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查看完整版本: [分享]NME 100 ALL TIME BEST BRITISH ALBUMS

啊啦嚯魔啦 2006-1-28 12:01

[分享]NME 100 ALL TIME BEST BRITISH ALBUMS

<P>最烦看榜单了。。。</P>
<P>八古好久没发榜单了。。。</P>
<P>那就发下落!!!</P>
<P>嘿嘿嘿嘿。。。</P>
<P>另外前面50个偶还没看到介绍!!!</P>
<P>--*----*-----</P>
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<P><FONT face=Verdana>This week NME announced the 100 greatest British albums ever made. Alongside this exclusive rundown of 51-100 you'll find the chance to win the top ten for yourself at the bottom of the page. Good luck.<br><br><STRONG>100 - Derek And Clive</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>(Live) </FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana>(Island, 1976)<br>Recorded by Peter Cook and Dudley Moore in 1973, bootlegs became tourbus essentials for the Stones. Finally released, the world got to hear some fucking exquisite British swearing. Forget Shakespeare, this is Britain’s greatest contribution to the spoken word. PS<br><br><STRONG>99 – Patrick Wolf</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Lycanthropy </FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana>(Faith And Industry, 2004 )<br>Half trendy teenager with a Nathan Barley haircut and half tortured poet from the depths of the local graveyard, Patrick Wolf stepped up with his mandolin and Dickensian day-wear to produced glorious, creepy tales of London life - complete with bloody pigeons… LC<br><br><STRONG>98 - Roots Manuva</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Run Come Save Me</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Big Dada, 2001) <br>The album that made the world take British hip-hop seriously. With his second album, salt of the earth south-Londoner Rodney Smith magically made his beats and rhymes compatible with underground credibility and mainstream success. A true first for the genre. HP<br><br><STRONG>97 - Led Zeppelin </STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Led Zeppelin IV</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Atlantic, 1971)<br>‘Wayne’s World’ was right; ‘Stairway’ is for ponytailed Total Guitar <br>readers. No, what makes ‘IV’ indispensable are songs like ‘Black Dog’ and <br>‘Rock n’ Roll’, thrilling slabs of rhythm and blues by a band at their <br>absolute bacchanalian peak. BN<br><br><STRONG>96 - Adam And The Ants</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Kings Of the Wild Frontier</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (CBS, 1980)<br>He may have looked like a prize buffoon, but Adam Ant was a classic British maverick. Here he fashioned a twin-drummed pop album that conquered the world with tribal rhythms and twangy surf guitars. AW<br><br><STRONG>95 - Julian Cope</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Jehovahkill</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Island, 1992)<br>Possibly the last true eccentric in British Rock, the ex Teardrop Explodes singer produced a record that features both the disturbing pop of ‘Fear Loves This Place’ and the hymn self-deification ‘Julian H Cope’. Paganistic perfection. AT<br><br><STRONG>94 - The Futureheads</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>The Futureheads</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana>(679, 2004)<br>Noel Gallagher called it “the weirdest music I’ve ever heard”. Had he added ‘fresh’, ‘exciting’ and ‘soon to be massively influential’, he’d have been spot on. HMC<br><br><STRONG>93 - Brian Eno</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Here Come The Warm Jets</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Island, 1974)<br>After leaving Roxy Music, “sound manipulator” Eno released this mix of bizarre lyrics and otherworldly guitar textures that sound like the inside of Kevin Shields’ head. A densely-detailed masterpiece which, even now, sounds like the future. NC<br><br><STRONG>92 - Oasis</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>(What’s The Story) Morning Glory?