List of 1990s albums considered the best
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This is a list of 1990s music albums that multiple music journalists, magazines, and professional music review websites have considered to be among the best of the 1990s and of all time, separated into the years of each album's release. The albums listed here are included on at least four separate "best/greatest of the 1990s/all time" lists from different professional publications (inclusive of all genres and nationalities) as chosen by their editorial staffs or by a sample size of an entire publication's audience, and/or hall of fame awards and historical preservation measures.
List
[edit]1990
[edit]Release Date | Album | Artist | Genre(s) | Label | Notes | Accolades |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
15 January 1990 | Reading, Writing And Arithmetic | The Sundays | ||||
January 1990[5] | Flood | They Might Be Giants | Alternative rock | Elektra |
| |
5 February 1990 | Chill Out | The KLF | KLF Communications | Ambient-styled concept album featuring an extensive selection of samples, portraying a mythical night-time journey throughout the U.S. Gulf Coast states, beginning in Texas and ending in Louisiana.[13] | ||
19 March 1990[18] | Violator | Depeche Mode | Mute | Reception | ||
10 April 1990[19] | People's Instinctive Travels And The Paths Of Rhythm | A Tribe Called Quest | Jive | Accolades | ||
10 April 1990 | Fear Of A Black Planet | Public Enemy | Contributed significantly to the popularity of Afrocentric and political subject matter in hip hop, and the genre's mainstream resurgence at the time.[28] | Appraisal | ||
19 April 1990 | Repeater | Fugazi | Post-hardcore[29] | Dischord | Accolades | |
18 May 1990[30] | AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted | Ice Cube | Priority | Accolades | ||
17 September 1990[34] | Heaven Or Las Vegas | Cocteau Twins | 4AD | Critical reception and legacy | ||
24 September 1990 | Rust In Peace | Megadeth | Thrash metal | Capitol | Regarded as one of the best thrash metal records of all time.[36][37] | Legacy and influence |
15 October 1990 | Nowhere | Ride | Creation | Acclaimed as one of the greatest albums of the shoegaze genre.[38] | Critical reception | |
26 June 1990 | Goo | Sonic Youth | DGC | |||
27 July 1990 | Bellybutton | Jellyfish | Power pop[43] | Charisma |
| |
1 October 1990 | The La's | The La's | Widely considered to be a precursor to the Britpop phenomenon of the mid-1990s.[48] | |||
10 September 1990[52] | Ragged Glory | Neil Young & Crazy Horse | Reprise |
| ||
17 September 1990 | Canción Animal | Soda Stereo | Alternative rock | Considered one of the best and most influential albums in the history of Latin American rock music, with many calling it the best album to ever come out of South America.[56][57] | ||
22 October 1990 | Behaviour | Pet Shop Boys | Parlophone | Critical reception
NME's "The 500 Greatest Albums Of All Time": #234[2] |
1991
[edit]Release Date | Album | Artist | Genre(s) | Label | Notes | Accolades |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
27 March 1991[61] | Spiderland | Slint | Touch and Go | Widely regarded as foundational to the 1990s post-rock and math rock movements.[62][63] | ||
2 April 1991 | The Orb's Adventures Beyond The Ultraworld | The Orb | Credited with popularizing theambient house movement.[66] | Reception | ||
8 April 1991 | Blue Lines | Massive Attack | Generally regarded as the first "trip hop" album.[68] | Reception | ||
22 April 1991 | Peggy Suicide | Julian Cope | Island | |||
14 May 1991 | Yerself Is Steam | Mercury Rev |
|
|||
27 August 1991 | Ten | Pearl Jam | Epic | Considered to have been instrumental in the rise and dominance of alternative rock throughout the decade.[74] | Legacy | |
