The Top Albums of 2019
Ninety-three albums that sounded like this year.
Ninety-three albums that sounded like this year.
Following a mid-year checkpoint, catching up on the rest of 2018 with picks from the year in music.
With 2018 a little more than half over, a check-in on the year's best long-player recordings.
This is the way the year ends: with a fade-out.
The best music from 2016 meant more than usual this year.
Why we like the music we do is a matter of personal history—and in at least one case, a profound experience of hearing David Bowie.
Music writing and music enthusiasm don't mix—let's change that. With the help of an army of YouTube commenters, we gush over our selections for the 31 best albums of the year.
A full calendar year of only listening to music that was released in 2013 comes down to this: The Morning News Editor's Choice Awards for the 19 best albums of the year.
A year's worth of music listening, whittled down to the core. Because in the end, there can be only 10.
It's the end of the year, and time to sum it up: Ten albums, all great, no filler.
The past 10 years have upturned the music world, and we're all better for it. A countdown of the year's best music, and the artist of the decade is named.
After 12 months of listening, only 10 records remain.
Because album lists shouldn't happen only once a year. Rounding out the '80s, music from the year America chose wrong.
Because album lists shouldn't happen only once a year. Now arriving within two decades of the present day.
Because year-end album lists shouldn't happen just once a year. In this installment: The lists and timeline converge.
In the past 12 months thousands of albums were released, but there are only 10 you'll need to remember.
Emptying out a storage space in Houston means judging sentimental value against what fits in the car.
Even though it wasn't an election year, in 1985 Alex P. Keaton could have run for president--and won.
It was no Orwellian nightmare; to have nightmares you need to sleep, and you can't sleep when you lay awake terrified about nuclear war.
Because album lists shouldn't happen only once a year. In this installment: The New Wave was drying up and the New Romantics were taking hold. But tell that to a Cub Scout in 1983 and you'll get a blank stare.
MTV was shaking up the airwaves, but if it was happening during an episode of Diff'rent Strokes. Ten favorite albums from the year the '80s really began.
Because album lists shouldn't happen only once a year. In this installment: Iran's taking hostages, Pat Sajak’s still on the air, and all of a sudden 1981 doesn’t feel like so long ago.
Because album lists shouldn't happen only once a year. In this installment: The dawn of a new decade saw punk rock fading away, or at least saving up to buy a synthesizer.
Because album lists shouldn't happen only once a year. In this installment, times were good: Every album came with a poster, disco was dying, and actors weren't Presidents.
Year-end album lists shouldn't happen only once a year. Inaugurating a new series, Andrew Womack raids his music collection to rank his favorite albums from every year, year after year, starting with as far back as he can recollect.
There were thousands of albums released by thousands of artists in 2004, so it must be hard to determine which were the 10 greatest, right? No, not really.
The iPod got a lot of use this year. After hundreds of albums and thousands of hours of listening to music, Andrew Womack narrows it all down to his top 10 albums of 2003. Here are his findings.