Se hela "100 Best Albums"-listan här!

2020 utsåg Rolling Stone “The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill” till det bästa rapalbumet genom tiderna. Nu tar Apple Music det ett steg längre och utnämner det till det bästa albumet någonsin, oavsett genre. Igår eftermiddag avslöjades hela listan, där även namn som Kendrick Lamar, Frank Ocean och Beyoncé får höga listplaceringar.

“good kid, m.A.A.d city” placeras på plats nummer 7, Beyoncés “Lemonade” på plats 10 och Frank Oceans “Blonde” på plats 5.

Listan har skapats av Apple Musics expertteam och en grupp utvalda artister som bland annat inkluderar Pharrell Williams, J Balvin och Charli XCX – plus ett antal låtskrivare, producenter och andra verksamma inom musikbranschen. Listan bygger på experternas urval och är helt oberoende av streamingsiffror från Apple Music. 

I samband med beskedet sa Lauryn Hill:

“This is my award, but it’s a rich, deep narrative, and involves so many people, and so much sacrifice, and so much time, and so much collective love.”

Läs nomineringarna för topp 10 och se den fullständiga listan nedan!

1. The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill (1998), Lauryn Hill

Lauryn Hill’s debut — and only — solo studio album was a seismic event in 1998: a stunningly raw, profound look into the spiritual landscape not just of one of the era’s biggest stars, but of the era itself. She was, and remains, a once-in-a-generation talent whose inspiration and innovation can be heard through the decades. Artists exhaust long discographies hoping for a cohesive piece of work resonant enough to reshape culture and inscribe its creator into the pantheon; Lauryn Hill did it in one. 

2. Thriller (1982), Michael Jackson

There are few pop albums, or even works of art, that denote a wholesale shift in time and space the way Michael Jackson’s Thriller did in 1982. It did nothing less than define the modern pop blockbuster and redefine the scope and reach of music. Seven of its nine original cuts were top 10 singles, and it became one of the bestselling albums ever made. 

3. Abbey Road (1969), The Beatles

The Beatles’ Abbey Road is an ageless, unmatched collection of songs by a world-changing band at their creative peak. The band’s 11th and penultimate album sounds like nothing more or less than four extremely gifted humans playing one indelible song after another in the same room together.

4. Purple Rain (1984), Prince & The Revolution

With half its track list comprising top 10 singles, this soundtrack is what truly turned Prince Rogers Nelson into one of the most instantly recognizable and distinctive pop artists ever. Prince often drew comparisons to Jimi Hendrix for the way he mixed music that felt Black and white, sacred and profane. The reality is that he had no precedent then and no comparison now. 

5. Blonde (2016), Frank Ocean

Though Blonde packs 17 tracks into one quick hour, it’s a sprawling palette of ideas, a testament to the intelligence of flying one’s own artistic freak flag and trusting that audiences will meet them where they’re at. They did. And Ocean established himself as a generational artist uniquely suited to the complexities and convulsive changes of the second decade of the 21st century. 

6. Songs in the Key of Life (1976), Stevie Wonder

In 1974, Stevie Wonder was the most critically revered pop star in the world; he was also considering leaving the music industry altogether. So when Songs in the Key of Life was released two years later, demand was so high that it became, at the time, the fastest-selling album in history. The album, which runs nearly 90 minutes, is effortlessly melodic, broad in scope, and deeply personal. Sonically, culturally, and emotionally, Songs in the Key of Life is much more than a gigantic collection of songs — it forms an entire worldview.

7. good kid, m.A.A.d city (2012), Kendrick Lamar

Kendrick Lamar’s sophomore album good kid, m.A.A.d city is one of the defining hip-hop records of the 21st century. West Coast hip-hop elders like Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre anointed Lamar to carry on the legacy of gangsta rap, and the legacy of this album is a crucial example of American storytelling that established the future Pulitzer Prize winner as perhaps his generation’s most accomplished writer. 

8. Back to Black (2006), Amy Winehouse

Amy Winehouse’s presentation and otherworldly, timeless vocals make her music feel different — not so much an attempt to re-create the past as to honor the music she loved while still being true to the trash-talking, self-effacing millennial she was. The sound of Back to Black might appeal to retro-soul fans and jazz classicists, but the attitude is closer to rap. Yes, she was funny. But she wasn’t kidding. 

9. Nevermind (1991), Nirvana 

Nevermind and its opening salvo “Smells Like Teen Spirit” didn’t just mark an unlikely breakthrough for the Seattle trio, it upended popular culture in ways never before and never since. Punk became pop, grunge became global vernacular, industry walls broke into rubble, and lead vocalist Kurt Cobain was anointed the reluctant voice of a generation in need of catharsis — all seemingly overnight.

10. Lemonade (2016), Beyoncé

Beyoncé’s genre-obliterating blockbuster sixth album is furious, defiant, anguished, vulnerable, experimental, muscular, triumphant, humorous, and brave — a vivid personal statement, released without warning in a time of public scrutiny and private suffering. Every second of Lemonade deserves to be studied and celebrated.