16 September 1991 | Laughing Stock | Talk Talk | Cited as a watershed entry for the at-the-time budding post-rock genre.[79] | Legacy | ||
23 September 1991 | Screamadelica | Primal Scream |
|
Critical reception and legacy | ||
23 September 1991 | Trompe Le Monde | Pixies | Alternative rock | 4AD | ||
24 September 1991 | Nevermind | Nirvana | DGC | Brought grunge and alternative rock to a mainstream audience, and is regarded as having initiated a resurgence of interest in punk culture among teenagers and young adults of Generation X, becoming seminal to the counterculture of the decade.[89][90][91] | Legacy | |
24 September 1991 | The Low End Theory | A Tribe Called Quest | Jive | Garnered recognition from music critics and writers as a milestone in alternative hip hop, and for Q-Tip's production, which advanced the development and exposure of jazz rap.[92][93][94] | Accolades | |
24 September 1991 | Blood Sugar Sex Magik | Red Hot Chili Peppers | Warner Bros. | Accolades | ||
4 November 1991 | Bandwagonesque | Teenage Fanclub |
| |||
4 November 1991 | Loveless | My Bloody Valentine | Creation | Widely praised by critics for its sonic innovations and session leader Kevin Shields' "virtual reinvention of the guitar".[110] | Accolades | |
18 November 1991 | Achtung Baby | U2 | Alternative rock | Island | Legacy |
1992
[edit]Release Date | Album | Artist | Genre(s) | Label | Notes | Accolades |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 January 1992 | Little Earthquakes | Tori Amos | Singer-songwriter[111] | Regarded as having shaped the female singer/songwriter movement of the '90s.[111] | Legacy | |
10 February 1992 | Generation Terrorists | Manic Street Preachers | Columbia | |||
25 February 1992[114] | Vulgar Display Of Power | Pantera | Groove metal[115][116] | Atco | Legacy and accolades | |
9 March 1992[117] | Going Blank Again | Ride | Creation/Sire | Considered "predictive" of later genres of indie rock.[120] | ||
30 March 1992 | Lazer Guided Melodies | Spiritualized | Dedicated | Regarded as having anticipated dream pop.[122] | ||
30 March 1992 | Dry | PJ Harvey | Too Pure | |||
20 April 1992 | Slanted And Enchanted | Pavement | Matador | Accolades | ||
21 April 1992 | Check Your Head | Beastie Boys | Critical reception | |||
21 April 1992 | Wish | The Cure | Fiction |
| ||
12 May 1992 | The Southern Harmony And Musical Companion | The Black Crowes | Blues rock[134] | Def American | ||
2 June 1992 | It's A Shame About Ray | The Lemonheads | Atlantic | |||
8 June 1992 | Angel Dust | Faith No More | Critical reception and legacy | |||
7 July 1992 | Images And Words | Dream Theater | Progressive metal[145] | ATCO | Accolades | |
4 September 1992 | Copper Blue | Sugar | Rykodisc/Creation | |||
8 September 1992 | Bone Machine | Tom Waits | Experimental rock | Island | Often noted for its rough, stripped-down, percussion-heavy style, as well as its dark lyrical themes revolving around death and decay.[148] | Critical reception |
29 September 1992[150] | Dirt | Alice In Chains | Columbia | Often considered as one of the most influential albums to the sludge metal subgenre.[154][155] | Reception and legacy | |
5 October 1992[156] | Automatic For The People | R.E.M. | Warner Bros. | Critical reception | ||
26 October 1992 | Love Deluxe | Sade | Epic | |||
3 November 1992[164] | Rage Against The Machine | Rage Against The Machine | Epic | Critical reception | ||
9 November 1992 | Selected Ambient Works 85–92 | Aphex Twin | Considered a classic, defining work of electronica and ambient techno.[169][170] | Reception and legacy | ||
24 November 1992 | Bizarre Ride II The Pharcyde | The Pharcyde | One of the first alternative rap acts on the West Coast to have wide appeal.[172] | |||
15 December 1992 | The Chronic | Dr. Dre | Popularized the G-funk subgenre within gangsta rap, and is widely regarded as an album that re-defined West Coast hip hop.[175] | Accolades |