</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Creation, 1995)<br>Second album of “left-overs” from Definitely Maybe that took Oasis from NME faves into Tabloidworld (and Number 10) Noel still says he can’t see what all the fuss is about. Bless ‘im. RP<br><br><STRONG>91 - The Fall</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>This Nation’s Saving Grace</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Beggars Banquet, 1985)<br>After 25 albums, The Fall have become British musical icons. Back in 1985, this album proved they could add catchy melodies to their familiar brutal, barbarous rhythms, without selling out. SW<br><br><STRONG>90 - Supergrass </STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>I Should Coco</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Parlophone, 1995) <br>Getting caught with the blow, joyriding and making sure your teeth are clean. Proof that teenage traumas are brilliant, particularly when they’re so goddamn catchy.<br>ST<br><br><STRONG>89 - Blur</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Parklife</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana>(Food, 1994)<br>More so than ‘Definitely Maybe’ or ‘His’N’Hers’, Parklife isTHE definitive Britpop album from its sketches of a Britain on a Sunday to the love letter to this Emerald Isle ‘This Is A Low’. Made even better by the fact that the Yanks did not get it <I>at all</I>. HMc<br><br><br><STRONG>88 - Underworld</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Dubnobasswithmy headman</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana>(Junior Boys Own, 1993)<br>Pre-Born Slippy second-attempt debut of electronica genius from an old Debbie Harry session guitarist, his geeky ex Nu-Wave mate and a young DJ that proved crucial in the evolution of UK dance music. RP<br><br><STRONG>87 - -Small Faces</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Ogden’s Nut Gone Flake</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Immediate, 1968)<br>What happens when mods get stoned: horny R&amp;B, soul and psychedelia, cobbled together into a a daft concept album narrated by Stanley Unwin, all a year before Pete Townshend thought up ‘Tommy’. Plus ‘Lazy Sunday’ PM<br><br><STRONG>86 - -George Harrison</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>All Things Must Pass</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Apple, 1970)<br>The only solo Beatles album to make the chart, and features a host of unused compositions from the Fab Four era. A sprawling double with no filler, and features an amazing cover short of a mad-looking, bearded Harrison surrounded by garden gnomes. (AW)<br><br><STRONG>85- -ABC</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>The Lexicon Of Love </FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana>(Neutron, 1982)<br>Time has not been kind to this but no one can deny The Lexicon Of Love’s reign at the top of the new-romantic tree. Welding perfect pop tunes to Trevor Horn’s radical production, this is the only album that makes all those white suits and poncey haircuts forgivable. (HP)<br><br><STRONG>84 - Redskins</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Neither Washington Nor Moscow…</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Decca, 1986)<br>They were skinheads, Socialist Workers and they were fab. Their horn-driven polemics were as influenced by classic soul and Motown as punk. And you don’t have to be a political animal to love them – you just need to have taste. AT<br><br><STRONG>83- Wire</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Pink Flag</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Harvest, 1977)<br>The modern post-punk revival is rightly attributed to the likes of Joy Division and Gang Of Four in the main but Wire’s minimalist rhythms and arty guitar angles are almost as crucial thanks primarily to the 21 (21!) blasts of agit-punk contained herein. HP<br><br><STRONG>82 - Happy Mondays</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Pills’N’Thrills And Bellyaches</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Factory, 1990)<br>The Monday’s Ecstasy-fuelled, Paul Oakenfold-produced third studio album that promoted Madchester to the capital of 1990 Britain and Shaun Ryder on a drug bender he never retired from. RP<br><br><STRONG>81 - Antony &amp; The Johnsons</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>I Am A Bird Now</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Rough Trade, 2005)<br>Chichester’s not normally known for their gender bending singers. But this one with a delicate Warhol fixation and an otherworldly voice that is a like the glorious combo of Little Jimmy Scott, The Trio Bulgarka and Chet Baker. Timeless, desperately sad and surreal all at the same time. PE</FONT></P>
[align=right][color=#000066][此贴子已经被作者于2006-1-29 21:35:16编辑过][/color][/align]

