Tuesday 4 October 2016

A list that claims to be universal, but overlooks almost everything

As I, perhaps looking to control obsessions that have dominated my thoughts and prevented me doing any real work on this blog or elsewhere over recent months, browsed YouTube looking for greatest albums articles of the type I lavished up a decade or so ago, I found one from 2013 that I had failed entirely to discover when it was originally written.

The list is, interestingly from my perspective and history as a music listener, written by Australians, namely Toby Creswell, Craig Mathieson, and John O‘Donnell. The critics claim that they are dealing with what they perceive to be a kind of “nationalist” bias in rock criticism, claiming in their YouTube interview that:
“A US list will contain 99 US artists and the Beatles; a British list will contain 99 British artists and one US artist” 
I do have my doubts that “nationalist” bias of this type is so extreme as Cresswell and Mathieson claimed in their interview; nonetheless I do not doubt that the nation one is from can greatly influence which albums are considered important.

Creswell and Mathieson claim to have compiled their list from as many authoritative sources as possible rather than their own listening; however from my knowledge garnered during the 2000s of the most serious kind of rock criticism it is not possible for me to believe honestly that they have simply failed to see that a large number of  “best albums” lists are totally ephemeral and simply reflect the public popularity of records rather than enduring influence or being even remotely groundbreaking or even distinctive. To take at least some care, even if not the most extreme sort, to ensure that such lists are avoided is essential.

Joe S. Harrington’s decision in his Top 100 Albums to not allow anything released after 1992 to be included was a sign of wisdom since it is exceedingly clear he was listening to very little groundbreaking during the decade between 1993 and 2003, whilst David Keenan, who did include a couple of albums released after 1993 in his The Best Albums Ever...Honest, nonetheless came out utterly free from trendiness and attention to the present. Piero Scaruffi’s list of the 25 best albums is even more than Harrington’s or Keenan’s, the product of extremely intensive study of music and sound (not I would say by any means perfect), and focuses on music whose influence over the long term can be clearly demonstrated. I will say that I think Scaruffi can be a little over-the-top in praising avant-garde music that is not as good as he thinks, but his ability to find music of considerable value but which I would never learn about from other more mainstream critics is most definitely sufficient for me to recommend him.

I have tabulated Creswell, Mathieson and O‘Donnell’s top 100 albums, published in their book 100 Best Albums Of All Time, along with whether the album is included in the three lists by Harrington, Keenan and Scaruffi noted in the preceding paragraph and which I also note in my critique of NME’s Top 500 Albums from around the same time. Symbols:
  1. a blank indicates that the artist has no albums on the relevant list
  2. one asterisk is added for each album other than the one listed here the artist has on the relevant list
  3. in Harrington’s and Scaruffi’s lists, each album included is given its number on that list
  4. for Keenan’s list, which was not strictly ordered, each album from here included therein is simply labelled with a “Y
  5. albums released after the lists were published, or after 1992 with Harrington, are labelled with an “ineligible
  6. albums I own are shaded in pink
ArtistTitleYearHarringtonKeenanScaruffi
1Bob DylanHighway 61 Revisited1966