Hela listan:

  • 100: Body Talk – Robyn
  • 99: Hotel California – The Eagles
  • 98: ASTROWORLD – Travis Scott
  • 97: Rage Against The Machine – Rage Against The Machine
  • 96: Pure Heroine – Lorde
  • 95: Confessions – USHER
  • 94: Untrue – Burial
  • 93: A Seat at the Table – Solange
  • 92: Flower Boy – Tyler, The Creator
  • 91: Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1 – George Michael
  • 90: Back in Black – AC/DC
  • 89: The Fame Monster (Deluxe Edition) – Lady Gaga
  • 88: I Put a Spell on You – Nina Simone
  • 87: Blue Lines – Massive Attack
  • 86: My Life – Mary J Blige
  • 85: Golden Hour – Kacey Musgraves
  • 84: Doggystyle – Snoop Dogg
  • 83: Horses – Patti Smith
  • 82: Get Rich or Die Tryin’ – 50 Cent
  • 81: After the Gold Rush – Neil Young
  • 80: The Marshall Mathers LP – Eminem
  • 79: Norman F****** Rockwell! – Lana Del Rey
  • 78: Goodbye Yellow Brick Road – Elton John
  • 77: Like A Prayer – Madonna
  • 76: Un Verano Sin Ti – Bad Bunny
  • 75: Supa Dupa Fly – Missy Eliott
  • 74: Downward Spiral – Nine Inch Nails
  • 73: Aja – Steely Dan
  • 72: SOS – SZA
  • 71: Trans-Europe Express – Kraftwerk
  • 70: Straight Outta Compton – N.W.A
  • 69: Master of Puppets (Remastered) – Metallica
  • 68: Is this It – The Strokes
  • 67: Dummy – Portishead
  • 66: The Queen Is Dead – The Smiths
  • 65: 3 Feet High and Rising – De La Soul
  • 64: Baduizm – Erykah Badu
  • 63: Are You Experienced? – The Jimi Hendrix Experience
  • 62: All Eyez on Me – 2Pac
  • 61: Love Deluxe – Sade
  • 60: The Velvet Underground and Nico (45th Anniversary Edition) – Velvet Underground & Nico
  • 59: AM – Arctic Monkeys
  • 58: (What’s The Story) Morning Glory – Oasis
  • 57: Voodoo – D’Angelo
  • 56: Disintegration (Remastered) – The Cure
  • 55: ANTI – Rihanna
  • 54: A Love Supreme – John Coltrane
  • 53: Exile on Main Street (2010 Remaster) – Rolling Stones
  • 52: Appetite for Destruction – Guns ‘N Roses
  • 51: Sign O’The Times – Prince
  • 50. Hounds of Love (2018 Remaster) – Kate Bush
  • 49. The Joshua Tree – U2
  • 48. Paul’s Boutique – Beastie Boys
  • 47. Take Care (Deluxe Version) – Drake
  • 46. Exodus ((2013 Remaster) – Bob Marley & The Wailers
  • 45. Homogenic – Björk
  • 44. Innervisions – Stevie Wonder
  • 43. Remain in Light – Talking Heads
  • 42. Control – Janet Jackson
  • 41. Aquemini – Outkast
  • 40. I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You – Aretha Franklin
  • 39. Illmatic – Nas
  • 38. Tapestry – Carole King
  • 37. Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) [Expanded Edition] – Wu-Tang Clan
  • 36. BEYONCÉ – Beyoncé
  • 35. London Calling – The Clash 
  • 34. It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back – Public Enemy
  • 33. Kid A – Radiohead
  • 32. Ready to Die (The Remaster) – Notorious B.I.G.
  • 31. Jagged Little Pill (Remastered) – Alanis Morissette 
  • 30. WHEN WE ALL FALL ASLEEP, WHERE DO WE GO? – Billie Eilish
  • 29. The Low End Theory – A Tribe Called Quest
  • 28. The Dark Side of the Moon – Pink Floyd 
  • 27. Led Zeppelin II – Led Zeppelin
  • 26. My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy – Kanye West
  • 25. Kind of Blue – Miles Davis 
  • 24. The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars (2012 Remaster) – David Bowie
  • 23. Discovery – Daft Punk 
  • 22. Born to Run – Bruce Springsteen
  • 21. Revolver – The Beatles
  • 20: Pet Sounds – The Beach Boys
  • 19: The Chronic – Dr. Dre
  • 18: 1989 (Taylor’s Version) – Taylor Swift
  • 17: What’s Going On – Marvin Gaye
  • 16: Blue – Joni Mitchell
  • 15: 21 – Adele
  • 14: Highway 61 Revisited – Bob Dylan
  • 13: The Blueprint – JAY-Z
  • 12: OK Computer – Radiohead
  • 11: Rumours – Fleetwood Mac
  • 10. Lemonade – Beyoncé
  • 9. Nevermind – Nirvana 
  • 8. Back to Black, Amy Winehouse
  • 7. good kid, m.A.A.d city, Kendrick Lamar
  • 6. Songs in the Key of Life, Stevie Wonder
  • 5. Blonde, Frank Ocean
  • 4. Purple Rain, Prince & The Revolution
  • 3. Abbey Road , The Beatles
  • 2. Thriller, Michael Jackson
  • 1. The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, Lauryn Hill

Foto: Apple Music

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