啊啦嚯魔啦 2006-1-28 12:03

<P><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>80 - Black Sabbath</FONT></STRONG><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Paranoid</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Vertigo, 1970) <br>Before he became the lumbering pater familias of reality TV’s first family, Ozzy was the scariest man in rock, as demonstrated by the brilliant ‘War Pigs’ and ‘Electric Funeral’. Oh, and lets not forget the title track, a riff big enough to sink the Titanic. BN<br><br><STRONG>79 - Teenage Fanclub</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Bandwagonesque</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Creation, 1991) <br>The enormously loveable Glasgow four-piece took the best bits of glam, indie and classic rock to create a timeless, hook-laden masterpiece. Part Big Star, part grunge: all brilliant<br><br><STRONG>78 - Aphex Twin </STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Selected Ambient Works 85-92</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (R&amp;S, 1992)<br>The twisted genius of dance music stalked Britain’s discos, mutating the genre in his own mischievous image. Twitching, pulsing, light, bouncy yet urgent, ‘Selected Ambient Works’ contains pure beauty and pure evil. PS<br><br><STRONG>77 - The Beta Band</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>The Three EP’s</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Regal, 1998)<br>It’s a fitting mark of their martyrdom that every great idea The Beta Band <br>ever had was plagiarized by those of lesser imaginations (even Embrace had a <br>go), but this album stands as testament to their wilful oddness and –on <br>songs like ‘Dry The Rain’ and ‘She’s The One’ – surprising melodic nous. BN<br><br><STRONG>76 - Cornershop</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>When I Was Born For The 7th Time</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Wiiija, 1997)<br>After spending most of the 1990s underachieving, Tjinder Singh and Ben Ayers realized their kaleidoscopic musical ambitions with a multi-genre masterpiece and made the entire nation sing the words “everybody needs a bosom for a pillow” for six months solid to boot. HP<br><br><STRONG>75 - Tricky</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Maxinquaye</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Island, 1995)<br>From out of Bristol’s darkest corners came Britpop’s worst nightmare. Tricky’s first album still stands as the Holy Bible of trip-hop and also features his take on Public Enemy’s ‘Black Steel’- recasting the strident anti-government rant into one of sly dissent, making it twice as powerful. HP<br><br><STRONG>74 - Prodigy</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Music For The Jilted Generation</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (XL, 1994)<br>'Jilted Generation' sparked a revolution on the streets of provincial<br>Britain, and Prodigy's tribal, psycedelic second album that stands as<br>their masterwork. With 'No Good (Start The Dance)' and 'Poison' they<br>taught the Britpop generation how to dance, and kick-started a whole<br>generation of cross-cultural chemistry. DM<br><br><STRONG>73 - Kaiser Chiefs</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Employment</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (B-Unique, 2005)<br>The rain, the pub, hating your job, falling in love, parties, one night stands, getting drunk, falling over… that’s Britain. Forget glossy tourist brochures, ‘Employment’ celebrates and cherishes the spice and the fizzle that make modern life great – meaning you’ve never had it so good. PS<br><br><STRONG>72 - Joy Division</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Closer</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Factory, 1980)<br>The band’s second and last album was released shortly after singer Ian Curtis’ suicide, and the dark overtones of the likes of the magnificently gloomy ‘New Dawn Fades’ and ‘Decades’ can be seen as eerily prophetic in aftermath of such terrible events. A haunting masterpiece. AW<br><br><STRONG>71 - Buzzcocks</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Love Bites</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (United Artists, 1978)<br>Proving that punks were capable of moving on, Shelley and co’s second has both the youthful zest of their early singles and – gasp! – some <I>acoustic</I> guitars. And it’s got ‘Ever Fallen In Love?’. HMc <br><br><STRONG>70 - Spacemen 3</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>The Perfect Prescription</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Glass, 1987)<br><STRONG>The Perfect Prescription</STRONG> (Fire, 1987)<br>Long before Spiritualized seized the bliss-rock crown Jason Pierce and sonic soul-brother Sonic Boom created this narcotic album of transcendent beauty. NC<br><br><STRONG>69 - Roxy Music</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>For Your Pleasure</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Island, 1973)<br>Foisting that typically British paradox - the seedy gentlemen with an eye for the ladies but also maybe the fellas - on the nations discerning music fans, this sexually charged mixture of avant-garde pop and sleazy disco paved the way for the cultural whiplash that was the arrival of punk in 1977. LC<br><br><STRONG>68 - The Pretty Things</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>SF Sorrow</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Columbia, 1968)<br>The original Thamesbeat band’s 1968 psychedelic masterpiece invented the rock opera, but don’t blame them – just marvel at the way ‘SF Sorrow’ gives you new ideas every second. PL<br><br>67 - Coldplay<br>A Rush Of Blood To The Head (Parlophone, 2002)<br>Where this “bunch of bedwetters”(&copy; Alan McGee) became world-beating multinational botherers, thanks solely to good ol’ fashioned classic songwriting and Chris Martin’s awkward yet massive charisma.HMc<br><br><STRONG>66 - Elvis Costello</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>This Year’s Model</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Radar, 1978) <br>Fuelled by anger, regret, jealousy, vodka and what Costello euphemistically described as “assisted insomnia”, ‘This Year’s Model’ is a vicious tour of the heart’s dark side. Picking at the fresh scabs of broken relationships, Costello’s launches a spikey tirade, while the Attractions’ new wave stomp ensures his second album is the essential break-up revenge record. PS<br><br><STRONG>65 - Radiohead</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Kid A</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Parlophone, 2000)<br>Replacing guitars with warped electronica and Aphex Twin glitches, Radiohead here did what any self-respecting biggest band in the world should do and look at the formula. Destroy it. And make it all over again. HMc<br><br><STRONG>64 - Gang Of Four</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Entertainment!</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (EMI, 1979)<br>Proto-Franz, proto-Bloc Party, proto-bloody everyone, Gang Of Four's bristling debut matched strident political polemic with edgy guitars and taut rhythms and invented all your favourite spiky guitar bands. MMc<br><br><STRONG>63 - David Bowie</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (RCA, 1972)<br>Bowie’s Ziggy was about animal drama, all too revealing catsuits and big choruses. It wasn’t just glam rock- it was a polysexual, personality- crisis-covered-in-glitter masterwork of reinvention that was never seen in the history of rock before.<br><br><STRONG>62 - Saint Etienne</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Fox Base Alpha</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Heavenly, 1991)<br>One of the rare occasions where music hacks forming bands turns out to be a good idea, St Etienne were the high concept brainchild of Melody Maker journo Bob Stanley (who wrote rather an accurate, not to say prescient review of the Stone Roses debut) and Pete Wiggs. Fusing kitsch ‘60s stylings to post-acid house electronica and various breathless female singers, their 1990 debut gave the world one of the greatest cover versions of all time. KM<br><br><STRONG>61 - Echo &amp; The Bunnymen</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Ocean Rain</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Korova, 1984)<br>Reflecting the decadence of the decade, the Bunnymen threw everything into the mix, but when the result was string-drenched songs as beautiful as ‘Silver’, who cares? NC</FONT><br><br></P><br>
[align=right][color=#000066][此贴子已经被作者于2006-1-29 21:35:44编辑过][/color][/align]