1993
[edit]Release Date | Album | Artist | Genre(s) | Label | Notes | Accolades |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 March 1993 | Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We? | The Cranberries | Island |
| ||
29 March 1993 | Suede | Suede | Nude | Often cited as one of the first Britpop records.[184][185] | Accolades | |
26 April 1993[186] | Rid Of Me | PJ Harvey | Island | Accolades | ||
24 May 1993 | Orbital | Orbital |
|
Accolades | ||
24 May 1993 | Red House Painters | Red House Painters | 4AD | Praised extensively for its melancholic instrumentation and emotional depth.[193][194] |
| |
1 June 1993 | Souvlaki | Slowdive | Creation | Legacy | ||
22 June 1993 | Exile In Guyville | Liz Phair | Matador | Regarded as exceptional for its lo-fi sound and the emotional honesty of Phair's lyrics, inspiring several imitators.[202][203] | Accolades | |
5 July 1993 | Debut | Björk | Credited as one of the first albums to introduce electronic music into mainstream pop.[207][208] | Accolades | ||
27 July 1993 | Siamese Dream | The Smashing Pumpkins | Virgin | Regarded as one of the greatest alternative rock albums for its diverse musical influences and lyrical material considered unique relative to other contemporary releases.[215] | Release, reception and legacy | |
10 August 1993[216] | Transient Random-Noise Bursts With Announcements | Stereolab | Duophonic/Elektra | |||
30 August 1993 | Last Splash | The Breeders | 4AD/Elektra Records | Regarded as a significant album for alternative rock's crossover into the mainstream.[222][223] | Accolades | |
6 September 1993 | Wild Wood | Paul Weller | Rock | Go! Discs | ||
21 September 1993 | In Utero | Nirvana | DGC | Reappraisal | ||
27 September 1993 | Very | Pet Shop Boys | Parlophone | |||
5 October 1993 | Gentlemen | The Afghan Whigs | Elektra | Critically considered to be among the best-written breakup albums.[230] |
| |
11 October 1993 | Tindersticks | Tindersticks | Chamber pop | This Way Up | ||
19 October 1993[233] | Vs. | Pearl Jam | Epic | Accolades | ||
9 November 1993 | Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) | Wu-Tang Clan | Served as a landmark release in the era of hip-hop known as the East Coast Renaissance.[234] | Retrospect | ||
9 November 1993 | Midnight Marauders | A Tribe Called Quest | Jive | Frequently credited as a contributor to a "second golden age" of hip hop in the mid-1990s, as well as the pinnacle of the Native Tongues movement.[235][236][237] | Accolades | |
23 November 1993 | Doggystyle | Snoop Dogg | Regarded as having helped introduce the hip-hop subgenre of G-funk to a mainstream audience, bringing forward West Coast hip-hop as a dominant force in the early-mid 1990s.[238][239]
Praised for the lyrical "realism" that Snoop Dogg delivers on the album and for his distinctive vocal flow.[240][241] |
Accolades | ||
29 November 1993 | Incunabula | Autechre | Warp |
1994
[edit]Release Date | Album | Artist | Genre(s) | Label | Notes | Accolades |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
24 January 1994 | Dubnobasswithmyheadman | Underworld | Junior Boy's Own | |||
1 February 1994 | Dookie | Green Day | Reprise | Considered pivotal in solidifying punk rock and pop-punk's mainstream popularity.[248] | Accolades | |
14 February 1994 | Hex | Bark Psychosis | Circa | The term "post-rock" was coined by music journalist Simon Reynolds in his review of the album for Mojo magazine.[249] | ||
14 February 1994 | Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain | Pavement | Matador | Legacy | ||
18 February 1994 | I Could Live In Hope | Low | Vernon Yard | Helped to birth the genre known as slowcore due to its "unprecedent pace".[252][253] | Legacy | |
