Obviously inspired by @PP_BOY_@lemmy.world 's question
Stadium arcadium by the chili peppers.
Probably one of the greatest single compilations of music ever put together by humanity.
Even most of the songs that didn’t come out as singles are absolute bangers: Wet Sand (my personal favourite), Charlie, Hard to Concentrate and Slow Cheetah could easily overshadow many other singles from the following albums
I was really glad to see this. Stadium Arcadium was my first thought and it is just packed with such greatness. I can listen to it start to finish and never be bored or want to skip any of it.
All my favorites frequently shift and change over time but I’m utterly obsessed with Music From the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle, by the Olivia Tremor Control. Some of the best fucking psychedelic pop I’ve ever heard.
The Gold Album - Autechre
Nonagon Infinity - King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard. Though their other 25 albums are awesome too.
I am also partial to their album PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: an Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation. Probably my favorite metal album, and they aren’t even a pure metal band.
I think my personal favorite is Omnium Gatherum, but it has some ups and downs. Nonagon Infinity is pretty much flawless from top to bottom (and back to top)
Enslaved is my favourite band and for me its a bit of a toss up between the albums ‘In Times’ and ‘Ruun’.
Before Enslaved took the top spot, it was Dissection’s ‘Storm Of The Light’s Bane’. Honorable mention for Opeth’s ‘Blackwater Park’.
Blackwater Park would have been my choice.
Storm of the Light’s Bane is a top 5 album all time for me, but Dissection is not my favorite band, if that makes sense.
Mezzanine
Risingson makes me feel like im inside a private bdsm dungeon party session in underground germany with my buddy mike
For Queen, take a listen to their second album, Queen 2. It’s quite underrated, as only Seven Seas of Rhye is on the greatest hits.
However it’s a phenomenal record, full of their musical experimentation that would find critical fruition in night at the opera, but a bit more raw and moody.
Dream Theater “Awake” (1994). Extraordinary from the first to the last note. 75 minutes of phenomenal prog metal. They’ve made good and great albums before and after, but they never excelled the pure class and artistry displayed on this album.
Bruce Dickinson “The Chemical Wedding”. I never liked Iron Maiden much, but Dickinson’s solo stuff is a different class. Fresh, creative, varied, energetic. Most of his solo albums are well worth the listen, but “Chemical Wedding” stands out for its high variety and creativity.
Black Sabbath - Heaven and Hell
Such a refined masterpiece that few can touch. Mob rules and Dehumanizer are close seconds, but miss the sheer presence that Heaven and Hell beholds.
To me at least, Heaven and Hell is immersive and profound to an extent, that their other albums cannot compare. It holds a very special place in my heart.
Dio - The last in line.
Not quite head and shoulders above his other albums, but lands the most hits for me. I love every track on this album, and none are a “miss”. I love (almost) every other Dio album, but each has at least one song that doesn’t resonate with me.
Dire Straits - Brothers in Arms
Cliche choice, but extremely enjoyable to listen and relax to. If you listen more closely, it becomes very immersive as each song has a clear story and a moral. Though some tracks are slower paced and longer, I don’t find a single one boring, which I sometimes do on other Dire Straits albums.
I have several favorite bands, so I refuse to choose between them. In no particular order:
Dream Theater - Images and Words, but Awake is only lagging behind by a nanometer.
Metallica - I have a hard time choosing between Puppets and Black
Destiny Potato - Lun
Dimmu Borgir - Puritanical
Foo Fighters - The Colour and the Shape
I first stumbled across them in early 2015 via spotify recommending Indifferent. That caused me to check out the entire album, and I instantly loved it.
Jimi Hendrix Experience’s Electric Ladyland.
It’s the quintessential experimental album: with songs spacing through many different genres, two 10+ minutes long jams, recurring themes and the best cover ever to be performed which is All Along the Watchtower (originally from Bob Dylan)prolly not a popular opinion but; violent femmes why do birds sing
you’re telling me you think this is better than the eponymous album
yes!
i dunno… theres something more… hmmm… personal about it. i like epo, but i love wdbs
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nbcWJCfkdCVeUvGZMlo_gVDsLhFRPUm4o&si=c84nIM6a1JPv5xjY
Gravity and Grace by Respire