THOUGHTS ON COUNTRY'S "GREATEST" ALBUMS
Recently Rolling Stone issued its edict
coronating the one hundred best country albums of all time. They've
done these lists before, but as much as I detest Rolling Stone (which
used to be a music magazine) I can't dump on them too much this time
around. They either managed to shake some older writers from the
mothballs or they actually sat down and listened to a bunch of old
albums, because they included some like this (#63), one of the best live
country albums of all time:
As for more modern albums, they also
honored "Ghost On The Canvas" by Glen Campbell (#88), which I fell in
love with upon hearing the opening track.
And this album (#18!) is superb:
It
was clear without even reading the article's preface that the article's
contributors strove to only include one album per artist (with some
exceptions), which is a little disingenuous, because I would easily
place multiple George Strait and Dwight Yoakam albums on my list. I also
question the albums by these artists they did choose, but taste is subjective.
One notable omission, which for a "hip" publication is head-scratching, is this:
In
my late teens and early twenties I was a huge consumer of country
albums (later CD's), and due to either the sparsity of choices and
later, more disposable income, I bought a ton of clinkers. In an earlier
post I even included a photo
of my collection (misleading because the rows of CD's are two deep),
and that wasn't even the entirety of it. It didn't include my stack of
LP's or the boxed sets that are stashed under my bed. Not to mention
hundreds of 45's. Yes, I still have all of them.
But what I found, eventually, is that I return to certain titles when I want to hear some good music.
Here are some of those:
(Good luck. Let me know if you can find it anywhere for sale online.)
($23.00? Really?)
I
know, I know ~ Red Headed Stranger and Will The Circle Be Unbroken get
all the press in lists like Rolling Stone's, but frankly I listened to
each of them one time and never again.
And I know I could go on and on cataloguing my favorites, but I don't have an eidetic memory.
Musical
tastes are subjective, and sometimes you simply had to be there. But I
can say without hesitation that you won't go wrong listening to any of
my choices.
Really.
Michelle Anderson, Senior Country Editor