28 February 1994 | D. I. Go Pop | Disco Inferno | Rough Trade | Highly influential for its innovative production approach that incorporated found sound elements through extensive use of digital samplers and its advancement of post-rock as a genre, alongside five EPs released by the band also during the 90s.[254][255][256] | ||
7 March 1994 | Selected Ambient Works Volume II | Aphex Twin | Warp | Was "a very early example of a record being anticipated, experienced, and, ultimately, analyzed in minute detail through online communication."[259] | ||
8 March 1994 | The Downward Spiral | Nine Inch Nails | Nothing/Interscope | Regarded as one of the most important albums of the 1990s in part due to its abrasive and eclectic nature and dark themes.[260] | Accolades | |
8 March 1994 | Superunknown | Soundgarden | A&M | Accolades | ||
14 March 1994 | Vauxhall And I | Morrissey | Alternative rock[261] |
|
||
12 April 1994 | Live Through This | Hole | DGC | Reappraisal | ||
18 April 1994[263] | Let Love In | Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds | Mute | |||
18 April 1994 | His 'N' Hers | Pulp | Britpop[265][266] | Island | ||
19 April 1994 | Illmatic | Nas | Columbia | Regarded as a landmark album in East Coast hip hop, as one of the greatest and most influential hip hop albums of all time, and having significantly contributed to the revival of the New York City rap scene.[268][269] | ||
25 April 1994 | Parklife | Blur | Food | Accolades | ||
26 April 1994 | Yank Crime | Drive Like Jehu | Regarded as a catalyst for the eclectic San Diego music scene and the emerging national emo scene of the 1990s.[51][270] | |||
26 April 1994 | American Recordings | Johnny Cash | American | Critical reception | ||
10 May 1994 | Diary | Sunny Day Real Estate | Sub Pop | Considered by many to be a defining emo album of the second wave, and key in the development of its subgenre, Midwest emo.[274] | ||
10 May 1994 | Weezer (Blue Album) | Weezer | DGC | Regarded as a formative influence on "melodic emo".[281] | Accolades | |
20 May 1994[282] | Teenager Of The Year | Frank Black | Alternative rock |
| ||
31 May 1994 | Ill Communication | Beastie Boys | Critical reception | |||
1 June 1994 | 76:14 | Global Communication | Dedicated | |||
6 June 1994 | Blade Runner | Vangelis | East West (Europe) / Atlantic (USA) | Soundtrack for Ridley Scott's 1982 science-fiction noir film Blade Runner. Acclaimed as an influential work in the history of electronic music and as one of the greatest film soundtracks of all time.[288] | Legacy | |
7 June 1994 | Purple | Stone Temple Pilots | Atlantic | Legacy | ||
21 June 1994 | Bee Thousand | Guided By Voices | Scat | Hallmark album in the "lo-fi" genre.[295] | Accolades | |
4 July 1994 | Music For The Jilted Generation | The Prodigy | ||||
15 August 1994 | Grace | Jeff Buckley | Columbia | Accolades | ||
22 August 1994 | Dummy | Portishead | Trip hop | Go! Beat/London | Accolades | |
29 August 1994 | Definitely Maybe | Oasis | Creation | Regarded as a cornerstone of the Britpop genre, and significant in revitalizing British pop/rock music in the 1990s.[301][304] | Legacy | |
30 August 1994 | The Holy Bible | Manic Street Preachers | Epic | Considered to be among the darkest albums due to its lyrical contents written by Richey Edwards as he was struggling with severe depression, alcohol abuse, self-harm and anorexia nervosa.[305] | Legacy | |
13 September 1994 | Ready To Die | The Notorious B.I.G. | Significant for revitalizing the East Coast hip hop scene.[307] | Accolades | ||
10 October 1994 | Dog Man Star | Suede | Nude | Accolades | ||
24 October 1994 | At Action Park | Shellac | Touch and Go | |||
1 November 1994 | MTV Unplugged In New York | Nirvana | DGC | Live album.[312] | Retrospective | |
1 November 1994[313] | Wildflowers | Tom Petty | Warner Bros. | |||
15 November 1994 | CrazySexyCool | TLC | Accolades |
1995