**
2The BeatlesRevolver1966
*
3The ClashLondon Calling1979
*
4NirvanaNevermind1991
*
5Van MorrisonAstral Weeks1968
Y
#21
6Joni MitchellBlue1971
7The Rolling StonesSticky Fingers1971
*
*
8Fleetwood MacRumours1977
9The Velvet Underground and NicoThe Velvet Underground and Nico1967
#25
Y
#4
10Public EnemyIt Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back1988
#27
*
11The Beach BoysPet Sounds1966
#84
*
12Bruce SpringsteenDarkness on the Edge of Town1978
*
*
13TelevisionMarquee Moon1977
#83
*
14Little RichardHere’s Little Richard1954
15Led ZeppelinUntitled (Led Zeppelin IV)1971
Y
16RadioheadOK Computer1997
17The BandThe Band1969
*
18The BeatlesThe Beatles (The White Album)1969
Y
19PixiesDoolittle1989
20John LennonJohn Lennon/Plastic Ono Band1970
21U2Achtung Baby1991
22Simon and GarfunkelBridge over Troubled Water1970
23Bob DylanBlonde on Blonde1966
**
#17
24Sex PistolsNever Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols1977
#2
25PrinceSign of the Times1987
26Arcade FireFuneral2004
ineligible
ineligible
27Michael JacksonThriller1982
28Neil YoungOn the Beach1973
*
*
29Jay-ZThe Blueprint2001
ineligible
ineligible
30Massive AttackBlue Lines1991
31The SmithsThe Queen Is Dead1986
Y
32Carole KingTapestry1971
33David BowieHunky Dory1971
*
34Ray CharlesModern Sounds in Country and Western Music1962
35Paul SimonGraceland1986
36Iggy and the StoogesRaw Power1973
*
*
37The Jimi Hendrix ExperienceAre You Experienced?1967
#20
*
38Aretha FranklinLady Soul1968
39RamonesRamones1976
#63
*
40The Rolling StonesExile on Main Street1972
*
*
41Patti SmithHorses1975
#17
*
42Miles DavisKind of Blue1958
**
Y
*
43Sonic YouthDaydream Nation1988
#94
*
44Bruce SpringsteenBorn to Run1975
*
*
45The BeatlesAbbey Road1970
*
46Guns’n’RosesAppetite for Destruction1987
47Black SabbathParanoid1971
*
*
48George HarrisonAll Things Must Pass1971
49Green DayAmerican Idiot2004
50The DoorsThe Doors1967
#5
51Pink FloydDark Side of the Moon1973
52James BrownLive at the Apollo1963
Y
53Creedence Clearwater RevivalCosmo’s Factory1970
54Pearl JamVs1993
ineligible
55The WailersBurning1976
56The MonkeesHeadquarters1967
57Talking HeadsRemain in Light1980
58Rod StewartEvery Picture Tells a Story1971
59DevoQ: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!1978
60Chuck BerryAfter School Session1957
61EminemThe Marshall Mathers LP2001
ineligible
ineligible
62BlondieParallel Lines1978
63Dusty SpringfieldDusty in Memphis1968
Y
64R.E.M.Automatic for the People1992
*
65The SupremesWhere Did Our Love Go?1964
66Oasis(What’s the Story) Morning Glory1995
ineligible
67Kanye WestMy Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy2004
ineligible
ineligible
68Jeff BuckleyGrace1994
ineligible
69The White StripesElephant2003
ineligible
ineligible
70EaglesHotel California1976
71WilcoYankee Hotel Foxtrot1994
ineligible
72Beastie BoysPaul’s Botique1989
73Tom WaitsRain Dogs1985
74Kate BushHounds of Love1985
Y
75The WhoLive at Leeds1971
*
*
76Joy DivisionCloser1980
#47
77KraftwerkTrans-Europe Express1977
78Randy NewmanSail Away1972
79PavementCrooked Rain, Crooked Rain1994
ineligible
80Curtis MayfieldCurtis1970
81Roxy MusicFor Your Pleasure1973
*
82The StrokesIs This It?2001
ineligible
ineligible
83Midnight OilDiesel and Dust1987
84ColdplayViva la Vida, or Death and All His Friends2008
ineligible
ineligible
85The KinksThe Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society1968
Y
86PretendersPretenders1980
87The Modern LoversThe Modern Lovers1975
#70
88Primal ScreamScreamadelica1991
89Fairport ConventionUnhalfbricking1968
*
90Elvis Costello and the AttractionsThis Year’s Model1978
#72
91PortisheadDummy1994
ineligible
92AC/DCBack in Black1980
*
Y
93BeckOdelay1998
ineligible
94Gang of FourEntertainment1979
95Marvin GayeWhat’s Going On?1971
96Arctic MonkeysWhatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not2006
ineligible
ineligible
97QueenA Night at the Opera1975
98Derek and the DominosLayla and Other Assorted Love Songs1970
99P.J. HarveyLet England Shake2011
ineligible
ineligible
100The ByrdsSweetheart of the Rodeo1968
*
*

As one can see at the merest glance, most recordings on Harrington’s Keenan’s and especially Scaruffi’s lists are completely absent:
  • only eleven of Harrington’s Top 100 albums are present
  • only ten of Keenan’s best 103 are present
  • only four of Scaruffi’s top 25 are present
  • ten artists on the list have a different album in Harrington’s Top 100
  • eighteen artists on the list have a different album in Keenan’s list
  • only Springsteen has a different album in Scaruffi’s top 25
What one can say about the general composition of Creswell, Mathieson and O‘Donnell’s list is that it has many major omissions by genre. Heavy metal is utterly absent apart from Black Sabbath and AC/DC, but hardcore punk and progressive rock are also unrepresented, and experimental rock also absent except for Sonic Youth, whose pop hooks allowed them to reach the Billboard Top 40 in 1994 with Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star. Folk and folk rock are also weakly represented apart from Dylan and Joni Mitchell, for whom I will say the magnificent and utterly unique Hejira may be the finest recording I have ever heard and stands much superior to the more famous Blue. The absence of metal and progressive rock is of course almost certainly due to well-documented biases in Creswell, Mathieson and O‘Donnell’s sources, and how with progressive rock the key albums were never remotely popular commercially in the English-speaking world. These biases are however no excuse for not even trying to correct them.

Another severe fault is how the most recent albums on the list are all popular and what one must call “fashionable”. There is not even something by Joanna Newsom, arguably the most brilliant musical artist of modern times, yet alone by more obscure underground acts since the 1990s, such as the post-rock scene.

For all its grandiose claims, Creswell, Mathieson and O‘Donnell’s list is a very bad one. It simply reproduces badly flawed lists of music that tends towards the ephemeral, and ignores important parts of rock history.

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