啊啦嚯魔啦 2006-1-28 12:04

<P 12pt?><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>60 - The Human League</FONT></STRONG><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Dare!</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Virgin, 1981)<br>The promise of the new decade in miniature, before it all went to shit with the Falklands War and the miners’ strike. Retro themes set to futuristic sounds and – crucially – killer pop tunes. NC<br><br><STRONG>59 - The Clash</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>The Clash</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (CBS, 1977)<br>Punk, for all its admirable ethos and gravity-defying hair, never had much <br>concept of actual songwriting until The Clash came along. This album changed <br>all that. It’s still a snarling declaration of intent ( see ‘White Riot’), <br>but on ‘Career Oportunities’ and ‘Remote Control’ The Clash doffed their <br>caps to 60’s classicism, with groundbreaking results. BN<br><br><STRONG>58 - Suede</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Dog Man Star</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Nude, 1994)<br>As Brett Anderson and Bernard Butler began to drift apart, Suede’s grand and ambitious second album is what emerged from the space between them. Ugly introspection and layer-upon-layer of beautified guitars make Dog Man Star their most powerful listening experience. HP<br><br><STRONG>57 - The Cure</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>The Head On The Door</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana>(Fiction, 1985)<br>Despite a reputation overshadowed by squalling gothic dirges and the size of Bob Smith’s ever-expanding barnet, The Cure’s 1985 ‘Head On The Door’ album was actually one of the synthesiser-‘80s purest pop moments featuring pop gems in ‘Inbetween Days’ and ‘Close To Me’ . Of course they could never completely escape the macabre - during filming for the video of the latter they nearly drowned when the cupboard they were in was pumped full of water. KM<br><br><STRONG>56 - Portishead</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Portishead</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Go! Beat, 1994)<br>Outer space noises, sampling bizarre jazz records and the stench of wintery heartbreak loomed over the Bristolian’s sublimely suffocating debut. “Trip hop”, “chill out”, “after dinner music” it most certainly wasn’t. PE<br><br><STRONG>55 - Bloc Party</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Bloc Party</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Wichita, 2005)<br>Is it really a year since Bloc Party became unwitting spokespersons for Britain’s youth? With abrasive guitars, insistent rhythms and adroit lyrics, ‘Silent Alarm’ is a brilliant reflection of life in Blair’s Britain. SW<br><br><STRONG>54 - Morrissey</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Vauxhall &amp; I</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Parlophone, 1994)<br>Mozzer's best solo effort was a direct retort to those critics who'd derailed his career in the mid-'90s, as he first wooed them with a clutch of beautiful ballads before savagely taunting them on the closing 'Speedway'. MMC<br><br><STRONG>53 - The Rolling Stones</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Let It Bleed</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (ABKCO, 1969)<br>Nothing sounded the death knell for the 60’s like this album, from ‘Gimme <br>Shelter’s apocalyptic promise that ‘War, children/ Is just a shot away’, to <br>Sir Mick Jagger threatening to ‘Stick a knife right down your throat’ on <br>‘Midnight Rambler’. Fuck you, hippies. BN<br><br><STRONG>52 - Madness</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>One Step Beyond</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Stiff, 1979)<br>The nutty boys made the gloomy Thatcher cursed days of the 1980s bearable with their cheeky, chipper stories of life and love with their cockney take on Caribbean ska that could get even the most disheartened skinhead up and skanking. LC<br><br><STRONG>51 - Billy Bragg</STRONG></FONT><B><br><STRONG><FONT face=Verdana>Talking With The Taxman About Poetry</FONT></STRONG></B><FONT face=Verdana> (Go! Discs, 1986)<br>In which the Barking Bard tackles such institutions as marriage, trade unions and the family and, on final track ‘The Home Front’, elegantly sums up life in the depressing days of ‘80s Britain with an energy that resonates today. MMC</FONT>
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[align=right][color=#000066][此贴子已经被作者于2006-1-29 21:36:10编辑过][/color][/align]