[edit]Release Date | Album | Artist | Genre(s) | Label | Notes | Accolades |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 January 1995 | Leftism | Leftfield | Progressive house | Columbia | Praised as one of the first major album-length works of dance music.[318] | Legacy |
20 February 1995 | Maxinquaye | Tricky | 4th & B'way | Regarded as a significant influence on electronica, underground hip hop and British hip hop, and a key release of the burgeoning trip hop genre.[319] | Critical reception and legacy | |
27 February 1995 | To Bring You My Love | PJ Harvey | Island | Accolades | ||
13 March 1995 | The Bends | Radiohead | Accolades | |||
March 1995 | Elastica | Elastica | Legacy | |||
4 April 1995 | Alien Lanes | Guided By Voices | Matador | |||
11 April 1995 | Wowee Zowee | Pavement | Matador | |||
25 April 1995 | The Infamous | Mobb Deep | Credited with helping to redefine the sound of hardcore hip hop, using its production style, which incorporated eerie piano loops, distorted synthesizers, eighth-note hi-hats, and sparse filtered basslines.[329][330] | |||
15 May 1995 | I Should Coco | Supergrass |
|
|||
29 May 1995[331] | Grand Prix | Teenage Fanclub |
| |||
7 June 1995 | Post | Björk | Considered an important exponent of art pop, and praised by critics for its ambition and timelessness.[339] | Accolades | ||
13 June 1995 | Jagged Little Pill | Alanis Morissette | Credited with leading to the introduction of several female singers such as Fiona Apple,[341] Shakira, Tracy Bonham, Meredith Brooks, and in the early 2000s, Pink, Michelle Branch, and Avril Lavigne.[342] | Impact and legacy | ||
1 August 1995 | Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... | Raekwon | Loud/RCA | Widely regarded as a pioneer of the mafioso rap subgenre.[344] | ||
7 August 1995 | Timeless | Goldie | FFRR | Widely regarded as a groundbreaking release in the history of drum and bass music.[345] | ||
15 August 1995 | Garbage | Garbage | Almo | Highly regarded for its unique production incorporating several genres of rock and electronic music together.[346][347][348] |
| |
26 September 1995 | Wrecking Ball | Emmylou Harris | Asylum/Elektra | |||
2 October 1995 | (What's The Story) Morning Glory? | Oasis | Creation | Legacy | ||
24 October 1995 | Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness | The Smashing Pumpkins | Virgin | Widely lauded for its 28-song scope and wide array of musical styles.[351][352] | Accolades | |
30 October 1995 | Different Class | Pulp | Island | Accolades | ||
6 November 1995 | Tri Repetae | Autechre | Warp | |||
7 November 1995 | Liquid Swords | GZA/Genius | Geffen | Highly regarded for its complex lyricism.[355] | Accolades | |
1995 | 94diskont. | Oval | Mille Plateaux/Thrill Jockey | Praised for its glitch music styling methods involving literally deconstructing music and digital audio by using exacto knives, paint, and tape to damage the surfaces of compact discs to stitch back together.[356] |
1996
[edit]Release Date | Album | Artist | Genre(s) | Label | Notes | Accolades |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 January 1996 | Millions Now Living Will Never Die | Tortoise | Thrill Jockey | Renowned as a groundbreaking album for the post-rock genre.[359] | ||
5 February 1996 | Murder Ballads | Nick Cave |
|
Mute |
| |
13 February 1996 | All Eyez On Me | 2Pac | Death Row/Interscope | The first ever double-full-length hip-hop solo studio album released for mass consumption globally.[365] | Accolades | |
13 February 1996 | The Score | Fugees | Ruffhouse/Columbia | Accolades | ||
11 March 1996 | Second Toughest In The Infants | Underworld | Junior Boy's Own | |||
18 March 1996 | Emperor Tomato Ketchup | Stereolab | Critical reception and legacy | |||
29 April 1996 | In Sides | Orbital | Internal/FFRR | |||
