodigy - Music for the Jilted Generation

Alanis Morisette - Jagged Little Pill

C2C - Tetra

Fuel Fandango - Aurora

Sepultura - Chaos AD

Hard Funk Trio - Mustang

These are all albums I can listen to and genuinely enjoy every track ... I can't give a particular reason. Most albums have tracks that I prefer to skip over, just not these ones.

Looking at it, that's a pretty international lineup ... purely by accident, lol ... artists from the UK, Canada, France, Spain, Brazil, and Argentina :-)

Fuel Fandango: "Despertaré" - one of my favorite videos ever.

Always good to see someone pick ...Jilted Generation over Fat of the Land. I do like the latter, but MFTJG is perfection.

Yes.

I loved Fat of the Land, had the available singles before the whole album dropped. But not every song is that good.

Experience is close for me (plus it's a nostalgia trip), and I also enjoy all of Invaders Must Die.

But Jilted is wall to wall Goldielocks perfect porridge :-)

Most of the music I listen to either doesn't come in albums, or is in a 40+ track OST. However, there are a few which I can say are enjoyable in their entirety.

UNDERTALE OST is 101 tracks, and while some of the tracks are ambient noise and sound effects, Like 93% of it is great. Basically anything Toby Fox does has a high rate of enjoyment from me.

Medium by Clark Powell is entirely a masterpiece—not only the individual tracks, but how they interact with one another, and what they represent to the story of their context.

Nothing Is Quick in the Desert by Public Enemy has a great listening experience, where nearly every track blends into the next. Not typical for the music I usually listen to.

It certainly isn't for everyone, but The Caretaker's Everywhere at the End of Time is excellent. The middle section up until nearly the end can be pretty abstract, but there's a certain... bliss that can be derived from it.

There's more, but these are the ones that immediately come to mind.

'Are', not 'does'.

Sorry, it's bothering me too much.

Very much a 'Does Bruno Mars Is Gay?' Headline situation

i think an album can be all masterpieces but the album itself isn't a masterpiece. it's very rare, but it's happens! if the album just sounds like a playlist and not a cohesive whole, i can't really call it a masterpiece. in a masterpiece of an album, each song elevates all of the others. sometimes that means telling a story, sometimes that means musical ideas pop up in multiple songs, and sometimes it's an inexplicable quality that just glues the whole thing together. all of my favorite albums are like that, a whole greater than the sum of it's already great parts

A lot of classic albums, for me, tend to have a connection running through all the songs. The album is a work in itself rather than just being a collection of random songs by the same artist.

The Magnetic Fields' Sixty-Nine Love Songs

They're not all masterpieces, but out of 69 tracks, the supermajority are bangers, with enough variety in tone to keep from being too much of the same thing.

For full album plays some of my favourites are:

  • Lou Reed's "New York"
  • David Bowie "Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars"
  • The Carpenters "Christmas Carol"
  • The Bodeans "Love & Hope & Sex & Dreams"
  • Bob Dylan's "Infidels"
  • Louis Prima's "The Wildest"
  • The Boomtown Rats "The Fine Art of Surfacing"

So I have a band where I like almost every album they have put out. Like maybe two exceptions. Some are more meh but its kinda hard to point to a favorite as it likely moves over time. I sorta have a consistent favorite song but boy there are many I like almost as much. I also really like some albums from other artists. All the ones I like I like all the songs on it.

I really don't have favorites with a lot of stuff. Music is one of them. I like practically everything. None of it is liked more than another; more that I like different things for different reasons.

“My beautiful dark twisted fantasy” by Kanye West.

To me it’s such a ride from beginning to end. It’s his magnum opus

I believe in this and its been tested by research, he who fucks nuns will later join the church. A double album where all but maybe 1 song fantastic.

There‘s (or at least can be) a difference between an album full of bangers and a album you enjoy from beginning to end in one sitting. But I’m with you on this one. Thinking about it, the following albums come to mind:

Tower of Power - „Soul Vaccination“

Linkin Park - „Meteora“

Opeth - „Blackwater Park“

Queensrÿche - „Operation Mindcrime“

Queen - „A Night At The Opera“

Fleetwood Mac - „Rumours“

Tracy Chapman - „Crossroads“

Elende - „Todbringer“

Tenhi - „Kauan“

While I‘m writing this, it occurs to me, that it’s impossible for me to name a favourite album. I can’t even name a favourite album for each genre.

Most music is pretty medicore. I can only name a handful of artists with more than one really good song.

Most music is pretty medicore

medicore? I have heard of metalcore, must be related. But there area many other genres! classical, jazz, blues, folk, pop, Rock & Roll, funk, disco, electronic... it's not most metalcore (and probably not medicore either, whatever that is).

From what I listen, only Nujabes' Luv(sic) Hexalogy I consider a masterpiece. I have to listen to it start to end. Though personally I have to be in the correct headspace to fully appreciate it.

There aren't a lot of other albums that I have to listen front to back that comes to mind. Although there are lots of songs that I listen to frequently. According to Spotify (before I canceled my sub earlier this year) I'm a Muse fan lol. Top artist I listened to for 5 years straight (I didn't subscribe to Spotify that long) Almost always dominate my yearly Top 10.

Yes, all songs are masterpieces.

Repion - Repion

Everything by Audioslave

Early Bjork

City and Colour - The Love Still Held Me Near

The Car is on Fire - Lake and Flames

Early Bjork

🥰 Headphones definitely one of my favourite songs of all time.

No not at all. I have absolutely terrible taste in music. We all do and any who thinks other wise is deluding themselves.

Booker T and the M.G.'s Universal Language

The album was dedicated to M.G.'s drummer Al Jackson, Jr., who was murdered in 1975;[2] the remaining members recruited Willie Hall to replace him on this album.[3] The group would not record another album for seventeen years, returning in 1994 with That's the Way It Should Be.

There's something so deep and unique about this album. Last Tango in Memphis is my favorite track, but this is one of the few albums of any genre I enjoy just putting on and listening to all the way through.

I generally don't really care about albums and just make a playlist with only the songs I like.

Personal favourites:

'Endless, Nameless' / The Wildhearts - from the fake-out beginning (don't turn the volume right up or you'll get a surprise) to the fade at the end, it's perfect to me. Joyously and gloriously noisy.

'Dreamweaver' / Sabbat - complex and clever thrash that gave young me a lot to think about; it's loosely based on a book about a mediaeval Christian missionary and the lyrics are incredibly dense, yet so skilfully done that you don't realise until you look at the lyric sheet and it's huge.

'Dopethrone' / Electric Wizard - for those bad mood days

'Mclusky Do Dallas' / mclusky - inventive and slightly surrealist lyrics, noisy guitars and a great drummer.

'Nothingface' / Voivod - still sounds like it was recorded five years from now despite being around 30 years old. Best description I can give is 'prog thrash' and that's not really very accurate.

'The Big Roar' / The Joy Formidable - noisy indie rock. Not going to win any awaawards for innovation but it's so well done.

Like most people's favourites, these were mostly released when I was starting to develop my own taste in music, and the release dates of most of them will tell you that means I'm getting old!