啊啦嚯魔啦 2006-1-29 21:34

<FONT face=Verdana size=2>1. The Stone Roses – The Stone Roses<BR>2. The Smiths – The Queen Is Dead<BR>3. Oasis – Definitely Maybe<BR>4. Sex Pistols – Never Mind The Bollocks…<BR>5. Arctic Monkeys – Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not.<BR>6. Blur – Modern Life Is Rubbish<BR>7. Pulp – Different Class<BR>8. The Clash – London Calling<BR>9. The Beatles – Revolver<BR>10. The Libertines – Up The Bracket<BR>11. Radiohead – The Bends<BR>12. The Specials – The Specials<BR>13. The Verve – A Northern Soul<BR>14. David Bowie – Hunky Dory<BR>15. Primal Scream – Screamadelica<BR>16. Dexys Midnight Runners – Searching For The Young Soul Rebles<BR>17. The Streets – Original Pirate Material<BR>18. Franz Ferdinand – Franz Ferdinand<BR>19. The Smiths – Strangeways Here We Come<BR>20. The Beatles – Rubber Soul<BR>21. Muse – Absolution<BR>22. Super Furry Animals – Radiator<BR>23. New Order – Technique<BR>24. Pet Shop Boys – Please<BR>25. The Kinks – The Village Green Preservation Society<BR>26. The Smiths – Hatful Of Hollow<BR>27. Pj Harvey – Dry<BR>28. Nick Drake – Bryter Later<BR>29. Led Zeppelin – Led Zeppelin II<BR>30. Suede – Suede<BR>31. Massive Attack – Blue Lines<BR>32. The Zombies – Odyssey And Oracle<BR>33. Coldplay - Parachutes<BR>34. The Jam – All Mod Cons<BR>35. Radiohead – Ok Computer<BR>36. The Beatle – The Beatles<BR>37. Manic Street Preachers – The Holy Bible<BR>38. Spritualized – Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space<BR>39. Ride – Nowhere<BR>40. Dizzie Rascal – Boy In Da Corner<BR>41. Kate Bush – Hounds Of Love<BR>42. The Jesus And Mary Chain – Psychocandy<BR>43. The Rolling Stones – Exile On Main Street<BR>44. Joy Division – Unknown Pleasures<BR>45. The Streets – A Grand Don’t Come For Free<BR>46. Pulp – His And Hers<BR>47. The Libertines – The Libertines<BR>48. Elastica – Elastica<BR>49. The Who – My Generation<BR>50. The La’s – The La’s<BR></FONT>

啊啦嚯魔啦 2006-1-29 21:40

<P><FONT size=2>简直么话说了..</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Verdana size=2>Arctic Monkeys 居然第五..</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Verdana size=2>离谱了点八!!!虽然还行,但是也没...</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Verdana size=2>这榜单看不下去了...</FONT></P>
<P><FONT face=Verdana size=2>鉴定完毕...</FONT><FONT face=Verdana size=2></P></FONT>

lilithhook 2006-2-7 14:19

帮你顶下,前10里面,我喜欢第10张远超第5张。虽然也很喜欢猴子们的表现。但还是浪子们DEATH ON THE STAIRS经典啊。猴子还需要时间考验[em02]

墨绿涩 2006-2-7 14:22

不喜欢这个排名,[em06][em06][em06][em06]

lilithhook 2006-2-7 14:23

不过对PETE的新专辑比较失望,他已经不要旋律了……
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查看完整版本: [分享]NME 100 ALL TIME BEST BRITISH ALBUMS