20 May 1996 | Everything Must Go | Manic Street Preachers | Epic | Legacy | ||
18 June 1996 | Odelay | Beck | Legacy | |||
25 June 1996 | Reasonable Doubt | Jay-Z | Roc-A-Fella/Priority[371] | Regarded as one of the greatest albums of New York's hip-hop renaissance of the '90s", and instrumental in transfiguring gangsta rap into mafioso rap.[372][373] | Legacy and influence | |
6 August 1996 | Music From The Unrealized Film Script: Dusk At Cubist Castle | The Olivia Tremor Control | Flydaddy | 74 minute double album comprising 27 songs.[374] | ||
13 August 1996 | Beautiful Freak | Eels | Alternative rock[376] | DreamWorks |
| |
27 August 1996 | ATLiens | OutKast | LaFace/Arista | Legacy | ||
9 September 1996 | New Adventures In Hi-Fi | R.E.M. | Warner Bros. | Awards | ||
16 September 1996 | Endtroducing..... | DJ Shadow | Mo' Wax | Considered a landmark recording in the development of instrumental hip hop.[378] Cited by Guinness World Records as the first album created entirely from samples.[379] | Legacy | |
17 September 1996[380][381] | Ænima | Tool | ||||
24 September 1996 | Pinkerton | Weezer | DGC | Accolades | ||
22 October 1996 | Soundtracks For The Blind | Swans | Young God | Critical reception
Paste's "The 300 Greatest Albums of All Time": #175[14] | ||
25 October 1996 | Long Season | Fishmans | Polydor | Consists of a single 35-minute composition based on the band's earlier single "Season".[391] Regarded as a landmark of Japanese rock music.[392] | ||
29 October 1996 | Being There | Wilco | Reprise | Reception | ||
4 November 1996 | Richard D. James Album | Aphex Twin | Warp | Highly regarded for its production, incorporating fast breakbeats and intricate drum programming, lush string arrangements, ambient melodies, modulated vocals, and unstable time signatures.[398][399][400][401] | Critical reception | |
18 November 1996 | If You're Feeling Sinister | Belle And Sebastian | Jeepster | Critical reception |
1997
[edit]Release Date | Album | Artist | Genre(s) | Label | Notes | Accolades |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
28 January 1997 | Perfect From Now On | Built To Spill | Warner Bros. | Stylistically, the album was marked by its experimentation with longer song structures and philosophical lyrics.[410] | ||
10 February 1997 | Blur | Blur | Food |
| ||
11 February 1997 | Baduizm | Erykah Badu | Credited with contributing to the commercial visibility of neo-soul. | Accolades | ||
25 February 1997 | Either/Or | Elliott Smith | Kill Rock Stars | Legacy | ||
3 March 1997 | The Boatman's Call | Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds | Singer-songwriter[419] | Mute/Reprise |
| |
18 March 1997 | Whatever And Ever Amen | Ben Folds Five | Alternative rock[421] | |||
7 April 1997 | Dig Your Own Hole | The Chemical Brothers | Freestyle Dust/Virgin (UK) | Critical reception and legacy | ||
8 April 1997 | Dig Me Out | Sleater-Kinney | Punk rock | Kill Rock Stars | Acclaimed for its energy and feminist lyrics.[424] | Legacy |
22 April 1997 | I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One | Yo La Tengo | Matador | Legacy | ||
21 May 1997 | OK Computer | Radiohead | Cited as one of the greatest albums of all time for its anticipation of the mood of 21st-century life's rampant consumerism, capitalism, social alienation, paranoia, and political malaise and its influence in pushing British rock from Birtpop towards melancholic, atmospheric alternative rock.[426][427] | Accolades | ||
16 June 1997 | Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space | Spiritualized | Dedicated | Legacy | ||
30 June 1997 | The Fat Of The Land | The Prodigy | Reception | |||
14 August 1997
(CD Version: June 8, 1998) |
F♯ A♯ ∞ | Godspeed You! Black Emperor | Notable for being devoid of traditional lyrics and is mostly instrumental, featuring lengthy songs segmented into movements.[434] | |||
