Feels # 1 EXPERIMENTAL ROCK ALBUM Feels "Animal Collective stopped hiding behind noise and let the songs breathe—the result was 2005's most emotionally direct experimental rock album, a record about love that actually sounds like love." Read Review
Nation Time # 2 FREE JAZZ ALBUM Nation Time "Joe McPhee walked into a SUNY gymnasium in 1970 with a tenor sax and a pocket trumpet and recorded one of the most emotionally direct free jazz statements ever committed to tape." Read Review
Horses # 3 PUNK ROCK ALBUM Horses "Before punk had a name, Patti Smith walked into Electric Lady Studios and recorded an album that fused Rimbaud with rock and roll—the 1975 debut that proved poetry could sweat." Read Review
Meddle # 4 PROGRESSIVE ROCK ALBUM Meddle "Before the concept albums consumed them, Pink Floyd made their most texturally adventurous record—a 23-minute song about absolutely nothing that somehow contains everything." Read Review
There's a Riot Goin' On # 5 SOUL ALBUM There's a Riot Goin' On "Sly Stone made a funk album that forgot how to dance, and it's the truest thing he ever recorded." Read Review
Music for 18 Musicians # 6 CLASSICAL ALBUM Music for 18 Musicians "Steve Reich built a piece of music that breathes, and fifty years later it's still inhaling." Read Review
The Slider # 7 ROCK ALBUM The Slider "Marc Bolan made glam rock's perfect album by refusing to take any of it seriously." Read Review
Disintegration # 8 ROCK ALBUM Disintegration "The Cure made an album about drowning and it sounds like the most beautiful way to go." Read Review
Psychocandy # 9 ROCK ALBUM Psychocandy "The Jesus and Mary Chain made feedback sound like a love song." Read Review
Strangeways, Here We Come # 10 ROCK ALBUM Strangeways, Here We Come "The Smiths saved their biggest sounds for their final goodbye." Read Review