16 September 1997 | Buena Vista Social Club | Buena Vista Social Club | Recognized by the Guinness World Records as the best-selling world music album.[436] | Reception | ||
22 September 1997 | Dots And Loops | Stereolab | Duophonic/Elektra | Praised for its blend of accessible bossa nova and 1960s pop music-inspired music with experimental and avant-garde sounds, and for being one of the first albums produced with a digital audio workstation.[437][438] | ||
22 September 1997 | Homogenic | Björk | Regarded as one of the most groundbreaking albums of all-time, and is often credited for connecting art pop to electronic dance music.[439] | Accolades | ||
29 September 1997 | Urban Hymns | The Verve | Hut | Accolades and legacy | ||
30 September 1997 | Time Out Of Mind | Bob Dylan | Columbia | Aftermath and legacy | ||
7 October 1997 | The Velvet Rope | Janet Jackson | Virgin | Regarded as a template for pop artists transitioning to a darker or rebellious sound and as a precursor to the development of alternative R&B.[444] | Accolades | |
21 October 1997 | Mogwai Young Team | Mogwai | Chemikal Underground | |||
18 November 1997 | The Lonesome Crowded West | Modest Mouse | Indie rock[445] | Up | Critical reception
Paste's "The 300 Greatest Albums of All Time": #300[14] |
1998
[edit]Release Date | Album | Artist | Genre(s) | Label | Notes | Accolades |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
16 January 1998 | Moon Safari | Air |
|
Credited with helping to establish the stage for the budding downtempo music style.[455] | Accolades | |
26 January 1998 | Mark Hollis | Mark Hollis | Polydor | Noted for being extremely sparse and minimal in its sound; AllMusic called it "quite possibly the most quiet and intimate record ever made".[456] | ||
10 February 1998 | In The Aeroplane Over The Sea | Neutral Milk Hotel | Merge | Highly regarded for its hard-to-categorize mix of genres, use of less conventional instruments like the singing saw and uilleann pipes, its lo-fi production, and its surrealistic and opaque lyrics inspired by Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl. Notable for developing a substantial cult following.[459][460][461] | Critical reevaluation and sales | |
22 February 1998 | Ray Of Light | Madonna | Credited for bringing electronica music into global pop culture.[462] | Accolades | ||
10 March 1998 | TNT | Tortoise | Thrill Jockey | Critically acclaimed for its postmodern sound using hard disk technology in a "forward-then-back" approach, with members individually adding parts to tracks at different stages until the tracks were completed.[463][464] | Critical reception | |
30 March 1998 | This Is Hardcore | Pulp | Island | Reception and legacy
Diariocrítico's The 100 Best Albums of the 90s: #69[466] | ||
20 April 1998 | Music Has The Right To Children | Boards Of Canada | Noted as a major influence on the electronic music genre, using vintage synthesisers, degraded analogue production, found sounds and samples, and hip hop-inspired rhythms in its production.[467][468][471] | Legacy and influence
NME's "The 500 Greatest Albums Of All Time": #181[49] | ||
20 April 1998 | Mezzanine | Massive Attack |
|
Praised for its darker aesthetic and more atmospheric style influenced by British post-punk, industrial music, hip hop and dub music.[472] | Reception | |
23 June 1998 | Mermaid Avenue | Billy Bragg & Wilco | Elektra | |||
30 June 1998 | Car Wheels On A Gravel Road | Lucinda Williams | Mercury | Credited with popularizing Americana music.[476] | Critical reception and legacy | |
19 August 1998 | The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill | Lauryn Hill | Contributed to bringing hip hop and neo soul to the forefront of popular music, and regarded as among the best hip-hop albums of all time.[477][478] | Accolades | ||
25 August 1998 | XO | Elliott Smith | DreamWorks |
| ||
21 September 1998 | Electro-Shock Blues | Eels | Indie rock | DreamWorks | Acclaimed for its representation of frontman Mark Oliver "E" Everett's personal losses and coming to terms with suddenly becoming the only living member of his family.[486] | |
28 September 1998 | The Three E.P.'s | The Beta Band | Regal | Compilation album. | ||
29 September 1998 | Deserter's Songs | Mercury Rev | V2 | |||
29 September 1998 | Aquemini | Outkast | LaFace/Arista | Praised for being one of the most creative rap albums for its musicality, eclectic sound, and unique lyrical themes.[492][493] | Accolades | |
29 September 1998 | Mos Def & Talib Kweli Are Black Star | Black Star | ||||
September 1996 | Horse Stories | Dirty Three | Touch and Go |
| ||
12 October 1998 | Without You I'm Nothing | Placebo | Hut | Reception | ||
20 October 1998 | American Water | Silver Jews | Drag City | |||
27 October 1998 | The Shape Of Punk To Come | Refused | Burning Heart | Incorporated experimental combinations of post-hardcore, post-punk, techno, and jazz sounds into its punk framework.[503] |
1999
[edit]Release Date | Album | Artist | Genre(s) | Label | Notes | Accolades |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
19 January 1999 | I See A Darkness | Bonnie 'Prince' Billy | Palace/Domino | |||
2 February 1999 | Keep It Like A Secret | Built To Spill | ||||
23 February 1999 | Things Fall Apart | The Roots | MCA | |||
23 February 1999 | The Slim Shady LP | Eminem | Praised for its unique lyrical style, dark humor lyrics involving cartoonish depictions of violence and heavy use of profanity, and unusual personality.[515] | Accolades | ||
9 March 1999 | Summerteeth | Wilco | Reprise | |||
15 March 1999 | 13 | Blur | Accolades | |||
16 April 1999 | Mule Variations | Tom Waits | ANTI- |
| ||
17 May 1999 | The Soft Bulletin | The Flaming Lips | Warner Bros. | |||
17 May 1999 | Play | Moby | Critical reception | |||
24 May 1999 | The Man Who | Travis | Post-Britpop[535] | Independiente |
| |
8 June 1999 | Californication | Red Hot Chili Peppers | Warner Bros. | Retrospective commentary | ||
12 June 1999 | Ágætis Byrjun | Sigur Rós | Highly regarded for its "cosmic", "other-worldly" and "timeless" nature due to the unique sound of the band's music.[538] | Reception | ||
28 June 1999 | Bocanada | Gustavo Cerati | BMG International | Regarded as one of the greatest Argentine and Latin-American rock albums of all time.[540][541] |
| |
14 September 1999 | 69 Love Songs | The Magnetic Fields | Merge | A three-volume concept album composed of 69 love songs.[543] | Critical reception | |
14 September 1999 | American Football | American Football | Polyvinyl | Considered one of the most important math rock and Midwest emo records of the 1990s. | ||
21 September 1999 | The Fragile | Nine Inch Nails | Acclaimed for its ambition and composition incorporating vast influences and genres.[546][547] | |||
12 October 1999 | Black On Both Sides | Mos Def | East Coast hip hop[549] | Rawkus/Priority | ||
19 October 1999 | Operation: Doomsday | MF DOOM | Fondle 'Em | Regarded as one of the most influential albums in independent and underground hip-hop history.[550] | Accolades | |
26 October 1999 | Emergency & I | The Dismemberment Plan | Regarded as a landmark indie rock album and influential to its development.[552] | Accolades and retrospective reviews | ||
2 November 1999 | The Battle Of Los Angeles | Rage Against The Machine | Epic | Critical reception | ||
9 November 1999 | When The Pawn... | Fiona Apple |
|
When_the_Pawn... | ||
10 December 1999 | Vision Creation Newsun | Boredoms | Birdman/WEA Japan |
See also
[edit]- List of 1980s albums considered the best
- List of best-selling albums
- Lists of fastest-selling albums
References
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